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MONDAY November24,2014
Dudeabides,with us EVENT GUIDE• SPORTS,B1
TODAY• CALENDAR, A5
bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
en 's ouSin
Science party time-
UR8:
High Desert Museumscience party offers a look athow planes, birds and insects fly.A5
Chasing adream —Bend amateur golfer Charlie Rice holds his own with the pros at Champions Tour qualifier.B1
MIRROR POND, PACIFIC PARK
Parkland unlike to derail dam plan By Scott Hammers The Bulletin
• The city and a state agency agree that Bendneeds 16,681 newresidencesby 2028. Now theymust determinewhat type of residencesthose units will be.
Deed restrictions on riv-
erfront land owned by the Bend Park 8t Recreation
District should not impede efforts to develop the area
BelovedBeast Mode-
in order to fund improvements to Mirror Pond, park district Director Don Hor-
He may be abit quirky, but Marshawn Lynch, theSeahawks' enigmatic running back, is said to be apopular figure among teammates.B1
ton said Friday. A proposal introduced earlier this month by the Mirror Pond Ad Hoc Com-
mittee calls for PacifiCorp,
Odituary —Washington,
nnin MP .
bmb
the owner of the Mirror Pond dam, to transfer
D.C.'s former mayor, Marion Barry, leaves behind alegacy mixed with moments goodand bad.A2
the dam, substation and surrounding lands to the city or the park district.
The city and park district
And aWehexclusive —A New Hampshirecollegetown says quarter-toting "Robin Hooders" must stop pumping change into expired parking meters.bendbulletin.cum/extras
EDITOR'5CHOICE
would in turn sell or lease
SINGLE-FAMILYUNATTACHED R A single home, unattached to others, on its own lot. Low density.
SINGLE-FAMILYATTACHED L+ Commonly called duplexes.Two ormore homes sharing awall. More dense.
By Chico Harlan, Wesley Lowery and Kimberly Kindy
MULTIFAMILY % Usually apartment buildings. Several homes in a single building. High density.
ing Drake Park, and in the
district's, Pacific Park just downstream of the dam.
Proceedsfrom thesales or lease would be used to
The city of Bend needs16,681 newresidences by2028. As part of a 2010 request to expand Bend's urban growth boundary, the city proposed that 65 percent of the neededhomesshould be single-family units. The state rejected that proposal, saying the city must consider the needfor more affordable units. A newproposal being studied calls for 55 percent single-family homes. NEW UNITS NEEDED
100% 20%*
22%
new park space and alter-
TOTAL NUMBER OFUNITS BY 2028
ations to Mirror Pond to inhibit the accumulation
of silt.
50,841 total
18%
50,000
80'/
12,890
The land where Pacific
Park sits was originally owned by PacifiCorp and
13,223
40,000
60% 77%
75%
77%
is subject to deed restric-
7,385
30,000
40%
tions requiring it be used as a park. The property
20,000
20% 0
finance the removal of the dam, the construction of
60,000
10,000 2000
2007
0
2012
* Segments might not equal total due to rounding ** Numbers not provided
The Washington Post
FERGUSON, Missou-
the land and nearby land they control — in the city's case, parking lots adjoin-
y ~ y
AnticipatingBend'shousingneeds
BEND'SHISTORICAL HOUSING MIX
A media frenzy is engulfing Ferguson
u
Source: Bend Urban Growth Remand
Q
5,505
5,838
10,843
9,175
also includes the Cascade
FAILED NEW PROPOSAL P ROPOSAL
Multifamily Q
Single-family attached
Q
25,624
36,467
34,799
2007 HOUSING STOCK
FAILED PROPOS AL
NEW PROPOS AL
School of Music, housed in a building that was once home to the park district's
Single-family detached
administrative offices. SeePlan/A4
Carli KruegerI The Bulletin
ri — The revolution, or
Iran nuke negotiators mayextend deadline
whatever happens here,
most certainly will be televised, but until then, every part of the lead-up will be, too. In recent days, shop owners boarding up stores have found them-
selves giving impromptu news conferences. Media
By Tyler Leedse The Bulletin
Bend has long been a town of single-family homes, the public-policy term for traditional houses,
arranged in rows and separated by yards. The city is now charged with planning for the number of such houses to be built by developers
galleries form to listen in
through 2028, while also making allowances for apartments and townhouses.
on church sermons. Television trucks hum in the parking lot of a tire shop, a front-rowseatacrossfrom police headquarters.
was included in a 2010 pro-
The national media
has again assembled in Ferguson, but this time, they've been drawn here
not by something that just happened but something that's about to, with a
grand jury deliberating whether to indict a white
police officer who fatally shot a black teen. The any-day-now anticipation, coming with ever-revised cable news speculation,
Such a "housing mix" posal to expand the city's urban growth boundary, the line beyond which the
city is not allowed to develop. That proposal, which called for 65 percent of all new homes within the cur-
rent and future boundary to be single-family, was rejected by the state and sent back to the city.
According to the Oregon
residences by 2028, but now
they must agree on what Development Commission, kinds of residences those which reviews UGB propos- will be. als, the city failed to justify Final say is up to the City how such a housing mix Council, but city staff and would satisfy the need for a committee of volunteers Land Conservation and
more affordable options,
working on the urban
a need the city itself had argued was driven by a lack
growth boundary process have proposed a new mix,
of apartments.
cutting the number of
The city and LCDC agree Bend needs 16,681 new
new single-family homes down to 55 percent. The
remainder is split into 10
percent for what's called single-family attached housing, which often means townhouses, and 35 percent multifamily, which is com-
By Michael R. Gordon and David E. Sanger New York Times News Service
VIENNA — With a
deadline for an agreement to curb Iran's nuclear program just a day away, American officials finally acknowledged Sunday
monly apartments.
"Getting to those numbers was a blend of art, science and, to be honest,
politics," said Brian Rankin, the city's principal planner. SeeHousing/A4
that the two sides would
not reach a deal by today's deadline but would probably extend the talks a second time to explore a series
of possible solutions. It was unclear how long
Social media threats: Merely free speech?
the talks would be prolonged or what additional
Media mega-events come and go. But this one
By Robert Barnes
stands out because it has
WASHINGTON — About a week after Tara Elonis
has returned this city of 21,000 to a spotlight it both
understands and some-
gone on for so long, because it's so emotionally charged, and because cameras have seized on a place that once considered
The Washington Post
sanctions relief Iran might
say: "Fold up your PFA (protection-from-abuse order) and
son, by phone or in a note. Instead, he posted it on his Facebook page, for all to see,
the limits of free speech on
receive as negotiators wrestled with differences
social media, the Supreme
such as how much nuclear
Court will consider next
put it in your pocket
in a prose style reminiscent
week whether, as a jury concluded, Elonis' postings con-
fuel Iran could produce, how long the accord would
times bristles at.
convinced a judge to issue a Is it thick enough to stop a protective order against her bullet?" estranged husband, Anthony, Anthony Elonis didn't her soon-to-be ex had this to deliver the message in per-
of the violent, misogynistic lyrics of rap artists he admired. In its first examination of
stituted a "true threat" to his
wife and others. SeeThreat/A8
last and how intrusive in-
spections would be, among other issues. SeeIran /A6
itself ordinary. Some 3t/2 months after the death of
Michael Brown, nearly everybody in Ferguson has a strong opinion on the shooting — and the way it's been covered. See Ferguson /A4
TODAY'S WEATHER i<r~~
P artly cloudy High 46, Low35 Page BS
INDEX Calendar A5 Crosswords Classified C 1 - 6Dear Abby Comics/Pu zzles C3-4 Horoscope
C4 Local/State A 5-6 SportsMonday B1-8 A7 Movies A7 Tee to Green B1, B6 A7 Nation/World A 2 T elevision A7
The Bulletin AnIndependent Newspaper
Q I/I/e use recyclnewspri ed nt
Vol. 112, No. 326,
24 pages, 3 sections
o
IIIIIIIIIIIIII 8 8 267 02329
A2
THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2014
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NATION Ee ORLD
Ami I i t , c orru tion a ueslra 'smiita By David D. Kirkpatrick
ists, even as President Barack Obama is doubling to 3,000 the
New York Times News Service
BAGHDAD —
O n e I r aqi
general is known as "chicken guy" because of his reputation for selling his soldiers' poultry provisions. Another is "arak guy," for his habit of enjoying that anise-flavored liquor on
the job. A third is named after Iraq's 10,000-dinar bills, "Gen. Deftar," and is infamous for
selling officer commissions. The Iraqi military and police forces had been so thoroughly pillaged by their own corrupt leadership that they all but collapsed this spring in the face of the advancing militants of the Islamic State — despite roughly $25 billion worth of U.S. training and equipment over the past 10 years and far more from the Iraqi treasury.
Now the pattern of corruption and patronage in the Iraqi government forces threatens to undermine anew U.S.-led effort to drive out the extrem-
Si sil.rva
number of U.S. troops in Iraq. The United States has insisted that the Iraqi military act as the conduit for any new aid and
are not authorized, say that
army and police payrolls are still wildly inflated by "ghost soldiers," either conjured en-
tirely by a superior officer or just splitting a paycheck with armaments being supplied for a patron instead of showing up a counteroffensive, including forwork money and weapons intendAnd Iraqi soldiers often ed for tribal fighters willing to charge that they have been push out the Islamic State. But furnished with partial supplies some of the weaponry has al- and cheaply made weapons beready ended up on the black cause their commanders took market and in the hands of Is- kickbacks or skimmed off the lamic State fighters, according savings. to Iraqi officers and lawmakers. Buying officer titles, shaking "I told the Americans, don't down civilians and siphoning give any weapons through the money from inflated payrolls army — not even one pieceare all "a continuous phenomebecause corruption is every- non," said Talal al-Zubai, a lawwhere, and you will not see maker from a Sunni party. any of it," said Col. Shaaban Dismissing the generals was al-Obeidi of the internal secu- insufficient, he argued. "They should be executed. rity forces and a Sunni tribal leader in Anbar province. "Our They destroyed Iraq," he said. "For the American advisers, people will steal it." Iraqi officers and lawmak- there is no chance their mission ers, some speaking on condi- will succeed with lying Iraqi tion of anonymity because they commanders."
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TuniSian eleCtiOn —Tunisians turned out in steady, orderly lines on Sunday tovote in their first free anddemocratic presidential election, voicing confidencethat they wereturning the pageonthe often-fractious transition following the revolution of 2011.Exit polls suggested that neither of the two leadingcandidates — theinterim president, Moncef Marzouki, andtheformer prime minister, Beji Caid Essebsi — waslikely to win anoutright majority and that a runoff between themwould benecessary. Official results were not expectedfor one or two days.
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POliCe-inVOIVed ShOOting —Officials in Cleveland wereinvestigating the police shooting of a12-year-old boywho died Sunday, aday after an officer shot him outside arecreation center when hereached for a weaponthat turned out to be afake pistol. The boy,Tamir Rice, died Sunday atMetroHealth Medical Center inCleveland, theCuyahoga County medical examiner's office said. He was shot in the torso at a park on Saturdayafter witnesses reported that hewas waving agun around andpointing it at people, the police said. Twopolice officers responded to thesceneandordered theboy to raise his hands, the police said, but herefusedand reachedfor agun in his waistband. An officer fired two shots, striking the boyonce,the police said. In a911 call released bythe police, a mansaid that "a guy" who appeared to be a juvenile waspointing a pistol at peopleandscaring them. Thecaller said twice that the gunwas"probably fake."
the death toll from asuicide bomb attack on avolleyball tournament has risen to at least 50, with morethan 60wounded. Theattack is the deadliest in Afghanistan this year. It happened ineastern Paktika province, bordering Pakistan, during the final of athree-day tournament with a hugecrowd in attendance. Thespokesmanfor the provincial governor, Mokhlis Afghan, saysthat 42 people werekilled immediately when the attacker detonatedexplosives as hemingled with the large crowd. There isstill someconfusion about the exact number of dead and wounded, he says. Afghanistan has beentackling insurgents for more than adecade, but attacks havebeenescalating this year. No claim of responsibility has been madefor Sunday's attack.
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the big dig. Nowcomesthe big melt. Residents of flood-prone areas around Buffalo should move valuables up from thebasement, packa bag and preparefor the possibility of evacuation as upto 7 feet of melting snow posedthe threat of flooding, Gov. Andrew Cuomowarned Sunday. "Err onthe side of caution," Cuomo said at anewsconference in Cheektowaga. "Youpreparefor the worst and hopefor the best, and that's what we're doing." Temperaturesacross theBuffalo region are expected to approach 60degreestoday.
AfghaniStan SuiCide dumd attaCk — AnAfghanofficial says
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Buffalo flood preparation —Firstcamethe big storm, then
Japan puakeS —Dozensof villagers remained in shelters today as aftershocks rattled aregion in central Japan hit by aweekend earthquakethat injured at least 41peopleanddestroyed morethan50 homes. Thedamage in a mountainous areathat hostedthe1998 Winter Olympics wasworsethan initially thought, though manywere rejoicing at the lack ofany deaths. At least 20people, including one2-year-old, were pulled from homes toppled by the magnitude-6.7 earthquakelate Saturday night. Sevenofthe injured hadbroken bones, manyafter being crushed byheavyfurniture asthey slept on their tatami floors.
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COntrOVerSy iu iStael —In a movelikelyto further inflame tensions with Israel's Arab citizens, the Israeli Cabinet onSundayapproved a bill to legally define thecountry as the nation-state of theJewish people. Thedecision, which set off a stormy debatethat could bring down Prime Minister BenjaminNetanyahu's brittle coalition government, foll owed weeksofdeadlyArab-Jewishviolenceandwasdenouncedby critics as damaging tothe country's democratic character and poorly timed at such acombustible moment. It now headstoward afull parliamentary vote onWednesday. Israel hasalways defined itself as the "Jewish state" — aterm that was contained in thecountry's declaration of independencein1948. Thenew law seeks to codify that status as a "Basic Law," Israel's defacto constitution.
— From wire reports
Evgeniy Maloletka/The Associated Press
A Ukrainian servicemanpatrols Trehizbenkavillage, which is controlled byUkrainian government forces, in the Luhansk region ofeastern Ukraine onSunday.
More than 4,300people havedied in fighting in eastern Ukraineover the past half year,according to U.N. estimates.
Find It All MARION BARRY • 1936 — 2014 Online Ex-D.C.mayorleavescheckered legacy bendbulletin.com
"During his decades in elected his personal demons, leading office in D.C., he put in place to the infamous hotel room arThe Associated Press historic programs to lift work- rest on Jan. 19, 1990. A video WASHINGTON — A coning people out of poverty, ex- of the arrest, which showed troversial and tireless advo- pand opportunity and begin him smoking crack cocaine,
Visit Central Oregon's
HunterDoullas See 100 life sized samples of the latest innovative and stylish Hunter Douglas window fashions!
By Ben Nuckols and Brett Zongker
cate for the nation's capital
to make real the promise of
was widely distributed to the
who created jobs for genera- home rule." tions of black families, Marion Barry was born March 6,
media and made him infamous worldwide.
1936, to Marion and Mattie Federal authorities had trict of Columbia politician, Barry, in the Mississippi delta been investigating him for though his arrest for drug use and was raised in Memphis, years for his alleged ties to in the midst of a crack cocaine Tennessee,after the death of drug suspects. epidemic often overshadows his father, a sharecropper. His arrest and subsequent Barry's work in the civil conviction — a jury deadhis accomplishments. The former four-term may- rights movement brought him locked on most counts, conor will long be remembered to Washington. He was elect- victing him of a single count of for one night in 1990 when he ed to city council in 1974. Four drug possession — was a turnwas caught on video lighting years later,Barry defeated in- ing point for Barry. A six-month term in f eda crack pipe in an FBI sting cumbent Mayor Walter Washoperation. In an instant, the ington in the Democratic pri- eral prison was hardly the then-mayor of the capital city mary and went on to easily end of Barry's political cawas exposed as a drug user win the general election. reer. But it forever changed Barry's early years in office how it was perceived. To himself. Barry, 78, died Sunday at were marked by improvement some, he was a pariah and an the United Medical Center, af- in many city services and a embarrassment. ter having been released from d ramatic expansion of t h e A few m o nths after h i s a hospital a day earlier. His government payroll, creating arrest, longtime civil rights spokeswoman, LaToya Foster, a thriving black middle class advocate and educator Rogsaid he collapsed outside his in the nation's capital. He es- er Wilkins, a past supporter, home. tablished a summer jobs pro- wrote in The Washington Barry died naturally of gram thatgave many young Post: "Marion Barry used the heart problems caused by high people their first work experi- elders and lied to the young. blood pressure, and his kidney ence and earned him political He has manipulated thoudisease was a contributing capital. sands of others with his cynfactor, the D.C. medical examThe city's drug-fueled de- icaluse of charges of racism iner said. Barry had a kidney cline in the 1980s and 1990s to defend his malodorous pertransplant several years ago. mirrored Barry's battles with sonal failures." Barry was the ultimate Dis-
Barry first made a name for
himself in the South as a leader in the civil rights movement and brought his fierce advocacy to D.C. to support the fight to free the city to manage its own city affairs, not Congress. That legacy was remembered Sunday at the White House upon news of Barry's death.
"Marion was born a sharecropper's son, came of age during the Civil Rights movement, and became a fixture in D.C. politics for decades," President Barack Obama said.
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MONDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2014•THE BULLETIN
A3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Monday, Nov. 24, the 328th
day of 2014. Thereare 37days left in the year.
STUDY
NUMBERS
Heading toward
HAPPENINGS
W
Medal of FreedomPresident Barack Obama awards the Presidential Medal of Freedom to, amongothers, Meryl Streep, Stevie Wonder, Ethel Kennedy,TomBrokaw, Isabel Allende andRep.John Dingell.
I
year ever
HISTORY Highlight:In1944, during World War II, U.S. bombers based on Saipanattacked Tokyo in the first raid against the Japanesecapital by landbased planes. In1784, Zachary Taylor, the 12th president of the United States, was born in Orange County, Virginia. In1859, British naturalist Charles Darwin published "On the Origin of Species," which explained his theory of evolution by means of natural selection. In1864, French artist Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec was born in Albi.
In1922, Irish nationalist and author Robert Erskine Childers was executed in Dublin by Free State forces. In1939, British Overseas Airways Corp. was formally established. In1963, Jack Rubyshot and mortally wounded LeeHarvey Oswald, theaccusedassassin of President John F.Kennedy, in a scene captured on live television. In1969, Apollo12 splashed down safely in the Pacific. In1971, a hijacker calling himself "Dan Cooper" (but who became popularly known as "D.B. Cooper") parachuted from a Northwest Orient Airlines 727 over the Pacific Northwest after receiving $200,000 in ransom — his fate remains unknown. In1974, the bone fragments of a 3.2 million-year-old hominid were discovered by scientists in Ethiopia;the skeletal remains werenicknamed "Lucy." In1989, Romanian leader Nicolae Ceausescuwas unanimously re-elected Communist Party chief. (Within a month, he was overthrown in a popular uprising and executed along with his wife, Elena, on Christmas Day.) In1992, a China Southern Airlines Boeing 737 crashed in southern China, killing all141 people on board. Ten years agn:Ukraine's election officials declared that Kremlin-backed Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovych had won Ukraine's bitterly disputed presidential runoff balloting; thousands of opposition supporters demonstrated in Kiev. Popular author Arthur Hailey died in NewProvidence, Bahamas, at age84. Five years agn:President BarackObama played host at the first state dinner of his presidency to visiting Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, an event marred by two gatecrashers, Tareqand Michaele Salahi. Kentucky officials said census worker Bill Sparkman, found bound and hanging from a tree with the word "fed" scrawled across his chest, had in fact committed suicide. One year agn:Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu harshly condemnedthe international community's nuclear deal with Iran, calling it a "historic mistake" and saying he wasnot bound by the agreement. TheVatican publicly unveiled a handful of bone fragments purportedly belonging to St. Peter, the first pope.
BIRTHDAYS Basketball Hall of FamerOscar Robertson is 76. Country singer Johnny Carver is 74. Former NFLCommissioner Paul Tagliabue is 74. Former White House news secretary Marlin Fitzwater is 72. Actress Denise Crosby is 57. Olympic bronze medal figure skater Chen Lu is 38. Actor Colin Hanks is 37. Actress Katherine Heigl is 36. Actress Sarah Hyland is 24. — From wire reports
By Seth Borenstein
By Seth Borenstein
The Associated Press
W ASHINGTON — A
The Associated Press
key
WASHINGTON — Despite a bitter U.S. cold snap,
polar bear population fell nearly by half in the past decade, a new U.S.-Canada study found, with scientists seeing a dramatic increase in young cubs starving and dying. Researchers chiefly blame shrinking sea ice from global warmmg. Scientists fromthe U.S. Geological Survey and Environm ent Canada captured,tagged and released polar bears in the
the globe is rushing hellbent toward its w armest year on record with last m onth setting t h e f i f t h
monthly heat record of year. The National O ceanic
and Atmospheric Administration announced Thursday that last month was the
hottest October on record worldwide. The 58.43 degrees Fahrenheit beat out
October 2003. "It is becoming pretty
southern Beaufort Sea from
2001 to 2010. The bear population shrank to about 900 in
clear that 2014 will end up
as the warmest year on record," said Deke Arndt, cli-
2010, down from about 1,600
in 2004. That area is one of two main U.S. polar bear regions.
mate monitoring chief for NOAA's National Climatic Data Center in Asheville, North Carolina. "The re-
"These estimates suggest to
me that the habitat is getting less stable for polar bears,"
said study lead author Jeff Bromaghin, a USGS statistician. Wildlife biologist Steve A mstrup, wh o
maining question is: How much?" With only two months
g'i ., p
s t arted t h e
study for the USGS and left to become chief scientist at the
conservation group Polar Bear International, said his early research in the 1980s found about 1,800 polar bears in the
U.S. Geological Survey via TheAssociated Press file photo
Steve Amstrup holds triplet polar bear cubs in Prudhoe Bay, Alaska, in 2005. A new U.S.-Canada study says a key polar bear population fell nearly in half in the past decade, with scientists seeing a dramatic
increase in youngcubs dying. Researchers chiefly blame shrinking sea ice from global warming.
far this year, the world is avand 2007 survived.Normally
region.
about half of cubs live. "We suspect that they are ly different by the late 1990s, dying of starvation," Broearly 2000s," said Amstrup, maghin said. "The habitat was profound-
a co-author o f t h e s t u d y
in the j ournal Ecological Applications. Bromaghin said only two of 80 polar bear cubs the team tracked between 2004
left in the year, 2014 has now surged ahead as the globe's warmest year so far, beating 2010 and 1998. So
In this part of the Arctic, there usedto be more sea ice in the summer; that's where
starved, he said.
Arctic summer sea ice had been declining since the late
cause sea ice shrank to a low scientists had not expected or seen before.Sea ice levels
1970s but "we've seen over dropped even lower in 2012 the past decade, decade-and- and have recovered a tad since. "There is definitely a relaa-half, the rate of decline has really accelerated," said Mark
tionship here between what's
Serreze, director of the Nation- happening to the bears and seals lived, and seals are what al Snow and Ice Data Center what's happening to the ice,"
bears ate. With limited access
in Colorado. And 2007 was "a
to the seals, the cubs probably
wake-up call" for scientists be- of the study.
said Serreze, who wasn't part
eraging 58.62 degrees. If the last two months of the year are only average for the 21st century, it will still be the warmest year ever, Arndt sard.
He said this year's heat is what scientists expect from man-made global warming. Scientists say the burning of coal, oil and gas traps heats, changing the climate.
Study suggestsgenetic link for malehomosexuality By Lindsey Tanner The Associated Press
CHICAGO — A large study of gay brothers adds to evidence that genes infl uence men's chances of being homosexual, but the results aren't
strong enough to prove it. Some scientists believe several genes might affect sexual orientation. Researchers who led the new study of nearly 800 gay brothers say their results bolster previous evidence pointing to genes on the X chromosome.
They also found evidence of influence from a gene or genes
Orlin Wagner/The Associated Pressfile photo
on a different chromosome.
Mauricio Cabrera, above,andhis
But the study doesn't identify which of hundreds of genes located in either place might be involved. Smaller studies seeking ge-
brother, Julio, not pictured, are among almost 800 gay brothers nationwide who donated blood or saliva to help scientists
netic links to homosexuality
search for genetic cluesabout the origin of homosexuality.
have had mixed results. The new evidence "is not
proof but it's a pretty good in- blood or saliva samples from dication" that genes on the two participants. chromosomes have some influence over sexual orientation,
Chromosome X is one of two
human sex chromosomes; the
said Dr. Alan Sanders, the lead other is chromosome Y, presauthor. He studies behavioral genetics at NorthShore Univer-
sity HealthSystem Research Institute in Evanston, Illinois. Experts not involved in the
ent only in men.
The study authors note that animal research suggests a gene located in one region of chromosome X may contribute
study were more skeptical. to some sexual behavior; it's Neil Risch, a genetics expert one of the same regions cited in at the University of California, the new study. San Francisco, said the data Specific causes of homoare statistically too weak to sexuality are unknown. Some demonstrate any genetic link. scientists think social, cultural, Risch was involved in a small- family and biological factors er study that found no link are involved, while some relibetween male homosexuality gious groups consider it an imand chromosome X. moral choice. Dr. Robert Green, a medical Study participant Dr. Chad geneticist at Harvard Medical Zawitz, a Chicago physician, School, called the new study called the research "a giant "intriguing but not in any way step forward" toward answerconclusive." ing scientific questions about The work was published last homosexuality and helping week by the journal Psycho- reduce the stigma gays often logical Medicine. The National face. Institutes of Health paid for the Being gay "is sort of like research. having certain eye color or The researchers say they skin color — it's just who you found potential links to male
are," Zawitz said."Mosthetero-
homosexuality in a portion of chromosome X and on
to be heterosexual. It's puz-
chromosome 8, based on an
analysis of genetic material in
sexuals I know didn't choose zling to me why people don't understand."
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Call 800-801-8765 or visit sunriver-resort.com to book your stay! Use promo code: LOCALS "Must show Deschutes county drivers license upon checkin. Valid for stays before December 25, 2014. Restrictions may apply.
I
T ube
U®
A4
THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2014
Housing Continued fromA1 The art, Rankin said, lies in
the inherent guesswork of predicting future needs, while the science comes from the way the
guessingwas informedbymodelsbased on avariety offactors. Some of the variables the city
examined inciude past trends, demographic preferences and population projections. However, there is no single way to combine those factors, and the city was able to produce multi-
ple projections for the needed housing mix. The residential technical ad-
visory committee, a group of volunteers studying the housing mix, initially supported backing a mix that called for 60 percent new single-family homes. That idea, however, en-
countered the political reality of Oregon's land use laws. At a
"The problem is, it's
up to the developer to actually build
something. The city has little power
to determine how developers work. ... We can change market produce the needed housing, but we really can't make anything happen.
say news organizations have produced a warped portrait of Ferguson, a small city with middle-class homes and a historic shopping district.
That's why we need
to make sure what we propose is supported by the market." — Brian Rankin,
Bend's principal planner
need for apartments is less
severe than for single-family homes. As Rankin pointed out, "A person who can afford a sin-
saying. recently proposed apartment Andy High, a vice president complex off Southwest Sumfor the Central Oregon Build- mer Lake Place has led to resiers Association and a member dents organizing in opposition, of the residential committee, claiming the development will saidhe believed trend onewas createmore traffi c and change the better option, but because the feel of the neighborhood. of the dire need to expand the On Northwest Steidl Road, urban growth boundary, he a small street by th e Portbacked trend two. land Avenue bridge with sin"There's an extreme land gle-family homes, neighbors shortage in Central Oregon," fought the building of a triplex High said last week. "If we for fiveyears, bringingthe case don't do anything, we're just to the Oregon Land Use Board going to see land prices rise. of Appeals multiple times. "We're not changing this The reason I supported trend two is because it will likely city into a bunch of tenements," pass. I think the other way, the Snyder said. "That's absurd, 60 percent way, would have but that's the way many folks betterreflected what our com- have reacted to this. They just munity is actually like." see these big, ugly apartment complexes. One, they don't The two trends need to be big, and two, they If trend one and trend two don't need to be ugly. They were both built out, it would be can be perfectly attractive, hard to tell which was which and they can be duplexes, from a bird's-eye view. If trend triplexes, condominiums or one became areality,by 2028, townhouses." trend two, the number would
be 34,799, a gap of 834. Even compared with the original proposal, which called for 65 percent single-family, trend two is only off by 1,668, while the number of m ultifamily units increases by 333 to 13,223.
R ankin m ade t h e p o i nt that in Old Bend, one of the
city's more expensive neighborhoods, multifamily homes exist on streets dominated by large single-family homes. "We're not t alking about
anything new here," he said. "In the city's most historic neighborhood, you can see these buildings right across
Tom Kemper, the executive from some of the most valudirector of Housing Works, able single-family homes in the the region's housing authority, city." and a member of the residential committee, said he didn't
Rankin pointed to a stretch of Northwest Broadway, where
feel there was enough evidence a series of lots have multiple pointing toward either option. units. And on Northwest Riv"It felt like it was just, 'Do erside, right across from Drake you want door A or door B?'" Park, what looks like a sinKemper said in October. "It's gle-family home is actually diall a matter of degree between vided into multiple apartments. "Density can fit in these the two, but the interesting thing about it is that it is a substantial departure fromthehis-
neighborhoods without affect-
toric trend, which makes a lot
ing livability, you already see that across the city," he said.
of people nervous. I think the
To help new development
speed with which we're doing shift toward apartments and this makes me nervous." townhouses, the city is considSid Snyder, a retired soft- ering changes to its code. The ware developer on the residen- ideas range from creating intial committee, said Friday he centives for such developments believed the city could have
with smaller fees to allowing
gone even further away from more flexibility in how close single-family homes. a building can come to the "There's this one view that sidewalk. The city could also we know what people want, set more strict requirements because we have the historical for densityin areas across data to show what people have the city, making it impossibought," Snyder said. "I don't ble to build large single-famagree with that. What people ily homes in places prime for bought can also simply be a redevelopment. "The problem is, it's up to reflection of what was available. If you need a roof over the developer to actually build your head, you may not like something," Rankin said. "The it, but you have to take what's city has little power to deteravailable." mine how developers work. Supporting the idea that fu- They interpret demand and ture development should em- risk and the code and profit, brace more apartments and townhouses is the observa-
They're worried, too, that
reporters are here to document the next round of violence, if there is one, not the underlying problems. "Riot porn" is w hat D emocratic committee member Patricia
Jahi Chikwendiu/The Washington Post
Bynes called it, referring to Protesters stage a mock lynching outside a St. Louis courthouse last week. Media attention has images of young black men been nonstop since the fatal shooting of Michael Brown in nearby Ferguson, Missouri. them to guard their faces from tear gas. Bynes rejected any characterization of Ferguson as a failed community. "You aren't seeing this city if you think this is a ghetto," Bynes said. "And you are missing the story, which is that this
could happen anywhere, including the suburbs."
the aftermath of the shoot-
rate is less than I percent while
by the market." many of those lucky enough to — Reporter: 541-633-2160, have an apartment have expetleeds@bendbulletin.com
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reporters and crew members
ulars want to avoid the neigh-
ing. The St. Louis Post-Dis- borhood where the shooting patch noted rather pointedly occurred until things calm this week that the property down. The boards covering damage stands at $5 million the windows and the news— one-24th as much as that people often hovering out-
here. The Post has four re-
from a hailstorm two years
side, he added, don't neces-
porters, one photojournalist and one videographer. Some nights in Ferguson, media employees outnumber protesters. There are 166 reporters
ago. The newspaper also referred to The Washington
sarily help.
and editors on an email list
Post's description of Fergu-
"It's a Catch-22," he said. "You want justice, and you
who have asked the St. Louis County prosecutor to notify them directly when the grand jury has reached a decision. "A media circus," said David
son as a "burned-out symbol want people to have their of racial and class divisions voices be heard. But I also The grand jury, after a in America." But only one need to pay my bills." weekend pause, could meet building has burned. Derek Shaeffer, 55, a con"A lot of the press corps is crete laborer who has paragain as early as today to discuss the case of Darren looking for that kind of (vio- ticipated in protests, said, "I Wilson, the officer, who has lent) action, and that is con- don't mind having you guys not spoken publicly since the tributing to the nonstop nar- around." shooting. CNN anchors Don rative of expecting violence," Shaeffer explained: "There Lemon and Anderson Coo- said Mervyn Marcano, a might be more harassment per both revealed Sunday on communications s t r ategist and beatings if the cameras
Awaiting the decision
Twitter that they had met secretly with Wilson to solicit
who works for several St.
Carson, a Post-Dispatch pho-
tographer. "When I was driving down West Florissant the other day, I saw three or four
people being interviewed in the span of a half-mile." Carson said he has experienced the deep suspicion that
went away. Our focus should
the community feels about the
Cooper after the anchor acknowledged "meeting briefly" with Wilson. No matter what happens after the grand jury decision,
Louis grass-roots organiza- be keeping you guys around. media. On Sept. 23, he arrived tions. "I think that actually If the cameras had been here at the spot where Brown was undermines the communiinitially, M ichael B r own killed — where a memorial of ty-building work people are wouldn't be dead." candlesand stuffed animals trying to do here." Because of th e m edia had been erected — to take frenzy in Ferguson, many pictures of another potential A complicated relationship residents — even those with crime scene. Many reporters and Ferno direct connection to the Part of the memorial had guson residents say a com- shooting — have given mul- caught fire — accidentally or p licated r e l ationship h a s tiple i nterviews. Charles deliberately — opening fresh formed since the shooting in Davis, who bought the Fer- wounds among residents on August. Some restaurants guson Burger Bar one day Canfield Avenue. "Some peoplecame at me have benefited financially before the shooting, has told from the droves of hungry some version of his story to and told me to delete the picreporters. Other business- The Washington Post, USA tures on my camera," Carson es, such as barbershops and Today, CBS, B l oomberg said. "... They said, 'You guys dollar stores, say the media Businessweek, CNN and Al are just down here being vulpresence has at times em- Jazeera America. On a more tures.' I said, 'No, I've been b oldened protesters to b e disturbing note, several days down here since the first day.'" more violent, forcing owners ago, a passenger van nearing Carson said some residents to board their windows and a protest er-erected barricade and protesters, who had seen costing them business. was swarmed by camera- him working for weeks to Barber Thomas Bradley men, who turned into a bar- document the community's
many feel the w all-to-wall
estimates that he has lost 80
an exclusive interview. Several other networks and channels are in the running, said CNN's Brian Stelter, who first
reported the off-the-record negotiations. A Wilson interview would
provide a missing version of events that led to the shoot-
ing, but th e
n egotiations
themselves are noteworthy,
given how tightly Wilson's whereabouts and activities have been kept under wraps. So, "literally only journalists know where (Wilson) is at?" one Twitter user asked
ricade that prevented the van
response to Brown's shoot-
coverage has overplayed percent of his business, in from backing out. the extent of misbehavior in large part because many regCNN has several dozen
ing, vouched for him, and the crowd backed off.
~+ccoolsculpting
Plan H orton said that in t h e mid-1960s the utility trans-
Horton s ai d b e cause are being planned for early P acifiCorp would b e a January. partner in the larger plan — Reporter: 541-383-0387, for the area, and because shammers@bendbullet in.com the plan would allow the
ferred the property to the
utility to walk away from
city — at that time, parks
the 100-year-old dam, he doesn't expect the deed
Continued fromA1
were a department of the city — with the condition it be used as a park. When
the city parks department was dissolved and the park
r estrictions
will
be
an
obstacle. "Usually they're not so r estrictive yo u
around it," he said.
propertywas transferred to the newly created district.
Horton and others with the ad hoc committee were
Horton said the district
inside
LE F F E L GE N T E R 0
8
,
www.lcffclccnter.com '541-388-3006
I
~ lelt+
M AG A Z Bilm
••
48
Don't s etttefor anyone but apl c uticsurgeon for Coolsculp6ng
s ~re kere! Step up
to Bosch!
TheBulletm
Stainless steel Supeior deaning
c a n' t g e t
district created in 1974, the
has found ways to sell land with similar deed restric-
Weekly Arts & Enfertainmenf
&uei!!!
meeting with PacifiCorp offici als Friday afternoon
HNsoN
for additional discussions of
TV.APPLIANCE
the committee's proposal. schutes County gave the The park district will be district to construct a park hosting two public meetings was sold, Horton said, when to discuss the plan Dec. 4 at the county agreed to waive the park district's offices at tions in the past. Land De-
the deed restrictions as long as the sale proceeds were
used on a different park.
799 SW Columbia St.,one
at noon and one at 5:30 p.m. Two more public meetings •
•
•
•
•
•
~
•
•
•
•
and then decide what to do.
We can change policies to help tion that younger generations the market produce the needprefer these housing styles ed housing, but we really can't over traditional homes with a make anything happen. That's fenced-in yard. There's also the why we need to make sure fact that Bend's rental vacancy what we propose is supported
(Dodges 8 Angels)
en't taken part in the protests,
with their shirts off, using
r ep r esentative multifamily developments. A
tal single-family homes. With
~a
'i'
gle-family home can also get ter chance of being approved an apartment, but the opposite by the state. is not always true." "Of the two presented, trend Nonetheless, Bend residents two is better," Rankin recalled haven't always w e lcomed
the city would have 35,633 to-
il» '1'tll'
ric,tl
policies to help the
one and trend two — had a bet-
DLCD
have welcomed the increased scrutiny, saying that a media presence helps expose systemic, race-related problems
1,
rienced rising rents. representative of th e state's It has also been argued that Department of Land Conser- the risk of overestimating the
the
Many residents, business owners and elected officials
justice system. But others, particularly those who hav-
r e sidential commit-
percentor55 percentoptionknown respecti vely as trend
Continued fromA1
in the police force and the
tee meeting in late August, a vation and Development was asked if he t hought the 60
Ferguson
SEASGN OF STYLE e ven t
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MONDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2014•THE BULLETIN
CIVIC CALENDAR TODAY
Deschutes County Commission — The county commissioners are scheduled to hold a regular business meeting at10 a.m. at the Deschutes Services Building, 1300 NWWall St., in Bend. Theboard will consider a number of petitions and set hearing dates for annexations of land into the Deschutes County Rural Fire Protection District No. 2.
