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THURSDAY November27,2014
lVEP7 INSIDE
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By Tyler Leeds
Lanning, COCC discoveredhe had been placed on administrative leave after a colleague accused
The Bulletin
After failing to hire a new president last
him of raping her at a conference in Portland.
The Multnomah County District Attorney's year, Central Oregon Community College has received 50 applicants to serve as the school's Office chose not to pursue the case because of next leader, an increase of 14 over the prior go-roUIld.
insufficient evidence, but the college moved
Last winter, the college narrowed its 36 applicants down to one, Patrick Lanning, an admin-
on, naming an interim president from within its own ranks, Shirley Metcalf, to serve a oneyear term after then-President Jim Middleton
istrator from Chemeketa Community College retired. in Salem. After announcing its intention to hire •
See COCC /A5
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Turkeysin the wild make a comeback
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By Michael S. Rosenwald The Washington Post
Members of a Maryland church were preparing a turkey supper when they looked out the window and discovered several distant relatives of the main
course approaching. The wild turkeys were not feeling festive. One flew at and into a truck.
When two members of Faith United Church of Christ in Frederick went
outside to get a closer a look, they were gobbled at and chased back inside. A joke quickly made the rounds: The wild turkeys •
•
•
had somehow learned their
•
kinsfolk were on platters.
They wanted revenge. Wild turkeys were nearly extinct a century ago, but a decadeslong effort to restore their population has been so successful that
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the fowl are showing up in unlikely places. See Turkeys /A4 k
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Drone ~tunts raise concerns
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Ryan Brennecke 1 The Bulletin
Amateur photographers and Hollywood filmmakers
many, adds an ingredient to a dish as Terry Denend and her
turn to them for lush over-
.ft, an exchange student from Mexico, as she eats a handful of
head shots. Geologists use them to look above the seas
I •
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Terry Denend started
globe and know little about the holiday's history, they both echo Terry Denend's appreciation of family and
preparing their Thanksgiving feast four days ago with the girls' help. As of Wednesday afternoon, they had already
togetherness. "With this time we spend
types of pie and whipped
different corners of the
together preparing, I feel closer to my (host) family," Nadine said. "I enjoy it so much, having a break and spending a lot of time together."
cooked threedifferent the sweet potatoes. Bob Denend had the prime rib
seasoned and this morning
for oil-bearing rocks. Amazon executives are pushing to use them to plop packages onto doorsteps. But now drones — the unmanned flying vehicles the size of apizzaboxare also a favorite tool for more unruly groups: pranksters and troublemakers. As the price of drones has fallen and sales have
Terry Denend will stuff the
risen, the machines have emerged as central char-
turkey.
acters in stunts from the
See Sharing /A5
•
puckish to the criminal. See Drones/A4
e II
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The Bulletin
INDEX I
AnIndependent
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THURSDAY November 27,2014
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TODAY: HEALTH, D1-8 '
.
' Thermography:Canwefind breastcancerearlier?
Teenagers:Howto getthemto seeadoctor — ASAP? ~~~'- Exercisand e the mind: Isit just a placeboeffect?
resi en ia searc 0
O S ron S
By Tyler Leeds
Eatingfish:Whyisn't moreof theworld doingit?
Lanning, COCC discoveredhe had been placed on administrative leave after a colleague accused
The Bulletin
After failing to hire a new president last
Smartphones: Aretheythefuture of healthcare? Billionaires:Canacoupleofthemcurehealth care'sils?
him of raping her at a conference in Portland.
The Multnomah County District Attorney's year, Central Oregon Community College has received 50 applicants to serve as the school's Office chose not to pursue the case because of next leader, an increase of 14 over the prior
insufficient evidence, but the college moved
go-round. Last winter, the college narrowed its 36 appli-
on, naming an interim president from within its own ranks, Shirley Metcalf, to serve a one-
cants down to one, Patrick Lanning, an admin-
year term after then-President Jim Middleton
istrator from Chemeketa Community College retired. in Salem. After announcing its intention to hire
TODAY'S READERBOARD
Turkeysin the wild make a comeback
arin
Parade floats —without the helium, the showwouldn't go on.A3
Switching sides —civil War loyalties can be flexible. B1
Rare sighting —Agray
t'I'1CB.
wolf is spotted at the Grand Canyon.C4
EDITOR'SCHOICE Meg Roussos/The Bulletin
From a quiet street to a crime scene
Jamie Giannioses, 57, of Bend, carries the remnants of a turkey to be made into stock while his sons Theodore, 20, left,
and Niko, 19, help prepare 30 moreThanksgiving Day meals Wednesday at Bend's Community Center. For information
on free meals today, there and elsewhere, see Page B1.
SeeCOCC /A5
• Foreign exchange students Clara and Nadine,who arestaying in La Pine,are alsobringing the flavors of home to their first Thanksgiving
By Michael S. Rosenwald The Washington Post
Members of a Maryland church were preparing a turkey supper when they looked out the window and discovered several distant relatives of the main
course approaching. The wild turkeys were not feeling festive. One flew at and into a truck.
When two members of Faith United Church of Christ in Frederick went
outside to get a closer a look, they were gobbled at and chased back inside. A joke quickly made the
C
rounds: The wild turkeys
0 ,P.;
had somehow learned their
r
kinsfolk were on platters.
By Monica Davey and Alan Blinder was never much, a faded
They wanted revenge. Wild turkeys were nearly extinct a century ago, but a decadeslong effort to restore their population
commercial strip on a
has been so successful that
stretchthat drewpeople from the apartments nearby
the fowl are showing up in unlikely places. SeeTurkeys/A4
New York Times News Service
FERGUSON, Mo. — It
for most of the essentials.
You could pick up milk at the convenience store, get a manicure at Crystal
Nails, wash your clothes at the Ferguson Laundry. On a busy Friday night, men would gather to talk and
Drone stunts raise concerns
watch sports on television at
the barber shop as theygot straight razor shaves. But West Florissant
Avenue, in its modest way, was the heart of the neighborhood where Michael
Brown died andthe scene of the protests that followed his shooting in August. Now — withpolice officers directing most traffic away, and yellow tape and parked squad cars blocking access — it is something very
By Nick Wingfield New York Times News Service 4r
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Nadine Kas, 18, second from right, an exchange student from Germany,adds an ingredient to a dish as Terry Denend and her
turn to them for lush over-
husband, Bob Denend, laugh at Clara Robledo, 16, second from left, an exchange student from Mexico, as she eats a handful of
head shots. Geologists use
marshmallows onWednesday asthey prepare for Thanksgiving.
them to look above the seas
different: a desolate crime
scene and abitter symbol of what has been lost and
By Jasmine Rockow
how hard it will be to crawl
Vegan German pretzels and prime rib aren't usually on the Denend family Thanksgiving menu, but this year, Terry Denend has
backtosome semblance of normalcy after this week's arson, looting and destruction. The images are the sort
The Bulletin
a lot of different palates to
tornado has spun through
please. In addition to her hus-
a town. The five-lane road
band, Bob, their two grown
was lined with empty buildings boarded up for
children and a gaggle of grandkids, Terry is cele-
protection, and punctuated
brating this American hol-
m ore often seen aftera
Amateur photographers and Hollywood filmmakers
iday with two international exchange students.
