Bulletin Daily Paper 11-25-14

Page 1

Serving Central Oregon since190375

TUESDAY November25,2014

SPORTS • C1

bendbulletin.com OSU-CASCADES

TODAY'S READERBOARD Recount for Measure92

— It's official. Oregon's GMO-labeling measure is headed for an automatic recount.B1

A TurkeyDaytreat for yOur tadie.— A dinner roll recipe fit for a holiday meal.D1

Pius: Countingdownto ChriStmaS —A guide to Advent calendars.D1

• Legal challenge stalls acquisition of 46-acre pumice mine

pus is designed to stand

By Tyler Leeds

on its own, the university

challenged by Truth In Site, a group of residents who fear the campus will

has also been in negotiations to purchase an adja-

The legal challenge

campus. OSU-Cascades has already purchased a 10-

to OSU-Cascades' ex-

acre parcel in southwest

worsen traffic and who

pansion has slowed the university's acquisition

Bend and submitted plans to build a 1,900-student

owned by 4R-Equipment, a subsidiary of Jack Robinson and Sons, for $7.875

of a former pumice mine to include in its new

campus on that site.

recently filed a challenge with the Oregon Land Use Board of Appeals. While the 10-acre cam-

The Bulletin

Those plans have been

S~II8)of-1st huil'ding, 1 a'cres'

cent 46-acre pumice mine

Site ,of oldtt 'mine, 46 ,acres

~9stL

The plan for OSU-CaSCadeS 0 Where they

+ plan to put it • The options for what it will look like,AS

million. SeeLand /A5

The Bulletin

And a Wed exclusiveIn a post-downturn economy, even orchestras aredownsizing. bendbuuetin.com/extras

FERGUSON

EDITOR'5CHOICE

GM defect, not driver, to bame in fata crash By Rebecca R. Ruiz New York Times News Service

Candice Anderson

L1IVlV

According to the National Retail Federation, holiday sales are expected to increase by 4.1 percent this year. Sales in November and December can account for as much as 30 percent of a retailer's annual sales and make up nearly 20 percent of the industry's annual $3.2 trillion.

BlackFriday:Whattoexpect?

received the bittersweet

According to NRF surveys, moreshoppers plan to get out onBlackFridayeveryyear.

news Monday in a Texas courtroom, fighting back

PLAN TOSHOP ON BLACK FRIDAY

tears, and her arm around the mother of the boyfriend

she had feltresponsible for killing in a car crash 10 years ago. The judge cleared Anderson in the death of the

boyfriend, Gene Mikale Erickson, even though she had pleaded guilty to criminally negligent homicide in the case years ago.

80%60'/

Clothing ar clothing accessories 20%

2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013

PLAN TOSHOP ONLINE ON BLACK FRIDAY 50%

20'/ 20

2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 Survey data not yet available for 2014

Is SmallBusinessSaturday catchingon? According to the NRF survey, most adults aren't sure whether they'll hit up local small businesses onNov.29. PLAN TOSHOP "SMALL BUSINESS SATURDAY" THIS YEAR

INDEX

Yes

No

21%

7%

Vol. 112, No. 329 The Bulletin 30 pages, 5 sections

Maybe 52

How higis Cyher Monday? PLAN TOSHOP ON CYBER MONDAY

60 40

2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013

And it's not lust Cyber Monday. As ashare of retail sales, e-commerce continues to climb. SHOPPING ONLINEOVERALL As a percentage of all retail 8%

!

Newspaper

88 267 02329

MONEY SPENT ONGIFT CARDS $35B 30

Even in Bend, Black Friday has backed up into Thursday

20

2007 2008 2009 2010 201 I 20l2 2013 2014

$600B

THANKSGIVINGDAY

500

300

2006 2007 20082009 201020112012 2013

Via USPS:Dec. 15via Standard Post; Dec. 20 via First Class Mail8 Priority Mail; Dec. 23 via Priority Mail Express. Seewww.usps.com/ holiday for full schedule. Via UPS:Dec.18 for UPSGround; Dec.22 for UPS 2ndDayAir; Dec. 24for UPS Express Critical. Seehttp://compass.ups.com/lastdays-ship-ups-for-christmas-2014-delivery for full schedule. Fun fact:According to the UPSwebsite, the company anticipates delivering 585 million packages worldwide this December,an11 percent jump from 2013anda newrecord for the company. Via FedEx(to arrive Dec. 25):Dec.12 for FedEx SmartPost; Dec. 17for FedEx Ground and Home Del ivery;Dec.25forFedExSameDay. Seewww.fedex.com/us/holiday/last-days-toship.html for full schedule. Andy Zetgett/The Bulletin

ST. LOUIS — A grand jury on Monday dedined to indict police officer Darren Wilson in the fatal shooting

of an unarmedblackteenager, resolvinga secretive, monthslong legal saga and reigniting

Related

• Obama pleads for calm,AS • Portland chief: Officers must remove Ferguson postsBS

po werfui frustrations

about Americ a's policing The decision means that Wilson,

28, will face no state

97 4 P.M.

charges for the August 9 shooting of 18-year-old Michael Brown. It also set off a show of

rue21,Cascade Village

fury on streets near where

7 A.M. TO NOON

Fred Meyer,61535 S. U.S.Highway

5 P.M.

BestBuy,CascadeVillage JCPenney,CascadeVilage Dick's SportingGoods,Cascade Village 6 P.M.

American Eagle,Old Mill Kohl's,Bend River Promenade Macy's,Bend River Promenade Target,63435 N. U.S.Highway 97 WalMarl,20120 Pinebrook Blvd. Ross,Cascade Village AH BendFactory storesexcept Christopher & Banks, Classic Beauty Supply, GNC,TuesdayMorningand Hickory Farms BLACK FRIDAY MIDNIGHT

Source:National Retail Federation

07 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014

Editor' snote:Here'swhen manyof the stores in Bendwill open for holiday shopping. The list is by nomeans exhaustive.

10 P.M.-2 A.M.

How longcani wait toshipmy presents?

Q I/I/e userecycled newsprint

o

Gift-card spending continues to climb. According to NRF,the average gift-card buyer plans to spend$172.74 this year, up from $163.16 last year.

400

An Independent

': IIIII I

Jewelry or precious metal accessories • Sg Home ddcor or home-related furnishings ~0 Personal care or beauty items Sporting goods or leisure items

TOTAL HOLIDAYSPENDING

20

At Home D1-6 Dear Abby D6 Business C5-6 Horoscope D6 Calendar B2 L ocal/State B1-6 Classified E1-6 Obituaries B5 Comics E3-4 Sports C 1-4 Crosswords E4 TV/Movies D6

P Boo ks, CDs, DVDs vidoreo games ' gons omeretectronicsoraccesscries

25

TODAY'S WEATHER Clouds, sunshine High 54, Low36 Page B6

~~ ~g

• 6% Other

30%

80%

i~~~~

Looks like a gift card. If not that, then expect a sweater, a book or aniPad.

By Wesley Lowery, Kimberly Kindy and Jerry Markon The Washington Post

40

40%

In a photo caption that accompanied astory headlined "Bend's housing future: Balancing homes andapartments," which appearedMonday, Nov. 24, on PageA1,the definition of single-family attached units was incorrect. Single-family attached units are townhouses, which are attached units on separate lots. Duplexesare attached units on asingle lot, and qualify as multifamily units. In the text of a graphic that accompanied astory headlined "Forgot to shovel your sidewalk? You're in luck," which appeared Saturday, Nov.22, on Page B5,the regulation for snow removal in Prineville was incorrect. The city requires residents to clear snowandclear or cover ice with material that allows safe travel on icewithin the first two hours of daylight. The Bulletin regrets the errors.

What arepeopleasking Santa for? TYPES OFITEMS PEOPLE WANT TO GET THIS YEAR (More than oneanswer OK)

SeeGM/A4

Corrections

Lll

Officer won't be charged in shooting

Buckle,Old Mill Bath 8 Body Works, OldMill Game Stop,Old Mill Gymboree,Old Mill Oregonlocker Room,Old Mil Pacific Sunwear,Old Mill Rashege,Old Mill Victoria's Secret,Old Mill Zumiez,Old Mill 5 A.M.

Fred Meyer,61535 S. U.S.Highway 97

Home Depot,63465 N. U.S. Highway97 lowe's,20501 Cooley Road 6 A.M.

Banana Republic,Old Mill Bed Bath andBeyond, Cascade Village Claire's,Old Mill GAP,Old Mill

laneBryant,CascadeVillage Jo-AnnFabrics Ag BendFactorysloresexceptGNC, HickoryFarms,RockyMountain ChocolateandTuesdayMorning 6:30 A.M.

HickoryFarms,BendFactorySfnres SeeList/A4

Brown was shot, a reflection of emotions that register in this riven city as either out of control or justifiable.

Yellow and orange ribbons from a burning police car lit up a block. SeeFerguson/A5

Colorado potshops bracefor holidayrush By Duane D. Stanford and Kevin Orland Bloomberg News

DENVER — Pot sellers

are gearing up for their first holiday season since recreational marijuana was legalized in Colorado. At Grass Station, a shop in Denver that sells $7 joints, $21 chocolate bars and even an $11 hp balm, the goal is to get the same kind of post-Thanksgiving sales bump as department stores or clothing chains. Some potsellershave even renamed the traditional

Black Friday shopping day "Green Friday." "We have really high expectations," said Grass Station owner Ryan Fox.

"Now we've got the legal means for people to give marijuana as a gift, and that's never really been

something that was feasible in the past." See Pot /A4


A2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 2014

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NATION Ee ORLD

e ensec ie a e resi nsun er ressure By Helene Cooper

ter weeks of r i sing tension

New York Times News Service

over a variety of issues, in-

strategy as a "team effort," and spoke of trying to "build

cluding what administration

teams and to work together to

WASHINGTON — Defense

Secretary Chuck Hagel resigned under pressure Monday after President Barack Obama determined that he had to shake up his national

security team in the face of escalating conflicts overseas and hawkish Republicans reasserting themselves on Capitol Hill. It was a striking reversal

for a president who chose Hagel two years ago in part to limit the power of Pentagon

officials who had repeatedly pushed for more troops in Afghanistan and a slower drawdown of American forces from Iraq. But in the end,

Hagel's passivity and lack of support in Obama's inner circle proved too much for an administration that found itself

back on a war footing. Aides said Obama made the decision to r emove his

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defensesecretary Friday af-

officials said were Hagel's de- make things happen for the lays in transferring detainees good of the country." from the military prison in In reality, Hagel was never Guantanamo Bay and a dis- able to penetrate the presipute with Susan Rice, the na- dent's tight national security tional security adviser, over team of West Wing loyalists, Syria policy. officials at the White House The strains were evident in and the Pentagon said. And a stilted ceremony Monday f aced with th e c alls fo r a at the White House, where shake-up of his national seObama called the defense sec- curity staff to better deal with retary he had pushed out "ex- an onslaught of global crises, emplary" and lauded his sta- Obama balked at the idea of tus as the first enlisted combat replacing Rice, Secretary of veteran to hold the job, saying State John Kerry or the powit had helped him to empa- erful White House chief of thize with American soldiers. staff, Denis McDonough. But as the president spoke The president is "too close of the "blood and treasure to Susan Rice, and John Kerand sacrifices" of enlisted ry's in the middle of Iran nemen and women like Hagel, gotiations," said one adminHagel stared ahead fixedly, istration official, speaking on declining to make eye contact condition of anonymity. "So with Obama. he went for the low-hanging W hen it was his turn t o fruit" — Hagel, who was critspeak, Hagel described the icized by White House aides president's national security as largely silent in meetings.

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heads into anextraordinary meeting of its governing board todaystruggling to find its footing, after a reported frat housegang raperocked the university's vaunted reputation andgenteel self-image andunleashed complaints that it had mishandledandconcealed sexual assaults for years. Theadministration has drawnfire for its unsteady responseto the issue andthe report, published last week byRolling Stone, most recently for a video of adeanacknowledging weeks beforethe article that even students whohadadmitted to sexual assault had invariably escaped expulsion —andthat no onehadbeenexpelled for sexual assault in at least seven years. Professors shelved lesson plans Monday to devote classes to dissecting the problem, asprotesters kept up a string of demonstrations outside thewhite-columned, Federal-style fraternity housewherethe rapewas said to havetaken place two years ago. On abridge nearby, amakeshift memorial to afreshman, Hannah Graham, whowas murdered in September —the university's most recent communal trauma —hadbeenpainted over with the message "Take backthe party: end rape." COnfliCt in JeruSalem — EnasShalodi, aPalestinianmother of six, has beenseverely punished by Israel for something shedidn't do. A wrecking crewgutted her family's apartment in Jerusalem last week, tearing down innerwalls and leaving behind athick layer of debris. The demolition came a month after her oldest son, 21-year-old Abdel Rahman, drove acar into a crowd waiting for a train in Jerusalem, killing a 3-month-old girl and anEcuadorean tourist before being shot and killed at thescene. Israel says it needstougher tools to stop recent "lone wolf" attacks onJews by Palestinians. But critics say thepractice is strikingly at oddswith basic notions of justice, fairness andlegality in a democracy —andthat it is bound to bring onmore hatred rather than serve as adeterrent. Israel has givenhouse demolition notices to families of six Jerusalemassailants, including theShalodis and the relatives of two cousins whokilled five people in asynagogue last week. Afghan attaCk —A bomb hidden in the medianstrip of an avenue in Kabul wasdetonated as aconvoy of coalition troops passedby Monday, apparently killing two foreign soldiers, according to reports from Afghan officials. TheU.S.-led International Security Assistance Force announcedthat two of its soldiers had beenkilled Monday asa result of anenemy attack. In line with official policy, it did not release the nationalities of the twoanddescribed the location of theattack only as eastern Afghanistan. Theheadof the criminal investigation division of the Afghanpolice, Rohullah, who like manyAfghans usesonly one name, said thebombwent off at 8:45 a.m. andstruck a Toyota Land Cruiser. In addition, hesaid, anAfghan passer-by waswounded. The episode took place ineastern Kabul, not far from the sceneof a suicide attack last week onacamp housing foreign workers and officials.

Calarie COunt requirementS —TheFoodand DrugAdmin-

The Bulletin's primary concern is that all stories areaccurate. If you knowof an error in a story, call us at541-363-0356.

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UniVerSity Of Virginia rape repOrt — The university of Virginia

JapanreoeSSIOn — WhenPrimeMinister Shinzo Aberesponded to Japan's surprise recession bydelaying asales-tax increase, it was a cause for worry, not celebration, for manyyoung Japanese.This generation, barely aware oftheir country's economic heyday, frets that putting off tough decisions nowcould makethe future even worse. Despite Abe's unprecedentedstimulus efforts — almost everything short of dropping moneyfrom helicopters — Japanhas slipped into recession less than twoyears after the last one. With the country's debt rising, population agingandjob security fading, young people in particular wonder when,andif, Japanwill bounce back.

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Iran nIIClear 'taikS — A yearlong effort to seal anuclear dealwith Iran fizzled Monday,leaving the U.S.and its allies little choice but to declare aseven-month extension in hopesthat a newdeadline will be enough to achieve what a decade of negotiations havefailed to dolimit Tehran's ability to make a nuclear weapon. Pushbackfrom critics in Congress followedalmost immediately, with powerful Republicans saying that Iran is merely trying to buytime. U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry andother Western foreign ministers defendedtheadd-on time as thebest wayforward. "We would befools to walk away," Kerry declared.

Mike Grorr/The Associated press

New York Gov.Andrew Cuomo, left, walks along a watery driveway while surveying the aftermath of last week's lake-effect snowstorms Monday inWest Seneca, NewYork. People in storm-socked areasaround Buffalo began returning to work Monday as fast-melting mounds of snow fed into creeks that were starting to swell. It was not clear howwidespread flooding would be almost a weekafter western NewYork was pum-

meled by epic snowfall. Thermometer readings were approachin g 60degreesbymidmorning,andsome residents of the Buffalo areawere out andabout in T-shirts riding bicycles while others focused onthe tasks at hand. Temperatures wereexpected to hit nearly 60 degrees, causing Buffalo area residents to prepare for evacuations caused by runoff from melting snow, and overflowing creeks.

istration will announcesweeping rules today that will require chain restaurants, movie theaters andpizza parlors across thecountry to post calorie counts ontheir menus. Health experts said the new requirements would helpcombat thecountry's obesity epidemic by showing Americans just howmanycalories lurk in their favorite foods. The rules will havebroad implications for public health. As muchas a third of the calories that Americans consume comefrom outside the home, andmanyhealth experts believe that increasingly large portion sizes andunhealthy ingredients havebeensignificant contributors to U.S. obesity. — From wire reports

— The Associated Press

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Dems down to 3sitesfor 2016 By Matt Flegenheimer

tion would be held at the Bar-

New York Times News Service

clays Center. The Democratic National The bidding process has Committee said Monday that setoffan occasional war of it had narrowed its list of pos- words between officials in sible convention sites in 2016 New York and Philadelphia, to three cities: Columbus, where former Gov. Edward O hio; New York C i ty ; and Rendell of Pennsylvania has Philadelphia. championed that city's bid The committee had previ- (he previously served as its ously been considering Phoe- mayor). nix and Birmingham, Alabama, as well. "We're thrilled to move to • % I

Rendell has said that a Brooklyn convention has "huge problems," including a dearth of hotels near the contransport, i n

t h e m i ddle

of rush hour, thousands of d elegates f r o m Mi d t o w n

to Brooklyn?" he said in August.

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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

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

It's Tuesday, Nov. 25, the 329th

day of 2014. Thereare 36days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS POpe FranCiS — Pope Francis delivers his first public speech about Europe. Heis likely to focus on issuessuch as immigration and jobless rates among theyoung.

SCIENCE

rom in ae oasci-i oc user An astrophysicist's failed blind date led to a cinematic collaboration that has moviegoers and critics

the project, and it remained in limbo until late 2012, when

buzzing. Meet Kip Thorne, the man behind the science of "Interstellar."

C hristopher Nolan

HISTORY Highlight:In1984, William Schroeder of Jasper, Indiana, becamethesecondmanto receive a Jarvik-7 artificial heart, at HumanaHospital Audubon in Kentucky. (Schroeder lived 620 days on thedevice.) The Ethiopian famine relief song "Do They Know It's Christmas?" was recorded in London by the charity supergroup Band Aid. In1783,the British evacuated New York, their last military position in the United States

during the Revolutionary War. In1864, during the Civil War, Confederate agents set aseries of arson fires in NewYork; the blazes werequickly extinguished. In1908,the first issue of The Christian Science Monitor was published. In1944, baseball commissioner Judge KenesawMountain Landis died at age78. In1957,President Dwight D. Eisenhower suffered a slight stroke. In1963, the body of President John F. Kennedywas laid to rest at Arlington National Cemetery; his widow, Jacqueline, lighted an "eternal flame" at the gravesite. In1974,former U.N. Secretary-General UThant died in New York at age65. In1986, the Iran-Contra affair erupted as President Ronald Reagan andAttorney General Edwin Meeserevealed that profits from secretarms sales to Iran had beendiverted to Nicaraguan rebels. In1999, 5-year-old Elian Gonzalez was rescued by apair of sport fishermen off the coast of Florida, setting off an international custody battle. In2002, President George W. Bush signed legislation creating the Department of Homeland Security, and appointed Tom Ridge to beits head. Tel years ago:Leading Sunni Muslim politicians in Iraq urged postponement of the January 30, 2005 national elections (however, the elections ended uptaking place as scheduled). A manwith a knife broke into a high school dormitory in Ruzhou, China, killing nine boys asthey slept. (Chinese authorities later executed a 21-year-old manwho confessed to the attack.) Five years ago: Toyota said it would replace the gaspedals on 4 million vehicles in the United States becausethe pedals could get stuck in the floor mats and causesudden acceleration. One year ago:Pushing back against critics, President Barack Obama forcefully defended the temporary agreement to freeze Iran's disputed nuclear program, declaring that the United States "cannot close the door on diplomacy." Prosecutors closed their yearlong investigation into the shooting rampage atSandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, that claimed the lives of 26 victims; their report said the motive of gunman AdamLanza, who also killed his mother and himself, might never beknown.

BIRTHDAYS Pro Football Hall of Famecoach Joe Gibbs is 74.Singer Bob Lind is 72. Author, actor and economist BenStein is 70. Actor John Larroquette is 67. Retired MLBAll-Star Bucky Dent is 63. Dancejudge Bruno Tonioli (TV: "Dancing with the Stars") is 59. SingerAmy Grant is 54. Former NFLquarterback Bernie Kosar is 51.Actress Jill Hennessy is 45. Actress Christina Applegate is 43. Former NFL quarterback Donovan McNabb is 38. Former first daughter JennaBushHager is 33. Former first daughter Barbara Pierce Bush is33. — From wire reports

c a me

aboard and resurrected it.

More than just the'science police'

By Josh Rottenberg Los Angeles Times

It started with a blind date. Theoretical astrophysicist

Nolan

a d m it s h e w as

initially wary o f

Kip Thorne was a divorced single dad raising a teenage daughter when he got a call in September 1980 from a close friend — fellow scientist Carl Sagan.

}i

T h orne's

involvement. " I wa s w o r ried t hat h e would just be the science po-

I

lice, telling me what I could and couldn't do with my sto-

Would Thorne be interest-

ry," said the d i rector, who traces his ow n i n t erest in

ed in going out with a woman

space to watching Sagan's

he knew?

"Cosmos" when he was 10.

Though the shy Caltech professorwas far more comfortable contemplating black holes and other imponderables than he was navigating the world of dating, he said yes. Thorne took his date, Lyn-

"But what I rapidly realized in talking to him was that

da Obst, then a science editor

holes, wormholes — they're

at the New York Times Magazine, to the world premiere

far more exotic than anything I can come up with as a

of Sagan's TV series "Cosmos" at the Griffith Obser-

screenwriter." The scientist and the film-

he was able to offer me tre-

mendously exciting narrative possibilities. "The mind-blowing quality of real science — relativity, gravitational theory, black

vatory. True to science-nerd

form, Thorne wore a not very flattering tuxedo — he remembers it being baby blue, though Obst insists it was maroon. "We reallyenjoyed each o ther's company, but t h e romance never went any-

Ricardo DeAratanha I Los AngelesTimes I TNS

Astrophysicist Kip Thorne poses for a portrait this month in front of a stellar mural at California Institute of Technology's Cahill Center for Astronomy and Astrophysics in Pasadena, California, where Thorne has his office. Thorne's research into black holes and wormholes helped form the basis for the sci-fi movie "Interstellar." visual effects team to keep

world thought I was."

black hole to get a character

the film's depictions of black Although he is a self-de- in his screenplay for the film where," Thorne said recently. holes and other cosmic phe- scribed introvert, Thorne is "Contact" from one point in Through an i m probable nomena as science-based as also a born teacher, and he space to the other. series of twists and turns, possible. He's also written a clearly enjoys talking. One If Thorne received a residthough, that blind date would book, "The Science of Inter- moment he's telling the story ual check every time a sci-fi lead to director Christopher stellar," as a companion to the of how, in the mid-1970s, he movie or TV show has used Nolan's new science-fiction movie. won a scientific bet with his a wormhole as a plot deepic, "Interstellar." Still, he knows he'll catch friend Stephen Hawking. The vice since, he would be a far S cience-fiction mov i es flak f ro m f e llow s cientists prize? A subscription to Pent- wealthier man. are usually much more fic- for some of the leaps the film house magazine. ("You have Still, despite his lack of tion than science, but "Inter- makes. to understand, I grew up in a filmmaking know-how, Obst "One eminent colleague Mormon culture — I thought stellar" is deeply rooted in said Thorne's way of apscience. Wormholes, black here came out of a screen- that would be a fun thing to proaching the mysteries of holes, the f i f t h d i m ension ing of 'Interstellar' and said, bet for.") The next moment the universe made him an 'I loved the movie, but I have he's patiently explaining how ideal cinematic collaborator. — what Thorne calls "t he "He's an extremely imagwarped side of the universe" a few bones to pick with you the imperceptible slowing of — play critical roles in the about the science,'" Thorne time due to Earth's gravity inative scientist," Obst said. story of a last-ditch space-ex- sard. affects the GPS system in the "He once told me his idea of ploration mission to find a He shrugged. iPhone resting on the table. a big time is sitting on a stool new home forhumankind.

"I can enjoy 'Harry Potter' and 'Star Trek,' but I really

"Look, I'm 74. I've had a career for half a century that

I've thoroughly enjoyed. I'm

Aboutthatblind date ...

on a mountain with a pencil in his hand — that's all

appreciatehard science fic- not particularly sensitive to tion," said Thorne, who has criticism anymore."

r em a i n ed he needed. He loves to play friends with Obst — who intellectually." went on from journalism to Thorne didn't initially set

an executive producer credit on the film. "There have

a successfulcareer as a film producer. Together, they con-

Improbableoutcome

been far too few films of this That this scientist wound type, in which the science is up rubbing elbows with Matembedded in the fabric of the thew M cConaughey and story." Anne Hathaway seems imThorne went t o u n usual probable. Then again, when lengths to ensure that, even you've spent your career where "Interstellar" v e ers studying how space and time into the realm of pure specu- can bend and warp, normal lation, there is always some ideas of what's probable or scientific justification to back improbable don't really apply. it up. Since the start of his career, Thorne has been a star

Team ofscientists

among those who study the

During the film's development, he led a daylong work-

stars. (Caltech theoretical physicist John Preskill says shop in which 14 scientists, of him: "Kip is a visionary including as t r obiologists, scientist.") "I got a lot of notoriety earplanetary scientists, psychologists and a s pace-policy ly on," Thorne said. "Much of expert, hashed out ideas. He my career I was just trying worked closely with the film's to prove I was as good as the

Thorne

had

cocted the original treatment for "Interstellar" in 2005. At that point, the plot was quite different from that in

the finished film. ("It involved going through a wormhole to explore things on the other side, but it wasn't set in the

future," Thorne said.) But its core never changed. "The idea was to explore the universe as it is," Obst said. " We thought i t w a s more interesting to look at

out to be a scientist. Raised in an academic family in a conservative area of Utah, his childhood career aspirations were far more earthbound.

"I wanted to be a snowplow

maker only really came into conflict once, Nolan said. The director was determined to have a spacecraft in the film travel faster than the speed

of light. Thorne balked at the idea. "Over about two weeks, he finally wore me down and helped me understand that it

was impossible according to the theory of relativity," Nolan said. Despite the success of "Interstellar," Thorne doesn't see a major new career in

movies in his future. He has plenty of other things to keep him occupied: researching gravitational waves, writing a science fiction novel, scuba diving and skiing with his wife, Carolee Joyce Winstein, a professor of biokinesiology and physical therapy at USC. "Lynda, Stephen Hawking and I have been talking about another movie project

for a while — if that leads to something, it's likely to be my last one," Thorne said. (He declined to offer details, but it's probably safe to assume it's

in the science-fiction genre.) "I've enjoyed this, but I'm at that point in my life where I want to do new things.

"I can't imagine not being

w a s a k i d ," in a phase where I'm trying he said. "Growing up in the to understand something or Rocky Mountains, that's the create something," he said. most glorious job you can "That's the essence of life." imagine. But then my mothd river when I

er took me to a lecture about the solar system when I was 8 and I got hooked." The

"Interstellar"

t r e at-

ment attracted Steven Spielwhat this stuff would actually berg, who signed on to direct. look like than to make it up." Hardly a movie buff, Thorne Thorne had crossed paths had seen only one of Spielwith Hollywood only once be- berg's films. (Perhaps not fore, when, in the early 1980s, surprisingly, it was "E.T.: The he suggested to Sagan that he Extra-Terrestrial.") use a wormhole instead of a But in 2010, Spielberg left

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A4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 2014

Pot

vested in attached grow houses at some stores, the pungent

GM

List

Continued from A1

musk of fresh cannabis flowers

Continued from A1

Continued from A1

dings to theback of the nostrils door at 8a.m. Friday, the dayaf- like apineypotpourri. ter Thanksgiving, as tokers try Inside the stores, customers to get their fingers on rationed get a greeting that's more like specials. Sixteen customers a bail bondsman than a Gap will get an ounce of weed for derk in khakis. Hefty amounts $50 that generally sells for five of cashandweed onthepremistimes that amount. Sixty joints es generally require a guardwill go for $1each. The price for sometimes packing a sidearm a $30 vape-pen cartridge will — toprotecta fortifiedmetalenbe cut in half. trance. AnID screener oftensits Colorado's almost 300 legal behind bulletproof glass, gmbmarijuana sellers have more to bingthepicture cardsthrough a worry about than just enticing small opening or drawer. customers with discounts. The Once customers get past the industry is grappling with 500 screener and enter the inner pages of regulation and myriad sanctum, things get fun again. marketing restrictions. There's At Patients Choice onthe Green also concern that the federal Mile, the Eagles' "Hotel Califorgovernment still sees the trade nia" plays on the sound system as illegal, even if officials are as customers browse Dixie Roll looking the other way for now. chocolate chews and sarsapaOutdoor advertising, bill- rilla soft drinks for $15 each. boards and most mass mar- They are spiked with the canketing for weed are prohibited, nabinoids that either make you said Mike Elliott, executive di- high or take the edge off pain. rector of the Marijuana Indus- Marijuana buds are prepacktry Group, a trade association aged in sealed plasticpouches. representing 30 owners with The array of offerings is dazThe shop expects a line at the

200 store licenses. For that reason, many pot

sellers have been hesitant to do a holiday marketingblitz. "We haven't spent much time

thinking about the holidays," he said. "We spend our time fo-

cusing on compliance." Colorado voted to allow pot sales for medicinal purposes in 2000. The industry didn't take

off, however, until President Bamck Obama took over in

2009 and concerns about federal enforcement eased. The state laterapproved sales for recre-

Anderson, 21 at the time

of the crash, was driving her car when she inexplicably lost control and crashed into a

tree. Erickson, her passenger, died at the scene, and Anderson has been wracked with

guilt ever since. In getting her

Now, most Colorado residents

slopes.

ational and medical marijuana

combined to raise $52.5 million in revenue for the state through taxes, licenses and fees. A stretch of Denver's South Broadway avenue known for its antique shops has been in-

J. Jill, Old Mill

GM with the defective switch,

which can cause a loss of power, disabling power brakes, power steering and air bags. At least 35 deaths have been linked to the defect, which

went unreported by GM for more than a decade. In May 2007, five months

Men's Wearheuse,Cascade Village Motherhood Maternity,Old

disorientedandemotional.

his mother had struggled for years with the thought of purchasing one for her only child. Anderson placed a bouquet of redroses onthe grave after withdrawing a single one from the bunch. She said she handed the single rose to Erickson. "This will change so many things," Anderson said in the telephone interview.

among the cars equipped by

GM did not disclose the switch's role when f ederal

safety regulators asked about the cause of the crash in a socalled death inquiry. Instead,

Mill REI, Old Mill

Pomegranate Holiday Shop,

in June 2007, the automaker wrote to the National High-

Old Mill

Tuesfiay Morning, BendFactory Stores Vanilla Urban Threads,Old

way Traffic Safety Administration that it had not assessed

the cause of the crash when, in fact, it had: A GM engineer

Mill

before Anderson entered her On Monday, James Cain, guiltyplea, GM had conducted a spokesman for GM, said in an internal review of the crash a statement: "We have taken and quietly ruled its car was to a neutral position on Ms. Anblame,but never letA nderson derson's case. It is appropriate or local law enforcement offi- for the court to determine the cials know. legal status of Ms. Anderson." After the crash on Nov. 15, The automaker's public 2004, Anderson's parents liq- acknowledgment linking Anuidated their 401(k) to retain a derson's crash to the defective lawyer to defend her. While a ignition switch came in aletter deal with prosecutors spared from GM's lawyers that was her jail time, she was on pro- submitted by her lawyers to bation for five years and paid the judge in Van Zandt Counmore than $10,000in fines and ty, Texas. restitution. She also suffered Until this year, she wrestled serious injuries inthe accident, with questions about her role induding a lacerated liver. But in Erickson's death. The pothe guilt surrounding her own lice trooper who investigated survival and her boyfriend's the accident had deduced that death caused her more endur- Anderson was intoxicated beingpain, she said. fore her drug test results came When the hearing was over back.Hispolicereportreferred on Monday, Anderson, her to the seemingly inexplicable

had found just a month earlier that power to the vehicle had

Simply Mac,Old Mill Wonderland ToySheppe,

family, and Erickson's mother, Rhonda, went together for the first time to visit Erickson's

believe the grand jury would

I

I •

I

most likely shut off. The district attorney who

Old Mill 9 A.M.

prosecuted Anderson, Leslie

Chice's,Old Mill Savory Spice Shop,Old Mill Ginger's Kitchenware,Old

Poynter Dixon, and the police

trooper who investigated the accident had both said that if the ignition-switch defect

Mill

had been publidy known at

Sweet Tooth CandyShoppe,

the time of the crash, certain details of the accident — like

Old Mill 9:30 A.NI.

the lack of skid marks or eva-

GffC, BendFactory Stores

sive action — would have been

10 A.NI.

seen differently.

Confluence FIII Shop,Old

"At the time, unbeknownst to Ms. Anderson or my office,

Mill

Desperado Beutipue,Old Mill Saxen's Fine Jewelers,Old

there were issues regarding her 2004 Saturn Ion," Poynter Dixon wrote in a letter in sup-

Mill

Tumalo Art Co.,Old Mill Tumale Creek Kayak &Canoe,Old Mill

port of Anderson in July. "Had I known at the time that GM knew of these issues and has since admittedto such, I donot

circumstances of the accident,

11 A.NI.

Naked Winery,Old Mill

her history of recreational have indicted her for intoxicadrug use, "and Anderson's be- tion manslaughter."

• •

I

I

a

• •

first nine months of the year, ac-

cordingtothe state Revenue Department. In that period, recre-

put up just last week, after

Anderson's Saturn Ion was

• •

I • •

Flip Flop Shops,Old Mill Francesca's,Old Mill Harry Ritchie,Cascade Village

Sources: Old Mill District, various store websites

•• •

8 A.M.

grave. His headstonehadbeen havior at the scene," which was

• •

World Market,Cascade Village

after the hearing. "I'm elated.

Things are upside down. Or, really, right-side up."

21 and older can try to make it At the Grass Station, located through the permitting gauntlet. within an industrial area a few W hile Washington is t h e miles from Coors Field, Fox is only other state currently al- expecting a rush of customers. lowing recreational sales, vot- The former electrical contracers in Alaska, Oregon and the tor, who sold medical marijuaDistrict of Columbia approved na since 2009 before tmnsitionsimilar measures on Nov. 4. ing to recreational sales in JanThe legalized pot industry in uary, logged his biggest sales of the United States will be worth last year on Black Friday. about $2.3 billion this year and may grow to more than $10 billion by about 2018, accordin the industry. This "green rush" genemted $207 million in recreational pot sales in Colorado during the

Old Mill

Monday for the first time pubMark Graham /The New York Times file photo licly linked Erickson's death Candice Anderson was the driver in a 2004 crash that killed her to an ignition switch defect in boyfriend, Gene Mikale Erickson, in Canton, Texas. Ten years millions of its small cars. since the accident in a defective Saturn Ion — recalled by Gen"It's overwhelming; it's a eral Motors for its faulty ignition switch — Anderson has been range of emotions," Anderson cleared of the criminal record she carried as a result. said in a telephone interview

season,the slow period before snow arrives and skiers hit the

h

by General Motors, which on

tomers during Denver's mud

ing tothe San Francisco-based ArcView Group, which invests

TJ Maxx,Bend RIver Promenade White HouseBlack Market,

from an extraordinary — and long delayed — admission

psychoactive ingredient in cannabis, is sold in waxes, goos, hard resin bits called "shatters" and other compounds used to enhance the high. Edibles go farbeyondbrownies. There are chocolate bars, coffee drinks, breads, candies and the popular lollipop. Plant-cultivation cydes and fluctuating supply can make it hard for shops like Patients Choice to plan promotions too far ahead. They aren't always sure what products they'll have on hand. Still, the store plans to use the holiday to attract cus-

Old Mill

r e cord

cleared, Anderson benefited

zling. Concentrated THC, the

ational use — no doctor's note needed — beginning in January. Until July, however, only medicinal retailers could apply for recreational-weed licenses.

7 A.M.

PetSmart,Cascade Village Rocky Mountain Chocolate, Bend Factory Stores Sunglass Hut,Old Mill Strictly Organic Coffee Ce.,

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filtrated by the state's newest industry. So many medicinal and recreational marijuana re-

tailers have snatched up affordable storefronts in recent years that the area has been dubbed

the Green Mile. Efforts by the new neighbors to create a business association have met resistance by some antique-shop owners, who worry about being overshadowed. Melding the marijuana trade with traditional business-

es remains a workinprogress. In the midst of this swirling uncertainty, many pot retailers have yet to tap their inner Ma-

cy's and roll out ambitious holiday promotions. Much of their

day is spent dealing with security. Banks, concerned about possible federal r e tribution,

mostly snub the industry, leaving it an all-cash business. Sam Kamin, a U n iversity

of Denver law professor who trackstheindustry, saidhe'snot sure how big the post-Thanksgiving sales surge will be. Black Friday may not even beat a weekend in August when the

jam band Phish came to town. Still, there are plenty of signs of the market's budding sophistication — and that indudes holding more promotions.

i •

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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN A 5

Ferguson

Odama urges calmafler Fergusondecision

Continued from A1 Police fired tear-gas canis-

WASHINGTON — President BarackObamaappealed for calm and understanding in Ferguson, Missouri, on Mondayafter agrand jury decided not to indict in thedeath of Michael Brown, pleading with both residents andpolice officers to show restraint. "We are anation built on the rule of law, so weneedto accept that this decision wasthe grand jury's to make," Obamasaid. In a late-night statement from theWhite House,Obamasaid it was understandable that some Americans would be "deeply disappointed — evenangered" that police officer Darren Wilson wasn't indicted. Yet heechoed Brown's parents in calling for anyprotests to be peaceful, saying that their wishesshould behonored asthey grieve their son. At the sametime, Obamasought to dispel the notion that race relations havedeteriorated, the protests in Ferguson notwithstanding. He called for Americans to turn their attention to ways to bring police andtheir communities closer together. "That won't be done bythrowing bottles. That won't bedone by smashing carwindows.Thatwon'tbedonebyusingthisasanexcuse to vandalizeproperty," Obamasaid. "It certainly won't be done by hurting anybody." Obama, whohasfaced repeatedcalls to visit Ferguson, said he would "take alook" at whether such avisit would now bewise. The Justice Department is conducting aseparate investigation into possible civil rights violations that could result in federal charges.Attorney General Eric Holder called Brown's death a"tragedy" and said federal investigators weretaking pains not to jump to conclusions.

ters to contain the crowds. Not fa r f r o m C h r i stmas

lights in downtown Ferguson thatread "Seasons Greetings," people looted liquor and convenience stores, a response

that ran counter to the peace that M issouri a uthorities, President Barack Obama and

Brown's family had requested. As St. Louis County Prosecuting Attorney Robert Mc-

Culloch announced the decision, National Guard troops fanned out across the city.