Bend Planning
REDMOND
A5
STATE NEWS
tri cu s ootin investi ate • Police release few details about incident By Ted Shorack The Bulletin
Redmond Police are continuing to investigate a shooting that occurred early Sunday morning at a strip club, leaving one person injured. The person, who police are not identifying, was taken from Big T's in downtown
Eugene
Chambers said detectives
burned car. The cause of death
are involved in the ongoing investigation. The incident oc-
was likely from carbon monoxide poisoning and smoke
that are not life-threatening, according to Sgt. Curtis Chambers. A suspect was identified
curred at about I:30 a.m. at 413 SW Glacier Ave. in Redmond.
inhalation, officials said.
Eugene —Twotop
and taken into custody by
released today. The incident adds to an alreadybusy month forRedmond Police. The shooting comes on the heels of two re-
Redmond Police were called Nov. 16 to locate a 19-year-old woman who had gone missing overnight. The woman was found in the early morning in a Central Oregon Irrigation
brain researchers are leaving the University of Oregon for the University of Chicago,A6
police. Few details are being released because the investigation is ongoing, Chambers said. "Releasing of details would
Additional details about the shooting are expected to be
Redmond to a hospital and
hamper the investigation at
cent deaths in Redmond. On Nov. 14, a 21-year-old
then released with injuries
this time," Chambers said.
man was found dead in a
District canal. Her death is be-
lieved to be from hypothermia related to exposure. — Reporter: 541-617-7820, tshorack@bendbulletin.com
Have a story idea or submission? Contact us!
The Bulletin
Commlssloll —Planning commissioners are scheduled to meet at 5:30 p.m. at City Hall,
Call a reporter Bend ......................541-633-2160 Redmond...............541-617-7831 Sisters....................541-617-7831 La Pine...................541-617-7831 Sunriver .................541-617-7831 Deschutes.............541-617-7820 Crook.....................541-617-7831 Jefferson...............541-617-7831 Salem ..................406-589-4347 D.c....................... 202-662-7456 Business...............541-617-7815 Education..............541-617-7831 Health...................541-383-0304 Public lands..........541-617-7812 Public safety.........541-383-0376
710 NW Wall St. The
agenda includes continued public hearings to receive comments on the Stormwater Public Facility Plan and the Collection System Public Facility Plan.
HIGH DESERT MUSEUM SCIENCE PARTY
TUESDAY
RedmondCity
Councii —The
Submissions • Letters and opinions:
/4
council is set to meet at 6:30 p.m. at Council Chambers, 777 SWDeschutes Ave. Theagenda includes a presentation about earthquakes and a public hearing on an ordinance amending the city's comprehensive plan to add achapter on livability.
Email: jetters©bendbuljetin.com Maik My Nickel's Worth or In MyView P.O.Box6020 Bend, OR 97708 Details ontheEditorials page inside. Contact: 541-383-0358
• Civic Calendarnotices: Email eventinformation to news@bendbulletin.com,with "Civic Calendar" inthe subject, and include acontact name
and phonenumber. Contact: 541-383-0354
WEDNESDAY
• Schoolnews andnotes:
Alfalfa Fire District board of directors — The board of directors for the Alfalfa Fire District is scheduled to hold a regular business meeting at 6 p.m. at the Alfalfa Community Hall, 26155 Willard Road, Alfalfa. The agenda includes discussions about the search for a fire chief, code of ethics training and optional funding sources.
JfI
Email newsitemsand notlces of generallnterest to newsObendbulletin.com. Email announcementsof teens' academic achievements toyouth@bendbujjetin.com. Email collegenotes, military graduationsandreunion infoto bujjetin@bendbujjetin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358
"va"ak
• Obituaries, DeathNotices: Details onthe Obituaries page inside. Contact: 541-617-7825, obitsctbendbujletin.com
• Community events:
Contact:541-383-0354,
news©bendbuuetin.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.
EVENT CALENDAR
Photos by Meg Roussos/The Bulletin
Erica Pelley, associate curator of education, center, helps Meg Wheary, 9, of Bend, use a leaf blower to demonstrate flight during the
"Winged Wonders" science party at the High Desert Museum onSunday.
The Milestonespagepublishes Sunday in Community Life. Contact: 541-633-2117 r
hour program. "We decided that we want-
The Bulletin
TODAY JEFF BRIDGES6THE ABIDERS: Thefamous film actor performs withhis country band, with Jessie Bridges; $56.50-$73.50 plus fees; 6 p.m.SOLD OUT, and 9p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre. org or 541-317-0700. "STAR CROSS'D JAMMERS":Film screening for LGBTStars and Rainbow Movie Night; $5; 6:30 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70SW Century Drive, Bend;www. ladyvalorfilm.com or 541-323-1881. "QUEENROCK MONTREAL1981":A
• Births, engagements, marriages, partnerships, anniversaries:
• Wildlife incorporated into science party program demonstrationsfor first time By Ted Shorack High Desert Museum staffhosted a few "science parties" over the weekend,
giving families an interactive look at how planes, birds and insects fly. The event drew about 60 people to Sunday's morning show, where volunteers got
to experience firsthand the principles of flight. In the past, the museum
has held the Science Party program to discuss electricity, matter, heat and ice, and
force. This year's "Winged Wonders" is the first to incorporate wildlife into the half-
ed to do something a little bit
o'
Well shot!
different than we have in the past," said Carolyn Nesbitt,
r t
curator for education. Since
r < > r
Reader photos
4
birds tie in with the princi-
ples of flight, she said, "We thought it would be a great combination."
Dressed as an airline captain and bee, Nesbitt and Nickie Braesel touched on
lift, drag, thrust and gravity while providing examples and finding volunteers to demonstrate the concepts.
Some of the demonstrations included using a hair dryer to make a pingpong
Email events to communitylife@ bendbulletin.com orclick on "Submitan Event"onlineat bendbulletin.com.Details onthe calendarpageinside. Contact: 541-383-0351
A raptor was part of a demonstration during the "WingedWonders" science party. ball hover in the air and demonstrate lift. They also
with hands-on activities and interactives ... the science
showed it on a larger scale with a bigger round ball and
concepts with a fun and inviting show that everyone can
leaf blower. "What we try to do is teach
come to," said Nesbitt.
SeeScience party/A6
Send us your best outdoor photos at C3bendboiietin.com/ readerphotos.Your entries will appear online, and we'll choose the best for publication in the Outdoors section. Submission requirements: Include as much detail as
possible — when and where you took a photo, any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and contact info. Photos selected for print must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.
Queenconcert recorded live at Montreal's Forum in1981 and remastered; $12.50; 7 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8( IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. LORD DYING: The Portland sludge-metal band performs, with Castle, Shovelbelt, The Beerslayers, Gravewitch and Dinirium; $5; 7 p.m.; Third Street Pub, 314SEThird St., Bend; 541-306-3017. TUESDAY "ATOMBWITHAVIEW": A darkcomedic playabout a family that inherits a
large fortune;$5;7 p.m.;
NATURALHISTORY PUB:BobBoyd, local historian, will discuss "Over There:TheAmerican Doughboy in WWI"; free, registration requested; 7 p.m., doors open at5:30 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 NW Bond St., Bend;www. highdesertmuseum.org/ rsvp or 541-382-5174. WEDNESDAY THETRAILRUNNING FILM FESTIVAL: Showcasing avariety of different trail running films; $15; 6 p.m., doors openat 5 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.trailfilmfest. com or 541-323-1881.
Mountain View High School, 2755 NE 27th St., ACOUSTA NOIR:The Bend; www.bend.k12.or.us Roseburg folk-blues or 541-355-4401. musician performs; free;
9:30 p.m.; Dojo, 852 NW Brooks St., Bend; www.dojobend.com or 541-706-9091. THURSDAY I LIKE PIETHANKSGIVING DAY FUNWALK/RUN: Runorwalk2K,5K,10K or10 miles andeat pie, with a baking contest; online registration closes Nov. 26; $5and a 5-pound food donation for Neighborlmpact suggested, registration requested; 9 a.m., shirt pick-up and registration at 8 a.m.; Riverfront Plaza, 875 NW Brooks St., Bend; www.footzonebend.com or 541-317-3568. THANKSGIVING DONATIONMAT CLASS: A Pilates class to benefit the Bethlehem Inn; free,
donations accepted, registration requested; 1011 a.mJ BendPilates,155 SW Century Drive, Suite 104; www.bendpilates.net or 541-647-0876. THANKSGIVING WITH FRIENDS:Full Thanksgiving dinner for those in the areawho have no one to celebrate with; free, registration required; 5-7 p.m.; Epikos Community Center, 222 Reed Market Road, Bend; andy©epikoscommunity . com or 541-610-8318. FRIDAY BEND INDOORSWAP MEET:Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend Indoor
Swap Meet, 679 SE Third St.; 541-317-4847. RAKU POTTERYSHOW AND SALE:Featuring works by local potters of Central Oregon, plus jewelry and scarves; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; The Environmental Center, 16 NW KansasAve., Bend; www.envirocenter.org or 541-410-5943. WONDERLAND EXPRESS AUCTION: A silent auction of unique creations; proceeds benefit Wonderland Express; free admission; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Sunriver Resort Great Hall, 17600 Center Drive; www. wonderlandexpress.com. SANTALANDAT THE OLD MILL DISTRICT: Take a photo with Santa, children's activities, Tree
of Joy and more; free admission, additional cost for take-home photos, $5 donation for children's activities; 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; SantaLand, 330 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. CARRIAGERIDES IN THE OLD MILL DISTRICT: Ride in the Cowboy Carriage, located between Ben & Jerry'sand Francesca's; proceeds benefit the KIDSCenter; weather dependent; donations accepted; 2-5 p.m.; Ben & Jerry's, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. GRAND ILLUMINATION AND HOLIDAY FESTIVITIES:Featuring a petting zoo, face painting, live entertainment and more, with a holiday
lighting ceremony at 7 p.m.; 3-8 p.m.; Sunriver Resort,17600 Center Drive; www. sunriver-resort.com or 541-593-1000. SISTERSCHRISTMAS TREE LIGHTING CEREMONY:Featuring the lighting of the holiday tree, carols, a"cookie crawl" and more; 5:306:30 p.m.; Village Green Park, 335 S. ElmSt.; www.sisterscountry.com, jeri@sisterscountry.com or 541-549-0251. "NATIONALLAMPOON'S CHRISTMAS VACATION": A showing of the classic holiday film, with a pre-show ugly sweater contest; $12 plus fees; 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.
org or 541-317-0700. SATURDAY BEND INDOORSWAP MEET: Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 SE Third St.; 541-317-4847. RAKU POTTERYSHOW AND SALE: Featuring works by local potters of Central Oregon, plus jewelry and scarves; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; The Environmental Center, 16 NW KansasAve., Bend;
www.envirocenter.orgor 541-410-5943. Contact: 541-383-0351, communitylife@bendbulletin.com or "Submit an Event" online at www.bendbulletin.com. Entries must be submitted at least 10 days before publication.
Ae
THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2014
OREGON NEWS
Top brain researchers leave UO for University of Chicago Associated Press EUGENE — Two top brain researchers are leaving the
University of Oregon and taking their labs and research grants to the University of
"At a really excellent place (such asUO), where the money is tight, you serve as college football does for the NFL. Wejust hope that this doesn't happen too often."
Chicago. The move is a setback for a
— Ulrich Mayr, psychology department head
university that is trying to re-
cruit top talent. Professors Ed Awh and Ed Vogel have been NFL," Mayr said. "We just central to a hiring effort the hope that this doesn't happen UO was pursuing. too often." It's not uncommon for elite Awh and V ogel w ere universities to hire top r ethe heart of a "Neurons to searchers away from other Minds" cluster-of-excellence schools, and UO is downplay- hiring proposal the UO was ing the significance of the re- pursuing. The UO selected 10 searchers' departure. of its top research efforts"Brain research is very mostly in the sciences — and broad here at the University hoped to raise millions of of Oregon. Our Institute of dollars for each to hire addiNeuroscience will still have about 17 people even after
the two Eds leave. That's a very, very powerful group of researchers," said Brad Shelton, interim vice president for research and innovation.
The UO made an "aggressive counteroffer," but it's difficult for a public school to compete with an elite uni-
versity with a robust endowment, psychology department head Ulrich Mayr said.
said. "It's on hold and will be revised later once we have regrouped." Mayr hopes to start the search for a couple of new
Using hair dryers and pingpong balls, Owen Lewis, 9, left, and Alden Cid, 7, help demonstrate during
neuroscientists soon. "Peo-
a lesson on the principles of flight at the High Desert Museum's "Winged Wonders" science party
ple like to come to Oregon, so I do expect to get good
Sunday.
candidates," he said.
"We have also been very successful in the past in
Science party
terms of keeping stars in our
Continued from A5 Braesel, an associate cura-
ranks without them leaving.
tional faculty.
The clusters will t a ke You have to fight for that. We the UO from good to great, have been able to win that Chuck Lillis, president of the fight," Mayr said. UO board of trustees, told Shelton, meanwhile, said faculty in a meeting earlier he knows of no other retenthis week. tion threats that would derail To pursue the neurosci- another cluster proposal, but ence cluster now, UO would he wouldn't be surprised if have to hire two senior re- new challenges arise. "There are always groups searchers who are working on the cusp of discovery and people on the verge of to replace Awh and Vogel being poached when you — plus two more senior re- have really good people," he searchers and junior facul- said. "We have a lot of really, ty to round out the cluster. really good researchers here. "I don't think our cluster We worry about this all the
"At a really excellent place (such as UO), where the money is tight, you serve as college football does for the is dead at this point," Mayr
Meg Roussos/The Bulletin
Shows w i l l con t i nue "It's great for kids at 5 through this week twice a day years (old) all the way up to at 11:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m..
adults," Nesbitt said.
The same show will be of-
tor of wildlife, brought out a
— Reporter: 541-617-7820, tshorack@bendbulletin.com
fered at the end of December.
horned owl and a peregrine falcon for the audience to observe as the program began to focus on the different wing types for birds. Braesel pointed out that the falcon's wings
are meant for fast dives, but do not allow the bird of prey to glide. The audience also got to see how insects with four wings can hover and maneuver when Nesbitt got out a miniature quadcopter from
l
««trI«SIS«i
®VEH' ®®®
D's Hobbies in Bend. Nesbitt
flew the remote-controlled quadcopter around the room
time."
for the audience to see while
Braesel spoke about the way insects move their wings.
AROUND THESTATE RhadeS Schelet' — An Oregonian attending the University of Puget Sound in Tacoma, Washington, has been selected for a prestigiousRhodes scholarship.TheRhodes Trust announced Sunday that William Rathje, of Lake Oswego,was among 32 Americans selectedfor the scholarship. Rathje is asenior at Puget Sound studying computer scienceand English literature. He co-founded a literary magazine for newplays, hasdevelopedfouriPhoneappsandcomposed a full-length musical that was performed in Portland. Rhodes scholarships provide all expensesfor students to study up to four years at the University of Oxford in England. Rathje plans to earn amaster's degree in computer science beginning next fall.
suspects are14 years old, the other is13. They were turned over to the custody of the Clackamas County Juvenile Department. The sheriff's office said one teen climbed onto the roof and entered the school, then let the others in.
"What we try to do is teach with handson activities and
Plea dargaill —A mandescribed by his
with a fun and inviting show that everyone
lawyer as suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder and off his medications in October has pleaded guilty to a string of arsons around the Linn County town Scio. The plea bargain on arson and criminal mischief charges means a suspended sentence for 29-year-old Zachary Lee Burghart. A prosecutor cited his lack of a criminal record. Two barns burned, and one was destroyed, along with a pickup, a Lincoln Town Car POliCe ChaSe —Authorities detained two teenagers who allegedly broke into aWilsonville ele- and $15,000 worth of hay. Defense lawyer James Huffman says Burghart got off medication when mentary school and stole property. TheClackamas County Sheriff's Office said deputies responded to he tried to transfer his treatment from Portland an alarm from Boones Ferry Primary School Friday to Salem. Huffman says Burghart was injured in evening and spotted four teens leaving. The teens the Navy and declared disabled. Authorities said Burghart was staying with family members in the ran, but police chased themand caught up with all four. They were carrying the stolen property, area of the fires. — From wire reports which authorities have not identified. Three of the
interactives ... the science concepts
O i%LY 10 AVAILAS L E ~ . 'OFliElt OKI.Y VALII) OX BI.ACK I'ltlllAY
can come to."
Opening on Black Friday at 10:00 a.m.
— Carolyn Nesbitt, High Desert Museum curator for education
SGQ~Q&00$
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Iran
just between Iran and us but the relationship between Iran
agreement that we think we
Continued from A1
and the world, and the region, begins to change,"Obama
Republican and even some Democratic lawmakers have
Secretary of State John Ker-
ry raised the idea of extending said Sunday in an interview the talks in a meeting Sunday on ABC. night with Mohammad Javad The decision of when and Zarif, Iran's foreign minister. u nder w ha t c o n ditions t o It was not clear whether a doc- agree to a negotiating extenument detailing new points of sion has been a highly delicate convergence would be issued one for the Obama adminis-
can have." warned that they would press for additional sanctions if the
American negotiators did not emerge from the latest round of talks with provisions that
toughened the
t emporary
agreement. That agreement
freezes much of Iran's nuclear program and is set to expire "Our focus remains on tak- negotiators for the two sides this evening. ing steps forward toward an have spent months drafting The Obama administration agreement, but it's only nat- and which are now waiting for already agreed to one extenural that just over 24 hours political decisions from Iran's sion in July, which it justified from the deadline, we are dis- supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali on the grounds that sufficient cussing a range of options," Khamenei, and Obama. progress had been made to said a senior State DepartBut given the failure to warrant continuing the talks ment official, who spoke on close the wide gap that re- until today, the anniversary the condition of anonymity to mains, neither leader seems of an agreement for a tempodiscuss internal deliberations. inclined to end the negotia- rary accord that froze some of "An extension is one of those tions — or to declare failure. Iran's advances and required options. It should come as no The Iranians have reportedly Iran to dilute a stockpile of surprise that we are also en- declined to agree to disman- fuel that t h e W est f e ared gaged in a discussion of the tle a significant number of could quickly be converted to options with the Iranians." their centrifuges — the ma- weapons use. Earlier on Sunday, Presi- chines that enrich uranium A breakdown in talks, U.S. dent Barack Obama said that at supersonic speed — just as and Iranian officials seem the gaps in the negotiations Obama has refused to end the to agree, is in neither side's were still "significant." sanctions by a specific date, interest. Obama appeared to rule until he can measure Iran's Any extension that might out giving in to one of Iran's compliance. be agreed to would presumcentral demands: that as part And other issues are in dis- ably keep in place the freeze of any final deal, the United pute. One is how many years on much of Iran's nuclear States and its partners lift, an agreement would last be- program and could be cited quickly and permanently, all fore Iran would be free, like by the White House to make the nuclear-related sanctions any other signer of the Nucle- the caseto Congress against against Iran. " I think I r a n ar Nonproliferation Treaty, additional sanctions. It would would love to see the sanc- to develop as large a civilian also enable the United States tions end immediately, and nuclear infrastructure as it to argue to Prime Minister then to still have some ave- would like. Another is what Benjamin Netanyahu of Isranues that might not be com- kind of freedom inspectors el — whom Kerry called on pletely closed, and we can't do would have to visit any loca- Saturday — that there is no that," Obama said, referring tion where they suspect nu- need for military action beto avenues for producing a nu- clear-related work might be cause Iran's nuclear threat is clear weapon. underway. less than it was a year ago. But he also held out hope For weeks, the American But the temporary accord that an agreement, if it could team has sought to keep the was never envisioned to be be struck, would change the pressure on the Iranians to permanent. And in Tehran, nature of th e r elationship make hard decisions in the where the issue is whether with Iran for the first time in talks by insisting that an ex- negotiators can win an end more than three decades. tension was not on the table. to the economic sanctions, "What a deal would do," "We are not talking about an an extension would probably he said, "is take a big piece extension," Kerry insisted as not allow Iran to sell more oil of business off the table and recently as Thursday. "We on international markets or perhaps begin a long process are driving towards what we resume normal banking relatoday in return for an extension in the talks.
in which the relationship not
tration. It would like to lock in many areas of agreement that
believe is the outline of an
tionships with the West.
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THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2014
A a nistan uiet I s SHOULDER PAIN an onni ttime rai s BEEN TOLD THESE FACTS?
By Rod Nordland and Talmoor Shah
sive. Mindful of the bad name uation of intelligence sharing,
New York Times News Service
supportfrom U.S.forces past "night operations." the end of theyear. "We need strong backing U.S. military officials have long viewed night raids as the of foreign forces during night most important tactic in their raids, the helicopters and night fight against Taliban insur- vision goggles, GPS equipment, gents, because they can catch and better guidance," he said. the militant group's leaders "Now we have noticed free where they are most vulnera- movement of the Taliban, they ble. For years, the Americans are moving around at night ignored Karzai's demands that and passing messages and rethe raids stop. cruitingpeople for fighting, and Two Afghan army generals the only solution to stop their in some of the country's most movement is night raids." active combat zones — HelA Western military official, mand and Kandahar provinces speaking on the condition of in southern Afghanistan — said anonymity because of the po-
KABUL, A f ghanistan The government of the new Af-
ghan president, Ashraf Ghani Ahmadzai, has quietly lifted the ban on night raids by special operations forces that his predecessor had imposed. Afghan National Army Special Forces units are planning to resume the raids in 2015, and in
somecasestheraidswillindude members of U.S. special operations units in an advisory role,
according to Afghan military officials as well as officials with the U.S.-led military coalition.
that night raids have, the U.S. military has renamed them
air transportation and close air
That news comes after pub- in interviews on Saturday that litical sensitivity of the matter, lished accounts of an order by they welcomed the lifting of a said that the Afghan forces President Barack Obama to al- ban on night raids, and the pos- would take the lead. "Night operations are somelow the U.S. military to contin- sibility of U.S. support for them, ue some limited combat opera- adding that they expected the thing the Afghans will be doing tions in 2015. That order allows raids to resume in2015. in a much more targeted way, for the sort of air support that is Some 200 Afghan Special the way they were trained to do necessaryfornightraidsto be Forces troops have recently but were held back under Karcarried out successfully. been transferred to Kanda- zai," the official said. "We're Night raids were banned har and have begun training not going to be doing that, but for the most part in 2013 by in night raid techniques, ac- there are going to be training President Hamid Karzai. Their cording to Maj. Gen. Abdul missions with advisers along. resumption is likely to be con- Hameed, commander of the They are not going to go onto troversial among Afghans, for Afghan National Army's 205th the target with the Afghans, whom any intrusion into priCorps in Kandahar. but they may go along in some vate homes is considered offenHameed welcomed a contin- cases and stayback."
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I
Threat
primer on social media in his brief to the court. "Facebook 'friends,'" he explained, "genContlnued fromA1 The issue is whether Elonis erally will have access to each should be prosecuted for what other's posts and will also see he says was simply blowing off each other's new content as steam - "therapeutic efforts part of a live newsfeed." to address traumatic events," A number of people watched as his brief to the court saysElonis' newsfeed with growing because what matters is not alarmduring atwo-monthperihis intent but whether any rea-
sonable person targeted in the rants would regard them as
menacing warnings. Parties on both sides of the groundbreaking case are asking the court to consider the unique qualities of social media. In this rapidly evolving realm of communication, only the occasional emoticon may signal whether a writer is engaging in satire or black humor, exercising poetic license, or delivering the kind of grim warnings that have presaged school shootings and other acts
of mass violence. Elonis, who has already servedprison time forhis Face-
book posts, and some of his supporters say the court must lookbeyond incendiary content to discern the writer's intent.
"Internet users maygive vent
to emotions on which they have no intention of acting, memori-
alizing expressions of momentary anger or exasperation that
oncewere communicated faceto-face among friends and dissipated harmlessly," said a brief filed on Elonis' behalf by the Student Press Law Center, the Electronic Frontier Foundation
and the writers organization PEN. Domestic violence experts,
on the other hand, say social media has become a powerful tool for dispensing threats.
Victims of domestic abuse, according to a brief filed by the National Network to End Do-
mestic Violence,"have experienced reallife terror caused by
increasingly graphic and public posts to Facebook and other social media sites — terror that is
exacerbated precisely because abusers nowharness the power of technology, 'enabling them to reach their victims' everyday lives at the dick of a mouse or the touch of a screen.'"
First Amendment implications The case carries wide First Amendment implications for
od in 2010. His wife had leftwith their two children, and Elonis,
I
release from prison. The Supreme Court has never given a clear answer as to whether intent must be prov-
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en. In a 1969 case, the court I
ruledinfavor ofa w arprotester
i • i
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charged with threatening President Lyndon B. Johnson: "If
they ever make me carry a rifle the first man I want to get in my
sights is L.B.J." The court in a brief order
then 27 and working at Dorney said it was dear from laughter Park and Wildwater Kingdom both from the speaker and his amusement park in Allentown,
•
audience at the antiwar rally
Pennsylvania, grew increasing- that the words were not a true ly despondent and angry. threat. He was fired after co-work-
ers interpreted one of his Face- Deciphering intent book postings as a threat to Elwood said in an interview them. He responded: ""Some- that one of the things that one once told me that I was a makes this case important is firecracker. Nah, I'm a nuclear that there is no way in social bomb and Dorney Park just media to pick up the "cues (expletive) withthe timer." and signals" that would indiElonis' lawyer in th e Sucate whether a speaker is sepreme Courtcase,Washi ngton rious or joking, threatening or attorney John Elwood, noted hyperbolic. for the court that the posting He pointed to the Supreme was "followed by an emoticon Court's language in a 2002 of a face with its tongue stick- decision about Virginia's law ing out to indicate 'jest.'" a~ cros s-burning. The In other postings, Elonis court said constitutionally unsuggested that his son dress protected "true threats" encomas "Matricide" for Halloween, pass "those statements where with his wife's "head on a stick" the speaker means to commuas a prop. He pondered making nicatea serious expression of a name for himself by shooting an intent to commit... unlawup an elementaryschool and ful violence." noted that there were so many Verrilli argued in his brief nearby to choose from — "hell that this language means only hath no fury like a crazy man that such statements are a "type" of true threat, not the in a kindergarten dass." That brought a visit from an only type. "A bomb threat that appears FBI agent, and the prolific Elonis later recalled that with this to be serious is equally harmposting: fulregardless ofthe speaker's "Little Agent Lady stood so private state of mind," Verrilli close wrote, adding: "Juries are fully Took all the strength I had capable of distinguishing benot to turn the (expletive) tween metaphorical expression ghost of strong emotions and statePull my knife, flick my wrist, ments that have the clear sinisand slit her throat" ter meaning of a threat." There was much more. But In Elonis' case, Verrilli pointElwood's brief noted that Elo- ed out, the jury acquitted him nis created a rapper-sounding of threatening his amusement pseudonym — "Tone Dougie," park co-workers while finda combination of his first and ing that the threats against his m iddle names — forhisscreeds wife, schoolchildren and the and sprinkled the postings with FBI agent were serious. references to his "art" and First A brief filed by the Marion Amendment speech rights. Brechner First A m endment True, the language of the Project at the University of Florposts was violent, the brief idaand two rap-music scholars, notes, but the same is true ofhis Erik Nielson at the Universihero Eminem, who frequently ty of Richmond and Charis rapped about violent fantasies Kubrin of the University of Calabout his ex-wife. ifornia-Irvine, advises the court "Tone Dougie" posted explic- that intent is especially importit disclaimers about his "ficti- ant when considering rap. tious lyrics" and, according to Some of the images for his brief, made clear that they which Elonis was prosecuted, did "not reflect the views, val- Nielson said in an interview, ues, or beliefs of Anthony Elo- are no different from the ones
free-speech rights and artistic expression. Briefs laden with the f-word and vulgar references to the female anatomy attempttoprovidea crash course on Eminemand Wu-Tang Clan nis the person." that have won E minem 13 for the justices, whose tastes Some courts require pros- Grammys. lean more toward Wagner and ecutors to show that a defenBut the government says Puccini, and illuminate what dant intends to make good on the very popularity of rap some scholars say are the mis- warnings in order to obtain a music shows there is no reaunderstood storytelling attri- conviction for communicating son to think that using the "any threat to injure the person reasonable-listener standard butes of rap. It is a thoroughly modern of another." would inhibit speech or artistic case for justices who even But most do not, and the expression. "If rap music has thrived ... a eschew email c o m munica- judge in Elonis' case instructed tions with one another but jurors that the government had true-threats standard that does are increasingly called upon to prove only that a reasonable not require proof of subjective to decide issues centered on person would view the postings intent can hardly be thought to evolving technology. Last term as "a serious expression of an chill the speech that petitioner alone, they decided cases in- intention to inflict bodily injury highlights," Verrilli wrote. " Eminem's ly rics, B o b volving cellphone privacy, soft- or take the life of an individual. ware patents and doud-based The U.S. Court of Appeals Dylan's music and other examInternet streaming video. for the 3rd Circuit upheld Elo- ples cited by petitioner do not Solicitor General Donald nis'conviction,and he served involve factual backdrops even Verrilli Jr., representing the more than three years of a remotely analogous" to Elonis', government, offered a basic 44-month sentence before his he said.
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"WhenI would lift my arm up, I would get pain inside thejoint. WhenI didn't move myshoulder, my pain level stayed ata 3 out oi 10. WhenI moved it, it would up to an8 or 9. At night I couldn't sleep on that side.I would get numbness, pain and ache all the waydown to my elbow. I cannow sit without moving it and my pain is0-1. I can now move it normal, and whenI do, I only get a level 1 for pain. I can nowhave my shoulder do my work, and not have anymore problems." L H.
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LIND CHIROPRACTIC CENTER 444 NE Norton, Suite102, Bend, OR 97702
541-389-3072
IlV THE BACI4: WEATHER W Motor sports, B2 NBA, B3
NHL, B8 THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2014
O www.bendbulletin.com/sports
The week ahea
A rundown of gamesandevents to watch for locally and nationally from the world of sports (all times Pacific):
Today
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
College basketball, OregonState vs. OklahomaState, 5:30 p.m. (onlino, ESPN3); Oregonvs.Michigan,6:30 p.m. (onlino, ESPN3):The 3-0 Beavers are in Las Vegas tofacethe 4-0 Cowboys in the MGMGrand Main Event. In another meeting of unbeatens, the 3-0 Ducks are at Barclays Center in Brooklyn to take on the 3-0 Wolverines in the Progressive LegendsClassic.
NBA basketball, Portland at Charlotte, 4 p.m. (CSNNW):TheTrail Blazers conclude their first eastern road trip of the season when theyface the Hornets at Time Warner CableArena. TheBlazers are back homeFriday night to take on the Memphis Grizzlies in a clashof early-season leaders in theWestern Conference.
NFl football, Chicago atDetroit, 9:30 a.m. (CBS);Philadelphia at Dallas,1:30 p.m. (Fox);Seattle at SanFrancisco, 5:30 p.m. (NBC):In keeping with tradition, the NFLserves up a heaping helping of gridiron action — three crucial divisional rivalry games — tosupplement the Thanksgiving holiday feast.
College football, ArizonaState at Arizona, 12:30 p.m. (Fox);Stanford at UCLA, 12:30 p.m. (ABC): The scrambled Pac-12 South race will sort itself out, and UCLAcontrols its own destiny. If the Bruins beat Stanford at the RoseBowl, they advance to thePac-12championship game. If UCLAloses, the Arizona State-Arizona winner moves on toface Oregon for the conference title.
College football, Oregonat Oregon State, 5 p.m. (ABC):The Ducksand Beavers meet at ReserStadium in Corvallis, and as usual, plenty is at stake for both teams in the annualCivil War. Oregon has visions of a national championship, and Oregon State, which needs to win to be bowl eligible, would like nothing better than to deny its archrival in the regular-season finale.
TEE TO GREEN
Bend's Rice gets taste of Champions Tour success
COLLEGE
COMMUNITY SPORTS
FOOTBALL
When the turkeys trot and the finish-line pie's hot, when the bells jingle and the New Year rings in with shoes all ajangle, it can only mean one thing:
urday in college football. For the first time since late September the top four is the same aslast week's: Florida State, Alabama, Oregonand Mississippi State. The gap betweenthe Seminoles andthe Crimson Tide narrowed after yet another close call by
The Bulletin
Charlie Rice saved one of
the rounds of his life for a stage on which he had most hoped to play welL For years, the now-49-year-old amateurgolfer
Florida State, which beat
Rico
playing on the Champions Tour, professional golf's 50-and-over circuit. On his first chance to make that dream come true — less than two weeks ago in the
first round of the regional stage of the 2014 Champions Tour Regional Qualifier at Bear Creek Golf Club in Murrieta, California — Rice fired a 4-under-par 68 to seize the
first-round lead in a field overwhelmed by professionals. "One of the coolest things of all was seeing my name on top of that list after the first
day," Rice says. "Only three people all week shot in the 60s and it was all on that first
day. And to see 'Rice' as a 68 up there leading was ... it was great validation for all the hard work I've been putting into it." Rice's 68 was the lowest
round posted by any of the 49 golfers in the field during the four days of the tournament.
And it was one of only 11 under-par rounds shot at Bear Creek.
Heady stuff for an amateur playing his first round at that level of golf. See Rico/B6
Inside
This is the point in the season whenthings get weird. Rivalry week is here, with championship weekend ondeck. The Associated Press poll didn't change Sundayat the top after a blah Sat-
By Zack Hall
from Bend had dreamed of
Top poll spots remain the same
Meg Roussos/The Bulletin
Nolan King, 21, of Bond, runs in the Central Oregon Community Collogo's 5k Turkey Trot on Saturday.
Boston College 20-17on a field goal in the waning seconds. Florida State received 37 first-place votes and 1,458 points, down six and18 from last week. Alabama has 21firstplace votes and1,445 points. No. 3 Oregon received two first-place votes, one more than last week. Baylor passedTCU, moving to No. 5.The Horned Frogs areNo.6 and Ohio State stayedat seventh. No. 22 Minnesota moved into the rankings for the first time since 2008 after winning at Nebraska onSaturday. Falling out were Southern California, Utah, Nebraskaand Duke. No. 12 Arizonaand No. 13 ArizonaState will play for the Territorial Cup on Friday with both teams ranked for the first time since 1986. The Wildcats and Sun Devils also both havea chance to win the Pac12 South if No. 9UCLA loses to Stanford. — rhe Associated Pess
•Offs eason update:Meadow Lakes Golf Course,B6
• A look aheadto running events throughout the holidays By Beau Eastos
NFL
The Bulletin
Lynch is an enigma, but beloved
un fast, dress warm. And if you finish in a timely fashion, enjoy a
slice of pie or a warm mug of holiday cheer. With Thanksgiving
RENTON, Wash. — Here's
Christmas fast on its heels,
earlier this month, and he's
the holiday run season is
having the best game of his season.
Uporl Us.
After he scores his third
touchdown, he jogs off the field and hands the ball to
Central Oregon Community
Robert Turbin, his backup.
College's Turkey Trot on Saturday
said. "But he told me, 'I want you to have this ball. It's for
kicked off the unofficial six-week span of
"I don't know why," Turbin
us. It's for the running backs, the group, a representation of how we go about our business on a daily basis.' For
local festive runs that typically support a
good cause, usually require several layers
whatever reason, that one particular touchdown meant
of clothing and more often than not reward
a lot to him, and he wanted
participants with something sweet at the
me to have it."
See Lynch /B4
finish line.
I like Pio Rnn/Walk (www.footzonobond.com):Untimed run that starts and finishes at Bend's Riverfront Plaza at 9a.m. in front of Crow's Feet Commons. Participants, who areasked to donate five cans of food and $5 toNeighborlmpact, havethe option of running any distance they like. Event organizers will mark turnaround points for 2K, 5Kand 10Kroutes. Bond ThanksgivingClassic SK/10K (www.bondthanksgivingclassic.com): Timed course through Bend's Old Mill District that starts at 9 a.m. Costis $30for the 5Kand $35for the10K. Day-of-race registration fee increases by $5for each race. MadraslbrkoyTrot(www. macaqnatic.com):Both the 5K and 10Kloops start and finish at the MadrasAquatic Center. Cost is $5 for Madras Aquatic Center (MAC)members and $10 for nonmembers. Race starts at 9 a.m.
just three days away and
a Marshawn Lynch story: He's playing the Giants
THURSDAY(THANKSGIVING DAY)
SATURDAY
By Jayson Jonks The Seattle Times
CentralOregonholidayruns
See Running /B7
DEC. 6 Jingle Boll Rnn/Walk(www.bondiinglo bogrnn.kintora.org):A longtime local favorite, Bend's Jingle Bell 5Kstarts at11:40 a.m. and kicks off the BendChristmas parade. ChristmasCookie Rnn(RORKFacobook page): Runthrough the lights at EagleCrest Resort. CanyonRumbleFrozenHalf(MADrasRunnersFacobook page): Half marathon, 5Kand 10Koptions in late-season Madras run. DEC. 31 Rnn Into theNewYear (www.flootfoothond.com): Start at11:30 p.m. and run 2.015 miles in Bendbefore heading back to Fleet Feetfor celebratory drinks and treats.