Clara Robledo, a 16-yearold from Mexico, and Na-
dine Kas, an 18-year-old from Germany, are living with the Denends in La
Pine for one year while they study at La Pine High
even though they hail from
Terry Denend started
globe and know little about the holiday's history, they both echo Terry Denend's appreciation of family and
preparing their Thanksgiving feast four days ago with the girls' help. As of Wednesday afternoon, they had already
togetherness. "With this time we spend
types of pie and whipped
different corners of the
together preparing, I feel closer to my (host) family," Student Exchange, a study Nadine said. "I enjoy it abroad program. so much, having a break This is their first time cel- and spending a lot of time ebrating Thanksgiving, and together." School, through North West
cooked threedifferent the sweet potatoes. Bob Denend had the prime rib
seasoned and this morning
for oil-bearing rocks. Amazon executives are pushing to use them to plop packages onto doorsteps. But now drones — the unmanned flying vehicles the size of apizzaboxare also a favorite tool for more unruly groups: pranksters and troublemakers. As the price of drones has fallen and sales have
Terry Denend will stuff the
risen, the machines have emerged as central char-
turkey.
acters in stunts from the
SeeSharing/A5
by mounds of rubble where others had, just last week-
puckish to the criminal. SeeDrones/A4
end, stood. Gone are three
businesses — victims of arson that followed a grand jury's decision not to indict
a white police officer in Brown's fatal shooting. SeeStreet/A5
TODAY'S WEATHER Some showers High 54, Low38 Page C10
The Bulletin
INDEX Business Calendar Classified
65-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Health 01-10 Obituaries C2 Crosswords E 4 H o roscope 09 Sports E1-6 Dear Abby D9 Lo cal/State Cf -1 0 N'/Movies
AnIndependent
C8 B1-4 D9
Q l/l/e use recycled newsprint
Vol. 112, No. 331,
5 sections
0
8 8 267 0 23 30
7
A2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2014
The Bulletin
NATION Ee ORLD
HOW to reaChuS
A TURKEY WINSITSFREEDOM
STOP, START OR MISS YOUR PAPER?
VideO Of Shut12-year-Old — The police officer who fatally shot a12-year-old boy carrying a pellet gun fired within t1/a to 2 seconds of pulling up in his cruiser, police said Wednesday.During those few moments, he ordered theyoungster three times to put up his hands, they said. Thecity released a surveillance video that shows the shooting of Tamir Rice, whowas carrying an airsoft gun that shoots non-lethal plastic pellets. Much of the footage showswhat appears to be a bored kid alone in apark on an unseasonably warm November afternoon. Tamir is seenpacing, occasionally extending his right arm with what appears to be a gun in his hand, talking on acellphone and sitting at a picnic table with his headresting on his arms. Thegun wasn't real. It can bebought at sporting goods stores for less than $20. Tamir's was lacking the bright orange tip that is usually put on such weapons to indicate they're not real guns.
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COSby allegatiOnS —Bill Cosby testified under oath in 2005 that he gave theNational Enquirer anexclusive interview about looming sexual-assault accusations by aCanadian womanagainst him in exchange for the tabloid spiking a secondaccuser's story. Excerpts released Wednesday ofCosby's deposition from a civil lawsuit filed by Andrea Constand quoteCosby assaying hefeared the public would believe her sexual-assault accusations if the Enquirer published similar claims by BethFerrier. Both womenaccused Cosby of drugging and molesting them. "Did youever think that if Beth Ferrier's story was printed in the National Enquirer, that that would make the public believe that maybeAndreawas also telling the truth?" Cosby was asked. "Exactly," Cosby replied.
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Pahlo Martinez Monsivais 1 The Associated Press
President BarackObama, right, with daughter Sasha, carries on theThanksgiving tradition of saving a turkey from the dinner table with a "presidential pardon" of"Cheese"— hiscompanion,"Mac,"was also spared — in theGrand Foyer of theWhite House on Wednesday. Also with Cheeseare Gary Cooper, center, chairman of the National TurkeyFederation and owner of
Cooper Farmsand his son, ColeCooper, far left. "If you're a turkey, andyou're named after a side dish, your chances of escaping Thanksgiving dinner are pretty low," Obamasaid at the annual event, which drew international media coverage. Later Wednesday,Obamatook his family to a neighborhood food pantry to donate apair of turkeys "that didn't make thecut."
Health SiguupS — Obamaadministration officials said Wednesday that more than1 million people hadsubmitted applications for health insurance in the first week of this fall's openenrollment period under the Affordable CareAct, and that 45 percent of them hadalready selected health plans. Theapplications showedthat HealthCare.gov, the website for the federal insurancemarketplace, was working. The federal marketplacewas largely dysfunctional when it openedlast fall. More than three times asmany people selected health plans in one week this month as inall of October and November of last year.
ThankSgiVing traVel — Astormalongthe East Coaston
Si sil.ArL
Wednesday brought with it a mix of rain, sleet andsnow, slowing traffic, grounding planesand prompting many people to changetheir Thanksgiving plans. By midday, morethan1,000 flights were grounded across the EastCoast and some5,000 flights were delayed. With many people heeding calls to get out of town early, security lines started backing upwell before the worst weather had descended on the region. OnTwitter, it did not take long for frustrated commuters to post enough photos to form a collage of airport misery.
Drsarirsre
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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlotteiy.org and individual lottery websites
POWERBALL The numbers drawn Wednesday night are:
©
ewc a en esas airwar ar es By Eric Schmitt
said Federico Borello, the execcarries out the bulk of the work utive director of the Center for SHAW AIR FORCE BASE, to analyze and select planned, Civilians in Conflict, an advoS.C. — The United States is or deliberate, targets that allied cacy group. "The U.S. and coshifting more attack and sur- warplanes strike in Syria and alition forces will need to have veillance aircraft from Afghan- Iraq. processes inplace toinvestigate istan to the air war against the The targets are fixed sites and respond to any allegations Islamic State, deepening U.S. such as military headquarters of civilian casualties." involvement in the conflict and and communications centers, raising new challenges for the oil refineries, training camps, military planners who work troop barracks and weapons here in central South Carolina, depots. far from the targets they will More than 7,000 miles away pick for those aircraft. at Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar, A dozen A-10 ground-attack in the Persian Gulf, another planes have recentl y moved group focuses on so-called popfrom Afghanistan to Kuwait, up targets — convoys of miliwhere they are to start fly- tants or heavy weaponry on the ing missions supporting Iraqi move. ground troops as early as this These have been the top priweek, military officials said. ority of the three-month camPerhaps nowhere outside the paign,even though only about Middle East do the additional one outof every four aircraft aircraft have a more directim - missions sent to attack them pact than at this Air Force base. has droppeditsbombs. Therest But while the Air Force person- of the missions have returned nel who help plan airstrikes to the base, failing to find a taragainst the Islamic State from
get they were permitted to hit
here will have more firepower to bring to bear, they face an
underthe strictrules of engagement designed to avoid civilian casualties. Human rights groups con-
enemy that has not proven to be
an easy target. "When we target a n a-
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ber of the coLfrt's four-person
New York Times News Service
liberal wing, a role she seems to enjoy. She has resisted calls for her resignation from liberals derwent a heart procedure who say they want President Wednesday morning and was Barack Obama to name her reexpected to leave the hospital placement, rather than a possiwithin the next two days, the ble Republican successor. Supreme Court announced. The issue is now largely Ginsburg, 81, "experienced moot. The Republican takeover discomfort during routine exer- of the Senate next month will cise" on Tuesday night and was almost certainly narrow the taken to MedStar Washington range of candidates who could Hospital Center, the court said be confirmed in the last two in a statement. Doctors placed years of Obama's presidency. a stent in her right coronary Ginsburg has repeatedly artery, a procedure known as a vowed in r ecent months to WASHINGTON Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg un-
the statement said. Kathleen Arberg, the court's
The estimated jackpot is now $2.7 million.