Though there was calm and silence in the streets of Ferguson for a half-beat after the

announcement, anger erupted shortly thereafter, and just

after midnight county police reported hearing automatic-weapon fire. David Goldman /The Associated Press In a sign of the way that the An armed police officer stands on guard Monday after a group of protesters vandalized a police events from Ferguson have cruiser in the wake of the announcement that the grand jury decided not to indict police officer Darren both compelled and startled

a nation, protesters also gathered in front of the White House and in several other ma-

frontation between W i lson

Brown did not raise his hands

jor cities, with sporadic reports of pol icecarsbeing attacked. Though many in St. Louis

and Brown on Canfield Drive. at all or that he raised them "Hands up, don't shoot" briefly and t hen dropped has become a rallying cry in them and then turned toward expected that Wilson would recent month for protesters, Officer Wilson, who then not be indicted, officials here but McCulloch said that even fired several rounds." faced a challenge in trying the image of Brown's surrenA statement from Wilson's to provide rationale for that der may have been a fiction. attorneys released shortly "Some w i t nesses m a i ndecision. McCulloch, during after the announcement said a news conference, empha- tained their original statement that officers must sometimes sized that testimony varied that Mr. Brown had his hands make "split-second and diffisharply among eyewitnesses in the air and was not moving cult decisions" and that Wilson "followed his training and made it difficult to have a toward the officer when he clear account of what unfold- was shot," McCulloch said. and followed the law." ed during the 90-second con- "Several witnesses said Mr. After the grand jury an-

Land

resources, and we've had to fo-

cus our attention on the appeal process rather than planning

Continued from A1 University leaders have said

for the 46 acres."

before the purchase can be LUBA will typically issue a finalized, they need to make written ruling within 77 days sure the site is safe to build of recei ving a record ofdocuon and that the cost to do so ments, in this case submitted is within reach. A geotechni- by the city of Bend. cal evaluation completed this The second property would summer brought good news, allow the university to expand finding the land would be safe from 1,900 students up to 5,000 for a campus. The university students. Conceptual work has had planned to set up a peer re- already been done to visualview process for the report, but ize what this 56-acre campus hasn't had the ability to follow would look like, with some through because of the legal options placing the majority of challenge by Truth In Site. academic buildings at the bot"We're unfortunately in a bit tom of the mine, surroundedby of a holdingpattern," said Kelly dorms up on the mine's lip and Sparks, the university's asso- the purchased 10-acre lot. ciate vice president for finance Before that vision could be and strategic planning. "We realized, however, the univeronly have a limited number of sity would have to determine

nouncement, many authorities the proceedings was released or "tug of war" took place. in the region urged peace. Mis- late Monday night, but beBrown then ran east on souri Gov. Jay Nixon, a Demo- forehand McCulloch tried to Canfield, and Wilson gave crat, warned that "if people are describe the encounter be- chase. "Less than 90 seconds violent or threatening property, tween Wilson and Brown. He passed" during the entire enthen resources will be used." said that during the incident, counter, McCulloch said. Ten F or m o r e th a n th re e Wilson angled his vehicle to shots were fired after Brown months, the grand jury block the path of Brown and fled, and Brown was hit sevmade up of seven men and friend Dorian Johnson. Two en or eight times. "We are profoundly disapfive women, nine white and shots were fired while Wilthree black — heard evidence son still sat in the car, and pointed that the killer of our into the shooting. They met Brown's blood was found in- child will not face the con25 timesand heard from 60 side the vehicle. McCulloch sequence of his actions," the witnesses, McCulloch said. said, referencing witnesses, Brown family said in a stateA trove of evidence from that some kind of "tussling" ment released Monday night.

what work would have to be We just haven't been able to done on the pit to make con- review them yet. The second struction feasible. While the thing we still need to do is to geotechnical report, conducted work with a civil engineering by Carlson Geotechnical, was firm to see if the cost for the mostly positive, it did identify different levels of fill and (soil) two issues. compactionare reasonable per One is the presence of "un- square foot." controlled fill materials," inSoil compaction and the adcluding "boulders up to four dition of fill material are two feet in diameter," which could strategies the university could cause instability. The other is pursue to stabilize the mine. the presence of steep, tall walls OSU-Cascades' Senior Projon the sides of the mine, in ect Manager Jane Barker said some placesreaching 80 feet. the university has already put The report noted these walls, down $200,000 in earnest monwhich are generally stable, ey on the site, and will soon may be "susceptible to slope owe more, though the univerinstability and rockfall," espe- sity would not disclose how cially during seismic activity. much, citing a requirement "The peer review is something major we still need to do as part of our due diligence," Sparks said. "We have offers.

ThreevisionsforOSU-Cascadescampus

LEGEND FEATURES MARKEDBELOW --- Property O Academic buildings 0 M i n or access road I Overlooks and vistas boundary 8 Housing 9 Service road 4 Vernal ponds, wetland, ~ B u ilding wet desert meadows ~ P onderosa 8 Student life centers 0 P a rking (onsite) 9 Main entrance P Amph i theatre/outdoor ® Courtyards ~ D eciduous gathering area 6 Main loop road ® Canyon bottom ~ D esert meadow © Canyon cliffs, rim & W ater

MASTERPLANCANYON i

to notify the property's own-

i nformation to

such information to the public.

ahead with it." — Reporter: 541-633-2160,

Sparks did say the sale agreement had been extended through August 2017, giving

tleeds@bendbuitetin.com

the university nearly t h ree

DOES EVERYONE MUMBLE?

yearstocloseon theproperty. "We want to do this right,"

Sparks said. "It's a complicated parcel, and we want to make sure we bring all the relevant

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A6

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 2014

1. Compare plans before December 7th. Call your local experts!

In Bend: i n es c u es ,

r o o , e ers o n o u n

Do your medicare health and drug plans cover what you need? Skilled volunteers from Oregon SHIBA (Senior Health lnsurance Benefits Assistance) provide free, unbiased help to compare plans and costs.

2. Get extra help. Some programs pay for prescription costs, or for Medicare Part

B premiums. If you have Medicare, do you qualify? Individual Less than $1459 monthly gross income Less than $13,440 in savings and resources

Married Couple Less than $1966 monthly gross income Less than $26,860 in savings and resources

Find out more. Call

OREGOH MEDICARE SAYIHGS COHHECT

1-855-447-0155, toll-free, Monday Friday, 9~~ Sp~ SHIBA

Oregon Medicare Savings Connect

ging and Disability Resource Connection of OREGON-


Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6

© www.bendbulletin.com/local

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 2014

BRIEFING

WHATEVER HAPPENED TO ...

GMOballots to be ecounted byhand

Following up onCentral Oregon stories that have beenout of the headlines. Email ideas to news©bendbulletin.com.

REDMOND ROD & GUN CLUB

The OregonSecretary of State's Office has tallied the final unofficial results from the November election. A full hand recount of ballots is required when the difference between votes cast for and against a measure is no more than onefifth of1 percent of the total votes. According to the state, there are809 more no votes for Ballot Measure 92, which if approved would require labeling of genetically modified organisms. That is within the margin that will require an automatic recount. The results are available at Oregonvotes. gov.

REDMOND

Suspect namedin

strip club shooting By Clnire Withycombe The Bulletin

Redmond Police have identified a Madras man as a suspect in a shoot-

ing at a Redmond strip club that took place early Sunday. Miguel Estrada, 31, has been lodged in the Deschutes County jail on

suspicion of fourth-degree assault, attempted fourth-degree assault,

felon in possession of a firearm and unlawful possessionofa firearm,

among other charges, after an altercation at Big T's, a

STATE NEWS

strip club just west of U.S.

Highway 97, that resulted in non-life-threatening injuries to one person.

The incident reportedly

Eugene

started because of money owed from an old debt. A

Ashland

• Ashland:Southern Oregon University is excluding a pool in pavilion remodel,B3 • Eugene:Downtown student housing development opens, but tenants have complaints,BS

firearm believed to be in Estrada's possession was

fired during the conflict, in which police believe Estrada was a participant. Po-

lice believe the gun firing Meg Roussos 1 The Bulletin

Rudy Rodriguez, of Prineville, competes during the Skeet and Trap shooting competition at the Redmond Rod & Gun Club on Sunday.

sponded to a call of shots fired at the club at about

By Scott Hammers

cording to Redmond Police Sgt. Curtis Chambers. Upon arriving, police helped two injured people until medics arrived. See Shooting /B5

1:30 a.m. on Sunday, ac-

said Thursday the club has signed a deal to purchase Halligan Ranch, and expects

sporting clays, similar to trap shooting, but with clay pigeon targets launched from

Club has found a new home,

to finalize the deal by the

several different points.

manufacturing and other industrial-oriented businesses.

just weeks before Deschutes County was set to evict the club from its shooting range near the Redmond Airport. Club president Bill Layton

first of February. Located off U.S. Highway 97 about

The club has leased the property near the Redmond

the club an extension of its

4 miles south of Redmond,

Airport from the county

the ranch has in recent years been home to a course for

since the early 1970s, but in

The Bulletin

PUBLIC OFFICIALS U.S. SENATE • Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore. 107 Russell Senate Office Building Washington, D.C.20510 Phone: 202-224-3753 Web: http://merkiey. senate.gov Bend office: 131 NWHawthorne Ave., Suite 208 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-318-1298 • Sen. Rnn Wyden,D-Ore. 223 Dirksen Senate Office Building Washington, D.C.20510 Phone:202-224-5244 Web: http://wyden. senate.gov Bend office: 131 NW Hawthorne Ave., Suite107 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-330-9142 U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES • Rep. Greg Waiden, R-HnodRiver 2182 Rayburn House Office Building Washington, D.C.20515 Phone: 202-225-6730 Web: http://waiden. house.gov Bend office: 1051 NWBond St., Suite 400 Bend, OR97701 Phone:541-389-4408 Fax: 541-389-4452 STATE OF OREGON • Gnv. John Kitzhaber, D 180 State Capitol, 900 Court St. Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-378-4582 Fax:503-378-6872 Web: http://governor. oregon.gov • Secretary nf State Kate Brown, D 136 State Capitol Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1618 Fax: 503-986-1616 Email: oregon.sos@ state.or.us • Treasurer TedWheeler, D 159 Oregon StateCapitol 900 Court St. NE Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-378-4329 Email: oregon. treasurer@state.or.us Web: www.ost.state. or. Us • AttorneyGeneralEllen Rcsenblum,D 1162 Court St. NE Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-378-4400 Fax: 503-378-4017 Web: www.doj.state. or. Us • LaborCommissionerBrad Avakian 800 NE OregonSt., Suite 1045 Portland, OR97232 Phone:971-673-0761 Fax: 971-873-0762 Email: boii.maii©state. Ol. US

Web: www.oregon.gov/ boii Motteofficials, B2

was unintentional. Redmond Police re-

The Redmond Rod & Gun

recent years, the county has

WHAT'5 HAPPENING WITH ...

been looking for ways to relocate the club to make way for In March, the county granted lease, giving it until Dec. 31 to vacate the property. See Gun club/B6

4$

CRIMINAL CASES Justin Link

: :'Link was one of five teenagers involved ,::'in the 2001 murder of Redmondresident :::Barbara Thomas. Hewas sentenced to ,::'life in prison without parole in 2003 after ,::'being found guilty of 22 charges, includ,::'ing aggravated murder andattempted murder.

Eric : Norgaard, 22, wasarrested Nov. 1on Inrganrd .::'suspicion of stabbing James Briles, 18, ::'his roommate in Juniper Hall at Central .::'Oregon Community College.

: :'The Oregon Court of Appeals deter:::mined last year that the Deschutes ,::'County Circuit Court mishandled ,:::Link's previous appeal bynot per,::'mitting him a resentencing hearing ,::'after an initial appeal in 2006. The ,:'appeals court sent the casebackto , ::Deschutes County Circuit Court for resentencing. ::'Norgaard was indicted on charges : :'of attempted murder, first-degree ::'assault and unlawful use of aweapon Nov. 10.

Link is being held in the Deschutes County jail. He recently received anewattorney, Thaddeus Betz,andisscheduledto begin his three-to-four-week sentencing on April 21.

DESCHUTES COUNTY

Changes made to

snowplan By Ted Shornck The Bulletin

Norgaard is scheduled to enter a plea Dec. 2.

Deschutes County commissioners approved an updated plan Monday for snow and ice removal on the 900 miles within the

county road system. The changes alter the wording and format of the

Richard ::'The co-owner of Acrovision Sports CenGustnfsnn,ter ,aBendgymnasticsacademy,was ::'charged with11 counts of first-degree :sexualabuse,possessionofcocaineand ::'22 counts of encouraging child sexual abuse. ,::The : former Madras High track coach Melissn Bnwermnn,::is charged with second-degree sexual ,::abuse andother crimes for her alleged , ::'role in a sexual relationship with a :::17-year-old on her track team.

Deenn Guss

Gustafson was found guilty on all : Gustafson is expected to besentencedat countsofsexualabuse,20counts 10:30 a.m. today. of encouraging child sexual abuse and possession of cocaine Nov.7.

actual document, making it easier to understand while maintaining the same approach to removing snow and ice.

Chris Doty, road department director, said the

Atavideo hearing onAug.15, Bow- Bowerman is dueback incourt Jan. 15 erman was granted athird-party for a pretrial conference. release from the Jefferson County jail. Her husband, JonBowerman, posted $5,000 bail to release heron Aug. 18.

: The Jefferson County treasurer faces : ::Goss pleadednot guilty to all : 36charges of forgery, theftand official: charges on Aug.13. misconduct after a county investigation found altered checksandunderreported cash deposits.

.::'A pretrial conference is scheduled for Dec. 2.

: entered Alford pleas Nov. l ,Bremont is scheduled to besentenced Michael: ::Theformer principal of Redmond Pro- ::Bremont Bremunt: ::ficiencyAcademy wasarrested after 20to attempting to elude apolice : ::Dec.16. ::'a high-speed police chase onstate , ::'officer and onecount of identity ,:::Highway126 on Sept. 6. Bremont was theft. The state dropped areckless ,::'released from DeerRidge Correctional driving charge andthree counts of : :'Institution in March after serving 14 identity theft. Last month, hewas , :'months for sexual abusecharges involv- assigned120 days in jail for violating former students. ing his probation.

prior plan had all the same objectives and priorities, but was written more

for operators and not the public. Doty presented the updated plan to county commissioners at Monday's

meeting. "This is basically our playbook for how we go about fighting snow and ice events that occur within

the county and happen upon our road facilities," Doty told commissioners. The last version of the

plan was adopted in 2001. Doty said the document

wording has changed "substantially" since the last time but the overall strate-

gy hasn't. "Fighting snow and ice is definitely an iteration,

something you do over time," he said. "You learn

OTHER STORIES

from previousevents and

build upon that, and so I would expect the snow and Eric Bush , ::'Theformer Prineville Police chief . ::'was accused of misusing the city's : :'flex time policy and for using police : :'department computers and office : ::equipment. Bushwasfired after a ,::'10-month investigation commissioned by the city.

: Oregon Department of Justice: The lawsuit against the Local Govern,An :::investigation found there was insuf-: ment Personnel Institute is ongoing : ::ficient evidence to prosecute Bush: and a hearing is scheduled for Dec.1. for any crime. Thecity of Prineville agreed to payBush$666,701 plus attorney's fees to settle the $2.5 million lawsuit he filed against the city.

ice plan to reflect that."

The road department divides the county into 16 snow zones with certain

areas taking a greater priority if snow accumulates throughout the county.

See Snow/B5


B2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 2014

E VENT

ENDA R

TODAY

FRIDAY

NATURAL HISTORYPUB: Bob Boyd, local historian, will discuss "Over There: The American Doughboy in WWI"; free, registration requested; 7 p.m., doors open at 5:30 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.org/rsvp or 541-382-5174.

BEND INDOORSWAP MEET: Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend Indoor SwapMeet, 679 SE Third St.; 541-317-4847. RAKU POTTERYSHOWANDSALE: 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 EXPRESSAUCTION: Asilentauction of unique creations; proceeds benefit Wonderland Express; free admission; 10a.m.4 p.m.; Sunriver Resort Great Hall, 17600 Center Drive; www.

WEDNESDAY THE TRAILRUNNING FILM FESTIVAL:Showcasing a variety of different trail running films; $15; 6 p.m., doorsopenat5 p.m .;Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.trailfilmfest.com or 541-323-1881. ACOUSTANOIR: The Roseburg folk-bluesmusician performs; free; 9:30 p.m.; Dojo, 852 NW Brooks St., Bend; www.dojobend.com or 541-706-9091.

THURSDAY I LIKE PIE THANKSGIVINGDAY FUN WALK/RUN:Run or walk 2K,5K,10K or10 miles and eat pie, with a baking contest; online registration closes Nov. 26; $5 and 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. THANKSGIVINGDONATION MAT CLASS:A pilates class to benefit the Bethlehem Inn; free, donations accepted, registration requested; 10-11 a.m.; Bend Pilates, 155 SW Century Drive, Suite 104; www. bendpilates.net or 541-647-0876. THANKSGIVING WITH FRIENDS: Full Thanksgiving dinner for those in the area who have no one to celebrate with; free, registration required; 5-7 p.m.; Epikos Community Center, 222 Reed Market Road, Bend;

andy©epikos community.com or 541-610-8318.

Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communityli feibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at vpvpvp.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.

4

Ben &Jerry's andFrancesca's; proceeds benefit the KIDSCenter; weather dependent; donations accepted; 2-5 p.m.; Ben &Jerry's, 680 SW PowerhouseDrive, Bend; 541-312-0131. GRAND ILLUMINATIONAND HOLIDAYFESTIVITIES:Featuring a petting zoo, face painting, live entertainment and more, with a holiday lighting ceremony at 7p.m; 3-8 p.m.; Sunriver Resort, 17600 Center Drive; www.sunriver-resort. com or 541-593-1000. SISTERSCHRISTMASTREE LIGHTINGCEREMONY:Featuring the lighting of the holiday tree, carols, a "cookie crawl" and more; 5:30-6:30 p.m.; Village GreenPark, 335 S. Elm St.; www.sisterscountry.com, jeri© sisterscountry.com or 541-549-0251. "NATIONALLAMPOON'S CHRISTMASVACATION":A showing of the classic holiday film, with a preshow ugly sweater contest; $12 plus fees; 7 p.m.; TowerTheatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700.

.P: +.:,j, t1

SUNDAY Bulletin file photo

Take a carriage ride at the Old Mill District between 2 p.m. and 5 p.m. starting Friday. Proceeds benefit the KIDS center.

wonderlandexpress.com. SANTALANDATTHEOLDMILL DISTRICT:Takeaphoto with Santa, children's activities, Tree ofJoy and more; free admission, additional cost for take-home photos, $5 donation for children's activities;11 a.m.-5 p.m.; SantaLand, 330 SWPowerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. CARRIAGERIDES IN THEOLD MILL DISTRICT:Ride in the Cowboy Carriage, located between

writer who is questioned about his stories and apossible connection to recent murders; $10 plus fees in advance; 7:30 p.m.;VolcanicTheatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. CURVE: A night of dance music, with DJs Jefe, Manoj, Barisone, Mr. Wu and Paranome;$12;10 p.m.; Domino Room, 51 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.j.mp/curveinbend or 541-408-4329.

SATUIU)AY 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 SwapMeet, 679 SE Third St.; 541-317-4847. RAKU POTTERYSHOWAND SALE: Featuring works by local potters of Central Oregon, plus jewelry and scarves; free admission;10a.m.-5 p.m.; The Environmental Center, 16 NW KansasAve., Bend;www. envirocenter.org or 541-410-5943. WONDERLAND EXPRESSAUCTION: A silent auction of unique creations; proceeds benefit Wonderland Express; free admission;10 a.m.2 p.m.; Sunriver Resort Great Hall,17600 Center Drive; www. wonderlandexpress.com. TURKEYTROTFUNRUN/WALK: Fun run to benefit the SHSNordic Ski team; $10, registration required; 10:30 a.m.-1 p.m.; LodgeRestaurant at Black Butte Ranch,12930 Hawks Beard; www.blackbutteranch.com, recreation©blackbutteranch.com or 541-595-1282. SANTALANDATTHE OLDMILL DISTRICT: Takeaphoto with Santa, children's activities, Tree ofJoy and more; free admission, additional cost for take-home photos, $5 donation for children's activities; 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; SantaLand,330 SWPowerhouse

Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. CARRIAGERIDES IN THEOLD MILL DISTRICT:Ridein the Cowboy Carriage, located between Ben & Jerry's and Francesca's; proceeds benefit the KIDSCenter; weather dependent; donations accepted; 2-5 p.m.; Ben 8 Jerry's, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. SISTERSCHRISTMASPARADE:

The paradeis on HoodAvenuefrom

Pine to Spruce; 2-5 p.m.; Hood Avenue, across from LesSchwab Tires; www.sisterscountry.com, jeri@ sisterscountry.com or 541-549-0251. PRINEVILLECHRISTMAS PARADE: This year's theme is "Holiday Traditions"; 5-6 p.m.; Downtown Prineville. ST. CHARLESREDMOND STARLIGHTHOLIDAY PARADE: The theme is "It's a Whoville Christmas," annual tree lighting by SantaClaus after parade inCentennial Park; free; 5 p.m.; downtown Redmond; 541-923-5191. PRINEVILLECHRISTMAS TREE LIGHTING:5:15 p.m.; Downtown Prineville. BEND CHRISTMASTREE LIGHTING: Sing carols, listen to local choirs, watch Santa light the Christmas tree and more; free; 6 p.m., tree lighting at 6:30 p.m.; DrakePark, 777 NW Riverside Blvd.; www.j.mp/xmasbend or 541-788-3628. "THEPILLOWMAN": Encore performance of the playabout a

Second Son; $5; 8 p.m.;Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

Dec.2 GREEN TEAMMOVIE NIGHT:A screening of "Salt of the Earth," a reenactment of a1951 strike at azinc mine in NewMexico; free; 6:30-8:30 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 NE Ninth St., Bend;www.bendfp.org or 541-815-6504.

Dec. 3

BEND INDOORSWAP MEET: Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend IndoorSwap Meet,679SE Third St.; 541-317-4847. SANTALANDATTHEOLDMILL DISTRICT: Takeaphoto with Santa, children's activities, Tree ofJoyand more; free admission, additional cost for take-home photos, $5 donation for children's activities; 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; SantaLand, 330SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. CARRIAGERIDES IN THE OLD MILL DISTRICT:Ridein the Cowboy Carriage, located between

Ben &Jerry's andFrancesca's; proceeds benefit the KIDSCenter; weather dependent; donations accepted; 2-5 p.m.; Ben 8 Jerry's, 680SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. HIP HATCHET: The Portland folk-blues artist performs, with Christopher Paul Stelling and Micah Peterson; $5; 8 p.m.;Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

MONDAY

EMPOWERINGFAMILIES BREAKFAST:A breakfast fundraiser for the Latino Community Association; free, donations accepted, registration requested; 7:15-8:30a.m.; Boys & Girls Club of Bend,500 NWWall St.; www.latinocommunityassociation.

org, whitney© latinocommunityassociation.org or 541-382-4366. TREE LIGHTINGCEREMONY: Lighting of the 65-foot Ponderosa pine, visits with Santa, a performance by the Summit High Choir and ladder truck tours with the BendFire Department; free, onenon-perishable food item suggested donation; 5:45 p.m.; Northwest Crossing, Mt. Washington and NWCrossing drives, Bend; www.northwestcrossing.com. "FINAL POSE": Featuring the awardwinning documentary on theend-oflife journey ofyoga instructor Myra Fisher; $5 plus fees inadvance, $10 at the door; 7 p.m.; TheBelfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; www.belfryevents. com or 541-815-9122.

TOUCHMARK

ZACHARY LUCKY:TheCanadian country-folk artist performs, with

SlNCE 1980

716 SW11lh St. Redmond . 541.923.4732

•3

I

XEws OF REcoRD POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log whensuch arequest is received. Anynewinformation, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-633-2117.

BEND POLICE DEPARTMEMT Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at1:07 p.m. Nov. 12, in the2800 block of NW Clearwater Drive. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:32 a.m.Nov.22,in the63300 blockof Majestic Loop. DUII —Jason Frederick Piper, 34, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 4:32 a.m. Nov. 21, in thearea of NWSixth Street and NWDrake Road. Thelt —Atheft was reported and an arrest madeat1:08 p.m. Nov. 21, in the 20100 block of Pinebrook Boulevard. DUII —Jason LeeHedge, 34, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 9:23

PUBLIC OFFICLAS Continued from Bf STATE SENATE

• Sen. TedFerrioli, R-District 30 (Jefferson, part of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,S-323 Salem, OR 97301 Phone:503-986-1950 Email: sen.tedferrioli@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/ferrioli • Sen. Tim Knopp,R-District 27 (part of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,S-423 Salem, OR 97301 Phone:503-986-1727 Email: sen.timknopp©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/knopp • Sen. Doug Whitsett, R-District28 (Crook, part of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,S-303 Salem, OR 97301 Phone:503-986-1728 Email: sen.dougwhitsett@state. of'.Us

Web: www.leg.state.or.us/whitsett STATE HOUSE • Rep. Jason Conger, R-District 54 (part of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,H-477 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1454 Email: rep.jasonconger©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/conger • Rep. JohnHuffman, R-Distrlct 59 (part of Jefferson) 900 Court St. NE,H-476 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1459 Email: rep.johnhuffman©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/huffman • Rep. Mike McLane,R-District55 (Crook, part of Deschutes)

p.m. Nov. 21, in the61300 block of S. U.S. Highway97. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at2:29 a.m. Nov. 23, in the1000 block of NWBond Street. Theft —A theft was reported at11:29 a.m.Nov.23,inthe200blockofNW Congress Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 5:51 p.m. Nov. 21, in the61300 block of S. U.S. Highway97. Theft —A theft was reported at 3:13 p.m.Nov.22,inthe2700blockofNE Boyd Acres Road. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at7:21 p.m. Nov. 21, in the 3100 block of N. U.S.Highway 97.

PRIMEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT Theft —A theft was reported at1:16 p.m. Nov. 22, in thearea of NEThird Street. Burglary —A burglary was reported at11:54a.m. Nov. 21, in theareaof NW DeerStreet. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported andan arrest made at1:50 a.m. Nov.22, in the area of NWSecond Street.

900 Court St. NE,H-385 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1455 Email: rep.mikemclane@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/mclane • Rep. GensWhisnsnt, R-District 53 (part of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,H-471 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1453 Email: rep.genewhisnant@state. OI;us

Web: www.leg.state.or.us/whisnant DESCHUTES COUNTY 1300 NWWall St., Bend, OR97701 Web: www.deschutes.org Phone: 541-388-6571

Deschutes County Commission • TsmmyBaney, R-Bsnd Phone: 541-388-6567 Email: Tammy Baney© co.deschutes.or.us • Alan Unger, D-Redmond Phone: 541-388-6569 Email: Alan Unger©co.deschutes. OI;us

JEFFERSON COUMTY SHERIFF'S OFFICE Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at6:01 a.m. Nov.18, in the area of E.U.S. Highway 26near milepost 2. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 7:25 a.m.Nov. 18, in the area of AshwoodandHaycreek roads. Burglary —A burglary was reported at 4 50 p.m. Nov.18, in the16600 block of SWLower BridgeWay. Burglary —A burglary was reported at4:19 p.m. Nov.20, in the100 block of NW DepotRoad. Theft —Atheft was reported at 2:38 a.m. Nov. 21, in the100 block of NE Daisy Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at10:35 a.m. Nov. 22, in the area ofHaystack Reservoir.

OREGOM STATE POLICE Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 7:15 p.m.Nov.22, in the area of U.S. Highway 97near milepost

• Mike Ahern • John Hatlield • Wayne Fording Phone: 541-475-2449 Email: commissioner@co.jefferson. oi;us CITY OF BEND 710 NW Wall St. Bend, OR97701 Phone:541-388-5505 CITY OFREDMOND 716 SWEvergreen Ave. Redmond, OR97756 Phone: 541-923-7710 CITY OF SISTERS 520 E. CascadeAvenue, P.O.Box39 Sisters, OR97759 Phone: 541-549-6022 CITY OF lA PINE P.O. Box3055, 16345Sixth St. La Pine, OR97739 Phone: 541-536-1432

• Tony DBBons,R-La Pine Phone: 541-388-6568 Email: Tony DeBone©o.deschutes.

CITY OF PRINEVILLE 387 NEThird St., Prineville, OR97754 Phone: 541-447-5627 Email: cityhall@cityofprineville.com

CROOK COUNTY 300 NE Third St., Prineville, OR97754 Phone: 541-447-6555 Email: administration©co.crook.or.us Web: co.crook.or.us

CITY OF MADRAS 71 SE DStreet, Madras, OR97741 Phone:541-475-2344

oi'.Us

JEFFERSON COUNTY 66 SE DSt., Madras, OR97741 Phone:541-475-2449 Web: www.co.jefferson.or.us

Jefferson County Commission

CITY OF CULVER 200 W. First St., Culver, OR 97734 Phone: 541-546-6494 CITY OF METOLIUS 636 Jefferson Ave., Metolius, OR 97741 Phone: 541-546-5533

Ie trliagl c

147. DUII —Thomas Joseph McArdle Jr., 52, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at12:42 a.m. Nov.23, in the area of SWFifth Street and SW Forest Avenue. DUII —Brandi Lane Wanker,30, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at1:42 a.m. Nov. 23, in thearea of NEThird Street and NERevereAvenue.

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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON AROUND THE STATE

i c es swimmin oo By Joe Zavala

tranged wife in her suburban Portland apartment in October 2013 and then fled with their young daughter has been sentenced to life in prison. JoshuaCavett, 37, was sentenced Mondayafter pleading guilty to murder, being a felon in possession of a firearm and afelon in possession of body armor. He'll be eligible for releaseafter 28 years. Jessie Doyle Cavett, his estranged wife, was 27 at the time of her death. Court records show shehadfiled for a restraining order and sought a divorce in August 2013. Shewrote in her restraining order request that her husband hadrepeatedly harassed her and threatened her life. JoshuaCavett's lawyer, Gordon Mallon, said his client shot his wife after he wasdenied visitation with their then-2year-old daughter. Cavett took the toddler and left his wife's then-5year-old daughter, who called a family friend to report the shooting.

ation Center. It uses two archi-

Ashland Daily Tidings

ASHLAND — A

GreSham killing —AnOregon manwhofatally shot his es-

tectural firms, working togethm a ssive

er, with the recreation center

$29 million remodeling of Southern Oregon Universi-

being designed by Sink Combs Dethlefs Architects in Colorado andMcNeal being designed by Straus & Seibert Architects of Medford.

ty's McNeal Pavilion will dra-

matically change the school's athletic complex. Some of that change will come from subtrac-

During an Associated Stu-

tion, as the architects' current

model eliminates the university's pool. "The pool is not going to make it. It's not in the current

program," said Drew Gilliland, SOU's director of facilities, Bob Pennell I The Medford Mail Tribune planning, management and Jennie Watt swims in the Southern Oregon University. Watt has sustainability. been swimming in the pool three times a week since1992. A $29 A concrete masonry and million remodeling of Southern Oregon University's McNeal Pavilsteel structure, McNeal was ion eliminates the university's pool. completed in its original form in 1957beforeremodels and ad"It seems like the powers vilion building, noting that the ditions in 1966 and 1991 led to the current 120,000-square-foot that be at SOU are trying hard greatest concernswerefireand facility. Now 57 years old, the to get rid of the pool because HVAC (heating, ventilation and mixed-use building is due to be they don't want the hassle of air conditioning) deficiencies. replaced, minus the pool, with maintaining it anymore," she Another investigation in 2013 work scheduled to start next sard. by ZCS Engineering conduded summer.

But Ryan B r own, SOU's

The pool was deemed not head ofcommunity and meworth rebuilding or replacing, dia relations, said the decision said Gilliland, because it was in came at least in part from dibad shape and in a poor loca- rection provided by university tion with regard to a new Student Recreation Center that is

students.

ed that SOU has no swim team

from student fees, and the stu-

"A large portion of the fundpart of the project. He also not- ing for that project is coming

and the pool is mostly used by dent government through a high schools. survey asked about the pool," The decision to leave a pool Brown said in an email. "It out of the plans did not sit well doesn't get used enough, and with Cynthia Moscaritolo of the result of that survey was the Rogue Valley Masters, a not to include the pool in the community-based swim team funding for the new project. A based in Ashland. majority of the students did not Moscaritolo said most of the favor funding the pool." student body does not know of An assessment of McNeal the school's plans to scrap the conducted in 2008 recommendpool. She believes it will be a ed major repairs and maintebig loss for the community. nance to the entire McNeal Pa-

dents of Southern Oregon University meeting on Monday a group of Masters Swimmers, including Moscaritolo, pleaded with ASSOU board to reconsider eliminating the pool. Moscaritolo even brought an architectural design she drew herself which includes a deck patio along the retrofitted pool. She was disappointed with the

Worker found unconscious in hole — Firefighters have rescued a construction worker found unconscious at the bottom of a15-foot-deep hole in southwest Portland. Fire Lt. DamonSimmons saidMonday thatnoonewaswiththemanwhen hebecame unconscious and it wasn't clear whether he fell or had somepossible medical issue. The fire department's technical rescue teamgot him out of the hole and hewastaken to OHSUhospital. His condition was not known. The manwas not identified.

COmmerCial Cradhing — Thecommercial Dungenesscrabbing

reaction.

"I thought it was a nice drawing and they would smile or something, but everyone just stared and looked bored," she said. "I think they feel like

season is set to openDec. 1from southwest Washington to northern California. Fishery managers in Oregon, Washington andCalifornia met over the weekendand agreed to open commercial crabbing from Klipsan Beach,Washington, to Point Arena, California. The Oregon Department of Fish andWildlife said commercial crabbers are allowed to set their gear asearly as Nov. 28. Recreational harvest of Dungeness crab in the oceanoff Oregon also opens Dec.1. Recreational Dungeness crabbing is openyear round in Oregon's bays and estuaries.

they don't have the power, or

they just don't care."

that there was corrosion in the

The student fees committee

steelcolumns and reinforce- decided not to pursue the matment embedded in the concrete ter because, according to inforwalls. A second opinion con- mation provided in a Senate firmed the original assessment. meeting the following night, T hat means most of t h e the pool was ranked low on building must be replaced, in- surveyscompleted by students. cluding the space now occu- Thatsurveyreportedthatrenopiedby themain gym, an aux- vating the pool would cost $2.5 iliary gym, a dance studio and million to $3 million, a number thepool. Moscaritolo disputes. "The truth is," she said, "it Those components, minus the pool, are planned to be re- would only cost $750,000 to built from the ground up, says $850,000 to retrofit the pool. Gilliland. He emphasized that What they didn't state (in the the architects' plans are still survey) was that they also had in flux as parties make adjust- to put in some locker rooms. ments to avoid cost overruns. So what I'm saying is I know The massive building project there's enough wiggle room will cost $14.5 million for Mc- in a ($29 million) budget to inNeal and $14.5 million for the dude $750,000 forpool-related new adjacent Student Recre- things."

HaSh Oil eXplOSian —Police said two men were injured in a blast in the restroom of a Tigard service station where they were trying to make hashoil from marijuana and butane used in the process exploded. The two Tigard men — 18and 23years old — took themselves to Providence St. Vincent Medical Center early Sunday. They were transported to the LegacyOregon Burn Center. Firefighters with Tualatin Valley Fire andRescue put out a small fire in the ceiling. Smoke had spread to the food mart. Officers and firefighters said the men were trying to produce hash oil when aheat gun ignited butane. The Washington County district attorney's office will decide whether the two will be charged. — From wire reports

Find It All

LEFFEL CE N T E R W

The Associated Press ROSEBURG — A p r omi-

nent Oregon economist says one of the counties hardest hit by the decline of the state's

forest industries should expect a "silver tsunami" of retirees as aging baby boomers flee California and, if predictions pan out, the Pacific Northwest becomes a refuge

from potential impacts elsewhere of climate change. His advice to D o uglas County leaders is to make it a priority to make sure those retirees get their health care

locally rather than in Eugene or Portland.

"Think of it as capturing Medicare dollars in Douglas County," said John Tapogna,

Douglas County has regained Tapogna said a proposed 1,050 of the 4,440 jobs lost. private health care college The unemployment rate is in d o w ntown R o seburg below 10 percent, compared would be a step in the right with 16.3 percent in 2009. "It's been a bit of a rolldirection. Douglas County has long er coaster, but i t's coming been a center of logging and down," Rooney said. milling in Oregon, but it is Prices for lumber have reone of the Southern Oregon covered "surprisingly well," areas whose economies have but with little timber being sufferedbecause of protec- h arvested fro m U . S . F o r tionsfor endangered species est Service land there is not that curtailed logging on fed- enough tofeed the demand, eral lands and mechanization said Mark Rasmussen of the and consolidation among Mason, Bruce and Girard formilling and wood products est management consultant companies. company. The local economy has Chinese demand for lumbegun to come back from ber is a growing market, he the Great Recession. State said, especially for w ood economist Brian Rooney said from private timberlands. president of ECONorthwest.

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Effort to encouragecollege spreadsin east By Kelly Ducote La Grande Observer

grade level, is the beginning year, Academic M omenof shaping a 10-year Academ- tum students visit a partner

L A G R A ND E

— Th r e e ic Momentum Personal Develyears into the Academic Mo- opment Plan to help students mentum p r ogram, E astern pin down their projected edu-

Promise officials say 3,550 cational and career future. students are participating in In 2012-13, the Pendleton the program across the reSchool District piloted the gion, from Wallowa County to program.Seventeen more disGilliam County. tricts signed on last year. Now, A cademic M omentum i s 42 schools participate in the part of Eastern Oregon Uni- program. versity's Eastern Promise proFifth-graders in the program, which aims to increase gram take a visit to EOU to get accessto college and postsec- a feel for postsecondary eduondary education in the re- cation. Mielke said this comgion. A large part of the pro- ing spring, when the schools gram works to offer college visit the university, they will credit to high school students, tie in their visits as the Portbut the Academic Momentum land OperaCompany comes portion of the program is di- to town. "They engage in some kind rected toward younger students in elementary and mid-

dle school. "We're in practically every

of activity," Mielke said. In the past, students have heard from the EOU president. Stu-

dents may see a student-athgon," said Dan Mielke, execu- l ete presentation or a l a b tive director of Eastern Prom- presentation. ise. "The idea is you need Eastern Promise officials to start early with creating say the quick growth in the the mindset in students that Academic Momentum prothey're going to do something g ram occurred after t h e later on beyond high school." program coordinator, VickA cademic Mome n t u m ie Read, contacted all the is tailored to fifth- through schools to inform them of eighth-grades and starts by training opportunities availasking students, parents and able through the program. "We're g r owing more educators to sign a compact asserting students will work quickly than we expected, as on academic habits to prepare schools are communicating them for college or vocational with each other and spreading training. the excitement," Read said. T hat, done a t t h e f i f t h During the seventh-grade school district in Eastern Ore-

StOP byfOr libationS and liVely COnVerSatiOnWith Other AdFed memberS. We Can beyOurfirSt, middle Or laSt StOPOnyOur Way Outto FirSt Friday.

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"This is the first year we'll

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college application process, applying for f inancial aid and other aspects of higher education. Those involved with Aca-

demic Momentum also say the program aims to break

•e.•

down potential barriers to ed-

ucationfor underrepresented populations, including those in poverty. Read said many of the participating school districts have more than 50 percent of their students in free or

reduced lunch programs. "A child from p overty has an even tougher path to

college and postsecondary preparation for many reasons," Read said. "Our teach-

ers need to be alert and prepared to help them overcome those additional obstacles."

Last month, educators participated in a poverty-awareness training to provide teach-

ers with a realistic approach to working with students and

parents from poverty and research-based strategies to improve studentperformance.

• •

e e


B4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 2014

EDj To

The Bulletin

s

aren s nee e wi new ma me 0 s arents trying to help their children with math home-

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work are frustrated. Even highly educated parents-

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some withmaster's and doctoral degrees — are complaining that they can't figure out the new methods, which are far different from the onesthey learned in school. Given the well-established value of engagedparents, it's a frustration that demands prompt attention. Few things could be more counterproductive than forcing parents out of the homework equation. At a vecent Crook County School Board meeting, board members talked about complaints they've received from parents about Common Core State Standards-inspired changes in the way students must demonstrate how they arrive at answers to otherwise routine mathproblems. According to a report in the Central Oregonian newspaper,board members Scott Cooper and Gwen Carr talked about the need to give parents resources to help them feel competent in the new methods. Stacy Smith, director of curriculum and instruction, said Crook County teachers are providing parents with practice sets that show the problem-solvingprocesspresented inthe classroom. They are also designing homework to reinforce lessons the students have already learned, not introduce new concepts. In the future, Smith hopes to give parents Internet resources and videos to explain the classroom lessons. Theproblemiswidespreadacross the move than 40 states that have ad-

opted the Common Core. The New York Times reported that parents who once felt unable to help with high school trigonometry now find first-grade assignments baffling. The changes result from ashift away hommemorizing formulas to understanding the concepts behind them. Studentsare expected to demonstrate multiple ways to find the answer to problems presented largely in word format. It doesn't help that many textbooks and materials don't yetrefl ectthenew approach. Los Angeles first-grade teacher Jane Ching Fung wrote in the publication Education Week that she works to educate parents about Common Core standardsso they can partner with her in their child's education. She advises her fellow teachers to educate parents during parent-teacher conferences and invite them to interactive workshops, as wellas provide Web and other resources. She sees it as her responsibility to give parents the tools they need to support their students. That kind of constructive approach, like the efforts in Crook County, can help cut frustration, keep parents engaged and give the standardsa chance to raise student skills as intended.