NFL Browns Falcons
2 24
Eagles
4 24
Titans
Patriots Lions Packers Vikings
2 21
olts Jaguars
2 3
engas Texans
13
Be r Buccaneers
21 13
Seahawks Cardinals
3
Chargers Rams
2 24
Broncos Dolphins
3
36
9ers Redskins
13
owos Giants
3 28
Inside • Seahawks hand Cards second loss. NFL roundup,BS
B2
THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2014
ON THE AIR
COREBOARD
TODAY Time T V/Radio 11:30 a.m. ESPN2 2 p.m. E S PN2 4 p.m. CSNNW,
BASKETBALL
Men's college,KansasStatevs.Purdue Men's college, Arizona vs. Missouri NBA, Portland at Philadelphia
FOOTBALL College
Men's college, Villanova vs.VCU 4 p.m. Men's college, Arizona State vs. Maryland 4p . m . Men's college, Murray State atXavier 4 p.m. Men's college, SantaClara at Michigan State 4 p.m. Men's college, Stephen F. Austin State at Baylor 5 p.m. Men's college, OregonState vs. OklahomaState 5:30 p.m.
E S PN2 ES P NU FS1
Bi g Ten Roo t
KICE 940-AM, KRCO 690-AM, 96.9-FM
M en's college, Chaminade vs. Pittsburgh Men's college, NJIT atMarquette Men's college, Alabamavs. Iowa State Men's college, Oregonvs. Michigan
6 p. m . ESP NU 6 p.m. FS1 6:30 p.m. ESPN2 6:30 p.m. KBND 1110-AM, 100.1-FM
Men's college,Auburnvs.Tulsa Men's college, BYU vs. San DiegoState SOCCER England, Aston Villa vs. Southampton
8 p.m. E S PNU 8:30 p.m. ESPN2 noon
NB C SN
4 p.m.
N B CSN
HOCKEY
NHL, Pittsburgh at Boston FOOTBALL
NFL, Baltimore at NewOrleans
5:15 p.m. ESPN
WRESTLING
Arizona State at OregonState
7 p.m.
P a c-12
TUESDAY SOCCER Europe, Champions League, CSKA Moscowvs. Roma Europe, Champions League,Manchester City (England) vs. Bayern Munich (Germany) European, Champions League,Schalke04 (Germany) vs. Chelsea(England)
8:50a.m.
FS2
11:30 a.m. F S1 11:30 a.m. F S2
BASKETBALL
Men's college, Maui Invitational, teamsTBD Men's college, Maui Invitational, teamsTBD Men's college, St. Peters at Rutgers Men's college,TexasatKentucky Men's college, Maui Invitational, teamsTBD Men's college,LegendsClassic,teamsTBD Men's college, Eastern lllinois at Creighton Men's college, Air Force atColorado Men's college, Hall of FameClassic, teams TBD Men's college, Maui Invitational, TeamsTBD Men's college,LegendsClassic,TeamsTBD Men's college, Delaware atStanford
11 a.m. 1:30 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 4:30 p.m. 4:30 p.m. 5 p.m. 6 p.m. 6:30 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 8 p.m.
ESPN2 ESPN2
Big Ten SEC ESPN ESPNU FS1
Pac-12 ESPNU ESPN ESPN2
Pac-12
FOOTBALL
Men's College, Ohio at Miami-Ohio HOCKEY NHL, NewJerseyat Vancouver
4 p.m.
E S PN2
7 p.m. C SNNW
Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. The Bulletinis not responsible for late changesmadebyTVor radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF BASKETBALL Shaq, Hill, 6 others entering college Hall of FameShaquille O'Nealand his coach at LSU, Dale Brown, joined six other luminaries with induction into the CollegeBasketball Hall of Fameon Sunday night. Former Dukestar Grant Hill, Louisville standout Darrell Griffith, longtime Maryland coachGary Williams, Stetson's Glenn Wilkes Sr., Five-Star Basketball Campfounder Howard Garfinkel and the late Prairie ViewA&Mstar Zelmo Beaty werealso inducted.
SOCCER OSU men OuSted frOm NCAAtOurney — Creighton's Lucas Stauffer scored in the 50th minute, and that wasthe only goal in the Bluejays'1-0 victory over OregonState in the second round of the NCAAmen's soccer tournament Sunday atMorrison Stadium in Omaha, Nebraska. Creighton (15-3-2) advances to the third round for the third time in four seasons. TheBeavers (12-8-1) concluded aseason that featured a1-0 first-round victory over Denver onThursday, the first NCAAtournament win in the OSUprogram's 27-year history.
HORSE RACING Some 30 horses die in stable fire outside ChicagoMore than 30 horses died in astable fire in suburban Chicago over the weekend, with distraught owners of the animals arriving Sunday to lay flowers at the site, a fire department official said. The fire Saturday occurred 50 miles northwest of Chicago atValley ViewAcres. — From wire reports
Oregon Stanford Washington California Oregon St. WashingtonSt ArizonaSt. Arizona UCLA SouthernCal Utah Colorado
NHL
In the BleachersO 2014 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Ucnck
Pac-12 AH TimesPST
KBND 1110-AM, 100.1-FM
HOCKEY
IN THE BLEACHERS
North Conf Overall W L W L P F PA 7 1 1 0 1 504 260 4 3 3 2 2
4 5 6 6 6
6 7 5 5 3
5 5 6 6 8
2 77 3 70 4 24 2 89 3 69
6 6 4 0
2 3 4 8
9 7 7 2
2 4 4 9
3 8 5 299 37 2271 3 2 4 280 3 0 8 430
1t/Z,vy
THf. VALK blJRST , HELIH (55PEb'iH6 lNTOTHECIIBlg Rfe
r
182 304 435 332 432
RE'8E FNl~4 FeH T% 5KY...BUTcH EC
South W L W L P F PA 6 2 9 2 4 0 9 290 6 2 9 2 3 9 8 271
iTOUT- HY Vo)CE
GoUNDSjijST I lKE A NUNCHklg!
Friday's Games
StanfordatUCLA,3:30 p.m. ArizonaSt. atArizona,3:30 p.m.
Saturday'sGames Utah atColorado, 10a.m. NotreDam eat Southern Cal,12:30 p.m. BYUatCalifornia, 1:30p.m. OregonatOregonSt., 5p.m. WashingtonatWashington St., 7:30p.m. Polls AP Top26 R ecord Pls P v 1 . Florida St.(37) 11- 0 1 , 458 1 2 . Alabama (21) 10-1 1 , 445 2 1 0-1 1,393 3 3. Oregon (2) 4. MississippiSt. 1 0-1 1,301 4 9 -1 1,234 6 5. Baylor 9 -1 1,233 5 6. TCU 1 0-1 1,163 7 7. OhioSt. 8. Georgia 9 -2 1,002 9 9-2 99 8 11 9. UCLA 9-2 9 7 1 10 10. Michigan St. 8-2 89 8 12 11. Kansas St. 9-2 8 0 7 15 12. Arizona 13. Arizona St. 9-2 79 0 13 14. Wisconsin 9-2 76 4 14 15. Auburn 8-3 5 9 7 16 16. GeorgiaTech 9-2 5 8 1 17 17. Missouri 9-2 52 5 19 18. Mississippi 8-3 39 8 8 19. Marshall 11-0 38 4 18 20. Oklahom a 8-3 36 3 23 21. Colorado St. 1 0-1 346 2 2 22. Minnesota 8-3 232 N R 23. Clemson 8 -3 1 9 8 N R 24. Louisville 8 -3 1 9 1 N R 25. BoiseSt. 9-2 9 6 NR Othersreceivingvotes:Arkansas40, LSU39, Nebraska14,Utah14,Duke9, SouthernCal8, Memphis 3, Texas A8M2, WestVirginia2, UCF1. CoachesTop26 Record Pls Pvs 1. Alabama (25 ) 10-1 14 7 4 2 2. FloridaSt.(30) 11 - 0 1 4 6 2 1 1 0-1 1431 3 3. Oregon (6) 1 0-1 1323 4 4. MississippiSt. 9-1 1259 5 5. TCU 9-1 1242 6 6. Baylor 1 0-1 1191 7 7. OhioSt. 8. Michigan St. 9-2 1052 9 9 -2 1002 1 0 9. Georgia 10. UCLA 9-2 96 3 12 11. Kansas St. 8-2 9 1 2 11 12.Arizona 9-2 81 8 13 13. Arizona St. 9-2 7 8 3 14 14. Wisconsin 9-2 75 8 15 15. GeorgiaTech 9-2 61 5 16 16. Auburn 8-3 5 6 5 17 17. Missouri 9-2 56 0 20 18. Oklahom a 8-3 42 0 22 19. Mississippi 8-3 390 8 20. Marshall 11-0 383 18 21. Colorado St. 1 0-1 304 2 3 22. Minnesota 8 -3 25 6 N R 23. Louisville 8 -3 20 8 N R 24. Clemson 8 -3 20 3 N R 25. BoiseSt. 9-2 8 5 NR Othersreceivingvotes: LSU43, Nebraska41, Arkansas19,Utah19,Cincinnati 7, LouisianaTech 7, Stanford 7,Duke5, SouthernCal 4, Texas 4, Texas A&M 4, Northernlllinois 3, lowa1, NotreDame1, UtahSt.1.
NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE AH TimesPST
www.gocomics.com/inthebleachers
r
EaslernConference Atlantic Division
GP W L OT PlsGF GA 2 3 16 6 1 3 3 61 57 Tampa Bay 2 2 14 6 2 3 0 77 60 Boston 22 13 9 0 2 6 57 54 Detroit 2 0 10 5 5 2 5 55 49 Toronto 2 1 11 8 2 2 4 67 63 Ottawa 19 9 6 4 22 52 50 Florida 18 7 5 6 20 40 47 Buffalo 2 1 6 13 2 1 4 36 70 Metropolitan Division GP W L OT PlsGF GA Pittsburgh 1 9 1 3 4 2 28 69 44 N .Y. Islanders 20 14 6 0 2 8 68 57 N.Y.Rangers 20 9 7 4 22 57 58 Washington 20 9 8 3 21 56 54 NewJersey 21 9 9 3 21 53 61 Philadelphia 19 8 9 2 18 57 60 C arolina 2 0 6 11 3 1 5 48 62 C olumbus 20 6 1 2 2 1 4 49 72
Montreal
WeslernConference Central Oivision GP W L OT 2 1 14 6 1 2 0 13 5 2 2 1 12 8 1 22 10 9 3 1 9 11 8 0 21 8 9 4 21 7 9 5
St. Louis Nashville Chicago Winnipeg Minnesota Dallas Colorado
Pacific Division
PlsGF GA 2 9 57 43 2 8 57 42 2 5 63 44 2 3 45 51 2 2 54 43 20 61 72 19 53 67
PlsGF GA 31 60 54 2 9 65 61 28 71 61 2 6 57 49 S an Jose 2 3 1 0 9 4 2 4 62 64 Arizona 22 9 11 2 2 0 54 67 E dmonton 2 1 6 1 3 2 1 4 49 74 GP W L OT Anaheim 2 2 13 4 5 Vancouver 21 14 6 1 Calgary 22 1 3 7 2 L os Angeles 21 11 6 4
Maryland vs. ArizonaState,at KansasCity, Mo.,4 p.m. OklahomaStatevs. OregonState, at LasVegas, Nev,. 5:30 p.m. Michiganvs.Oregon, atBrooklyn, N.Y.,6:30 p.m. Tuesday'sGames Air Force at Colorado, 6p.m. Delaware at Stanford, 8p.m. CS Fugerton at SouthernCal,8 p.m. WednesdayrsGames OklahomaatUCLA,11:30 a.m. UT PanAmericanatUtah,5p.m. Cal PolyatCalifornia, 7 p.m. Thursday'sGames SanJoseStateatWashington, 8p.m. WashingtonStateatUCSantaBarbara, 9p.m. Friday's Game NorthDakotaat Utah,7 p.m.
Sundav'sGames TOP 25
No. 1Kentucky86,MontanaState28 No. 11WichitaState105, Newman57 WestVirginia78,No.17Connecticut 68 No. 18Oklahoma90,NorthwesternState 68
No. 20OhioState106, SacredHeart 48 EAST
Bethune-Coo kman65, CCSU60 Columbi a54,Lehigh44 Fairfield80,SouthDakota72,OT Hofstra93,Wagner 71 Holy Cross101, Nichols70 Mass. -Lowell64,Fordham 57 Providence 75, Notre Dame74 Rutgers76,St.Francis (NY)73 StonyBrook89,Merchant Marine 54 Towson 79,Monmouth(NJ)75,OT Woffor d64,Sam HoustonSt.53 SOUTH American U. 51,MoreheadSt. 46 Georgia74,FAU61 Kentu cky86,MontanaSt.28 LouisianaTech76, Presbyterian48 Mississippi80,N.Arizona74 NC State68,South Florida65 Radford88,Catawba52 UAB58,JacksonSt.50 UCF76, SC-Upstate69 UMass75,Florida St.69 Vanderbilt78,TennesseeSt. 46 America's Line MIDWEST Bradley58, NCA&T50 NFL Cincinnati54,E.Illinois 49 (Hometeamsin Caps) Favorite Open Current 0/U Underdog Creighton65, NCCentral 45 E. Michigan79,Longwood48 Today 4tN 2tN 4 1 t7t Bills Jets Ohio St.106,SacredHeart 48 SAINTS 3tN 3 50 Rave ns S. Illinois67,Ill.-chicago60 Samford64, UMKC55 Texas A&M-CC62,SaintLouis56 Valparaiso93, Maine70 SOCCER WichitaSt.105, Newman57 Yale66,KentSt.59 YoungstownSt.76,UNCGreensboro 67 MLS playoffs SOUTHWE ST MAJORLEAGUE SOCCER lona 78, NorthTexas58 AH TimesPST Oklahoma 90,NorthwesternSt. 68 UALR 94, CSNorthridge88, 20T CONFERE NCEFINALS FARWEST (Two-legaggregateseries) CS Bakersfield70,Delaware52 Sunday'sGames ColoradoSt.75, Mercer62 NewEngland2,NewYork1 Denver80,CoppinSt.54 Los Angeles1,Seatle 0 LoyolaMarymount82,SanDiegoChristian 60 Saturday,Nov.29 SaintMary's(Cal)72,UCIrvine69 NewYorkat NewEngland, noon UC Riverside102,Saint Katherine49 Sunday,Nov.30 UCLA77,LongBeachSt. 63 Los Angeleat s Seattle, 6p.m. Washington 76,Pacific 69 TOURNAME NT Gildan CharlestonClassic Champi o nshi p BASKETBALL Miami77,Charlotte58 Third Place Men's college Akron68,SouthCarolina63 Pac-12 Fiflh Place AH TimesPST PennSt.63, Southern Cal61 Seventh Place Drexel61,Cornell 59 Sunday'sGames Hall of Fame Tip-off PennState63, Southern Cal61 Championship Washington 76, Pacific 69 Northeastern65,Manhattan51 UCLA77,LongBeachState63 Today'sGames Third Place Navy70,Binghamton 68 Missourivs.Arizona,at Lahaina, Hawaii, 2p.m.
Puerlo RicoTipoff Championship WestVirginia78,Uconn68 Third Place Dayton 65, Boston College 53 Fiflh Place Texas A8M64, NewMexico 51 SeventhPlace Coll. ofCharleston61, GeorgeMason60 USVI ParadiseJam Semitinals f linois St.64, OldDominion 45 SetonHall85,Gardner-Webb67
Women's college Sunday'sGames TOP 25 No.1 Conne cticut 96,Creighton60 No. 2SouthCarolina 89, SanDiegoState38 No. 3NotreDame104, Holy Cross29 No. 7Duke83, Marquette51 No.10Texas75,UCLA65 No. 11NorthCarolina76, Oregon59 No.12 Louisville69,Ball State56 Missouri82,No.14California 70 No.15 MichiganState64, IUPUI45 No.16 Nebraska 66, Utah43 No.24Georgia64,GeorgiaTech57 No. 24Purdue66,Toledo48 EAST
BostonCollege90,Bryant 79 Lafayette 74, Hartford 59 Princeton63,American U.56 RobertMorris84,UMBC60 SacredHeart 59, Maine58
Uconn 96,Creighton60 VirginiaTech72,Providence69 SOUTH Clemson79,Furman69 ClevelandSt.73, FIU65 Duke83, Marquette51
EastCarolina71, Bethune-Cookman42 FAU90, W.Illinois 88 George Mason71, Coll, ofCharleston61 Georgia64,GeorgiaTech57 Hofstra64,Norfolk St.47 James Madison 80,Pittsburgh64 Louisville69,Ball St.56 McNeese St. 57,SouthernMiss. 55 MiddleTennessee71, Mississippi 65 Minnes ota68,Memphis62 SouthCarolina89,SanDiego St.38 Virginia66,Auburn51 Wake Forest65, Coppin St.54 MIDWEST
Alabama 58,Temple 51 Drake89,Wisconsin 77 Harvard 87, Quinnipiac 83 flinois 62,SouthernU.42 Indiana 85, IncarnateWord 49 lowaSt. 85,Cincinnati 54 Kansas55,Georgetown42 Michigan74,W.Michigan 47 MichiganSt.64, IUPUI45 Nebraska66, Utah43 NotreDame104, Holy Cross29 Oaklan d66,ChicagoSt.40 Ohio St.96,VCU86 Purdue66,Toledo48 SIU-Edwardsville86,Air Force51 SOUTHWE ST Arkansas 78, Northwestern St.30 FloridaSt. 74,UMass46 Texas Tech 65,MorganSt.57 UTSA72,Lamar 40 FARWEST California 82,Missouri 70 Colorado St. 70,fflinois St.49 N. Arizona67,UCSantaBarbara49 NorthCarolina76, Oregon59 Pacific 64,lona49 Southern Cal68,FresnoSt.50 Texas75, UCLA65 Washington 81, Yale 51 TOURNAMEN T PreseasonNIT MississippiSt.88,W.Kentucky77
NOTE: Twopoints for a win, onepoint for overtime loss. Sunday'sGames St. Louis4, Winnipeg2 N.Y.Rangers5, Montreal 0 Anaheim 2,Arizona1 Vancouver 4, Chicago1 Today'sGames Pittsburghat Boston, 4p.m. PhiladelphiaatN.Y.Islanders,4 p.m. Ottawa at Detroit, 4:30p.m. Mmnesot aatFlonda,4:30p.m. Tuesday'sGames Winnipeg at Columbus,4 p.m. Ottawa atSt. Louis, 5p.m. Los Angeleat s Nashvile, 5p.m. Edmonton atDalas,5;30 p.m. ColoradoatArizona,6 p.m. NewJerseyat Vancouver, 7p.m. Calgaryat Anaheim,7p.m.
MO TOR SPORTS Formula 1 Ahu DhahiGrandPrix Sunday atYasMarina circuit, Ahu Dhahi, United ArabEmirates Lap length: 3.46miles 1. Lewis Hamilton, England,Merced es, 55 laps, 1:39:02.619,mph. 2. FelipeMassa,Brazil, Wiliams,55,1:39:05.195. 3. ValtteriBottas,Finland,Wiliams,55, 1:39;31.499. 4. DanieRi l cciardo,Australia, RedBull,55,1:39:39.856. 5. JensonButton, England, McLaren, 55, 1:40:02.953. 6. Nico Hulkenberg,Germ any, ForceIndia, 55, 1:40;04.767. 7. Sergio Perez, Mexico, Force India, 55, 1:40:13.679.
8. Sebastian Vettel, Germany, Red Bull, 55, 1:40:14.664.
9. Fernando Alonso, Spain, Ferrari,55, 1:40:28.432. 10. KimiRaikkonen,Finland,Ferrari,55,1:40:30.439. 11. Kevin Magnussen,Denm ark, McLaren, 55, 1:40;32.995. 12. Jean-Eric Vergne, France,Toro Rosso, 55, 1:40:34.566. 13. Rom ainGrosjean,France,Lotus, 54,+1lap. 14. NicoRosberg, Germany,Mercedes,54, +1lap. 15. Esteban Gutierrez, Mexico, Sauber,54,+1 lap. 16. AdrianSutil, Germany,Sauber, 54,+1 lap. 17. WillStevens,England, Caterham,54, +1lap. Not Classified 18. KamuiKobayashi, Japan,Caterham,42, Retired. 19. PastorMaldonado,Venezuela, Lotus,26, Retired. 20. DaniilKvyat,Russia,ToroRosso,14, Retired.
Drivers Standings(afler 19 of 19 races): 1,
Hamilton,384points. 2, Rosberg, 317.3, Ricciardo, 238. 4,Bottas,186. 5, Vetel, 167.6,Alonso, 161. 7, Massa,134. 8, Button,126. 9, Hulkenberg,96. 10, Perez,59. 11,Magnussen,55. 12, Raikkonen, 55. 13, Vergne,22. 14, Grosjean,8. 15, Kvyat, 8. 16, Maldonado 2. 17Bianchi 2. Constructors Standings: 1, Mercedes,701 points. 2,RedBull, 405.3, Wiliams, 320.4, Ferrari,216.5, McLaren,181.6,ForceIndia,155.7, Toro Rosso,30.8, Lotus,10.9, Marussia, 2.
DEALS Transactions BASEBALL
AmericanLeague
OAKLAND ATHLETICS— Acquired 1BIke Davis and internationalbonusslot 86 fromPittsburgh for internationalbonusslot 27. DesignatedOFAndrew Brownfor assignment. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague DETROITRED WINGS — Recalled C Stephen Weiss fromhis conditioning loanto GrandRapids
(AHL).
FLORIDAPANTHERS — Reassigned F Rocco Grimaldi toSanAntonio(AHL). COLLEGE CONNECTI CUT— SuspendedGOmarCalhoun,F RakimLubin,GDanGuest, andGMarcel Lewisfrom the men'ba s sketball teamfor thechampionship game of thePuerto Rico Tip-Off for violatingteamrules.
MOTOR SPORTS
HamitonWinSR titeinA u o a Schumachermakingprogress dut faces longrecovery BERLIN —Former Formula Oneworld champion Michael Schumacher continues to make progress as herecovers at home from last December's skiing accident. Schumacher's manager,Sabine Kehm,tells German TVstation RTL that the seven-time champion is "making progress considering the severity of his injury" and "you have to give it time. I think you really just have to have patience." Schumacher was left in a comaafter the accident and Kehm isgrateful for the outpouring of support that has beenshown. She says, "The family is really very thankful and also very moved by it... I think that positive energy can have agood effect." Schumacher lives in Gland, nearGenevain Switzerland. — The Associated Press
By Jerome Pugmire The Associated Press
old Hamilton said. "I didn't sleep last night. I went for a run and had
A BU D H A BI , U n i ted A r a b a massage, I thought I would be Emirates — British driver Lewis tired, but somehow I felt composed Hamilton clinched his second For- for the race. This has been an in-
mula One title in style after winning the season-ending Abu Dhabi
credible year. It feels very surreal, like an out-of-body experience, like Grand Prix on Sunday, with title it's not really happening." rival Nico Rosberg drifting out of He kept his helmet on for several contention after failing to recover minutes, appearing to wipe away from a poor start. Hamilton, the 2008 Fl champi-
tears, as the emotion of his hard-
on, entered the race with a 17-point
to sink in.
fought championship win started
I; ROSeI 2n
Rosberg started from pole position and, with double points on offer, could have taken his first Fl title with a win providing Hamilton
finished third or lower. That dream scenario lasted three seconds — the time it took
Hamilton to overtake Rosberg, whose race turned into a nightmare. He eventually finished 14th.
Brazilian driver Felipe Massa crossed the line in second place ahead of his Williams teammate Valtteri Bottas, while Red Bull's
Standing watching in the Mercedes garage, Britain's Prince Har- Daniel Ricciardo drove superbly to ry told him he was a "legend" and finish fourth despite starting from "Woooooo-hoooooo, world Hamilton was visibly emotional as the back of the grid. champion I can't believe it! Thank the national anthem blared out. Overall, Hamilton scored 384 "I'm lost for words. One thing points, with Rosberg notching 317 you so much guys," Hamilton screamed over his race radio, be- I want to say is a big huge 'Thank and Ricciardo third with 238. fore grabbing a Union Jack flag You' to all the fans, to my family. Although it was a one-sided race, and waving it above his car as his I love you guys," Hamilton said. the season was a welcome drivers' "This is the greatest day of my life contest after Sebastian Vettel beat mechanics celebrated wildly. "It's hard to soak all of this up. — 2008 was a special day but this is Fernando Alonso by 155 points last So much pressure," the 29-year- way, way beyond that." year. lead over his Mercedes rival Ros-
berg, needing only a top-two finish to guarantee the title.
Oao~+ Kamran Jebreili/The Associated Press
Mercedes driver Lewis Hamil-
ton celebrates after winning the Formula One race in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, Sunday.
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2014• THE BULLETIN
NBA
COLLEGE BASKETBALL ROUNDUP
nuriescou e
un e r i n on runUCLA
COMMENTARY
By Benjamin Hoffman New Yorh Times News Service
t home Friday night, the Okla-
homa City Thunder were leadA ing the underwhelming Brooklyn Nets, 53-49, at halftime. In any other season, a victory would have been all but certain, but in this season
las Mavericks, to wonder if the team
should consider having Durant and Westbrook sit out the rest of the sea-
son. Such a move would ensure their recovery and could help build the franchise through the high draft pick a bad record would garner. Since making the playoffs in the West will probably require 50 wins or more, this season couldbe lost already regardless
of rapidly diminishing expectations for Oklahoma City, the Thunder slowly let the game go Brooklyn's way. In the closing seconds, with the Thunder down by 2, Reggie Jacksonof whether Durant and Westbrook one of the few recognizable Thunder return. "The question I don't think anybody players to avoid injury of late — missed a 3-pointer that could have won the has asked is why don't they pull a Dagame. Instead, Oklahoma City lost and vid Robinson and try to get Tim Dunfell to 3-11, the worst mark in the West- can?"Cuban said beforetheMaveri cks ern Conference. And with every game played Miami on Nov.9. that the injured Kevin Durant and RusCuban was referring to the 1996-97 sell Westbrook miss, it becomes more season, when the Spurs, coming off a questionable if the Thunder, a perennial contender, can be righted.
two-season stretch in which the team
Both stars were expected to partici-
won a combined 121 games, were forced to spend most of the season with-
pate in noncontact practices Saturday,
out David Robinson, the team's All-Star
but neither is expected to play before center. Robinson missed the first month early December. As Derrick Rose and of the season with a back injury, and six a host of other players can attest, re-
games into his return, he broke his foot
turning from a serious injury is not always amenable to a schedule.
and missed the rest of the season. With
The Thunder's poor start inspired Mark Cuban, the owner of the Dal-
B3
Sean Elliott also sitting out much of the time, the Spurs finished 20-62.
Intentional or not, the Spurs' lost
seasoncreated a dynasty.After a 3-15 start, coach Bob Hill was fired. San Antoniogeneralmanager Gregg Popovich, whose only experience as a head
Nerlens Noel and Joel Embiid could be
coach had been at NCAA Division III Pomona-Pitzer, decided to name him-
No. 6 pick in the 2013 draft, sat out his
a formidable frontcourt combination, as Robinson and Duncan were in the early
days of the Spurs dynasty. But Noel, the
rookie season while recovering from self as Hill's replacement. Popovich did knee surgeryand has yetto refine his not do much better than Hill, going 17- game to NBA standards on a consistent 47, but that was just bad enough to help basis. Embiid, the No. 3 pick this year, is the team win the draft lottery. Popovich recovering from off-season foot surgery used the top pick of the 1997 draft on and has yet to play. By the time both Duncan, a quiet power forward from are healthy and ready to compete, their Wake Forest. rookie contracts could almost be over. Five championships later, Popovich But those hapless Spurs of old, at and Duncan are among the best pair- least on the surface, are more similar to ings of coach and player in NBA histo- thisseason'sThunder than tothe 76ers. ry, and the team's initial success can be It is not that the current Thunder roster largely attributed to Robinson's losing lacks the talent to win, it is that the tala season of his prime and the team's ent has been neutralized by injuries. If making little effort to compete in his a lost season resulted in the addition to absence. the roster of a game-changing player, Repeating that situation, however, the results could take the team from peis hardly guaranteed. Philadelphia is rennial contender to overwhelming title seemingly openly tanking for a second favorite. season. Despite the high draft picks the But while Cuban was not wrong to 76ershave acquired, it is hard to see raise the idea, the Thunder may want them turning around soon, considering to think twice before basing a stratethat just two of their players are manag- gy on drafting a player like Duncan. ing a league-average player efficiency There have been a lot of top draft picks rating. acquired by struggling teams over Philadelphia's hopes for an eventual the years,but there has only been one resurgence are based on the notion that
Duncan.
overtakes Long BeachSt. The Associated Press LOS ANGELES — Nor-
man Powell scored 24 points to lead all five start-
ers in double figures and UCLA beat Long Beach State 77-63 o n
S u n day
night to give coach Steve Alford a win on his 50th
birthday. Powell hit four of the Bruins' eight three pointers and finished 8 of 14 from
the field. Bryce Alford had 17 points and seven assists, Isaac Hamilton scored 12
points and Kevon Looney and Tony Parker each had 10 to help UCLA (4-0) win its fourth straight to open the season.
The 49ers (2-3) committed 19 turnovers and lost
ROUNDUP
to UCLA for the 13th time in 14 meetings between the
schools. Mike Caffey scored 19
azers a eou etics, us win strea to seven The Associated Press
during this winning streak. Aldridge had 20 points and 14 rebounds, reserve
UCLA led just 66-61 with three minutes remaining but closed on an 11-2 run to
secure the victory. The 49ers outshot the
Bruins 43-40 percent and outrebounded them 39-38, but UCLA scored 25 points
off turnovers to overcome those deficits. The Bruins never trailed
in the second half but had to hold on tight.
S t otts t a l ked
about his team needing to stop
They led 42-31 at half-
its habit of slow starts. It didn't happen, as the Trail Blazers
time largely on the strength of a 21-3 run midway
Chris Kaman scored 16 points and the Trail Blazers exte n ded their streak to seven
missed 12 of their
through the first half, but
first 13 shots from the
Caffey scored nine straight points out of the break to
floor and fell behind by 10 midway into the
cut UCLA's lead to 46-40.
Alford halted the mo-
second quarter.
games with a 94-88 victory over the Bos-
mentum with a 3-pointer from the top of the circle
Tip-ins
ton Celtics on Sunday
row," he said. "Act like we've arrived, still in the moment, still stay-
State.
Before the game. Portland coach Terry
I t was
Portlandat PhiladeIphia lihen 4 p.m., today NNW 1110-A
ing hungry." Damian Li l l ard a dded 12 p oints, n ine r e -
bounds and five assists for Portland, which began a brief East swing. Nicolas Batum
also had 12 points. After a rough first half, the
with a defender in his face.
j ust t h e
fourth road game of the season for the Blazers. The y 've played nine at home, winning eight to help
H e found Powell i n t h e corner for another 3-point-
them get off to a great
put the Bruins back in front by double-digits. Also on Sunday:
start t hi s
er on the next possession and Parker added a tip-in to complete an 8-0 run that
s eason.
Stotts knows a short trip with three games
Pac-12
in the East could be
tough. "It's part of the NBA. Going West to East is a chal-
lenge," he said. Also on Sunday: Warriors 91, Thunder 86:
g
Washington 76, Pacific
Wt
69: SEATTLE — S h a wn
Kemp Jr. scored 18 points and Washington used a b alanced attack t o
OKLAHOMA CITY — Marre-
Trail Blazers were much bet- ese Speights scored 28 points ter offensively in the second. to help G olden State beat Michael Dwyer/TheAssociated Press They added better defense and Oklahoma City. It matched the Portiand's Wesley Matthews, right, drives to the basket past Boston's Kelly Olynyk in the fourth quarpulled away early in the fourth second-highest scoring game ter of Sunday's game in Boston. The Biazers won 94-88. quarter. of Speights' career and was "We started to get stops," his best total since 2009. Lillard said. "Everything in Grizzlies 107, Clippers 91: the first half, they were com- MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Marc NBA SCOREBOARD fortable and it was simple. We Gasol had 30 points and 12 repicked it up in the defensive bounds to lead Memphis to a Carter1-30-02,Udrih4-82-211, Koufos1-30-12, Standings Summaries end and madethem have to victoryover the Los Angeles Leuer4-80-09, pondexter 4-82-3u, calathes0-1 All Times P ST 0-00, Stokes 0-00-00. Totals 42-8516-23107. guard more than one thing." Clippers. Gasol was 13 of 18 L.A. Clippers 21 19 32 19 — 91 Blazers94, Celtics88 Jeff Green and Jared Sul- from the field as six Grizzlies EasternConference Memphis 2627 35 19 — 107 Ni L Pct GB linger had 19 points apiece reached double figures. CourtPORTLAND (94) d-Toronto u 2 846 Batum5-110-012, Aldridge7-216-720, Lopez Heat 94, Hornets 93 for Boston, which dropped its ney Lee added 13 points for d-Washington 9 3 750 1'/z 461-29, Lillard4-142-212, Matthews4-7 0-010, d-Chicago 8 5 615 3 fifth in six games. Avery Brad- Memphis, which maintained Blake5-80-011, Crabbe0-1 0-00, Kaman6-134-4 CHARLO TTE(93) Miami 8 6 571 3'/2 16, Wright0-1 0-0 0,Freeland2-4 0-0 4. Totals ley and Rajon Rondo each the league's best record (12-2). Henderson 2-50-05, M.Wiliams3-50-07,JefAtlanta 6 5 545 4 37-8613-15 94. ferson9-174-522,Walker6-152-216, Stephenson scored 13. Rondo added eight Heat 94, Hornets 93: MIAMI Milwaukee 7 7 500 4'Iz BOSTON (88) 7-14 2-417,Zeller4-7 3-411, Neal5-0 1-1 13, Cleveland 5 7 417 5'/z assists and six rebounds. — Luol Deng scored 26 points, Green 7-164-519, Sul l i n ger8-220-019, Ol y nyk Roberts1-50-02, Biyombo 0-00-00. Totals37Orlando 6 9 400 6 0-3 0-0 0,Rondo6-91-213, Bradley6-180-013, "I feel really good about Chris Bosh and Mario Chalm7912-16 93. Brooklyn 5 8 385 6 Thornton 2-5 0-0 4, Bass 3-7 2-2 8, Tu rner 4-9 2-2 MIAMI(94) Indiana 5 8 385 6 the way we guarded," Boston ers each added 20 and Miami Zeller1-5 0-12,Wallace0-10-00. Totals 37Deng10-144-5 26,S.W>lliams2-4 0-05, Bosh 4 8 333 6'/z 10, Boston 95 9-12 88. coach Brad Stevens said. "I held on in the final seconds 9-21 0-020, Chal m ers5-89-1020, Brown0-20-0 NewYork 4 10 286 7'Iz Portland 2123 28 22 — 94 0, Napie4-9 r 2-214, Andersen0-00-00, McRobfeel like now we have a way to beat Charlotte and snap a Charlotte 4 10 2ij6 7'/z BosioII 2326 2316 — 88 50-03,Ennis0-02-22,Haslem 2-30-04. Detroit 3 10 231 8 3-Point Goal— s Portland 7-19 (Matthews2-3, erts1that we can point to or a game three-game home slide. KemPhiladelphia 0 13 000 11 Batum 2-6, Lillard 2-6, Blake 1-2, Wright 0-1, Totals 33-6617-1994. Charlotte 2222 28 21 — 93 that we can point to that we ba Walker missed two potenWesternConference 0-1), Boston5-23 (Sullinger3-9, Green Miami 2330 14 27 — 94 Ni L Pct GB Crabbe did it against a good team." tial go-ahead shots in the final 1-4, Bradl e y 1-ij, Ol y nyk 0-1, Turner 0-1). Foul e d d-Memphis 12 2 857 Out — N on e. Rebounds — P o rtl a nd 61 (Aldridge Green agreed. half-minute for the Hornets, d-Golden State 10 2 833 I 94 (OT) 51(Olynyk, Bass8). Assists—Portland Nuggets101, Lakers d-Portland 10 3 769 1'/z 14), Boston "I believe we played great," and Al Jefferson's tip-in try (Blake,Lilard 5), Boston17(Rondo 8). Total Houston 10 3 769 1'A 20 F ouls — P or t l a nd 13, Boston 15. Te c hn i c al s — B os DENVER (101) he said. "We put ourselves in a bounced off the rim as time Dallas 10 4 714 2 Chandler6-152-319, Faried4-90-3ij, Mozgo v e second.A—16,692 (18,624). SanAntonio 9 4 692 2'/z ton defensivthree position to win the game." expired as Charlotte dropped 5-9 3-413,Lawson5-10 7-1018, Afflalo5-174-4 Phoeni x 9 5 643 3 15, McGee1-1 002, Arthur37229, Foye0 50 2 The game was tied at 72-all its fifth straight. Sacrame nto 8 5 615 3'/z Warriors 91, Thunder86 0, Gallinari3-82-410,Robinson0-41-21, Hickson afterthreequartersbeforethe Nuggets 101, Lakers 94: LA. Clippers 7 5 5II3 4 2-5 2-4 6. Totals 34-90 23-38101. Trail Blazers took charge with a 17-5 run to start the fourth. Wesley Matthews and Lillard each hit a 3-pointer just over a minute apart.