I I
Ginsburg recovering after heart surgery
The estimated jackpot is now $90 million.
46 05021 0380400410
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cur that the U.S. military has
taken steps to reduce the risks looking at their capability for of civilian casualties in the air decades, and have extensive campaign but said the dantarget sets," said Maj. Sonny gers would increase when alAlberdeston, thetargetingchief lied-backed Iraqi ground forces here. "But these guys are mov- seek to retake cities like MosuL "When they're actually fighting around. They can be in one place, and then a week later, ing in urban areas, the chalthey're gone." lenges will be harder to make This rear headquarters of the sure they're not causing harm,"
coronary catheterization.
The numbers drawn Wednesday night are:
— From wire reports
tion-state, we've typically been
4 Q >SQ nQuQeSQS MEGABUCKS
Central Command's air forces
New York Times News Service
JeruSalem Spy ballOOnS —Israeli police are watching from above in their attempts to keepcontrol in Jerusalem in the face of the city's worst wave of violence in nearly a decade.Police have been flying surveillance balloons over the city's eastern sector and OldCity — the location of its most sensitive holy sites — to monitor protests and move in onthem quickly. They say the puffy white balloons, which carry a rotating spherical camera pod, have greatly helped quell the unrest. But the eyes inthe sky are unnerving Palestinians. The Israeli company that makesthe Skystar180 aerostat system says the balloons canstay in the air for 72 hours andcarry highly sensitive cameras.
"She is resting comfortably,"
stay on the court as long as
her health holds and she stays mentally sharp. In an interview
last year, she said she loved her public information officer, work and intended to continue added that "Justice Ginsburg "as long as I can do the job fullexpects to be on the bench on steam, and that, at my age, is Monday." The court is sched- not predictable." uled to hear two arguments She has had cancer twice, that day, including one on how and has attributed her survival the First Amendment applies to partly to the medical care she threats conveyed on Facebook. received at the National InstiGinsburg is the senior mem- tutes of Health.
I'
i
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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
A3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Thursday, Nov.27, the 331st day of 2014. Thereare 34 days left in the year.
HAPPENINGS OPEC —The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries will meet in Vienna.
ThankSgiving — Americans celebrate their thankfulness for the pastyear with a feast — or shopping.
HISTORY Highlight:In1924, Macy's first Thanksgiving Dayparadebilled as a "Christmas Parade" — took place in NewYork. In1839, the American Statistical Association was founded in Boston. In1901, the U.S.Army War College wasestablished in Washington, D.C. In1910, NewYork's Pennsylvania Station officially opened. In1939, the play "Key Largo," by Maxwell Anderson, opened at the Ethel Barrymore Theater in New York. In1942, during World War II, the Vichy Frenchnavy at Toulon scuttled its ships and submarines to keepthem out of the hands of Germantroops. In1962, the first Boeing 727 was rolled out at the company's Renton Plant. In1970, Pope PaulVl, visiting the Philippines, was slightly wounded at the Manila airport by a dagger-wielding Bolivian painter disguised as apriest. In1973, the Senatevoted 92-3 to confirm Gerald R.Fordas vice president, succeeding Spiro Agnew, who'd resigned. In1978,San Francisco Mayor GeorgeMoscone and City Supervisor Harvey Milk, a gayrights activist, were shot to death inside City Hall by former supervisor DanWhite. In1983, 181 people were killed when a ColombianAvianca Airlines Boeing 747crashed near Madrid's Barajas airport. In1989,abomb blamed on drug traffickers destroyed a Colombian AviancaBoeing 727, killing all107 people on board and three people onthe ground. Ten years ago: After four decades in North Koreaand less than onemonth in a U.S. military jail near Tokyo, U.S. Army deserter Charles Jenkinsbecame afreeman.The Ukraine parliament declared the recently held presidential election invalid. Five years ago: Tiger Woods crashed his SUVoutside his Florida mansion, sparking widespread attention to reports of unfaithfulness to his wife, Elin Nordegren. (The couple divorced the following year.) Former President Bill Clinton andSecretary of State Hillary RodhamClinton announced to their friends daughter Chelsea's engagement to longtime boyfriend Marc Mezvinsky. Oneyear ago: In a short ceremony inside their Chicago apartment, Vernita Grayand her partner of five years, Patricia Ewert, made lllinois history as they becamethe first gay couple to wed under the state's new law legalizing same-sex marriage. Rising anger over deadly drone attacks spurred a Pakistani political party to reveal the identity of what it said was the top U.S.spy in the country and demand hebe tried for murder. A cranecollapsed at aSaoPaulo stadium being constructed for the 2014 World Cup, killing two workers.
BIRTHDAYS Author Gail Sheehy is 77. Academy Award-winning director Kathryn Bigelow (Film: "The Hurt Locker") is 63. TV host Bill Nye ("Bill Nye, the Science Guy") is 59. Actor William Fichtner is 58. Caroline Kennedy is 57. AcademyAward-winning screenwriter Callie Khouri (Film: "Thelma andLouise") is 57. Rock musician Charlie Burchill (Simple Minds) is 55. Rock musician Charlie Benante (Anthrax) is 52. Rockmusician Mike Bordin (Faith NoMore) is 52. Actress Robin Givens is 50. Actor Michael Vartan is 46. Actor Jaleel White is 38. Actress Alison Pill is 29. — From wire reports
SCIENCE Q&A
eiLim ives an s win aia ea i •
•
Today's big parade wouldn't be possible without the lighter-than-air element — which also has more practical uses, like in MRI machines and welding. By Malcolm Ritter The Associated Press
, h4',~i< ~i~~~4
does the parade Q •• Where helium come from?
snN'
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NEW YORK — It'll never • It forms underground rank up there with turkey • and tends to m ingle and pumpkin pie, but for with natural gas deposits. So millions of Americans the when companies extract and Thanksgiving e x p erienceprocessthe natural gas,they just wouldn't be t h e s ame without ... helium.
For 364 days of the year,
:s
separate out the helium and
sell it to companies like Linde. Helium is shipped worldwide,
the colorless and o d orless
so the stuff that will pump up
gas works quietly behind the scenes, doing jobs like chilling magnets in MRI imaging machines and helping welders protect their work from
Paddington Bear or Pikachu couldcome from as close as Kansas or Wyoming, or as far away as Qatar, Africa or even Australia.
impurities.
But o n Th a n ksgiving, the Iighter-than-air element moves onto a much bigger stage. It's the stuff t hat m akes
does it get to the Q •• How parade?
A • to make it a liquid so it's easier to transport. Huge,
Snoopy, Spider-Man, Papa specialized containers of the Smurf and other huge bal- stuff are shipped to a plant loons sail high above the in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. crowd at the Macy's Thanks- Gas floats above the liquid in giving Day Parade in New these containers; this gas is York. drawn off and compressed. Just so we can be properly The gas is loaded into heavy thankful for the second-most steel tubes, and 10 to 12 tubes abundant element in the uniare put on each of four flatverse (it ranks behind hy- bed trucks. The day before drogen), we turned for some the parade, the trucks drive basicfacts to Eric Bass. He is
product manager for helium at Linde North America Inc. This week, for t h e 2 0 th
straight year, his company will supply the gas to the parade, which in turn is mark-
ing its 88th year.
Julie Jacobson /The Associated Press file photo
Annie Cheung, right, an anchor driver for the Pikachu balloon, helps untangle a hose used to fill char• First, the gas is chilled acter balloons with helium from a truck earlier this month in the parking lot at CitiField in New York.
to fill 600,000 W hat h a p p en s to A •• Enough to 700,000 Mylar party Q • • t he h elium a f t er t h e balloons. But the parade he-
parade?
lium is 99.999 percent pure,
A • mosphere as the balloons are deflated. In 2008,
• I t e scapes to t h e a t -
whereas the stuff in a party balloon might be only 97.5 percent pure.