EPA memogood newsfor biomass, forest thinning

A

new approach to measuring some carbon emissions is good news for Oregon's forests and biomass industry. An Environmental Wotection Agency memo revealedlast week that the agency is taking a more thorough look at the carbon emissions that come from forest products. If the new calculations survive into a final ruling, forest and biomass industry jobs could follow, along with better ways to thin forests and cut wildfire risk. As Bulletinreporter Andrew Clevengerwrote Thursday, the positive news came in a memo to EPA's regional air directors from Janet McCabe, acting assistant administrator for the Office of Air and Radiation. She wrotethe agency isconsidering information that shows some forest byproducts don't add to carbon emissions if the full context is considered. Waste products from logging are oftenburned on site if no good alternatim exists, producing the same amount of carbon emission

as if they were taken to a mill and turned into woodpellets. Makingthe pellets, however, has otherbenefits in energyproductionandjob creation. Also, in a sustainable, managed forest, some of that carbon is reabsorbed by the trees. That tips the balance in favor of biomass over even relatively clean natural gas. The memo provides encouragement for the biomass industry, but also is likely to make forest thinning more feasible, withbenefits for healthy forests and fire control. It's heartening to see the EPA recognize the complexity of these factors in forest management and carbon emissions and see ways for apparently competing interests to work together. Oregon and other Western states need to find ways to put their natural resources to work to create jobs and products, but also to dear overgrown forests and reduce emissions. This emerging understandingof the environmental effects could help cveate the regulatory frameworkto make that possible.

M 1Vickel's Worth Leave no trace, and get Dome repair can't fix involved in conservation what ails within

Sen. Ron Wyden's O&C Land legislation. I disagree with The Bulle-

tin's editorial that calls for Wyden to work with sponsors of a House

Though I was glad that problems In looking at the picture of the with increasing use of our public Capitol dome repair project, I can version of this legislation written lands received coverage from The only compare this project to an by Reps. Greg Walden, Peter DeBulletin recently, the front page story expensive facelift on an extreme- Fazio and Kurt Schrader. and subsequent editorial ultimately

ly troubled patient. No amount of

First, Wyden has worked with

missed the point. The problem is not money can fix that which is ailing that so many people love places like the inside of the building, and that

DeFazio and others in reaching many commonalities on the leg-

Three Sisters Wilderness and Smith

islation and

is its heart.

h a s i n c reased the

Rock, but that people take these placIt is ironic that the description amount of annual harvest that the es for granted and are not educated states that most o f t h e o u tside House bill supports. about the fragile plants and animals

damage to the dome is where two

that live in our wildbackyard. "Loved to death" is an oxymoron. If you love a place you dean up after yourself andpractice"leave notrace." You learn everything you can about

pieces of metal are joined together and water has seeped in and caused rust. If only it w ere that

easy to fix the separation and rust within those halls.

that place and you treat it with re-

It also interesting to note that the

Second, elements ofthe House

bill strongly supported by Walden, DeFazio and Schrader will n ever work. It would set aside about

half the federal 08 C Lands under state management for harvest. To take over a million acres of feder-

spect. Although crowdingis aserious last restoration was in 1960, just

al land and turn it over to the state is something Wyden does not sup(both parties) started the infection. port and would not be signed into es, like the Oregon Badlands Wilder- The walls are covered with lies, law as stated by the White House. ness, that have also seen increasing deception, arrogance, lawlessness, No legislation is perfect, but issue, the solution is not to simply directuneducated crowds toother plac-

about the time the progressives

use with Bend's recreation boom.

loathing of the American voters,

Backcountry Hunters 8z Anglers

It would go a long ways towardaddressing this problem if those promoting popular places also encouraged people to get involved with the many local groups that hold conservation and stewardship of our natural landscape as their mission. Or-

disrespect and political correctness. And, just because somebody else's party is in, the heart does not seem to improve or get better. The

believes the senator has struck a

Tower of Babylon comes to mind

public services while environmen-

as the first big government project

tal groups want things left alone. Neither side gets the full measure

and that did not turn out well. What is the cure? I am not sure,

ganizations like the Friends of Ore-

balance in this argument. Counties want to harvest more timber

for needed revenues to support

of what they want. But, each gets

gon Badlands Wilderness, Oregon but I choose hope based on my Natural Desert Association, Friends faith. Or as a 1960's Bob Dylan of the Central Cascades Wilderness classic "The Answer is Blowing in and Friends and Neighbors of the the Wind." Deschutes Canyon Area provide Carol Orr ample opportunities for people to Terrebonne get to know our local wilderness and give back to the places they Support Sen. Wyden's

acresfor conservation and creates new wilderness and backcountry

and the lands they care for need all 0&C Land legislation the love they can get. As a native Oregonian, I hunt Robert Windlinx Jr. and fish the entire state, includBend ing much of the land contained in

to act.

love. These nonprofit organizations

something, which is the measure of collaborative legislation. The bill sets aside 1.6 million areas good for hunters and an-

glers. At the same time, it would double timber harvests, providing more economic certainty for west-

ern Oregon's 18 counties. It's time Karl Flndllng Bend

Letters policy

In My Viewpolicy How to submit

We welcomeyour letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250words and include the writer's signature, phonenumber and address for verification. Weedit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhereandthose appropriate for other sections of TheBulletin. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.

In My View submissions should be between 550and 650 words, signed and include the writer's phone number and address for verification. Weedit submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject those published elsewhere. In My View pieces run routinely in the space below, alternating withnational columnists. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.

Please address your submission to either My Nickel's Worth or In My View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin. Email submissions are preferred. Email: letters©bendbulletin.com Write: My Nickel's Worth / In MyView P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804

What role should the FAA play in regulating civilian drones? By Troy A. Rule

year, FAA officials haveissued ceaseand-desist notices against ordinary or more than half a century, the citizens for flying small commercial Federal Aviation A dministra- drones just a few dozen feet above tion has piloted the development land. of sensible aviation regulation in the The FAA's controversial crackdown Los Angeles Times

F

United States. Unfortunately, when

Congress enacted legislation in 2012 directing the FAA to craft rules for small civilian drones, the agency entered uncharted territory. Civilian drones are fundamentally different from manned aircraft. Many

smalldrones can bepurchased online for just a few hundred dollars and are designed to hover relatively close to

the ground, well below where conventional planes and helicopters fly. The FAA is working on federal civilian droneregulations,but inthe meantime, the agency has outlawed any commercial uses of drones without

express FAA authorization. This ban applies to hundreds of types of flying devices that are not even capable of reaching the minimal safe altitude of manned airplanes. Several times this

on commercial drones drew attention last March when an administrative law judge for the National Transportation Safety Board ruled that the FAA

found afederalregulatory scheme ca- at the federal government level. For pable of effectively integrating drones instance, the agency could accelerate into the nation's airspace. A June au- the development of national drone dit report revealed that the agency safety and performance standards was "significantly behind schedule" analogous to the National Highway in meeting congressionally imposed Traffic Safety Administration's mandeadlines for its development of civil- ufacturing standards for motor vehi-

ing programs for commercial drones and their operators, legislatures could enact laws that clarify the scope of

ian drone regulations. Frustrated at

drone regulation as well. In particular, drone zoning laws adopted at the local

des. Among other things, these FAA

the FAA's snail-like pace, companies standards could require that all comsuch as Amazon and Google have mercial drones incorporate specific lacked authority to fine a man $10,000 begun exporting theirdrone research global positioning system features to for using his drone to capture aerial activities to other countries. ensure compatibility with a nationally footage of the University of Virginia Small drones are not built for standardized geo-fence network defor a promotional video. The judge lengthy interstate flights at altitudes signed to keep drones out of the way hearing the case candidly pointed out where conventional airplanes fly, so of conventional aircraft. At least one that, under the FAA's expansive view why should a federal agency be the leading drone manufacturer is already of its own regulatory power, even the chief regulator of these devices? Rath- usinggeo-fence so~ to prevent flight of a paper airplane or a toy glid- er than seeking to expand its regulato- operators from flying their drones into er would fall within FAA jurisdiction. ry jurisdiction all the way down to the the airspace surrounding hundreds of Shockingly, a board opinion issued ground, the FAA should advocate for airports around the world. this week reversed that decision and itself amore limitedrole in a collaboraMost other facets of civilian drone implied that the FAA did possess reg- tive federal, state and local regulatory regulation are better suited for lower ulatory authority over the flights of scheme tailored to the unique attri- levels of government. Several state unmanned objects, regardless of their butes of drone technologies. legislatures have already enacted size, all the way down the ground. The FAA should be focused on drone-related statutes, but s t ates This new ruling is particularly those aspects of drone regulation that should be doing much more. In additroubling because the FAA still hasn't are most appropriately implemented tion to creating registration and licens-

landowners' rights to exdude drones

fromthe airspace above their land. Local governments are well-positioned to serve valuable functions in level could permit wider use of drones

in certain commercial or agricultural zones while imposing greater restrictions on drones above residential ar-

eas. Municipalities could even adopt temporary-use permit provisions to accommodate occasionaldrone use

by real estate agents and wedding photographers without compromising landowner privacy The commercial drone industry is poised to take off in the United States,

butitwill largelyremaingroundeduntiltheFAA embraces anarrower regulatory role and gets out of the way. — Troy Rule is a law professor at Arizona State University's Sandra Day O'Connor

College of Law.


TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

B5

OREGON NEWS

BITUARIES

Jan. 8, 1946 - Nov. 20, 2014 Arrangements: Prineville Funeral Home, 541-447-6459

Services: A private family gathering will be held at a later date.

toremove er uson osts

FEATURED OBITUARY

DEATH NOTICES Linda Frye, of Bend

olce c Ie QI eIs 0 Icels

Veteran journalist

used hisexperience

The Associated Press

to educate at GWU

to remove images from their Facebook pages that use police badges in expressions of solidarity with the Ferguson, Missouri, police officer who shot 18-year-old Michael Brown. Reese saidthe images are right to a personal opinion, depictions of the Police Bureau but they can't use the police badge along with the words "I badge in expressing it. He am Darren Wilson." said he's ordered an internal Reese said in a statement investigation. Monday that officers have the It appeared from their pages

Dale Bartlett, of Bend Oct. 9, 1949 - Nov. 23, 2014 Arrangements: Prineville Funeral Home, 541-447-6459 Services: A private family gathering will be held at a later date.

Edna W. Alden, of Bend Sept. 23, 1925- Nov. 18, 2014 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home, 541-382-2471 www.niswonger-reynolds. com Services: A memorial service will be held Fri., Nov. 28, 2014, at 11:00 a.m., at the VFW Hall at 7118 SE Fern Ave., Portland, OR, followed by inurnment next to her husband at Willamette National Cemetery, Portland, OR.

Herta Gertler, of Bend Feb. 5, 1919 - Nov. 18, 2014

Arrangements: Prineville Funeral Home, 541-447-6459 Services: A private family gathering will be held at a later date.

Phyllis Wells, of Redmond Aug. 20, 1928 - Nov. 21, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Redmond, 541-504-9485 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Services will be held at a later date. Contributions may bemade to:

Hospice of Redmond, OR.

By Will Lester The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Mi chael Shanahan, a veteran

Washington political reporter for The Associated Press and Newhouse Newspapers who used that experience to teach new generations of students at George Washington University about the business he loved, died Saturday. Frank Sesno, director of

George Washington's School of Media and Public Affairs, said Shanahan died Saturday morning, surrounded by family, after suffering a severe

ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around the world: Viktor Tikhonov, 84: Soviet

— Al May, colleague

the Associated Press

nahan was head coach of

Media and Public Affairs. He the Washington Redskins. brought a reporter's eye and Al May, a GWU colleague, a professor's dedication to his said Shanahan would take work." calls from irate Washington Sesno said Sunday that Redskins fans and listen to Shanahan's death was a sur- their beefs. After letting them prise. "It was totally out of the vent for a while, Shanahan blue," he said. would patiently tell them they Shanahan, who was as- had the wrong Shanahan, sistant director for student Maysaid. affairs at SMPA, also had

taught various journalism courses at the school. "There is nothing like being in a classroom and teaching and making some broader point ... and suddenly a memory from my own experience as a journalist will pop into my head. I will tell a yarn, a story, an anecdote from my long experience as a reporter

S hanahan b r ought

the

energy that comes with a second career, had an extraordi-

Those experiences went

far beyond Washington in a career that touched on

ed morethan 4,000watercolors and won national championships in handball and squash and a squashtournament. Died

Shanahan wasa commuting partner, sailing companion and his heart were always and close friend. They would open to them." frequently cross paths on the Shanahan is survived by campaign trail. his wife, Victoria Elliott, and "He was low-key with a de- two grown daughters, Marlightful sense of humor," said tha and Claire.

teacher and a friend to countless students at GW. His door

Obituary policy

Phone: 541-617-7825

Email: obits@bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254

Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR97708

firefighting contract. Steven Metheny of Medford was in federal court in Medford Monday. He entered guilty pleas to two of the 22 counts of the indictment against him. He

2008 while carrying a firefighting crewnear Weaverville, California. It was the deadliest helicopter crash involving working firefighters in U.S. history. Defense lawyer Steve Myers

licopters crashed on takeoff in

to the crash.

mond for injuries that were not life threatening. They

mond Police.

Estrada is also suspected of possession, delivery and manufacture of cocaine, supplying contraband, second-degree disorderly conduct and recklessly endangering another person Sunday,according to Redmond Poli ce. Department I n vestigations ing to Redmond Police. Unit by calling 541-504-3420 Estrada was convicted of or via Deschutes County Dis- delivery of cocaine in 2009 patch at 541-693-6911. and delivery of methamphetEstrada isalso suspected of

amine in 2006 in Deschutes

Anyone who knows about possession, delivery and manthe incident or who was at Big ufacture of cocaine, supplyT's, witnessed the i ncident ing contraband, second-deand has not yet spoken to law gree disorderly conduct and enforcement is encouraged to recklessly endangering an-

County and of possession of a Schedule II controlled sub-

contact the Redmond Police

other person Sunday, accord-

stance in Jefferson County in

2003. — Reporter: 541-383-0376, cwithycombe@bendbulletin.com

half-century.

colleague at th e

Death Notices are freeandwill be run for one day, but specific guidelines must befollowed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes.They may be submitted by phone,mail, email or fax. TheBulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of theseservices or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.

a statement backing the orders.

many major events of the last

lion worth of real estate, paint-

— From wire reports

Continued from B1 One person suffered a gunshot wound to the neck as a result of the fired shot and

person suffered injuries due to broken glass. The case remains under investigation, according to Red-

worked as a reporter, cover- wife and toured many sites ing many areas of politics, from the war that ended alhockey coach whose teams from campaigns to federal most 40 years ago. won three Olympic gold med- agencies to Congress to the Among those was the town als but fell to the United States White House. of An Loc, where Shanahan in the "Miracle on Ice." Died Shanahan joined the AP had served for seven months after a long illness Monday in in 1965 after his graduation as an intelligence officer. Russia. from Penn State. But after With the help of a guide, he Allan Kornblum, 65: The several months, he interrupt- searchedforfamiliarscenery. "But there had been heavy founder of Coffee House Press, ed his journalism careerfora describedasoneofthepremier stint in the military, including combat in An Loc late in the nonprofit literary publishers in a tour as intelligence officer war, induding air strikes on the nation. Died at his home in with service in the Vietnam part of the town, and everySt. Paul on Sunday. War. He was awarded the thing from that era seemed Ernest Kinoy, 89: Wrote Bronze Star. gone," he wrote in a story for Broadway musicals, HollyHe returned to journal- The Boston Globe. "All the wood screenplays and Emmy ism in 1969, working for the physical memories and symAward-winning episodes of AP's Pittsburgh bureau and bols of my war had seemingly "The Defenders" and "Roots." covering such stories as the beenbombedto smithereens." Died Monday in Townshend, assassination of United Mine May said Shanahan had a Vermont. Workers leader Jock Jablon- session on Watergate schedWilhelm Burgdorfer, 89: ski and the 1970 shooting of uled for this coming week Swiss-born researcher who four student demonstrators at and talked i n h i s l e cture gained international recogni- Kent State University. about actually covering the tion for discovering the bacteSoon after that, Shanah- Watergate scandal. "His lecria that causes Lyme disease. an moved tothe Washington ture showed the joy and enDied from complications of bureau of the AP. His cov- thusiasm he had for AmeriParkinson's disease Nov. 17 in erage included presidential can journalism," said May. Hamilton, Montana. campaigns, top federal agen- "He really did convey that to Samuel Klein, 91: Po l- cies, Congress and the White the students." "I canremember so many ish-born founder of B r azil's House. Hecovered the White largest home-appliance retail- House and politics at New- times when students were er, Casas Bahia. Died Nov. 20 house Newspapers for six troubled," May said of Shanain Sao Paulo from respiratory years after that. And for a de- han's role as a student advisfailure. cade he was a media spokes- er. "Mike would never give up Victor Elrnalh, 95: Builder man for the American Petro- onthem." and entrepreneur who import- leum Institute, before going Another GW colleague, ed the first Volkswagens to the into teaching. Steve Roberts, said Shanahan United States, developed $7 bilTom Raum, a longtime "was a mentor, a counselor, a

Nov. 17 in Manhattan, New York.

Shooting

were laterreleased. The other

F or more than a q u a rShanahan returned to Viett er-century, Shan a h a n nam early this year with his

A P , said

the U.S. Forest Service to win a

at the school.

nary commitment to teaching and to the kids, especially in passingalong hisexperiences making in the dassroom," he in Washington."

that at least two of the officers had taken steps to comply. A police spokesman couldn't be reached. Mayor Charlie Hales issued

company that provided the helicopter that crashed killing nine people fighting a wildfire was vice president of Carson noted that prosecutors never has pleaded guilty to provid- Helicopters outside Grants Pass alleged that the false helicopter ing false aircraft weights to when one of the company's he- weights in any way contributed

was treated at St Charles Red-

and thatcements the broader theoretical point that I was

school website. "I can tell I've connected with the students when they say: 'Aha! Now I understand whatyou mean.'"

GRANTS PASS — A former executive of a southern Oregon

same enthusiasm he had for journalism to teaching and to advising students, said May, a GWU journalism professor who initially hired Shanahan "He was an excellent professor," May said. "He had an

officers have the right to a personal opinion, but they can't use the police badge in expressing it. He said he's ordered an internal investigation.

firefightersguilty of givingfalseinfo By Jeff Barnard

and advocate of the School of

Reese said in a statement Monday that

Provider of helicopter that killed 9

Raum. That wry sense of humor letter to students, faculty and was in evidence during the staff. "Professor Shanahan early part of this decade, was an u nshakable friend when a different Mike Sha-

"We are all devastated by this news," Sesno said in a

P o r t land

he's ordered three officers

stroke earlier in the week.

said in a video posted on his

DEATHS

"He was an excellent professor. He had an energy that comes with a second career, had an extraordinary commitment to teaching and to the kids, especially in passing along his experiences in Washington."

PORTLAND —

Police Chief Mike Reese said

Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Mondaythrough Friday for next-day publication and by4:30 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the secondday after submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication,and by9a.m. Monday for Tuesdaypublication. Deadlines for display adsvary; please call for details.

Snow Continued from B1 The areas plowed and sanded first include roads near Tumalo and Sisters, northwest

a n d so u t hwest

of Redmond, northeast and south of Bend as well as parts o f Sunriver an d

Plows from the road department are dispatchedwhen snow accumulation reaches 4 inches within a zone. The snow plowing, sanding and application of chemicals to reduce snow continue until accumulation stops.

L a P i ne.

County crews work next on roads west of Bend, east of

in the Tumalo area, Lower

Redmond, south of Sunriver

and Huntington Road in La

and east of La Pine. Bend, Redmond, Sisters

Pine. About 35 roads are considered major roads for coun-

and La Pine clear roads with-

ty snow and ice removal.

in city limits. The county focuses on arterial and col-

Plows from the road department ar e d i spatched

lector roads in the unincorpo-

when s no w

ratedareas,which are either a primary traffic route or a road connecting a residen-

reaches 4 inches within a zone. The snow plowing, sanding and application of chemicals to reduce snow continue until accumulation

tial area to that route. Within the county road network, 84 miles are considered arterials

Bridge Way in Terrebonne

a c c umulation

The elevation of county roadsranges from 2,800 feet to 6,300 fee and include Cas-

the public in its new format.

collector roads.

cade Lakes Highway and Paulina Lake Road, which were closed in response to multiple inches of snowfall on Nov. 13.

The county plan calls for a response to early snowfall to avoid road closures as well as addressing roads with steep grades, curves and intersections. West of Bend city l i mits,

"There's a lot of good in-

Find It All Onllne

bendbulletin.com

missioner Tony DeBone said,

urging people to look at the document. — Reporter: 541-617-7820, tshorack@bendbulletin.com

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the major roads on the county's priority list include SkyRoad and OB Riley Road. Some other major roads include Cline Falls Highway

Information about road maintenance canbeen found on the Deschutes County website, including a FAQ aboutsnow andiceat: www.deschutes.org/Roadl Road-Maint enance-Operations/Snow-l ce-FAQ.aspx

stops.

The board approved the updated version of the plan u nanimously, agreeing i t would be more accessible to

and 239miles are considered

DeschutesCounty snowremoval

lerry.gtlmour©wvbk.com



IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 NFL, C3 Sports in brief, C2 NHL, C3 NBA, C3 College basketball, C4 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 2014

O www.bendbulletin.com/sports

MEN'S COLLEGEBASKETBALL

MLB

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

Seager, I's agree on 7-year deal

om can't e sto e

SEATTLE —Kyle Seager has cashed in on the best season of his young career, becoming the third Seattle Mariners player to reach the $100 million threshold. The third

baseman and the

Mariners have agreed Seager to a $100

million, seven-year contract, a person withknowledge of the deal told TheAssociated Press onMonday. The person spoke to the AP oncondition ofanonymitybecause the deal is pending a physical. The deal also includes a 2022 option. Seager is coming off his first All-Star game selection and his first Gold Glove.The 27-year-old hit.268 with a career-high 25 homers and 96 RBls. Seager was eligible for salary arbitration and would havebeen eligible for free agency after the 2017season. He made$540,000 last season and nowjoins pitcher Felix Hernandez and second baseman Robinson Cano asMariners with nine-figure contracts. Yahoo! Sports first reported the agreement. There was nocomment from the team. Seattle said it was committed to raising its payroll after the team won 87 gamesand fini shedonegame back for the AL's second wild card. — The Associated Press

Pitchers highlight ballot for Hall NEW YORK— Randy Johnson, Pedro Martinez and JohnSmoltz areamong 17 newcomerson baseball's 2015 Hall of Fame ballot. Craig Biggio, who fell two votes shortof the Martinez 75 percent neededin

• Oklahoma star's record gamealmost wasn't seenby mother who battled illness andweather By Cliff Brunt The Associated Press

NORMAN, Okla. — Gloria Perine almost missed her Photos by Ryan Brennecke 1 The Bulletin

Oregon State junior Bryan Boswell runs drills with his teammates during practice at OSUlast week.

Texas last Saturday when

Oklahoma running back Samaje Perine set a new major-collegerushing recordwith 427 yards against Kansas. "I would have been so upset with myself had I not gone," she said Monday. "I knew it

• Two Central Oregonians return to hoopsafter opentryouts at OregonState CORVALLIS-

rawled in a courtside seat during a Wednesday afternoon practice, seemingly challenging the chair to hold up his 6-foot-10-inch frame, Wayne Tinkle

Sp

cuts himself off in midsentence.

He has just spotted Bryan Boswell slipping on the 3-point line during a drill at the OSU Basket-

GRANT LUCAS Inside • Prep notebook,C4 • Beavers, Ducks,C4

ball Center, across the street from Gill Coliseum. And Tinkle cannot

says, returning to the sideline con-

contain himself. "Don't trip on that 3-point line!"

versation. "And Brian gets sniped a lot."

the first-year Oregon State men's basketball coach yells, his voice hoarse from the previous night's game. "We call that sniping," Tinkle

throat, and I had been sick. It

actually crossed my mind that this was going to be the first game that I miss. But then

portunity to misstep during a practice, clad in the colors of an NCAA

I was like, 'No way. I'm just going to fight through it. I'll never miss a game.' " Her son showed similar toughness in a performance for the ages. He did not enjoy the conditions that nearly kept

Division I school.

Because Boswell and fellow Central Oregon product Matt Dahlen, and surely the other five walk-on

players on the Beavers' roster this season, believed their basketball careers were dead before arriving in Corvallis. However, thanks to an open tryout in October — or in Dahlen's case, a referral from OSU

his mother at home during Oklahoma's 44-7 win.

"That was horrible," he

said. "I hate rain. I would have

baseball coach Pat Casey — those

much rather played in snow, just because my feet wouldn't

careers have been revived. And

be soaked, and it wouldn't

feel like an extra 50 pounds

approaches him. The teacher and student exchange playful barbs.

those players are playing pivotal rolesunder anew coach tryingto lay the foundation for his program.

But the truth is, Boswell considers

SeeCourt/C4

Sure, when Boswell hears about his coach's comments, the junior

that I've had on me. But you

have to play through whatever weather it is, so it was a great opportunity for me to establish myself even more, and I think I did a pretty good job." Only a week earlier, Wisconsin's Melvin Gordon

broke LaDainian Tomlinson's 15-year-old record for rushing yards in a game by 2 yards, with 408 in a 59-24 win over

Nebraska. None of Oklahoma's great running backs ever performed like Perine did last

Saturday. Not Heisman Trophy

balloting, tops17 holdovers on the Base

Association of America ballot announced Monday.That group includesBarry Bonds, RogerClemens, Sammy Sosa,Mark McGwire, Mike Piazza,Jeff Bagwell andTim Raines. Johnson went 303166 and won five Cy Young Awards. TheBig Unit struck out 4,875, second only to Nolan Ryan's 5,714. Martinez, a two-time Cy Young winner, was

was going to rain. I wasn't feeling well, and I had a sore

himself blessed just to have the op-

the 2014

Smoltz

son's historic game. Bad weather and illness nearlyprevented herfrom making the trip from central

winners Billy Vessels, Steve

Owens or Billy Sims, Heisman runner-ups Adrian Peterson or Greg Pruitt, two-time Heisman finalist Joe Wash-

ington or all-time Sooner touchdown leader DeMarco Murray. Perine shattered

Pruitt' sschoolrecordby 133 yards. He had the best half

everby an Oklahomaback in the first half with 222 yards, then had the fourth-best half

by a Sooner back in the second half, with 205 yards. He broke Peterson's freshman record for

rushingtouchdowns in a season, and now, numerous other

Oregon State redshirt freshmanMatt Dahlen is amongseven walk-on players at Oregon State this season.

records are within reach.

SeeMom/C3

219-100, struck out

3,154 and led themajor leagues in ERAfive times. Smoltz is vying to join former Atlanta teammates GregMaddux and TomGlavine, who were inducted this year along with Chicago White Sox slugger Frank Thomas. Smoltzhada 213-155 record and154 seasons, the only pitcher with 200 wins and 150 saves. Hewas 15-4 in the postseason. Carlos Delgado, Nomar Garciaparra, Gary Sheffield and players' association head TonyClark also are among the first-time eligibles. — The Associated Press

TENNIS:YEAR IN REVIEW

Move towardtop ex-payersascoachespaying off By Christopher Clarey New York Times News Service

PARIS — The last point of the official

2014 season was fitting. Not only because Roger Federer won it to cap a re-

surgent year by securing the Davis Cup for Switzerland but also because Federer won it on his way to the net.

His wickedly sliced backhand dropshot winner left the Frenchman Richard Gasquet no chance and was the last and

one of the best reminders of the big impact that the new wave of stars-turnedcoaches had on the year.

After a downbeat 2013, Federer

brought in Stefan Edberg, who rushed the net all the way to No. 1, in order to hear a fresh voice and hone his attacking game. Though Paul Annacone, Federer's former coach, also knew plenty about net play, Federer took his skills and confidence to a new level in the fore-

court with Edberg in his camp. Otherleading men alsoprospered under high-profile guidance. Of the four players who won the Grand Slam singles titles this year — Stan Wawrinka, Rafael

Nadal, Novak Djokovic and Marin Cilic

s

®

— only Nadal was not coached by a former Grand Slam singles finalist. Wawrinka made his breakthrough at the Australian Open under Magnus

Norman, a French Open finalist once ranked No.2. Djokovic won Wimbledon again — after a two-year lapse — with Boris Becker, a three-time Wimbledon

champion, in his camp. Cilic, one of the most unexpected winners in the history

oftheU.S.Open,was coached by another former Wimbledon champion, Goran Ivanisevic.

SeeCoaches/C3

Sue Ogrocki i The Associated Press

Oklahoma's Samaje Perine sprints into the end zone with a touchdown during Saturday's

game in Norman, Oklahoma.


C2 T H E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 2014

ON THE AIR

CORKBOARD

TODAY 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)

Time T V/Radio 8 :50 a.m.

Boys soccer 11:30 a.m. F S1 11:30 a.m. F S2

BASKETBALL

Men's college, Purduevs. Missouri Men's college, St. Peters at Rutgers Men's college,TexasatKentucky Men's college,KansasSatevs.Arizona Men's college,VCU vs.Oregon Men's college, Eastern lllinois at Creighton Men's college, Air Force atColorado Men's college, Maryland vs. IowaState Men's college, Maui Invitational, TeamsTBD Men's college, Villanova vs. Michigan Men's college, Delaware atStanford

11 a.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

Big Ten SEC ESPN

ESPNU FS1

Pac-12 ESPNU ESPN ESPN2

Pac-12

FOOTBALL

Men's College, Ohio at Miami-Ohio

PREPS

FS2

4 p.m.

E S PN2

lutermouutaiu Conference AH-leagueteams Players oftheyear—ZachEmerson,jr., Moun-

tain View; AlexBowlin, sr., Summit Coach oftheyear— RonKidder, Summit First team —Scott Bracci, sr., Bend;Kelly Gieber,jr., Bend;ZachEmerson, jr., MountainView; TaylorWilman,jr., MountainView;Mario Torres, sr., MountainView;Nakoda Sanders, jr., Ridgeview;Alex Bowlin, sr.,Summ it; Eli Warmenhoven, sr., Summit; C.J. Frilz, sr., Summ it; ConorGalvin, sr., Summ it; TannerAbbott, sr., Summit. Second team—ZachHite,sr., Bend; BryantJolma, jr., Bend;TraceWhatley,jr., MountainView;Jose Torr es,so.,MountainView;LukeJohnson,sr.,Mountain View; CarlosMontanez, jr., Redmond;EddieVargas, sr.,Ridgeview;Malachi Stalberg, so.,Ridgeview; Mackyander Velde,so., Summit; Cameron Ficher, sr., SummitDane ; Kiger,fr., Summit. Honorabl e mention — Chance Flammang, jr., Bend;WiliamCabrera, sr., Mountain View;Juan Ibanez,sr., MountainView; ErnestoChavez, jr., Redmond;RalfNeuschmied,sr., Summit; MichaelScinto, sr., Summit. Goalkeeper — Firstteam,CarlosPaez, sr., Summit; Second team,Ryan Murphy,sr., Bend;Honorable mention,KeldonBrent,jr., Mountain View.

HOCKEY

NHL, NewJerseyat Vancouver

WEDNESDAY BASKETBALL

Men's college, Butler vs. North Carolina Men's college,Oklahoma vs.UCLA Men's college, Maui Invitational, TeamsTBD Men's College, Maui Invitational, TeamsTBD Men's college, Furman atDuke Men's college, Minnesota vs. St. John's Men's college, Campbell at OhioState NBA, Portland at Charlotte

9 a.m. 11 a.m.

ESPN2 ESPN2 11:30 a.m ESPNU 2 p.m. ESPN2 2 p.m. ESPNU 4 p.m. ESPNU

4 p.m. 4 p.m.

Big Ten

CSNNW, KBND 1110-AM,100.1-FM NBA, NewYorkat Dallas 4:30 p.m. ESPN Men's college, Maui Invitational, Teams TBD 4:30 p.m. ESPN2

Men'scollege,Texas-PanAmericanatUtah 5 p.m. Men's college, Lehigh at DePaul 5 p.m. Men's college,Georgiavs.Gonzaga 6:30 p.m. Men's college, Maui Invitational, Teams TBD 7 p.m. M en's college, Cal Poly-SLOat California 7 p. m . Men'scollege,Oklahoma Statevs.Tulsa 8:30 p.m. SOCCER Europe, Champions League,Arsenal (England) vs. Borussia Dortmund (Germany) 11:30a.m. Europe, Champions League, Ludogorets (Bulgaria) vs Liverpool (England) 11:30 a.m. HOCKEY NHL, Philadelphia at Detroit

GOLF Emirates Australian Open

Girls soccer

7 p.m. C SNNW

Pac-12 FS1 ESPN2 ESPN

Player oftheyear —Sarah Bailey, sr., Mountain View Coach oftheyear—JamieBrock,Summit First team —Christina Edwa rds, jr., Summit; Camille Wea ver, so., Sum mit; MeganCornett, so., Summit;MaggieMcElrath, fr., Summit; HannahCockrum,sr.,Bend; CambriaHurd, sr.,Bend;TaylaWheeler, so., Bend;RosaleeMendez, fr., MountainView;Taryn Poole,jr., MountainView;AspenJeter,fr., Ridgeview. Second team — Megan Buzzas, sr., Summ it; Megan Day,so.,Summit;KarahMccugey,jr.,Bend; SiennaWal, so., Bend;Maile Kilmer,fr., Bend;Aspen Crew,sr., MountainView;RileyDickinson, so.,Mountain View;RoseLand,so.,Redmond;ChloeGoodwin, sr., Ridgeview; Saylor Goodwin,fr., Ridgeview. Honorable mention —AnnistonWard,so., Summit;SophiaEllington, jr., Summit; MyaFraley, jr., Summit;AbbyNopp, so., MountainView;Alexa Bickford, srr, MountainView;SavannahMiler, jr., Mountai nView;Amidee Cogeknon,jr.,Bend;Lacey Adye, so.,Bend;JasmineChapman,so.,Bend;Sophia Hamil ton,so.,Redmond;AnnaLand,so.,Redmond; MykenzieGabriel, jr., Redmond; Hailey Wiliamson, so., Ridgeview;KalyFineran,sr., Ridgeview;Adrienne Wilcox, so.,Ridgeview;Tatum Carlin, jr., Ridgeview; MadisonChoffel, jr., Mountain View.

N.Y. Jets Buffalo

3 0 0

0 — 3

7 7 17 7 —

38

First Quarler Buf — Woods7 passfromOrton (Carpenter kick), 8:04. NYJ—FGFolk 27, 1:01. Second Quarter Buf — Chandler 19 passfrom Orton (Carpenter kick),:43. ThirdQuarter Buf — FGCarpenter 53, 9:45. Buf — Lawsonblockedpuntrecoveryinendzone (Carpenterkick), 7:57. Buf—Jackson 5run(Carpenterkick),5:03. FourlhQuarler Buf — Dixon30run(Carpenter kick), 5:53.

NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE

AH TimesPST

A—56,044.

First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns Interceptions Ret. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-YardsLost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession

7 -39 1 - 10 8-38.9 4-46.5 0-0 0-0 9 -60 4 - 24 29:06 30:54

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING —N.y. Jets: C.Johnson7-40, Ivory 7-31, Conner 1-13, Smith2-4, Vick2-4. Buffalo: Dixon 12-54,Jackson10-32, B.Brown6-20, Orton 1-10.

PASSING —N.Y. Jets: Vick7-19-1-76, Smith 10-12-0-89.Buffalo:Orton24-32-0-230.

RECEIVING —N.y. Jets: Kerley 5-66, Decker 4-63, C.Johnson3-22, Ivory 3-7, Cumberland 1-5, Harvin 1-2.Buffalo: Woods9-118, Watkins 3-35, Chandler3-28, Jackson3-13, Gragg2-11, Hogan 2-5, Smith1-12,Dixon1-8. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None.

College Pac-12 AH TimesPST

East W L T 9 2 0 6 5 0 6 5 0 2 9 0 South W L T 7 4 0

FS2

Golf

Listingsarethemostaccurateavailable. TheBulletinis not responsible for late changesmadebyTVor radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF

P ct PF PA . 8 18357 227 . 5 45285 219 . 5 45238 207 . 1 82177 303

P ct PF PA Indianapolis . 6 36333 256 Houston 5 6 0 . 4 55242 226 Tennessee 2 9 0 . 1 82192 293 Jacksonvile 1 10 0 .091161 305 North W L T P ct PF PA 7 3 1 . 6 82246 234 7 4 0 .6 3 6295 208 7 4 0 . 6 36288 263 7 4 0 . 6 36242 219 West W L T P ct PF PA Denver 8 3 0 . 7 27332 260 K ansas Cit y 7 4 0 .63 6 261 195 S an Diego 7 4 0 .63 6 245 216 Oakland 1 10 0 .091176 285 NATIONALCONFERENCE

Easl

W L T 8 3 0 8 3 0 3 8 0 3 8 0 South W L T 4 7 0 4 7 0 3 7 1 2 9 0 North W L T 8 3 0 7 4 0 5 6 0 4 7 0

BASEBALL Red Soxspend onSandoval, Ramirez to shake cellar

— The Red Soxare hoping to spend their way out of the AL East cellar with two bjg free agent signings. The first team in major league history to go from worst to first and backagain has agreed to terms third basemanPablo Sandoval, his agent confirmed Monday night. According to a baseball official with knowledge of the deal, Boston also agreed to adeal with Hanley Ramirez, who came up tothe major leagues with the RedSox. Theofficial confirmed both agreements on the condition of anonymity because the players hadn't passed physicals. The Ramirezdealwas expected to be finalized today. The moves give the RedSox apotent batting order that includes two of the past three World Series MVPs, Sandoval andDavid Ortiz. But they still have to replace the four starting pitchers they traded last summer.

Former major leaguepitcher Sadecki dead at 73 —Ray Sadecki, who pitched in the major leaguesfor18 seasons andwon 20 games for the1964 World Series champion St. Louis Cardinals, has died from complications of blood cancer, his son, Steve, said. Sadecki was 73. Sadecki madehis major leaguedebut at age19 with the Cardinals in1960. In1964, he went 20-11and helped St. Louis win the National Leaguepennant. TheCardinals beat the NewYork Yankees in theWorld Series in seven games.

HOCKEY LOngtimeNHL COaCh dieS at71— FormerNHLpl ayer,coach and executive PatQuinn hasdied at age71. TheWestern Hockey League's VancouverGiantssaidQuinndiedSundaynightinVancouver after a long illness. Quinnwas aco-owner of the team, which on Monday announced his death onbehalf of the family. Quinn played parts of nine seasons in theNHLandwent on to enjoy a long coaching career. Hecoached the Philadelphia Flyers, Los Angeles Kings, Vancouver CanucksandTorontoMapleLeafs.Quinnalsoguided Canada to the gold medal at the 2002Olympics in Salt LakeCity.

BASKETBALL TaylOr aPOIOgiZeS,WOn't aPPeal NBASuSPenSiOn—An apologetic Jeffery Taylor says hewill not appeal the NBA's24-game suspension following his guilty plea ondomestic violence charges. The Hornets forward addressed themedia onMondayand said he takes "full responsibility" for his actions anddeemedNBACommissioner AdamSilver's punishment "appropriate." Taylor apologized to the Hornets organization, his teammatesandthe womanwhom he assaulted at the hotel in East Lansing, Michigan, in September. The 25-year-old Taylor says he's "genuinely sorry for everything that happened." TheNBAPlayers Association last week called the suspension "excessive" and said it would support an appeal byTaylor. But Taylor says he respects "the commissioner's decision on the punishment" and is "taking all of the steps to makesure nothing like this ever happens again."