Boston missed 12 of its first
LOS ANGELES —
W i l son
Chandler scored 19 points and Ty Lawson had 16 points and
16 assists, helping Denver beat the Los Angeles Lakers. Arron Afflalo added 15 points for
the Nuggets, who have won The Celtics made a brief five of six following a 1-6 start spurt, closing it to 92-88 on that was capped by consecuconsecutive 3s by Bradley and tive double-digit losses to PortSullinger with 90 seconds to land. The Lakers, coming off go, but they were unable to a 140-106 drubbing at Dallas, make shots in the final minute. began a four-game homestand Portland shot just 35.4 per- with their seventh straight cent in the opening half, but loss to the Nuggets, despite started 6 of 7 in the second 27 points from Kobe Bryant. 14 shots in the quarter.
and took their first lead of the
game at59-57 on Aldridge's layup. The teams were then tied five times in the final 4
t h e second
half, and David Samuels had 11 for Long Beach
minutes of the third.
BOSTON — LaMarcus Aldridge likes the attitude the Portland Trail Blazers have
night. "I like it because I don't want guys getting caught uP in the moment of seven in a
points, all in
The NBA's No. 4 career scorer made only four of 14 shots
after the third quarter and finished 10 for 24.
NewOrleans Denver Utah Minnesota LA. Lakers Oklahoma City d-divisionleader
7 6 5 3 3 3
5 7 9 9 11 12
Sunday'sGames
Memphis107,LA.Clippers91 Miami94,Charlotte93 Portland94,Boston ij8 GoldenState91, OklahomaCity 86 Denver101,LA.Lakers94, OT
Today'sGames PortlandatPhiladelphia, 4p.m. LA. Clippers atCharlotte, 4p.m. Orlando at Cleveland,4 p.m. PhoenixatToronto, 4:30p.m. NewYorkat Houston 5p.m. IndianaatDalas, 5:30p.m. Chicago at Utah,6 p.m. Tuesday'sGames AtlantaatWashington,4 p.m. GoldenStateatMiami, 4:30p.m. Sacramento atNewOrleans,5p.m. Detroit atMilwaukee,5 p.m. Chicagoat Denver,6p.m.
583 4
462 5'/2
357 7 250 8 214 9 200 9'/z
GOLDEN STATE(91) Barnes0 50 00, Green 3-11 3410, Bogut1-3 0-02, Curry5-153-415, Thompson6-204-4 20, Iguodal3-71-1 a 7,Barbosa0-21-21, Speights1118 6-9 28,Livingston1-4 0-0 2, Ezeli3-70-0 6, Rush0-10-00. Totals33-9318-2491. OKLAHOM ACITY(86) Thomas1-60-02,Ibaka5-176-616, Adam s4-7 2-210, Jackson 10-261-1 22, Roberson1-40-02, perkins2-4 0-4 4, Morrow5-0 4-516, collison 1-20 22, Telfai371-27, r Lamb0 65 55. Totals 32-90 19-27 86. Golden State 2824 18 21 — 91 Oklahoma Cii y 2 0 27 19 20 — 86
Grizzlies107, Clippers91 LA. CLIPPERS (91) Barnes 4-60-29, Griffin 5-172-412,Jordan1-2 0-02, Paul7-137-t22, Redick5-102-215, Crawford 5-137-719, Turkoglu1-1 1-23, Hawes 2-7 1-2 5, Farmar0-3 0-00, Davis2-20-2 4, Bullock 0-2 0-0 0,Cunningham0-1 0-00, Udoh0-00-0 0. Totals32-7720-28 91. MEMPHIS (107) Allen 4-94-412, Randolph5-11 0-010, Gasol 13-18 4-530,Conley2-62-5 7, Lee4-10 2-313,
LA. LAKERS (94) Johnson3-101-17, Davis1-32-44, Hill 2-ij 7-8 11, Lin 8-151-317, Bryant10-247-1027, Sacre 4-65-613, Young2-122-27, Price0-30-00, Ellington 3-80-08. Totals33-89 25-3494. Denver 21 20 31 1415 — 101 L.A. Lakers 1 9 20 36 11 8 — 94
Leaders Bryant,LAL Davis,NOR James,CLE Harden,HOU Anthony,NYK Curry,GO L Cousins,SAC Griffin, LAC Thompson, GOL Irving,CLE Bosh,MIA Aldridge,POR Gay,SAC Jefferson,CHA Lillard,POR
Scoring G FG FT PTS AVG 13 08 87 347 26.7 12 126 64 316 26.3 12 105 64 13 86 09 14 126 59 11 89 45 13 109 83
296 24.7 317 24.4 334 23.9 256 23.3 301 23.2 u 99 53 254 23.1 10 74 49 226 2z6 12 85 65 262 2t8 13 93 76 279 2t5 11 92 44 235 21.4 13 92 17 214 21.1 13 09 34 272 20.9 12 80 52 251 20.9
hold
off Pacific for a victory in the first game of the Marv Harshman Classic.
Penn State 63, Southern Cai 61: CH A R LESTON, S.C.— D.J. Newbill scored 16 of his 22 points in the
second half an d
Penn
State held off Southern Cal
to take fifth place at the Charleston Classic.
Top 25 No. 1 Kentucky 86, Montana State 28: LE XINGTON, Ky.— Devin Booker
scored a career-best 18 points, A aro n
H a r r ison
added 14 and Kentucky held Montana State scorelessfor several stretches. No. 11 Wichita State 105, Newman 57: WI C H ITA, Kan. — Ron Baker scored 16 of his 18 points in the first
half, leading Wichita State past Division II Newman.
West Virginia 78, No. 17 Connecticut 68: SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Juwan Staten had 23 points
and West Virginia held off several second-half r u ns to beat Connecticut in the
championship game of the Puerto Rico Tip-Off.
No. 19 Oklahoma 90, Northwestern State 68: NORMAN, Okla. — Isaiah
Cousins scored 20 points to helpOklahoma rebound from its first loss of the sea-
son by beating Northwestern State. No. 20 Ohio State 106,
Sacred Heart 48: COLUMBUS, Ohio — D'Angelo Russell scored 32 points
and Shannon Scott set a school record with 16 assists to lead Ohio State to a
win against overmatched Sacred Heart.
B4
THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2014
Lyncb
gifts, especially when compared to the determination
Continued from B1 It is a candid Lynch snapshot: genuine, under the radar and a bit strange. Doug Baldwin heard the story, too. He talked to Lynch about it, and
with which Lynch runs, but
IW,
'llt
they are just as vital to his success. Yet Lynch is still defined by his power. He's had his helmet ripped off this year and kept running. He's had a braid ripped from his head and kept running. He's had four or five defenders draped on him and kept running.
he has a different take. "That m oment e p itomiz-
es who Marshawn Lynch is," Baldwin said. "In the grand scheme of things, you guys might not understand it. I had
"A lot of people talk about how the receivers block in the
a conversation with him, so I
know exactly why he did that. Turbin and Christine Michael
run game, but in all honesty
will understand it when Mar-
shawn is gone, but he does things for a reason. Yes, it is
and the way he runs the ball," Baldwin said. "With the passion he runs with and giving
truly heartfelt. But that situ-
his all out there, you can't
ation right there epitomizes Marshawn Lynch."
help but want to go out there and block as hard as you can for him because of the way he runs." The question hanging over this season is whether Lynch will be back with the Sea-
that starts w it h
Understanding the caricature To understand Marshawn Lynch is to first understand
that you probably won't un-
teisst
hawks next year, an almost
. o.
derstand Marshawn Lynch. "I don't understand him,
unavoidable cloud. Lynch will be 29 next season, and he
„~j
either," Turbin said. "He's not
M a rshawn
will have more than 2,000 ca-
reer carries. As well as he has played, it is entirely possible
supposed to be understood.
That's what people have to understand about him and a lot of guys in this locker The Associated Press photos room. The reason why we're Seattle's Marshawn Lynch joins in as Seahawks' Ses Gals cheerleaders dance during a break late in the second half Sunday in Seattle. here is because we're dif-
that the Seahawks will cut ties with him. For what it's worth,
Carroll addressed the topic this week, saying, "we want him around here for as long as he can play." On the field, Lynch has been at or near his best — a
ferent, and the reason that
makes him so good is because he's so different, with his own way of thinking and his own mindset. He's not about how it's supposed to be,
fringe MVP candidate to some
around the league. Perhaps the best way to understand him is by not trying to under-
quote-unquote."
Lynch has become a media caricature the past couple of
stand him at all and instead
years, partly of his own doing. His reluctance to talk at
embracing all the quirks, all
the Super Bowl turned into
good times and rough edges that come with one of the Seahawks' most unique players. "I think his rough edges are what makes him a good play-
a circus and became a dominant story that week. His
t he crushing r uns, al l
Eg
standoff with the NFL over
his unwillingness to speak after games resulted in him getting fined $100,000 this week. Lynch goes full "Beast Mode" on Arizona's Larry Foote on Sunday His refusal to cooperate At 29 years old, Lynch showsfew signs of slowing down.
Lynch during Super Bowl Media Day last season., which he left as
er," Bennett said. "That tenacity, that I-don't-care attitude,
soon as possible.
it makes him run the way he
with the media has had the
runs. You can't question his ef-
effect of painting Lynch in a his space in anyway, it's going of hand in the third quarter, he to be really hard to regain his doesn't care if he has 35 yards trust and loyalty back — if you or 150 yards and is about to 'Matrix' because everybody even can." break a record, he'll pull himis in (there) with Twitter and The other word is genu- self out of the game to let some Instagram and all that stuff," ine. As out-there as some of of the younger guys get reps. defensive lineman Michael Lynch's behavior can seem, Most guys go after their stats, Bennett said. "He's just so as defiant and individualistic but he doesn't care about stats. out of it, on his own w i ng, as hecan sometimes appear, And that's unique for an offenand it seems like he's just dif- teammates say Lynch is noth- sive player." ferent. Or maybe everybody ing if not real. Said Bennett: "Just last else is just wrong. You know It would be easy for Lynch home game, hebrought two what I mean'? If more people to repair his image with the kids in here, a sick kid from caredlesswhat other people media, to throw a bone af- his charity. He walked him thought of them, how much ter games and talk for a few through the locker room and better would the world be?" minutes. Lynch isn't averse to showed him around and inIn the locker room, Lynch attention — just recently he troduced him to us and just is one of the Seahawks' most appeared in an episode of the changed the kid's life. He respected players. He is a rare TV show, "The League" — but didn't call the media and say, offensive player who is just he doesn't carem uch abouthis 'Look at me, I'm doing this as comfortable with the de- image, other than the obvious every week.' He does a lot fensive line as he is with the incentive of avoiding hefty of charity work that nobody receivers. He is held in such fines from the league. sees." "That's the cool thing about high esteem in large part beAvril said Lynch would give cause of his play on Sundays. him, too," Av ri l s a id. "He the keys to his Lamborghini But he is also valued as a knows who he is. A lot of us, a to a teammate for a couple of mentor, a loyal teammate and lot of football players and ath- days if he needed to borrow a confidant more than willing letes, don't know who they are a car. Baldwin laughed and to dispense no-BS feedback. so they play the fence. But he agreed. "From Little League to high knows who he is. He believes "And I would say to him, school to college to the pros, in certain things and nothing 'Dog, your Lamborghini?!' he's the best teammate I've can budge that." Baldwin said. "And he would ever been around," Baldwin It is easy to find players will- be like, 'Bro, it's just a car.' You said. ing to say nice things about know'? His mentality about "Shawn is one of the cool- teammates in an NFL locker things, he's such a down-toest teammates I've ever had," room — it is the nature of team Earth person. He knows the defensive end Cliff Avril said. sports. But the level to which true value of things." "I think if a lot more people teammates endorse Lynch Off-field issues'overblown' were like him, the NFL would rings different. Lynch's season has largely be a better place," Bennett Said Baldwin: "Every year sard. he takes care of the offensive been defined, from the beginline. And you hear about run- ning, by off-field issues. Loyal and genuine ning backs taking care of the He held out for more monThere are two words that offensive line, but he goes well ey during training camp. A come back when teammates above and beyond. He does reportsurfaced afterthe midtalk about Lynch. ridiculous things for the offen- season trade of Percy Harvin The first is loyalty, and it sive line. I won't get too much that Lynch was so upset he goes a ways in understanding into it because it's his business. almost didn't get on the team why he doesn't talk to the me- But if a guy needed anything bus. Shortly before the Carodia and why he harbors some on the team and approached lina game, another round of animosity toward the Sea- him about it, he would have no reports flared up: one said that hawks' organization. hesitation to help them out." Lynch would likely not return "He's loyal to a fault," BaldSaid Avril: "This a true and to the Seahawks next season win said. "But it does come real good story about Mar- and another said Lynch's rewith a price. If you do double shawn. Shawn is the type of lationship wit h c oach Pete crosshim, orifyou disrespect person who if the game is out Carroll had deteriorated to the light almost entirely unfamiliar to his teammates. "I like to say he's out of the
"
point that they were no longer
talking. "I think that is being a little bit overblown," Baldwin said.
"That's from the knowledge
fort. He's giving the most you can give as a player."
ridiculous."
Having acareer year The irony is that Lynch is under the most scrutiny of his
career in what is one of his More recently, Lynch stayed best seasons, if not the best. out on the field in freezing Lynch is so in-tune with temperatures at halftime in the Seahawks' offense that he Kansas City. Mike Silver of knows exactly where to go and the NFL Network talked with how to get there. Where other Lynch on the phone after the running backs gamble lookgame and raised the idea that ing for the home run, Lynch Lynch's decision to stay on the is patient enough to cruise field might have been his way behind the line of scrimmage of showing displeasure with until the hole opens. the organization. Those sound like simple "I'm going to tell you exactly that I have."
why he stayed out there in the
cold," Baldwin said. "His body is so beat up that he wanted
to save his energy so he could go for the rest of the game. He was hurting. He didn't want to get up and walk into the
locker room because it would take him more energy than he wanted to expend. He wanted
to save that for the field.
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"That's legitimately what that was. That stupidity that's
•
•
•
•
•
Switzerland winsDavisCupfinal By Samuel Petrequin
zerland into a 2-1 lead Satur-
The Associated Press
day with a straight sets defeat
"Stan has put in so much effortover the years and played
of Gasquet and Julien Ben-
an unbelievable weekend that
LILLE, France — Roger Fed-
neteau in the doubles. gave me the opportunity today. Federer was thrashed by I'm very much aware of that, Gael Monfils in his first singles this one is for the boys." match after struggling with It took 15 years for the fora bad back but recovered as
mer top-ranked Federer to
the weekend progressed and achieve glory in the Davis did not face a break point on Cup after making his debut champion gave Switzerland its Sunday. in the prestigious event in "I'm happy I was able to stay 1999. He fell on his knees affirst title in the team competition and addedthe onlybigtro- calm andplay a good match, ter converting his first match phy in tennis missing from his and I'm really happy for the point and laid face down on collection. guys in the team, everybody the court before hugging team The 33-year-old Federer and worked incredibly hard to get captain Severin Luthi and his an unassailable 3-1 lead. The 17-time Grand Slam
Stan Wawrinka had put Swit-
me match ready," Federer said.
teammates.
•
•
out there about him staying out there because he's mad
at somebody? He don't care about that (stuff)." Said offensive line coach
Tom Cable: "There wasn't a response needed because I knew he was treating (injuries). To say or think otherwise is
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the
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MONDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2014• THE BULLETIN
NFL ROUNDUP
NFL SCOREBOARD American Conference
Summaries
7 7 3 7 — 24 0 1B 3 8 — 2 1
First Quarter GB — Lacy1 run(Crosbykick),1:34. SecondGuarler Min —CharleJohnson 22 passfrom Bridgewater (Walshkick), 11:06. GB — R.Rodgers 1 passfromA.Rodgers (Crosby kick), 5;23. Min — FGWalsh39,:16. Third Quarler Min — FGWalsh51, 6:42. GB — FGCrosby48, 2:41. Fourlh Quarler GB — Lacy10 passfromA.Rodgers(Crosbykick), 8;34. Min — Jennings 5 passfromBridgewater (Charle. Johnson passfromBridgewater), 3:23. A—52,386. First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-Yards Lost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards
Timeof Possession
GB
INDIVIOUALSTATISTICS
1-13.
MISSED FIELDGOALS—None.
0 1B g 3 — 13 B 0 21 0 — 21
SecondGuarler TB — Evans 19passfrom McCown (Murraykick),
13:24. TB — FGMurray32,:04. Third Guarter
Chi — Jeffery 2 passfrom Cutler (Gouldkick),
10:33.
Chi — Forte13 run(Gould kick), 4:51. Chi —Forte 1 run(Gould kick), 302. Fourlh Quarler TB — FGMurray39,4:56. A—61,109.
Timeof Possession
TB Ch i 17 12 3 67 204 22-66 26-92 3 01 11 2 2-12 3-0 3 -42 3 - 43 0-0 2-6 25-48-2 17-27-0 5 -40 3 - 18 6-40.5 9-40.8 4-2 1-1 9 -87 6 - 45 30:10 29:50
INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Tampa Bay: Martin11-27, Sims 6-22, McC own3-12,Rainey1-3, Lane1-2. Chicago: Forte23-89,Carey3-3. PASSING — TampaBay:McCown25-48-2-341. Chicago: Cutler17-27-0-130. RECEIVING —Tampa Bay: MurphyJr. 6-113, Jackson5-117, Rainey4-18, Evans3-47, Seferian-Jenkins2-16, Sims2-11, Myers1-9, Stocker 1-6, Martin1-4.Chicago: Forte5-23, Bennett 4-37, Marshall3-32,Jeffery3-22,Wilson1-10, Rosario 1-6. MISSEDFIELOGOALS—Chicago: Gould54
(WL).
BengalS 22, TGXQIIS13 Cincinnati Houston
7 2 7 6 — 22 B 3 1B 0 — 13 First Quarter Cin — Sanu6passfromDalton(Nugent kick),1;19. SecondQuarler Cin—Atkinssafety,8:57. Hou —FGBugock36, 1:45. Third Quarler Cin — Hil 2run(Nugentkick),11:48. Hou —Joseph60interception return(Bullockkick), 7:19. Hou —FGBullock 25,1:48. Fourlh Quarler Cin—FG Nugent31,8:48. Cin—FG Nugent49, 1:55. A—71,777.
First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-Yards Lost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession
C in 24
Hou
18 3 72 24 8 43-139 19-64 2 33 184 3-20 2-7 4 -109 1 - 23 1 -4 1 - 60 24-35-1 21-45-1 0-0 1-5 4-48.3 5-47.2 1-0 0-0 6 -60 3 - 15 39:10 20:50
INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Cincinnati: Hill 18-87, Bernard 17-45,Dalton7-6, Sanu1-1. Houston: Blue16-46, Grimes 2-16,Maffett 1-2. PASSING —Cincinnati: Dalton 24-35-1-233. Houston: Malle21-45-1-189. tt RECEIVING—Cincinnati: Green 12-121, Sanu5-48,Gresham4-33, Bernard2-22, Hill1-9. Houston: Hopkins 5-39,Graham 4-41,A.Johnson3-36,Grimes3-32,D.Johnson 3-21,Blue 3-20. MISSED FIELDGOALS—None.
Patriots 34, Lions 9 Detroit NewEngland
3 3 0 3 — 9 7 17 3 7 — 3 4
First Quarter Det — FGPrater 48,11:44. NE — Wright 4passfromBrady (Gostkowski kick), 3:10. SecondGuarler Det — FGPrater 20, 13:37. HE — Blount3run(Gostkowskikick),12:43. NE — Wright 8passfromBrady (Gostkowski kick), 2:42. NE— FGGostkowski35,:00. Third Guarter NE— FGGostkowski43,5:05. Fourlh Quarler Det — FGPrater 49,14:48. NE — Blount 1run(Gostkowskikick),1:53. A—68,756. First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-Yards Lost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession
Det NE 21 29 3 35 439 25-91 20-90 2 44 349 2 -5 4 - 15 1 -27 1 - 81 1-5 1-0 18-46-1 38-53-1 2-20 0-0 5-46.2 5-47.6 0-0 1-0 9-54 11-84 30:11 29:49
INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Detroit: Bell 19-48,Stafford3-18, Tate1-13,Riddick2-12. New England: Blount1278, Vereen 8-12. PASSING —Detroit: Staford18-46-1-264.New England: Brady 38-53-1-349. RECEIVING—D etroit: Tate 4-97, C.Johnson 4-58, Riddick3-40, Ross3-35, Ebron2-23, Fuller 1-13, Bell 1-(minus 2). NewEngland: Edelman 11-89, LaFel9-98, l Vereen8-48, Gronkowski 5-78, Wright5-36. MISSED FIELDGOALS—Detroit: Prater 53
(WL).
5 2
5 8
0 0
W 7 5 Tennesse e 2 Jacksonvile 1
L 4 6 9 10
T 0 0 0 0
Indianapolis Houston
North Cincinnati Pittsburgh Cleveland Baltimore
W L T 7 7 7 6
3 4 4 4
1 0 0 0
P c t PF PA .6 8 2 .6 3 6 .6 3 6 .6 0 0
246 234 288 263 242 219 261 181
H ome Away A FC NFC 4 - 1-1 4 - 1-0 4 - 2-0 4 - 1-0
3 - 2-0 3 -3-0 3 - 2-0 2 -3-0
West Denver Kansas City SanDiego Oakland
Philadelphia Dallas N.Y.Giants Washington
NewOrleans Atlanta Carolina TampaBay
5-3-0 6-3-0 4-4-0 3-4-0
Div 2-0-1 2-1-0 1-1-0 2-2-0 3-0-0 2-2-0 3-0-0 2-3-0
First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards
Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns Interceptions Ret.
W L T Pct P F P A H o m e Away AFC N F C D i v Comp-Att-Int 8 3 0 .7 2 7 3 3 2 26 0 6 - 0-0 2 - 3-0 6 -1-0 2 -2-0 3-0-0 Sacked-YardsLost 7 4 0 .6 3 6 2 6 1 19 5 4 - 1-0 3 -3-0 5 -3-0 2 -1-0 1-2-0 Punts 7 4 0 .6 3 6 2 4 5 21 6 5- 1- 0 2 - 3-0 5 - 3-0 2 -1-0 2-2-0 Fumbles-Lost 1 10 0 . 091 176 285 1 - 5-0 0 -5-0 1 -8-0 0 -2-0 1-3-0 Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession
National Conference W 8 8 3 3
L T 3 0 3 0 8 0 8 0
Pc t .7 2 7 .7 2 7 .2 7 3 .2 7 3
W L T Pct 4 6 0 .4 0 0 4 3 2
7 7 9
0 1 0
.3 6 4 .3 1 8 .1 8 2
J ax
-" iu
In d
INOIVIDUAL STATISTICS
49ers17, Redskins13
g 7 3 3 — 13 H ome Away N FC AFC D i v Washington 7 3 0 7 — 17 5 - 0-0 3 -3-0 6-3-0 2-0-0 4-1-0 San Francisco First Guarler 7 4 0 .6 3 6 197 190 4 - 1-0 3 - 3-0 5-2-0 2-2-0 2-0-0 SF — Boldi n 30 pass from Kaepernick (Dawson 5 6 0 .4 5 5 236 303 2 - 3-0 3 -3-0 4-3-0 1-3-0 1-2-0 3. 4 7 0 .3 6 4 202 244 2 - 3-0 2 - 4-0 4-5-0 0-2-0 0-4-0 kick), 11:1 SecondGuarler Was —Morris1run (Forbathkick), 5:33. West SF — FGDawson41,:00. H ome Away N FC AFC W L T Pc t PF PA Div Third Quarter Arizona 9 2 0 .81 8 240 195 6 - 0-0 3 -2-0 7-1-0 2-1-0 2-1-0 Was —FGForbath27,:31. Seattle 7 4 0 .6 3 6 279 218 5 - 1-0 2 -3-0 5-2-0 2-2-0 1-1-0 Fourlh Quarler S an Francisco 7 4 0 .6 3 6 228 225 3 - 2-0 4 -2-0 6-3-0 1-1-0 1-2-0 Was —FGForbath46, 7:42. St. Louis 4 7 0 .36 4 209 285 2 - 3-0 2 - 4-0 3-5-0 1-2-0 2-2-0 SF — Hyde4run(Dawson kick), 2:59. A—70,799. Thursday'sGame Thursday,Nov.27 Oaklan d24,KansasCity20 Chicagoat Detroit, 9:30a.m. Was SF Sunday'sGames Philadelphia at Dalas,1:30 p.m. First downs 12 16 GreenBay24, Minnesota21 SeattleatSanFrancisco, 5:30p.m. Cincinnati22,Houston13 Sunday,Nov.30 TotalNetYards 2 13 31 2 27-136 29-66 Chicago21,TampaBay13 Tennessee atHouston,10a.m. Rushes-yards Cleyeland 26, Atlanta24 OaklandatSt. Louis, 10a.m. Passing 77 24 6 Philadelphia43,Tennessee24 CarolinaatMinnesota, 10a.m. PuntReturns 3-11 4-8 NewEngland34, Detroit 9 Washingtonat Indianapolis, 10a.m. KickoffReturns 2 -37 4 - 98 Indianapolis23,Jacksonvile 3 Cleveland atBuffalo,10a.m. 1-7 0-0 InterceptionsRet. N.Y.Jetsat Bufalo, ppd., snow San Diego atBaltimore,10a.m. Comp-Att-Int 11-20-0 20-29-1 Seattle19,Arizona3 N.Y.GiantsatJacksonvile,10 a.m. Sacked-YardsLost 5 -29 2 - 10 SanDiego27, St.Louis 24 CincinnatiatTampa Bay, 10a.m. Punts 8-46.6 6-50.3 SanFrancisco17rWashington13 NewOrleansatPittsburgh,10 a.m. 1-1 3-2 Fumbles-Lost Denver39,Miami36 Arizonaat Atlanta, 1:05p.m. 7 -53 5 - 47 Penalties-Yards Dallas31,N.Y.Giants28 NewEnglandatGreenBay,1:25p.m. Time ofPossession 29:55 30:05 Open:Carolina,Pittsburgh Denverat KansasCity,5:30p.m. Today'sGames Monday,Oec.1 INOIVIDUAL STATISTICS N.Y.Jetsvs.BuffaloatDetroit,4p.m. Miami atN.Y.Jets, 5:30p.m. RUSHING —Washington: Morris 21-125,GrifBaltimoreat NewOrleans,5:30p.m. fin III 4-11, Young2-0. SanFrancisco: Gore13-36, Hyde7-16,Kaepernick 9-14. AH TimesPST PASSING —Washington: Griffin III 11-19-0106, Garcon0-1-0-0. San Francisco: Kaepernick 20-29-1-256. RECEIVI NG—Washington:Garcon3-34,Jackson2-39,HeluJr.2-9, Paul1-11, Robertsl-7, Morris Eagles 43, Titans 24 Broncos 39, Dolphins 36 1-5, Paulsen1-1. San Francisco: Boldin 9-137, 5-58, Miler 3-40,VDavis3-21. Tennessee 0 17 0 7 — 2 4 Miami 7 14 7 8 — 3 6 Crabtree MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None. Philadelphia 1 71 0 7 9 — 43 Denver 314 0 22 — 39 First Quarter First Quarler Phi — Huff107 kickoffreturn(Parkeykick),1447. Mia — Dan.Thomas3 run (Sturgiskick), 11:22. Phi — Sproles 4run(Parkeykick),10:44. Den —FGMcManus38,4:10. Seahawks19, Cardinals 3 Phi — FGParkey36,3:25. SecondQuarter SecondQuarler Mia — Tannehig 1run (Sturgis kick),1253. g 3 0 0 — 3 Ten—Hunter 40passfrom Mettenberger(Succop Den— D.Thomas5passfromManning(McManus Arizona Seatlle 3 6 10 0 — 19 kick), 14:51. kick), 7:08. First Guarler Phi —FGParkey26,11:29. Mia — M.Wallace 10passfrom Tannehiff (Sturgis S ea — F G H a us chk a 27, 8;45. Ten—Greene2run(Succopkick), 8:22. kick), 1:54. SecondGuarler Phi — McCoy2run(Parkeykick), 4:35. Den— D.Thomas14passfrom Manning(McMaSea —FGHauschka32,12:52. Ten—FGSuccop20,:51. nus kick),:12. Sea —FGHauschka52,10:09. Third Guarler Third Guarler Ari —FGCatanzaro23,:14. Phi — Casey14 pass fromSanchez(Parkeykick), Mia — Landry 5passfromTannehil (Sturgiskick), Third Quarter 11:27. 2:11. Sea—FG Hauschka40,8:34. Fourth Quarter Fourth Guarter Sea —Helfet 20passfromWilson(Hauschkakick), Phi — FGParkey35,14:14. Den— D.Thomas5 passfrom Manning(Sanders 52. Phi — FGParkey30,10:18. passfromManning),14:09. A—68,327. Ten—McCluster 6 passfromMettenberger(SucDen —Anderson10run(McManuskick), 5:01. Den—Welker 2 passfrom Manning (McManus cop kick),5:43. Phi — FGParkey50,2:26. A ri Se a kick), 3:13. Mia — Landry1 passfrom Tannehig (Miffer run), First downs 12 16 A—69,596. TotalNetYards 2 04 29 3 1:34. 20-64 29-124 T en Phi A—76,987. Rushes-yards First downs 16 26 Passing 1 40 169 0 -0 2 - 32 TotalNetYards 3 51 462 M ia D e n PuntReturns Rushes-yards 19-52 38-164 First downs 25 29 KickoffReturns 2 -45 1 - 20 Passing 2 99 2 9 8 TotalNetYards 3 13 4 5 0 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 1-2 PuntReturns 3 -13 6 - 50 Rushes-yards 21-97 35-201 Comp-Att-Int 14-26-1 17-22-0 KickoffReturns 7-186 4-156 Passing 2 16 24 9 Sacked-YardsLost 3 -9 7 - 42 Interceptions Ret. 2-33 1-0 PuntReturns 1 -17 3 - 1 2 Punts 7-31.9 3-50.0 Comp-Att-Int 20-39-1 30-43-2 KickoffReturns 2-40 3-100 Fumbles-Lost 2-0 0-0 0 -0 1 3 7 Sacked-YardsLost 5-46 2-9 Interceptions Ret. Penalties-Yards 3-25 77 -4 Punts 6-49.0 3-45.0 Comp-Att-Int 26-36-1 28-35-0 Time ofPossession 24:33 35:27 Fumbles-Lost 3-2 0-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 1-12 1-8 Penalties-Yards 7 -56 9 - 6 9 Punts 3-53.3 1-45.0 INOIVIDUAL STATISTICS Time ofPossession 26:48 33:12 Fumbles-Lost 3-0 1-1 RUSHING —Arizona: Effington10-24, Stanton 6 -50 9 98 Penalties-Yards 4-23, Taylo5-14, r Hughes1-3. Seattle: Wilson10INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS Time ofPossession 25:43 34:17 73, Lynch15-39, Turbin 4-12. RUSHING —Tennessee: Sankey10-37, Greene PASSING —Arizona: Stanton14-26-1-149. Se6-15,McCluster1-2, Metenberger2-(minus2). PhilINDIVIDUAL STATISTICS atUe:Wilson17-22-0-211. adelphia:McCoy21-130, Sproles6-25, Polk7-5, RUSHING —Miami: Miller 12-59, Dan.Thomas RECEIVING —Arizona: Ellington5-39,Jo.Brown 3-19, Tannehi4-15, g L.James2-4. Denver: Ander- 3-61, Sanchez4-4. Carlson3-25,Ja.Brown3-24.SeatUe:Moeaki PASSING— Tennessee: Mettenberger20-39-1son 27-167,Thompson5-33, Sanders 1-3, Manning 4-34, Lynch3-43, Helfet 2-27, Baldwin2-6, Turbin 345. Philadelphia:Sanchez30-43-2-307. 2-(minus 2). 2-3, Lockette1-48,Wilson 1-21, Kearse1-19, NorRECEIVING —Tennessee: Walker5-155, HuntPASSING —Miami: Tannehig 26-36-1-228. wood1-10. er 4-64,N.W ashington4-63,McCluster 3-15, Sankey Denver: Mannin28-35-0-257. g MISSEDFIELDGOALS—Arizona: Catanzaro 2-14, Wright 1-28,Schwenke1-6. Philadelphia: RECEIVING —Miami: Landry 7-50r Gibson Seattle: Hauschka49(BK). J.Matthews 6-77,Maclin 6-59,Celek5-48, Ertz4-30, 5-42, M.Wallace4-35, Sims 4-31, Hartline 2-39, 49 (WR). Cooper3-49, Sproles3-14, Polk1-15, Casey1-14, Matthews2-24, Miler 1-8, Williams1-(minus1). McCoy 1-1. Denver: D.Thom as10-87, Sanders9-125, Anderson MISSEDFIELDGOALS—Philadelphia: Par4-28,Welker4-18,Tamme1-(minus1). Cowboys31, Giants 28 key 49(WL). MISSEDFIELDGOALS—Oenver: McManus 33 (WR). Dallas 3 7 14 7 — 31 N.Y. Gtants 7 14 0 7 — 2 8 First Guarler Browns 26, Falcons24 N YG — B e ck ha m Jr . 3 pa ssfromManning(J.Brown Chargers 27, Rams24 kick), 7:01. Cleveland 7 6 10 3 — 26 Dal — FGBailey38, 2:45. Atlanta 7 7 B 10 — 24 St. Louis 3 7 7 7 — 24 SecondQuarler First Quarter SanOiego 3 3 14 7 — 2 7 NYG— Beckham Jr . 43 pass from Manning Atl — Jones24 passfromRyan(Bryant kick), 5:53. Firnl Guarler Cle — Crowell11 run(Cundiff kick),1:33. SD — FGNovak23, 9:10. (J.Brown kick),14:52. Dal — Witten 4 passfrom Romo(Bailey kick), SecondQuarler StL — FGZuerlein 22,1:03. Cle — FGCundiff 33,13:17. SecondQuarter 9:15. Cle — FG Cundiff 37,9:20. StL — Jenkins 99 interception return (Zuerlein NYG —A.Wigiams3run(J.Brownkick), 3:18. Atl —Rodgers8passfromRyan(Bryant kick),:55. Third Quarter kick), 11:32. SD — F G N ov ak 48,:02. Dal — Beasley 45passfrom Romo (Bailey kick), Third Quarler Cle — FGCundiff 32,9:46. Third Quarler 6:35. Cle — Crowell 26run(Cundiff kick),:46. SD — Ry.Mathews32run(Novakkick), 9:50. Dal — Bryant 31 passfromRom o (Bailey kick), SD — Gachkar13 fumble return (Novakkick), 9:29. 1:08. Fourth Quarter Atl — S.Jackson1 run(Bryant kick), 9:31. StL — Austin 6run(Zuerlein kick), 6:18. Fourth Guarter Atl —FGBryant 53,:44. Fourth Quarter NYG —Robinson 1 pass fromManning (J.Brown Cle — FGCundiff 37,:00. SD — Allen29passfromRivers(Novakkick), 8:09. kick), 3:00. StL — Bailey7passfromHil (Zuerlein kick),2:04. A—70,046. Dal — Bryant 13 passfromRom o (Bailey kick), A—66,040. 1:01. Cle Atl A—80,520. First downs 29 21 SIL SD TotalNetYards 4 75 31 5 First downs 16 19 D al N Y G Rushes-yards 29-162 23-63 TotalNetYards 3 17 41 0 First downs 18 27 Passing 3 13 2 5 2 Rushes-yards 24-107 22-128 TotalNetYards 385 417 0 -0 1 - 1 2 Passing PuntReturns 2 10 28 2 Rushes-yards 25-119 32-89 0 -0 4 - 8 4 PuntReturns KickoffReturns 2-44 1-0 Passing 2 66 328 1-0 3-9 Interceptions Ret. KickoffReturns 6-142 2 - 43 Punt Returns 4-68 1-(-1) Comp-Att-Int 23-41-3 27-43-1 Interceptions Ret. 1 -99 2 - 1 3 KickoffRe t u rns 1 -22 4 - 99 1 -9 3 - 2 1 Comp-Att-Int Sacked-YardsLost 19-36-2 29-35-1 1-45 0-0 Interceptions Ret. Punts 1-41.0 4-44.5 Sacked-Yards Lost 1-7 3-9 Comp-Att-Int 18-26-0 29-40-1 2-0 1-1 Fumbles-Lost Punts 4-44.5 4-49.3 2 -9 2 - 10 Sacked-YardsLost Penalties-Yards 5 -30 7 - 40 Fumbles-Lost 2-1 3-2 Punts 4-48.8 4-55.0 Timeof Possession 30;37 29:23 Penalties-Yards 9 -90 8 - 85 Fumbles-Lost 1-1 0-0 Time ofPossession 28:51 31:09 7 -63 5 - 30 Penalties-Yards INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS Time ofPossession 24:53 35:07 RUSHING —Cleveland: Crowell 12-88,West INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS 14-62,Hoyer3-12. Atlanta: S.Jackson13-34,RodgRUSHING — St. Louis: Mason 16-62,AusI N DIVIDUAL ST A T I S TICS ers 3-16,Freeman5-7, Ryan2-6. tin 3-27, Cunningham 4-18, Hill 1-0. San Diego: RUSHING —Dallas: Murray 24-121, Romo PASSING—Cleve land: Hoyer 23-40-3-322, Ry.Mathews12-105,Oliver 6-17, D.Brown1-7, Rivers 1-(minus2). N.Y. Giants: Jennings19-52, A.Wil3-(minus1). Gordon0-1-0-0. Atlanta: Ryan27-43-1-273. RECEIVING —Cleveland: Gordon8-120, Austin PASSING —St. Louis: Hil18-35-2-198, Hekker liams10-35,Hynoski2-4, BeckhamJr.1-(minus 2). PASSING —Dallas: Romo 18-26-0-275. N.Y. 6-64, Hawkins5-93, Barnidge2-23, Gabriel 1-13, 1-1-0-19.SanOiego: Rivers 29-35-1-291. West 1-9.Atlanta: White9-96, Jones5-68, Hester RECEIVING —St. Louis: Bailey 7-89, Cook Giants:Manning29-40-1-338. 4-50, Rodgers3-11, S.Jackson2-17, Toilolo 2-17, 3-27, Austin 3-11, Britt 2-37, Cunningham 2-11, RECEIVING —Dallas: Bryant 7-86, Witten Douglas2-14. Mason 1-26, Kendricks1-16. San Diego:Allen 4-30, Beasley2-66, Murray2-22, Hanna 1-27, MISSEDFIELDGOALS—Cleveland: Cundiff 6-104, Royal6-50, Floyd4-30, Oliver 4-23,Green Dunbar1-26, Williams1-18. N.Y. Giants: Beck56. 2-34,D.Brown 2-20,Gates 2-14,Ry.Mathews 2-8, ham Jr.10-146,Jennings8-68, Randle3-36, Fells 3-35, Donnell 2-24,Parker1-16, A.Wiliams1-12, Ajirotutu1-8. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—St. Louis: Zuerlein Robinson1-1. 46. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None. W L T P c t PF PA 8 3 0 .7 2 7 354 246
Sg.