How bi g
Q •• balloons?
Linde tried recycling some of the gas by withdrawing it a r e th e through tubes put into some of the balloons.
A
• They come in a variety But Bass said the process into Manhattan for the inflat• of sizes. According to was expensive, and there ing of the parade balloons. Macy's, Snoopy is as tall as a Crews fill the balloons with three-story building, as long long hoses, topping them off as 11 bicycles and as wide as on parade day. five taxi cabs. The big balWINDOW loons are made up of multiple How much helium is chambers that are inflated TREATS • needed? individually. 7%1SW10th • Redmand • (541) 5484616
wasn't enough time to recov-
er most of the gas before the streetshad to be cleared for traffic.
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How vulturesevolvedto live on rotting meat,and what that canteach us By Rachel Feltman
tire microbiome of one — let
The Washington Post
alone one of the dirtiest birds. And it turns out that in some
Have you thanked a vulture
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ways, vultures have a microbiting rid of an awful lot of dan- ome in reverse— in compargerous bacteria for us. Accord- ison to humans, anyway. Huing tonew research published mans havemuch more bactetoday? It turns out they're get-
in Nature Communications, the
vulture has a gut designed to
rial diversity in their stomachs andmouthsthantheydo onthe
kill off the bacteria that thrive
surface of their skin. We carry
on the carrion they crave. Whentheychowdown, theyre-
multitudes of beneficial bacte-
ria inside us, with our own colmove the dangerous microbes onies vastly outnumbering any from the ecosystem — and if bacteria we might pick up from we can learn more about how the outside world. the vultures manage this feat, But vultures have dirty, dirty we might be able to harness faces — and shockingly dean their skills in our own fights guts. The researchers found an against bacterial infections. average of 528 kinds ofbacteria In the past few years, new on the vulture faces they samtechnology has helped to un- pled, but only 76 kinds ofbactelock the secrets of the microbi- ria in their guts. "They're sticking their heads ome — the bacterial communities that thrive around, on, and into decaying carcasses, so it's in all of us. But little has been not surprising that their faces done to investigate the bird have so many kinds of bacteria," Graves said. "But when microbiome. "If you're going to study any you get to the lower intestine, kind of bird's microbiome, we it's dominated by a small numfigured, vultures would be a ber of very common bacteria. great place to start," said study There's a huge reduction from co-author Gary Graves, the what they actually consumed." curator of birds for the SmithSo during their digestive sonian National Museum of Natural History. "It's a micro-
processes, vultures must kill
off the vast majority of the mibially rich environment, to say crobes they consume. It's possithe least." ble that most of the bacteria just That's because of the birds' can't compete with the champidietary habits: You've proba-
on few that survive.
bly seen a vulture picking at The species that continue roadkill at least once. But it gets to thrive in their guts are ones even more gross than that. To that cause a lot of problems for tear into the rotting carcasses, humans. Clostridia and Fusothey usually stick their beaks bacteria are the winners of the into the anus of their prey. It's vulture gut showdown. The the easiest opening, but expos- former includes bacteria that es them to an extra set of nas- causesbotulism, gangrene and ty bacteria: In addition to the tetanus — dangerous infections microbes that thrive in rotting
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for humans. Fusobacteria con-
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tribute to gum disease and ulwhatever bacteria live in the de- cers, and may also be involved ceasedprey'sfecalm atter. in some casesof colon cancer. Graves and his colleagues But vultures, whose guts are didn't know what to expect. teeming with the deadly miThey were basically going in crobes,don'tsuffer from bleedwith a blank slate. Previous ing gums or rotting limbs. So studies had taken small sam- if scientists can figure out how ples of bacteria from different vultures manage to tolerate species of birds, but no one had those microbes, they might be ever sat down to profile the en-
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A4 T H E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2014
Drones Continued from A1 In recent months, drone pilots have tried to smuggle contraband into prisons and disrupt sporting events at stadiums. Animal rights groups have turned to drones to stalk
hunters as the hunters stalk wildlife. And in France, more
than a dozen illegal flights over nuclear power plants have unnerved the authorities.
The antics are forcing public safety officials to look at the air above them, general-
Bill Henkel via The Washington Post I Submitted photo
A flock of turkey feeds in a residential backyard this month in Clear Brook, Virginia, near Winchester off Interstate 81. Thanks to repopulation efforts, the U.S. wild turkey population has increased.
Turkeys
who are killing record num-
on ammunition and sporting goods. The idea of saving turContinued from A1 suburban counties. But their keys took hold. They've been spotted wan- resurgence is not without draThe problem: How? States dering into suburban back- ma. Sometimes small delega- tried to breed turkeys and yards, pecking across Trader tions of wild turkeys wander release them into the wild, a Joe's parking lots, even strut- into residential neighborhoods strategy that didn't work. Beting along Interstate 66 in on failed exploratory missions cause the turkeys hadn't grown Northern Virginia. for good grub or companion- up with a wild mother, nobody Jim Clay, a well-known Vir- ship. For people unaccustomed taught them the ropes — what ginia turkey caller and hunter, to seeing turkeys, their appear- to eat, where to sleep, how to saw a gobbler and two hens ances are entertaining and oc- avoid predators. "Imagine turning a chicken while riding in a cab on the casionally unnerving. George Washington Parkway The Humane Society has loose in the woods and expectnear Reagan National Airport. even issued a document titled ing it to survive and reproduce "I almost lost my mind," Clay "What to Do About Wild Tur- on its own," said Gary Norsaid. "The taxi driver thought keys," which indudes tips to man, a Virginia state turkey biI did lose my mind. That's not scare them away. ologist. "Their odds of survival "It's important," the Humane were in the matter of weeks." where you'd expect to see turkeys, but there they were." Societysays, "that all members Trapping them was another In the 1950s, the country's of your family (including chil- option, but cornering turkeys wild turkeys numbered fewer- dren and the elderly) exhibit could qualify as an Olympic than 500,000, wildlife experts their dominance over your sport. They are innately dissay. But now more than 7 mil- neighborhoodturkeysthrough trustful and quick to flee. If lion roam the American land- hazing in order to have the de- they see anything that looks scape. Their impressive come- sired effect. Although wild tur- like a pen — whoosh, they are back is the result of an inven- keys may look large and intim- gone. tive effort to trap and move the idating, they are usually timid But in the 1950s, South Carelusive birds with rocket-con- and scare easily." olina wildlife experts had a trolled nets. eureka moment: Why not use In Maryland, which had just Turkeyrecovery rocket-controlled nets origa thousand wild turkeys in the Wild turkeys and Ameri- inally designed to ensnare 1970s, there are now at least ca go way back. In pre-Colo- waterfowl? So they tried it. A 35,000. Virginia has upwards nial times, they were nearly large net was concealed on the of 200,000. as ubiqui tous as today's deer. ground. Turkeys were baited "I would say this ranks near Then the early European set- to the area. The net was then the top of any conservation tlers came along. This was remotely propelled over the success story," said Bob Long, not a good time to be a turkey. turkeys with small r ockets. Maryland's state turkey bi- Their forest habitats were de- Nabbed. ologist. "When you're going stroyed, and the settlers killed The method was replicated from a turkey population in the them year-round. around the country. Trapped thousands to a turkey populaBy the 1900s, roughly 30,000 turkeys were moved to areas tion in the millions, that's pret- wild turkeys remained. The where theyhad been wiped out. ty amazing." problem continued until a Now wild turkeys roam evThe soaring population has wildlife management move- ery state except Alaska, where been a godsend for hunters, ment emerged, fueled by taxes it's too cold. bers of wild turkeys, even in
ly thought safe and secure, as a place for potential trouble. And for groups pushing drones as legitimate business tools, the string of high jinks are an unexpected and unwel-
come headache — one, they fear, that will bolster a push by regulators to keep a tight leash on the machines. The Federal Aviation Administration has said t h at
drones raise safety concerns, like running into people and planes. On Wednesday, the agency said it receives about 25 reports each month
of drones operating near manned aircr aft.The agency is expected to propose new rulesfor commercial use as early as next month. "It's now in the hands of
all types of people — good people, bad people, tricksters, pranksters, kids," said Patrick
Egan, a consultant on commercial drone projects and editor at sUAS News, a drone
news site. "All hell is going to break loose as far as the shenanigans that are perpetrated with drones."