NO. 1KentuCky giVeS KanSaS a TOP 25 tumdle — Topranked Kentucky certainly made abeliever of Kansas coachBill Self last week. Made alot of believers among Top 25voters, too. After running roughshod over theJayhawks in the Champions Classic, the Wildcats routed Boston andMontana State to cap aperfect week. The impressive performances allowed Kentucky to consolidate its spot atop the APpoll on Monday, earning all but three votes from the 65-member media panel. Thosethree went to No. 2 Wisconsin, which edged Arizona bythree points. Duke and North Carolina rounded out the top five, with Kansas tumbling from fifth to No. 11 after its 72-40 loss to Kentucky. — From wire reports

Atlanta

NewOrleans Carolina TampaBay

P c t PF PA . 7 27342 275 . 7 27292 240 . 2 73233 294 . 2 73217 273 P c t PF PA . 3 6 4262 281 . 3 64288 286 . 3 18215 300 . 1 82207 300

P ct PF PA . 7 27354 246 .6 3 6197 190 . 4 55236 303 . 3 64202 244

West W L T 9 2 0 7 4 0 7 4 0

P ct PF PA . 8 18240 195 . 6 36279 218 . 6 36228 225 4 7 0 . 3 64209 285

Arizona Seattle SanFrancisco St. Louis

Monday'sGames Buff alo38,N.Y.Jets3 Baltimore34, NewOrleans27 Thursday'sGames Chicagoat Detroit, 9:30a.m. Philadelphia at Dalas,1:30 p.m. SeattleatSanFrancisco, 5:30p.m.

Sunday'sGames Tennessee at Houston,10a.m. OaklandatSt. Louis, 10a.m. CarolinaatMinnesota,10 a.m. Washingtonat Indianapolis, 10a.m. Cleveland atBuffalo,10 a.m. San Diego atBaltimore,10a.m. N.Y.GiantsatJacksonvile,10 a.m. Cincinnati atTampa Bay,10 a.m. NewOrleansatPitsburgh,10 a.m. Arizonaat Atlanta, 1:05p.m. NewEnglandatGreenBay,1:25p.m. Denverat KansasCity,5;30p.m. Monday'sGame Miami atN.Y.Jets, 5:30p.m. Monday'sSummaries

Ravens34, Saints27 Baltimore New0rleans

7 7 10 16 — 34 7 10 0 16 — 27 Firsl Quarler Bal — Smith Sr. 15passfromFlacco Puckerkick), 8:13. NO — J.Graham10 pass fromBrees (S.Graham kick), 3:20. SecondQuarter Bal — Forset13 run(Tuckerkick), 9:08. NO —FG S.Graham 20,4:00. NO —Colston26passfromBrees(S.Grahamkick), :17.

ThirdQuarler Bal — FGTucker 31, 8:30. Bal — Hil 44interception return(Tuckerkick), 4:59. FourthQuarter Bal — FGTucker 55,10:59. NO —FGS.Graham 34,6:33. Bal — Forsett20run(Tuckerkick), 2:53. NO—J.Graham 2 pass from Brees(S.Graham kick),;40. A—73,373. First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns Interceptions Ret. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-Yards Lost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards

Time ofPossession

Bal

NO

23 26 4 49 52 5 32-215 21-126 2 34 39 9 2-0 1-7 2 -52 1 - 20 1-44 0-0 18-24-0 35-45-1 1 -9 4 - 21 2-63.0 3-48.7 1-1 1-0 6 -42 5 - 50 30;15 29:45

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING —Baltimore: Forsett 22-182,Pierce 7-28, Jones1-3,Flacco2-2.New Orleans:Morgan 1-67, Ingram11-27, Thomas5-19, Brees3-15, Stils

1-(minus 2). PASSING —Baltimore: Flacco 18-24-0-243.

NFL

LIONS COWB OYS 49ERS

No.19M ichigan70,Oregon 63 MICHIGAN (4-6)

Chatman 1-42-4 4, Donnal2-30-0 4, Walton Jr. 1-3 4-46, Irvin 6-114-419, LeVert3-1311-1318, Albr echt3-6007,Wilson0-0000,AbdurRahkman 0-00-00, Dawkins1-1 0-02, Doyle4-52-410, Bielfeldt 0-00-00.Totals21-4623-2970.

OREGON (3-1)

(Home teamsinCaps) OpenCurrent 0/U Underdog Thursday 6H 7

47 r/ z

OklahomaSt. 66, OregonSt. 53 OREGON ST. (3-1)

Payton II4-7 0-010, N'diaye1-20-0 2, Duvivier 0-4 1-2 1, Morris-Walker3-10 5-6 13, Schaftenaar 3-71-1 8, Robbins3-8 9-1216, Gomis0-0 3-6 3, Reid 0-40-00.Totals14-4219-27 53.

OKLAHOM AST. (5-6)

Nash6-10 7-919, HickeyJr. 4-9 2-512, ForteIII 4-11 7-1017,Cobbins1-21-3 3,Carroll 5-70-013, Griffin 0-20-00, Burton0-0 0-00, Shine1-20-0 2, Soucek0-00-0 0, Newberry 0-0 0-00, AllenJr. 0-0 0-00, Solomon0-00-00.Totals21-4317-2766. Halftime —OklahomaSt. 30-24.3-Point GoalsOregonSt. 6-17(Payton II 2-4, Morris-Walker2-5, Robbins1-3, Schaftenaar1-4, Duvivier 0-1), OklahomaSt. 7-21 (Carrog3-5, HickeyJr. 2-4, Fortegl

2-9, Nash 0-1, Griffin 0-1,Shine0-1). FouledOutNone.Rebounds—Oregon St. 29 (Payton II, Robbins 6), OklahomaSt. 30 (Carroll 7). Assists—Oregon St. 8 (Duvivie3), r OklahomaSt. 6 (Forte RI2). Total Fouls—OregonSt. 22, OklahomaSt.21. A—NA. TOP 26 No. 3Arizona72,Missouri 53 No. 6Louisville 87,SavannahState26 No. 11Kansas87,Rider60 No.12 Viganova 77, No.14VCU53 No. 13lowaState84, Alabama74 No.15SanDiegoState92, BYU87(2 OT) No. 18Michigan70,Oregon63 No. 20MichiganState79,SantaClara52

America's Line Favorite

Monday'sSummaries

Wo m e n's college Monday'sGames

TOP 25 No. 2NotreDame97,Harvard 43 No. 4Tenne ssee 97, TennesseeState46 No.5Stanford70,NewMexico65 No. 7Texas A&M59, Prairie ViewA&M41 No.10Maryland65, Loyoal43 EAST Columbi a79,RhodeIsland69,OT Cornell58,Fairfield47 St. John's49,Marist 48 SOUTH Maryland 65, Loyola(Md.) 43 Tennessee 97,TennesseeSt. 46 Tulane60,NCState51 Vanderbilt75,SaintLouis57 MIDWEST NotreDam e97, Harvard43 SOUTHWE ST Rice59,TexasA8M-CC54 Texas A&M59,Prairie View41 FARWES T Cal St.-Fugerton70,Weber St.68 SaintMary's(Cal)99,SacramentoSt. 91 Stanford70, NewMexico 65

Polls AP Women'sTop26 R ecord Pts P n r 1. SouthCarolina(21) 3-0 85 2 2 2. NotreDam e(12) 4- 0 838 3 2-1 768 1 3. Uconn(1) 3-0 751 4 4.Tennessee 2-1 7 2 0 6 5. Stanford 3-0 7 1 3 10 6.Texas(1) 4-0 687 5 7.Texas A&M 3-0 604 7 8. Duke 4-0 5 7 4 1 3 9. Kentucky 4-0 563 9 10. Maryland 11. NorthCarolina 4 0531 11 4-0 4 9 4 12 12. Louisville 1-1 445 8 13. Baylor 4-0 4 0 7 14 14. California 4-0 3 8 1 16 15. Nebraska 2-1 3 4 2 15 16. MichiganSt. 4-0 2 9 1 18 17.Iowa 4-1 2 6 0 18 18. DePalu 3-0 2 5 0 20 19. Oregon St. 20. Oklahoma St. 3 1162 21 3-0 1 6 0 22 21. Rutgers 4-0 1 0 5 24 22. Georgia 3-0 1 0 5 23 22. Syracuse 22. WestVirginia 2-1 105 17 25. Mississippi St. 4 - 0 77 Others receivingvotes: Gonzaga 54, Oklahom a 24, NC State15, Vanderbilt15, Minnesota14,James Madison12,Purdue10,FloridaSt. 9, ArizonaSt.8, Arkansas8, St. John's6, UCLA4, W.Kentucky 4, GreenBay3, lowaSt. 1, SouthFlorida1, UALR1, WashingtonSt.1.

Monday'sGames

Friday'sGames

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

FS1

VCUvs.Oregon,4:30p.m. Air Forcevs. Colorado,6p.m. Delawarevs. Stanford, 8p.m. CS Fullertonvs.Southern Cal,8 p.m. Wednesday'sGames Oklahoma at UCLA,11:30 a.m. UT PanAmericanat Utah,5 p.m. Cal Polyat California, 7p.m. Thursday'sGames SanJoseStateatWashington, 8 p.m. Washington Stateat UCSantaBarbara,9 p.m. Friday'sGame NorthDakotaatUtah,7p.m.

Benjamin3-5 2-5 8, Cook6-14 1-3 13,Brooks 6-141-214,Young5-168-820, Rorie1-30-03, Bell 1-40-02, Benson 0-10-00, Abdul-Bassit1-20-03. Totals 23-6912-1863. N YJ Buf Halftime —Michigan 33-27. 3-Point Goals11 21 Michigan5-13 (Irvin 3-6, Albrecht1-2, LeVert1-4, 2 18 3 3 6 Chatman 0-1), Oregon5-19(Young2-9, Abdul-Bas19-92 29-116 sit 1-2, Brooks1-2, Rorie 1-3, Benson0-1, Cook 1 26 22 0 0-1, Benjamin 0-1). FouledOut—Brooks, Cook. 3-42 1-5 Rebounds —Michigan 29(Irvin, LeVert 5), Oregon 6 -90 1 - 13 41 (Benjamin11).Assists—Michigan 11 (Albrecht, 0 -0 1 - 3 4 Chatman,Levert 3), Oregon10 (Young3). Total 17-31-1 24-32-0 Fouls—Michigan16, Oregon24.A—8,465.

Saturday'sGames Utah atColorado,10a.m. NotreDam eat SouthernCal,12:30 p.m. BYUat California,1:30p.m. OregonatOregonSt., 5 p.m. WashingtonatWashington St., 7:30p.m.

NFL

ESPN2

Bills 38, Jets3

StanfordatUCLA,3:30p.m ArizonaSt.atArizona, 3:30P.m.

FOOTBALL

Pac-12

4:30 p.m. NBCSN 5 p.m.

Intermountain Conterence AH-leagueteams

New Orleans: Brees35-45-1-420. RECEIVING —Baltimore: TSmith5-98, Smith Sr. 4-89, Juszczyk3-21, Forsett 2-8, Daniels2-7, M.Brown1-14, Pierce 1-6. NewOrleans: Stills 8-98, J.Graham 6-47,Thomas6-37,Colston4-82, Toon3-42, Hil 2-22,Ingram2-15, Cadet 2-11, Morgan1-62,Watson1-4. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None.

Bea r s

SOUTH Louisville87,Sayannah St. 26 Memphis77 Prairie View49 Mississippi St 59ClaytonSt 46 Wake Forest75, Nicholls St.48

MIDWEST

89,Jacksonville 71 3 3 55 Eagl e s IPFW 1 1 40 r7r S eahawksRlinois89,Brown68 Indiana St. 61,Austin Pea y57 Sunday COLTS 9'/z 9H 5 1 W ashingtonlowa72,Pepperdine 61 87,Rider60 TEXANS 7 6 H 4 2 r/ z Tit a ns Kansas BILLS Browns Marquette62, NJIT57 Michigan St.79,SantaClara52 RAVEN S Chargers 92,Bucknell65 Giants 2 2 44 JAG UARSToledo Bengals 3H 3H 44Vr BUCCAN EERS Xavier89,MurraySt. 62 SOUTHWE ST RAMS 7 7 43r / r Rai ders 67,StephenF.Austin 51 STEELE RS Saints Baylor T CU106, MVSU 53 VIKINGS 3 3 43 Pan t hers FARWEST Cardinals 1 2 44H FA LCONS 93,ColoradoChristian 58 PACKE RS 3 3 58 V r Pat riots N. Colorado New Me x i c o St . 88, S tetson68 Broncos 1 1 49' / z CHIEFS PortlandSt.90,SIU-Edwardsville 87,OT Monday Dolphins JETS SanDiego77,W.Michigan70 Wyoming66, FloridaA&M45 College Tournamen t Today CBEHall of FameClassic Ohio 1'/z 2'/z 47'Iz MIAMI-OHIO lowaSt. 84,Alabama74 Thursday Tcu BH BH TEXAS Maryland78,ArizonaSt.73 EA Sporls Maui Invitational Lsu 21/2 3 491/2 TEXAS A&M Arizona72,Missouri 53 Friday Virginia 1H 1H VirginiaTech KansasSt.88, Purdue79 BOWLGREEN 8 9 ' /r Ball St Pittsburgh81,Chaminade68 Gulf CoastShowcase W. MICHIG AN 6 7 N. Illinois Buffalo 2 2 UMASS Evansville58,FresnoSt.52 MARSHALL 21'/z 21'/z W. Kentucky FloridaGulf Coast58,Marist 43 Bay66, East Carolina49 22'Iz 22'/~ E. MICHIG AN Green Toledo IOWA PK 1 Nebraska SanFrancisco88, Hawaii 73 E. Carolina 17'Iz 17 TULSA Legends Classic gan70,Oregon63 Houston 21'/r 22 SMU Michi 77 VCU53 Navy 9 9 S. ALABA MA Viganova Arkansas MGMGrandMainEvent MISSOU RI 4'/~ 4'/~ Oklahoma St. 66,OregonSt. 53 UCLA Stanford ARIZONA ArizonaSt Tulsa53,Auburn35 USVI ParadiseJam ColoradoSt Plr 7 AIR FO RCE C. Florida 1 1'/z 1 2 S. FLORIA D SetonHall84,glinois St.80 4'I~ 3'I~ O ld Domi n i o n 58, Gardner-Webb46 Akron KENTST Clemson64,LSU61 Saturday Michigan WeberSt.59, Nevada56 OHIO ST 20 20 BOSTON COL 10'/r 11 Syracuse Polls FLAATLANTIC 4 4 Old Dominion AP Top 26 DUKE 19 18 WakeForest R ecord Pts P r v Tennesse e 16'/r 17 VANDER BILT 5-0 1,6 2 2 1 WISCON SIN 12'/z 13'/z Minnesota 1. Kentucky(62) (3) 4 01,4 9 4 3 MIAMI-FLA 10 10 Pittsburgh 2. Wisconsin 3-0 1 ,491 2 MARYLAN D 8'/r 8'/r Rutgers 3. Arizona 6'I~ 7 5-0 1 ,474 4 LATECH Rice 4. Duke 3-0 1,3 1 4 6 N. CARO LINA 7r/2 7r/2 Nc State 5. NorthCarolina N'WESTE RN BH BH 6. Loui s vi l le 3-0 1 ,219 7 lginois 4 -0 1 ,187 1 0 INDIANA 3 3 Purdue 7. Texas APP'CHIAN ST 16 16'/x 4-0 1 ,165 9 Idaho 8. Virginia 5 5I / 2 3-0 1 ,120 11 Cincinnati TEMPLE 9. WichitaSt. 12'/~ 13'/~ 1 0. Gonza g a 4-0 1 ,077 13 TexasSt GEORGIA ST 1-1 IOWAST W. Virginia 11. Kansas 9 81 5 3-0 9 1 7 12 ARKAN SASST 21'/r 22 NewMexico St 12. Viganova 2-0 8 2 8 14 Uab 4 4 SO MISS 13. IowaSt. 3-0 7 6 0 15 NEWMEXICO 4 4 Wyoming 14. VCU 3 0736 16 BOISEST 9 9 UtahSt 15. SanDiegoSt. 3-0 5 5 7 20 SANDIEG OST SanJoseSt 16. OhioSt. 5 -0 5 2 1 Washington 4 4 WASH ST 17.Miami 23'/x 24'/x 2-1 473 8 Baylor TexasTech 18. Florida 3-0 4 0 1 24 GEORG IA 13H 13 GeorgiaTech 19. Michigan 2-1 399 19 KANSAS ST 27'/z 28 Kansas 20. MichiganSt. Virginia 5-0 344 CALIFOR NIA 4 4 Bvu 21. West 22. UCLA 4 -0 1 7 3 Oregon 20 20 OREGO NST 4 -0 148 MichiganSt 13'/x 13'/x PENNST 23. Creighton 3-1 1 4 4 17 ALABAMA 91/2 91/2 Auburn 24. Uconn 3 -0 131 FLORIDA ST 10 8 Florida 25. Arkansas 9'/2 9'/2 Nevada UNLV Othersreceivingvotes: Oklahoma 108, Stanford Ul-Monroe 80, Providence63, Utah42, Minnesota21, N.Iowa GA SOU THERN 13'Iz 14 CLEMSO N S. Carolina 17, RhodeIsland16, Syracuse15,OklahomaSt. 14, FRENSO ST 11 11 Hawaii Georgetown10,Memphis10, Baylor 7,Indiana6, CalUtah 10 9 COLOR ADO ifornia 5,Rlinois5, Nebraska5, Cincinnati 4, NCState MEMPHIS 20 20'/x Connecticut 4,Wyoming4,Dayton3,Maryland3,UTEP3,BYU2, LOUISVILLE 14 13 Kentucky Northeastern1,Xaviert. MississippiSt 1 2 MISSISSIPIP UTEP 4 4 Mid Tenn St USATodayTop26 UL-Lafayette 11 11 TROY R ecord Rs P v s UT-S.ANTONIO 6 5 N. Texas 1. Kentucky (29) 5 0796 1 61/2 7 5-0 733 3 USC NotreDame 2. Duke 3. Wisconsin(2) 4 0726 4 4. Arizona (1 ) 3-0 723 2 SOCCER 3-0 622 8 5. Louisville 6. NorthCarolina 3 0617 6 4-0 5 8 5 9 MLS playoffs 7. Virginia 4-0 5 5 8 11 8. Gonzag a MAJORLEAGUESOCCER 4-0 5 4 1 10 9. Texas AH TimesPST 10. WichitaState 3-0 491 13 3-0 4 6 9 12 11 Viganova CONFERE NCEFINALS 1-1 458 5 12. Kansa s (Two-legaggregateseries) 2-0 3 7 8 14 13.lowaState Saturday'sGame 14.Virginiacommon wealth3-0 36 9 15 NewYorkat NewEngland,noon 15. SanDiegoState 3- 0 348 16 Sunday'sGame 2-1 16. Florida 3 03 7 Los Angeleat s Seattle, 6p.m. 3-0 2 8 1 20 17.OhioState 3-0 2 6 5 22 18. Michigan 19. MichiganState 2 - 1 238 19 BASKETBALL 20. Miami(Fla.) 5-0 160 NR 2-1 1 1 4 18 21. Okl a hom a Men's college 3-1 1 1 2 17 22. Connecticut Pac-12 4-0 93 NR 23. UCLA AH TimesPST 24. WestVirginia 5-0 81 NR 5-0 47 NR 25. Providence Monday'sGames Othersreceivingvotes: Stanford42; Arkansas35; Arizona72, Missouri53 Utah27;Syracuse26;Georgetown23;NotreDame Maryland78,ArizonaState73 20; Nebraska17;Oregon11; Baylor 10;Creighton9; Oklahoma State66,OregonState53 Minnesota 9; OklahomaState8; California 6;Northern Michi gan70,Oregon63 lowa 6;Indiana5; Texas-ElPaso5; Charlotte 4; ColoraToday'sGames do 4; lowa 4; GeorgeWashington3; LouisianaTech3; Alabama vs. ArizonaState,4 p.m. SaintMary's3;Wyoming 3;KansasState2; Memphis 2; KansasStatevs.Arizona,4:30 p.m. Rhode Island2;llinois1; LSU1;SouthernMethodist1.

HOCKEY NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE AH TimesPST

EaslernConference AtlanticDivision Montreal Tampa Bay Detroit Boston Toronto Ottawa Florida Buffalo

GP W L OT 2 3 16 6 1 22 14 6 2 2 1 11 5 5 2 3 13 9 1 2 1 11 8 2 20 9 7 4 19 7 6 6 2 1 6 13 2

PlsGF GA 3 3 61 57 3 0 77 60 2 7 59 52 2 7 59 57 2 4 67 63 22 55 54 20 41 51 1 4 36 70

MetropolitanDivision PlsGF GA 30 72 46 3 0 69 57 22 57 58 21 56 54 21 53 61 19 57 61 1 5 48 62 1 4 49 72 WesternConference CentralDivision GP W L OT PlsGF GA St. Louis 2 1 14 6 1 2 9 57 43 Nashville 2 0 13 5 2 2 8 57 42 Chicago 2 1 12 8 1 2 5 63 44 Minnesota 20 12 8 0 2 4 58 44 Winnipeg 22 10 9 3 2 3 45 51 Dallas 21 8 9 4 20 61 72 Colorado 21 7 9 5 19 53 67 PacificDivision GP W L OT PlsGF GA Anaheim 2 2 1 3 4 5 31 60 54 V ancouver 21 14 6 1 2 9 65 61 Calgary 22 1 3 7 2 28 71 61 L os Angeles 21 11 6 4 2 6 57 49 San Jose 2 3 1 0 9 4 24 62 64 Arizona 22 9 11 2 20 54 67 E dmonton 2 1 6 1 3 2 1 4 49 74 NOTE: Two points for a win, onepoint for overtime loss. Monday'sGames N.Y.Islanders1, Philadelphia0,SO Pittsburgh3, Boston 2,OT Detroit 4,Ottawa3 Minnesota 4,Florida1 Today'sGames Winnipegat 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. GP W L OT Pittsburgh 2 0 1 4 4 2 N .Y. Islanders 21 15 6 0 N.Y.Rangers 20 9 7 4 Washington 20 9 8 3 NewJersey 21 9 9 3 Philadelphia 20 8 9 3 C arolina 2 0 6 11 3 C olumbus 20 6 1 2 2

DEALS Transactions BASEBAL L

AmericanLeague

CLEVEL AND INDIANS— Acquired RHPCharles

BrewerfromArizonafor cashconsiderations. DesignatedLHPScott Barnesfor assignment. KANSASCITYROYALS — OFJoshWillingham announced his retirement. OAKLANDATHLETICS — Named Dan Kantrovitz assistantgeneral manager. TEXAS RANGERS—PlacedOFJimAdducionunconditionalreleasewaivers. Agreedto termswith INF Ed Lucas ona minor leaguecontract. NationalLeague LOSANGELESDODGERS— AcquiredRHPJuan NicasiofromColorado for a player to benamed or cashconsiderations.Designated INFRyan Jackson for assignmen t. MILWAUKEE BREWERS— PromotedJeff Harding to director-creativde esign andstrategy, Chris Kimbag promotedto director-groupticket salesandTai Pauls to directorof Brewers Enterprises. BASKETB ALL NationalBasketballAssociation HOUSTONROCKETS— RecalledG NickJohnson from RiG orandeValley(NBADL). MEMPHISGRIZZLIES — Named Glynn Cyprien basketbaloperati l onsassistant andscout. PHILADE LPHIA 76ER S — Recalled F JaKarr Sampson fromDelaware(NBADL). FOOTBA LL NationalFootballLeague DALLASCOWBOYS— SignedDTDavonColeman to thepracticesquad. KANSAS CITYCHIEFS—PlacedS Eric Berry on the non-footbalillness l list. TAMPA BAYBUCCANEERS— Placed FBJorvorskie Lane oninjured reserve. WASHIN GTON REDSKINS — Signed LB Steve Beauharnaisfromthepractice squad.PlacedLBAdam Haywardoninjured reserve. HOCKEY NationalHockeyLeague ARIZONA COYOTES—AssignedFLucas Lessio to Portland(AHL). CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS—ReassignedFPhilip DanaulttoRockford(AHL). DALLASSTARS— ReassignedLW CurtisMcKenzie toTexas(AHL). EDMON TONOILERS—Fired goaltending coach FredericChabot.Named Dustin Schwarlz goaltending coach. MONTREAL CANADIENS — Assigned DNathan BeaulieuandFDraysonBowmanto Hamilton (AHL). TORONTOMAPLELEAFS— RecalledDKorbinian HolzerandLWDavid Booth fromToronto(AHL). SOCCER MajorLeagueSoccer MONTREAL IMPACT— NamedAdam Braztechnical director. COLLEG E TENNE SSEE — Announced the resignation of AdamHoward, men'sassistant basketball coach.Announcedvideocoordinator BeauBraden wil assum e Howard'duti s es.


TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

Despite longweek, Bills rout Jets38-3 The Associated Press

NBA ROUNDUP

C3

Coaches Continued from C1 There was also Kei Nishi-

i,,~i!:> 4&~~~

kori, the injury-prone talent from Japan who reached the U.S. Open final and broke into

the top five after adding the 1989 French Open champion

NFL ROUNDUP

DETROIT — Scott Chan-

Michael Chang to his team

dler capped an emotionally easy part of it, and back draining week with a cele- home they had the tough bration for the folks back part," Orton said. "Excited home in Buffalo. to gethere and get abig win After catching a touch- for us, and hopefully this down pass shortly before will propel us forward." halftime, he began mimOrton threw a 7 - yard icking a shoveling motion, touchdown pass to Robert a nod to Bills fans who Woods in the first quarter, have spent the past few and the second-year redays digging out of several ceiver's one-handed catch feet of snow. set up another touchdown

this year. And there was Milos Raonic, who became the first Canadian man to break

into the top 10 while being co-coached by Ivan Ljubicic, a formertop-three player and French Open semifinalist. It was hard to see it as a coincidence that the man who started the trend, Andy Mur-

ray, ended up losing ground after splitting with hi s star mentor, Ivan Lendl, in March

"It was a little bit of a

in the second. Chandler

tribute to the people of Buffalo," Chandler said. "You want to do something special for our fans. They did a great job showing up for us tonight, and for the people

caught a 19-yard scoring pass from Orton to make it

(Murray, in a variation on the

14-3 late in the half.

former No. 1 as Lendl's re-

C handler needed a snowmobile to get out of his neighborhood before

placement: the women's star

back there, we're behind

the team traveled to the Detroit area, and the Bills

you." After a week of frightening weather and an abbreviated practice schedule, Buffalo played one of its best games ofthe season in a 38-3 victory over the

faced logistical issues for several days. Tickets to the game were given out for free, and although Ford Field wasn't quite full, the crowd of 56,044 created

New York Jets on Monday a decent atmosphere in night. Kyle Orton threw prime time. "Our fans are phenomtwo touchdown passes, and the Bills also had a key play enal,"Buffalo coach Doug on specials teams in the Marrone said. runaway win. Also on Monday: Heavy snow in the BufRavens 34, Saints 27: falo area moved the game NEW ORLEANS — Justo Detroit, but there were

tin Forsett rushed for 182

plenty of Bills fans in atten- yards and two touchdowns, dance at Ford Field. Buffalo

(6-5) couldn't even practice before arriving in Michigan on Friday, but it was the Jets (2-9) who looked out of sorts all night. "We probably had the

and Baltimore beat New Orleans to hand the Saints

their third consecutive loss. Will Hill had a 44-yard interception return for a go-

ahead scorefor Baltimore in the third quarter.

theme, later h i red a nother

Amelie Mauresmo). So does all this mean that Matt Slocum I The Associated Press

Portiand's LaMarcus Aidridge, left, tries to get a shot past Phiiadeiphia's Neriens Noel during the first half of Monday's game in Philadelphia. The Biazers won114-104.

most casesthe star coaches were in a part-time role, adding value instead of manning the operation year round. Federer still has Severin

a zers ra as

ers

Liithi as part of his coaching

The Associated Press P HILADELPHIA — Th e Portland Trail Blazers didn't take the winless 76ers light-

ly following a lackluster first half. LaMarcus Aldridge had 15 of his 33 points during the pivotal third quarter to help the Trail Blazers defeat Phil-

led Philadelphia (0-14) with 24 points. "The biggest lesson is how hard you have to play to win," Portland coach Terry Stotts said. "Every night is a challenge.To be able to come back against a team playing with

Chris Paul had 22 points and a

desperation means a lot." T he T r ai l B l a zers a l s o

Mar DeRozan scored 23 and Toronto won its fifth straight

season-high 15 assists and Los Angeles handed Charlotte its sixth straight loss.

Raptors 104, Suns 100: TORONTO — Jonas Valan-

ciunas had a career-high 27 points and 11 rebounds, De-

adelphia 114-104 on Monday helped Philadelphia with 14 night, sending the 76ers to first-half turnovers, but they

game. Rockets 91, Knicks 86:

their 14th straight loss to open

HOUSTON — James Harden

committed just three in the

the season. second half. Wesley Matthews added 17 Also on Monday: points, Damian Lillard had 16 Cavaliers 106, Magic 74: and Robin Lopez chipped in CLEVELAND LeBron 12 for Portland (11-3), which James scored 29 points, in-

had 36 points to lead depleted Houston to a victory over slumping New York.

won its eighth in a row after

cluding 16 in the first quarter,

Bulls 97, Jazz 95: SALT LAKE CITY — Jimmy Butler scored 25 points and Pau Gas-

coming back from a two-point

and Cleveland broke a fourgame losing streak with a win

ol added 23 points and nine rebounds to lead Chicago over

over Orlando.

Utah.

of energy; we came out a little sluggish," Aldridge said. "They woke us up." Michael C arter-Williams

NHL ROUNDUP

Islanders off to best start in team history The Associated Press

all, and five straight on

U NIONDALE, N Y . Frans Nielsen and John

the road. The Flyers man-

aged only 20 shots in Tavares finally solved Phil- regulation. adelphia's Steve Mason in Also on Monday: a shootout, and the New Penguins 3, B r uins York Islanders outlasted 2: BOSTON — E v g eni the Flyers 1-0 on Monday Malkin scored his second night to post the best 21- goal of the night 32 secgame start in franchise onds into overtime, givhistory. ing Pittsburgh a win over Mason stopped 46 shots

before the tiebreaker, but after denying Kyle Okposo, he was beaten twice.

Boston. Wild 4, Panthers1: SUNRISE, Fla. — Jason Zucker scored two goals to lead

New York has a team-re- Minnesota over Florida. cord 15 wins through 21 Nino Niederreiter also games (15-6) and is 5-0 in scored forthe Wild, and shootouts. Mikko Koivu had two asJaroslav Halak made 21 sists. Zach Parise added an saves for his third shutout empty-net goal with 1:29 this season. He has won left. seven straight, allowing Red Wings 4, Senators only eight goals. The Is- 3: DETROIT — Stephen landers have won four in a Weiss scored twice during row and nine of 10. Detroit's three-goal secPhiladelphia has ond period to help the Red dropped five of six over- Wings beat Ottawa.

d-Memphis d-Golden State d-Portland Houston SanAntonio Dallas

L 2 2 3

pg ss

9 10 8 8 9 7 6 5 3

4 5 5 5 6 5 7 10 9

69) p/ 667 p/

u

Sacrame nto LA. Clippers Phoenix NewOrleans Denver Utah Minnesota LA. Lakers Oklahoma City d-divisionleader

3

833 g

Q5 31/)

6I5 py

600 3'/2

4

462 5'/2 333 P/2

Monday'sGames

Toronto104,Phoenix 100 Houston91,NewYorkII6 Indianau 1,Dallas 100 Chicago97, Utah95 Today'sGames AtlantaatWashington,4 p.m. GoldenStateatMiami, 4:30p.m. SacramentoatNewOrleans, 5p.m. Detroit atMilwaukee,5 p.m. Chicagoat Denver,6p.m. Wednesday'sGames BrooklynatPhiladelphia,4 p.m. GoldenStateatOrlando,4 p.m. PortlandatCharlotte,4 p.m. Washingtonat Cleveland,4p.m. NewYorkatDallas, 4:30p.m. TorontoatAtlanta, 4:30p.m. LA. ClippersatDetroit, 4:30p.m. Utah atOklahomaCity,5p.m. Sacramento atHouston,5 p.m. Milwaukee at Minnesota, 5p.m. Indiana atSanAntonio,5:30 p.m. Denverat Phoenix, 6 p.m. MemphisatLA. Lakers, 7:30p.m.

season-high 16

r e bounds, beat Dallas.

Becker and Cilic and is now

head of player development at Britain's Lawn Tennis Association. "But the truth is the

top players already have been on the circuit for 15 years or

from these ex-players. And this season is proof of that."

Rockets91, Knicks86 NEWYORK(86) Acy 0-41-21,Anthony6-112-314, Dalembert 3-3 0-06, Shum ert2-103-47, p Calderon3-72 29, Stoudemire4-80-08,Larkin4-50-08,JaSmith1-31-23, J.Smi th3-60-08,HardawayJr.2-70-05,Wear4-t 1-29, Prigioni 3-50-08. Totals 35-7610-1586.

CHICAGO (97)

UTAH(95) Hayward2-0 1-1 6, Favors10-171-2 21,Kanter

9-131-1 19,Burke8-141-1 18,Burks3-11 4-410, Ingles 5 9 0011, Booker47 01 8, Gobert 1-30 0 2, Exum 0-1 0-00, Novak0-0 0-00. Totals 42-86 8-10 95.

Chicago Utan

Pacers111, Mavericks100 INDIANA (111) SHill 4 84-412,Scola4-115-614, Mahinmi5-7 0-610, Sloan10-146-929, Stuckey2-96-612, Copeland4-100-011, Miles2-71-2 6, Rudez4-51-1 11, Allen1-2 1-23, Price1-40-0 3. Totals 37-77 24-36111.

Clippers113, Hornets92 L.A. CLIPPERS I113)

Big 4's Grand Slam cartel, but

Djokovic still finished No. 1, Federer No. 2 and Rafael Nadal No. 3.

Eight women might have reached Grand Slam finals, including Simona Halep and Dominika Cibulkova and a resurgent Caroline Wozniacki, but

S erena W i l liams

still finished No. 1 and Maria Sharapova No. 2. There were certainly big surprises in th e w omen's game, too. Victoria Azarenka,

who looked set to challenge Williams for supremacy in 2014, struggled with injuries and finished the year ranked 31st. The Canadian Eugenie Bouchard soared all the way

to No. 5, reaching the semifinals of the Australian and

CHARLO TTE(92) Henderson 3-112-28, Wiliams2-52-27, Jefferson 7-142-416,Walker4-117-815, Stephenson1-8 1-2 3, Zeller5-t 7-817, Neal2-7 4-58, Roberts 5-9 II-011, Biyombo1-1 3-45, Parg01-2 0-Ij Z Totals 31-75 28-3592. LA. Glippers 31 2 5 22 35 — 113 Charlotle 23 30 17 22 — 92

Li Na, the Chinese trailblazer, won the Australian Open

Cavaliers106, Magic 74

"If it's a baby, or if it's an adult or an older person — he really adjusts to

French Opens and the final at

Wimbledon before faltering. in Januarybutwas retired by September, citing the toll of chronic knee injuries. The younger generation, which also includes 17-yearold Alexander Zverev, looks

promising. But based on Nadal's history, another big surge in 2015 is hardly out of the question, and it will also be intriguing to see how Juan Martin del Potro, the

most significant absentee in the men's game for much of the season, recovers fr om

major left wrist surgery after already bouncing back from major right wrist surgery in 2010. Neither man has yet to bow to the trend and hire a former

superstar as a coach, and ¹

the person he's with or who wants

dal, who has worked with his

an autograph or to take a picture. He

uncle Toni Nadal since boyhood, says he has no intention of changing his longtime approach. But c h ange c e r tainly

smiles, and he just seems like he's very, very excited, and it's not fake."

Perine now ranks in the top 10 nationally in yards rushing, and he is tied for fourth with 19 touchdowns. He

received a standing ovation at Oklahoma's basketball game the next day, something he was not comfortable with but might need to get used to. "I wouldn't say e mbarrassed, I

would say more awkward, just because I've never had something like that happen to me before," he said. "I

had no idea they were going to do it. Perine was Oklahoma's No. 3 back new level of fame became apparent. It was kind of out of the blue for me. I "I actually am so very proud of him just tried to handle as best as I could. I ter hitting a woman in the face at a entering the season opener against restaurant before preseason practice Louisiana Tech, but he led the Soon- for the way he handles it," Gloria said. still felt very awkward." to be humble, and it helped when his

This season was also proof

that the old guard knew how to hang on to power despite absorbing some blows along the way. Wawrinka and Cilic might have broken up the

Bullock 1-3 0-0 3,Griffin 10-232-322, Jordan 4-5 3-411, Paul10-160-0 22, Redick 5-123-317, Crawford8-13 Ij-0 21,Farmar1-2 0-03, Hawes0-2 0-0 0, Davis2-40-0 4, Turkoglu4-80-010. Totals 45-88 8-10113.