11 24 1 94 389 23-80 35-175 1 14 214 2 -3 5 - 48 0 -0 2 - 64 0 -0 1 - 42 15-27-1 21-32-0 4 -32 5 - 39 7-49.4 3- 48.7 2-1 6-3 6 -43 6 - 54 25:55 34:05
RUSHING —Jacksonvile: Gerhart 4-31, D.Robinson14-25, Bortles5-24. Indianapolis: HerEast ron12-65,Luck8-49, Richardson13-42,Hilton1-15, PF PA H ome Away N FC AFC Di v Moncrief1-4. 342 275 6 - 0-0 2 -3-0 4-3-0 4-0-0 2-0-0 PASSING —Jacksonville: Bortles15-27-1-146. 292 240 3 - 3-0 5 -0-0 5-3-0 3-0-0 2-1-0 Indianapolis:Luck21-32-0-253. 233 294 2 - 4-0 1 -4-0 2-7-0 1-1-0 1-3-0 RECEIVING —Jacksonville: D.Robinson4-47, 217 273 2 - 3-0 1 - 5-0 1-7-0 2-1-0 1-2-0 Lee 3-52,Gerhart 3-19, Todman2-14, Hurns1-13, Shorts 1111-6, Lewis1-(minus5). Indianapolis: HerSouth ron 5-31,Hilton4-122, Moncrief4-38, Wayne 3-10, PF PA H ome Away N FC AFC D i v Fleener2-28,Doyle2-8, Nicks1-16. 261 252 3 - 2-0 1 - 4-0 4-4-0 0-2-0 2-1-0 MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None. 262 281 2 - 3-0 2 - 4-0 4-4-0 0-3-0 4-0-0 215 300 2 - 4-0 1 -3-1 3-5-0 0-2-1 1-2-0 207 300 0 - 5-0 2 -4-0 1-7-0 1-2-0 0-4-0
North
GreenBay Detroit Chicago Minnesota
Bears 21, Buccaneers13
First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-Yards Lost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards
NewEngland Miami Buffalo N.Y.Jets
Jacksonville 3 B 0 0 — 3 3 3 14 3 — 2 3 H ome Away A FC NFC D i v I ndianapolis First Guarler 6 - 0-0 3 -2-0 6-2-0 3-0-0 2-1-0 Ind —FGVinatieri 46,10:32. 3 - 2-0 3 -3-0 5-3-0 1-2-0 2-1-0 Jax — FGScobee28,4;17. .5 0 0 200 204 2 - 3-0 3 - 2-0 2-5-0 3-0-0 2-2-0 SecondGuarler .2 0 0 174 265 2 - 4-0 0 - 4-0 2-5-0 0-3-0 0-2-0 Ind — FGVinatieri 20,:12. Third Guarter South Ind — Richardson1run(Vinatieri kick),8:31. Pc t PF PA H ome Away A FC NFC D i v Ind — Hilton 73 passfromLuck(Vinatieri kick), .6 3 6 333 256 4 - 2-0 3 -2-0 6-3-0 1-1-0 4-0-0 6:08. .4 5 5 242 226 2 - 3-0 3 -3-0 4-3-0 1-3-0 1-1-0 Fourlh Quarler .1 8 2 192 293 1 - 4-0 1 -5-0 2-6-0 0-3-0 1-2-0 Ind —FGVinatieri 32,14:52. . 0 91 161 305 1 - 4-0 0 -6-0 1-7-0 0-3-0 0-3-0 A—64,328.
W L T P c t PF PA 9 2 0 .8 1 8 357 227 6 5 0 .5 4 5 285 219
Min
24 20 3 62 308 32-155 25-112 2 07 19 6 3-23 1-5 0-0 5 -126 1-0 0-0 19-29-0 21-37-1 1 -2 2 - 14 4-42.3 4-44.8 1-0 0-0 8-75 77 -7 31:45 28:15
RUSHING —Green Bay: Lacy25-125, A.Rodgers 6-34,Starks1-(minus4).Minnesota: McKinnon 15-54, Bridgewa ter 5-32, Banyard5-26. PASSING —Green Bay: A.Rodgers19-29-0209.Minnesota:Bridgewater21-37-1-210. RECEIVING — Green Bay:Nelson 8-68,Cobb 4-58, Quarless 2-50,Lacy2-13, D.Adams1-10, Kuhn 1-9, R.Rodgers 1-1. Minnesota:Jennings4-38, Charle.Johnson3-52, Rudolph3-50, Banyard3-19, McKinnon3-9, Patterson 2-18, Ellison 2-11, Ford
TampaBay Chicago
Colts 23, Jaguars 3
East
Packers 24, Vikings 21 GreenBay Minnesota
B5
Stephen Brashear/The Associated Press
Seattle quarterback Russell Wilson runs against Arizona in the second half of Sunday's game in Seattle. The Seahawks beat the Cardinals 19-3.
Defense leads Seahawks to19-3 win over Cardinals The Associated Press S EATTLE —
A f ter 10
safety Tyrann Mathieu said. A rizona was held t o
a
games, the defending cham- season-low 204 total yards. pions needed to ask the diffi- A week after throwing for a cult questions of each other. career-high 306 yards, Drew Most of all, whether the Se-
Stanton was 14 of 26 for 149
attle Seahawks were will- and one interception. ing to put aside egos and get Also on Sunday: back in the NFC West race. Broncos 39, Dolphins 36: Led by a stingy Seattle DENVER — Peyton Mandefensereminiscent ofasea- ning threw three of his four son ago and some more play- TD passes to D emaryius making by Russell Wilson, Thomas and C.J. Anderson the Seahawks handed the ran for 167 yards and the goArizona Cardinals their sec-
ahead score in Denver's win
ond loss of the season, 19-3 over Miami. on Sunday. Browns 26, Falcons 24: "There was something that
ATLANTA — Brian Hoyer
was missing," Seattle wide shook off three interceptions, receiver Doug Baldwin said. leading Cleveland down the "There was a subtle differ-
field in the final minute to
ence there and I feel like to- set up Billy Cundiff's 37-yard day we kind of found it. We field goal as time expired to talked about it throughout the
beat Atlanta.
week. Like I said, just trusting Patriots 34, Lions 9: FOXeach other, respecting each BOROUGH, Mass. — Tom other and going out there and Brady threw for 349 yards playing for each other. and two touchdowns in a "I definitely felt it today." pass-heavy offense against Seattle won for the fourth the NFL's stingiest rushing time in five games, putting defense and New England aside the m i ssed c hanc- stretched its winning streak es from last week's loss in to seven games with a victoKansas City and announc- ry over Detroit. ing th e S eahawks aren't Packers 24, Vikings 21: done by knocking off the M INNEAPOLIS — E d d i e league-leading Cardinals. Lacy rushed for 125 yards "Hard talks.Arguments. on 25 carries, both season Like a family, and just like highs, to help Aaron Rodga family we came together," ers and Green Bay hang on Seattle safety Earl Thomas against Minnesota. satd. Eagles 43, Titans 24: Wilson was sacked a sea- P HILADELPHIA — J o s h son-high seven times by Ar- Huff returned the opening izona's ultra-aggressive de- kickoff 107 yards, LeSean fense and the assortment of McCoy ran for 130 yards and blitzes they called to confuse Philadelphia beat Tennessee. and fluster the Seahawks Bengals 22, Texans 13: quarterback. But when Se- HOUSTON — Andy Dalton attle (7-4) needed a scoring threw for 233 yards and a drive, after s quandering touchdown and A.J. Green advantageous field position had 121 yards receiving on throughout the game, Wil- a career-high 12 receptions son delivered. to give Cincinnati a win over Considering the circum- Houston. stances, it was probably SeColts 23, Jaguars 3: INDIattle's most important drive ANAPOLIS — TY . H i lton of the season, capped when c elebrated the birth of h i s Wilson found backup tight first child with a 73-yard TD end Cooper Helfet on a 20- catch, spurring a second-half yard catch-and-run touchdown late in the third quarter. It was a must-win for Seattle if it had any hopes of
turnaround that allowed In-
NFC West. "It's a special win because
rushed for two touchdowns
attached. That's what you love about this team: We
Gilchrist intercepted Shaun Hill at the goal line with 56
dianapolis to pull away from Jacksonville.
Bears 21, Buccaneers 13: catching Arizona (9-2) in the CHICAGO — M a t t F o r te
in the third quarter, and Chiwe did it together," Thomas cago beat Lovie Smith and said. "For the first time this Tampa Bay. year, I think we played for Chargers 27, Rams 24: purereasons,forno mo tives S AN DIEGO — Ma r c u s can put our egos aside and secondsleftto preserve San we can admit when we're
wrong. Guys stayed true."
Diego's victory over St. Louis that helped tighten the AFC
Wilson finished 17 of 22 West race. for 211 yards and added 73 49ers 17, Redskins 13: yards rushing. He was at SANTA CLARA, Calif. his best on the lone touch- Carlos Hyde ran for a godown drive going 6 of 6 for ahead 4-yard t o uchdown 70 yards as Seattlemoved with 2:59 remaining, and San the pocketand made him Francisco barely squeaked less vulnerable to the Ariby lowly Washington with -
zona rush. He escaped the
a win that kept them in the
arms of Lorenzo Alexander thick of the playoff chase. for a possible sack and found Cowboys 31, Giants 28: Marshawn Lynch open for EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. 23 yards. Wilson also ran for — Tony Romo threw two 15 yards on third-and-ll to get Seattle inside the Arizona 20. "I think we let Russell Wilson be Russell Wilson on too
touchdown passes to D ez Bryant, the winner from 13
many occasions," Arizona
Giants.
yards with 1:01 remaining, lifting Dallas to a comeback
victory over the New York
B6
THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2014
T EE TO
R EEN
Offseason GOLF ROUNDUP update: New Zealand teen Komakes Meadow a record haul inLPGAfinale LakesGolf Course The Associated Press NAPLES, Fla. — New Zealand teenager
gmggb;
Lydia Ko was an instant millionaire even be-
IN BRIEF Three lOCalS earn Oregan PGA aWardS —ThreeCentral Oregon golf professionals were recently honored by theOregon Chapter of the PGA of America. Erik Nielsen, the longtime headprofessional at Bend Golf and Country Club, wasnamedthe chapter's head golf professional of the year. Nielsen wasalso elected secretary of the Oregon PGA. Tim Fraley, the headpro at Awbrey GlenGolf Club in Bend, was namedthe Oregon PGA'sleader in junior golf. In addition, Louis Bennett was named the resort merchandiser of the year in his first full year as theheadpro at Tetherow Golf Club in Bend. Bywinning their awards, Nielsen, Fraley and Bennett are all automatically nominated for Pacific Northwest Section PGA awards, which will be announced inearly 2015. — Bulletin staff report
fore she went into a three-way playoff Sunday in the CME Group Tour Championship. She finished off her rookie season in style.
By Zack Hall The Bulletin
This is another installment
in a weekly Tee To Green feature in which we check in via email with C entral Oregon
golf facilities for an offseason update. This week we contacted Zach Lampert, head golf professional and facility manager at Meadow Lakes Golf Course in Prineville.
Lampert, who was raised in Prineville, has been in charge of Meadow Lakes golf operations for three seasons. This is what he had to say about the current business of golf
and about Meadow Lakes, Prineville's municipal golf course:
How was business in
Q •• 2014'?
A
• Our rounds are down 2.9 • percent so far in 2014.
Golf revenueisdown 3.8 per-
cent. Total facility revenue is down 2.7 percent. The majori-
Another victory. Another record. And the
richest single-day payoff in the history of women's golf. Ko was flawless with a 4-under 68 that allowed her to capture the inaugural "Race to CME Globe" and its $1 million bonus. Then, the 17-yearold added an extra $500,000 to her big day when she won the Tour Championship with a par on the fourth playoff hole. And to think just one year ago she made $16,063 in her pro debut at Tiburon Golf Club. Her clothes drenched with champagne, she sat next to a pair of crystal trophies, with a glass case at her feet stuffed with cash to symbolize the $1 million bonus. Ko had posed with the cash case at the start of the
GOLF SCOREBOARD Corey Perrine/Naples Daily News
Lydia Ko holds up her trophy after winning the LPGA's CME Group Tour Championship.
$2 million as a rookie. Also on Sunday: Stenson retains World Tour Championship title: DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Henrik Stenson successfully defended his DP World Tour Championship title at the Eu-
week. She neverthought about the money until it was hers. "When I saw that $1 million in the box I was like, "Wow, I wonder who the winner of that will be?' " she said. "I've never see that
ropean Tour's season-ending event. The
much cash in one place before." Ko now has five wins before she can legally drink that champagne that was sprayed on her at the 18th green after she defeated Carlota Ciganda of Spain and Julieta Granada of Paraguay. She won three times this year, and her earnings from the Tour Championship made her the first player to go over
made a 4-foot birdie putt on the first playoff holefora one-shot victory overLee Janzen
Swede shot a final round 2-under 70 to win
by two strokes. Armour III wins Callaway Invitational: PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. — Tommy Armour III at the Callaway Pebble Beach Invitational.
Cullen wins Aussie Masters, Scott bid falls short: MELBOURNE, Australia — Australian Nick Cullen shot a 3-under 69 to win the Australian Masters by one stroke over Adam Scott.
ty of this deficit was due to the
fact that we were closed all of February. February is typically an OK month for us, but this
year we were closed with the large snowfall and frigid temperatures. The poor February also led to a slow start to our golf season this spring. Once
: lLA
we hit the summer months,
revenues were basically flat, and slightly up in the fall. any changes of Q •• Were note made to the facility during the past year? • In the past year, we filled • in the pond on hole No.
The Bulletin welcomescontributions to its weekly local golt results listings andevents calendar. Clearly legible items should be faxed to the sports deparlment, 541-3850831, emailed to sportsgbbendbuffetfn.com, ormailedtoP.O.Box6020;Bend,OR97708.
MichelleWie,$67,464 SandraGal,$67,464 HeeYoungPark, $47,675 So Yeon Ryu, $47,675 I.K. Kim,$36,730 StacyLewis,$36,730 BrittanyLang$36730 SarahJaneSmith, $27,885 Shanshan Feng,$27,885 MoriyaJutanugarn, $27,885 LizetteSalas,$27,885 AngelaStanford,$27,885 Na Yeon Choi, $22,368 CarolineHedwall, $22,368 MarinaAlex,$22,368 ChellaChoi $19610 LexiThompson, $19,610 Kim Kaufm an,$19,610 BelenMozo,$19,610 InbeePark,$17,181 KarineIcher,$17,181 AzaharaMunoz,$17,181 JessicaKorda,$14,716 Mirim Lee, $14,716 lheeLee,$14,716 ChristinaKim,$14,716 CatrionaMathew,$14,716 BeatrizRecari, $13,043 Sydnee Michaels, $11,993 BrittanyLincicome,$11,993 JennyShin,$11,993 Kyu-JungBaek,$10,183 CristieKerr,$10,183 KarrieWe bb, $10,183 JenniferJohnson,$10,183 SuzannPettersen,$10,183 YaniTseng,$8,456 AnnaNordqvist $8456 Mo Martin,$8,456 LauraDiaz,$8,456 Dori Carter,$7,511 SunYoungYoo, $7,511 AustinErnst,$6,836 HaeiiKang,$6,836 PaulaCreamer, $6,836 PornanongPhatlum, $6,296 Eun-Hee Ji, $6,027 Meena Lee, $6,027 MarialoUrihe,$5,577 CarolineMasson,$5,577 GerinaPiler, $5,577 PernigaLindberg,$5,127 Jodi Ewart Shadoff, $5,127 KatherineKirk, $4,857 CandieKung,$4,678 AyakoUehara, $4,453 DanielleKang,$4,453 Mi JungHur,$4,317 Thidapa Suwannapura,$4,183 TiffanyJoh,$4,183 AmeliaLewis,$4,047 DewiClaireSchreefel, $3,958
Calendar TOURNAMEN TS Dec. 13: ChristmasGooseGolf Tournament at Meadow LakesGolf CourseinPrinevile. Chapmanisfor two-person teamsandteesoffwith an11a.m. shotgun. Cost is$30plus$25per-persongreenfee. Toregisteror for more information, call theMeadowLakesgolf shop at 541-447-7113. Jan. 23: CentralOregonWinter Serieseventat Kah-Nee-Ta High Desert Resort nearWarmSprings. Triple-sixtournamentbegins withan11a.m.shotgun. Two-person teamswith nomorethanoneprofessional allowedperteam.Cost is $30for professionals, $50 for amateurs. Costincludesgrossandnetskinscompetitions.Cartcostsextra. Agplayersmust signuphy noon ontheWednesday before the event. Toregister or for moreinformation, call PatHuffer,headproat Crooked RiverRanch,at541-923-6343 oremail him at crrpat@ crookedriverranch.com. Jan.31:SuperBowlScrambleatMeadow Lakes Golf Course in Prinevile. Scramble is forfour-person teamsandteesoffwith an11a.m. shotgun.Cost is $80 perteamplus $25per-person greenfee.Toregister orformoreinformation, calltheMeadowLakesgolf shop at541-447-7113. Feb. 6: CentralOregonWinter Serieseventat Meadow LakesGolf Clubin Prinevige. Shamble tournamentbeginswith an11a.m.shotgun. Two-person teams with nomorethanoneprofessional allowedper team.Costis$30forprofessionals, $50for amateurs. Cost includes grossandnet skins competitions. Cart costsextra.All playersmustsign uphynoononthe Wednesday before theevent. Toregister or for more information,call PatHuffer,headproat CrookedRiver Ranch,at 541-923-6343or email himat crrpat@ crookedriverranch.com . Feb. 21: CentralOregonWinter Serieseventat CrookedRiverRanch. Beter-ball tournam ent begins with an11 a.m. shotgun. Two-person teamswith no morethanoneprofessional allowedper team.Cost is $30 forprofessionals,$50for amateurs. Costincludes grossandnetskinscompetitions. Cartcostsextra. All play ersmustsignupbynoonontheWednesdaybefore the event.Toregisterorfor moreinformation, call Pat Huffer,headproatCrookedRiverRanch, at541-9236343 oremail himatcrrpat©crookedriverranch.com.
Professional
A
LPGATour CME Grou pTourChampionship Sunday At Ritz-CarltonGolt Resort(TiburonCourse) Naples, Fla. Purse: $2million Yardage:gzg40;Par: 72 Final lx-won onfourlh playoff hole) LydiaKo-x,$500,000 71 - 71-68-68 —278 CarlotaCiganda,$141,743 70-67-71-70 —278 JulietaGranada,$141,743 66-71-70-71—278
10. This was a pond that had
given us problems in the past due to its shallow depth, so we chose to fill it in. This is still
a hazard, so the playability of the hole has not changed. Overall, we are very pleased with this project.
MorganPressel,$92,200 72-66-70-72—280
72-67-72-70—281 68-71-70-72—281 70-73-71-69—283 70-70-70-73—283 71-72-71-70—284 69-74-70-71—284 74-68-70-72—284 70-69-76-70—285 74-69-71-71—285 74-67-72-72—285 75-70-68-72—285 70-74-67-74—285 71-72-73-70—286 69-74-73-70—286 70-74-71-71—286 71-69-76-71—287 71-72-73-71—287 74-70-71-72—287 69-73-73-72—287 71-74-73-70—288 72-71-74-71—288 73-71-71-73—288 77-70-70-72—289 74-70-72-73—289 71-72-72-74—289 71-74-69-75—289 75-68-70-76—289 74-72-75-69—290 77-72-68-74—291 72-71-73-75—291 72-70-74-75—291 75-71-77-69—292 73-70-76-73—292 74-74-70-74—292 73-69-71-79—292 71-72-70-79—292 73-76-73-71—293 77-68-76-72—293 74-70-74-75—293 73-71-73-76—293 75-73-73-73—294 76-75-70-73—294 72-74-77-72—295 70-74-74-77—295 72-75-69-79—295 76-72-73-75—296 76-74-75-72—297 73-73-78-73—297 73-71-84-70—298 77-77-73-71—298 74-76-77-71—298 79-73-72-75—299 74-72-73-80—299 75-76-78-72 —301 76-78-76-72 —302 77-78-71-77 —303 74-72-78-79—303 76-74-81-73—304 76-78-79-74—307 83-73-71-80—307 76-81-77-75—309 82-80-76-76—314
Plgggg Well, Retire Well
• Are any changes and/or •
•
•
•
•
•
• improvements to the fa-
Brad Haun NM~22154 6
cility scheduled for 2015'? are scheduledto get A •• We a new fleet of golf carts
in 2015. We are going to be
541-280-2564 tyiL3213-T S
Jee Kiine/Trre Bulletin
Charlie Rice hits out of a bunker during this summer's Mirror Pond Invitational at Bend Golf and Country Club. Rice recently shot a 68 at a Champions Tour Regional Qualifier.
EVERGREEN' O2014ueureer Hom elsrw uaauiueaf trade remeof rsen fuon m e
working on some of the tee
boxes in the spring to enlarge and flatten those teeing surfaces. There are no other proj-
ects that are currently being planned for 2015. has been made Q •• Much about n ew i n i t i atives to grow the game (FootGolf, 15-inch holes, Speedgolf, etc.). What, if any, of those initiatives would you consider the
most promisinf? • I think that Speedgolf • is interesting. FootGolf
and the larger holes are not currently on our radar. I would like to see how those ideas are
implemented at other facilities before we consider joining in. your club either Q •• Has started to offer or does it plan to implement any of those initiatives? • I think t hat our f acili-
• ty would be great for Speedgolf. We may try to promote that some in the upcomingyear. — Reporter: 541-617-7868, zhallibendbulletin.com.
Rice
s udden-death playoff t o finish as runner-up at the
scores of 84, 83 and 81. That s t yle event that pits the re-
AULSKA, WASHINGTON,OREGON, IDAHO, MONTANA, UTAH REACH 3 million PacilycNorthufresterners withjust One Call! • PNDC CLASSIFIED - Dally Newspapers 29 newspapers 1,387,9SO circulation Number of words: 25 • Extra word cost: $$0 Cost:$540 (Runs3consecutivedaysincludingwkdaa
Of his 68, Rice adds: "It's
put him 16 shots behind the gion's best amateur golfers a great carrot. Now I know. cut to be among the 14 golf- against a team of the top club I just have to keep putting e rs who advanced to Nation-
p r o s.
• PNDN 2x2 DISPLAY - Daily Newspapers 27 newspapers -1,016,ae4 clrcrrlatlon Slauu 2x2 (3.25"x2") Cost: gx 2x2: $1,050
in the time."
al Qualifying SchooL Rice credits hi s r e cent Hadhefinishedbetter,this success to a more mature would be a different story. app r oach to the game that inAs it is, Rice got the shot of cludes an improving swing, confidence he needed to con- better putting, and being vince himself that he indeed more patient on the course. "It's really close, I think," had a golf game capable of helping him realRice says of his game. "Right now ize his dream. "I really believe it's all about short I have the ability b e l l eture I tlBVe ga me, and I am to pull it off," Rice gge >yflfpy pp d oi n g a lot of mensays. " I did it at . talwork. Golfisso that level. And if PU ~ D ~ I diff i cu l t b e cause youcandoitonce, did it at t h a t: you h a ve to stay you can do it over Ieyei p r f y f f in the m o ment. That's the hardand over." E ven as a com- YDU C~tI dD est th i n g t o d o petitive amateur, jt p i t Ce, ypU b eca u se there is Rice is a relative CgfI dp ff pyei s o much time beHe played brief- and OVer. ly for the golf team — Ch rli Ri
Numder ofholes:18 Status:Openyear-round, weather permitting Location: 300SW Meadow Lakes Drive, Prineville Tee times:541-447-7113 Course stats:Par 72, 6,783 yards Head golf professional: Zach Lampert Course designer:Bill Robinson (1993) Extras:Putting green, driving range, restaurant, pro shop Website: www.meadowlakesgc.com
PACIFIC NORTHWEST
Rice reflects of the paper
Continued from B1 Northwest Mi d - A m ateur sign that greeted him. "I But his hot hand cooled Championship. still have that piece of paconsiderably during the final As a result of it all, he was per and I am going to have three rounds of the regional i n v i ted to play in October's it laminated and put above qualifi er,in which he carded Hudson Cup, a Ryder Cup- my desk."
newcomer.
NeadowLakes Golf Course
School' was pretty cool,"
775SW onneWay,Suite120•Ben 541-728 -0321uwww.elevationcapitalstrategies.com
Q~
— Reporter: 541-617-7868, zhall@bendbulletin.com.
More Info:CecefiaOcnpa.com or call (916) 288-6011
•
•
tween golf shots." Taking the next
s 'ep cons zs tently competing but he had all but against w o r l dgiven up the game until four class professionals — is no years ago. That is when he foregone conclusion. began treatment for alcoholAs a married father of two ism, sobered up, and refo- teenagers and co-owner of cused his energy on golf. Bend ' s Two Guys Painting Sincethen,hehasbuiltan a n d Snow Removal, Rice increasingly impressive am- says finding the time and ateur resume. money to advance in golf This year, he won June's will always be a challenge. at Oregon State,
Mirror P on d
I n v itational,
o •
•
•
o •
g
•
•
o
•
• •
But w i t h his first taste of
staged annually at Rice's success on the stage of his home Bend Golf and Coun- dreams, he is committed try Club, for the third con-
t o a t l east another year of
secutive year. Later that t r y ing. month he finished 13th in The r e is no turning back, a loaded field of club pros now, he says. Not when he fiand amateurs at the Oregon nally has some proof that he Open InvitationaL belongs. "Driving up and having In August, he placed second at the Oregon Mid-Am- my own little parking spot ateur Championship,and with my name and 'PGA in September he lost in a C h ampions Tour Qualifying
•
•
•
•
•
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2014• THE BULLETIN
O M M U N IT Y BASEBALL BEND ELKSHOLIDAY HITTING CAMP: Nov. 24-25; Two-day camp focusing on hitting mechanics; led by former Elk coach Joe Dominiak, who recently coached in the Arizona Fall League; $100; 10 a.m.-3 p.m.; Bend Field House, 1182 Centennial Court; 541-385-5583 or joedominiak© bendbroadband.com.
CLIMBING BEND ENDURANCE COMPETITION CLIMBINGTEAM:Monday, Wednesday, Thursday; Competitive climbing team; $1,600; 3:30 p.m.; Bend Endurance Academy,500 S.W. Bond St.,Suite142; www.bendenduranceacademy.org. BEND ENDURANCEDEVELOPMENT CLIMBINGTEAM: M onday,W ednesday;For ages 9 and older; developmental climbing team; $480; 4 p.m.; Bend Endurance Academy,500 S.W. Bond St.,Suite142;
www.bendenduranceacademy.org.
RUNNING ILIKEPIE RUN: Nov.27,9 a.m.;atBend's Riverfront Plaza in front of Crow's Feet
PORTS
Commons; untimed run with turnaround markers for 2K, 5K, 10K and 10-mile routes; suggested donation of $5 and five cans of food; pies at the finish line; www. footzonebend.com. BEND THANKSGIVINGCLASSIC 5K/10K: Nov. 27, 9 a.m.; timed 10K or 5K that starts and finishes in Bend's Old Mill District; $30 for 5K, $35 for10K; www. bendthanksgivingclassic.com. MADRASTURKEYTROT: Nov. 29, 9 a.m.; 5K and10K options; starts and finishes at the Madras Aquatic Center; $5 for MAC members and $10 for non-members; www. macaquati c.com. CORK WEEKLYPERFORMANCE RUNS: Thursdays; Locations vary. Call Roger Daniels at 541-389-6424 for more info; 5:30 p.m.; Bend. FLEET FEETWEDNESDAYRUNS: W ednesdays; FleetFeet's RunthisTown runs, usually 3-5 miles; free; 6 p.m.; Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NWGalveston Ave., Bend; 541-389-1601. GROWLER RUN:Group run of 3-5 miles on Thursday from Fleet Feet. Share a growler of beer from Growler Phil's after the run; free; 6 p.m.; Growler Phil's, 1244 NWGalveston Ave, Bend, OR97701, Bend; 541-390-3865 or scott.whiteIIfleetfeet.com.
MOMS RUNNINGGROUP:Rain or shine, 3 to 4.5 miles every Thursday, 9:30 a.m.; free; 9:30a.m.;FootZone,842 NW WallSt.,Bend; 541-317-3568 or angelajefootzonebend.
com or lisa.nasr©me.com. MOVE IT MONDAYS:First and third
Mondays ofeachmonth. Carpool from FootZone to trailhead when scheduled. All other runs start and finish at FootZone. Usually 3-5 miles, paces 7-12 minutes per mile; free; 5:30 p.m.; FootZone, 842 NW Wall St., Bend; 541-317-3568 or melanie© footzonebend.com. NOON TACORUN: Noon taco run on Wednesdays from FootZone. Order food from the Taco Stand it will be ready upon your return; free (tacos not included); noon; FootZone, 842 NWWall St., Bend; 541-3173568 or teague©footzonebend.com. PERFORMANCE RUNNINGGROUP WITH MAX KING:Tuesdays; Interval-based running group. Locations vary; free; 5:30 p.m.; FootZone, 842 NWWall St., Bend; 541317-3568 or maxIefootzonebend.com. REDMONDRUNNINGGROUP: Tuesday group runs in Redmond. Meet at 314 SW Eleventh St. All abilities welcome; free; 6:30 p.m.; downtown Redmond; www.
runaroundsports.com.
REFLECTIVERUN:Wednesdays, 6 p.m.;
COMMUNITY SPORTS IN BRIEF
Running
RUGBY
Continued from B1 "Everyone can use some exface on Thanksgiving," Bend runner Robbie Donohue says. Donahue, 23, is an employee at Bend's Footzone running store, which sponsors the upcoming I Like Pie run. "And these runs are a great way to support the community and get out when maybe you're not necessarily feeling like you want to goout." This Thursday, Thanksgiving Day, provides Central Oregon runners with a pair
tral Oregon Community College blasted the Reed College Griffins 48-0 on Saturday to conclude its fall schedule with a 5-1overall record and 4-0 leaguemark. Levi Penter scored15 points on three tries for the Bobcats andDalton Chambers addedeight points on four conversion kicks. KennyDailey, Davis Kellar, Travis Skyles, RyanDavis and AdamPendergraft each added atry for COCC,which finished tied for first in the Pacific Northwest Collegiate RugbyConference small-school division with GonzagaUniversity. The two schools will play a playoff gamethis spring.
KAYAK ChriStmaS LightS Kayak SCheduled fOr DeC. 12 — Tumalo Creek Kayak8 Canoe'sannualChristmasLightsKayakontheDeschutes River will take placeFriday, Dec. 12. Kayakers whowish to participate should meet at the kayakshop at 3:15with their decorated kayak or canoe. Boats will depart from the dock behindTumalo Creek Kayak & Canoeat 4 p.m., with paddlers heading upstream to the pedestrian Flag Bridge in theOldMill District. The decorated kayaks and canoes areexpected to be onthe river between 4:15 to 6 p.m. For more information, go to www.tumalocreek.com.
group fun run of 3-5 miles; bring headlamps; free;; Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NWGalveston Ave., Bend; 541-389-1601 or scott.white© fleetfeet.com. RORK SATURDAY RUNS:Weekly run or walk with the Redmond Oregon Running Klub. Saturdays at 8 a.m. Email Dan Edwards for more info; free; 8 a.m.; downtown Redmond; rundanrun19©yahoo. com or www.raprd.org. SATURDAYA.M. RUNS:8a.m.meetat Fleet Feet Sports Bend. Various routes. Mostly trail. We will car pool to a trail head if necessary. Expect longer runs 4-8 miles of beautiful local routes; free; Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NWGalvestonAve.,Bend;541-3891601 or www.fleetfeetbend.com. STRENGTH &CONDITIONING:Mondays; class for beginner to intermediate-level function strength conditioning with an emphasis on running; free; 6 p.m.; Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NWGalveston Ave., Bend; 541389-1601 or scott.white©fleetfeet.com.
TABLE TENNIS TABLETENNIS EVENING PLAY: Monday eveningplay hosted by BendTableTennis Club; drop in fees are $3 for adults and $2 for youths and seniors; 6-9 p.m.; Boys
& Girls Club of Central Oregon (Bend), 500 NW Wall St Bend, OR97701; www. bendtabletennis.com.
SNOW SPORTS BEA NORDICYOUTH CLUB: Dec.20-M arch 1; Bend Endurance Academy; Ages 7 to 11; one and two days a weekoptions; Sat and/or Sun;TheYouth Clubfocuses on fun and introducing youth to the basics of cross-country skiing and joys of winter;
No ski passnecessary andtransportation
is provide; starts at $200; Bend Endurance Academy,500 SW Bond St.,Suite142; www.bendenduranceacademy.org. CROSS-COUNTRY SKIWAXING CLINIC: Dec. 4; How-to-clinic for cross-country
skiers; beginners to racersarewelcome; free; 6-7 p.m.; Sunnyside Sports, 930 NW Newport Ave, Bend OR,Bend; www. sunnysidesports.com. SHE'S ONSKIS NORDICSESSIONS: Starts Dec. 3; Nordic ski class for women who want to ski one day aweek with a coach; sixweek sessions open to advanced-beginner level and above; $160 for clinic only or $180 for clinic and trail pass; 9:30 a.m.; Mt. Bachelor ski area, 3000 Century Dr, Bend; http://www.mtbachelor.com/site/winter/ nordic/lessons.
to host Central Oregon's lone
"Everyonecan use some exercise before they stuff their face on Thanksgiving. And these runs are a great way to support the community and get out when maybe you're not necessarily feeling like you want to go out."
ercise before they stuff their
BodCatS CIOSe fall SeaSOn With ShutOut ViCtOry —Cen-
Email events at least 10days before publication to sports@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. For a more complete calendar, visit www.bendbulletin.comlcomsportscal.
ND
E
winter half marathon on Dec. 6, the Canyon Rumble Frozen
Half. Races of 5 and 10 kilometers will be held the same day on parts of the Canyon Rumble
Frozen Halfcourse. And Fleet Feet is working on
— Robbie Donohue
Thanksgiving Classic 5K and 10K takes place the same day
of reasons to tie up the laces. The untimed I Like Pie event,
in and around the Old Mill District. Things do not get too serious, though, as Thanksgiving Day-themed costumes are encouraged. Turkeys and pilgrims can often be seen jogging stride for stride during the Bend Thanksgiving Classic.
now in its eighth year, takes
"This is just another way to
get involved with the commuStreet Rapids trail for as far as nity," says Camden Stoddard, they feel like running. Runners of Bend. Stoddard works for have the option of completing a Fleet Feet Bend, which puts on 2-, 5-, or 10-kilometer loop — or the Bend Thanksgiving Claseven a 10-mile circuit — before sic. "We do a lot of group runs. returning to the start line at This is another way tobe active Riverfront Plaza just outside of in the community." Crow's Feet Commons. Plates Thursday is just one of sevand more plates of pie welcome eral upcoming days on which the massesupon theirreturn. runners can run for a good "This has become one of the cause.Madras host it s own biggest events in Bend," notes Turkey Trot on Saturday, and a Donahue, who said some 1,400 pair of area Christmas-themed runners turned out for l ast runs are scheduled for Dec. year's I Like Ke ntn. 6. Bend's long-running Jingle For those looking for a more Bell Run/Walk — which was structured run, the timed Bend canceledlast year because of
CXmaS Party tO raiSe funSfOrjuniOr raCerS —Thefourth annual CXmasParty, a Christmas party to raise moneyfor junior cyclocross riders from Oregonwhoare attending the U.S. Cyclocross nationals in Austin, Texas, in January, hasbeensetfor Dec. 4 at Bowen Sports Performance in Bend.Thefundraiser will feature a silent auction and the suggested minimum donation to attend is $5. The party starts at 6:30 p.m. For more information, go to www.bowensportsperformance.com. — Bulletin staff reports
putting together a New Year's Eve event called Run Into the New Year. Check Fleet Feet's website, v vww.fleetfeetbend.
snow and freezingtemperatures — takes place downtown, com, for more updates. kicking off the Bend Christ— Reporter: 541-383-0305; beastes@bendbulletin.com.
mas parade thatday. In Red-
mond, the Redmond Oregon Running Klub (RORK) is planning an evening Christmas Cookie Rtm that showcases the
holiday lights and decorations at Eagle Crest Resort.