has the impishness of some Brendan Schulman, a lawowners. The rise of online vid- yer in New York who repeo and social media has moti- resents commercial dients vated some operators to outdo interested in using drones, one another. said the mischief comes from About a year ago, Tom a few people and should not Mabe, a comedian in Louis- overshadow the l e gitimate ville, Kentucky, came up with use of drones. "It's important for us to a Halloween prank that used a drone to scare people with a balance those two things," he grim reaper, rigging the man- said, "and not curtail it just nequin to the drone with fish- because we see a handful of ing lines. The video, showing people doing things that are terrified people in a park, has objectionable." generated more than 7 million Last year, drones became views on YouTube. a potential tool in an age-old 'Tm hoping I'll be the drone dispute. People for the Ethical comic," said Mabe, who pulled Treatment of Animals began another drone prank this offering a $325 PETA-brandHalloween. ed drone, promoting it as a Outdoor sporting events, way to record illegal hunting. a director of which offer open-air environ- James Rodgers, ments with large audiences, innovation at the organizahave become a particularly tion, said it had sold "dozens" hot target. In October, a soccer of the drones, which he said match in Belgrade between should not be used to interfere the Serbian and Albanian na- with lawful hunting. But some say the buzzing tional teams was paralyzed when someone hovered a sound of the drones is a disdrone over the field that held
•
•
I
P i n izzotto,
c o ncerns used against them, too.
With s ecurity
For the most part, flying a drone is legal for recreational purposes, as long as operators follow a few guidelines, like staying below 400 feet. Declining prices — a four-rotor model with a mounted cam-
In April, a drone crashed mounting among stadium operators, the FAA recently trying to airlift a payload of updated a policy original- cellphones, marijuana and toly created after the Sept. 11, bacco over the walls of a max-
research firm, estimates the
the United States, largely be-
global civilian drone market
cause of the perceived risks of tors made earlier undetected unleashing swarms of them drops. into the skies. A few HollyRyan Calo, a law professor wood film companies have a at the University of Washingrare exception to the rule. The ton who studies drones, said FAA is expected to propose the troublemaking should rules requiring that commer- come as no surprise. "It would be the rare techcial operators maintain visual contact with drones and un- nology," Calo said, "that some dergo a certification. people didn't abuse."
2001, terrorist attacks. The
imum-security prison, the Lee
policy now explicitly prohibits C orrectional I n stitution i n drones from flying near major Bishopville, South Carolina. era can cost as little as $500 sporting events. One man was arrested in — have attracted more buyCommercial use of drones the case, and authorities are ers. Teal Group, an aerospace is also largely prohibited in looking for another. They are to be worth $450 million this year, up 45 percent from last
year. The machines now regularlymake mundane appearances at parks and weddings, often to supply overhead photography. As the number of drones has grown, though, so
•
I
turbance. Nick
a flag for Greater Albania, a chief executive of the U.S. charged symbol for many in Sportsmen's Alliance, a hunter lobbying group, said he had the stadium. A Serbian player yanked heard from hunters in New down the flag, which led to a York that a drone was used to scuffle among the players and scareofftheirducks. "They always talk about, rioting by fans. Drones have also buzzed 'We're not trying to interrupt British professional soccer hunting; we're just trying to matches and U.S. coll ege find bad guys,'" Hnizzotto football games. In August, a said. "To PETA, everybody student from the University who hunts is a bad guy." Law enforcement agencies of Texas, Austin, was arrested after piloting a drone over have bought drones to inspect the school's stadium, which suspicious packages and conwas filled with 93,000 fans. duct surveillance, a move that The student is facing possible has raised privacy concerns. charges, accordingto theuni- But now the authorities are finding that drones can be versity police.
unsure whether drone opera-
•
i
MORRIS REAL ESTATE IndependentlyOwned and Operated
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
COCC
proceed in largely the same fashion, emphasizing the thorContinued fromA1 oughness of the process. In "I was honestly a little ner- particular, Cooper noted the vous because we are in un- college will visit the campus of charted territory, extending any applicant it may consider the search the way we had to," hiring and also call colleagues said Laura Craska Cooper, not listed by the applicant as COCC's board chairwoman. references. "We now have a very strong "I think we used the best pool, and I think w ith even practices last year and what more candidates than last happened was a very unforyear, we have a broader selec- tunate anomaly," she said. "When you're dealing with tion from which to choose." Julie Golder, the college's employee confidentially and s earch consultant from t h e allegations that haven't been Association of Community proven, you can be put in a College Trustees, said it's "not difficult situation where a reftypical"for a second search to erence or employer will not bring in more applicants, but tell you things. I'm not sure that a second search is also you can guard against that 100 rare. percent." The college's search comN onetheless, Cooper d i d mittee will meet Dec. 4 and 5 specify one thing the college to select three to five finalists, will do differently. At the end which the COCC board will of each finalist interview last confirm. Those finalists will winter, the college asked each be announced later in Decemapplicant whether anything in ber and invited to visit the col- their past could embarrass the lege in late January or early college. Lanning, who at the February. time was on paid administraDespite the u n expected tive leave because of his colending to last year's search, league's accusation, said nothCooper said this year's will ing in his past would embar-
rass the college. Cooper said this time around, the board
will get more specific, "probing with follow-up questions" and asking whether a candidate
has everbeen placed on leave. One potential roadblock the college anticipated during this second search was a misconception that the interim president could be hired perma-
nently, something the college worried may dissuade potential candidates from applying. Ron Paradis, the college's spokesman, saidcandidates have asked whether Metcalf
would be considered for the job, but the college has made an effort to make clear her ten-
ure is limited to one year. "I think the number of applicants shows that w a sn't a problem," Paradis said. "I think what's really been imp ortant, though, is that w e
have theadvantage of having long-term stability, seeing as we've had four (permanent) presidents over our 65 years. I
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weekend instead. thought Thanksgiving break Clara said she is looking for- was weird when she first Continued fromA1 ward to learning how her host heard about it at school, but Nadine is vegan and loves to family celebrates holidays. eating dinner with the whole "We don't have a lot of holcook, so she is making some family sounded cool, she said. German "bretzel" to s h are idays where the whole famFor Terry D enend, Clara with her host family. They are ily comes and eats dinner," and Nadine are a second famsimilar to w h a t A m ericans said Clara. "In Mexico, when ily. Her own children have call a pretzel, but rather than granddad or grandma have a grown up and moved out to twisted, the dough is formed birthday, all the family comes start families of their own. "We're beginning to knit into 2-inch balls. Eating Ger- and celebrates. That is similar, man food makes her feel "a lit- because the family is coming together like a family," said tle bit at home" she said. and making food." Terry Denend. "They confide The Christmas season is Prior to coming to the Unit- in me. They tease with us back just getting underway in Ger- ed States, Nadine and Clara and forth. It's not unlike them many, so Nadine said she learned about Thanksgiving, to come up, put their arms wanted to make some Christ- and American culture in gen- around me and say 'I love you, mas cookies for today's feast. eral, from the movies. Na- Mom.' That's a n a w esome But Terry Denend likes to dine knew it was something feeling." take it one holiday at a time, so where the whole family came — Reporter: 541-383-0354, Nadine will make them next together to eat a turkey. Clara jrocreow@bendbulletin.com
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backthen. so much tumult, said they were uncertain whether this stretch had a future at all.