ORLANDO (74) Harkless1-7 0-02, Frye1-4 0-0 3,Vucevic 8-15 2-218,0ladipo8-155-622,Foumier2-93-48, Payton 2-71-2 6,Dedmon3-7 0-16, B.Gordon0-20-0 DALLAS (100) 0, Green 1-70-02, Ridnour2-20-05, Nicholson1-5 Parsons 6-13 1-2 16, Nowitzki 9-17 2-2 22, 0-0zTotals 29-8011-15 74. CLEVEL AND(106) Chandler2-32-46, Nelson4-0 0-010, Ellis 9-19 5-824, Aminu1-11-1 3, Wright 6-61-213, Harris James9179-1129, Love50 2412, Vareiao79 1-5 0-0 2, Barea2-5 0-2 4, Crowder0-0 0-0 0, 0-014, Irving5-91-I 12, Marion4-7 0-09, J.Harris 0-20-00,Waiters3-72-28,Thompson4-81-29, Villanueva 0-0 Ij-0 0. Totals 40-80 12-21 100. Indiana 25 30 30 26 —111 Cherry 2-60-05, Amundson2-21-25, Jones1-20-0 Dallas 24 26 28 22 — 100 3, Haywood 0-1 0-00. Totals42-81 16-22106. Orlando 16 22 20 16 — 74 Cleveland 26 30 25 25 — 106

began and getting suspended for the ers in that game with 77 yards and a season. Even then, Perine was behind touchdown on 13 carries. He ran for Continued from C1 Keith Ford and Alex Ross on the depth 34 yards against Tulsa, then led the "I'm jealous, I want 4+ too!" Peter- chart. He handled his uphill climb the Sooners again with 67 yards on just son tweeted afterward. "Congrats lil way he has handled every challenge nine carries against Tennessee. homie proud of you!" since childhood. His breakout came against West Vir"He's always surprised me how ev- ginia, Perine, a 243-pound bruiser with when he rumbled for 242 yards breakaway speed, might be just ery year, I get nervous because he's and four touchdowns in a 45-33 win. scratching the surface of his potential. moving up into a different age group He broke loose for 213 yards and three He is only 19 years old, one year re- or a different league ... or different touchdowns against Texas Tech the moved from playing high school ball. weight class, and then, on to high week before the 427-yard, five-touch"Who knows what his ceiling is?" school," Gloria Perine said. "I always down outburst against Kansas. Oklahoma coach Bob Stoops said. got nervous: 'What if he doesn't perAfter the record-setting game, the "He's going to get stronger, he's going form as well as he has and he gets family went to The Garage, a restauto get faster." bummed out? And every time, he's rant in Norman. Gloria said her father, Perine was not even considered been able to rise to the occasion. Ev- Sam, and Samaje's stepfather, Casey Oklahoma's top running back re- ery time the level increased, he's in- Barber,have helped teach Samaje creased his intensity."

said Bob Brett, who coached

that you can learn something

PORTLAIID(114) Batum3-80-06,Aldridge13-206-733,Lopez4-8 4-412, Lillard6-113-316, Matthews6-163-417, Kaman3-72-48, Blakeo-60-00, Crabbe3-50-08, HOUSTON (91) Barton2-20-0 5, Freeland4-61-1 9. Totals 44-89 Ariza 3-102-21II, MotieIunas6-120-013, Black 19-23114. 3-5 1-2 7,Canaan2-8 2-27, Harden11-22 7-7 36, PHILADELPHIA I104) Papanikolaou2-6 0-2 4, Dorsey0-2 1-4 1,Garcia Mbah aMoute2-30-04,DaviesI-30-02,Sims 2-40-05, Terry3-70-08. Totals 32-7613-19 91. 8-14 6-6 22,Carter-Wiliams10-24 4-5 24, Wroten New York 26 20 23 17 — 86 7-186-9 20,McDaniels2-42-26,Noel6-t0-012, Houston 27 24 18 22 — 91 Shved3-42-2 8, Gordon2-40-0 4, Thompson1-3 0-02,Covington 0-0 0-0 0.Totals 42-84 20-24 Raptors104, Siins100 104. Porlland 24 26 39 25 — 114 PHOENIX I100) Philadelphia 20 3 2 28 24 — 104 Marc.uorris 2-70-05, MarkMorris 8-161-217, 3-Point Goal— s Portland 7-27 (Crabbe 2-4, I-I 0-0 2, G.Dragic3-90-0 6,Bledsoe8-16 Matthews2-8, Aldridge1-1, Barton1-1, Lillard 1-4, Plumlee 5-121-1 13,Tucker4-6 Batum0-4, Blake0-5), Philadelphia0-8 (Sims0-1, 6-825, Len1-40-02, Green II-011, Thomas 6-10 0-016, Randolph 0-0 0-0 Ij, Davies 0-1, Thomp son 0-1, Shved0-1, McDanTolliver1-3 0-0 3. Totals 39-84 8-11 100. iels 0-1, Wroten0-3). FouledOut—Davies. ReTOROIITO(104) bounds —Portland 59 (Aldridge11), Philadelphia36 Ross4-113-313, A.Johnson1-30-0 2, Valanci(Carter-Wiliams7). Assists—Portland30 (Blake8), nas10-117-827,Lowry6-16 2-214, DeRozan 7-20 Philadelphia2II (Wroten 9). Total Fouls—Portland u 9-13 23,Wiliams6-123-417, Patterson0-02-2 2, 19, Philadelphia20. Technicals—Freeland, Lopez. Vasquez1-60-Ij 2,J.Johnson0-00-0 0, Hayes2-3 A—0,094(20,318). 0-0 4.Totals37-82 26-32 104. Phoenix 26 22 18 34 — 100 Bulls 97, Jazz95 Toronto 29 25 27 23 — 104

Mom

cruit. Joe Mixon had that honor, but he was suspended for the season af-

serve it, no question about it,"

really necessarily wanting to be involved for 40 weeks a year with a player. They've got families and everything like that, but I really think

Dunleavy1-3 0-0 2, Gasol 0-20 1-3 23,Noah 3 u 2~4 ,9 1-2 2-3 4, Rose5-10 5-818, Butler 8-168-9 25, 3 12 Mirotic 4-90-010, Brooks4-80-010, McDermot 0-1 0-0 0, Snell 2-30-0 5.Totals 36-72 16-23 97.

Portland114,Philadelphia104 LA. Clippers03, Charlotte92 Cleveland106,Orlando74

n a mes a r e

coming to coaching, however short term their contribution. "Look, if these top players are good coaches and they can get the results, they de-

even more and so they are not

Blazers104, 76ers104

W 12 10 0

t hat more bi g

Pacers 111, Mavericks 100:

AllTimesPST

d-Toronto 12 2 d-Washington 9 3 d-Chicago 9 5 Miami 8 6 Atlanta 6 5 Milwaukee 7 7 Cleveland 6 7 Indiana 6 8 Brooklyn 5 8 Orlando 6 10 Boston 4 8 333 7 4 0 NewYork 267 8/ 4 0 Charlotte Detroit 3 10 Philadelphia 0 14 Ooo I2 Western Conference

cardo Piatti — no global star, yet long considered one of the finest coaches in the game. But there can be no doubt

DALLAS — D o n ald Sloan scored 29 points and Indiana

Summaries

Eastern Conference W L

da. Nishikori still has Dante Bottini. Raonic now has Ric-

Clippers 113, Hornets 92:

Standings Paul Sancya/The Associated Press

team. Djokovic still has his longtime coach Marian Vaj-

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Blake Griffin had 22 points and a

NBA SCOREBOARD

Detroit. The Bills won 38-3.

are about to be a vanishing breed in the men's coaching ranks at the top? Unlikely. In

halftime deficit. "They came out with a lot

Buffalo wide receiver Robert Woods(10) scores on a seven-yard reception during the first half of Monday's game in

less prominent personalities

worked for his rivals in 2014, and there are hints that the

women'sgame could be next, with the former women's No.

1 Lindsay Davenport helping the promising yet erratic Madison Keys prepare for the 2015 season. One also has to wonder who is on Bouchard's shortlist after her

longtime coach Nick Saviano announced their split on Monday.


C4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 2014

MEN'S COLLEGEBASKETBALL

Prep notedook

Beavscan't keepupwith Cowboys

INTERMOUNTAIN CONFERENCEGIRLS SOCCERALL-LEAGUE Already with a third consecutive Class 5A girls soccer state championship, Summit received even more accolades with the announcement of the Intermountain Conference all-league teams. Christina Edwards, Camille Weaver, Megan Cornettand Maggie McElrath were all

Michael Martinez LAS VEGAS — Oklahoma State guard Phil Forte wasn't

hitting his shots Monday night, but his team's defense stepped up in the second half

INTERMOUNTAIN CONFERENCEBOYS SOCCERALL-LEAGUE In leading Summit to a third straight Intermountain Conference boys soccer title, the Storm's Alex

Bowlin has been named the IMC co-player of the year while Summit's Ron Kidder was selected as the league's coach of the year. Bowlin shares the honor with Mountain View's Zach Emerson, as the Storm and the Cougars combined for eight of11 players named to the first team. Bend's Scott Bracci and Kelly Gieber were named to the first team, as was Ridgeview's Nakoda Sanders. Carlos Montanez was a second-team selection to highlight Redmond

of the MGM G r and M ain Event. Oklahoma State will face

from Klamath Falls to 376

points and an 11th-place finish in the 38-team field.

CULVER'S MARTINEZ IS DISTRICTSOCCER MVP Senior Carlos Martinez has been namedboys soccer most valuable player in Class 3A/2A/1A Special District 4 for the 2014

season. In addition to Martinez, who wasnamed to the all-district first team, Culver freshmanEdwin Gutierrez received honorable mention. — Bulletin staff report

John Locher /The Associated Press

s t a rted t h e

Monday's game in LasVegas.

met it well. But I don't like the

night averaging 18 points a game, made just one of his

Nextup

F orte, wh o

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

Court Continued from C1 "Right now, they're more than just bodies," says Tinkle, referring specifically to Boswell, a 2012 Sisters High

graduate, and Dahlen, Redmond High class of 2013. "This is what we want to build our

program around: high character, no-nonsense, work hard, b lue-collar-type kids. A nd they personify that." The journeys of both Bo-

"Right now, they're more than just

"We were out-rebounding them at half," Beavers coach

Wayne Tinkle said. "We accepted that challenge and

the consolation game.

Oregon State junior Bryan Boswell, left, and redshirt freshman Matt Dahlen run drills together during practice at OSU last week.

pull away.

the basket against Oklahoma State's Phil Forte III during

State will battle Auburn in

first five shots but scored 13 points in the second half to finish with 17.

especially for me," Forte said.

Oregon State vs. Auburn When: Wednesday, 6 p.m.

"This was one of those nights when I c ouldn't hi t m u ch

TV:ESPN3

Radio:KICE

from the outside, but defense

940-AM;

"There's going to be nights

when our shots aren't falling,

KRCO690-AM, 96.9-FM

bodies. This is what we want to build our

will always be there. You can

program around: high character, nononsense, work hard, blue-collar-type kids. And they personify

5:03 left in regulation gave to the finish. Le'Bryan Nash led Oklathe Cowboys a double-digit lead, 55-45, and they coasted homa State with 19 points,

always rely on that." Forte's steal and drive with

casualness against pressure — the lackadaisical three-

on-ones where we throw a bounce pass at a guy's ankle." The Cowboys were led by Le'Bryan Nash, who had 19 points on 6-of-10 shooting. They converted 11 of 21 field-

goal attempts in the second halfand were 48.8percentfor the game (21 of 43). "This game could've gone either way, but I thought our defensive intensity in the sec-

that."

ond half was the difference," Oklahoma State coach Travis Ford said.

ROUNDUP <'klzjypplr,,

— Oregon State

coach Wayne Tinkle

Boswell spent two years at to figure everything out. I'm Southwestern Oregon Com- still trying to get back into it. munity College in Coos Bay, But I'm having fun." where he says he "didn't have Bringing on Boswell and a great experience" playing Dahlen was an easy decision,

Arizona cruises to win in Maui

for the Lakers. He entertained offersfrom severalout-of-state

The Associated Press

swell and Dahlen to walk on at

Oregon State began with the same question: Why not?

Tinkle says, what with Bo-

swell's size (he is listed at 6-8) and work ethic and Dahlen's stature (6-6) and skill level.

cost of his other college opTinkle has been upfront tions, led Boswell to hang up with all of his walk-ons. They his sneakers. might only practice. They He was content with play- might not suit up for games ing pickup basketball at Dixon or travel with the team. They Recreation Center on the OSU might not get to play at all. But, campus, maybe even sign up Tinkle observes, "they keep for intramural competition. It coming back for more."

High graduate, earned All-America honors by placing 28th in a field of 336 runners Saturday at the NAIA women's cross-country championships in Lawrence, Kansas. Stoltz completed the 5,000-meter course in 18 minutes, 31.6 seconds to lead the Lady Owls

second half, but Oklahoma State went on a 13-2 run to

Tulsa in Wednesday night's Oregon State's Malcolm championship game. Oregon Duvivier, right, drives toward

LOCALS COMMIT TO COLLEGES Crook County's Collbran Meeker and Mountain View's Aspen Creweach recently committed to compete in their respective sports. Meeker, a twotime Class 4A individual wrestling champion who helped the Cowboys set an all-classification record for team points at the state meet last season, signed a National Letter of lntent to wrestle at Oregon State next year. TheBeavers have won three straight Pac-12 team titles and four of the past five. Crew, a performance halter geldings champion at the 2013 AQHA Novice ChampionshipWest in LasVegas and a semifinalist in horse-

Stoltz, a 2012 Redmond

making a series of turnovers that slowed their hopes of a comeback. They got as close as six points, 51-45, in the

held Oregon State to 33-percentshooting to scorea 66-53 victory in the opening game

at SWOCC, combined with the

REDMONDGRAD SHINES ATNAIA CROSS-COUNTRY NATIONALS Oregon Institute of Technology junior Elissa

with the Cowboys' defense,

they forced 17 turnovers and

schools, but his recent turmoil

World Championship Show in Oklahoma, committed to Baylor University in Waco, Texas, over Georgia and New Mexico State for equestrian. Crew, who expect sto compete in horsemanship, joins a program that currently ranks No. 1 in the National Collegiate Equestrian Association.

16 points. Langston Mor-

ris-Walker had 13. Oregon State had difficulty

The Cowboys struggled occasionally on offense, but

High.

manship at the 2014AQHA

Forward Victor Robbins

led the Beavers (3-1) with

and saved him.

named to the all-IMC first

team for the Storm, and Summit's Jamie Brock was voted the coach of the year. Mountain View goalkeeper Sarah Bailey was voted the IMC player of the year and was joined on the first team by Cougar teammates Rosalee Mendez and Taryn Poole. Bend High's HannahCockrum, Cambria Hurd andTayla Wheeler were namedto the first team, as was Ridgeview's Aspen Jeter. Redmond High's Rose Land received second-team honors.

although he was plagued by foul trouble in the second half. Jeffrey Carroll added 13, and Anthony Hickey had 12.

The Associated Press

was at the rec center where fellow ballers told Boswell about

Tinkle's early-October open tryouts. "Why not?" Boswell

LAHAINA, Hawaii — Slow

starts and strong finishes are nothing new to Arizona. The

Wildcats did it in three games on the mainland and started the Maui Invitational the same

way. They better get it fixed fast with the competition ramping

up over the next two days. Rondae H o l lis-Jefferson and Brandon Ashley each scored 15 points, helping No. 3

"They understand they're

only going to be able to help us in practice, but they're

recalls thinking. "I've got nothing to lose."

program," Tinkle says of his walk-on players. "They really

delighted to be a part of the

Arizona wear down Missouri for a 72-53 victory in the opening round the Maui Invitation-

The tryouts consisted of sev-

like the fact that they can help

al on Monday. "That initial surge out of the

eral days of drills and scrim- the guys that are going to play mages, after which the field every day improve.... We're of 22 potential walk-ons was

narrowed to six players. Boswell remembers how stressed he was, how he struggled to focus on homework. Following a day of anxiety, his phone rang. "I wanted it so bad," Boswell

says. "That phone call was the best one I've ever gotten in my life." He was one of the chosen

gates of playing well at both

being realistic with them, but

ends, I don't know if w e've really done t h at," A r i zona

it's nice that they're bringing it every day and just happy to be

able to contribute to help us get better." Tinkle notes that at Montana, where h e w a s h e ad

coachfrom 2006 to 2014,there were times when walk-ons became scholarshipplayers and, sometimes, all-league sefew, and just a few days later, lections. Those players are "as Boswell, a Sky-Em League vital a part of our program as honorable mention player for anybody," Tinkle says. And Sisters his senior season when they should not be looked at,

Frank Franklin II /The Associated Press

Michigan's Caris LeVert (23) shoots over Oregon's Jordan Bell as he is fouled during the second half of Monday's game in New York. The shot counted. Michigan won the game 70-63.

Class 4A state tournament, from scholarship players. Afbegan practicing with the ter all, he says, "we need those guys' help to lay a foundation." Beavers. "None of us thought we'd be Dahlen was not among the 22 players trying out in ear- in this spot," says Dahlen, who ly October. Instead, he was has played just four minutes going through fall practices throughthreegames thissea-

reon eeS aee, utas t o ie i a n

with the OSU baseball squad. He walked on with the base-

By Dan Gelston

the Outlaws placed fifth at the

or treated, any

d i ff erently

son but made the most of it by netting two points and record-

though he was a second-team

all-state basketball player at Redmond High, where as a

ing a steal. "It's great. It's a great opportunity. I'll do whatever. Just being a part of this is just a great opportunity."

senior he led th e Panthers

He adds: "I'm just kind of

ball Beavers last spring, and

to a share of the Intermoun- doing whatever I can." "We're just here to push tain Conference title and was named the league's player of them (scholarship players) to the year, his basketball career get better, and we're getting was in the rearview mirror. "I better as well," says Boswell, was all baseball," he says. who for now, Tinkle says, is a But D a hlen's b aseball practice-only player. coach, Pat Casey, knew how A blessing, Boswell calls short Tinkle was on bodies. this opportunity. Humbling, Just a few weeks ago, Casey he says. A w hirlwind for approached the new basket- Dahlen, his head still spinball coach and told him about

Dahlen. Casey then went to the former Panther and proposed that Dahlen consider

returning to the hardwood. There was no t r yout, real-

he landed a spot on Tinkle's

inaugural OSU roster. "It's just been a whirlwind, still trying

— Reporter: 541-383-0307, glucas@bendbulletin.com.

Maryland 78, Arizona State 73: KANSAS CITY, Mo. Melo Trimble had 31 points, -

Dez Wells scored all but two of his 14 points in the second half

and Maryland beat Arizona State in the semifinals of the CBE Classic.

Top 25

NEW YORK — Ricky Doyle got an earful from a New York crowd.

points and nine rebounds, and Louisville jumped to a 29-0

But this was no Bronx cheer. Doyle's gritty effort grab-

bing boards and scoring bruising buckets inside earned him some applause and had the Michigan fans chanting the freshman forward's name as he walked off the court a winner.

"I never really experienced anything like that," Doyle said. Up next, he can try do it again with a championship at stake.

tion they needed to advance to the Legends Classic final at the Barclays Center.

at."

Pac-12

The Associated Press

in the orange and black, fullon Division I players.

"All the people that doubtly. Instead, Tinkle plugged Dahlen right into practice, ed me throughout my life, watching him warm up and that never thought I'd play go through drills. "We real- college basketball, I can say ly kind of threw him into the now that I'm playing Division fire," Tinkle says. "And he I basketball," says Boswell. "That was always my driving responded." "Taking a year and a half off motivation. I'm proving peo(from basketball), it's tough," ple wrong but also proving to says Dahlen, confessing that myself that I can still play at a his head is still spinning after higher level than where I was

improving. Today is another step for our team." Also on Monday:

No. 6 Louisville 87, Savan-

Oregon State Beavers — clad

ingly long-gone basketball careers have risen two walk-on

in search of getting better and

nah State 26: LOUISVILLE, Ky.— Montrezl Harrell had 15

Zak Irvin scored 19 points and Caris LeVert added 18 to lead No. 19 Michigan to a70-63 win over Oregon on Monday night. The Wolverines (4-0) used an 8-0 run midway through the second half to snap a tie game and give them just the separa-

ning. From the ashes of seem-

coach Sean Miller said. "I can also flip it and make it a positive, because like every team at this time of the year, you're

lead against Savannah State.

No. 11 Kansas 87, Rider 60: LAWRENCE, Kan. — Brannen Greene scored 17 points off the

bench, Perry Ellis also had 17 points and Kansas beat Rider. No. 12 Villanova 77, No. 14 VCU 53: NEW YORK — Jay-

NeXt pp Oregon vs. No. 14 VCU 4:30 p.m., today TV ESPNII

Radio:KBND

The Wolverines never trailed and

Vaughn Pinkston scored 15 points and Darrun H i l liard

had 14 to lead Villanova past Virginia Commonwealth. No. 13 lowa State 84, Alabama 74:KANSAS CITY, Mo.

— Georges Niang scored 28 points, reserve Dustin Hogue had 17 and Iowa State beat Al-

abama to reach the CBE Classic championship game. No. 15 San Diego St. 92,

made 23 of 29 free throws to hold off the

BYU 87:LAHAINA, Hawaii-

Ducks. They'll play No. 12 Villanova in the championship game. Oregon takes on No. 14 VCU in the consolation game. Joseph Young had 20 points for the Ducks (3-1). Ducks forward Dwayne Benjamin had eight points and 11 rebounds before leaving late in the game with an apparent left ankle injury. Coach Dana Altman said he did not know how bad the ankle was hurt. The Ducks struggled to get Young open looks from the floor. Young, who averaged 26 points over the first three games, made only five field goals. He missed seven of nine

Aqeel Quinn scored 22 points and hit a big 3-pointer in each overtime, helping San Diego

3-pointers.

Santa Clara.

State outlast BYU 92-87 Maui Invitational.

No. 20Michigan St.79,Santa Clara 52: EAST LANSING, Mich. — Gavin Schilling had

career highs of 14 points and 11 rebounds, leading Michigan State to a victory over


C5 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 2014

NASDAQ

DOW 17,817.90 ~

4,754.89

+

O» To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbugetin.com/business. Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection. S&P500 ~ 2,069.41 ~

4q 92

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58$P 500

Tuesday, November 25, 201 4

Gaugingconsumers' confi dence Economists predict that a gauge of consumer confidence improved this month. The Conference Board's index on consumers' confidence rose last month to a seven-year high, as solid hiring raised expectations for economicgrowth.Job gains and falling gasoline prices have helped boost consumers' confidence this year. The latest consumer confidence index is due out today.

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EURO +.0049 1.2437+

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Stocks inched higher into record territory on Monday as investors scooped up shares of retailers in anticipation of a strong holiday shoppingseason. Technology stocks also posted big gains.Investors have been pushing stocks higher this month in anticipation that central banks in Japan, China and Europe will be successful in jolting their economies into faster growth with new stimulus measures. If the gains keep up through the end of this week, the Standard and Poor's 500 index will have notched its sixth weekly rise in a row. It last did that a year ago. Half of the 10 sectors in the S&P 500 rose, led by consumer discretionary stocks.

"

2,000

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StoryStocks

........ Close:17,817.90 Change: 7.84 (flat)

.

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Vol. (in mil.) 3,061 1,540 Pvs. Volume 3,791 1,788 Advanced 1924 1927 Declined 1 194 7 8 2 New Highs 1 61 1 2 2 New Lows 18 42

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StocksRecap

Consumer confidence

J

GOLD ~ $1,195.50 ~

10YRTNOTE 2.31% •

5 91

LGF

Ciose:$33.10+-0.15 or O Despite its sizeable box office take, 8 8 the studio's Mockingjay, Part 1 fell short of previous installments in the film series. $40

United Technologies

35

110

30

100

S 0 52-week range $24.54~

S 0 52-week range

N $3 5.74

UT X

Close:$108.79%-1.51 or -1.4% The unexpected retirement of CEO Louis Chenevert after six years put some pressure on shares of the defense conglomerate. $120

$97.30~

N $ 120 .66

Vol.:3.6m (2.8x avg.) P E: 25.1 Vol.:9.7m (2.3x avg.) PE: 16 . 1 Mkt. Cap:$4.63b Yiel d : 0.8% Mkt. Cap:$99.18b Yie l d: 2.2%

Exxon Mobil

XOM Close:$95.72 V-1.09 or -1.1% Analysts see crumbling crude prices if OPEC doesn't cut output when it meetsthi s week; Raymond James downgraded the oil company. $100

Trina Solar

TSL Close: $10.36 V-0.57 or -5.2% The cancellation of a huge project in Inner Mongolia forced the solar company to cut its shipment forecast for the entire year. $20

Alaska Air Group A LK 34.81 ~ 56.94 55. 3 3 +. 8 3 +1.5 L L L +50. 8 +4 5 .1 98 2 1 4 0. 5 0 V L +19.9 +26 .2 2 5 6 1 1 1. 2 7 Avista Corp A VA 26.78 ~ 35.98 33 . 8 0 -.10 -0.3 V Economic report card Bank of America B AC 14. 37 ~ 18.03 17. 1 8 +. 0 6 +0.4 L L L +10. 3 +1 0 .3 50287 16 0 . 20 BarrettBusiness B BS I 18 . 25 o — 102 . 20 23 . 06 + . 34 +1.5 L V V -75.1 -72.2 169 d d 0 .88f The U.S.economy isoutpacing 15 Boeing Co BA 116.32 ~ 144. 5 7 13 4.61 +1.83 +1.4 L L L -1.4 + 2 . 1 3 967 1 9 2 . 92 most of the developed world and 95 10 Cascade Baacorp CA C B 4 . 11 ~ 5.82 4.97 +.1 1 + 2 .3 L L T -5.0 -6.4 47 appears on track to extend its ColumbiaBokg COLB 2 3.59 ~ 3 0.3 6 27.97 +.20+0.7 L L L +1. 7 +6 .4 204 18 0.64f momentum this year. S 0 S 0 N The economy grew 4.6 percent Columbia Sportswear COLM 33.46 — o 44.98 44 .54 +1.23 +2.8 L L L +13.1 +31 .0 29 1 2 7 0. 6 0f 52-week range 52-week range Costco Wholesale COST 109.50 — o 14 0.83 139.80 + .08 $.0.1 L L L +17. 5 +1 3 .9 1 621 30 1 . 4 2 in the second quarter, reversing a $86.91 ~ $104.76 $8.67~ $18.77 t18.30 13 .54 -.04 -0.3 W W W -17.5 -14.9 6 1 85 slide in the first three months of the Craft Brew Alliance BR EW 10.07 r Vol.:10.2m (0.8x avg.) PE : 1 2.1 Vol.:8.1m (1.6x avg.) P E: .. . FLIR Systems F LIR 28.03 ~ 37.42 31.6 3 +. 1 2 $ .0.4 L W L +5.1 +7.8 813 22 0.4 0 year. Did the trend continue in the Hewlett Packard Mkt. Cap:$405.33 b Yi e ld: 2.9% Mkt.Cap:$855.75 m Yie ld: ... HPQ 2 5 . 09 — 0 38.25 37.50 + .24 +0.6 L L L +34.0 +51 .3 10780 14 0 . 6 4 third quarter? Find out today, when Intel Corp I NTC 23.40 ~ 36.46 36.2 5 +. 6 6 $ .1.9 L L L + 39.7 $. 4 4.6 32961 17 0 .96f Barrick Gold ABX Tesla Motors TSLA the Commerce Department Keycorp K EY 11.55 ~ 14.70 13.5 3 +. 2 9 + 2 .2 L L L +0.8 +4.2 1 2 901 13 0 . 2 6 delivers its latest estimate of U.S. Kroger Co Close: $12.58V-0.27 or -2.1% Close: $246.72L3.94 or 1.6% K R 3 5 .13 ~ 58.98 58. 5 1 +. 1 4 +0.2 L L L + 48. 0 +4 0 .6 2 657 19 0 .74f Gold miners are under pressure as Elon Musk told Der Spiegel that the economic growth. Economists Lattice Semi LSCC 5.30 ~ 9.19 6.63 -.01 - 0.2 V L V +20 . 8 + 2 0. 3 4 8 4 3 0 the dollar, in which commodities are electric car maker is talking with project that the U.S. economy grew LA Pacific L PX 12.46 ~ 18.96 15. 5 0 +. 4 4 +2.9 L L L -16.3 -6.7 2205 dd traded, rises and the dollar index BMW about a possible battery techat an annual rate of 3.2 percent in MDU Resources MDU 24 . 85 o — 36.0 5 25. 89 + . 1 0 +0.4 L V V -15.3 -12.7 94 5 1 6 0 .73f hits a four-year high. nology partnership. the July-September quarter. Mentor Graphics MEN T 18.25 ~ 24.31 22. 0 9 + . 1 9 +0.9 L L L - 8.2 + 1 . 8 5 0 2 1 9 0 . 2 0 $20 $300 L L +27.2 +31 .4 33918 19 1 .24f Microsoft Corp MSFT 34.63 ~ 50.05 4 7. 5 9 -.39 -0.8 V Nike Ioc 8 N KE 69.85 ~ 98.96 97. 9 5 +. 5 3 +0.5 L L L +24.6 +2 6 .0 2 503 33 1 .12f 15 250 Nordstrom Inc JWN 54.90 — o 75.87 76 .26 +1.17 +1.6 L L L + 23.4 +22 .9 1 1 33 2 0 1. 3 2 Nwst Nat Gas NWN 40.05 ~ 47.75 4 6. 4 0 -.19 -0.4 V L L +8.4 +14 . 0 81 21 1. 8 6f 0 N S S 0 PaccarIac PCAR 53.59 — 0 68.81 6 7 . 34 + . 3 6 $ .0.5 L L L + 13.8 $. 2 2.1 1 176 1 8 0. 8 8 52-week range 52-week range Planar Systms PLNR 1.93 ~ 7.94 7.38 +. 0 9 $.1.2 L L L $.19 0.6 +234.4 6 3 0 4 3 $70.90~ $21.45 $116.10~ $291.42 Plum Creek P CL 38.70 ~ 46.99 41.6 6 +. 3 0 +0 .7 L L L -10.4 - 1.2 1388 4 0 1 . 76 V ol.:11.1m (0.8x avg.) PE: . . . Vol.:4.8m (O.sx avg.) P E: .. . Prec Castparts PCP 215.09 ~ 275. 0 9 23 8.37 +1.38 +0.6 L L L -11.5 - 6.5 91 8 1 9 0 . 12 Mkt. Cap:$14.65 b Y i e ld: 1.6% Mkt. Cap:$30.93 b Yield: ... ~ L L +1 9 . 4 + 1 7.6 9 7 0 3 0.9 2 Safeway Ioc SWY 26.69 ~ 36.03 34. 8 2 ... Schoitzer Steel SCHN 2 1.41 ~ 33.32 2 3. 6 4 -.03 -0.1 W L W -27.6 - 20.1 245 8 2 0 . 75 Denny's DENN Prosensa Holding RNA Sherwin Wms SHW 170.63 — 0 24 4 .86242.03 - .02 . . . ~ L L +31 . 9 + 3 0.9 4 2 9 2 8 2 . 2 0 Close:$9.59%0.70 or 7.9% Close: $18.60L7.16 or 62.6% StancorpFncl S FG 57.77 ~ 70.35 66. 6 4 +. 8 9 +1.4 L w L +0.6 +4.9 167 13 1. 3 0f Remodeled restaurants and improv- BioMarin will pay $680 million in StarbucksCp SBUX 67.93 ~ 82.37 80.5 2 +. 7 6 +1 .0 L L L +2.7 -0.8 4659 30 1.28f ing trends in the family-dining sector cash for the Dutch biotech company bring an upgrade for the restaurain a bid to strengthen its pipeline of Triquiot Semi TQNT 7.61 — o 24.19 24 .62 + . 99 +4.2 L L L +195 .2 + 213.4 4293 c c genetic disorder drugs. Umppua Holdi ngs UM P Q 14.94 ty 19.65 17 .29 + . 1 8 +1 .0 L L L -9.7 +0. 8 1 1 51 2 3 0. 6 0 teur from Janney Capital. Better quayter? $10 $20 US Bancorp U SB 38.10 ~ 44.35 44. 3 7 +. 4 0 +0.9 L L L +9.8 +15 . 6 4 7 85 1 5 0 . 9 8 Hewlett-Packard reports its latest WashingtonFedl WA F D 19.52 ~ 2 4.5 3 22.05 +.29+ 1.3 L L L -5.3 -3.4 29 0 1 4 0 .59f 15 quarterly financial results today. Wells Fargo & Co WF C 4 3.21— o 54.25 54 .10 + . 29 +0.5 L L L +19.2 +2 5 .1 10924 13 1 . 40 10 Beyond the PC and printer Weyerhaeuser WY 2 7 .48 — o 34.60 34 .83 + . 4 8 +1 .4 L L L + 10.3 +20 .1 2 8 14 2 6 1. 1 6 maker's earnings, investors will be S 0 N S 0 N listening for an update on HP's 52-week range 52-week range turnaround plan. The company has $6.13 $9.66 $3.95~ $18.99 taken steps to streamline its DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenct included. b -Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. 9 -Amount declaredcr paid in last t2 months. f - Current Vol.:1.3m (2.0x avg.) P E: 30.9 Vol.:5.5m (17.8x avg.) P E: . . . business this year. It has slashed annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum cf dividends paidafter stock split, cc regular rate. I —Sumcf dividends paidthis year.Most recent Mkt. Cap:$812.53 m Yield : ... Mkt. Cap:$667.78 m Yield : ... dividend wasomitted cr deferred. k - Declared cr paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend its payroll, eliminating more than announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate nct known, yield nct shown. r —Declared cr paid ic preceding 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash SOURCE: Sungard AP value cn ex-distrittuticn date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a clcsed-end fund - nc P/E ratio shown. cc —P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss ic last12 months. 34,000 jobs. Thousands more were slated to be cut in the August-October quarter. NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO HPQ $37.50 3-month T-bill . 0 1 ... +0 . 01 .07 $40 Shares of Lions Gate Entertainment fell Monday after last year's "Hunger Games: Catching Fire" and the $153 $25.26 6 -month T-bill . 0 6 .06 ... L L L .09 box office receipts for the latest installment of "The million opening of the 2012 original. 35 52-wk T-bill .12 .12 L L .12 Hunger Games" series fell short of Analysts at B. Riley 8 Co. wrote in a note to clients that although the box office fell expectations. Even so, it's estimated that 2 -year T-note . 5 0 .50 ... V L .28 The yield on the 30 the movie still had the biggest opening short of most estimates, they believe 5-year T-note 1.60 1.61 -0.01 W L W 1 3. 5 10-year of the year with $123 million at the building momentum and stronger Treasury held at 10-year T-note 2.31 2.31 ... V L V 2.75 '14 w eekend box office,according to overseas results will move the final 2.31 percent 30-year T-bond 3.02 3.02 3.83 studio estimates Sunday. tally closer to its estimate. Monday. Yields Operating The bar was set high. Shares are up 5 percent this affect rates on 1.01 NET 1YR 6 EPS I6 Mockingjay: Part 1" opened well year after rising 93 percent in consumer and BONDS YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO below the $158 million debut of 2013. business loans. Barcl aysLongT-Bdldx 2.85 2.86 -0.01 W W 3.6 2 4Q '13 4 Q '14 * * 5-yr Lions Gate Entertainment (LGF) Monday's close:$33.10 P ric e changeY TD 3 - y r BondBuyerMuniIdx 4.40 4.40 ... L W 5. 09 Price-earnings ratio: 14 Barcl aysUSAggregate 2.24 2.26 -0.02 W L W 2.34 LGF 4.6% 58 .0 45.9 based on past 12 months' results 52-WEEK RANGE Price-earnings ratio: 24 PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield 6.12 6.20 -0.08 L L L 5.73 36 ( B ased on past 12 month results) Div. y ield: 0.8% D ivi d end:$0.28 RATE FUNDS Dividend: $0.64 Div. Yield: 1.7% M oodys AAA Corp ldx 3.94 3.97 -0.03 w w 4.7 0 *annualized AP Source: FaotSet YEST3.25 .13 Source: Facteet Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.89 1.89 .. . W L W 1.6 3 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 3.09 3.12 -0.03 L L L 3.21 1 YRAGO3.25 .13 AP AmdFocus SelectedMutualFunds .

.

.

:::""." Mockingjay disappoints

Hartford Capital Appreciation is in the midst of making changes Marhetsummary to prepare for the retirement of Most Active long-time manager Saul Pannell; NAME VOL (BOs) LAST CHG no date has been announced. Petrobras 574903 S&P500ETF 529135 BkofAm 502872 Apple Inc s 457263 MktVGold 368444 AT&T Inc 364215 iShEMkts 353545 Microsoft 339175 Intel 329612 FordM 322132

10.50 -.34 207.26 +.58 17.18 +.06 118.63 +2.16 19.59 -.29 34.70 -.58 42.09 -.35 47.59 -.39 36.25 +.66 15.67 +.24

Hartford CapAprA m VALUE

ITHAX

B L EN D GR OWTH

Gainers NAME

L AST CHG 1 8.60 + 7 .16 8 .65 +2 . 5 7 InterCld wt 3 .20 +.95 FivePrime 2 0.70 +4 . 9 5 Ashford n 127.00 + 22.48 PlatUnd 7 4.19 t 1 2 .92 USMD 8 .50 +1 . 3 0 OversShB u 5 .42 +.82 NV5 wt 6 .00 +.85 Borderfr n 9 .78 +1 . 3 2

Prosensa Cimatron

%C H G +6 2 .6 +4 2 .3 c85 +42 . 2 03 +3 1 . 4 + 2 1 .5 073 +2 1 . 1 MomingstarOwnershipZone™ +1 8 . 1 e Fund target represents weighted +17 . 8 Q +16 . 5 average of stock holdings +1 5 .6 • Represents 75% of fuod's stock holdings

Losers NAME Can-Fite

LAST 4.1 4

O neHorizn 2 . 22 B iocept n 2 . 90 P hotMdx h 2 . 04 MolsCoor A 89.51

CHG %CHG -.66 -13.8 -.28 -11.2 -.36 -11.0 -.25 -10.9 -9.94 -10.0

Foreign Markets NAME

LAST CHG %CHG Paris 4,368.44 + 21.21 + A 9 London 6,729.79 -20.97 -.31 Frankfurt 9,785.54 +52.99 + . 54 Hong Kong23,893.14 +456.02 +1.95 -.03 Mexico 44,621.07 -12.21 Milan 19,925.82 -28.69 -.14 Tokyo 17,357.51 +56.65 + . 33 Stockholm 1,455.40 + 7.87 + . 54 Sydney 5,349.00 +56.90 +1.08 Zurich 9,058.51 -22.04 -.24

CATEGORY Large Blend MORNINGSTAR RATING™ * * N N N ASSETS $5,792 million EXP RATIO 1.14%

MANAGER Frank Catrickes SINCE 1998-12-30 RETURNS3-MO +2.6 YTD +9.1 1-YR +12.6 3-YR ANNL +26.2 5-YR-ANNL +12.6

TOP 5HOLDINGS Bristol-Myers Squibb Company

Apple Inc Micron Technology Inc Gilead Sciences Inc Actavis PLC

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 American Funds AmBalA m 26 . 29 +.82+9.0 +11.0 +17.1+12.2 A A A CaplncBuA m 61.42 +.89 +8.3 +9.9 +13.8 +9.3 A A A CpWldGrlA m 47.78 +.21 +7.1 +9.9 +19.3 +9.6 8 8 D EurPacGrA m 49.47 +.26 +0.8 +4.3 +15.0 +6.4 A 8 8 FnlnvA m 56. 1 0 +.14+9.8 +13.5 +22.2+13.9 D C C GrthAmA m 47.59 +.17+10.7 +14.5 +23.6+14.2 C 8 D IncAmerA m 22.88 +.81 +9.4 +11.1 +15.8+11.6 A 8 A InvCoAmA m 41.56 +.85 +14.5 +18.1 +23.6+14.1 A 8 C NewPerspA m39.33 +.14 +4.7 +7.8 +19.2+11.1 C 8 8 WAMutlnvA m43.44 +.82 +11.6 +14.2 +21.9+15.1 8 C A Dodge &Cox Income 13.91 +.81 +5.4 +5 .5 + 5.0 +5.2A A 8 IntlStk 45.14 +.88 +4.9 +7 .4+19.7 +9.1 A A A Stock 184.17 +.88 +10.6 +14.0 +27.6+15.9 8 A A Fidelity Contra 104. 3 9 +.50+9.7 +13.2 +21.8+15.3 D C 8 ContraK 104 . 41 +.50+9.8 +13.3 +21.9+15.5 D C 8 LowPriStk d 50.76 +.20 +7.5 +10.1 +22.2+16.3 E D C Fideli S artao 500 l dxAdvtg 73.63 +.21+14.0 +17.0 +23.8+15.7 A 8 A FraakTemp-Franklio Income C m 2. 49 -.81 +5.7 + 7 .0 +13.1+10.1 B A A IncomeA m 2. 4 7 ... +6 . 7 +8 . 1 +13.8+10.7 A A A Oakmark Intl I 25.34 +.16 -3.7 -2.5 +20.1+10.5 E A A Oppenheimer RisDivA m 21 . 80 +.12 +11.2 +14.8 +19.6+13.3 C E D RisDiv8 m 19 . 46 +.10 +10.3 +13.9 +18.6+12.3 D E E RisDivC m 19 . 34 +.11 +10.4 +13.9 +18.7+12.4 C E E SmMidValA m48.13 +.28 +9.1 +12.2 +20.5+13.7 C E E SmMidValB m40.46 +.24 +8.3 +11.3 +19.6+12.7 D E E T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 34.87 + .82 +7.7 + 9 .6 +21.4+13.7 E D C GrowStk 57.9 0 + .31+10.1 +15.2 +24.6+16.7 C A A HealthSci 75.8 5 +.93+29.8 +33.0 +41.3+28.3 8 A A Newlncome 9. 5 8 +.81+ 5.5 + 5.1 + 3.3 +4.3 8 C D Vanguard 500Adml 191.53 +.55 +14.0 +17.0 +23.8+15.7 A 8 A 500lnv 191.50 +.55 +13.9 +16.8 +23.7+15.6 A 8 8 CapOp 54.35 +.35 +17.7 +20.3 +28.5+17.1 A A A Eqlnc 32.65 ... +11.9 +13.9 +22.1+16.2 C C A IntlStkldxAdm 27.35 +.89 0 . 0 +1.5 +12.9 NA 8 D StratgcEq 34.86 +.26 +13.5 +17.4 +27.2+19.9 A A A TgtRe2020 29.19 +.87 +7.7 +9.1 +13.8 +9.9 A A A Tgtet2025 17.80 +.85 +7.9 +9.6 +15.1+10.6 A 8 8 TotBdAdml 10.86 +5.2 +4.6 +2.5 +4.0 C D D Totlntl 16.35 +.85 -0.1 +1.4 +12.8 +5.2 8 D D TotStlAdm 51.96 +.20 +12.7 +16.0 +23.9+16.2 8 8 A TotStldx 51.93 +.20 +12.6 +15.8 +23.7+16.0 8 8 A USGro 32.61 +.17 +13.7 +18.1 +24.6+15.4 A A B Welltn 41.80 +.89 +10.0 +11.5 +16.5+11.3 A A A FAMILY

PCT 3.28 2.16 1.89 Fund Footnotes: t$Fee - covering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, cr redemption 1.82 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales cr 1.73 redemption fee.Source: Mcrnirgstar.