Also,Madras is scheduled
participants along Bend's First
CYCLOCROSS
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COMMUNITY SPORTSSCOREBOARD Team highs —Scratchseries: Alley Kalz, 2302; Scratchgame:Bowling Stones,773;Handicapseries: NothinButTrouble,2587; Handicap game:HorsePlay, 935. Men's highs —Scratchseries: Milt Hatzke,658; Scratchgame; Larry Gerke, 285; Handicapseries: Hank Mahan, 716;Handicapgame:DougGray,28t. Women's highs—Scratchseries:Julie Mayers, 586;Scratchgame:RamonaFreeman,220Handicap series: RitaMadison,665; Handicapgame: Leslie Gerke,25a
Basketball Men's ADivision Week 3 CountryCatering GFP 10 Barrell snowplanks KnightRyderz Furnish/ZenithAuto SonnyCaldwel Goodyear/Wiliam Poter Attorneys ContinentalShaggers
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NEVADA FUN—IFLP2;Joe Gowdy 137/375; Rebecca Wood188/455
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I
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Kill a Blocking Nerd
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16 38 4 50
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W EAT H E R
THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2014
Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather,Inc. ©2014 I
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TONIGHT
LOW I ~
HIGH 45'
ALMANAC Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday
TEMPERATURE Yesterday Normal Record
35'
Periods of cloudsand sunshine
I f' I
TUESDAY
Rather cloudy
WED NESDAY
4-s 53' ~ 37'
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Intervals of cloudsandsun
g- u 5 5 ' ~ 3 1'
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Yesterday Today Tuesday
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UV INDEX TODAY
ROAD CONDITONS
NATIONAL WEATHER
SKI REPORT In inches asof 5 p.m.yesterday
Ski resort New snow Base AnthonyLakes Mtn:est.opening Nov.30 Hoodoo SkiArea: est. opening TBA Mt.Ashland:est opening Dec.4 Mt. Bachelor: est. openingNov.26 Mt. HoodMeadows 7 19-21 Mt. Hood Ski Bowl: est. opening Dec.13 Timberline Lodge 7 9-9 Willamette Pass:est. opening Nov.25 A spen / Snowmass, CO 4 13-13 Vail, CO 6 22-2 2 MammothMtn.Ski,CA 0 14-18 SquawValley,CA:est.opening Nov.26 Park City Mountain, UT 1 1 29-2 9 Sun Valley, ID:est, opening Nov.27 Source: OnThsSncw.ccm
48 contiguousstates) National high:69 at Punta Gorda,FL National low: 7 at Lake Yellowstone,WY Precipitation: 3.37" at Lake Charles, LA
53/49
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Juneau Kansas City Lansing Lss Vsgss Lexington Lincoln
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46/41/pc 57/46/pc
64/47/I 89/77/I
59/46/I 89/78/I
Yesterday Today Tuesday
Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 42/39/0.05 39/32/sh 39/27/sh 58/43/0.28 39/20/c 44/33/s 51/45/0.37 52/30/c 34/20/sf 64/53/0.00 63/39/s 63/44/s 56/48/0.91 57/31/pc 44/25/s 54/48/Tr 38/18/pc 46/31/pc Litiis Rock 64/56/0.58 59/34/s 55/33/s Lcs Angeles 80/57/0.00 81/53/s 83/55/s Louisville 59/47/0.73 57/33/pc 45/28/s Madison, Wl 50/45/0.55 37/17/r 28/1 6/pc Memphis 63/58/0.62 56/35/s 53/32/s Miami 83/76/Tr 86P3/s 83/75/I Milwaukee 50/38/0.29 43/20/r 29/1 7/pc Minneapolis 51/38/Tr 27/15/sn 28/23/pc Nashville 62/52/0.48 56/34/pc 51/29/s New Orleans 76/62/0.38 65/46/s 60/40/pc New YorkCity 57/43/0.00 70/49/pc 53/39/pc Newark, NJ 56/41/0.00 69/50/pc 53/37/pc Norfolk, VA 64/33/Tr 74/55/c 60/46/sh OklahomaCity 64/54/0.02 59/31/s 56/33/s Omaha 55/43/Tr 35/19/c 44/32/pc Orlando 86/69/0.03 86/66/I 76/63/r Palm Springs 77/53/0.00 75/51/s 74/52/s Pscris 55/51/0.30 37/20/sn 32/21/pc Philadelphia 54/38/0.00 74/51/pc 55/38/pc Phoenix 74/48/0.00 68/45/s 68/46/s Pittsburgh 63/45/Tr 63/34/sh 41/25/pc Portland, ME 59/37/0.01 60/51/r 57/33/pc Providence 59/40/Tr 64/52/r 57/36/pc Raleigh 57/35/0.07 78/49/c 59/41/c Rapid City 43/30/0.00 35/21/pc 40/26/sn Rsnu 46/27/0.00 53/28/pc 62/30/s Richmond 57/31/0.02 78/51/pc 60/42/pc Rochester, NY 52/42/0.11 64/38/sh 41/31/sf Sacramento 60/45/0.00 65/40/s 66/41/pc SI. Louis 57/53/0.86 41/27/sf 40/27/s Salt Lake City 41/31/0.11 39/25/pc 43/30/c Ssn Antonio 81/53/1.60 65/42/s 65/38/s Ssn Diego 71/57/0.00 79/54/s 81/54/s Ssn Francisco 66/49/0.00 65/50/s 68/51/pc Ssn Jose 65/46/0.00 66/44/s 70/46/pc Santa rs 47/31/Tr 41/1 3/pc 42/20/s Savannah 72/59/1.53 79/52/c 60/45/I Seattle 55/44/0.47 51/48/sh 57/50/sh Sioux Falls 44/38/0.13 27/1 5/c 36/25/pc Spokane 41/31/0.01 40/34/c 49/42/r Springfield, Mo 59/52/0.03 45/23/pc 44/29/s Tampa 83/70/0.01 80/65/I 73/58/r Tucson 67/43/0.00 66/39/s 66/39/s Tulsa 66/56/0.05 57/28/s 53/34/s W ashingt on,OC 57/38/0.00 79/50/pc 59/40/pc Wichita 59/54/0.11 53/24/pc 51/31/s Yskims 52/27/0.00 45/34/c 60/46/pc Yums 77/55/0.00 71/48/s 71/48/s
Hi/Lo/W 57/38/s 38/26/pc 47/32/pc 46/29/s 32/20/pc 56/38/c 57/42/pc 63/32/s 55/35/pc 41/27/sn 56/35/pc 34/17/sn 50/36/c 58/37/pc 54/35/pc 38/29/sf 48/34/pc 48/28/pc 61/47/I 58/38/pc 55/36/pc 41/30/c 28/17/pc 41/26/pc 37/26/pc 52/29/pc 38/29/s 61/42/c 57/39/c 40/26/pc 52/30/pc 67/40/s 59/37/s 38/26/pc 52/31/pc 38/28/pc 37/23/sf 24/17/pc 53/31/s 12/4/sn 30/16/sn 49/22/s 33/20/sf 30/20/pc 56/39/pc 52/34/pc 55/33/pc 40/36/sn 81/69/s 64/40/s 54/32/s 34/23/pc 59/31/s 62/44/r
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55/48/0.92 ls 57/50/0.00 lssg~d d d SS/2 d d d ulralo Auckland 63/58/0.03 * suuis wvock x xM d d +w Baghdad 70/54/0.00 s I $W 4/29 0/49 * Ch e n Bangkok 92/77/0.00 dd * . , 33/19 34/2 • Co umhus ~ asdelphis ~»~~s s esijing 51/32/0.01 1~9 • XX Sslt Lske 4/51 Beirut 66/57/0.89 snclsco 46/20 Omah • Den 39/25 Berlin 47/38/0.00 45/50 ingtun ** suL is 43/2 LssV ss lls, 79 Bogota 70/48/0.04 41/27 Kansas Ci 57/33 ssls Budapest 45/36/0.00 39/20 ville BuenosAires 84/61 /0.00 Chsrlo Los An Iss Csbc SsnLucss 82/60/0.00 1 * 1/53 • L' Cairo 70/59/0.00 Phuen Anchorsgs Mshoma Ci Calgary 39/1 9/0.03 • es/46 Aibuque ue 34 32/2 45/22 6 Csncun 8697/0.01 n Dr air inghs • Dslls Juneau 7 5 al Ps Dublin 45/34/0.00 es 7 ef/3 5/3 Edinburgh 46/39/0.00 19/32 N* Geneva 46/43/Tr p'ct i i • rlsndo Hsrsrs 87/58/0.00 r rlssus « + 7/42 6 Hong Kong 81/69/0.00 Honolulu»M Chrhushus ss/44 Istanbul 50/44/0.00 82/da ee/24 Ssismi Jerusalem 55/49/0.11 Monte v sen - '~ • 44/44 Johannesburg 68/59/0.21 Lima 72/63/0.00 Lisbon 59/57/0.30 Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 50/48/1.69 T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 63/54/0.23 Manila 91/78/0.00 aois 41/30
Rather cloudy,chance of a little rain
TRAVEL WEATHER
Hi/Lo/Prsc. HIRo/W 46 44 69' in 1933 Abilene 75/50/0.00 59/34/s /39 Irngton 50/42 28' 26' -7'in 1985 Portland 4s/41 Akron 60/42/0.11 59/34/sh Meac am Lostrne /4 5 /40 Albany 53/36/0.09 63/47/r 9 • 42/30 Enterpnl dl to 41/3 PRECIPITATION • • 9 • he Oaa 4 8 • 41/28 Albuquerque 50/42/0.00 45/22/s Tdlamo • 50/ 1 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" CENTRAL: Clouds and 54/50 andy • Anchorage 33/27/Tr 32/21/pc 50/41 Mc innvie 1.92"in 1953 some sunshinetoday „•• Heppner Atlanta 61/46/2.18 7O/42/pc Record 2/48 Grande t • „ ., • Condon 0/40 Atlantic City 54/41/0.00 66/54/pc 45 39 Month to date (normal) 2.1 4 " (0.97") with dry weather Union Lincoln Austin 82/52/1.97 63/35/s 42/ Year to date(normal) 8.55 " (8.74") expected. Dry tonight 55/52 Sale Baltimore 55/35/0.01 73/45lpc • pray Graniteu Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 24" with some clouds. 53/4 • /38 Billings 44/30/0.00 41/29/c 'Baker C Newpo 40/29 • 47/37 Birmingham 65/55/0.92 63/37/s SUN ANDMOON 2/46 54/52 • Mltch 8 38/28 Bismarck 40/21/Tr 23/1 5/pc 0 8 m P S h m a u R 0 d WEST:Mostly cloudy 4 7/38 Today Tue. I\ OrV U 8 I Boise 46/28/0.01 41/30/pc Yach 47/36 • John uu Sunrise 7:12 a.m. 7: 1 3 a.m. today with spotty 53/48 Boston 59/42/Tr 54/52 • Prineville oay 2/28 tario Bridgeport, CT 53/44/Tr 65/54/r Sunset 4:32 p.m. 4: 3 1 p.m. showers arriving in the 62/50/sh 48/35 • Pa lina 46/ 3 7 3 29 o Buffalo 52/40/0.1 5 60/35/c Moonrise 9:0 9 a.m. 10 :01 a.m. afternoon,becoming aFloren e • Eugene ' Se d Brothers Valeu 54/52 Burlington, VT 52/37/0.04 60/47/r steadier rain tonight. Moonset 6:5 9 p.m. 8:0 3 p.m. Su iVeru 46/35 40/29 Caribou, ME 40/31/0.00 49/47/r Nysse • 45/ Ham ton MOONPHASES Charleston, SC 68/53/1.48 78/54/c La pjne 41/31 Grove Oakridge Charlotte 58/40/1.34 74/41lpc First Fu l l Last New • Burns Junture OREGON EXTREMES Co 46/31 52/46 /44 Chattanooga 60/50/1.37 64/35/pc 57 2 • Fort Rock Riley 43/29 YESTERDAY Cresce t Cheyenne 36/28/0.00 34/20/c 44/32 45/35 Chicago 52/48/0.23 45/20/r High: 61' Bandon Roseburg • C h ristmas alley Cincinnati 60/45/0.56 58/30/pc Nov 29 Dec 6 D e c1 4 D ec 21 at North Bend Jordan V gey 57/53 Beaver Silver 46/32 Frenchglen 54/46 Cleveland 58/44/0.07 58/31/sh Low: 22' 43/30 Marsh Lake 48/34 THE PLANETS ColoradoSprings 48/29/0.02 42/fs/s 45/34 at Burns 46/34 Gra • Burns Jun tion Columbia, Mo 55/52/0.44 37/21/sf T he Planets R i se Set • Paisley 7/ a Columbia, SC 66/45/1.52 78/46/c • 47I33 Mercury 6:33 a.m. 4: 0 9 p.m. Chiloquin Columbus,GA 68/53/1.52 73/42/pc Medfo d '46/33 Gold ach Rome Venus 7:53 a.m. 4 : 5 6 p.m. 0 ' Columbus,OH 62/44/0.24 59/32/sh 56/ 47/33 Mars 11:00 a.m. 7 : 5 4 p.m. • 40 IOamath Concord, NH 57/32/0.01 59/47/r • Ashl nd • Fage Jupiter 10:28 p.m. 1 2:33 p.m. • Lakeview McDermi Corpus Christi 81/58/0.51 66/45/s Bro ings 50/ 44/31 Saturn 6:39 a.m. 4: 2 3 p.m. 55/ 45/29 46/29 Dallas 77/50/0.1 0 61/38/s Dayton 64/50/0.22 57/30/c 2:21 p.m. 3: 0 2 a.m. Uranus Denver 48/31/Tr 43/24ls Yesterday Today TUesday Yesterday Today Tuesday Yesterday Today Tuesday oss Moines 54/52/0.06 33/1 9/c City Hi/Lo/Prsc. Hi/Lu/W Hi/Lo/W C i tv Hi/Lu/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lu/W City Hi/Lo/Prsc. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Detroit 53/44/0.05 56/29/sh 56/42/0.08 55/49/c 58/52/pc Ls Grande 46/36/0.00 45/39/c 54/42/pc Portland 53/4 6/0.4653/49/c 59/51/pc 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. Asturiu Duluth 40/33/0.01 29/12/c Baker City 42/22/0.01 38/28/c 43/34/sf Ls Pins 42/29/0.19 45/35/pc 52/36/pc Prinsvills 46/ 2 1/0.0148/35/pc52/36/ pc El Paso 64/47ITr 55/34/s 1 N(~ 2 ~ 1~ N 0 Brcckings 56/45/Tr 5 5/49/c 59/49/pc M s dfcrd 47/3 9 /0.05 50/40/c 57 /37/pc Redmond 49 / 23/0.0050/35/pc 57/37/pc 9/-4/0.12 4/-1/pc Fairbanks The highertheAccuWssurscrxrmuy Index number, sums 41/22/0.00 43/29/pc 52/31/pc Newport 5 5 /45/0.00 54/52/c 57/51/pcRussburg 56/ 3 9/0.0754/46/c 60/46/pc Fargo 45/32/0.01 21/11/pc the greatertheneedfor eyssndskin protscgcn.0-2 Lcw, Eugene 58/39/Tr 52/47/c 58/47/pc NorthBend 61/46/0.00 57/53/c 62/51/pc Salem 55/42/0.02 53/49/c 60/50/pc Flagstaff 45/34/0.00 46/21/s 3-5 Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exirsms. Klsmsth Falls 42/26/0.04 44/31/pc 52/29/pc Ontario 41/23/0.01 38/29/pc 44/31/pc Sisters 47/33/0.02 50/38/pc58/39/ pc Grand Rapids 52/42/0.50 50/28/sn Lsksvisw 37/27/0.00 45/29/pc53/28/pc Pendleton 52/38/Tr 50/41/c 58/49/pc The Osllss 6 0 / 40/Tr 50/41/pc 59/48/pc Green ssy 49/38/0.14 43/24/r Greensboro 54/34/0.22 72/43/pc Weuther(WRs-sunny,pc-psrtlycloudy, c-clcudy, sh-shcwers,t-thundsrstcrms,r-rsin, sf-sncwflurries, sn-sncwI-ics,Tr-trscs,Yesterday data sscf 5 p.m. yesterday Harrisburg 56/31/0.00 70/43lpc l-84 at Cabbage Hill: Mostly cloudy todaywith Hsrffcrd, CT 61/41/Tr 66/50/r no travel problemsanticipated. Helena 43/31/Tr 39/27/c US 20 at SantiamPass:Mostly cloudy with no Honolulu 85/71/0.00 82/68/pc ~ o s ~ t o s ~ 2 08 ~ 308 ~ 408 ~ 5os ~e os ~7 08 ~ 8 08 ~ 9 08 ~t oos ~ttes Houston travel problemsexpected. ~ tos ~os 80/61 /0.66 67/42/s US26at Gov't Camp: Mostly cloudy anddry d d d Huntsville 63/54/0.28 60/35/pc * ** + ++ + * * * ~ dM calgs dd NATIONAL Indianapolis 55/44/1.05 52/26/c with no travel problemsexpected. 6 37/27 Jackson, MS 71/59/0.22 61/35/s EXTREMES US 26 atOchocoDivide:Clouds breaking 51/48 11 + 7* sssssx xxx ix C d d Jacksonville 78/67/1 .11 79/57/Pc YESTERDAY (for the for occasionalsunwith notravel problems r aismsrck
expected. ORE 58 atWigamette Pass:Mostly cloudy today with no travel problemsexpected, a bit of rain late. ORE138 at Diamond Lake: Cloudsand limited sunshinetodaywith notravel problems.
26'
Increasing clouds, a shower in the p.m.
Timesofsun and clouds
Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows. umatiga Hood 49/40 RiVer Rufus • ermiston
na
FRIDAY "'" 43'
35'
OREGON WEATHER EAST:Clouds andoccasional sunshine to Seasid day with dry weather 53/50 expected. Dry tonight Cannon with some clouds. 54/51
THU RSDAY "'" 49'
4
I
Mecca Mexico City
gon5/0.OO 86/65/I
80/53/0.00 Montreal 43/37/0.00 Moscow 30/1 6/0.18 Nairobi 81/62/0.08 Nassau 84/73/0.01 New Delhi 82/49/0.00 Osaka 63/46/0.00 Oslo 41/32/1.05 Ottawa 46/36/0.00 Paris 59/45/0.00 Riu ds Janeiro 79/72/0.19 Rome 64/54/0.00 Santiago 75/50/0.00 Ssu Paulo 79no/0'.05 Ssppcrc 42/39/0.00 Seoul 51/32/0.02 Shanghai 71/56/0.09 Singapore 86/79/0.15 Stockholm 43/34/0.01 Sydney 80/68/0.03 Taipei 66/7O/O' .OO Tsl Aviv 68/60/0.24 Tokyo 63/50/0.02 Toronto 48/39/Tr Vancouver 50/39/0.00 Vienna 45/36/0.00 Warsaw 41/32/0.00
71/61/c
68/47/pc
94ngtls
48/29/pc 67/59/r 44/36/pc 67/50/r 40/28/pc 74/59/r 76/61/pc 84/61/s 87/61/s 68/54/pc 68/57/pc 37/27/pc 36/22/pc 86/74/pc 84/69/I 46/38/pc 47/34/c 48/36/pc 46/34/c 59/45/pc 56/46/c 89/60/pc 89/58/pc 80/70/pc 81/71/s 52/46/r 51/45/sh 52/45/sh 53/47/sh 77/56/pc 78/57/I 73/64/c 74/63/c 66/55/pc 61148/I 46/36/pc 48/45/r
73/51/pc 59/42/r 27/19/c 79/57/pc 85/74/s 78/50/pc 67/53/pc 48/37/r 59/38/r 53/47/c 81/73/r 66/50/s 73/47/pc 77/67/r 47/37/r 54/39/r 70/55/r 88P6/I 44/36/r 84/66/I 82/67/s 65/57/sh 59/53/c 57/31/sh 49/42/r 43/38/c 36/32/pc
84/64/s 73/45/pc 43/29/sf 27/1 3/s 80/58/pc 84/72/pc 78/52/pc 59/52/r 43/34/pc 39/26/sf 56/49/I 85/76/I 66/55/pc 78/46/s 80/69/I 43/28/s 56/40/c 60/50/r 88/76/I 39/29/c 74/64lpc 80/69/s 67/59/r 58/50/r 38/26/sf 49/43/r 41/35/pc 40/34/sh
NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE
eamssow em raCin a vanCe Sa iSiCS By Dan Gelston
an extra set of pocket protec-
The Associated Press
tors than r ough-and-tumble
Buffalo Sabres goaltending coach Jim Corsi, this stat
goons. tracks shot attempts for and "Analytics is where we're against taken by a team or crunching in the NHL these going," Flyers general manag- player. It's the sum of a team days is being done in front of- er Ron Hextall said. "You can't or player's goals, shots on net, fices around the league with overvalue it, but in my mind shots that miss the net and the numbers involved in the it's going to become more and shots that are blocked. • League-Wide Success complex, lengthy calculations more and more valuable, I of analytics. think in all sports. It's another Rate: The league-wide shootThe "Moneyball" approach tooL Why not use every tool ing percentage from that area popularized in baseball has available? You still need eyes of the ice in the time frame slowly become as much a part on hockey players. You need selected. of the NHL as the breakaway. that. I don't think that will ever • PDO:The sum of a player's More and more teams are change, but the analytics, I on-ice shooting percentage turning to the same kind of wouldn't say it's a huge part, and on-ice save percentage. analyticS that haVe taken OVer but it's going to get bigger and Sam Ventura, a 26-year-old Major League Baseball when bigger." doctoral candidate at Carnegie they assess talent, players and Philadelphia, Toronto, Buf- MellOn, Co-fotmded the analytperformance. falo, Columbus, Los Angeles ics blog War On Ice. Ventura Never heard of Corsi and and others are leading the has become such a fan of NHL Fenwick'? And you call your- charge in using a new lens at math, he has tinkered with self a fan? scoping out the way players creating his own advanced It's a new era in the NHL are judged. The keythought is, stats, working on a m e t r ic and — much like in baseball there are other ways to scout called zone transition times. — there's still a d i vide bea player than the traditional He used zone information tween the new school thinkers means of goals, saves, plus/mi- (which zone a hit or shot may and the hockey lifers stewing nus and puck possession time. come from) and measured at the thought that nevvfanHere are some of the stats how long it took for each team gled stats could ever replace that are becoming part of the to transition between zones. "Over the long run, we gut feel in building a Stanley lexicon: Cup championship roster. • Fenwick Percentage:The should see the better teams T ake Philadelphia, f o r percentage of unblocked shots holding the puck in the offenexample. (on goal or missed) taken by sive zones longer and getting The franchise known for the player's team; also known the puck out of their defensive decades as the Broad Street as FF%. zones faster," he said. "That's Bullies now has more use for • Corsi: Named for former sort of what I found. The metric Far removed from punishing hits on the ice, the real
I created correlates pretty highly with the number of points in
the standings." Ventttra's stat could become
the next big thing in the NHL. Or it could take yearsforsome teams to adapt. "Hockey'S SuCh a free-flOWing game that it's hard to deter-
mine automatically where each
Washington Capitals coach
ple Leafs hired Kyle Dubas, a twentysomething former playalytics doesn't show for me is er's agent without any previous when the game's on the line, NHL experience. when games or important sitTeams have largely refused uations happen, it doesn't show to make the analytics experts me who's goingto win them." available to the media for fear The Sabres were at the fore- they will expose dassified front of analytics with stats ideas. developed by Corsi. He has Most advanced stats debunk Barry Trotz said. "What an-
player is at each point of the
moved on to St. Louis, leaving
the idea that the oldest stats are
game," he said."It's not surprising that hockey has been slower in adopting analytics." The hard-liners agree that fancy math should go the way of Fox's glowing puck. "There are guys that leave people on the ice in bad situ-
the heavy lifting in the front office to Jason Nightingale. The Pittsburgh Penguins hired Jason Karmanos as vice president of hockey operations
still the most reliable. Ventura
ations and don't get punished for it in terms of the numbers,"
said he found in his research
that hits and blocked shots — bread and butter for many NHL general managers — tend in June to be their analytics tobe overrated. "If you hit someone, that guru. The Blue Jackets turned to Josh Flynn. The Capitals means you didn't have the hired Tim Barnes. The Flyers puck before. Not having the use Ian Anderson. The Ma- puck is bad," Ventura said.
•
•
NHL ROUNDUP • •
•
Ducks scorevictory over Coyotes The Associated Press ANAHEIM, Calif. — Kyle Palmieri and Patrick Maroon
Keith Yandle scored and Mike Smith made 25 saves
NEW YORK — Henrik Lund-
for the Coyotes, who ended
fourth shutout, Martin St. Lou-
each scored a goal, and Ryan their three-game road trip in Kesler had two assists in the comically frustrating fashion. Anaheim Ducks' 2-l victory Smith lost his footing trying to over the Arizona Coyotes on play the puck behind his ovvn Sunday night. goal in the second period, and Frederik Andersen stopped
teammate Zbynek Michalek
29 shots for the Ducks, who landed on top of him. extended their u n beaten They left a gaping net for streak against the Coyotes to
Palmieri after Kesler collected
seven games. The Western Conference-leading D u cks (13-4-5) also won in regula-
the misplayed puck and calmly delivered it for the game's opening goal. Also on Sunday: Rangers 5, Canadiens 0:
tion for the first time in exactly
three weeks.
qvist stopped 21 shots for his is had a goal and assist, and the suddenly stingy New York Rangers routed Montreal. Blues 4, Jets 2:WINNIPEG, Manitoba — R y a n R eaves
scoredthe game-winner in his hometown as St. Louis defeated Winnipeg. Canucks 4, Blackhawks 1: V ANCOUVER, British C o lumbia — Jannik H a nsen scored the first hat trick of his
career as Vancouver defeated Chicago.
•
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ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin
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SUNRIVER' R ESO R T A DESTINATION RESORT
13th Annual Traditions Holiday Marketplace Fri., 11/28, Sat., 11/29, 10:00 am - 4:00 pm Homestead/Heritage in the Great Hall. 70+ Artisans Free Admission
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Yorkie M, 8 wks, docked, 1st shots, dewormed, $550 obo. 541-416-1615
a
CHECKYOUR AD
The Bulletin recommends extra '
25. 541-383-4231
I caution when pur-I
chasing products or • services from out of I 8 the area. Sending 8 • cash, checks, or • I credit i n f ormation may be subjected to
I
I Yorkie. Super healthy. I FRAUD. For moreI Fixed. Ready! $600. about an c Local only 541-977-7773 I information advertiser, you may C
on the first day it runs to make sure it is cor- Landscape lithograph n rect. Spellcheck" and 1906, artist Branson. $50. 541-419-6408 human errors do occur. If this happens to 255 your ad, please conComputers tact us ASAP so that corrections and any T HE B ULLETIN r e adjustments can be quires computer admade to your ad. vertisers with multiple 541-385-5809 schedules or those The Bulletin Classified ad selling multiple systems/ software, to disclose the name of the business or the term "dealer" in their ads. Private party advertisers are defined as those who sell one Stocking computer.
Three Chinese Men produced in solid teak. Dimensions: 15 n high x 6.5n wide.
Figures were 8 call t he Ore g on8 produced in ' State Atto r ney ' Thailand in 1978. Furniture & Appliances I General's O f f i ce $200 for Consumer Protec- • all 3 statues, cash. t ion ho t l in e at I A1 Washerse Dryers 1-231-360-5105 Full warranty. i 1-877-877-9392. (in Bend) FREE delivery(Also TheBulletin > Wanted: used W/D's. > Serving Cencref Oregon since l903 541-280-7355 210
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212
Antiques & Collectibles
Beautiful Oval Table Solid walnut, handcrafted by an Amish artisan for Schanz Furniture Co. Excellent condition w/lovely patina 27" H, top 30" L and 20" wide. Graceful curved legs with 2-1/2n hand-turned center support. Orig. $649; sell $200. 541-385-4790
Antiques wanted: Tools, furniture, pre-'80s John Deere toys, pre-'40s B/W photography, beer cans. 541-389-1578
Stuffers!
Wash bowl & pitcher set, large, exc. cond.
Mint condition, hit one time,
$125 541-419-6408
Cobra Baffler Irons 3-5-HB with covers, 6-PW, senior graphite.
240
Crafts & Hobbies
Antique table Top
$350.
35i/gn diameter, has
image of sailing ship on the top. Base is oak capstan. Very unique piece could sell separately. $400
Deicer cable kit for roof & utters w / i nstructions
I
951-454-2561
Quilting Machine-
(in Redmond)
H u sqvarna/
Viking, 10-ft bed, computerized,
gssoo.
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Donate deposit bottles/ G ENERATE SOM E The Bulletin recomcans to local all vol., EXCITEMENT in your i5 41-416-0538 mends extra caution non-profit rescue, for neighborhood! Plan a when purc h as- feral cat spay/neuter. garage sale and don't ing products or ser241 T railer a t Jak e 's forget to advertise in vices from out of the D iner, Hwy 2 0 E ; classified! Bicycles & area. Sending cash, Petco (near Wal-Mart) 541-385-5809. Accessories checks, or credit in541-419-6408. in Redmond; or dof ormation may b e nate M-F a t S mith Childrens bikes, girls subjected to fraud. Sign, 1515 NE 2nd Dining set: table, 8 20", $60. Boys 16", For more informaBend; or CRAFT in chairs, hutch/buffet, $40. 541-382-9211 tion about an adver- Tumalo. Can pick up hand- carved, 1927, tiser, you may call large amts, 389-8420. seats 10-12. $2250 obo. the O r egon State www.craftcats.org 541-548-2797 Get your Attorney General's business Office C o nsumer English Bulldog, AKC, GlassChina CA King Henredon Mahogany nH C hampion sired 4 Protection hotline at Closet, 68 x 39 nW x Sleigh Bed with Ormos old male avail1-877-877-9392. 16nD, 3 d r awers, able to p e t h o me. ganic Mattress and glass front d o ors, a ROW I N G Bedding. It's magThe Bulletin $1800. 541-728-8249 good shape. $425. gervingCensrel Oregonsrnce Sggg nificient. $4500 www.tarmersbulldogs.com with an ad in 541-382-6773 Cash only. German Shepherds The Bulletin's 541-390-7109 Want to impress the www.sherman-ranch.us "Call A Service 541-281-6829 relatives? Remodel Range, Whirlpool 30" Professional" your home with the Norwich Terriers AKC, free standing, self Directory $250. help of a professional rare! House raised, good cleaning, family dogs. M ales, Amana bottom freezer from The Bulletin's $2000. 541-487-4511 or fridge w / i cemaker. Milk bottle crate 20 "Call A Service email sharonm©peak.org $250. 541-923-3516. glass bottles marked Professional" Directory Dahlia Dairy $125 obo POODLE or POMAPOO 541-419-6408 SOFA - dark brown puppies, toy. Adorable! Adopt a rescued cat or 541-475-3889 leather, Hit a c hi kitten! Altered, vaccibrand, l i k e n ew, Men's Enhanced Aluminated, ID chip, tested, $300; and matching num Alloy-constructed more! CRAFT, 65480 chair and ottoman Crossroads Sport 2012, 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, l ike n ew , $ 2 0 0 . S/N ENI14764,has 1-5. 541 - 389-8420 541-280-0892 never been used or ridwww.craftcats.org Motorola radio, den. Wheel & rear re13iignwx7ndx8i/gn Great flectors, remoyable front Pug pups - 1/4 Chi. Blue Heeler, 1-1/2 yr M, cond. but non-working basket, special order smart, happy, wants to Healthy noses & eyes. M comfort seat, Planet Bike $80, 541-419-6408 please. House trained, $400; F $450. Champ eco-rack, unisex bar, shots utd, needs room to stud.541-389-2517 text ok Shimano non-slip gear run, free to good home. system. Was $940;sellQueenslandHeelers 541-419-8249 ing for$775 cash firm Standard & Mini, $150 1-231460-5105 & up. 541-280-1537 Chihuahua teacup pupSouth Korean pies (2) 1st shots, www.rightwayranch.wor Apothecary chest dpress.com dewormed. $250. typical of what was Santa Cruz Solo Pump Organ, 541-977-0035 used decades ago to mtn. racing bike, Scotty AKC pups, ready sell ¹11948 built in 1870 herbs and medicimed. full-suspennow! Mom/Dad on site, by New England nals. This piece is be1st shots. 541-771-0717 sion, good cond, Organ Co. lieved to have been must sell, $2000. IT IUT/ORKS! Siberian Husky/Wolf produced in 1940sn or Beautiful carved 541-480-2652 later. 35nW x 9.5 pups, bundles of love! cabinet. In 1878i it deep x 42" high. $400. 541-977-7019 took 2nd place in Asking$2500 cash Sydney, Australia. Takara bikes, mens & Chihuahua-Yorkies (2) 231-360-5105(Bend) Was presented to a womens, ridden once, non-shedding, allm eds, minister after his ser$75/ea. 541-382-9211 $200 ea. 54Tg-420-1068 vice in the Civil War. $300. 541 -385-4790 Coonhound/Blue Tick 242 Heeler, 1 yr female, good Exercise Equipment dog needs more space to St. Bernard puppies, The Bulletin reserves run. Pix avail on request. 1st shots, deworming, the right to publish all Pilates XP297 w/riser Free to good home. dewclaws removed, like new, $175 obo. ads from The Bulletin 541-598-5577 $450. 541-771-0956 541-408-0846 newspaper onto The South Korean Bulletin Internet webBlanket Chest Total Gym XLS kit, all site. typical of storing accessories including blankets for frigid Cyclo Trainer. $1348 The Bulletin nights. Dimensions gervlng Central Oregon since fggg value, selling $525. are 31n long x 14.5n 541-633-5496 wide x 22" high. TURN THE PAGE Dachshund CKC mini fe- Whoodle pups, 8 wks., Asking$800 cash. Treadmill, Proform XP male wire/smooth hair 1st shots, dewormed, 1 For More Ads 1-231-360-5105 $500 available 12/5. email male left. Guaranteed. Crosswalk 580, $300. (Bend) The Bulletin highdesertdogs@live.com $950. 541-410-1581 541-382-9211
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Guns, Hunting 8 Fishing Bend local pays CASH!!
for all firearms 8 ammo. 541-526-0617 Bird & Big Game hunting access in Condon, OR. 541-384-5381 CASH!! For Guns, Ammo & Reloading Supplies. 541-408-6900.
IOI tT IIIS RI DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL FOR $500 OR LESS?
Non-commercial advertisers may place an ad with our "QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week3lines 12 OI'
~ee eke eo! Ad must include price of
~en ie tem oi geoo or less, or multiple items whosetotal does not exceed $500. Call Classifieds at
541-385-5809 www.bendbulleiin.com
Yard Machine snowblower, 22", 2-stage, 179cc motor, exlnt shape, $300. 541-389-3469 265
Building Materials
• Cambria Quartz n nBellingham,
55 nx36", nearly
1-1/2 n thick, never
installed, $300 or best offer.
• Bronze 8 Crystal 2-tier, 6-arm chandelier, 22" across, $300 or best offer. 541-923-7491
La Pine Habitat
RESTORE Building Supply Resale Quality at LOW PRICES
257
Musical Instruments
Grand Piano Beautiful American made (1926) Kurtzmann parlor grand piano for sale. 5'5", mahogany case, matching bench, recently serviced and tuned. Family owned since original purchase. $3200 (appralsed value) or OBO. 541-306-6770.
Wurlitzer Ultra Console Model ¹2636 Serial ¹1222229. Made in USA.
Genuine maple wood. Includes matching bench.$900. (541) 598-4674 days, or8541) 923-0488 evenings.
Yamaha piano / harpsichord keyboard, 71 key, CP-30, w/pedal, stand & cord, $125. 541-385-4790 260
Misc. Items
Buyfng Dlamonds /Gold for Cash Saxon's Fine Jewelers 541-389-6655 BUYING Lionel/American Flyer trains, accessories. 541-408-2191. BUYING &
SE LLING
52684 Hwy 97 541-536-3234 Open to the public. Prineville Habitat ReStore
Building Supply Resale 1427 NW Murphy Ct. 541-447-6934 Open to the public. 266
Heating & Stoves Natural ga s h e ater, Abalon, free standing, 38,000 BTU, w/ceramic harth and stove pipe, like new, $700. Madras 541-325-6791 NOTICE TO ADVERTISER Since September 29, 1991, advertising for used woodstoves has been limited to models which have been certified by the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) and the federal E n v ironmental Protection A g e ncy (EPA) as having met smoke emission standards. A cer t ified w oodstove may b e identified by its certification label, which is permanently attached to the stove. The Bulletin will not knowingly accept advertising for the sale of uncertified woodstoves. Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809
New RCBS master kit. All gold jewelry, silver Supplies: 500 S8W, and gold coins, bars, 350 r n ds , 4 5 a cp. rounds, wedding sets, A ll ne w . $45 0 . class rings, sterling silver, coin collect, vin541-588-0694 tage watches, dental Check out the gold. Bill Fl e ming, 541-382-9419. classifieds online www.bendbulfetin.com Lawn Crypt, double inUpdated daily terment, Deschutes Memorial, near the Pond, 249 $1500. 541-771-4800 Art, Jewelry Wanted- paying cash & Furs for Hi-fi audio & studio equip. Mclntosh, JBL, Marantz, Dynaco, Heathkit, Sansui, Carver, NAD, etc. Call 541-261-1808 261
267
Fuel & Wood
WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD... To avoid fraud, The Bulletin recommends payment for Firewood only upon delivery and inspection. • A cord is 128 cu. ft. 4' x 4' x 8' • Receipts should include name, phone, price and kind of wood purchased. • Firewood ads MUST include species & cost per cord to better serve our customers.