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Ferguson, Missouri, swept broken glass from the sidewalks and painted hopeful messages onboarded-up storefronts, public officials cautiously said that tighter security measures andhundreds of National Guard troops hadhelpedstabilize the St. Louis suburb after a night of arsons, looting and violence. Butanger andfrustration over a grand jury's decision Mondaynot to indict a white police officer in the August killing of Michael Brown remained palpable. Gov.Jay Nixon, whom local officials criticized for not mobilizing enough security, did not announceadditional security measures but said hewould continue to monitor conditions there.
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possible," she said. "However, it may take a while." Like West Florissant, Ferguson itself has wrestled over time to bolster its standing, a
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name has become shorthand for racial turmoil. In 2010, this small St. Lou-
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sprang up after the August unrest. "I suspect," Fletcher said
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2014
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CENTRAL OREGON WILD HORSE COA LITION g4' V •
-
During the darkest hours here in the United States of America, we still have more to be grateful for than all the nations of the world, , great and small, throughout the generations of human history. Even when our challenges and adversity transcend what is possible to bear, we can be thankful for the spirit of unity that lessens the pain and stacks another brick of solidarity upon the foundation of our American soul. We are still a free Nation, owing to the sacrifices of many, past and present. We are also, despite the acts of a few, still a Nation of integrity, both personally and collectively. We are blessed with natural resources that we must always treasure and protect, as Creation's gift to a great and noble land. With thanks comes responsibility to value and revere all that we've been given. In this spirit, we pause to consider the blessings we enjoy in our daily lives, that sometimes come in the form of hair and hide and eyes that mirror both our good and our bad... our wild equine associates. • • •
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • o • • • • • • • •
"jIM" BY STACY MOTSCHENBACHER
Coyote Lakes HMA
Being Thankful...about ahorse?Really? There are so many more important things to be thankful for... or not. I have enjoyed the company of many horses, but I have never been THANKFUL for a horse until I adopted a Mustang. Gentling a Mustang forces upon an adopter courage, strength, patience, gentleness and gives the adopter the strength to continue when things go well and also courage when life is sucking in the round pen. A wild Mustang teaches an adopter how to communicate with thoughts, feelings, and micro-movements. Communicating with a wild Mustang made me a better person because it centered me. What the heck does that mean? I stopped questioning if I was right or wrong and just did the best I knew how. Really that is all we can do when gentling a wild Mustang, and in life. Just try. When gentling a wild Mustang, each try was rewarded. Perhaps with pinned ears and the back end of a horse, but it was a reward. Every action I made created a counter action in the horse. This gave me courage and confidence to make more attempts, more efforts. There is nothing like this. I became a better person because I knew that my attempts, my efforts would make a difference, because they did in the round pen. I carry these gifts from my Mustangs on me always. I have learned to try harder, be more forgiving, and carry on when life has me wading thru the proverbial stud pile. Most importantly I take time to appreciate the little rewards in life, because those little rewards can build into something amazingand phenomenal, like riding a wild Mustang.
"MUSTANGS" BY MADISON MATANANE I0 YEARS OLD Warm Springs
"SEEKSEEKQUA" BY EMMA MATANANE • 6 YEARS OLD
Reservation
My mustangsI am grateful. I am grateful because this spring my Mom and her friends decided to help find homes for some baby horses (they are mustangs) lots of baby mustangs! I helped them. When we started this I just said "Oh goody more horsesto take care of!" Horses are a lot of responsibility and I already have two horses. On the second load I was so thankful because a lot of kids do not have the chance to do anything with horses, special horses. They have feelings too just like us. I have gentled four over the summer. The third and fourth ones I fell in love with. Spending all my extra time with them and getting to know their personalities. Their owners, Tori and Helen let me see them now anytime. Tori's horse is a very charming horse, sweet and kind. She does not like to be the boss, she loves to hide and run from me. So I got her alone and in a smaller pen and played the friendly game. The second day I got the halter on. At that moment I was so proud! The fourth horse belongs to Helen. He was really brave, he got his halter on first and was the first to be worked with, he is real smart. It took a long time to get his halter on. So I thought; he loves alfalfa pellets... So I put his pellets in a coffee can and put the nose hole of the halter around the top of the can and slipped it on his nose. I was so thankful it worked and proud with his work and mine. We could go for walk now. Now he's gone to his new home, I miss him, he cuddles with me when visit and cries when I leave. Now I have two new mustangs our mare and her colt. I am even more grateful now because now I will get more experience with them and are so beautiful and sweet. Mom and her friends are going to keep finding homes for mustangs. I can't wait I have lots of work to do.
"LANA" BY ROBERT BATES
My Seekseekqua"Seeky,"Iam grateful. I am grateful for having "Seeky" in my backyard because I like to pet him and when we are big I can ride him. I look into his eyes and see me and him running in the hills. He is my first real horse. I have a mini horse but he is just little not a real horse like my wild mustang who is an Appaloosa. Grateful because my Mom and Papa got him for me. He teaches me responsibility because it's my responsibility to clean up after him, feed him and love him most of all.
"BARLOW AND GORDON" BY GAYLE HUNT
"ANDA N TE" BY LINDA BUTLER
Barlow and gordon, I am thankful to you
I am thankful to you for helping me learn t he Warm Springs dialect o f t h e W i l d Horse language. I am thankful to you for illuminating the person I want to be. I am thankful to God for bringing me Barlow and Gordon, for keeping them safe, and for the gentle nudge from being their teacher to becoming their student.
"WILLOW" BY CAROL STATTON P
Warm S p rings BLM Herd Management
8ndante (Andy) is a big beautiful black bay roho is part draft. He stood out in the crowd at the BLM corrals one snowy December several years ago. Of course I had to take him home to join our herd. Not being a trainer I had a professional work with him until he was ready to come home. He is kind, gentle and much to my surprise discovered his capability of being able to jump up and over ). a 5' fence and I happened to be next to him. I I was able to catch him easily with a trail of carrots as he is a sucker for carrots and apples. Then I also put him behind a taller fence. I have great respect for mustangs for their adaptability, kindness, and just give thanks that they are in my life. *
"WYATT" BY THE THOMAS FAMILY
Beatys Butte Mustang
Our family isso thankful for our Mustang Wyatt. Wyatt is a Beatys Butte Mustang captured as a 6 year old stallion. He has been everyone's favorite horse and has earned celebrity status in Central Oregon competing in Mustang shows, 4-H, competitive trail and mounted shooting. He is short in stature but makes up for it in personality. you always know if you aren't riding him right as he growls when someone is holding on his face too much. He likes water and will cross the largest river or traverse the steepest hill. When you ride Wyatt you feel invincible, there is nothing this horse won't do. He is like driving a truck with 4-wheel drive, one that has power steering as well. He comes to a whistle to be fed and then gets so animated jumping and whirling around until you feed him. Wyatt is a best friend kinda horse, one that's never been sick or lame and at 20 years old will live out his days with us. We are looking forward to many more years as Wyatt is going stronger than a horse half his age.