SU HIS

Commodities

FUELS

The price of U.S. crude oil fell Monday as traders looked ahead to an OPEC meeting on Thursday and the possibility of a production cut. In metals trading, gold, silver and copper fell.

Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) Heating Oil (gal) Natural Gas (mmbtu) UnleadedGas(gal)

Foreign Exchange The dollar rose versus the

Japanese yen,

but fell against the British

pound and euro. The ICE U.S. Dollar index,

which compares the dollar's value to a basket of key currencies, fell.

h5Q HS

METALS

Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz)

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 75.78 76.51 -0.95 -23.0 2.07 2.09 - 0.48 + 8 . 3 2.40 2.40 -0.37 -22.2 -1.9 4.15 4.27 -2.70 2.03 2.06 -1.12 -27.0

CLOSE PVS. 1195.50 1197.50 16.38 16.39 1207.50 1227.30 3.00 3.04 789.75 794.55

%CH. %YTD -0.17 -0.5 -0.09 -15.3 -1.61 -11.9 -1.02 -1 2.7 -0.60 +1 0.1

AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.70 1.71 -0.82 +26.0 Coffee (Ib) 1.90 1.90 +71.3 Corn (bu) 3.68 3.73 -1.41 -1 2.9 Cotton (Ib) 0.59 0.60 -1.00 -30.1 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 334.70 333.00 +0.51 -7.1 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.48 1.44 + 2.81 + 8 . 8 Soybeans (bu) 10.34 10.39 -0.51 -21.2 Wheat(bu) 5.42 5.47 -0.91 -10.4 1YR.

MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5698 +.0051 +.32% 1.6208 Canadian Dollar 1.1 299 +.0059 +.52% 1.0532 USD per Euro 1.2437 +.0049 +.39% 1.3551 JapaneseYen 118.29 + . 5 0 + .42% 1 01.34 Mexican Peso 13. 6 576 +.0541 +.40% 12.9736 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.8592 +.0005 +.01% 3.5613 Norwegian Krone 6 . 7770 -.0220 -.32% 6.0695 South African Rand 11.0334 +.0682 +.62% 10.0667 Swedish Krona 7.4 3 54 -.0321 -.43% 6.5834 Swiss Franc .9668 -.0033 -.34% . 9 072 ASIA/PACIFIC 1.1612 +.0068 +.59% 1.091 0 Australian Dollar Chinese Yuan 6.1417 +.0168 +.27% 6.0940 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7560 -.0024 -.03% 7.7527 Indian Rupee 61.905 +.265 +.43% 62.855 Singapore Dollar 1.3032 +.0039 +.30% 1.2496 South KoreanWon 1114.50 +2.41 +.22% 1061.81 Taiwan Dollar 3 1.03 + . 1 2 +.39% 29.64


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 2014

DEEDS Deschutes County • Signature Homebuilders LLC toElizabeth R.Collings and Gerald E. Thomas, trustees of theCollingsThomasFamilyTrust, Riverrim PUD,Phase10, Lot 404, $490,000 • Marla A. Hooverand Maria Peterson toJohn M.and Holly R. Denes,Paulina Peaks, Phase1,Lot1, $215,000 • Pahlisch Homes Inc.to Ertan R. Esmer,Eighth Street Cottages,Lot17, $250,087 • Roger G.Huntress Jr.and Ginetta Huntress toAmber G. andToddBileter, Heights of Bend, Phase 2, Lot40, $374,500 • Hayden Homes LLCto David M.andLindaM. Gaudette, GlenedenII, Lot 43, $213,013 • Gary C. Dohertyto Selena and Anthony lorg, Ni-LahSha, Phases2and3, Lot89, $289,900 • James J., Lynda,Jeremy J., Gabrielle M.andJames Feld to Scott B.and MariaJ. Chernoff, trustees ofthe S&J Chernoff FamilyTrust, and GrahamandJulie Chernoff, trustees oftheGrahamand Julie Chernoff 2007Trust, River Village III, Lot 8,Block 18, $539,000 • Jarred M. Bowmanto Aubrey Haverly,Partition Plat 2000-65, Parcel 2,$164,900 • Wayne A.Jordan to Bilie L Cartwright, Deschutes River Woods,Lot41, BlockJ, $162,500 • Craig E.andDulcie C. ChatwoodtoStephenW . Carlson, SouthMoreland Acres, Lot25,$180,000 • Pahlisch Homes Inc. to FrederickandTamara Graeber, trustees ofthe FrederickandTamara GraeberJoint Living Trust, Eighth StreetCottages,Lot 7, $252,500 • Daniel W.andIris R. Winey, trustees oftheWiney Family RevocableInter VivosTrust, toWineyLLC,Deschutes River Crossing,Phases3 and 4, Lot71,$287,000 • Tetherow Glen58LLCto FletcherChamberlin and Linda Johnson,Tetherow, Phase 2,Lot1, $209,400 • Craig C. andVickie L Coover toCharlesS.and Mary L. Keeran,DeerParkII, Lot17, Block14,$321,500 • Nathan B. and Heather L. Frederickson,HeatherL. MacLean toMark L and Linda K.Higginson, Broken Top, Phase 3-B, Lot310, $570,000 • David P.andMichelle F. McRae toTimothy A. and Lori J. Causey,CascadeView Estates, Phase8, Lot277, $499,900 • Kathryn L. Herrmann to Susan L Clark,Parks at BrokenTop, Lot50, $175,000 • Bruce C. andBonnie D. Whitneyto ZacharyA. and Darci S.Hagemeister, DiamondBar Ranch, Phase 3, Lot114, $225,000 • Donald 0. and Elizabeth G. Nappen to Christopher P. Spoto,Starwood, Lot21, Block2, $310,000 • Michael G. and DebraK. Smolich toKeith W.and Amelia M.Harris, Riverrim PUD, Phase2, Lot186, $612,000 • Citimortgage Inc.to Todd S. andMegan0. Straughan, First Addition toChaparral Estates, Lot11, Block3, $380,000 • Jeff Perryto Joyce S. Briggs, NorthwestTownsite Cos SecondAddition to Bend, Lots1 and4, Block18, $329,500 • Gregory C.andSueA. Johnson toCharlesR. and Kathleen R.Popish, First Addition toChaparral Estates, Lots12 and13, Block1, $332,000 • Mac andKatherine MacMillan toKarlaA.LuffLopezandStephenJ. Lopez, Westside Pines,Phase3, Lot 16, $350,000 • Susie M. Parr, trustee of the Susie M.Parr Revocable Trust, to SaadF.Jazrawi, Deschutes, Lots 3and 4, Block12, • Dale and Julie Grafto Sheila K.Odle, CanyonPoint Estates, Phase3, Lot 56, $215,000 • Arbutus L Stamas to Jason B.Stupfel, Williamson Park,Lot3and 5, Block 6,$249,500 • Tyson C.Keeverand Quinn M. FaheyKeever to Matthew and SereneHarrison, Aspen Rim, Lot143, $458,000 • Cody Radantto Donald 0. andElizabethG.Nappen, Summit Crest Phase1,Lot 63, $252,800 • Jennifer L. Solizto William and Lara D.Chan, PP199723, Parcel 3,$185,000 • Pahlisch HomesInc.to

EXECUTIVE FILE

nem 0 ent ratesta s ut

What:Eastlake Framing LLC What it does:Sells fine art and photos, frames works of art and restores oil paintings Pictured:DebSpicer Where:1335 NWGalveston Ave., Bend Employees:Two Phone:541-389-3770 Weh:www.eastlakeframing.com

By Joseph Ditzler

Crook County and 9.3 percent in Jefferson County.

The Bulletin

Unemployment levels

across the region are lower by a percentage point or more

Oregon, accordingto numbers released Mondayby the Oregon Employment Department. "This ... looks very similar

from October 2013, the depart-

to what we've seen the last six

Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

months or so, job growth at a steadypacebut the unemployment rate is not changing," said Regional Economist Damon Runberg, who prepared the monthly report. "What's diff'er-

ent, thebigthingIpulled from it, there's significant growthin the labor force."

About 1,400morepeople were employed or looking for

Washington County tookfirst

place with nearly 10,000new residents, accordingto PSU es-

Bureau of Labor Statistics. Job growth improved in

timates released Nov. 18.

would lose 670 jobs in October but lost only290. Retailers add-

two-thirds, she said. Eastlake rode out the bad times without

losing any employees. "We have a huge following of ultra-loyal fans," she said Friday. "During the downturn, they were incredibly loyal but they came in only once every two years rather than twice a year." With the 2007-09 recession in the rear view mirror and interior

design on homeowners' minds once again, business is picking up for Eastlake Framing. Friday, Spicer consulted with a client on the best way to reframe two oil

paintings, the largest of them 8 feet long by 4 feet high. "You know you've done it

rience, areamong the bestframers around, Putnam said. Framing is not Spicer's only skill. A former photograph retoucher who removed the blemishes from faces in thousands of

high school portraits, today she's a certified oil painting restoration specialist, which includes restoring original frames. She stores the needed chemicals in an office cabinet but works on

each project at home in a dedicated room off her garage. "It's more scientific and de-

tailed than you think," she said. The value in a piece of art or

photography, for most of her clients, whether in framing or restoration, is often measured

in sentiment, Spicer said. However,she said shelearned after

correctly when the frame is the

one painting restoration that the

bridge between the artwork and

piece was valued at $1 million. Spicer said she takes nothing

its environment," Spicer said. Mike Putnam, a professional photographer in Bend known for his landscape photographs of Central Oregon, makes Eastlake Framing his go-to shop. Eastlake has framed his work for all 15 years he's been a professional photographer, he said. "They're the best frame shop I've ever worked with and I've worked with others in the past.

They're efficient, they're fair, and they're super reliable," Put-

ed 130 new hires as the holiday shopping season unfolded, according to Employment Departmentnumbers. Elsewhere, unemployment

for granted. "This is the health-

iest year since the downturn, althoughyou can'tkeep comparing it to the peak. We may never see that again," she said. "I'm so thankful." She plans an anniversary party 5-9 p.m., Dec. 12 at the shop. Photographers whose work Eastlake Framing has showcased in its Artist Spotlight

• are popular now in framing? Deb Spicer: • Mid-century modern mixed with repurposed industrial. It's all about mixing materials now, (for example) stainless steel with the welding bead exposed mixed with distressed wood with glass thrown in

A•

the middle.... Most

everything has a clean line to it, not a lot of fussy detail.

Q •• Howdoyou learn the techniques associated with pairing the right frame with a piece of art? • You're either • born with it or

you're not. There's a lot with this job that

you're not able to be taught.

By Matt Day

the past year, or 18percent

growth, Runbergsaid.

SEATTLE — Microsoft is suing the Internal Revenue Ser-

Quinn Emanuel Urquhart &

vice in an effort to get details of an agreementbetween thetax regulator and a law firm examining how Microsoft tallied its sales between subsidiaries.

lated to the tax audit, Microsoft

of the contractbetweenthe IRS

company and its international

eventually proposing to provide a response by Dec. 9, Mi-

subsidiaries. Microsoft said the IRS is looking over the company's income tax returns for its fiscal years 2004 through 2009. The

with a combined 36 years expe-

Bookout, Parkland, Lot77, $201,950 • Jamesand Marilyn Elliott, trustees of the Elliott Family Trust to Melissa A.Thorne, Skyliner Summit at Broken Top, Phase 2,Lot 57, $418,000 • York & York LLC to Margaret J. King, Ballpark View, Lot 5, $229,900 • Charles B. andJanet L.P. McKnight to Michael J. and DianeC. Sterle, PonderosaEstate, Lot 7, Block1, $395,500 • Kevin G. andMelinda M. Sahli to Roger L and Wendy C.Aikin, Bridge Creek Village atBroken Top, Lot19, $375,000 •ChadandMicheleOoten to Roberta L. Leonhardy, Whispering PinesSecond Addition, Lot 3, Block25, $260,000 • Hayden HomesLLCto Michael D.and Christine A. Coppedge,trustees

— Reporter: 541-617-7815, jditzlerlbendbulletin.com

of the CoppedgeFamily Trust, Gleneden2, Lot 28, $221,316 • Daniel M. and Marykay Taylorto Douglas E.Kulper, Golf CourseEstatesat Aspen Lakes,Phase2, Lot 45, $265,500 • Kenneth D. and Flavia E. McBride toChristopher and Nicole Scariano,Aspen Rim, Lot 43, $480,000 • Kenneth M. Collins, Allen F.Evansand Michael A. Hawbecker toDuff A. Staley, SecondAddition to Bend Park, Lot11, Block 142, $235,000 • Laina A. Sappington to Philip S. McCauley,trustee of the Philip S.McCauley Living Trust, Township 14, Range13,Section 20, $275,000 • Jamie Stanley Custom Homes LLCto Steven D. and Mary K.Oldham,Tall Pines Fifth Addition, Lot 4, Block 32, $232,000 • Bradley S. andKristin

D. Holcomb toTim P.Van Blaricom, RiverMeadows Second Addition, Lot 32, $340,000 • Jennifer A. Blair, trustee of the Jennifer A.Blair Trust and Michael R.Blair, trustee of theMichael R. Blair Trust toCameron Ross, Shelvin ParkVillas, Lot17, $449,900 • Floyd C. Antonsen and Elizabeth Aguilar-Antonsen to Lori Barin, JulinaPark, Lot 35, $215,117 • Wells Fargo Bankto David Wines,Elkhorn Estate PhaseFive, Lot 69, $189,000 • Bridges at Shadow Glen LLCtoPahlisch Homes Inc, Bridges atShadow Glen Phase2A, Lot110, 121, 122,144,$315,000 •ClaudiaM.RosstoJames A. Mandel Jr.andKaraS. Mandel, EmpireVillage Phase1, 2, 3,Lot10, $287300

and QuinnEmanuel.The IRS twice said it needed an exten-

sion of the 20 days required by law to respond to the request, crosoft said.

An IRS spokesman said the agency doesn'tcomment on pending litigation.

Honda fails toreport deaths

Eastlake Framing, Spicer said she sees no end in sight. "The biggest difference beis this is our passion," she said. "This is what gets us up in the morning."

In September, Microsoft said it filed a Freedom of Informa-

tion Act request seeking details

separate average framers from

tween us and our competition

said in a lawsuit filed in federal court in Washington, D.C.

The underlying tax matter

The Associated Press

With 30 years behind her at

Sullivan to provide services re-

is a big one for Microsoft. At issue is the IRS's look at "transferpricing,"or how companies charge for goods and services bought and sold between a

By Tom Krioher

Beutler and Diane Offenfeld,

— Reporter: 541-617-7815, jditzler@bendbufietin.com

IRS in May entered into a $2.1 million contract with law firm

The Seattle Times

are planned.

Izaac andJenni Ross, Bridges atShadowGlen, Phase1, Lot44, $434,275 • Delmond 0. andPatricia M. Tilgner to DannyR. Barnes, Deschutes River Recreation Homesites Unit 9 Part 2, Lot 98, Block 58, $159,000 • Jim A. andOnnaStewart to Karen L.Savageand Laura Schweger-Savage, Broken TopPhase2-E, Lot 170, $860,000 • Pahlisch HomesInc. to William J. andEva Walters, Parkland, Lot 75, $255,950 • Wells Fargo Bankto Erin Bliss, Deschutes River Recreation Homesites Unit 8 Part1, Lot40, Block88, $224,900 • Terry L and Lynda J. Reed toJeffrey L. Anderson andLetty O'Neil Anderson, GannonPoint, Lot 9, $247,900 • Pahlisch HomesInc. to Gregory andAngela

whichit's expected to dedine. Builders added 730jobs over

Microsoft suesIRSfor details of tax agreement with firm

nam said. "There are some small sort of tricks to the trade that

tight and they're very precise compared to some people. Everything they can do, they do very well." Spicer's employees, Denise

sector held firm in a season in

• What styles

events are expected to attend and live music and refreshments

great framers. Their corners are

"Folks are comingto Deschutes County; it's growing like gangbusters," Runberg said Monday."It's not all retirees thatarecoming here.Theseare working-age folks that are contributingto the labor force." Elsewhere, the construction

rates remained unchanged in October at 10.1percent in

something of a luxury item.

framing shops in town by about

Deschutes County the largest

data from the state Employment Department and federal

percent. Normally, the county

The recession that arrived in 2007reduced the number of

Portland State Universityshow Deschutes County grewby 2.4 percent this year over2013, or nearly4000people. That gave

month lastyear, accordingto

ment rate dipped 0.1percent from the previous month to 7.8

for a shop that provides what Eastlake owner Deb Spicer describes as

estimates for Oregon from

percentage increase in the state, although in sheernumbers

seasonally adjustedunemploy-

Eastlake Framing celebrates 30 years in business in December, a feat

ment reported. New arrivals are adding to the growing labor force in Central Oregon, alongwiththe once-discouraged unemployed now seeking work as economic conditions improve, Runberg said. Preliminary population

work in October than the same

Deschutes County and the

By Joseph Ditzler •The Bulletin

Unemployment numbers

showed little or no improvement in October across Central

more than 1,700 injury and

The company said it filed documents detailing the lapses on Monday with regulators. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration

death claims about its vehicles

had demanded anexplanation

DETROIT — Honda is admitting that it failed to report

to U.S. safety regulators, a vio- on Nov. 3. The agency said at lation of federal law. the time that Honda may have The automaker said that it

failed to report incidents relat-

found out about the omissions ed to air bags made by Takata in 2011, yet it took about three years to take action.

Corp. as well as other defective parts.

BEST OFTHE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • SCOREfree business counseling:Business counselors conductfree 30-minute one-on-one conferenceswith local entrepreneurs; check in at the library deskon the second floor; free; 5:30-7 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St.; www. SCORECentral0regon. org. • Recruitment, Interviewingand Onboarding:Learnto attract good candidates and hire thebest fit; part of COCC's Leadership series; $95, registration required; 8 a.m.-noon; Central Oregon Community College, 2600NW College Way,Bend; 541-383-7270. DEC. 2 • SCOREfree business

counseling:Business counselors conductfree 30-minute one-on-one conferenceswith local entrepreneurs; check in at the library deskon the secondfloor; free; 5:30-7 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St.; www. SCORECentral0regon. org DEC. 3 • BusinessStartup Class:Learn toturn a greatideainto a successfulbusiness; $29, registration required; 11a.m.-1 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building,1027 NW Trenton Ave.,Bend; 541-383-7290, sbdcO cocc.edu orwww.cocc. edu/sbdc/ DEC. 4 • Recruitment, Interviewingand Dnboarding:Learnto

attract good candidates and hirethe bestfit; part of COCC'sLeadership series; $95, registration required; 8a.m.noon; Central Oregon Community College, 2600NW CollegeW ay, Bend; 541-383-7270. DEC. 5 • Open House: 8 a.m.-6 p.m.;Warren's Western Emporium, 337 S. RailroadAve., Redmond; 541350-2876 orwww. bubwarren.com DEC. 6 • Open House:8 a.m.-6 p.m.;Warren's Western Emporium, 337 S. RailroadAve., Redmond; 541350-2876 orwww. bubwarren.com • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday's Bulletin or visit bendbulletin.com/bizcal



D2 THE BULLETIN• TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 2014

FOOD

omatoama avo u oo sie ic By Julie Rothman

RECIPE FINDER

The Baltimore Sun

Helen Wallace of Hurley, New York, was looking for a recipe for tomato jam or preserves made with honey. Her

Looking for a hard-tofind recipe or cananswer a request? Write to Julie Rothman, Recipe Finder, TheBaltimore Sun,

mother made it in the 1950s,

and Wallace doesn't know how she did it. Mary Feigley, of Baltimore, shared arecipe for making tomato jam with honey. Tomato jam i s

501 N. Calvert St., Balti-

more, MD 21278, or email baltsunrecipefinder@ gmail.com. Namesmust accompany recipes for them to be published.

e s sentially a

fancy ketchup substitute that can be used as an accompa-

/

v

~QI~

Tomato Jam

Tomato jam is essentially a fancy

Makes 3 half-pint jars.

ketchup substitute

3 Ibs firm, ripe tomatoes (about

that can be used as an accompaniment for both savory and sweet foods.

fQ

W4

8 C), cored and diced 1 C honey 1/ C granulated sugar r/ tsp lemon zest 2 TBS lemon juice 2 vanilla bean pods, split Pinch of fine sea salt

BillHogan/Chicago Tnbune/TNS

Roasted red peppers from ajar never tasted so good as when

into the depths of winter.

In a large, nonreactive pot, combine ingredients, including both niment for both savory and Billie McElroy, of Red- vanilla pods. Simmer over medisweet foods. type of jam. mond, is looking for the rec- um-low heat, stirring occasionalAs foolproofrecipes go, If you don't want to fool ipe for the "original" mayon- ly, until mixture is very thick and "jammy," about1i/2 hours. Discard there is nothing much simw ith sterilization, this j am naise cake. pler than tomato jam — just will keep in a jar in the reIsabelle Burell of Parkville, vanilla pods. combine all the ingredients frigerator for about a week Maryland, is looking for the If canning, spoon into hot, sterin a heavy, nonreactive pot or inthe freezer for a couple recipe for the stewed toma- ilized jars and follow basic direcand cook them down until of months. However, I think toes that were served at the tions for canning. they are t h ick an d s t icky. it's worth the extra effort to now-closed Perring Place If not canning, let jam cool, then You don't have to peel or seed go through the canning pro- restaurant in Parkville. She store in refrigerator or freezer. The the tomatoes, and just about cess, and it's not that diffi- said the restaurant would jam will keep in the refrigerator for any type of firm ripe tomato cult. That way you'll be able never give her the recipe, about a weekandcan be frozen for — from cherry to heirloom to enjoy the last of the flavor- and she was hoping someone up to 6 months. to plum — will work for this ful summer tomato crop well might know the ingredients.

Requests

Rolls Continued from 01

doctored with some herbs and melted cheese.

Laid-backpastadish eases holidaystress By Joe Gray Chicago Tribune

You've just slid the umpteenth batch of cookies into the oven. Or you've been

grocery shopping all day for that big Thanksgiving meal. Or you've been cleaning the house, wrapping presents, writing Christmas cards. Whatever your holiday prep tasks, you've had it and you just can't face making

"You can bake them and

dinner. But before you reach

get them done when you have space in the oven, before you

for the phone to dial up a pizza, consider the pantry. You probably have a lot in there that you can throw together for a quick meal.

put the turkey in. You can also

bake the rolls the day before, cool them and store them in

Kick back and enjoy dinner, before untangling the Christmas tree lights. thing that inspires. Then follow this model,

which is blissfully free of chopping,the bane of many a cook. (OK, it requires just a little slicing). To make the peppers saucy and creamy, reach for a little dairy. You

may not have mascarpone in the fridge, but I'll bet you

Hagen said. The recipe for Jane's Butter

have cream cheese or a melT ake pasta. I n t h e 1 0 ty cheese such as brie. Start minutes it takes for the wa- with a few tablespoons and ter to boil, you could turn a add as much as you like.

Rolls is written for a 5-quart KitchenAid stand mixer, but if

jar of roasted red peppers and some staples into a

you don't have a stand mixer, Hagen said you can mix the recipe by hand. "The most difficult thing

lush treat. No roasted peppers? How about artichoke

a plastic bag on the counter,"

dip? Or eggplant dip? Dig around;you may find some-

Some hot, starchy pasta water will help smooth the way. Then kick back and enjoy dinner, before untangling the Christmas tree lights.

is how to tell when the dough

has mixedlong enough. We call it 'developed' enough. So,

Pantry Pasta Makes 2 servings. Prep time is10 minutes; cook time is10 minutes.

in that last mix of ingredients,

for five to seven minutes (in the mixer), we look for gluten development, or what's called

'strengthening,' in the dough. Joe Kline/The Bulletin Keep the mixer speed on me- Central Oregon Community College instructor and chef Laura Hagen's dinner rolls hail from a recipe dium. If you mix i t a t h i gh passed down byher mom. speed, the dough will tear. "You want it to be strong, yet smooth an d e l astic. It

1 jar (12 oz) roasted red bell peppers, drained, rinsed, sliced in strips

Jane's Butter Rolls

should bounce back a little

/2 Ib spaghetti 2 TBS olive oil 1 clove garlic

Makes 24 2-ounce rolls.

bit and have some strength.

That's something I teach my 1r/4 packets (~/4 oz each) or 3 tsp active dry yeast 3~/2 tsp kosher salt students, and I always have 1a/4 C warm water (80-90 degrees) 8 C bread flour or all-purpose flour (I recommend Bob's Red Mill organic bread flour) them mix dough by hand first. ~/2 C half-and-half or whole milk, scalded and I want them to u nderstand cooled to110 degrees 4oz(1 stick) butter, softened, plus afew what dough feels like when it's 2 Ig eggs at roomtemperature tablespoons more melted butter to brush on done," Hagen said. r/2 C granulated sugar rolls when they come out of the oven As a backup plan, you can always buy some ParkHeat the half-and-half or whole milk andcool to 110degrees. e r House rolls, but i f y o u In a medium-size mixing bowl, whisk together the warm water, eggs and the cooled half-and-half or milk. give Jane's Butter Rolls a try, Whisk in the yeast and let stand until bubbly, about 5 to10 minutes. we predict that you'll have Pour the eggand milk mixture into the bowl of astand mixer fitted with a dough hook. Addthe butter and then a delicious new addition to the dry ingredients: sugar, salt and breadflour. your Thanksgiving dinner Mix on low speeduntil the ingredients are uniformly incorporated, about 3 minutes. traditions. Mix on medium-low speedfor another 5 to 7 minutes. Don't mix on high speed or the dough maystart break"If you have time, make two ing down, or it may tear.Youwant the dough to bestrong, yet smooth and elastic. batches. They get eaten so Lightly butter or oil a bowl large enough to hold twice the quantity of dough younowhave. Put the dough in it, quickly," Hagen said. cover it with a clean cloth and put it in a warmplace to rise until doubled, 1 to 2 hours. — Reporter: ahighberger ®mac.com Place the dough on a lightly floured counter, and gently flatten it. Add a little flour if the dough feels sticky. With a floured rolling pin, roll the dough into a 12-by-18-inch rectangle. With a pastry wheel, cut it into 24 pieces that are 3-by-3 inches, or divide it into pieces that weigh about 2 ounces. Round and shape the pieces into balls. Place them on a half-sheet baking pan lined with parchment paper. "lf you have time, Leave a couple of inches betweeneachball, cover with a clean cloth, and place in awarm spot to double in size, make two batches. about1 hour. For cloverleaf rolls, divide each2-ounce portion into three individual pieces. Round eachpiece into a ball. Place the three rounds, seamside down, in agreased muffin tin. Proof rolls until double in size. They get eaten so Preheat oven to 375degrees. Bakerolls for approximately15 minutes, until lightly browned. Brush with meltquickly." ed butter while still warm. Cool on thebaking sheet or on acooling rack. Enjoy! — Laura Hagen,bakingand pastry chefinsr/t/ctor, CascadeCulinary Institute, Cenr/Bl On.'gonCommunity College, — Laura Hagen,

Fresh herbs, torn, or dried,

such as thyme orbasil

Heat a large pot of well-salted water to aboil over high heat; add the spaghetti. Cook until al dente, 8-10minutes. Drain, saving about /r cup of the cooking water. Meanwhile, heat the olive oil in a large skillet over medium heat. Smash the garlic with the side of a chef's knife; peel and add it to the pan. Cook, 1 minute. Stir in the peppers; cook to heat through, 3-5 minutes. Turn heat to low; stir in your dairy component. If using cheese,add some pasta water to help it melt. If using cream, let it reduce a little. Sprinkle on capers and herbs, if you have them. Stir the cooked, drained spaghetti into the skillet to coat strands with the sauce. Remove the garlic clove andserve.

M/i/i/i/i/cascadeculina/y.com

chef and instructor at COCC's Cascade Culinary Institute

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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

F OO D

D3

A inzertorte it ort e oi a s By David Tanis New Yorh Times News Service

At one point in my meandering cooking career, I found myself working in a French pastry shop in California. Although the owner was Swiss, nearly everything we produced was classical French: croissants, brioches, eclairs, that sort

The Washington Post

Butcher PamGinsberg shared herrecipe for RoastTurkey auJus.

How the butcherpreps her Thanksgiving bird

o f th i n g . T h ere

were freshfruittarts,chocolate gateaux and all kinds of puff-pastry delights, everything a self-respecting Francophile could dream of.

By Bonnie S. Benwick

Easter, we made all kinds of

cha gonna do with that?" The 51-year-old has been Venison, Delmonico, heri- cuttingmeat since shewas 17. tage breed pork loin, turkey, This fall, I got her to spill turkey, turkey, turkey breast, the beans. How do you preturkey: Each time I fetch one pare your Thanksgiving bird, from Wagshal's Market in Pam?

egg-shaped confections. But for Thanksgiving, there

Washington, D.C., butcher H er recipe, with a Pam Ginsberg asks, "What- tweaksbythe author:

The Washington Post

For Christmas, we m ade

masses of buches de Noel, Yule logs filled with buttercream and decorated with

marzipan mushrooms. At

few

was not one traditional Amer-

ican standard item. No apple pies, no pumpkin pies, no pecanpies. Because the bakery was so popular, people came in anyway, determined to pick up some sort of Thanksgiving dessert, along with breakfast pastriesand breads for the

hungry hordes of gathering relatives. At a certain point, with such

a high demand, we began to tell them what they wanted to

hear. There was one display case that featured a few Viennese and Swiss specialties. Most of t hem w ere sturdy,

somewhat somber-looking nut

Photos by Fred R. Conrad/The New York Times

Pam Ginsberg's Roast Thrkey au Jus

A Cranberry Linzer Torte with a lattice pastry crust, with ground toasted almonds and hazelnuts in the dough. Tortes are more often made with apricot or raspberry filling. In honor of Thanksgiving, this

Makes 8 servings, plus leftovers.

one substitutes cranberries. FOR THE PAN: 2 tsp kosher salt

truth a bit. Oh yes, we would They would spot the Linzer tell them, this one is traditional torte, a lattice-topped, raspber- for Thanksgiving in Austria, ry-jam-filled affair, made with and that one is very popular a marvelous dough of ground in Switzerland. Some cushazelnuts and almonds. Or the tomers actually walked away Engadiner Nusstorte, with its believing us, but there was no sweet filling of walnuts and real harm done, and we knew honey in a burnished caramel- they had bought something ized sauce, would catch their delicious. attention. For Thanksgiving this year, Since these tortes did look feeling a bit nostalgic, I had rather pielike, we stretched the Linzer torte on my mind. I was tortes.

determined to make one, only

1 tsp freshly ground black pepper 1 tsp garlic powder 2 tsp dried sage

mine would be revolutionary, filled with cranberry jam in-

steadof apricotor raspberry, the way I used to sell them. I wanted the rich, nutty fla-

2 bunches celery, pulled apart Water FOR THE TURKEY: One14-Ib turkey, giblets removed; but leave in the

vor of a European torte, but cranberries, I reasoned, would make it almost American. The

result of the unconventional pairing was so satisfying, it may wellbecome an annual habit.

w

Cranberry jam — not the more traditional

apricot or raspberry — isspread onto the crust.

pepper '/ tsp garlic powder 1 tsp dried sage 1 Ig onion, cut into quarters

3 or 4 cloves garlic (peeled) Handful fresh herbs, such as

rosemary, thymeand/or sage, for the cavity

For the pan:Combine the salt, pepper, garlic powder and dried sage, spreading it in the bottom of the roasting pan. Arrange the celery ribs so they cover the bottom of the pan; they will serve as a rack for the bird. Add enoughwater to cover the celery completely. For the turkey:Preheat the oven to 425 degrees. Season the bird inside and out (to taste) with the salt, pepper, garlic powder and dried sage. Place the onion, garlic cloves and fresh herbs inside the turkey cavity, then seat the bird on top of the celery. Roast for about 2 hours, using the liquid in the pan tobaste both the turkey cavity and the exterior a total of 3 times. After the last basting, tip out any liquid from the turkey cavity to ensure crispness. The interior temperature of the meat, taken near the thigh andaway from the bone, should register160 degrees on aninstant-read thermometer. Let the turkey rest for 15 to 20 minutes before carving. Strain the pan juices (jus) through a fine-mesh strainer, reserving only the garlic for mashing into potatoes, if desired. (Discard the celery and the herbs and onion that were inside the turkey.) Passthejus at the table.

5

The dough for the top of a Cranberry Linzer Torte with a lattice pastry crust, cut into strips about /s-inch thick, /4-inch wide and 12 inches long.

plastic truss 1 tsp kosher salt t/s tsp freshly ground black

Lattice is layered with ground toasted almonds and hazelnuts in the dough.

Cranberry Linzer Torte Makes10 to12 servings. Time: 2 hours, plus time for chilling.

Rated an overall 5 stars" two years in a row.

14 TBS (198 g) unsalted butter,

FOR THE FILLING:

12 oz (340 g) cranberries 2 cups (450 g) sugar

plus more for greasing the pan

Zest of 1 orange

Juice of 1 orange, pluswater to equal /4 C (220 milliliters) Pinch of salt FOR THE CRUST: /4 C (120 g) whole hazelnuts

3/4 cup (120 grams)whole almonds 1/4 C (270 g) unbleached all-

purpose flour, plus morefor

The only overall 5-star plan in Central Oregon.

/4 C (160 g) sugar Zest of 1 lemon

Zest of 1 orange 1 Ig egg, plus1 egg yolk

I

1 tsp vanilla extract /s tsp ground cloves 1/4 tsp ground cinnamon /2 tsp baking powder /4 tsp salt

I

i

i

tl

Powdered sugar, optional

dusting

Make the filling:Combine all ingredients in a saucepan over medium-high heat, stirring to dissolve sugar. Lower heat to a brisk simmer and stir frequently, until cranberries burst. Continue cooking, mashing fruit a bit with the back of a spoon, until thick as jam, about 30 minutes. Set aside. (Filling may be prepared in advance.) Heatoven to400 degrees.Place hazelnutsandalmonds ona baking sheet and bakeabout10 minutes, until well-browned. Rub skins off hazelnuts while still warm, discarding skins. Cool nuts, then grind finely in a food processor, adding 3 tablespoons of flour to keep them from becoming oily. (Nuts should have the texture of coarse cornmeal.) Set aside. Make the dough:In the bowl of a stand mixer with whisk attachment, combine butter, sugar and lemon and orange zest. Beat until sugar is dissolved and mixture is pale and fluffy, about 3 minutes. Beat in egg, egg yolk and vanilla. In a separate bowl, mix together ground nuts, the rest of the flour, cloves, cinnamon, baking powder and salt. Add to butter mixture in three parts, mixing each time until it forms a slightly sticky dough. Divide dough into 2 pieces, one slightly bigger. Form larger piece into a ball, wrap and flatten to a 1-inch thickness. Form smaller piece into a rough rectangle, wrap and flatten to a1-inch thickness about 4 by 5 inches. Chill 3 to 4 hours, or overnight. Heat oven to 350. Butter and flour an11-inch fluted French tart pan. Remove dough from refrigerator and let stand for 10 minutes. On floured parchment paper, roil the larger piece of dough into a 12-inch circle, dusting the top with flour as necessary. If dough is difficult to handle, chill again. Pat evenly into pan until sides and bottom are compietely lined with dough about /s-inch thick. Refrigerate or freeze tart shell until firm. Roll out smaller piece of dough on floured parchment paper to a rectangle about 10 by 12 inches and /s-inch thick. Cut into strips about /4 inch by12 inches. Transfer parchment to a tray and refrigerate or freeze until firm.

Spread cranberry jam evenly into shell. Lay strips across top in a lattice pattern. Form remaining dough scraps into a ropet/2 inch in diameter and use it to encircle outer edge of tart. Score diagonally with the handle of a spoon or flute with fingers to make aborder. Bake for 30 to 35 minutes, until jam is bubbling and dough is lightly browned. Let cool and dust with powdered sugar if desired. Serve in small wedges.

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D4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 2014

HOME ck

AR D EN

Advent

YOUR PLACE

These tips will help save water, money

Continued from 01 With the debut of the print-

ed Adventcalendar in Germany in the early 1900s, the

tradition began with a religious basis. The word Advent is derived from the Latin word

for "coming toward," and the calendars were used to count down the days until Jesus'

birthday on Dec. 25. The first calendars offered rr

small colored pictures to at-

s

tach to a cardboard backing for each day of Advent, and

By Alan J. Heavens The Phnadel phia tnqtarer

Vermont Christmas Co. / Submitted photos

dren to open to find a surprise

Above, the "Nativity Silhouette" Advent calendar and, below, "Shining Stable" calendar. Both

Hauling water in a 5-gallon container a couple of hundred yards from com-

inside — a Bible verse, a small

are from VermontChristmas Co.

munal spigot to campsite

laterthe calendars appeared with little windows for chil-

religious photo or even a piece of candy. Dwight Eisenhower is often credited with populariz-

has reinforced my tendency to conserve. You, no doubt, have reasons of your own.

Here are water-saving tips, compiled from a vari-

ing the Advent calendar in the United States, as he was

photographed with the family calendar and his grandchildren opening the tiny windows to discover the trea-

ety of sources: • T urn o ff t h e w a t e r

Vermont Christmas Co. / Submitted photo

while you brush your teeth. You'll save 3 gallons per brush. • R unning o nly f u l l loads in the washing machine and dishwasher can save 75 to 200 gallons per

Vermont Christmas Co. Advent chocolates.

sures inside.

Some contemporary Advent calendars have taken on more eclectic themes that are nonreligious but still themed for the excitement and the a nticipatory c o untdown o f

/

i

week.

-14

Christmas day. Advent calendars are traditionally used

• It takes 30 to 40 gallons of water to fill a bathtub, five to 10 gallons of water

rr~m (

from Dec. 1 to Dec. 25. Some

per minute to take a shower. • If you keep a bottle of water in the refrigerator, you won't have to run

lIl:

calendars have 24 openings leading to Christmas Eve, whereas others offer 25, with

the last reveal taking place Christmas morning.

Calendar options

forms.Most are printed cardboard or a book with small

doors to open each day, harking back to the origins of the piece. Many have traditional

religious themes, but others are simplysecular products with kid appeal. Lego makes a set with 24 buildables and action figures for counting down. Playmobil's Princess Wedding calendar featuresassorted guests and wedding activities as each small box is opened. And don't forget the Barbie Advent calendar, offering up a new accessory or garment for the favorite doll andior her owner.

Create a felt tree and tie a tiny

are some ideas for counting dog bone with ribbon and give down those days until the one a day to your pet. Christmas holiday: •M ake agarland and attach Inside editions 24 small socks to it; fill each What you choose to put into with a small gift or treat. Paint

the Advent calendar count-

clothespins to hold the socks down depends on individual in place on a rope or ribbon. choice. Some parents opt for a • Clip 24 mittens to a gar- small candy, gum or other ediland and add a numbered tag ble for each day. to each. (This is a great way Not going for a sugar fix? to recycle mittens and gloves Try filling the calendar with that may have lost a mate.) tiny gifts, such as toys, cars, • Make a wall quilt or pillow whistles, markers, etc.