Medical Equipmen Above artwork, created in 1975 in Knee Walker, "Drive The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon sinceSgsg Bangkok, Thailand, Economy", good cond. is fabricated from lit$90. 541-382-6379 erally thousands upon All YearDependable thousands of wax 263 Firewood: Seasoned; particles, and can Tools Lodgepole, split, del, only be described as B end, 1 f o r $ 1 95 unimaginable art! Painting is 44" x 32". Shopsmith manual 500/ or 2 cords for $365. Asking$2,500 cash 510, new cond, misc ac- Call fo r m u lti-cord 231-360-5105 (Bend) cessories to fit. $90 the discounts! lot. 760-486-6860 (Bend) 541-420-3484.
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
C2 MONDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2014•THE BULLETIN 476
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
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Employment Opportunities
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES
Masters Level Clinician/Site Supervisor (Bend)
Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed.
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Energetic, self-mo528 tivated, M a s ters Loans & Mortgages Level clinician/site supervisor to provide tre a tment, The WARNING Bulletin recommanage staff and mends you use cauc ommunicate e f tion when you profectively. Send revide personal sumes and quesinformation to compat ions to K r i s a t nies offering loans or kris© hhtreatmencredit, especially tidaho.com. those asking for advance loan fees or companies from out of state. If you have The Bulletin concerns or questions, we suggest you consult your attorney chasing products or I or call CONSUMER services from out of • Place aphoto in your private party ad HOTLINE, I the area. Sending for only $15.00par week. 1-877-877-9392. c ash, checks, o r I credit i n f ormation BANK TURNED YOU OVER '500 in total merchandise • may be subjected to DOWN? Private party 4 days.................................................. $18.50 I FRAUD. will loan on real es7 days.................................................. $24.00 I For more i nformatate equity. Credit, no 14 days .................................................$33.50 ' tion about an adverproblem, good equity I tiser, you may call is all you need. Call 28 days .................................................$61.50 the Oregon State Oregon Land Mort(call for commercial line ad rates) I Attorney General's gage 541-388-4200. Office C o nsumer s Protection hotline at l LOCAL MONEY:Webuy secured trust deeds & I 1-877-877-9392. CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: note,some hard money loans. Call Pat Kellev MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. LTh Bulleti g
Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri.
Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •
• . 3:00pm Fri.
• • 5:00 pm Fri •
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PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines
*UNDER '500in total merchandise 7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00 *llllust state prices in ad
Garage Sale Special 4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00
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A Payment Drop Box is available at Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin The Bulletin bendbulletimcom reserves the right to reject any ad at any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702
541-382-3099 ext.13.
Look at: Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale
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PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday.
Jrr." ~~ t'
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Can be found on these pages: EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools and Training 454- Looking forEmployment 470- Domestic & In-Home Positions 476 - Employment Opportunities 486- Independent Positions
DRIVERS
FINANCEANDBUSINESS 507 - Real Estate Contracts 514 -Insurance 528 - Loans and Mortgages 543 - Stocks and Bonds 558 - Business Investments 573 - Business Opportunities
269
325
470
Gardening Supplies & Equipment
Hay, Grain & Feed
Domestic & In-Home Positions
Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad PROMPT DELIVERY today and 54X-389-9663 reach over 60,000 readers For newspaper each week. delivery, call the Your classified ad Circulation Dept. at will also 541-385-5800 appear on To place an ad, call bendbugetin.com 541-385-5809 which currently or email receives over classified@bendbulletimcom 1.5 million page views every The Bulletin servins centraloregon since f9t8 month at no extra cost. 270 Bulletin Lost & Found Classifieds Get Results! Found air tool in case on Call 541-385-5809 Bear Creek Rd, 11/19. or place your ad Call to ID, 541-388-8956 on-line at Found Calico Cat, 11/15 bendbuHetin.com BarkTurfSoil.com
on Couch Mkt Rd. Very loving but skinny. Call to identify, 541-330-6923 USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Lost at Pioneer Park 10/25, 3-stone wedding Door-to-door selling with rinq w/attached band fast results! It's the easiest CaTI 541-433-5381 way in the world to sell. REMElylBER:If you have lost an animal, don't forget to check The Humane Society Bend 541-382-3537 Redmond 541-923-0882 Madras 541-475-6889 Prineville 541-447-7178 or Craft Cats 541-389-8420. Need to get an ad in ASAP?
The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809 341
Horses & Equipment
"s.
• R.
Silverado 2001 5th
wheel 3-horse trailer 29'x8', deluxe showman/semi living quarters, lots of extras. Beautiful condition. $21,900. OBO 541-420-3277
Fax it to 541-322-7253 The Bulletin Classifieds
Therapeutic Foster P arents ar e u r gently needed for youth in your community! Work from home part-time and get reimbursed up to $1800 per month for each youth in your care (max 2). For more info call 1-888-MSOREGON www.maplestaror.org 476
Employment Opportunities CAUTION: Ads published in "Employment O p porfunities" include employee and independent positions. Ads for p o sitions that require a fee or upfront investment must be stated. With any independentjob opportunity, please i nvestigate tho r oughly. Use extra caution when applying for jobs online and never provide personal information to any source you may not have researched and deemed to be reputable. Use extreme caution when r es ponding to A N Y online employment ad from out-of-state. We suggest you call the State of Oregon Consumer Hotline at 1-503-378-4320
servingcentral oregon sincerae
541-385-5809
Sales Northeast Bend
** FREE ** Garage Sale Kit Place an ad in The Bulletin for your garage sale and receive a Garage Sale Kit FREE! KIT INCLUDES:
• 4 Garage Sale Signs • $2.00 Off Coupon To Use Toward Your Next Ad
• 10 Tips For "Garage Sale Success!"
PICK UP YOUR GARAGE SALE KIT at
1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702
The Bulletin sertrrs ccnrraoregon since rsw
325
Hay, Grain & Feed 1st Quality mixed grass hay, no rain, barn stored, $250/ton. Call 541-549-3831 Patterson Ranch, Sisters Wheat Straw For Sale. also weaner pigs. 541-546-6171
421
Schools & Training XXTR Truck School REDMOND CAMPUS Our Grads GetJobs! 1-888-438-2235 WWW.XITR.EtXU
Sils'co
Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
Add your web address to your ad and readers on The Buiietin's web site, www.bendbulletin.com, will be able to click through automatically to your website. Advertise your car! Add A Ptcture!
Reach thousands oi readers!
Call 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Ctasstfieds
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II tt8868WIB Lead Network Engineer Responsible for engineering, configuration and installation of the company's internal data communication systems. T h i s p o s ition designs, evaluates and installs LANs, WANs, and other Internet, data communications systems and voice systems. Candidate must have extensive knowledge of LAN/WAN, data c ommunications systems, i n ternet a n d telecommunications protocols, remote access systems, PC and LAN hardware systems, routers, switches, and firewall. Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent customer service and over 400 stores in the western United States. We offer competitive pay, excellent benefits, retirement and cash bonus.Please go to www.lesschwab.com to apply. No phone calls please. Les Schwabis proud tobe an equal opportunity employer.
Bxi9nlh
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Furn. room quiet home, no drugs, alcohol or smoking. $450/mo. 1st & last . 541-408-0846 632
Apt JMultiplex General CHECK YOUR AD
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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./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648- Houses for RentGeneral 650- Houses for RentNEBend 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659- Houses for Rent Sunriver 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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List Your Home JandMHomes.com We Have Buyers Get Top Dollar Financing Available.
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:00 650
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870
Boats 8 Accessories Boats & Accessories 17.5' Bayliner 175 Capri, like new, 135hp I/O, low time, Bimini top, many extras, Karavan trailer with swing neck current registrations. $7000. 541-350-2336
3 bdrm, 2 bath $50,900 finished on your site. J andM Homes
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682 - Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687 - Commercial for Rent/Lease 693 - Office/Retail Space for Rent REALESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726- Timeshares for Sale 730- New Listings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738- Multiplexes for Sale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744- Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746- Northwest BendHomes 747- Southwest BendHomes 748-Northeast Bend Homes 749 - Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson CountyHomes 757 -Crook County Homes 762 - Homeswith Acreage 763- Recreational Homesand Property 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land
New Dream Special
541-548-5511
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870
Manufactured/ Mobile Homes
541-548-5511
Rooms for Rent
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Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. For all other types of watercraft, please go to Class 875. 541-385-5809
The Bulletin
servin central ore on since 1903
17.5' Seaswirl 2002 Wakeboard Boat I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, tons of extras, low hrs. Full wakeboard tower, light bars, Polk audio speakers throughout, completely wired for amps/subwoofers, underwater lights, fish finder, 2 batteries custom black paint job. $12,500 541-815-2523
Bayliner 185 2006 open bow. 2nd owner — low engine hrs. — fuel injected V6 — Radio & Tower. Great family boat Priced to sell. $11,590. 541-548-0345. 875
Watercraft
Snowmobiles on the first day it runs ds published in "Wa to make sure it is cortercraft" include: Kay rect. "Spellcheck" and aks, rafts and motor human errors do oc- 4-place enclosed Interbased outof Ized personal cur. If this happens to Bend, Oregon. Sales Help Wanted: your ad, please con- state snowmobile trailer watercrafts. Fo Earn a $2000 w/ Rocky Mountain pkg, E nergetic kio s k tact us ASAP so that "boats" please se Sign-on Incentive. $8500. 541-379-3530 sales person needed Class 870. corrections and any $18.90-$23.62 DOE. immediately for the 541-385-5809 2007 Bennington adjustments can be 660 Route delivery driving Bend-Redmond made to your ad. Pontoon Boat Motorcycles & Accessories (18-25 stops daily), area. Secured loca541-385-5809 2275 GL, 150hp serving central ovegonsince 1903 unloading 800 — 1400 tions, high commis- The Bulletin Classified 1985 Harley Davidson Honda VTEC, less cases per route at than 110 hours, 1200C with S portster customer locations, while sions paid weekly! Senior Apartmentoriginal owner, lots For more informaframe and '05 Harley The Bulletin's providing excellent Independent Living of extras; Tennest ion, p l ease c a l l ALL-INCLUSIVE crate motor. Rat Rod "Call A Service customer service. see tandem axle Howard at look, Screaming Eagle To be considered with 3 meals daily Professional" Directory trailer. Excellent 541-279-0982. You Month-to-month lease, tips, leather saddlebags, please go to our is all about meeting condition, ft23,500 e xtras. S acrifice a t c an a l s o em a i l website: check it out! 503-646-1804 yourneeds. $4000. Call Bill Logsdon, www.s sco ortland.com tcolestN yourneighCall 541-233-9914 458-206-8446 (in Bend). to download and borhoodpublications. Call on one of the 662 complete an application com for more infor2008 11'x2' Zodiak, like professionals today! or you can apply in Houses for Rent mation. new, ActiV hull, safe person at: NW Bend lock canister, 15HP 26250 SW Parkway Yamaha w/ t r olling BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS House for rent/sale! 3 Center Drive, • 5 plate, 6 gal Transom Search the area's most bdrm 2 bath, newly reWilsonville, OR 97070 tank, less 30 hrs, 2 comprehensive listing of Mon-Fri 9am -4pm. mod. thru-out, 134 NW chest seats, full Bimini Harlev Davidson classified advertising... Colorado. $1200/mo. 1st/ for Carol C., top, Transom wheels, Looking 2001 FXSTD, twin real estate to automotive, Happy Birthday Dec last/sec. 541-389-2028 Need to get an cover, RV's special. cam 88, fuel injected, 20th! Call Linda Montmerchandise to sporting $5500. 541-923-6427 gomery at 208-908-8562 ad in ASAP? Vance & Hines short 675 goods. Bulletin Classifieds shot exhaust, Stage I You can place it appear every day in the RV Parking with Vance & Hines print or on line. online at: fuel management Full hookup RV site Call 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com www.bendbulletin.com avail. through April system, custom parts, extra seat. 30th, $325 + e l ec. $1 0,500OBO. 541-3BB-5B09 The Bulletin Central Oregon KOA Call Today serving centraloregon since l9rs 541-546-3046 541-516-8684 C all 54 /-385-580 9 NEWSPAPER
Sysco is now hiring • Delivery Drivers & 486 • Shuttle Associates Independent Positions
The Bulletin
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Community Sports/ Preps Reporter The Bulletin is looking for a resourceful and enthusiastic reporter with broad sports interests to join a staff that covers the wide range of competitive and recreational activities for which our region is famous.
We are seeking a reporter who can cover everything from traditional sports to the offbeat and extreme, with particular emphasis on community (participation) sports and preps. Necessary skills include feature writing, event coverage, and the ability to work well on deadline. A college degree is required. Reporting experience, polished writing skills and a track record of accuracy and reliability are a must. Many of the duties of this position require evening and weekend availability.
For Equal Oppottunity Laws c ontact Also important is the ability to conceptualize the Oregon Bureau of multimedia components that might complement Labor & I n dustry, stories, including video, audio and slide show Civil Rights Division, elements. Experience using social media sites, 971-673- 0764. including Facebook and Twitter, is preferred.
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Employment Opportunities
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The Bulletin is an independent, family-owned newspaper in Bend, a vibrant city of 80,000 surrounded bysnow-capped mountains and home to unlimited outdoor recreation. The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace and an equal-opportunity employer. Pre-employment drug screening is required prior to hiring. To apply, please email cover letter, resume and writing samples to: s ortsre orter@bendbulletin.com
No phone inquiries please.
Tlhe Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since f903
General The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Saturday night shift and other shifts as needed. We currently have openings all nights of the week. Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpositions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. Starting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we pay a minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts are short (1 1:30 - 1:30). The work consists of loading inserting machines or stitcher, stacking product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup and other tasks. For qualifying employees we offer benefits i ncluding l if e i n surance, short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. Drug test is required prior to employment. Please submit a completed application attention Kevin Eldred. Applications are available at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chandler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be obtained upon request by contacting Kevin Eldred via email (keldred@bendbulletin.com). No phone calls please. Only completed applications will be considered for this position. No resumes will be accepted. Drug test is required prior to employment. EOE.
The Bulletin serving central oregon sincefslo
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to r o m ot e
o u r service
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Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care
NOTICE: Oregon state law requires anyone Harley Fat Boy 2002 who con t racts for 14k orig. miles.. Exconstruction work to cellent cond. Vance & Serving Central be licensed with the Hines exhaust, 5 Oregon Since 2003 Construction Contrac745 spoke HD rims, wind tors Board (CCB). An Residental/Commercial vest, 12" rise handle Homes for Sale active license bars, detachable lugSprinkler means the contractor gage rack w/ back is bonded & insured. BIOIN-Out NOTICE rest, hwy pegs & many Verify the contractor's Sprinkler Repair All real estate adver- chrome accents. Must CCB l i c ense at tised here in is subsee to appreciate! www.hirealicensedMaintenance ject to th e F ederal Sf0,500. in CRR area contractor.com Fair Housing A c t, • Fall Clean up call 530-957-1865 or call 503-378-4621. which makes it illegal Mowing The Bulletin recom- •Weekly to advertise any pref& Edging mends checking with • Bi-Monthly & Monthly erence, limitation or HDFatBo 7996 the CCB prior to con- Maintenance discrimination based tracting with anyone. on race, color, reliSome other t rades gion, sex, handicap, ~Landsca in also req u ire addi-•Landscape familial status or national licenses and tional origin, or intenConstruction cettifications. tion to make any such •Water Feature preferences, l imitaInstallation/Maint. Completely Debris Removal tions or discrimination. •Pavers Rebuilt/Customized We will not knowingly •Renovations 2012/2013 Award accept any advertisJUNK BE GONE •Irrigations Installation Winner ing for real estate Showroom Condition I Haul Away FREE Senior Discounts which is in violation of For Salvage. Also Many Extras Bonded & Insured this law. All persons Cleanups 8 Cleanouts Low Miles. 541-815-4458 are hereby informed Mel, 541-389-8107 $15,000 LCB¹8759 that all dwellings ad541-548-4807 vertised are available Handyman on an equal opportuWhere can you find a nity basis. The Bullehelping hand? I DO THAT! tin Classified From contractors to HD Softtail Deuce 2002, Home/Rental repairs 750 broken back forces Small jobs to remodels yard care, it's all here Honest, guaranteed Redmond Homes sale, only 200 mi. on in The Bulletin's work. CCB¹151573 new motor from Har"Call A Service ley, new trans case Dennis 541-317-9768 Looking for your next and parts, s p oke Professional" Directory emp/oyee? wheels, new brakes, Place a Bulletin help n early all o f b i k e LandscapingNard Care wanted ad today and brand new. Has proof Painting/Wall Covering reach over 60,000 Oregon Landof all work done. Re- NOTICE: scape Contractors Law readers each week. movable windshield, ALL AMERICAN Your classified ad T-bags, black and all (ORS 671) requires all PAINTING businesses that adwill also appear on Interior and Exterior chromed out with a vertise t o pe r form bendbulletin.com Family-owned willy skeleton theme Landscape Construcwhich currently reon all caps and cov- tion which includes: Residential 8 Commercial ceives over 40 yrs exp.• Sr. Discounts ers. Lots o f w o rk, l anting, deck s , 1.5 million page 5-vear warranties heart and love went ences, arbors, HOLIDAY SPECIAL! views every month into all aspects. All water-features, and inCall 541-337-6149 at no extra cost. done at professional stallation, repair of irCCB ¹193960 Bulletin Classifieds shops, call for info. rigation systems to be Get Results! Must sell quickly due l icensed w it h th e Call 385-5809 or C & H Painting, LLC to m e dical bi l l s, Landscape Contrac- "For a Sweet Paint Job" place your ad on-line $8250. Call Jack at tors Board. This 4-digit Commercial/Residential at 541-279-9538. number is to be inLic'd, bonded, insured. bendbulletin.com cluded in all adver- ccet7ose7 541-977-4360 KAWASAKI tisements which indi775 cate the business has Good classified adstell KLX125, 2003, good condition. a bond,insurance and the essential facts in an Manufactured/ workers compensa$1100. Mobile Homes tion for their employ- interesting Manner.Write 541-593-8748 ees. For your protec- from the readers view -not Fall Clearance tion call 503-378-5909 the seller's. Convert the 3 Bdrm, 2 Bath, Yamaha V-Star, 250cc or use our website: facts into benefits. Show 1601 sq.ft., 2011 motorcycle, new www.lcb.state.or.us to the reader howthe item will RETAIL custom seat for rider, check license status help them in someway. $85,609 vinyl coating on tank, before contracting with This 2 helmets included. SALE the business. Persons advertising tip $77,599 Finished Gets 60mpg, and has doing lan d scape brought to you by On Your Site. 3,278 miles. maintenance do not J & M Homes Asking $4700, firm. r equire an L C B The Bulletin semnr cenl al 0~n since rrts 541-548-5511 Call Dan 541-550-0171 cense.
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, NOV 24, 2014
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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, NOV 24, 2014
DAILY BRIDGE CLUB lvlonday November 24,2014
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD w'll sbpr tz A SIGN OF ME TIMES
Great magazine
All the puzzles this week, from Monday to Seturdey, have been created by one person, Patrick Blindeuer. Keep your solutions handy, because the Saturday puzzle conceals 8 meta-challenge irwolving the solution grids of all six.
By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency
Since its first i ssue in O ctober 1 929, T h e B r i d g e W o r l d ha s chronicled the game's evolution and h elped p l ayers g e t b e t ter. T h e magazine enjoys an i n ternational reputation among experts but also offers material for advancing players. In today's deal from an "Improve Your Play" feature for intermediates, South arrives at 3NT, and West leads a low heart. Declarer doesn't have time to set up and cash the clubs, even if the suit breaks 2-2. He must try for three spade tricks. South's best chance is to lead a spade from d ummy t o h i s n i n e, producing a third trick if East has the ten (or both the queen and ten). If West has th e t en , d e clarer still succeeds if either defender started with Q-x-x. ENTRIES
spade and he rebids two hearts. The opponents pass. What do you say? ANSWER: This decision is close. You have only 10 high-card points, but partnerpromises a six-card or longer heart suit, and your queen may solidify his suit. Your other points are an ace,a working jack and a king. If your side is vulnerable, bid 2NT to try for game. Otherwise, pass. South dealer N-S vulnerable
9 Q7
0 K42 4 10 9 8 6 EAST
0753 4AJ
0 1086 4KQ
Since declarer is short of dummy entries, he should put up the queen of hearts at Trick One, hoping it holds. Then he can make his spade play. The Bridge World is a must for any aspiring player. For s ubscription information and interesting features, see bridgeworld.com. South 1 NT DAILY QUESTION 20
Simpsons" lack 17Instant 43 Expire, as a subscription 20Gen (member of the 44 illu sion MTV Generation) 49What a medical 21 Nutritional examiner supplement brand examines
4kQ 1086 I vi 985 2
SK I L I M ECO EK PSY AWL TU V I A AM AL S ORA SCE NTS TOR T E D I RT CR I P T HUS T L E ASC OTS DES ERT MES AGE NOS SE
4K9 9AJ ( 7 AQ J 9 4 754 3 2 Nor t h 24 3 NT
Eas t Pass All Pa s s
You hold: 4b A I 5 3 9 Q 7 Openl n g l ead — 94 0 K42 4 1 0 9 86 . Yo u r p a rtner opens one heart, you respond one ( C ) 2014TribuneContentAgency, LLC
Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO
T5 I T NE APP CHO T E E I N N C CA ROL YHA E EM RA
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5
6
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18
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16
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23
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38
28
31 33
34
35
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42 44
45
46
47
48
50
51
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ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE
SOUTH
W est Pa s s P ass
1
a good reason for taking the 13 easy way out" 17 53 Almighty 54 Judy'5 brother on "The Jetsons" 55 It's north of 24 California 57 of T ranquillity 29 58Timeleading up 32 to Easter
22 Lo-cal beers ACROSS 1 Travel aimlessly, 24Attire for Caesar with "about" 26 Product that 4 Sis'6 sibling competes with Uncle Ben's 63 555-55-5555, 7Studiowith a lion e.g.: Abbr. mascot 29 John who won the 1964 64Apex 10Standard sugar Heisman Trophy measure: Abbr. 65 Gulager of "McQ" 31 High-ranking 13King Kong, e.g. 66TV scientist Bill angels 14Permit figure: 32Apt anagram of 67 Courtroom Abbr. CO-STAR — S 15Answerto "Paris est-il la capitale 33 Bridge 68 Cloud's locale de la France?" 69 "For a j o l ly 35 Midnight 16Indian immigrant good fellow" on "The 42 Bald person's 70 Number of years
NORTH 4oA J53
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No. 1020
52
53
55 59
56
57
58
60
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
PUZZLE BY PATRICK BLIOIDAUER
18 How pawns are arranged, at first 19 100 yrs. 23 Lyricist Gershwin 24" is so you!" 25 Response to an insult 27 Southwest alternative, for short 28 Home to Dollywood and Graceland: Abbr. 30 Prefix with glyceride 33 Resell, as concert tickets
47 '9/yhoam
34 Letter after
upsilon 36 From Bangkok 37 Shirte, in some brand names 38 Jean of "Bombshell" 39 Foe 40 Lenin'6 land, for short 41 Critic Rex 44Texascity named after a Ukrainian city 45 Least tanned 46 Despot
argue?" 48 Underground tombs 49 Louisiana style of cooking 51 Opposite of neg. 52 Psychologist Fromm 56 Wildebeests 59 "All systems go" 60007, for one 61 Cyclops or cyclone feature 62 Range of knowledge
cow 8 Revolver, e.g. 9 Bette of "Beaches" 10 Piece of advice D from H&R Block Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2 000 E R I C B A N A 11Oration ast puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords / ($39.95 a yearj. 5 hare tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. D I C TA T E D 12 Pocketbooks
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15 Neigh sayer 16 Clarinet cousin
cash 20 Foamy brew 21 Korean cars 22 Put in a chip for a
hand 23 Turn topsy-turvy
Kids these days!
25 Meaner than a
junkyard dog 26 Where to see
splits and strikes 30 Sci-fi subject 31 Replacement
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36 Highlander's hat 39 Part of a journey 41 Id controller
42 Young man 43 See 38-Down
45 La Scala production
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47 Where to keep
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME 35
Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square, to fOrm fOur Ordinary wardS.
GUGOE ooo14 TribunecontentAgency,LLC AO Riahe Reeerved.
by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
I ohovoaa wowcÃe going fo run ooday!
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55 On the ocean
38 With 43-Across, umbrella drink
51 Indian princes 52 Lines on a list 53 Dam on the Nile 56 Workout centers 58 Old record
40 Soccer score 44 Repress 46 Inspire with a
pregame pep talk, say
player 59 Remove creases
47 Comes down as
from 60 Storied loch
ice pellets
48 And others, briefly 62 Cape Town's 49 Male escort country: Abbr.
ANSWER TO PREVIOUSPUZZLE:
E T V E E R A R 13 Shabby R A 19 Give a hoot IVIDC 24 20-Across R E E serving 25 Shoppe adjective I N S 26 Get-out-of-jail
T I N G S R T O O K I A L L Y L A F L P S B I I T A N N G A G E E R T S FA A M cash A R G O N B I 27 Earthenware pot G U A R D D U T 28 Out of control E B B J A Z Z 29 IM chuckle N I BL E T V 32 S q uad: Best A Buytech support D E L E T E 33 Fairy tale baddie A S E V E R H 34 Gravy vessel xwordeditor@aol.com
11 Grab: eat 12 One beyond hope
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23
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35
6
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27
R O D R I G U E Z O N A I R
E S C A G E R S O R E S A P U P P E R E E S E R S A P E I P A N A P S E N E S T E A N I S M A T I C T E N S 11/24/1 4
10 1 1
9
15
20
26
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56 Leslie Caron title role
65 Photographer's
VANSCA HE WANTEP TD LEAYE BUT HE I2II7I4"r HAVE ENOU&HN0W arrange the CirCled letterS
Io form the surprise answer, ao suggested by the above cartoon.
"I can promise you I wake up at the slightest sound."
Francisco's terrain
37 Part of Lawrence 50 Karen who wrote Welk's cadence as Isak Dinesen
12
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16
18
19
21
22
24
25
28
29
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37
38
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39
40
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KEBCUT
HEROOAOI~ 6 Lauahilveock Ocensina Inc., 084 Oy Universal Udick, 2014
7 Warship fleets 8 Beliefs: Suff. 9 Rural area 1 0 "Heeeere's ! " : Carson intro
63 Bring on board
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HERMAN
4 More often than not 5 How Bond likes martinis 6 Making mention
cars, for short
17 Flat-topped
E-mail: bholbrook1@gmail.com
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side 3 Bouquet holder
critter 10 British sports
landform 18 Where to get
htlp Jtwww.oafohavonocomic.com
DOWN 1 Doorframe part 2 On the sheltered
": ECX3-EH-CXX3-CX3 (Anowero tomorrow) KIOSK I M MUNE C O U SIn Saturdays ~ Jumbles: OFTEN Answer: Farley rolled on the barn floor because of hio — "IN-STINKS"
51
request 55 66 Sci-fi subjects 67 IRS IDS 61 68 M a r t in: British
sports car
52
53
56
57 5 B
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
59
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69 Things
associated with 18-, 26-, 47- and
61-Across
By C.W. Stewart ©2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
11/24/14
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
C6 MONDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2014•THE BULLETIN
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Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
class, certified mail, and attorney's fees i n interest t o t h e Bend, County of DEr eturn receipt r e - i ncurred herein b y grantor as well as any SCHUTES, State of quested, addressed to reason of said default; other person owing an Oregon, sell at public the trustee's post of- any further sums ad- obligation, the perfor- auction to the highest fice box address set vanced by the benefi- mance of which is se- bidder for cash the forth in this notice. ciary for the protec- cured by said trust i nterest in th e d e Due to potential con- tion of t h e a b o ve deed, and the words scribed real property flicts with federal law, described real prop- "trustee" and "benefi- which the grantor had erty and its interest ciary" include their re- or had power to conAgee and Mary Anne persons having no Agee, as tenants by record legal or equi- therein; and prepay- spective successors vey at the time of the the en t irety, as table interest in the ment penalties/premi- in interest, if any. The execution by grantor grantor, to Rockwood subject property will ums, if applicable. By trustee's rules of auc- of the trust deed, toTitle, as trustee, in fa- only receive informa- reason of said default tion may be accessed gether with any interat ww w .northwest- est which the grantor vor of Mortgage Elec- tion concerning the the beneficiary has tronic R e g istration lender's estimated or d eclared al l s u m s trustee.com and are or grantor's succesSystems, Inc., solely actual bid. Lender bid owing on the obliga- incorporated by this sors in interest acas nominee for Na- i nformation is a l s o tion secured by the reference. You may quired after the exthe trust deed i mmedi- also access sale sta- ecution of the trust tionpoint a Division of available a t Nat. City Bank of IN, trustee's web s ite, ately due and pay- tus a t ww w . north- deed, to satisfy the www.northwestas beneficiary, dated able, said sums being westtrustee.com and foregoing obligations trustee.com. Notice is the following, to wit: www. USA-Foreclothereby secured and 05/03/06, r e corded sure.com. For further t he costs and e x 05/19/06, in the mort- further given that any $197,199.33 with ingage records of Des- person named in ORS terest thereon at the information, p l ease penses of sale, in86.778 has the right, rate of 2 percent per contact: Kathy Tag- cluding a reasonable chutes County, Orbe g inning gart North w est charge by the trustee. egon, as 2006-34567 at any time prior to annum and subsequently as- five days before the 06/Ot/11; plus prior Trustee Services, Inc. Notice is further given signed to Deutsche date last set for the accrued late charges P.O. Box 997 Belle- that for reinstatement Bank National Trust s ale, to h av e t h is of $170.72; plus ad- vue, WA 98009-0997 or payoff quotes reCompany, as Trustee foreclosure proceed- vances of $1,720.00 425-586-1900 ALLYN, quested pursuant to for F i rs t Fr a n klin ing dismissed and the that represent paid J AMES R . (TS¹ O RS 8 6 .786 a n d Mortgage Loan Trust trust deed reinstated foreclosure fees and 7023.97001) 86.789 must be timely c ommunicated in a 2006-FF11, Mortgage b y payment to t he costs and property in- 1002.273665-File No. Pass-Through Certifi- beneficiary of the en- spections; t ogether written request that c omplies with t h at cates, Series tire amount then due with title e x pense, LEGAL NOTICE 2 006-FF11 by A s - (other than such por- costs, trustee's fees TRUSTEE'S NOTICE statute addressed to tion of the principal as the trustee's "Urgent signment recorded as and attorneys fees in- O F SALE File N o . 2011-23896, covering would not then be due curred herein by rea- 7023.98503 R e f er- Request Desk" either t he f o llowing d e - had no default oc- son of said default; ence is made to that by personal delivery scribed real property curred) and by curing any further sums ad- c ertain t rust d e e d to the trustee's physisituated in said county any o ther d e fault vanced by the benefi- made by S u zanne cal offices (call for adand state, to wit: Lot complained of herein ciary for the protec- Barnett, as grantor, to dress) or b y f i r st T hirty-Four (34) o f that is capable of be- tion of t h e a b o ve Amerititle, as trustee, class, certified mail, Hayden View Phase ing cured by tender- described real prop- in favor of Mortgage r eturn r e ceipt r e O ne, City o f R e d- ing the performance erty and its interest Electronic R egistra- quested, addressed to mond, De s chutes required under t he therein; and prepay- tion Systems, Inc. as the trustee's post oftr u st ment penalties/premi- nominee for Hyperion fice box address set County, Ore g o n. o bligation o r PROPERTY AD- deed, and in addition ums, if a p plicable. Capital Group, LLC, forth in t his n otice. DRESS: 3163 South- to paying said sums W HEREFORE, n o its successors and Due to potential conwest Newberry Avor tendering the per- tice hereby is given assigns, as benefi- flicts with federal law, enue Redmond, OR formance necessary that the undersigned ciary, dated 03/t 8/08, persons having no 97756 Both the ben- to cure the default, by trustee will on Febru- recorded 03/25/08, in record legal or equieficiary a n d the paying all costs and ary 11, 2015 at the the mortgage records table interest in the trustee have elected expenses actually in- hour of 10:00 o'clock, of DESC H UTES subject property will to sell the real prop- curred in enforcing the A.M. in accord with County, Oregon, as only receive informaerty to satisfy the obli- obligation and t rust the standard of time 2008-13278 and sub- tion concerning the deed, together with established by ORS gations secured by sequently assigned to lender's estimated or the trust deed and a trustee's and 187.110, at the f ol- Wells Fargo Bank, actual bid. Lender bid notice of default has attorney's fees not lowing place: inside N.A. by Assignment i nformation is a l s o been recorded pursu- exceeding the the main lobby of the recorded as available a t the amounts provided by web s ite, ant to Oregon ReDeschutes C o u nty 2012-00358, covering trustee's said OR S 8 6 .778. t he f o llowing d e - www.northwestvlsed Statutes Courthouse, 1164 NW 86.752(3); the default Requests from per- Bond, in the City of scribed real property trustee.com. Notice is for which the foreclo- sons named in ORS Bend, County of Des- situated in said county further given that any s ure i s m a d e i s 86.778 for reinstate- chutes, State of Orand state, to wit: Lot person named in ORS grantor's failure to pay ment quotes received egon, sell at public two (2) of replat of lot 86.778 has the right, when due the follow- less than six days auction to the highest four (4) Floyd Acres at any time prior to ing sums: monthly prior to the date set bidder for cash the Farm, recorded Sep- five days before the date last set for the payments of for the trustee's sale i nterest in t h e d e - tember 27, 1995, in will be honored only at $1,524.24 beginning scribed real property Cabinet D, Page 157, s ale, to h av e t h is 1 2/Ot/1 0; plus l a te the discretion of the which the grantor had Deschutes C o unty, foreclosure proceedcharges of $0.00 each b eneficiary or if r e - or had power to con- Oregon. PROPERTY ing dismissed and the month beg i nning quired by the terms of vey at the time of the ADDRESS: 2445 trust deed reinstated t 2/t 6/1 0; plus prior the loan documents. execution by grantor Northeast Burks Court by payment to t he accrued late charges In construing this no- of the trust deed, to- Bend, OR 97701 Both beneficiary of the enof $180.75; plus ad- tice, the singular in- gether with any inter- the beneficiary and tire amount then due vances of $3,728.50; cludes the plural, the est which the grantor t he t r ustee h a v e (other than such portogether with title ex- word "grantor" inor grantor's succes- elected to sell the real tion of the principal as pense, costs, trustee's cludes any successor sors in interest acproperty to satisfy the would not then be due fees and attorney's i n i nterest t o th e quired after the exobligations secured by had no default occurred) and by curing fees incurred herein grantor as well as any ecution of the trust the trust deed and a by reason of said de- other person owing an deed, to satisfy the notice of default has any o ther d e fault fault; any further sums obligation, the perfor- foregoing obligations been recorded pursu- complained of herein advanced by the ben- mance of which is se- thereby secured and ant to Oregon Re- that is capable of beeficiary for the protec- cured by said trust t he costs an d e x - vised Statutes ing cured by tendertion of the above de- deed, and the words penses of sale, in- 86.752(3); the default ing the performance scribed real property "trustee" and "benefi- cluding a reasonable for which foreclosure required under the and i ts inte r est ciary" include their re- charge by the trustee. is made is grantors' o bligation o r tr u s t therein; and prepay- spective successors Notice is further given failure to pay when deed, and in addition ment penalties/premi- in interest, if any. The that for reinstatement due th e fo l lowing to paying said sums ums, if applicable. By trustee's rules of auc- or payoff quotes re- sums: monthly pay- or tendering the perreason of said default tion may be accessed quested pursuant to ments of $885.41 be- formance necessary at w w w .northwest- O RS 8 6 .786 a n d to cure the default, by the beneficiary has inning 10/Ot/tt and trustee.com and are d eclared all s u ms 86.789 must be timely 880.05 b e g inning paying all costs and owing on the obliga- incorporated by this c ommunicated in a 3/t/12; plus prior ac- expenses actually intion secured by the reference. You may written request that crued late charges of curred in enforcing the trust deed i mmedi- also access sale sta- c omplies with t h at S t 01.70; plus a d - obligation and trust ww w .north- statute addressed to vances of $1,370.00 deed, together with ately due and pay- tus a t and able, said sums being westtrustee.com and the trustee's "Urgent that represent paid trustee's the following, to wit: www.USA-ForecloRequest Desk" either foreclosure fees and a ttorney's fees n o t sure.com. For further exceeding the $232,217.18 with inby personal delivery costs, property i nterest thereon at the information, p l ease to the trustee's physi- spections and bro- amounts provided by rate of 4 percent per contact: Kathy Tag- cal offices (call for ad- kers price opinion; to- said OR S 8 6 .778. annum be g inning gart Northwest dress) or b y f i r st g ether w i t h tit l e Requests from pert t/Ot/10; plus l a t e Trustee Services, Inc. class, certified mail, expense, costs, sons named in ORS charges of $0.00 each P.O. Box 997 Belle- r eturn r eceipt r e - t rustee's fees a n d 86.778 for reinstatemonth begi n ning vue, WA 98009-0997 quested, addressed to a ttorney's fees i n - ment quotes received t 2/t 6/t 0 until paid; 425-586-1900 Agee, the trustee's post of- curred herein by rea- less than six d ays plus prior accrued late Richard B. and Mary fice box address set son of said default; prior to the date set (TS¹ forth in this notice. any further sums ad- for the trustee's sale charges of $180.75; Anne p lus a dvances o f 7777.19990) Due to potential con- vanced by the benefi- will be honored only at flicts with federal law, ciary for the protec- the discretion of the $3,728.50; t o gether 1002.273535-File No. with t itle e x pense, persons having no tion of t h e a b o ve beneficiary or if r eLEGAL NOTICE costs, trustee's fees record legal or equi- described real prop- quired by the terms of and attorneys fees in- TRUSTEE'S NOTICE table interest in the erty and its interest the loan documents. curred herein by rea- OF SALE File No. subject property will therein; and prepay- In construing this noson of said default; 7023.97001 R e f e r- only receive informa- ment penalties/premi- tice, the singular inany further sums ad- ence is made to that tion concerning the ums, if applicable. By cludes the plural, the vanced by the benefi- c ertain t rust d e e d lender's estimated or reason of said default word "grantor" inciary for the protec- made by James R. actual bid. Lender bid the beneficiary has cludes any successor tion of t h e a b ove Allyn, single man, as i nformation is a l s o d eclared al l s u m s i n interest t o t h e the owing on the obliga- grantor as well as any described real prop- grantor, to Deschutes available a t other person owing an erty and its interest County Title C o m- trustee's web s ite, tion secured by the therein; and prepay- pany, as trustee, in www.northwesttrust deed i mmedi- obligation, the performent penalties/premi- favor o f M o rtgage trustee.com. Notice is ately due and pay- mance of which is seums, if a p plicable. Electronic Registra- further given that any able, said sums being cured by said trust W HEREFORE, n o - tion Systems, Inc., as person named in ORS the following, to wit: deed, and the words tice hereby is given nominee for M o rt- 86.778 has the right, $197,164.74 with in- "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their rethat the undersigned gagelt, its successors at any time prior to terest thereon at the trustee will on Febru- and assigns, as ben- five days before the rate of 2 percent per spective successors ary 10, 2015 at the eficiary, dated date last set for the annum beg i nning in interest, if any. The hour of 10:00 o'clock, 09/t 9/05, r e c orded s ale, to h av e t h is 09/Ot/11; plus prior trustee's rules of aucA.M. in accord with 09/23/05, in the mort- foreclosure proceed- accrued late charges tion may be accessed the standard of time gage records of Des- ing dismissed and the of $101.70; plus ad- at ww w .northwestestablished by ORS chutes County, Or- trust deed reinstated vances of $1,370i00 trustee.com and are 187.110, at the folThe default for which incorporated by this egon, as 2005-64223 by payment to t he lowing place: inside and subsequently as- beneficiary of the en- foreclosure is made is reference. You may the main lobby of the signed to Wells Fargo tire amount then due grantors' failure to pay also access sale staww w .northDeschutes C o u nty B ank, N.A. by A s - (other than such por- when due the follow- tus a t Courthouse, 1164 NW signment recorded as tion of the principal as ing sums: monthly westtrustee.com and www.USA-ForecloBond, in the City of 2011-35595, covering would not then be due payments of $885.41 beginning 1 0/01/1 1 sure.com. For further Bend, County of Des- t he f o llowing d e - had no default occhutes, State of Or- scribed real property curred) and by curing and $880.05 begin- information, p l ease egon, sell at public situated in said county any o t her d e fault ning 3/t/12; plus prior contact: Kathy TagNorth west auction to the highest and state, to wit: Lot complained of herein accrued late charges gart bidder for cash the Thirteen, Windance that is capable of be- of $101.70; plus ad- Trustee Services, Inc. i nterest in t h e d e - Estates, Phase 1, De- ing cured by tender- vances of $1,370.00 P.O. Box 997 Bellescribed real property schutes County, Or- ing the performance that represent paid vue, WA 98009-0997 which the grantor had egon. P R O PERTY r equired under t h e foreclosure fees and 425-586-1900 BAR1718 o bligation o r or had power to con- ADDRESS: tr u st costs, property in- NETT, SUZANNE M. vey at the time of the S OUTHEAST V I R - deed, and in addition spections and b ro- PS¹ 702 3 .98503) execution by grantor GINIA ROAD BEND, to paying said sums kers price opinion; to- 1002.273664-File No. of the trust deed, to- OR 97702 Both the or tendering the per- g ether w i t h titl e LEGAL NOTICE gether with any inter- beneficiary and t he formance necessary expense, costs, est which the grantor trustee have elected to cure the default, by trustee's fees and at- TRUSTEE'S NOTICE or grantor's succes- to sell the real prop- paying all costs and torneys fees incurred OF SALE File No. sors in interest ac- erty to satisfy the obli- expenses actually in- herein by reason of 7023.111746 Referquired after the ex- gations secured by curred in enforcing the said default; any fur- ence is made to that ecution of the trust the trust deed and a obligation and t rust ther sums advanced c ertain t rust d e e d by the beneficiary for made by Larry Bashdeed, to satisfy the notice of default has deed, together with foregoing obligations been recorded pursu- trustee's and the protection of the ian and Diane Lee thereby secured and ant to Oregon Re- attorney's fees not above described real Bashian, as tenants t he costs an d e x - vlsed Statutes exceeding the property and its inter- by the entirety, as penses of sale, in- 86.752(3); the default amounts provided by est therein; and pre- grantor, to Northwest cluding a reasonable for which foreclosure said OR S 8 6 . 778. payment Trustee Services, Inc., charge by the trustee. is made is grantors' Requests from per- penalties/premiums, if as trustee, in favor of Notice is further given failure to pay when sons named in ORS applicable. WHERE- Mortgage Electronic that for reinstatement due th e f o l lowing 86.778 for reinstate- FORE, notice hereby Registration Systems, or payoff quotes re- sums: monthly pay- ment quotes received is given that the un- Inc., as nominee for quested pursuant to ments of $ 1,122.10 less than six days dersigned trustee will A ccredited Hom e O RS 8 6 .786 a n d beginning 0 7 / Ot/11 prior to the date set on February 11, 2015 Lenders, Inc., a Cali86.789 must be timely and $1,100.03 begin- for the trustee's sale at the hour of 10:00 fornia Corporation, its c ommunicated in a ning 5/1/12; plus prior will be honored only at o'clock, A.M. in ac- successors and aswritten request that accrued late charges the discretion of the cord with the stan- signs, as beneficiary, c omplies with t h a t of $170.72; plus ad- b eneficiary or if r e - dard of time estab- dated 07I20I07, restatute addressed to vances of $1,720.00 quired by the terms of lished by ORS corded 07/30/07, in the trustee's "Urgent that represent paid the loan documents. 187.110, at the folthe mortgage records DESC H UTES Request Desk" either foreclosure fees and In construing this no- lowing place: inside of by personal delivery costs and property in- tice, the singular in- the main lobby of the County, Oregon, as to the trustee's physi- spections; t o gether cludes the plural, the Deschutes C o unty 2007-41733 and subcal offices (call for ad- with title e x pense, word "grantor" inCourthouse, 1164 NW sequently assigned to dress) or b y f i r st costs, trustee's fees cludes any successor Bond, in the City of Wells Fargo Bank, LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE O F SALE File N o . 7777.19990 R e f e rence is made to that c ertain t rust d e e d made by Richard B.