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Warm Springs Reservation
for not kicking my head into Harney County, even though you've wanted to.
Warm Springs Reservation
I adopted my foal, Lana about 5 months ago and it has been great! I was ecstatic to help out with the rescues even before I knew an adoption would be in my future. I think that there are so many lessons to get out of this ongoing experience. Dedication is one thing to learn and apply. Another thing is patience. One of the things I have learned from training my horse Lana is that with patience and practice you can really do anything that you set your mind too. She has come so far in such a short amount of time. I am truly thankful for the unexpected blessing that she has been in my life.
Warm Springs Reservation
Big Summit Wild Horse
One year ago I ventured up into the Ochocos to observe and photograph the wild mustangs of the Big Summit Herd. I could have never imagined what would manifest from that first adventure; numerous of additional trips, photographing many different members of the herd, bringing an offspring of the herd into our family and then fostering another member of the herd. My heart has been captured by the beauty and spirit of these amazing horses and I am filled with the deepest gratitude for their imprint they have left on my soul.
"OPIE" BY MIKE MOTSCHENBACHER
South Steens HMA
Why I appreciate mustangs. I ride a mustang for exploring trails, competing in sanctioned endurance rides and doing mounted searches for Jackson County Search and Rescue. Surprisingly, this formerly wild horse helped me get my confidence back to ride horses. After I had two separate serious accidents riding two different horses, I was becoming nervous about riding. The first accident involved a "spook," a run away horse, and subsequently a concussion, whiplash, and torn vitreous attachment in one of my eyes. The second involved a spook where the horse went sideways and I did not, That resulted in a fractured rib. After the rib healed I was riding this second horse on a flat forest road. We were at a walk when the horse tripped, went down, and landed on his side. Luckily neither of us was hurt, but my confidence in having a pain free riding experience was not high. My wife talked me into trying this gentled mustang who had been off the range for two years. I have been riding this horse for eight years now. His name is Opie. He is the most sure footed horse I have ever ridden. All horses spook, but his are few, mild, and ridable. I have read that most mustangs are far sighted while one third of domestic horses are near sighted. This has been born out in Opie where he will see a deer several hundred yards off and figure out what it is and another horse in our group won't see it until it is within 40 yards and spook. He can be opinionated at times, but I don't mind this. To me this means he is thinking for himself, keeping himself safe... which makes me feel safe.
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"SPIRIT" BY LINDA BUTLER
BLM Kiger Mustang
I am very grateful to have Spirit in my life. He is I2 now and has been part of our herd for about IO years. He is very proud, gentle, hard working, and shows great dignity. He also shows in second level dressage and gets good comments from most judges. He also does musical freestyles with a rider in costume and did a jumping exhibition at a show. I am very proud of him and appreciate how fortunate I am to be a caretaker for such wonderful horses as Mustangs.
CENTRAL OREGON % ILD HORSE COALITION
central oregon
WI H ORSE
And our eurrent projeet:
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RESCUE REVOLUTION, A TRAINER CHALLENGE wwvr.cowildhorse.org • www.equineoutreach.com
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NFL
Postseason e imination pressureon 49ers and Seahawks
Area players land all-state honors After guiding Sisters to its fourth volleyball state championship in program history, Outlaw senior Nila Lukenshas been namedtheClass 4A state player of the year. The outside hitter posted 306 kills and a .366 hitting percentage this season, leading
v hl
I
the Outlaws to a fifth
straight Sky-Em League championship. Lukens' coach —and mother — Miki McFadden,was voted the 4Acoach of the year. MaInside • Complete Alexis all-state Urbach listings and for Central Crook Oregon County's teams,B2 Karlee Hollis joined Lukens on the 4A all-state first team, while Sisters' Allie Spear andMadras' Shelby Mauritson were named to the second team. Another Central Oregon standoutgarnered player-of-the-year honors, and for Shealene
• Tonight's gameis a likely mustwin for both teamswith the
playoffs looming By John Branch New York Times News Service
SANTA CLARA, Calif. — After the San Francisco 49ers won another close
game Sunday afternoon, coach Jim Harbaugh watched that night's nation-
ally televised NFL game with his family. During one network promotion for
San Francisco's game on Thanksgiving against the
• ®Qg
Little, it was nothing
ll)
new. For the second time in three years, Little, a Culver senior, was selected 2A player of the year after helping the Bulldogs to the Columbia Basin Conference title and a third-place
NFC West rival Seattle Sea-
it I 1t> B
hawks, NBC showed a gang of live turkeys. Harbaugh's threeyoungest children were excited. "And then the next shot, they had loaded the turkeys
ili
onto a truck and they were drivingthem away,"Harbaugh said Monday. "And the kids were like, 'Where are they going?' And we kind of thought, maybe we won't have turkey this year for Thanksgiving."
finish at the state tour-
nament. Culver also placed three players on
lllustration by Greg Cross/The Bulletin
the all-state third team:
Jenny Vega, Margie Beeler and EmmaHoke. In 5A, BendHigh's Callie Kruska was a firstteam all-state selection, and Summit's Renee Kenneally and Mountain View's Mikayla Schumacher received second-team honors. From state champion St. Helens, TaylorAlbertson andTomRay were named 5Aplayer and coach of the year, respectively. The 4A and 5Aallstate volleyball teams were voted on by high school coaches throughout Oregonand were compiled byThe Oregonian newspaper. — Bulletin staffraport
Levi's Stadium. With both
the 49ers and the Seahawks at 7-4, two games behind the
division-leading Arizona Cardinals (9-2), the loser tonight might be left out in the cold.
Inside
By Zack Hall
Civil Wai' No. 3 Oregonat Oregon State When:5 p.m., Saturday TV:ABCRadio: KBND 1110AM, 100.1-FM; KICE 940-AM; 96.9-FM
Local officials to work 1Afinal A crew representing the Central OregonFootball Officials Association has been named towork the OSAAClass1A state championshi pgame Saturday in Hermiston. COFOA commissioner Tim Huntley confirmed the assignment on Wednesday. Heading the COFO A crew Saturday will be referee RandySmith, of Redmond. EdLorenz, of Bend, will serve as umpire; HayesMcCoy, of Redmond, will be the headlinesman;RickTorassa, of Redmond, will be the line judge; and Mike Durre, of Bend, will be the back judge. The1A final between Adrian and Shermanis set for 6 p.m. at Hermiston High School.