Disney is also in the Advent

calendar game with Mickey Mouse, Pixar "Cars" and prin-

with 24 pockets.

cesses — each opening reveals a chocolate treat.

hanger with enough pockets calendar with holiday activi-

If you're a crafter, start early to cross-stitch, needlepoint or

For a little family involve• Use an over-the-door shoe ment, outfit th e countdown

for the countdown.

ties to do each day — such as

• Wrap small packages and building a snowman, writing sew your own Advent calenmark them with numbers, so to Santa, taking a drive to dar from numerous kits and one is opened each day. see holiday lights or making patterns available. • Create a Christmas tree cookies. Or, add a charitable Look for ready-made Adwallhanging and make num- component with things to do vent calendars outfitted with bered felt ornaments so that for others, such as cleaning a small drawers if you want to each day one is added to the neighbor's walk, playing with have a reusable holiday dectree. When the tree is fully decorated, it's time for Santa.

pets at a shelter or visiting the

orating item. Consider tai-

elderly at a nursing home. If your calendar follows a religious theme, perhaps fill

in present shapes with rib- it with daily Bible verses or bons, or consider snowflakes stories.

loring the daily contents to a family member so the countdown is an ongoing gift. For example, a tea lover might love to try 24 different teas

as embellishments.

throughout December, or a

The ornamentscan be simple feltrounds or more elaborate

• Choose small colored Ready-mades

bags and fill each with a little gift. Add numbers for the

saves 200 to 300 gallons per

From left, the Lego "Friends" and the Lego "Star Wars" Advent calendars.

Many printed commercial calendars are available today, with drawstrings to hold daily some traditional with religious gifts. theming, others taking on • Find a picture of a nativity other formats, but all with the sceneand create24 animals to same purpose. go with it. Add one each day Many families make their until Christmas. own Advent calendars, estab• No kids, but beloved pets? lishing new traditions. Here

the tap until the water gets cold enough to drink. That

Submitted photo

teen might love a lip gloss or cosmetic of the day.

Commercially available Advent calendars take on many

— Reporter: gwizdesigns@aol.com

countdown. • Paint a branch and create 24 felt leaves. Add one each

week. • A pin-size hole in a

water pipe loses more than 2,000 gallons a day. • To reduce water flow in toilets, install a plastic

Dwight Eisenhower ts often credited with

popularizing the Advent calendar in the United

2

3'

8

i "

's

' s" 'n"

10 '

'6

water bottle weighted with

pebbles in the tank, or

12

switch to a low-flow toilet that cuts the water used per

I"

States,as he was photographed with the family calendar and hts grandchildren opening

3

A-

'IV

' l6 '

9-

2 0'

n

"rr

l r"

-18'

flush from five to 10 gallons to 1.6 gallons or less.

'23

Installing a flow restrictor in the shower will cut

25

the tiny windows to

water use by as much as

discover the treasures

two-thirds.

Bucilla by Plaid Enterprises / Submitted photo

Bucilla "Christmas Pageant" Advent calendar.

inside.

— Contact Alan J. Heavens at aheavensphill ynews.com.

(~~

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the opening sequence. • Find bright red or green envelopes and fill each with a small gift or to-do item. Tape to the wall and open one each day. • Sew small fabric pouches

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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

D5

ASK MARTHA

I eas or vegetarian T an sgivingguests - MARTHA STEWART Vegetarian holiday fare

Q

• A few of my Thanks• giving guests are veg-

etarians. What can I

Nancy Ross Hugo/Submitted photo/TNS

s erve

Author/gardener Nancy Ross Hugo photographs miniature

instead of turkey as an alter-

arrangements of pansies on awindowsill.

nate main dish?

hile s t u ffing a n d A•• Wmashed potatoes are delicious, they shouldn't be

/

expected to take the place of an entree for vegetarians. Consider adding a main dish featuring a seasonal vegetable, such as stuffed acorn squash. A filling of whole grains, nuts and cheese adds protein and makes it extra satisfying. For this recipe and more hearty vegetarian options, check out "Meatless,"

l

ig i.'

1,

While stuffing and mashed potatoes are

r~

ehe

giving-vegetarian-mains.

Q

Mike Krautter / Martha Stewart Living

For a seasonal and satisfying vegetarian Thanksgiving dish, try

acorn squash stuffed with grains, nuts and cheese.

• How should I " d o g• proof" my d r i veway and walkways during the

icy spots, look for pet-friendly

ball's top and bottom against

winter months?

versions, said Lisa Peterson

a surface to flatten; wrap the

A

• Two i ndi s pensable of the American Kennel Club, roving around it until com• cold-weather supplies such as Safe Paw Ice Melter. pletely covered. Insert a T pin

— antifreeze and i ce-melt-

Dog booties will also protect

on top. Tie the yarn to the pin

Daily Press (Newport News, Va)

Virginia gardener Nancy Ross Hugo has always

maintain a safe environment

Repurposing extra felting materials

for your dogs, said Louise Murray, DVM, vice presi-

Q•

dent of the ASPCA Animal Hospital, in New York City.

If antifreeze spills or drips from your car (it's a bright green liquid), t horoughly clean it up. If you use salt on

it p o ssible to s a lQ •• Isvage honey that has

place of an entree for vegetarians. Consider adding a main dish featuring a seasonal vegetable, such as stuffed acorn squash. Setting yourself up for easy entertaining there any recipes I Q •• Are can prepare in advance

batches as flat disks in plastic

wrap. The dough will thaw quickly (in about 30 minutes), • D on't d i s c ard c r y s - and you'll have the option of W hat can I d o w i t h • extra roving and yarn • tallized h oney. Y o u fresh cookies if company stops from felting projects? can dissolve the crystals by by. • Craft simple pumpkins microwaving glass jars for — Questions of general interest • with the leftover roving 15-second intervals, or placcan be emailed to mslletters@ and yarn, a foam ball, and a ing plastic ones in a pot of marthastewart.com. For more scrap of rope (proportional to water over low heat, shaking information on this column, visit the size of the ball). Press the them often. www.marthastewart.com. crystallized?

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Covers

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Row covers aren't the only

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time for that, not yet.

I put my covers down last month, one ofthem on a bed

Joe Yonan/The WashingtonPost

The author is using billowy, semisheer white fabric pieces draped over two of his urban garden's

where I had seeded carrots, raised beds to keep plants going through the winter months. radishes, beets, kale and spinach a few weeks earlier, and

another on a bed where I had just sown some spinach and arugula seeds. The kale probably won't get big enough to feed me much of anything this fall, but I'm expecting some baby spinach and arugulaand maybe some carrots and radishes — to make it to my

Thanksgiving table. Come spring, if we don't have another harsh, killing winter, the fabric should be abledo even more magic. "With spinach, arugula, certain lettuce varieties and even kale, if the plants go into the fall, and they're immature but

healthy, and there's a row cover over them, in March, when the regrowth starts, they start

growing like crazy," says Jon Traunfeld, extension specialist

and master gardener program coordinator at the University of Maryland. "The growth can be incredible. They'll be way ahead."

Some caveals Even though the row covers

increasethe temperature of the air surrounding the plants and help them maintain more

moisture (even as the winter air gets drier and drier), they w on't make di a fference in one

of the most important factors of vegetable gardening: soil temperature.

So gardeners who thinkthey can get a late start on sowing seeds in the fall, only to make

up for it with a row cover, will be disappointed. And if you use

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BarkVtlfssil.csm

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Continued from 01

I spent a few dollars on many yards of a medium-weight fab-

celebrate the seasons." In

Virginia, she's a well-known little snippets of plants and author, having written "Reripening fruit on a window- markable Trees of Virginia." sill at her home in Ashland, In Howardsville, Virginia, Virginia. she also operates Flow"I have a windowsill right er Camp, a 50-acre retreat above my kitchen sink, and where she once offered flowI've always enjoyed look- er-rel ated programs but now ing at plant material backlit rents it to nature lovers at there," she says. www.flowercamp.org. But it really goes back furThe 177-page windowsill ther, to when she was 6 years book takes you on the jourold and her mother start- ney of choosing containers, ed her making little flower finding plant material, comarrangements. bining and shuffling materiIn 2011, she began cre- als, playing with leaves and ating windowsill arrange- vines and breaking away ments daily. from bottles as containers. "I just wanted to see what She even shows how a blade would happen if I practiced of grassor a pile of apple this activity the way other peels can be arranged into people do poetry or drawing art. A month-by-month phoor music," she says. to gallery makes it easy to "It helped me pay much duplicate what you like for closer attention to what was your own home. Her blog going on outside. That's the http://windowsillarranging. biggest payoff — making blogspot.com provides ongoyou a better observer and ing ideas. "Windowsill A r t" is keeping you in closer touch with the seasons." $ 18.95; published by S t . Now, Hugo hopes to pass Lynn's Press; it's available at on that passion through www.amazon.com.

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be lethal if ingested, try to

natural arrangements to

been in the habit of putting

ing salt — are hazardous their tender paw pads from and wrap it around the ball. and keep on hand for unexyet alluring to dogs: Many salt. And if you fear your dog Hot glue the rope over the pected guests? dogs like the smell and taste has eaten either of these sub- pin. • Try this: The next time • you're making cookies, of antifreeze, and they lick stances, call your veterinariReviving crystallized honey make extra dough and freeze the salt off their paws. Since an immediately. both of these substances can

her new book, "Windowsill Art: Creating one-of-a-kind

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because one tear could be exacerbated as soon as the wind starts whipping things around. I also used a generous amount of fabric and left a lot of slack so

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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 2014

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

a e success or a ecomer o a e ni TV SPOTLIGHT

day-morningshows. "If we are dealing with a labor issue," he said, "we may have somebody who is actually on the line" picketing, he said.

bert' has had the silent T; we

could have had an invisible one." By Bill Carter

Even without the T, connections to the departing "Colbert

New York Times News Service

Larry Wilmore is not about to be spoiledby sudden success.

Report" will be extensive for

The next late-night host on

Comedy Central said a friend

inheriting Colbert's position on the Comedy Central schedule,

recently told him not t o l et

but he is also moving into the

success change him. Wilmore, who is 53 and probably best-known for his stinging comedy commentaries as the "senior black correspondent" on "The Daily Show," said he Richard Shotwefr / Invision /The Associated Press file photo "The Nightly Show With Larry Wilmore" makes its debut Jan. 19 on responded: "It's too late for success to Comedy Central.

studio and offices that production is vacating when Colbert

do anything to me. I'm too old.

Success had its chance. It's too late for you, success. You had Larry Wilmore." Central unveiled the new tiyour shot. You're not going to That sounded both dever tle: "The Nightly Show With change me at this point." and original to everyone in- Larry Wilmore." That was the That was a bit of a comedy volved, and, of course, it had simplest choice, Wilmore said. riff, of course. But Wilmore the ring of familiarity from It also fits nicely, temporally, was sincere about appreciating the 2002 Steven Spielberg-Tom between the shows that will the opportunity when his new Cruise film. But the ring got bracket it four evenings a week: late-night show starts on Com- a bit too loud in August when " The Daily Show" and " A t edy Central. The start date is the studio that owns the film, Midnight." Jan. 19.

"When you're older and you get this kind of thing, you can really enjoy it for what it is," he said Sunday. "I'm raring to go." He said he was also not thrown by the pressure of limited time to get the show up

Fox, announced it was making

a television pilot based on the movie. "It b ecame

The main thrust will be to

examine issues from the point

of view of the underdog. In that c omplicated," way, the title change is proba-

Wilmore explained, because bly a good one, he said. "It was never intended to be the only way to retain the original title would have been to a show only about minorities," always use it in the complete Wilmore said. "It's a show

and running, nor a last-minute form. It would get a bit unwrinkle in its official identi- wieldy, he said, when discussty. When the series was an- ing the show in interviews or nounced in May by Jon Stew- on social media repeatedly to art, the "Daily Show" host and

But he also emphasized that

"The Nightly Show" would be comedy. "We're not doing heavy social issues every night," Wilmore said. The writing and performing staffs are still being put together, and the production will have

the new effort. He is not only

say "The Minority Report With

about underdogs, and that hap-

ends his run Dec 18.

"I'm also moving into Stephen's house and driving his

about a month to build the set after Colbert leaves. In the first

old car," Wilmore said.

weeks of January,Wilmore

He did seriously consider the said,he hopes to do a series of title "Meet the Rest," because practice shows to get a sense of his new show is intended to be, how everything will work. as he put it, "a cousin of 'Meet None of this is daunting, the Press.'" Though the show Wilmore said — well, except is still very much a work in for the part about succeeding progress, Wilmore said "The Colbert: "Stephen has been so Nightly Show" would regular- amazing, and he has such a ly feature a panel discussion: loyal following, that part is a bit a scripted comedy version of daunting." what is seen on Sunday-mornBut afte r a long career as a ing talk. He said he would prob- stand-up comedian, writer and ably start each show with a creator and show runner of sitcomedy take on something in coms (most recently the new the news, delivered in all likeli- ABC hit "Black-ish"), Wilmore hood from a seat at a desk, the is happy to step into the glare way Stewart and Colbert have that comes with being the star long opened their shows. of his own show. "When my father was in his The cast will consist of those who are called players rather 40s, he went back to school to than correspondents, but they become a doctor," Wilmore may do a comedyreport as"The said. "He was a probation offi-

pens in a lot of different forms, Daily Show" does and then be whether it's race, gender or interviewed by Wilmore before whatever." joining the panel. He said unNot thathe didn'tmuse about scripted interviews with people other possible titles. connected to the news are also "I thought we could make it being discussed, though he wiII

Wilmore's mentor (as well as Larry Wilmore." "The last thing you want an executive producer on the new show), the title was to be is brand confusion," he said. 'The Wilmore-T Report,' with "The Minority Report With So last week, he and Comedy an invisible T," he said. "'Col-

cer before that. He started tak-

ing pre-med courses, and he just did it. He was a really solid student because he had perspective. He wasn't out playing beer pong every night. It was such a lesson to me. I'm having

not rely on a roster of the usual

suspects who turn up on Sun- the time of my life with this."

nei or'save eta et ie

MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may t/e an additional fee for 3-D and iMAXmovies • Movie times a/e subject to change after p/ess time. I

Dear Abby: I l iv e in a 55-and-older mobile home park. Because my coach isn't huge, I have a nice little backyard where I have a small vegetable garden and a lovely lemon tree.

woman a visit, and tell her you would prefer that she ASK permission before helping herself to anything in your garden. And if that doesn't stop her, make installing that fence a priority. Dear Abby: Nowadays, I'm l earning abou t

— such as where and when the funeral or memorial will be held, and if I can send flowers or make a donation. THEN I write the con-

dolence note. Dear Abby:When I come home from work, errands or whatever, my wife is often on the phone. I

One daywhile I was tendingmy garden, the woman who lives behind the deaths of f amfind it rude that she won't put the me came over to say ily members and phone down for a moment to say DPPR euo an a mire my friends by email, and hello and, if the call needs to be ABBY I'm uncertain h ow vegetables. When returned, tell me briefly what it's she saw I have Swiss to respond. I always about. Is that unreasonable'? chard growing, she send th o ughtful, My wife walks into another exclaimed, "Oh, I will have to pick personal handwritten notes of con- room with no explanation, never some because my daughter loves dolence. But how best to acknowl- straying from the call, and conit!" edge orrespond to theemail? tinues talking for another 10 or I was dumbfounded. She has It seems wrong to ignore it in 20 minutes. What do you think of room to plant her own little gar- favor of sending a letter via the this'? — Craving Attention in Colorado d en but n ever d oes. She h a s Postal Service, because my meshelped herself t o l e mons, too. sage will take a while to reach Dear Craving: I agree that it When I saw her doing it, I was the bereaved. But it also seems would be more loving if she acagain too shocked to say any- wrong to say, "Oh, so sad to hear knowledged your presence with thing. She doesn't ask; she just the news" in an email, as if that a smile and a "Hi, Honey — I'll be helps herself. was the sum total of my thoughts. off the phone in a few minutes." What do I s a y a t t i mes like What to do? However, for you to expect her to these? We live so close and there — Caring Out West report whom she's talking to and are no fences ... yet. Dear Caring:Here's what I do. what they have been discussing — Fuming in Vista, California I pick up the phone and CALL seems not only nosy on your part, Dear Fuming: Unless you are the person who sent the email, but also behavior that could be willing to d raw t h e l i ne, your or a member of the family that considered controlling. neighbor will continue to assume suffered the loss. I express my — Write to Dear Abbyat dearabbycom that silence is consent. So pay the

sympathy and find out the details

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORTUESDAY, NOV. 25, 2014:Thisyearyou could prove to be a financial wizard. You'll listen to your sixth sense when it comes to taking any risks. Don't always count on your impulsiveness being right. Generally this is the case, but not every time. If you are single, your love life could be wild and unpredictable. It would be wise not to con8tersshewthe kisd sider a relationship pf deyyes'll hstre "long term" until it ** * * * D ynamic actually is. If you ** * * p osltlve ar e attached, the

By Jacqueline Bigar

you can trust this person, as he or she easily closes down in situations that you assume are easy. Tonight: Move in a different direction.

CANCER(June21-July 22)

** * * Defer to others, especially since they seem to have strong feelings about a certain situation. You could have diffiwith someone you look up to, as he *** Average tw o of you could culty or she might prefer you to have a more ** So-so add a lot of fire to hands-onapproach.Recognizeyourlim* Difficult your bond. A trip to its. Tonight: Accept a fun invitation. a new spot could LEO (July 23-Aug.22) invigorate your bond. CAPRICORNoffers ** * * You'll be committed to completwise advice. ing a project, and you will focus all of your ARIES (March21-April19) ** * * Remain flexible despite a friend's energy on this particular enterprise. You couldbetakenabackby some adjustrigidity. At a certain point, you are likely to feel rebellious. Someone else will know ments you might need to make. A roomhow to move this person gently off his or mate or family member also could be out of sorts. Tonight: Take the high road. her position, but you might have to step back and keep quiet in the meantime. VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) Tonight: A must appearance. ** * * You could be disappointed by a loved one's unexpected reaction. UnderTAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * * * Y our ability to visualize differ- standthatyoucan'tchange anyone,even ifyou thinkyou can. This person will need ent routes to the same end will emerge. to work through his or her issues alone. A loved one's intentions might startle Allow your creativity to find a different you when you grasp what he or she has approach. Tonight: Time to party! inmind.A discussion could shed some light on whether this person is willing LIBRA (sept. 23-oct. 22) to be flexible. Tonight: Listen to great ** * You might be upset by someone's music. words — in fact, you could develop a cavalier attitude as a result. You won't GEMINI (May 21-June20) ** * You'll prefer to deal with one want to make any financial commitments at this point in time. Emphasize your comperson individually. Discussions could evolve to a new level of understanding passion in a conversation with a friend or as a result. You might question whether loved one. Tonight: Make it early.

I I

8 p.m. on6, "NCIS" —Holiday travel canbe complicated enough, but try being anNCISagent working acase while stuckin the middle of it. DINozzoand Bishop (Michael Weatherly. Emily Wickersham) find themselves inthat situation — alongwith Bishop's NSA-lawyer husband(gueststar Jamie Bamber) — inthe new episode "Grounded." Aterrorist threat affects manyairports just as Thanksgiving transit reaches its peak. Veterancharacteractress Edie McClurg alsogueststars. 8 p.m. on10, "MasterChef"Talkabout having to keep your sunnyside up —but in alimited amountof time. Theyoung chefs have10 minutes to prepareas many eggs as they can inthat particular style in thenewepisode "Junior Edition: AnEgg-Cellent Adventure." Later, the kidsareasked to imagine themselves running their own restaurants andmaking their most specialized dishes tobe included ontheir respective menus. 9:01 p.m. on5,8, "Marry Me"The newepisode"Bruges Me" is in the spirit of the long-agoseries "My Two Dads," sinceJake (Ken Marino) decides toget betteracquainted with Annie's (CaseyWil-

son) ... twodads(Tim Meadows, Dan Bucatinsky). Unfortunately, his attempts to bondwith both men generate problems.Gil (John

Gemberling)seeksAnnie'shelp in

prepping a bigproduction number for the Flemish PrideParade. Mo Gaffneygueststars. 10:01 p.m. on6, "Personof Interest" — Agang-related situation puts Reeseand Finch (JimCaviezel, Michael Emerson) atodds inthe new episode"The DevilYouKnow." Their discordresults fromhow each wantsto handle thematter when Elias (Enrico Colantoni) lands in the crosshairs of agang leader (Winston Duke).Rootand Shaw (Amy Acker,SarahShahi) also don'tsee eye-to-eye indetermining how to dealwith fresh trouble generatedby Samaritan. JamesLe Gros gueststars. 10:31 p.m. onUSA, "Benched" — At first Nina (ElizaCoupe) is dazzledbythe charismatic private defense attorney (MehcadBrooks,

"NecessaryRoughness")whohas beenassignedtooneofher cases, butsoon shebeginsto worrythat he is playing her inthe newepisode "Shark, Actually." Back atthe office, Phil (JayHarrington) adopts a more serious manner tosway astenographer whorebuffedhis flirtations becauseshefinds him too immature. © Zap2it

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TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports

** * * You are likely to be disappointed by someone's knee-jerk reaction. Try not to make the situation any worse than it alreadyis.Someone could change his or her tune when you least expect it. Tonight: Wherever you are, others will want to be.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) ** * * * Y ou could be taken aback by all the ground you need to cover. Your focus continues to be on a financial matter that you'll want to clarify. If you did just what you wanted, you could causea problem. Tonight: Carefully weigh the pros and cons of whatyou want to do.

GAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.19) ** * * Whereas others seem to fumble under the pressure, you'll endure and flourish. A family member might throw a boomerang in your path, but you're likely to jump right over it. Be careful, as a conversation with a friend could have a heavytone.Tonight:Bespontaneous.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) ** * Understand that you'll need to deal with someone with whom it is nearly impossibl eto have an open,honestconversation. Look for ways to maximize your energy, and don't allow this person — or anyone else — to deplete it. Tonight: Put distance between you and others.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March20) ** * * W hile others mope around, you'll bring friends together for a meeting. You will accomplish a lot with an open discussion. Let people knowthat their ideas are valued; they'll appreciate it and feel more included. Tonight: Where the crowds are. © King Features Syndicate

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ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbuiletin.com THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 2014 •

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contact us: Place an ad: 541-385-5809

Fax an ad: 541-322-7253

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Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the

Includeyour name, phone number and address

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24-hour message line: 541-383-2371 Place, cancel or extend an ad Th

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B u I I e t i n :

ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202- Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free Items 208- Pets and Supplies 210 -Furniture & Appliances 211- Children's Items 212 -Antiques & Collectibles 215- Coins & Stamps 240- Crafts and Hobbies 241 -Bicycles and Accessories 242 - Exercise Equipment 243 - Ski Equipment 244 - Snowboards 245 - Golf Equipment 246-Guns,Huntingand Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- HealthandBeauty Items 249 - Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253 - TV, Stereo andVideo 255 - Computers 256 - Photography 257 - Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259 - Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - Medical Equipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools

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Want to Buy or Rent CASH PAIDfor wood dressers & dinette sets. 541-420-5640 USE THE CLASSIFIEDSI Door-to-door selling with fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell. The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809 203

Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows

... A BIG Deal ...

• VENDORS WANTEDo

for Craft Fair Dec. 6, 9-5; Dec. 7, 10-3 Booths: Crafts, $30; Commercial, $50. Accepting Donations for Rummage Sale thru Dec. 5th ireceipts avail.) TACK & EQUIPMENT 15% Consignment. Let us sell your tack! For more information: 541-548-6088 or ~kmberl . rffthset ors onsiets.se ~

... A BIG Deal ... (Benefilfing 4-H) • Craft Fair • Rummage Sale • Tack 8 Equip. Sale! Dec. 6, 9am-5pm & Dec. 7, 10am-3pm

Deschutes Co. Fairgrounds Kid friendly activities! Admission: $1.00 (or a non-perlshable food Item to be donated to

local food banks). Proceeds benefit Deschufes County4-ff.

SUNRIVEIr 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

On the web at: www.bendbulletin.com 1 7 7g

264- Snow Removal Equipment 265 - BuildingMaterials 266- Heating and Stoves 267- Fuel and Wood 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment 270- Lost and Found GARAGESALES 275 - Auction Sales 280 - Estate Sales 281 - Fundraiser Sales 282- Sales NorlhwestBend 284- Sales Southwest Bend 286- Sales Norlheast Bend 288- Sales Southeast Bend 290- Sales RedmondArea 292 - Sales Other Areas FARM MARKET 308- Farm Equipment andMachinery 316- Irrigation Equipment 325- Hay, Grain and Feed 333- Poultry,RabbitsandSupplies 341 - Horses andEquipment 345-Livestockand Equipment 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers 358- Farmer's Column 375 - Meat andAnimal Processing 383- Produce andFood

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208

210

212

241

245

246

Pets & Supplies

Furniture & Appliances

Antiques & Collectibles

Bicycles & Accessories

Golf Equipment

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

Yorkie M, 8 wks, docked, 1st shots, dewormed, $550 obo. 541-416-1615

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The Bulletin recommends extra ' The Bulletin reserves the right to publish all I caution when purads from The Bulletin

CASH!! For Guns, Ammo & Reloading Supplies.

I chasing products or •

I services from out of I

541-408-6900. newspaper onto The Bulletin Internet website. IOW'RS TIS Stocking Men's Enhanced AlumiI credit i n f ormation Stuffers! num Alloy-constructed The Bulletin Crossroads Sport 2012, may be subjected to Serving CensresOregon since lg«g Mint condition, Yorkie. Super healthy. I FRAUD. For more DO YOU HAVE hit one time, S/N ENI14764,has Fixed. Ready! $600. SOMETHING TO information about an c Cobra Baffler Irons Local only 541-977-7773 advertiser, you may C Just bought a new boat? never been used or ridSELL 3-5-HB with covers, Sell your old one in the den. Wheel 8 rear reFOR $500 OR 6-PW, senior 8 call t he Ore g on8 classifieds! Ask about our flectors, removable front 210 LESS? Atto r ney ' Super Seller rates! graphite. basket, special order Furniture & Appliances 'I State Non-commercial 541-385-5809 General's O f f i ce comfort seat, Planet Bike advertisers may $350. Consumer Protec- • eco-rack, unisex bar, 951-454-2561 place an ad t ion ho t l in e at I Shimano non-slip gear A1 Washerse Dryers with our (in Redmond) system. Was $940;sellFull warranty. i 1-877-877-9392. "QUICK CASH ing for $775 cash,firm. FREE delivery(Also SPECIAL" 1-231-360-5105 TheBulletin > Wanted: used W/D's. > Serving 246 Cencref Oregon since l903 1 week3linee 12 541-280-7355 OI' Guns, Hunting Santa Cruz Solo 212 ~se eks s i n mtn. racing bike, & Fishing Three Chinese Men Ad must Antiques & med. full-suspenproduced in solid include price of sion, good cond, Collectibles teak. Dimensions: 300 Weatherby s~nle tem oi gsoo must sell, $2000. n magnum Mark V 15 n high x 6.5 wide. or less, or multiple 541-480-2652 Antiques wanted: Tools, Figures were German made, with items whose total furniture, pre-'80s John Leupold 3x9x50 produced in does not exceed Beautiful Oval Table Deere toys, pre-'40s B/W Takara bikes, mens & Thailand in 1978. scope. $500. Solid walnut, handphotography, beer cans. womens, ridden once, $200 for $1600 obo. crafted by an Amish 541-389-1578 $75/ea. 541-382-9211 all 3 statues, cash. 541-480-9430 Call Classifieds at artisan for Schanz 541-385-5809 1-231-360-5105 242 Furniture Co. Excellent www.bendbulleun.com (in Bend) condition w/lovely patina. Anti ue table Top Exercise Equipment Bend local pays CASHI! 27" H, top 30" L and 20" for all firearms & wide. Graceful curved ammo. 541-526-0617 New RCBS master kit. Pilates XP297 w/riser legs with 2-1/2n Supplies: 500 S&W, like new, $175 obo. hand-turned center Bird & Big Game hunt- 350 r n ds , 4 5 a cp. 541-408-0846 support. Orig. $649; ing access in Condon, A ll ne w . $450 . 208 208 35~/gn diameter, has Total Gym XLS kit, all sell $200. OR. 541-384-5381 541-588-0694 Pete & Supplies • P ets & Supplies image of sailing ship 541-385-4790 accessories including on the Cyclo Trainer. $1348 249 top. Base Donate deposit bottles/ G ENERATE SOM E value, selling $525. Wash bowl 8 pitcher The Bulletin recomArt, Jewelry EXCITEMENT in your is oak cans to local all vol., 541-633-5496 set, large, exc. cond. mends extra caution capstan. & Furs non-profit rescue, for neighborhood! Plan a $125 541-419-6408 Treadmill, Proform XP when purc h as- feral cat spay/neuter. garage sale and don't Very ing products or serCrosswalk 580, $300. unique T railer a t Jak e 's forget to advertise in vices from out of the 541-382-9211 eo piece, could sell 240 D iner, Hwy 2 0 E ; classified! area. Sending cash, separately. $400 Petco (near Wal-Mart) 541-385-5809. Crafts & Hobbies 245 checks, or credit in541-419-6408. in Redmond; or doGolf Equipment f ormation may b e nate M-F a t S mith subjected to fraud. Sign, 1515 NE 2nd Dining set: table, 8 For more informaCHECK YOURAD Bend; or CRAFT in chairs, hutch/buffet, Quilting tion about an adver- Tumalo. Can pick up Above artwork, hand- carved, 1927, MachineWhether you're created in 1975 in tiser, you may call large amts, 389-8420. seats 10-12. $2250 obo. I H u sqvarna/ looking for a home Bangkok, Thailand, the O r egon State www.craftcats.org 541-548-2797 Viking, 10-ft bed, is fabricated from litor need a service, Attorney General's erally thousands upon computerized, Office C o nsumer German Shepherds GlassChina your future is in CA King Henredon Mahogany www.sherman-ranch.us thousands of wax Closet, 68nH x 39 nW x Protection hotline at $SSOO. these pages. on the first day it runs Sleigh Bed with Or541-281-6829 particles, and can 1-877-877-9392. 16 nD, 3 d r awers, 541-416-0538 to make sure it is corganic Mattress and only be described as e glass front d o ors, Q Norwich Terriers AKC, rect. Spellcheck" and Bedding. It's magunimaginable art! The Bulletin good shape. $425. rare! House raised, good human errors do ocgervingCensrel Oregons«nce Sggg Painting is 44" x 32". nificient. $4500 541-382-6773 family dogs. M ales, 241 cur. If this happens to Cash only. Asking$2,500cash $2000. 541-487-4511 or 231-3igg0-5105 (Bend) 541-390-7109 Bicycles & your ad, please conAdopt a rescued cat or email sharonm@peak.org Thousands of ads dai l y tact us ASAP so that Accessories kitten! Altered, vacci- POODLE or POMAPOO corrections and any wpnnt andonhne. People Look for Information nated, ID chip, tested, puppies, toy. Adorable! Range, Whirlpool 30" adjustments can be Childrens bikes, girls free standing, self About Products and more! CRAFT, 65480 541-475-3889 made to your ad. 20", $60. Boys 16", cleaning, $250. Services Every Daythrough 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, 541-385-5809 $40. 541-382-9211 Amana bottom freezer • Cl e 1-5. 541 - 389-8420 The Sullefin Classineds The Bulletin Classified fridge w / i cemaker. Milk bottle crate 20 www.craftcats.org $250. 541-923-3516. glass bottles marked Dahlia Dairy $125 obo Blue Heeler, 1-1/2 yr M, 541-419-6408 SOFA - dark brown smart, happy, wants to ggm please. House trained, leather, Hit a c hi Pug pups-1/4Chi. shots utd, needs room to Healthy noses & eyes. M brand, l i k e n ew, Call a Pro run, free to uood home. $400; F $450. Champ $300; and matching Whether you need a 541-419-824g stud.541-389-2517 text ok chair and ottoman fence fixed, hedges l ike n ew , $ 2 0 0 . trimmed or a house Cava Tz u p u ppies. Queensland Heelers 541-280-0892 Only three males left. Standard 8 Mini, $150 built, you'll find & up. 541-280-1537 Ready now. First shot professional help in www.rightwayranch.wor and worming. $300 dpress.com Kelly at 541-604-0716 The Bulletin's "Call a or 541-489-3237 Scotty AKC pups, ready Service Professional" now! Mom/Dad on site, Directory Chihuahua teacup pup 1st shots. 541-771-0717 541-3B5-5809 pies i2) 1st shots, Siberian Husky/Wolf dewormed. $250. South Korean pups, bundles of love! 541-977-0035 Apothecary chest $400. 541-977-7019 typical of what was used decades ago to sell herbs and medicinals. This piece is believed to have been Motorola produced in 1940sn or n n n radio, 13~/~wx7 dx8/g Great later. 35nW x 9.5 cond. but non-working deep x 42" high. Chihuahua-Yorkies (2l St. Bernard puppies, $80, 541-419-6408 non-sheddinpn all meds, 1st shots, deworming, Asking $2500 cash $200 ea. 54T0-420-1068 dewclaws removed, 231-360-5105iBendl $450. 541-77'I -0956 Unlike unregulated Internet advertising, we make every Coonhound/Blue Tick T oy A u ssies. T w o :I Heeler, 1 yr female, good ASDR registered red attempt to ensure that products sold in our classifieds are dog needs more space to merle males. F i r st run. Pix avail on request. shot and w orming. from a valid source. Free to good home. Pump Organ, $600 Kell y at 541-598-5577 ¹11948 built tn 1870 541-604-0716 or by New England 541-489-3237 South Korean Organ Co. Blanket Chest IT IUT/ORKS! typical of storing Beautiful carved blankets for frigid cabinet. In 1878i it took 2nd place in nights. Dimensions sog n are 31n long x 14.5 Sydney, Australia. Dachshund CKC mini feWas presented to a wide x 22" high. male wire/smooth hair Whoodle pups, 8 wks., minister after his serAsking$800 cash. $500 available 12/5. email 1st shots, dewormed, 1 vice in the Civil War. 1-231-360-5105 highdesertdogs@live.com male left. Guaranteed. $300. 541 -385-4790 (Bend) or 541-350-9506 $950. 541-410-1581

8 the area. Sending 8 • cash, checks, or •

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Where buyers meet sellers.

Your Future Is Here.

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Classifjeds •

Buy 8 Sell Safely In TheBulletin Classifieds

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BSSl 1C


E2 TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 476

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

Can be found on these pages:

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • 325 Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. Hay, Grain & Feed Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. 1st Quality mixed grass hay, no rain, barn stored, Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. Call $250/ton. 541-549-3831 Ranch, Sisters Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Patterson Wheat Straw For Sale. weaner pigs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri. also 541-546-6171

Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •

• . 3:00pm Fri. • • 5:00 pm Fri •

Starting at 3 lines

Place a photo inyourprivate party ad foronly$15.00par week.

*IJNDER '500in total merchandise

OVER '500 intotal merchandise

7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00

Garage Sale Speclal

4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50

4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00

(call for commercial line ad rates)

PRIVATE PARTY RATES

*llllust state prices in ad

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

MX

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

265

267

270

Computers

Building Materials

Fuel & Wood

Lost & Found

T HE B ULLETIN

re-

Bend Habitat RESTORE

WHEN BUYING quires computer advertisers with multiple Building Supply Resale FIREWOOD... REMEMBER: If you ad schedules or those Quality at LOW have lost an animal, To avoid fraud, selling multiple sysPRICES don't forget to check The Bulletin temsl software, to dis740 NE 1st The Humane Society recommends pay541-312-6709 close the name of the Bend ment for Firewood business or the term Open to the public. 541-382-3537 only upon delivery "dealer" in their ads. Redmond and inspection. Private party advertis- Where can you find a • A cord is 128 cu. ft. 541-923-0882 ers are defined as 4' x 4' x 8' Madras helping hand? those who sell one • Receipts should 541-475-6889 From contractors to computer. Prineville include name, yard care, it's all here 541-447-7178 phone, price and 257 or Craft Cats kind of wood in The Bulletin's Musical Instruments 541-389-8420. purchased. "Call A Service • Firewood ads Professional" Directory 266 MUST include Grand Piano species & cost per Sales Northeast Bend Beautiful American cord to better serve made (1926) • Cambria Quartz our customers. Kurtzmann parlor "Bellingham," ** FREE ** grand piano for 55"x36", nearly The Bulletin Garage Sale Kit sale. 5'5", ma1-1/2" thick, never servInycenrral oregonance iae hogany case, Place an ad in The installed,$300 or Bulletin for your gamatching bench, rebest offer. All year Dependable cently serviced and rage sale and reFirewood: Seasoned; tuned. Family ceive a Garage Sale • Bronze & Crystal owned since origiLodgepole, split, del, Kit FREE! 2-tier, 6-arm channal purchase. B end, 1 f o r $ 1 95 delier, 22" across, KIT INCLUDES: or 2 cords for $365. $3200 (appraised $300 or best offer. Call fo r m u lti-cord • 4 Garage Sale Signs value) or OBO. 541-923-7491 • $2.00 Off Coupon To discountsi 541-306-6770. Uae Toward Your 541-420-3484. Next Ad • 10 Tips For "Garage Sisters Habitat ReStore Just too many Sale Success!" Building Supply Resale collectibles? Quality items. LOW PRICES! PICK UP YOUR 150 N. Fir. Sell them in GARAGE SALE KIT at 541-549-1621 The Bulletin Classifieds 1777 SW Chandler Open to the public.

Wurlitzer Ultra Console Model ¹2636 Serial ¹1222229. Made in USA.

Genuine maple wood. Includes matching bench.$900. (541) 598-4674 days, or (541) 923-0489 evenings.

Ave., Bend, OR 97702

s4< -3ss-ssos

266

Heating & Stoves

sertine centraloregon since r903

Natural ga s h e a ter, Gardening Supplie Abalon, free standing, • & E q uipment 38,000 BTU, w / ceramic harth and stove pipe, like new, $700. BarkTurfSoil.com Madras 541-325-6791 NOTICE TO

Yamaha piano / harpsichord keyboard, 71 key, CP-30, w/pedal, stand & cord, $125. 541-385-4790

ADVERTISER

Since September 29, 1991, advertising for

The Bulletin

269

PROMPT DELIVERY

541-389-9663

Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSI Ff EDS 268

Sales Southeast Bend Black Friday Indoor Sale! 1 day only, 9-3. Everything must go! Name your price - no reasonable offers refused! Furniture, household items, art work & collectibles. Credit cards accepted. 20278 Badger Rd. (east of 3rd St.) No earlybirds!

Fornewspaper used woodstoves has delivery, call the been limited to modCirculation Dept. at 260 els which have been 541-385-5800 certified by the OrMisc. Items To place an ad, call egon Department of 541-385-5809 Environmental QualBuying Diamonds or email ity (DEQ) and the fed- claeeiiied@bendbulletimcom /Gofd for Cash E n v ironmental Saxon's Fine Jewelers eral Protection A g e ncy The Bulletin 54'I -389-6655 serviny cenaar(hegcm since ste Garage Sales (EPA) as having met smoke emission stanBUYING Garage Sales dards. A cer t ified Lionel/American Flyer 270 w oodstove may b e trains, accessories. Oarage Sales Lo s t & Found identified by its certifi- • 541-408-2191. cation label, which is Find them BUYING & SE LLING permanently attached Found air tool in case on Creek Rd, 11/19. in All gold jewelry, silver to the stove. The Bul- Bear and gold coins, bars, letin will not know- Call to ID, 541-388-8956 The Bulletin rounds, wedding sets, ingly accept advertis- Found Calico Cat, 11/15 Classifieds class rings, sterling sil- ing for the sale of on Couch Mkt Rd. Very ver, coin collect, vin- uncertified loving but skinny. Call to 541-385-5809 tage watches, dental woodstoves. identify, 541-330-6923 gold. Bill Fl e ming,

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 bendbuHetin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 541-385-5809

CAUTION: Ads published in "Employment Opporfunities" include employee and independent positions. Ads fo r 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 c aution when a p plying for jobs online and never provide personal information to any source you may not have researched and deemed to be reputable. Use extreme c aution when r e s 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 For Equal Opportunity Laws c ontact Oregon Bureau of Labor 8 I n d ustry, Civil Rights Division, 971-673- 0764.