N.A. by Assignment recorded as 2012-10122, covering t he f o llowing d e scribed real property situated in said county and state, to wit: Beginning at the Southeast corner of Section 31, Township 17 South, Range 13 East of the Willamette Meridian, Des c hutes County, Ore g o n; thence South 89 degrees 49' 33" West along the Southerly line of said Section 3 1, a d i s tance o f 467.00 feet; thence North 00 degrees 02' 13" East parallel to the Easterly line of said Section 31, a distance of 4 6 7.00 feet; thence North 89 degrees 49' 33" East parallel to the Southerly line of said Section 31, a distance of 467.00 feet; thence South 00 degrees 02' 13" West along the Easterly line of said S ection 31, a d i s tance of 467.00 feet to the point of beginning.
persons having no record legal or equitable interest in the
vanced by the beneficiary for the protection of t h e a b o ve described real property and its interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. By reason of said default the beneficiary has d eclared al l s u m s owing on the obligation secured by the trust deed i mmediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to wit: $243,940.49 with interest thereon at the rate of 2.875 percent per annum beginning t t/Ot/11; plus p rior accrued late charges of $176.88; plus advances of $1,535.00 that represent paid foreclosure fees and costs and property inspections; t o gether with t itle e x pense, costs, trustee's fees and attorneys fees incurred herein by reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of t h e a b o ve described real property and its interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if a p plicable. W HEREFORE, n o tice hereby is given
subject property will only receive information concerning the lender's estimated or actual bid. Lender bid i nformation is a l s o available a t the trustee's web s ite, www.northwesttrustee.com. Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.778 has the right, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the s ale, to h av e t h is foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated b y payment to t he beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any o t her d e fault complained of herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance required under t he tr u st PROPERTY AD- o bligation o r DRESS: 22390 Bear deed, and in addition Creek Road B end, to paying said sums OR 97701 Both the or tendering the performance necessary b eneficiary and t h e trustee have elected to cure the default, by to sell the real prop- paying all costs and erty to satisfy the obli- expenses actually incurred in enforcing the that t gations secured by the trust deed and a obligation and t r ust notice of default has deed, together with and been recorded pursu- trustee's ant to O regon Re- attorney's fees not vlsed Statutes exceeding the 86.752(3); the default amounts provided by for which foreclosure said OR S 8 6 .778. is made is grantors' Requests from perfailure to pay when sons named in ORS due t h e fo l lowing 86.778 for reinstatesums: monthly pay- ment quotes received ments of $ 1 ,452.38 less than six days beginning 0 7 /Ot/12 prior to the date set and $1,462.48 begin- for the trustee's sale ning 3/1/13; plus prior will be honored only at accrued late charges the discretion of the of $682.08; plus ad- b eneficiary or if r e vances of $1,798.90 quired by the terms of that represent paid the loan documents. foreclosure fees and In construing this nocosts and property in- tice, the singular inspections; t o gether cludes the plural, the with title e x pense, word "grantor" incosts, trustee's fees cludes any successor and attorney's fees i n i nterest t o th e grantor as well as any i ncurred herein b y reason of said default; other person owing an any further sums ad- obligation, the perforvanced by the benefi- mance of which is seciary for the protec- cured by said trust tion of t h e a b ove deed, and the words described real prop- "trustee" and "benefierty and its interest ciary" include their retherein; and prepay- spective successors ment penalties/premi- in interest, if any. The ums, if applicable. By trustee's rules of aucreason of said default tion may be accessed w w w .northwestthe beneficiary has at d eclared all s u ms trustee.com and are owing on the obliga- incorporated by this tion secured by the reference. You may trust deed i mmedi- also access sale staww w .northately due and pay- tus a t able, said sums being westtrustee.com and the following, to wit: www.USA-Foreclo$316,045.32 with in- sure.com. For further terest thereon at the information, p l ease rate of 2 percent per contact: Kathy Tagannum be g inning gart Northwest 06/Ot/1 2; plus prior Trustee Services, Inc. accrued late charges P.O. Box 997 Belleof $682.08; plus ad- vue, WA 98009-0997 vances of $1,798.90 425-586-1900 Bashian, Larry and Diane that represent paid (TS¹ foreclosure fees and Lee costs and property in- 7023.111746) spections; t o gether 1002.274144-File No. with title e x pense, LEGAL NOTICE costs, trustee's fees and attorneys fees in- TRUSTEE'S NOTICE curred herein by rea- OF SALE File No. son of said default; 7023.99505 R e f e rany further sums ad- ence is made to that vanced by the benefi- c ertain t rust d e e d ciary for the protec- m ade b y Ste v e tion of t h e a b o ve Bleasdell, as grantor, described real prop- to Pacific Northwest erty and its interest Title, an Oregon cortherein; and prepay- poration, as trustee, in ment penalties/premi- favor o f M o r tgage ums, if a p plicable. Electronic RegistraW HEREFORE, n o tion Systems, Inc. as tice hereby is given nominee for Pacific that the undersigned Residential Mortgage, trustee will on Febru- its successors and ary 19, 2015 at the assigns, as b enefihour of 10:00 o'clock, ciary, dated 08/1 t/05, A.M. in accord with recorded 08/16/05, in the standard of time the mortgage records established by ORS of DESC H UTES 187.110, at the fol- County, Oregon, as lowing place: inside 2005-54086 and subthe main lobby of the sequently assigned to Deschutes C o u nty Wells Fargo B ank, Courthouse, 1164 NW N.A. by Assignment Bond, in the City of recorded as Bend, County of DE- 2012-07863, covering SCHUTES, State of t he f o l lowing d e Oregon, sell at public scribed real property auction to the highest situated in said county bidder for cash the a nd state, t o w i t : i nterest in t h e d e - L OTS 11 A N D 1 2 , scribed real property BLOCK 5, SISTERS, which the grantor had DESCHUTES or had power to con- COUNTY, OREGON vey at the time of the PROPERTY A Dexecution by grantor DRESS: 203 EAST of the trust deed, to- A DAMS AV E N U E gether with any inter- SISTERS, OR 97759 est which the grantor Both the beneficiary or grantor's succes- and the trustee have sors in interest ac- elected to sell the real quired after the exproperty to satisfy the ecution of the trust obligations secured by deed, to satisfy the the trust deed and a foregoing obligations notice of default has thereby secured and been recorded pursut he costs an d e x - ant to O regon ReStatutes penses of sale, in- vlsed cluding a reasonable 86.752(3); the default for which foreclosure charge by the trustee. Notice is further given is made is grantors' that for reinstatement failure to pay when or payoff quotes re- due t h e fo l lowing quested pursuant to sums: monthly payO RS 8 6 .786 a n d ments of $ 1 ,373.71 86.789 must be timely beginning 12/Ot/11, communicated in a $1,364.67 beginning written request that 3/t/12, $1,379.85 bec omplies with t h a t inning 1 0/1/1 2 and statute addressed to 1,365.24 beginning the trustee's "Urgent 10/t/13; plus prior acRequest Desk" either crued late charges of by personal delivery $ 176.88; plus a d to the trustee's physi- vances of $1,535.00 cal offices (call for ad- that represent paid dress) or b y f i r st foreclosure fees and class, certified mail, costs and property inr eturn receipt r e - spections; t o gether quested, addressed to with title e x pense, the trustee's post of- costs, trustee's fees fice box address set and attorney's fees forth in this notice. i ncurred herein b y Due to potential con- reason of said default; flicts with federal law, any further sums ad-
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 1000
Legal Notices deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and t he costs and e x penses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that for reinstatement or payoff quotes requested pursuant to O RS 8 6 .786 a n d 86.789 must be timely c ommunicated in a written request that c omplies with t h a t statute addressed to the trustee's "Urgent Request Desk" either by personal delivery to the trustee's physical offices (call for address) or b y f i r st class, certified mail, r eturn r e ceipt r e quested, addressed to the trustee's post office box address set forth in t his notice. Due to potential conflicts with federal law, persons having no record legal or equitable interest in the subject property will only receive information concerning the lender's estimated or actual bid. Lender bid i nformation is a l s o available a t the trustee's web s ite, www.northwesttrustee.com. Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.778 has the right, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the s ale, to h av e t h is foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated b y payment to t he beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any o t her d e fault complained of herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance required under the o bligation o r tr u s t deed, and in addition to paying said sums or tendering the performance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and trust deed, together with trustee's and a ttorney's fees n o t exceeding the amounts provided by said OR S 8 6 .778. Requests from persons named in ORS 86.778 for reinstatement quotes received less than six d ays prior to the date set for the trustee's sale will be honored only at the discretion of the beneficiary or if r equired by the terms of the loan documents. In construing this notice, the singular includes the plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor i n interest t o t h e grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, and the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. The trustee's rules of auction may be accessed at ww w .northwesttrustee.com and are incorporated by this reference. You may also access sale status a t ww w .northwesttrustee.com and www. USA-Foreclosure.com. For further information, p lease contact: Kathy Taggart North w est Trustee Services, Inc. P.O. Box 997 Bellevue, WA 98009-0997 425-586-1900 BRADLEY, SYLVIA (TS¹ 7023.111268) 1002.273582-File No.
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Legal Notices
when due the following sums: monthly of payments $1,921.40 beginning 05/01/1 1 and $1,915.44 beginning 5/1/12; p l u s advances of $1,843.00 that represent property inspection fees and paid attorneys' fees and costs; together with title expense, costs, trustee's fees and attorney's fees incurred herein by reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of the above described real property and i t s int e rest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. By reason of said default the beneficiary has d eclared al l s u m s owing on the obligation secured by the trust deed i mmediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to wit: $255,741.45 with in-
terest thereon at the rate of 6.25 percent per annum beginning 0 4/01/1 1; plus l a t e charges of $0.00 each month beg i nning 05/t 6/1 1 until paid; plus prior accrued late charges of $0.00; plus advances of $1,843.00 that represent property inspection fees and paid attorneys' fees and costs; together with title expense, costs, trustee's fees and attorneys fees incurred herein by reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of the above described real property and its interest therein; and pre-
payment
penalties/premiums, if applicable. WHEREFORE, notice hereby is given that the undersigned trustee will on February 19, 2015 at the hour of 10:00 o'clock, A.M. in accord with the s tandard of time established by ORS 187.110, at the following place: inside the main lobby of the Deschutes C o u nty Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond, in the City of Bend, County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the i nterest in t h e d e scribed real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by grantor of the trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor
or grantor's succes-
sors in interest acquired after the execution of the trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and t he costs and e x -
penses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee.
Notice is further given that for reinstatement or payoff quotes requested pursuant to O RS 8 6 .786 a n d 86.789 must be timely c ommunicated in a written request that c omplies with t h at statute addressed to the trustee's "Urgent Request Desk" either by personal delivery to the trustee's physical offices (call for address) or b y f i r st class, certified mail, r eturn receipt r e quested, addressed to the trustee's post office box address set forth in this notice. Due to potential conflicts with federal law, persons having no record legal or equitable interest in the subject property will only receive informaLEGAL NOTICE tion concerning the TRUSTEE'S NOTICE lender's estimated or OF SALE File No. actual bid. Lender bid 7023.96624 R e f e r- i nformation is a l s o the ence is made to that available a t c ertain t rust d e e d trustee's web s ite, made by M ichael www.northwestChesser and Peggy trustee.com. Notice is Chesser, as tenants further given that any by the entirety, as person named in ORS grantor, to Western 86.778 has the right, Title & Escrow Co, as at any time prior to trustee, in favor of five days before the Mortgage Electronic date last set for the Registration Systems, s ale, to h av e t h is Inc. as nominee for foreclosure proceedSecuritynational Mort- ing dismissed and the gage Company, a trust deed reinstated Utah Corporation, its b y payment to t he successors and as- beneficiary of the ensigns, as beneficiary, tire amount then due dated 02/07/07, re(other than such porcorded 02/1 5/07, in tion of the principal as the mortgage records would not then be due of Deschutes County, had no default ocOregon, as curred) and by curing 2007-09684 and sub- any o ther d e fault sequently assigned to complained of herein Wells Fargo Bank, that is capable of beN.A. by Assignment ing cured by tenderrecorded as ing the performance 2011-28634, covering r equired under t h e t he f o llowing d e - o bligation o r tr u st scribed real property deed, and in addition situated in said county to paying said sums and state, to wit: Lot or tendering the per17, Tollgate Addition, formance necessary Deschutes C o unty, to cure the default, by Oregon PROPERTY paying all costs and A DDRESS: 69 3 3 6 expenses actually inSILVER SPUR SIS- curred in enforcing the TERS, OR obligation and t rust 97759-9562 Both the deed, together with b eneficiary and t h e trustee's and trustee have elected attorney's fees not to sell the real prop- exceeding the erty to satisfy the obli- amounts provided by gations secured by said OR S 8 6 . 778. the trust deed and a Requests from pernotice of default has sons named in ORS been recorded pursu- 86.778 for reinstateant to Oregon Re- ment quotes received vlsed Statutes less than six days 86.752(3); the default prior to the date set for which the foreclo- for the trustee's sale s ure i s m a d e i s will be honored only at grantor's failure to pay the discretion of the
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b eneficiary or if r e - or had power to conquired by the terms of vey at the time of the the loan documents. execution by grantor In construing this no- of the trust deed, totice, the singular in- gether with any intercludes the plural, the est which the grantor word "grantor" inor grantor's succescludes any successor sors in interest aci n i nterest t o th e quired after the exgrantor as well as any ecution of the trust other person owing an deed, to satisfy the obligation, the perfor- foregoing obligations mance of which is se- thereby secured and cured by said trust t he costs and e x deed, and the words penses of sale, in"trustee" and "benefi- cluding a reasonable ciary" include their re- charge by the trustee. spective successors Notice is further given in interest, if any. The that for reinstatement trustee's rules of auc- or payoff quotes retion may be accessed quested pursuant to at w w w .northwest- O RS 8 6 .786 a n d trustee.com and are 86.789 must be timely incorporated by this communicated in a reference. You may written request that also access sale sta- c omplies with t h a t tus a t ww w .north- statute addressed to westtrustee.com and the trustee's "Urgent www.USA-ForecloRequest Desk" either sure.com. For further by personal delivery information, p l ease to the trustee's physicontact: Kathy Tag- cal offices (call for adgart Northwest d ress) or b y fi r st Trustee Services, Inc. class, certified mail, P.O. Box 997 Belle- r eturn r eceipt r e vue, WA 98009-0997 quested, addressed to 425-586-1900 the trustee's post ofChesser, Michael and fice box address set Peggy (TS¹ forth in this notice. 7023.96624) Due to potential con1002.273980-File No. flicts with federal law, persons having no LEGAL NOTICE record legal or equiTRUSTEE'S NOTICE table interest in the OF SALE File No. subject property will 7023.96606 R e f e r- only receive information concerning the ence is made to that c ertain t rust d e e d lender's estimated or made by Martin S. actual bid. Lender bid Denham, Theresa I. i nformation is a l s o Denham, h u s band available a t the web s ite, and wife, as grantor, trustee's to First American Title www.northwestInsurance Co. of OR., trustee.com. Notice is as trustee, in favor of further given that any Mortgage Electronic person named in ORS Registration Systems, 86.778 has the right, Inc., as nominee for at any time prior to Suntrust M o rtgage, five days before the Inc., its successors date last set for the and assigns, as ben- s ale, to h av e t h is eficiary, dated foreclosure proceed04/07/06, r e corded ing dismissed and the 04/14/06, in the mort- trust deed reinstated gage records of Des- b y payment to t h e beneficiary of the enchutes County, Oregon, as 2006-25506 tire amount then due and subsequently as- (other than such porsigned to Wells Fargo tion of the principal as B ank, N.A. by A s - would not then be due signment recorded as had no default oc2011-32784, covering curred) and by curing t he f o llowing d e - any o t he r d e f ault scribed real property complained of herein situated in said county that is capable of beand state, to wit: Par- ing cured by tendercel 2 of Partition Plat ing the performance required under t he No. 2001-8, being a Replat of Parcel 1 of o bligation o r tr u st P artition P la t No . deed, and in addition 1 998-31 located i n to paying said sums Section 7, Township or tendering the per18 South, Range 14, formance necessary E ast o f the Wil - to cure the default, by lamette Meridian, De- paying all costs and expenses actually inschutes County, Oregon. P R O PERTY curred in enforcing the A DDRESS: 24 7 8 0 obligation and trust Doods Road Bend, deed, together with trustee's and OR 97701 Both the a ttorney's fees n ot beneficiary and the the trustee have elected exceeding to sell the real prop- amounts provided by said OR S 8 6 .778. erty to satisfy the obliRequests from pergations secured by sons named in ORS the trust deed and a notice of default has 86.778 for reinstatebeen recorded pursu- ment quotes received ant to Oregon Re- less than six days vlsed Statutes prior to the date set 86.752(3); the default for the trustee's sale for which the foreclo- will be honored only at s ure i s m a d e i s the discretion of the grantor's failure to pay beneficiary or if rewhen due the follow- quired by the terms of ing sums: monthly the loan documents. of In construing this nopayments $3,269.78 beginning tice, the singular in03/01/1 1, $3,217.48 cludes the plural, the beginning 4/1/12 and word "grantor" in$3,097.87 beginning cludes any successor 4/1/13; plus prior ac- i n interest t o t h e crued late charges of grantor as well as any $ 790.74; plus a d - other person owing an vances of $ 7 37.50 obligation, the performance of which is sethat represent paid foreclosure fees and cured by said trust costs and property in- deed, and the words spections; t ogether "trustee" and "benefiwith title e x pense, ciary" include their recosts, trustee's fees spective successors and attorney's fees in interest, if any. The i ncurred herein b y trustee's rules of aucreason of said default; tion may be accessed any further sums ad- at ww w . northwestvanced by the benefi- trustee.com and are ciary for the protec- incorporated by this tion of t h e a b o ve reference. You may described real prop- also access sale staww w .northerty and its interest tus a t therein; and prepay- westtrustee.com and ment penalties/premi- www. USA-Forecloums, if applicable. By sure.com. For further reason of said default information, p l ease the beneficiary has contact: Kathy TagNorthwest d eclared al l s u m s gart owing on the obliga- Trustee Services, Inc. P.O. Box 997 Belletion secured by the trust deed immedi- vue, WA 98009-0997 ately due and pay- 425-586-1900 DENable, said sums being HAM, MARTIN S. and the following, to wit: THERESA 1. ( T S¹ 7023.96606) $388,343.85 with interest thereon at the 1002.273723-File No. rate of 6.5 percent per annum beg i nning LEGAL NOTICE 02/01/11; plus prior TRUSTEE'S NOTICE accrued late charges O F SALE File N o . of $790.74; plus ad- 7023.111426 Refervances of $ 7 37.50 ence is made to that that represent paid c ertain trust d e ed foreclosure fees and made by Andrew W. costs and property in- Engel and F rancie spections; t o gether Engel, as grantor, to with title e xpense, Fidelity National Title costs, trustee's fees Insurance Company, and attorneys fees in- as trustee, in favor of curred herein by rea- Wells Fargo Bank, son of said default; N.A., as beneficiary, any further sums ad- dated 10/31/06, revanced by the benefi- corded 11/06/06, in ciary for the protec- the mortgage records tion of t h e a b ove of DESC H UTES described real prop- County, Oregon, as erty and its interest 2006-73593 and subtherein; and prepay- sequently assigned to ment penalties/premi- Bank of America, N.A. ums, if a p plicable. by Assignment reW HEREFORE, n o corded as tice hereby is given 2013-17143, covering that the undersigned t he f o llowing d e trustee will on Febru- scribed real property situated in said county ary 11, 2015 at the hour of 10:00 o'clock, and state, to wit: Lot A.M. in accord with 54 of Awbrey Park, the standard of time Phase Two, City of established by ORS Bend, Des c hutes 187.110, at the f olCounty, Ore g o n. lowing place: inside PROPERTY ADthe main lobby of the D RESS: 3462 N W Deschutes C o u nty BRYCE CA N YON Courthouse, 1164 NW L ANE B E ND , O R 97701 Both the benBond, in the City of Bend, County of Des- eficiary a n d the chutes, State of Or- trustee have elected egon, sell at public to sell the real propauction to the highest erty to satisfy the oblibidder for cash the gations secured by i nterest in t h e d e - the trust deed and a scribed real property notice of default has which the grantor had been recorded pursu-
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ant to Oregon Re- prior to the date set year immediately prevlsed Statutes for the trustee's sale ceding the appoint86.752(3); the default will be honored only at ment. for which foreclosure the discretion of the is made is grantors' b eneficiary or if r e - A pplications will b e failure to pay when quired by the terms of taken at the District due th e f o l lowing the loan documents. Office, located at 145 sums: monthly pay- In construing this no- SE Salmon Drive, unments of $ 2,065.23 tice, the singular in- til Tuesday, Decem201 4 at beginning 03/01/1 3, cludes the plural, the ber 9 , 5:00p.m. The Board $1,886.33 beginning word "grantor" in12/1/1 3, $ 1 , 850.93 cludes any successor will interview candibeginning 3/1/14 and i n i nterest t o th e dates on December $2,396.99 beginning grantor as well as any 17, 2 0 14 . P l ease 4/1/14; plus prior ac- other person owing an contact Trish Huspek crued late charges of obligation, the perfor- at 541.923.8247 or $ 232.56; plus a d - mance of which is se- v isit th e B o ard o f vances of $2,075.00 cured by said trust Director's webpage at that represent paid deed, and the words www.redmond.k12.or. foreclosure fees and "trustee" and "benefi- us for more informacosts; together with ciary" include their re- tion or to download an title expense, costs, spective successors application packet. t rustee's fees a n d in interest, if any. The a ttorney's fees i n - trustee's rules of auc- T he p e rson a p curred herein by rea- tion may be accessed pointed wil l s e r ve w w w .northwest- January 7, 2015 son of said default; at any further sums ad- trustee.com and are June 30, 2015 and will vanced by the benefi- incorporated by this fill the vacancy creciary for the protec- reference. You may ated by the resignation of t h e a b ove also access sale sta- tion of Ron Munkres ww w .north- effective November 4, described real prop- tus a t erty and its interest westtrustee.com and 2014. Anyone wishtherein; and prepay- www.USA-Forecloing to be elected to ment penalties/premi- sure.com. For further serve the remaining ums, if applicable. By information, p l ease two-year portion of the reason of said default contact: Kathy Tag- four-year term may the beneficiary has gart Northwest file an application with d eclared al l s u m s Trustee Services, Inc. the Deschutes County owing on the obliga- P.O. Box 997 Belle- C lerk's Office f o r tion secured by the vue, WA 98009-0997 placement on the May trust deed i mmedi- 4 25-586-1900 EN - 19, 2015 ballot. ately due and pay- GEL, FRANCIE and LEGAL NOTICE able, said sums being A NDREW W ( T S¹ The undersigned has the following, to wit: 7023.111426) been appointed per1002.273741-File No. $572,489.25 with insonal representative terest thereon at the LEGAL NOTICE o f the E s t ate o f rate of 3.25 percent REQUEST FOR NORMAN CHARLES per annum beginning PROPOSALS CROWE, Deceased, 02/01/1 3; plus prior Notice is hereby given by th e D e s chutes accrued late charges that Desch utes County Circuit Court of $232.56; plus ad- County, through the of the State of Orvances of $2,075.00 Community Developthat represent paid ment Department, will egon, probate numforeclosure fees and receive proposals per b er 14PB0126. A l l costs; together with s pecifications u n t i l persons having claims title expense, costs, 3:00 p.m., December against the estate are trustee's fees and at- 15, 2014 for: COM- required to p resent torneys fees incurred PREHENSIVE USER the same with proper herein by reason of F EE STUDY 8 F I - vouchers within four (4) months after the said default; any fur- NANCIAL PLAN. No ther sums advanced proposals will be re- date of first publication to t h e u n derby the beneficiary for ceived or considered the protection of the after that time. The signed or they may be Add i tional above described real Deschutes C o u nty barred. property and its inter- Community Develop- information may be o btained from t h e est therein; and pre- ment Dep a rtment court records, the unpayment (CDD) is requesting penalties/premiums, if proposals for a Com- dersigned or the atapplicable. WHERE- prehensive User Fee torney. Date first pubFORE, notice hereby Study and Financial lished: November 24, is given that the un- Plan. The Compre- 2014. ANNETTE M. dersigned trustee will h ensive User F e e C RAWFORD, P e r on February 17, 2015 Study should focus sonal Representative at the hour of 10:00 primarily on user fee c/o Ronald L. Bryant, o'clock, A.M. in ac- services provided by Attorney at Law, Brycord with the s tan- the CDD. The scope ant Emerson, LLP, dard of time estab- of work includes re- PO Box 457, Redlished by ORS view of existing user mond, OR 97756. 187.110, at the folas well as the LEGAL NOTICE lowing place: inside fees of new T RUSTEE'S N O the main lobby of the identification fee opportunities, and Deschutes C o u nty the development of a TICE OF SALE The Courthouse, 1164 NW 5-year CDD financial Successor Trustee, under the terms of Bond, in the City of plan. The contract will Bend, County of DE- be for a period of one the Trust Deed described herein, at SCHUTES, State of from the con- the direction of the Oregon, sell at public year tract execution date. auction to the highest The resulting contract current B eneficiabidder for cash the may be made renew- ries, hereby elects i nterest in t h e d e - able by the County at to sell the property scribed real property its sole discretion for d escribed in s a i d which the grantor had two (2) one-year peri- Trust Deed to sator had power to con- ods depending on the isfy the obligations vey at the time of the needs of the County. secured thereby. A. PARTIES TO THE execution by grantor P roposals may b e DEED : of the trust deed, to- s ubmitted either i n T RUST gether with any inter- paper copy or elec- Grantor: DANIEL K. est which the grantor tronically via e-mail. VARCOE; Trustee: or grantor's succes- Proposals submitted WESTERN TITLE 8 COMsors in interest ac- in paper copy must be ESCROW quired after the ex- enclosed in an enve- PANY; Beneficiary: ecution of the trust l ope b e aring t h e CHARLES A. HAand deed, to satisfy the proposer's name and SELIP RHONDA L. HASEforegoing obligations address, clearly thereby secured and marked with the title LIP ("Original Beneficiary"); B . D E t he costs an d e x - of the Request for OF penses of sale, in- Proposal (RFP), and SCRIPTION cluding a reasonable s ubmitted to : N i c k THE PROPERTY: "All of Block 1, all of charge by the trustee. Lelack, C o mmunity Block 2, all of Block Notice is further given Development DeEXC E PTING that for reinstatement p artment, 117 N W 8, THEREFROM that or payoff quotes re- Lafayette Av e n ue, portion of Block 8 of quested pursuant to P.O. Box 6005, Bend, FIRST A D DITION O RS 8 6 .786 a n d OR 97708-6005. At 86.789 must be timely the proposer's option, TO LA PINE, Desc ommunicated in a p roposals may b e chutes County, Orwritten request that submitted e lectroni- egon, lying westerly c omplies with t h at cally in PDF format of the continuation of the centerline of statute addressed to only the trustee's "Urgent Nick.Lelack©des- to: Walker Street beRequest Desk" either chutes.org Proposals t ween First a n d by personal delivery submitted e lectroni- Second Streets, all to the trustee's physi- c ally must b e r e - of Block 9, all of cal offices (call for ad- ceived in c o mplete B lock 10 , a l l o f dress) or b y f i r st form prior to the date B lock 11, a l l o f class, certified mail, a nd t i m e sta t ed B lock 12, a l l o f r eturn receipt r e - above. Late bids will B lock 13, a l l o f quested, addressed to not be accepted. Pro- B lock 14, Lots 1 the trustee's post of- posal packets may be through 16, Block fice box address set obtained by contact- 15, all of Block 18, forth in this notice. ing Nick Lelack, Des- all of Block 19, all of Due to potential con- chutes County Com- B lock 20 , a l l o f flicts with federal law, munity Development B lock 21, a l l o f Block 22 , F I R ST persons having no Department, 117 NW record legal or equi- Lafayette A v e nue, ADDITION TO LA PINE, D e schutes table interest in the P.O. Box 6005, Bend, County, Oregon." C. subject property will OR 97708-6005, or ASSIGNMENT O F only receive informa- 541-385-1708, B ENEFICIAL I N tion concerning the Nick.Lelack©desTEREST: The benlender's estimated or chutes.org o r by eficial interest of the actual bid. Lender bid downloading the proOriginal Beneficiary i nformation is a l s o posal at: in the Trust Deed available a t the was assigned to LA trustee's web s ite, http://www.deschutes. org/Requests-for-ProPINE RODEO ASwww.northwestSOC. by A s signtrustee.com. Notice is posals/Comprehensive-User-Fee-Studyfurther given that any and-Financial-Plan.as ment of Trust Deed person named in ORS px. Deschutes County by Beneficiary re86.778 has the right, may reject any pro- c orded July 2 4 , at any time prior to posal not in compli- 2014, as Recorder's 201 4 -23877 five days before the ance with al l p r e- No. ("Beneficiary"), all in date last set for the scribed s o l icitation t he D e eds a n d s ale, to h av e t h is procedures and reforeclosure proceed- quirements and other R ecords of D e s ing dismissed and the applicable laws, and chutes County, Ortrust deed reinstated the County may re- egon. D. T R U ST by payment to t he INFORMAfor good cause DEED Dated: Janubeneficiary of the en- ject and all proposals TION: tire amount then due any ary 18, 2002; Reupon the C ounty's Date: (other than such por- finding that it is in the cording tion of the principal as public interest to do January 18, 2002; No. : would not then be due so. In accordance with R ecorder's had no default oc- Title II of the Ameri- 2 002-03279; R e Plac e : curred) and by curing cans With Disabilities c ording any o ther d e fault Act of 1990 ("ADA"), Deeds and Records of Desc h utes complained of herein anyone who requires that is capable of be- an alternative format, County, Oregon; E. ing cured by tender- auxiliary aid or serDEFAULT: The ing the performance vice for effective re- Grantors are in der equired under t h e view of this document fault and the Benefio bligation o r tr u st should contact t he ciaries elect to foredeed, and in addition ADA Coordinator at c lose t h e Tr u st to paying said sums ( 541) 388-6584 o r Deed by reason of or tendering the per- his/her designee at the Grantors' failure formance necessary (541) 617-4747. to pay: (1) monthly to cure the default, by p ayments in t h e LEGAL NOTICE amount of $895.54 paying all costs and expenses actually in- The Redmond School each, commencing curred in enforcing the District i s s e e king with the p ayment obligation and t rust q ualified people t o due July 18, 2012 deed, together with apply for a vacancy and continuing each trustee's and on its Board of Direc- month t h ereafter; attorney's fees not tors. and (2) real propexceeding the erty t a xe s for amounts provided by The board consists of 2010-2011 plus insaid OR S 8 6 . 778. five members elected terest; 2 0 11-2012 interest, Requests from per- at large. Those inter- plus sons named in ORS ested must be regis- 2012-2013 plus in86.778 for reinstate- tered voters and resi- terest and ment quotes received dents of the Redmond 2013-2014 plus inless than six days School District for one terest. F. AMOUNT
DUE: By reason of t he
d e fault, t h e Beneficiaries have declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by the Trust Deed immediately due a
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