The Bulletin terviny central oreeonsince ras

541-385-5809

or place your ad on-line at bendbuHetin.com

Add your web address to your ad and readers onThe Bulletin's web site, www.bendCheck out the bulletin.com, will be classifieds online able to click through vvvvvv.bendbttffetin.com automatically to your Updated daily website. 341

Horses & Equipment

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Call The Bugetin At 541-385-5809 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail At: www.bendbulletin.com DRIVERS

SijXco

Silverado 2001 5th wheel 3-horse trailer 29'x8', deluxe showman/semi living quarters, lots of ex- Sysco is novv hiring tras. Beautiful condi- • Delivery Drivers & tion. $21,900. OBO • Shuttle Associates 541-420-3277 based out of Bend,Oregon.

Earn a $2000 Sign-on Incentive.

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for Hi-fi audio & studio equip. Mclntosh, JBL, Marantz, Dynaco, Heathkit, Sansui, Carver, NAD, etc. Call 541-261-1 808

WHEN YOU SEE THIS

264

Snow Removal Equipment Yard Machine snowblower, 22", 2-stage, 179cc motor, exlnt shape, $300. 541-389-3469

476

476

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Looking for your next employee? caution when purPlace a Bulletin help chasing products or I wanted ad today and services from out of • reach over 60,000 Energetic, self-moreaders each week. tivated, M a s ters I the area. Sending Your classified ad c ash, checks, o r Level clinician/site will also appear on supervisor to pro- I credit i n f ormation bendbulletin.com be subjected to vide tre a tment, • may FRAUD. which currently manage staffand I For more informa- I receives over 1.5 c ommunicate e f tion about an adver- • million page views fectively. Send re- I tiser, you may call every month at sumes and questhe Oregon State no extra cost. t ions to K r i s a t I Attorney General's Bulletin Classifieds kris©hhtreatmenOffice C o n sumer s Get Results! tidaho.com. Protection hotline at l Call 385-5809 or place I 1-877-877-9392. your ad on-line at LTh Bullet bendbulletin.com Take care of The Bulletin

Masters Level Clinician/Site Supervisor (Bend)

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your investments with the help from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

486

TURNTHEPAGE For MoreAds The Bulletin

Independent Positions

Sales Help Wanted: E nergetic kios k sales person needed immediately for the Bend-Redmond General area. Secured locaThe Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Saturtions, high commisday night shift and other shifts as needed. We sions paid weekly! currently have openings all nights of the week. For more informaEveryone must work Saturday night. Shifts t ion, p l ease c a l l start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and Howard at end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpo-

541-279-0982. You sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. c an a l s o em a i l Starting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we pay a tcoles@yourneighminimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts borhoodpublications. are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of com for more inforloading inserting machines or stitcher, stackmation. ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup and other tasks. For qualifying employees we Look at: offer benefits i ncluding life i n surance, Bendhomes.com short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid for Complete Listings of vacation and sick time. Drug test is required prior to employment. Area Real Estate for Sale 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.

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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 Schwab is proudto be an equal opportunity employer.

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

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

MOreP iXatBendbljlletijl,COm On a classified ad go to www.bendbulletin.com to view additional photos of the item.

476

Employment Opportunities

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$1500. 541-771-4800

Wanted- paying cash

FINANCEANDBUSINESS 507- Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 528- Loans andMortgages 543- Stocks andBonds 558- Business Investments 573 - BusinessOpportunities

Community Sports/ Preps Reporter

Lawn Crypt for two at Deschutes Memorial Gardens near the Pond.

541-480-4695

EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools andTraining 454- Looking lor Employment 470- Domestic & In-HomePositions 476 - EmploymentOpportunities 486 - IndependentPositions

$18.90-$23.62 DOE. Route delivery driving (18-25 stops daily), unloading 800-1400 528 cases per route at Loans & Mortgages customer locations, while The Bulletin ServingCentral Oregon since f903 providing excellent WARNING customer service. 421 The Bulletin recomTo be considered NEWSPAPER mends you use cauSchools & Training please go to our tion when you prowebsite: vide personal www.s sco ortland.com HTR Truck School information to compaREDMOND CAMPUS to download and nies offering loans or Our Grads Get Jobs< complete an application credit, especially 1-888%38-2235 or you can apply in The Bulletin is looking for a resourceful and enthose asking for adWWW.DTR.EDU thusiastic reporter with broad sports interests to person at: vance loan fees or 26250 SW Parkway join a staff that covers the wide range of com- companies 470 from out of Center Drive, petitive and recreational activities for which our state. If you have Domestic & Wilsonville, OR 97070 region is famous. concerns or quesMon-Fri 9am -4pm. In-Home Positions We are seeking a reporter who can cover ev- tions, we suggest you erything from traditional sports to the offbeat consult your attorney Have an item to or call CONSUMER Therapeutic Foster and extreme, with particular emphasis on comHOTLINE, P arents ar e u r munity (participation) sports and preps. Necessell quick? 1-877-877-9392. gently needed for sary skills include feature writing, event coverIf it's under youth in your comage, and the ability to work well on deadline. A BANK TURNED YOU munity! Work from '500 you can place it in college degree is required. Reporting experi- DOWN? Private party home part-time and ence, polished writing skills and a track record will loan on real esThe Bulletin get reimbursed up of accuracy and reliability are a must. Many of tate equity. Credit, no to $1800 per month Classifieds for: the duties of this position require evening and problem, good equity for each youth in weekend availability. is all you need. Call your care (max 2). '1 0 -3 lines, 7 days Oregon Land MortFor more info call Also important is the ability to conceptualize the gage 541-388-4200. '16 - 3 lines, 14 days 1-888-MSOREGON multimedia components that might complement www.maplestaror.org (Private Party ads only) stories, including video, audio and slide show LOCAL MONEY:Webuy secured trust deeds & elements. Experience using social media sites, note, some hard money including Facebook and Twitter, is preferred. loans. Call Pat Kellev IS 541-382-3099 ext.13. The Bulletin is an independent, family-owned newspaper in Bend, a vibrant city of 80,000 surNeed to get an rounded bysnow-capped mountains and home ad in ASAP? to unlimited outdoor recreation. The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace and an equal-opportunity You can place it employer. Pre-employment drug screening is online at: required prior to hiring. www.bendbulletin.com To apply, please email cover letter, resume Lead Network Engineer and writing samples to: 541-385-5809 s ortsre orter@bendbulletin.com Responsible for engineering, configuration and • 5 installation of the company's internal data No phone inquiries please. communication systems. T hi s p o s ition designs, evaluates and installs LANs, WANs, and other Internet, data communications Harp I'liI d~ar~oec. systems and voice systems. Candidate must have extensive knowledge of LAN/WAN, data 5erving Central Oregon sinre f903 gom e n at 20'8-908-8562 c ommunications s ystems, i n ternet a n d telecommunications protocols, remote access systems, PC and LAN hardware systems, routers, switches, and firewall.

541-382-9419.

Olhaunsen regulation size pool table in very good shape with cues, balls, misc. accessories. $1 000. 541-389-1272 or

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Employment Opportunities

BSSl 1C S www.bendbulletin.com

To place your photo ad, visit us online ati mmnp.bendbulleti n . c o m or call with questions,5 41-385-58 0 9

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Call54I 3855809toprcmcte yoarservice• Advertise for 28dap storting attlcI Ittaifriirt~atr t rrrtaritivr rmsr rrrtarI

Building/Contracting LsndscspingNard Care Landscaping/Yard Care

NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon Landlaw requires anyone scape Contractors Law who con t racts for (ORS 671) requires all construction work to businesses that adbe licensed with the vertise t o p e r form Serving Central Oregon Since 2003 Construction Contrac- Landscape Constructors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: Residental/Commercial active license p lanting, deck s , Sprinkler means the contractor fences, arbors, is bonded & insured. water-features, and inBIOW-Out Verify the contractor's stallation, repair of irSprinkler Repair CCB l i c ense at rigation systems to be www.hirealicensedl icensed w it h th e Maintenance contractor.com Landscape Contrac- Fall Clean up or call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit ••Weekly Mowing The Bulletin recom- number is to be in- & Edging mends checking with cluded in all adver- •Bi-Monthly & Monthly the CCB prior to con- tisements which indi- Maintenance tracting with anyone. cate the business has Some other t rades a bond,insurance and ~Landsca in also re q uire addi- workers compensational licenses and tion for their employ- •Landscape Construction certifications. ees. For your protection call 503-378-5909 •Water Feature or use our website: Installation/Maint. Debris Removal www.lcbistate.or.us to •Pavers check license status •Renovations JUNK BE GONE before contracting with •Irrigations Installation I Haul Away FREE the business. Persons For Salvage. Also land scape Senior Discounts Cleanups & Cleanouts doing Bonded & Insured maintenance do not Mel, 541-389-8107 541-815-4458 require an L CB Handyman

cense.

LCB¹8759

Painting/Wall Covering

BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS Search the area's most Home/Rental repairs ALL AMERICAN Small jobs to remodels comprehensive listing of PAINTING Interior and Exterior Honest, guaranteed classified advertising... Family-owned work. CCB¹151573 real estate to automotive, Residential& Commercial Dennis 541-317-9768 merchandise to sporting 40 yrs exp.• Sr. Discounts 5-vear warranties goods. Bulletin Classifieds The Buuetin's appear every day in the HOLIDAY SPECIAL! "Call A Service Call 541-337-6149 print or on line. Professional" Directory CCB ¹193960 is au about meeting Call 541-385-5809 C & H Painting, LLC your needs. www.bendbulletin.com "For a Sweet Paint Job" I DO THAT!

Call on one of the professionals today!

The Bulletin servingcentral oregonsince iaa

Commercial/Residential Lic'd, bonded, insured. ccst7ossr 541-977-4360


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DAILY BRI DG E C LU B

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

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD will SIIprtz

T ttesday November 25,2014

Overberried

A SIGN OF ME TIMES

By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency

" I w a s the r ecipient o f an Overberry special i n t h e p e n ny game," Ed, the club expert, told me. Joe Overberry thinks it's nobler to go down in pursuit of overtricks than to make what he bid. He drives his partners crazy. "Joe was declarer at four spades," Ed said. "As West I led the queen of diamonds, and my partner signaled with the nine. Joe took his king, led a club to dummy and rettuned a trump to finesse with his jack." "If he had picked up the trumps," I said, "I'll bet he would have led a heart to dummy's queen, trying for three overtricks."

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"No doubt," Ed nodded. "But I took the queen of trumps, and we cashed two diamonds. East then led h is last diamond, and my t e n o f trumps was sure to score for down one. You should have heard North." South's correct play was to take the A-K of trumps. With a normal 3-2 break, he would have at least 10 tricks. If t rumps broke 4-1, South would have options but might finesse in hearts and make his game if West had the king.

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LAST DIAMOND

48 Kristoff's reindeer in "Frozen"

All the puzzles this week, from Monday to Seturday, have been created by one person, Patrick 49 "Much About Nothing Blindauer. Keep your solutions handy, because the ("The Simpsons" Saturday puzzle conceals 8 meta-challenge involvepisode) ing the solution grids of all six.

No. 1021

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By Peter A. Collins ©2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

11/25/14


THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25 2014 E5

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

)

s

I

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fe

870

880

881

882

885

Boats & Accessories

Motorhomes

Travel Trailers

Fifth Wheels

Canopies & Campers

CHECK YOURAD

RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605- RoommateWanted 616- Want ToRent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent 632 - Apt./MultiplexGeneral 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NW Bend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SE Bend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648- Houses for RentGeneral 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for RentSunriver 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663- Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RVParking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space

682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REALESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 -Real Estate Trades 726- Timeshares for Sale 730 - NewListings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - MultiplexesforSale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744- Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746-Northwest Bend Homes 747 - Southwest BendHomes 748-Northeast Bend Homes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson County Homes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land a.

Houses for Rent General

630

Rooms for Rent Furn. room quiet home, no drugs, alcohol or smoking. $450/mo. 1st 8 last . 541-408-0646 Need help fixing stuff? Call A Service Professional find the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com 632

Apt./lillultiplex General CHECK YOUR AD

on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified

Senior ApartmentIndependent Living ALL-INCLUSIVE with 3 meals daily Month-to-month lease, check it out! Call 541-233-9914 634

Apt./Multiplex NE Bend

Call for Specials! Limited numbers avail. 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. W/D hookups, patios or decks. NOUNTAIN GLEN, 541-383-9313 Professionally managed by Norris & Stevens, Inc. FIND YOUR FUTURE HOME INTHE BULLETIN

Your future isjust a page away. Whetheryou're looking for a hat or aplace tohangit, The Bulletin Classified is your bestsource. Every daythousandsof buyers andsellers ofgoods and services dobusinessin these pages.Theyknow you can't beat TheBulletin Classified Sectionfor selection andconvenience - every item isjust a phone call away. The Classified Section is easy to use.Everyitem is categorizedandevery cartegoiy is indexed on the section's front page. Whether youarelookingfor a home orneedaservice, your future is inthe pagesof The Bulletin Classified.

The Bulletin ServingCentral Oregon since19t8

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

850

Snowmobiles

4-place enclosed Interstate snowmobile trailer w/ RockyMountain pkg, $8500. 541-379-3530 860

Motorcycles & Accessories 1965 Harley Davidson 1200C with S portster frame and '05 Harley crate motor. Rat Rod look, Screaming Eagle tips, leather saddlebags, e xtras. S acrifice a t $4000. Call Bill Logsdon, 456-206-8446 (in Bend).

648

. Ij Ij

Skamper 1990 8-ft popup cabover camper, immaculate, many extras, 3-burner stove, heater w/thermostat, hot water heater, oversized pressure water s y stem„ on the first day it runs Fantastic Fan, lots of to make sure it is cor- storage, sleeps 4, $3750. rect. "Spellcheck" and 541-617-0211 human errors do occur. If this happens to

P

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

Harlev Davidson

2001 FXSTD, twin cam 86, fuel injected, Vance & Hines short shot exhaust, Stage I with Vance & Hines fuel management system, custom parts, extra seat. $10 500OBO Call Today 541-516-8664

2006 11'x2' Zodiak, like new, ActiV hull, safe lock canister, 15HP Yamaha w/ t r olling plate, 6 gal Transom tank, less 30 hrs, 2 chest seats, full Bimini top, Transom wheels, cover, RV's special. $5500. 541-923-6427

Beaver Marquis, 1993 40-ft, Brunswick floor plan. Many extras, well maintained, fire suppression behind refrig, Stow Master 5000 tow bar, $22,995.

541-383-3503

2007 Jayco Jay Flight 29 FBS with slide out & awning - Turn-key ready to use, less than 50 total days used by current owner. Never smoked in, no indoor pets, excellent your ad, please concond., very clean. Lots of tact us ASAP so that bonus features; many corrections and any have never been used. adjustments can be Asking $18,000. C a l l made to your ad. Lisa, 541-420-0794 for 541-385-5809 more info / more photos. TheBulletin Classified

Dutchman Denali 32' 2011 travel trailer. 2 slides Everything goes, all kitchen ware, linens etc. Hitch, sway Fleetwood D i scovery bars, water & sewer hoses. List price 40' 2003, diesel, w/all $34,500 - asking options - 3 slide outs, $26,800 Loaded. satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, Must see to apprecietc., 32,000 miles. Wintered in h e ated ate. Redmond, OR. 541-604-5993 shop. $79,995 obo. 541-447-6664

Four Winds 2008 18' travel trailer used very little

908

Aircraft, Parts & Service Freightliner custom

5th wheel puller, sleeper cab, rebuilt engine with 20k miles, 6.5 generator, 120 cu. ft. storage boxes - one 6' long. Gets 10.9 mpg, many more features. All in good shape. See to appreciate (in Terrebonne area).$24,000. 503-949-4229

1/3 interest in

Columbia 400,

Financing available.

$150,000

(located @ Bend) 541-266-3333

$8500. Freightliner 1994 Custom Motorhome

541-719-1217

Keystone Everest 5th Will haul small SUV PUBLISHER'S Wheel, 2004 or toys, and pull a NOTICE Model 323P - 3 slides, trailer! Powered by All real estate adverrear island-kitchen, 6.3 Cummins with 6 tising in this newspafireplace, 2 TV's, speed Allison auto Heartland P r owler per is subject to the CD/DVR/VCR/Tuner trans, 2nd o wner. 2012, 29PRKS, 33', w/surround sound, A/C, F air H o using A c t Very nice! $53,000. Ads published in the like new, 2 slides-liv- custom bed, ceiling fan, which makes it illegal "Boats" classification 541-350-4077 "any i ng area & la r ge W/D ready, many extras. to a d vertise • H omes for Sale include: Speed, fishcloset, 15' power awNew awning & tires. preference, limitation ing, drift, canoe, ning, power hitch 8 Excellent condition. or disc r imination NOTICE house and sail boats. stabilizers, full s i ze $18,900.More pics based on race, color, All real estate adverHarley Fat Boy 2002 For all other types of queen bed, l a r ge available.541-923-6408 religion, sex, handi14k orig. miles.. Exwatercraft, please go shower, porcelain sink cap, familial status, tised here in is sub- cellent cond. Vance & to Class 875. ject to th e F ederal 8 toilet. marital status or naHines exhaust, 5 Fair Housing A ct, 541-365-5609 $25,000or make offer. tional origin, or an in- which makes it illegal •a spoke HD rims, wind 541-999-2571 tention to make any HOLIDAY RAMBLER vest, 12" rise handle to advertise any prefVACATIONER 2003 such pre f erence, Servtn Central Ore on since 1903 bars, detachable lug8.1L V8 Gas, 340 hp, limitation or discrimi- erence, limitation or gage rack w/ back based nation." Familial sta- discrimination Bayliner 185 2006 workhorse, Allison 1000 rest, hwy pegs & many Keystone Raptor, 2007 on race, color, relitus includes children open bow. 2nd owner 5 speed trans., 39K, accents. Must 37 toy hauler,2 slides, sex, handicap, chrome NEI/I/ TIRES, 2 slides, — low engine hrs. under the age of 16 gion, see to appreciate! generator, A/C, 2 TVs, Onan 5.5w gen., ABS living with parents or familial status or na- $10,500. In CRR area — fuel injected V6 satellite system w/auto tional origin, or intenbrakes, steel cage cock— Radio & Tower. legal cus t odians, call 530-957-1865 in/out sound syspit, washer/dryer, fire- KeystoneLaredo 31' tseek, pregnant women, and tion to make any such Great family boat em,sleeps 6,m any exlace, mw/conv. oven, preferences, l imitapeople securing cus- tions or discrimination. Priced to sell. w i th 1 2 ' tras.$29,999. In Madras, ree standing dinette, RV 2006 Sleeps tody of children under 6, $11,590. call 541-771-9607 or was $121,060 new; now, slide-out. will not knowingly HDFatBo 7996 541-546-0345. 16. This newspaper We queen walk-around 541-475-6265 $35,900. 541-536-1008 accept any advertiswill not knowingly acbed w/storage undering for real estate neath. Tub 8 shower. cept any advertising which is in violation of 875 Laredo 30' 2009 2 swivel rockers. TV. for real estate which is Watercraft this law. All persons Air cond. Gas stove & in violation of the law. are hereby informed refrigerator/freezer. O ur r e aders a r e ds published in "Wa all dwellings adMicrowave. Awning. hereby informed that that tercraft" include: Kay Completely Outside sho w er. all dwellings adver- vertised are available Rebuilt/Customized aks, rafts and motor an equal opportuSlide-through stortised in this newspa- on Providence2005 Ized 2012/2013 Award personal nity basis. The Bullea ge. E a s y Lif t . per are available on Fully loaded, 35,000 Winner watercrafts. Fo $29,000 new; Askoverall length is 35' an equal opportunity tin Classified miles, 350 Cat, Very ing "boats" please se Showroom Condition $13,600 has 2 slides, Arctic basis. To complain of clean, non-smoker, Many Extras Class 670. 541-447-4605 package, A/C,table d iscrimination ca l l 3 slides, side-by-side Low Miles. 541-365-5609 & chairs, satellite, HUD t o l l-free at • Redmond Homes refrigerator with ice S'15,000 Arctic pkg., power 1-600-677-0246. The maker, Washer/Dryer, 541-548-4607 awning, in excellent toll f ree t e lephone Serving Central Oregonsince 19D3 Rv Flat screen TV's, In condition! More pix CONSIGNMENTS number for the hear- Looking for your next motion satellite. at bendbulletin.com emp/oyee? ing im p aired is WANTED 880 $95,000 Place a Bulletin help 1-600-927-9275. We Do The Work ... $22,500 541-460-2019 Motorhomes wanted ad today and 541-419-3301 You Keep The Cash! HD Softtail Deuce 2002, reach over 60,000 On-site credit broken back forces 652 readers each week. RV approval team, sale, only 200 mi. on Your classified ad Houses for Rent CONSIGNMENTS web site presence. new motor from Harwill also appear on WANTED NW Bend We Take Trade-Ins! ley, new trans case bendbulletin.com We Do The Work ... and parts, s p oke which currently reYou Keep The Cash! BIG COUNTRY RV House for rent/sale! 3 wheels, new brakes, ceives over On-site credit Bend: 541-330-2495 bdrm 2 bath, newly ren early all o f b i k e 1.5 million page MONTANA 3585 2008, approval team, Redmond: mod. thru-out, 134 NW 2007 Winnebago brand new. Has proof views every month web site presence. 541-548-5254 exc. cond., 3 slides, Colorado. $1200/mo. 1st/ of all work done. ReOutlook Class "C" at no extra cost. king bed, Irg LR, last/sec. 541-389-2028 We Take Trade-Ins! 31', solar panel, movable windshield, Bulletin Classifieds Arctic insulation, all catalytic heater, T-bags, black and all Get Results! options - reduced by BIG COUNTRY RV excellent condition, Looking for your chromed out with a Call 385-5609 or Bend: 541-330-2495 $3500 to $31,500. Say "goodbuy" next employee? willy skeleton theme more extras. place your ad on-line Redmond: 541-420-3250 Place a Bulletin help Asking$55K. on all caps and covto that unused at 541-548-5254 wanted ad today and ers. Lots o f w o rk, Ph. 541-447-9268 bendbugetin.com item by placing it in reach over 60,000 RV heart and love went readers each week. CONSIGNMENTS into all aspects. All The Bulletin Classifieds Your classified ad WANTED done at professional The Bulletin Get your will also appear on We Do the Work, shops, call for info. To Subscribe call business 541-385-5809 bendbulletin.com You Keep the Cash! Must sell quickly due 'vv'-~ 541-365-5600 or go to which currently reOn-site credit to m e dical bi l l s, www.bendbulletin.com ceives over 1.5 milapproval team, $6250. Call Jack at e ROW I N G lion page views evweb site presence. 675 541-279-9536. Winnebago 22' ery month at no We Take Trade-Ins! RV Parking 2002 - $28,500 extra cost. Bulletin Manufactured/ with an ad in Chevy 454, heavy KAWASAKI Classifieds Get ReBIG COUNTRY RV Full hookup RV s ite duty chassis, new Mobile Homes KLX125, 2003, The Bulletin's sults! Call 365-5609 Bend: 541-330-2495 avail. through April batteries & tires, cab good condition. "Call A Service or place your ad Redmond: & roof A/C, tow hitch 30th, $325 + e l ec. Fall Clearance $1100. on-line at 541-546-5254 Professional" w /brake, 21k m i ., Central Oregon KOA 3 Bdrm, 2 Bath, 541-593-6748 bendbulletin.com 541-546-3046 more! 541-260-3251 1601 sq.ft., Directory RETAIL Yamaha V-Star, 250cc $65,609 882 2011 motorcycle, new SALE Sell an Item Fifth Wheels custom seat for rider, $77,599 Finished vinyl coating on tank, On Your Site. 2 helmets included. J & M Homes Snowbird Special! Gets 60mpg, and has 541-546-5511 Open Road 36' w/3 3,276 miles. Allegro 32' 2007, like Ready to makememories! slides! King bed, Asking $4700, firm. new, only 12,600 miles. Top-selling Winnebago List Your Home If it's under$500 hide-a-bed, glass Jandg/fHomes.com Call Dan 541-550-0171 Chev 6.1L with Allison 60 31J, original owners, nonshower, 10 gal. wayou can place it in We Have Buyers transmission, dual ex- smokers, garaged, only ter heater, 10 cu.ft. 870 Alpenlite 28 ft. Get Top Dollar haust. Loaded! Auto-lev- 18,800 miles, auto-levelThe Bulletin fridge, central vac, Financing Available. 1987, New stove, Boats & Accessories eling system, 5kw gen, ing jacks, (2) slides, upsatellite dish, 27" TV Classifieds for: 541-548-5511 fridge. Good furpower mirrors w/defrost, graded queen bed, bunk /stereo system, front 17.5' Bayliner 175 Capri, 2 slide-outs with awbeds, micro, (3) Tvs, nace, AC. Stereo, power leveling jacks DVD player. Queen New Dream Special like new, 135hp I/O, low nings, rear c a mera, sleeps 10! Lots of stor$10 • 3 lines, 7 days & scissor stabilizer 3 bdrm, 2 bath time, Bimini top, many trailer hitch, driver door age, maintained, very bed WITH bedding. jacks, 16' awning. $16 - 3 lines, 14 days $50,900 finished extras, Karavan trailer w/power window, cruise, clean!Only $67,995! Ex20 ft. awning. 2005 model is like on your site. with swing neck, current exhaust brake, central tended warranty and/or fi- Good shape. $4500 new! $25,995 J and M Homes (Private Party ads only) registrations. $7000. vac, satellite sys. Asking nancing avail to qualified 541-977-5587 541-419-0566 541-546-5511 541-350-2336 $67,500. 503-781-8812 buyers!541-388-7179

%0o0o

o

1/3 interest in wellequipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. $65,000. 541-419-9510 www. N4972M.com

Want to impress the relatives? Remodel your home with the help of a professional from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

The Bulletin

The Bulletin

-llh&

, • etu

I

1/5th interest in 1973

Cessna 150 LLC

150hp conversion, low time on air frame and engine, hangared in Bend.Excellent performance & affordable flying! $6,000. 541-410-6007

1974 Beffanca 1730A 2180 TT, 440 SMO, 180 mph, excellent

condition, always hangared, 1 owner for 35 years. $60K. In Madras, call 541-475-6302

HANGAR FOR SALE. 30x40 end unit T hanger in Prineville.

Dry walled, insulated, and painted. $23,500. Tom, 541.786.5546

Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 196 6 A e r o Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time, full panel. $21,000 obo. Contact Paul at 541-447-5184.

916 Trucks & Heavy Equipment

FAST!

Peterbilt 359 p otable water truck, 1 990, 3200 gal. tank, 5hp pump, 4-3" h oses, camlocks, $ 25,000. 541-620-3724

SEMI-DRY VAN

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

$8500.

541-719-1217

Your auto, RV, motorcycle, boat, or airplane

ad runs until it sells or up to 12 months

FOR ONCY

(whichever comes first!)

00+

Includes up to 40 words of text, 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold headline and price. • Daily publication in The Bulletin, an audience of over 70,000.

«j yA""' bt/piEE<

"Little Red Corvette"

• Weekly publication in Central Oregon Marketplace —DELIVERED to over 30,000 households.

P

NlonacoDynasty 2004-L~ ADED! solid Faturesinclude 4-dr s counter, su surtace deconvectionmlcro, built-inwasher/drye, ramictiletloor,TV,DUD, satellitedish,alrleveling, storage ass-through dk ingsizebed tray,ana' -Allforonly $149,000 541-000-000

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rvette Convertl oupe 132 mffes -24mpg Ad scriptiona„ ' terestingfa o howmuch ould ha in a c

$12 5PO 541 P(IO

• Weekly publication in The Central Oregon Nickel Ads with an audience of over 30,000 in Central and Eastern Oregon • Continuous listing with photo on Bendbulletin.com * A $290 value based on an ad with the same extra features, publishing 28-ad days in the above publications. Private party ads only.

For more information call 541-385-5809.


E6 TUESDAY NOVEMBER 25 2014 • THE BULLETIN I

• 0 ~ I •

BOATS 8 RVs 805- Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies and Campers 890- RVs for Rent

• •

AUTOS8ETRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916 - Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles 933

Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories

Antique & Classic Autos

Pickups

2 Studded snow tires. LT235/65R16, on rims from 1975 Ford 3/4 HD pickup, used less than 150 mi., $100. 541-369-6769

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2005 Diesel 4x4 1965 Mustang Hard top, 6-cylinder, auto trans, power brakes, power steering, garaged, well maintained, engine runs strong. 74K mi., great condition.$12,500. Must see! 541-598-7940

Dodge Dakota, $100 obo.

Chev Crewcab dually, Allison tranny, tow pkg., brake controller, cloth split front bench seat, only 66k miles. Very good condition, Original owner, $34,000 or best offer. 541-408-7826 Advertise your car! Add APrcture!

541-385-5781

Reach thousands of readers!

Call 541-385-5809

The Bulletin Classifieds (4) Les Schwab studded snow tires, 265/70R16, reat shape, 90% tread, Mercedes 360SL 1962 CAL LW 265 obo. 541-362-4144 Roadster, black on black, TODAYW 4 Studded Les Schwab soft 8 hard top, excellent tires on rims , condition, always ga- Chevy Pickup 1978, m i l es, long bed, 4x4, frame 245/75R-16 off '96 raged. 1 55 K up restoration. 500 Toyota 4Ru n ner,$11,500. 541-549-6407 Cadillac en g i ne, $150. 541-615-0666. fresh R4 transmis4 studded P205/75R-14 sion w/overdrive, low tires on GM wheels, apmi., no rust, custom prox 500 miles on them interior and carpet, $350. Bob, 541-548-4671 n ew wheels a n d tires, You must see FIND IT! it! $25,000 invested. ettiy ty I lylercedea $12,000 OBO. SELL IT! 450SL, 1975 541-536-3669 or The BulletinClassifieds 97K Miles 541-420-6215. $6999. (4) studded tires on rims, 541-504-6399 L235/75R-15 (fit SUV or truck), excellent cond, $400. 541-366-3022 '65-'66 Mustang original bucket seats, completely rebuilt, better than new. Price lowered, must sell. Chevy Si l verado 541-447-7272 Oldsmobile CUSTOM 1500 20 1 4 , L T , CRUISER WAGON 1991 4 WD, crew c a b , 932 1 owner, 6 seatbelts, short box, 5.3L, new Antique & 116K mi, 350EFI V6, Feb. 28, 2014. Not Classic Autos auto, $3000 driven since June 541-365-6166 or 2014. Gar a ged. Norm06@msn.com Loaded, brown tan cloth interior, 4900 Plymouth Duster, 1974, $34,9 9 0. sound body, 360 enqine mi., 541-460-5634 (needs work). $2300. gythrp©gmail.com Call 541-390-2454

Chevelle Malibu 1966 Complete restoration, $32,900.

(509) 521-0713 (in Bend, OR)

CHEVELLE MALIBU 1969 350-4spd, 3" exhaust. $12,000. 541-768-0427

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Pickups

Sport Utility Vehicles

Sport Utility Vehicles

Sport Utility Vehicles

Ford Escape

JEEP WRANGLER

Mercury Mariner

975

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932

255/65R16, fit

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(4) Bridgestone Blizzak studless snow tires & rims,

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 933

Honda Ri d geline RTL 2006. 2nd owner 112,000 mi.. Records 2009 Hybrid Limited AWD, great tires. since owning car for 5 VINO A17570 years. Truck crew cab $23,977 w ith 3.5 V 6 , a u t o trans, very clean with ROBBERSON most options, 17n almaam loy wheels with Toyo ~ ~ Tires at 60%. Custom 541-312-3966 t onneau cover f o r Dlr ¹0205. pricing bed, and tow hitch. good thru 11/30/14 Price to sell$13,997. dagreene75 tN hotmail. com or 610-909-1701 Good classified ads tell the essential facts in an Toyota Tundra 4x4, 2002 interesting Manner. Write SR5 access cab, with canopy, $6500 o b o. from the readers view - not the seller's. Convert the 541-260-1650 facts into benefits. Show PRICE REDUCED the reader how the item will help them insomeway.

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2009 hard top 16,000 miles. automatic, AC, tilt & cruise, power windows, power steering, power locks, alloy wheels and running boards, garaged.

$22,500.

MERCEDES-BENZ GL450 2 0 10 Im -

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Sport Utility Vehicles 2006- 4x4, room for everyone. VIN¹121999 $16,977 BMW X3 35i 2010

Exlnt cond., 65K miles w/100K mile transferable warranty. Very clean; loaded - co(d weather pkg, premium pkg & technology pkg.

Keyless access, sunroof, navigation, satellite radio, extra snow tires. (Car top carrier not included.)$22,500. 541-915-9170

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541-647-0061. 940

Vans

Nearly perfect! Must see! vin¹ 142671

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Chrysler Town & Country LXI 1997, beautiful inside & out, one owner, nonsmoker, loaded with options! 197,692 mi. Service rec o rds available. $4 , 950. Call Mike, (541) 6156176 after 3:30 p.m.

Mercedes GLK350

Dlr ¹0205. pricing good thru 11/30/14

541-312-3986

Dlr ¹0205. pricing good thru 11/30/14

Automobiles

2010 - Gorgeous, AWD. Vin¹310777 $26,977. aeeoc»~

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Buick LaCrosse

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541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. pricing good thru 11/30/14

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541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. pricing good thru 11/30/14

pricing good thru 11/30/1 4

MAZDA 3 S 2011

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Limited Edition. PRAYING FOR SNOW! Vin¹149706

21,977 ROBBERSON ~

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541-312-3966 Dlr ¹0205.Price good thru 11/30/1 4

Mercedes MBZ ML500 2007 silver, fully equipped, 74,100 miles, mounted snow tires on alloy rims. Original owner, all records $17,500. 541-322-6281

Certified preowned with warranty. ¹401047 Onl $16,947 ROBBERSON ctlleecn ~

2006 - Great runner, must see. VIN ¹159299 $9977.

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541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205 price good thru 11/30/14

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Mercedes MBZ ML500, 2003, loaded, 102K, facJeep Grand Cherokee tory rims w/snow tires incl. 2007, 74K mi., $9999. All records, exlnt cond., 541-923-3516 $9,500. 541-322-6281 Jee Libe

VW CDNV. 1 9 76 Chevy Silverado $8999 -1600cc, fuel 2012 4x4 Crew Cab injected, classic 1976 Chevrolet Trailblazer 39K miles, Volkswagen Convert2006 4x4 ible. Cobalt blue with White Diamond paint, Automatic, 6-cylinder, a black convertible Tonneau cover, leather wheel, power wintop, cream colored heated seats, running tilt dows, power brakes, interior 8 black dash. boards, tow-ready, air conditioning, keyThis little beauty runs new tires (only 200 less entry, 69K miles. and looks great and miles on them), like Excellent condition; turns heads wherever new inside and out! tires have 90% tread. it goes. Mi: 131,902. $29,900. $11,995. Phone 541-504-6399 541-350-0775 Call 541-598-5111

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541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Special

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Jeep Commander

2007 - Loaded, awesome. Vin¹569977 SOLD! ROBBERSON

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Hyundai Elantra

ROBBERSON

541-312-3986

Cadillac Escalade

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541 e385-5809

Toyota FJ Cruiser 2012, 4WD, w/traction control, alloy 2013, loaded, wheels, mud & snow sporty, nearly t ires, tow pkg. + perfect. VIN¹624601 trailer break, back $17,977 up camera, r oof rack, ABS breaks + ROBBERSON independent system, mamm blue tooth connec~ ~ tion, hands free cell 541-312-3966 phone c a p ability, Dlr ¹0205. Price compass, outside good thru 11/30/14 temp, inclinometer, 32K mi. , p r istine condition, $31,900. 541-549-1736 or

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2011 Has everything, seriously!! Vin¹301632 $49,977 ROBBERSON

Find It in The Bulletin Classifiedsl

$11,977

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ROBBERSON 541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. pricing good thru 11/30/14

541-419-5960

maculate, custom wheels and new 20" tires. 2nd set MBZ wheels with snowToyota Tundra Ltd. Ed. The Bulletin flake tires. Full new CrewMax, 2011 - Only Ser ingCent el Oregon since tgtg car ext. warranty 29,700 miles & loaded! 361hp, TRD off road pkg, Ford Expedition 2003, March 2017. 59,500 Bilstein shocks,16n alloys, Eddie Bauer P kg., miles. Fully loaded sunroof, rear s l i ding loaded, 1 owner, mint incl. DVD and NAV. window, backup camera, cond., new all weather $34,500. 12-spkr JBL sys, running tires, no a ccidents, 541-615-3049 brds, hitch/trailer sway only 77K mi., $12,999. kg, 10-way adj leather 541-549-7956 or td seats, dual climate 54'I -699-7056. control, sonar, 6-disc CD, Tick, Tock Bluetooth, more! $34,900. GMC Yukon Tick, Tock... 541-390-6616 IThis

2009 - All wheel drive, same vehicle as the Escape, in great shape! Vin¹J13074 Only $13,977

Honda Accord SE 2006, 4-cyl, great mpg, nonsmoker, well maint'd, 95K mi., clean. 1 owner. Reduced $6250 firm. 460-266-7395 (Bend)

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541-312-3966

Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 11/30/14 Buick LeSabres, 2002 132k $3999; 2005 179k $4999. 541-419-5060 Chevrolet Cruze 2013, 2700 actual miles, 4-cyl turbo, nCadilliacn red, verv clean, must see! $14,995. 541-362-0194

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

LEGAL NOTICE IN THE COURT OF T HE STATE O F OREGON FOR THE COUNTY OF DESC HUTES PRO BATE DE P ARTMENT. In the Matter o f the E state o f JOHN PAR T I N,

D eceased. C a s e No. 14PB 0 102. N OTICE T O IN TERESTED P ERSONS. NOTICE IS HEREBY G I V EN that t h e un d e rsigned has b e en appointed personal representative. All persons ha v i ng claims against the estate are required to present t hem, with vouchers attached, to the undersigned personal representative at the law offices of BALYEAT & EAGER, LLP, 920 NW Bond Street, Suite 209, Bend, OR 9 7701, within four months after the date of first publication of t h is notice, or the claims may be barred. All p ersons wh o s e rights may be affected by the proceedings may obtain additional information from the records of the Court, the personal repres entative, o r th e lawyer for the personal r epresentative, Andrew C. Bal yeat. Dated a nd first published on November 18, 2014. Lynn R. McLaughlin, Personal R e p resentative. Personal Representative: Lynn R. McLaughlin, 20676 Son g bird L ane, Bend O R 97702, (541) 977-571 7. La wyer for Personal Representative: A ndrew C. Balyeat, Balyeat 8 Eager, LLP, 920 NW Bond Street, Suite 209, B end, OR 97701, (541) 322-0404, (541) 322-0505 FAX, andy@balyeatlaw.c om, OSB ¹951927.

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WHEN YOU SEE THIS

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PT Cruiser 2007, 5spd, 32 mpg hwy, 60K miles, new tires+ mounted studded snow tires, $7250. 541-433-2026

1000 Legal Notices

MoreP ixatBendbulletin,com On a classified ad go to www.bendbulletin.com to view additional photos of the item.

The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

Time to d8cluttBT? Need some extra cash? Need some extra space the garage?

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List one It em * i n Th e B u l le t in's Classifieds for three days for FREE. P LUS, your ad ap p e ars in PR INT a n d ON-LINE at be n d bulletin.com

SSSl 1C To receive yourFREE GLASSIFIED AD, call 541-385-5809 or visit The Bulletin office at: 1777 SW Chandler Ave. (on Bend's west side) *Offerallowsfor 3linesof textonly. Excludesall service, hay,wood,pets/animals, plants,tickets, weapons,rentals andemployment advertising, andall commercial accounts. Mustbean individual itemunder$200.00andprice ofindividual itemmustbeincludedin thead. Ask yourBulletin SalesRepresentative aboutspecial pricing, longerrunschedules andadditional features. LimitI ad peritem per30daysto besold.


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