The 49ers have reached
• Despite attendingtherival school, somefans maintain loyaltyto Oregonor OregonState
KRCO690-AM,
PREP FOOTBALL
The Bulletin
• Oregon State comes up short in men's basketball, falls to Auburn
ing degree he wanted to pursue and a track and field program that seemed a better fit for the
the conferencechampion-
small-school runner than Or-
the 49ers there last January,
egon'strack team, which even then was a national power.
barely, then won the Super
Blazers get win, sweep road trip Wesley Matthews scores 28 points and leads Portland to its ninth win in a row, 10597 over Charlotte,B3
ship game the past three seasons. The Seahawks beat BowL The teams have com-
did not have the heart to give up his childhood loyalties once
bined for 47 regular-season and eight postseason victories the past two seasons,
the green and yellow of UO. "My Beaver buddies call me a traitor and my Duck buddies call me not a true Duck fan through and through," Ramp says with a slight chuckle. "I'm
he arrived on campus.
more than any division
football game between the
in a lose-lose situation." Ramp, a recently retired
at OSU. "And usually I would sit at the end of the student
Oregon Ducks and the Oregon
air traffic controller, chose to
section just so I wouldn't be
State Beavers. From the time when he was
attend OSU not for football rea-
pummeled to death."
sons, of course. He chose to go to college in
Ramp is part of a rare group of college sports fans in Oregon. SeeEnemy/B4
M ark Ramp can only laugh
71-69,B3
when he receives that familiar
skeptical eyefrom afan ofeitherOregon and Oregon State. The 57-year-old, who lives between Bend and Redmond, is a proud graduate of OSU. But you will not find him wearing orange and black this Saturday during the annual Civil War
a child growing up in Crow, a tiny farming town just southwest of Eugene, Ramp has bled
But unlike many students, he
"I rooted for the Beavers (in school), but when the Ducks
rivals. SeeSeahawks/B4
came to town it was HARD not
to root for the Ducks," recalls Ramp, who never did run track
Corvallis because Oregon State
offered the forestry engineer-
Nextup Seattle at San Francisco Whee: 5:30 p.m., today TV:NBC
Radio: KRCO 690-AM,
96.9-FM
GOLF
OLYMPICS
Woods at five-year mark of auident IOC corrects
record on 1964 figure skating pair
• The golf star is still in recovery after his personal life, followed byhis ' career, went into a tailspin
By Amy Rosewater New York Times News Service
A little more than 50 years after they skated in the 1964 Winter Games in Innsbruck,
Austria, U.S. figure skaters Vivian and Ronald Joseph can finally call themselves Olympic bronze medalists — and, unlike in years past, they now have the International Olympic Committee to back up their claim.
— Bulletin staff raport
NBA
Dinner plans were scuttled
by the schedule anyway, with an evening kickoff at
By Doug Ferguson
y
The Associated Press
The sister-brother pairs skating team
Any mention of golf during the week of Thanksgiving used to be about the Skins Game.
placed fourth in those games, but they were awarded bronze medals a couple of years
Now, it is hard not to think about Tiger Woods.
It was fiveyears agothis weekwhenhis private lifebegan to unravel. It still seems surreal to recall the breaking news scrolling along the bottom of the television that Woods had
been "seriously injured" in a car accident outside his home. The injury was not that serious. He was treated and released. See Woods/B4
later when it was determined that the GerTiger Woods l
Jeff Roberson/The Associated Press
man team had signed a pro contract with Holiday on Ice before the Olympics. At that time, amateur status was taken seriously,
and the Germans were stripped of their silver medal. SeeSkating /B3
B2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2014
ON THE AIR
CORKBOARD
TODAY Time TV/Radio Men's college,SantaClaravs.Tennessee 9 a.m. ESPN2 Men's college, Butler vs. Oklahoma 10 a.m. ESPN Men's college,Kansasvs.RhodeIsland 11 a.m. ESPN2 Men's college, Princeton vs. Texas-El Paso 11 a.m. ESPNU Men's college, Wisconsin vs. Georgetown ESPN noon Men's college, LIU-Brooklyn vs. Stony Brook 1 p.m. ESPNU Men's college, SanDiegovs. Xavier 1:30 p.m ESPN2 Men's college, lllinois vs. Indiana State 2 p.m. FS1 Men's college,SaintJoseph'svsW .Kentucky 3 p.m. ESPNU Men's college, Michigan State vs. Rider 3:30 p.m ESPN2 Men's college, GeorgiaTechvs. Marquette 5:30 p.m ESPN2 Men's college, Long BeachState vs.W. Michigan 5:30 p.m ESPNU Men's college, SanJose State vs. Washington 8 p.m. ESPN2 Men's college, Baylor vs. Memphis 9 p.m. FS1 BASKETBALL
FOOTBALL
9:30 a.m. 1:30 p.m. 4:30 p.m. 4:30 p.m. 5:30 p.m.
NFL, Chicago atDetroit NFL, Philadelphia at Dallas College, LSUatTexasA8M College, TexasChristian at Texas NFL, Seattle at SanFrancisco SOCCER Europa League,Wolfsburg (Germany) vs. Everton (England) Europa League,Feyenoord (Netherlands) vs. Sevilla (Spain) Europa League,Tottenham (England) vs. Partizan Belgrado (Serbia) Europa League, Milano (Italy) vs. Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk (Russia)
CBS Fox ESPN FS1 NBC
Player of the year —TaylorAlbertson, sr., St. Helens Coach ofthe year—TomRay, St.Helens Firstteam —Taylor Albertson, sr., St.Helens; MeghanStuddard, sr., LaSalle; CaffieKruska,sr., Bend;GraceRivers, sr., Lebanon;PaigeBerrochoa,sr., Crater;HannahBogatin, sr., Corvaffisr Second team —LoganKalauli, jr., St. Helens; ClaireHoffman,fr., Marist;ReneeKennealy, sr., Summit; Noa Ena,sr., Hermiston; Marlie Norman, sr., La Salle; Hailey Hayes, sr., Wilsonviffe;AnnaHouser,jr., Marist; MikaylaSchumacher, sr., Mountain View. Class 4A AU-Stafe
Player of theyear —Nila Lukens,sr., Sisters Coach ofthe year— Miki McFadden, Sisters First team — NilaLukens,sr., Sisters; Megan Bunn, jr., Banks;Alexis Urbach,sr., Madras;Hailee Woolsey,jr., Marshfield;HaileyNelson, sr., Cascade; KarleeHoffis,sr., CrookCounty. Secondteam — McKenzieCushman,sr.,Hldden Valley;Caitlin Pasturel,sr., Cascade; Affie Spear, jr., Sisters;ShelbyMauritson, sr., Madras;AlyssaChung, sr., Banks;CassandraBrownell, sr.,LaGrande; MaKennaPartain,jr., Banks;AdrianaMereida-Ford, sr., Phoenix.
FOOTBALL 10 a.m.
FS1
10a.m.
FS2
noon
FS1
noon
FS2
5 p.m.
Golf
NFL NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE
AH TimesPST AMERICAN CONFERENCE
East W L T P c t PF PA 9 2 0 . 8 18357 227 6 5 6 5 2 9
GOLF
Emirates Australian Open
Tennesse e Jacksonvile
SOCCER England, West Bromwich Albion vs Arsenal
1 10 0
North W L T 7 3 1 7 4 0 7 4 0 7 4 0 West W L T
4:45 a.m. NBCSN
FOOTBALL
College, Northern lllinois at Western Michigan College, Nebraska at lowa College, Central Florida at South Florida College, Western Kentucky at Marshall College, Arkansas at Missouri College, Stanford at UCLA College, Arizona State at Arizona College, Virginia at Virginia Tech College, EastCarolina atTulsa
8 a.m.
ESP N U
9 a.m. ABC 9 a.m. E S PN2 9 a.m. FS1 11:30 a.m. CBS 12:30 p.m. ABC 1 2:30 p.m. F o x 5 p.m. ESP N 5:30 p.m. ESPNU
BASKETBALL
Men's college, Orlando Classic, TeamsTBD 9 a.m. ESP N Men's college, Battle 4 Atlantis, TeamsTBD 1 1 a.m. E S PN Men's college, Orlando Classic, TeamsTBD 11:30 a.m. ESPNU Men's college,W ooden Legacy,Teams TBD 12:30 p.m. ESPN2 Men's college, Battle 4 Atlantis, final: TeamsTBD 1 p.m. ESP N Women's college,NebraskaatUCLA 1 p.m. P a c-12 Men's college, Yale atProvidence 1 p.m. FS1 Men's college, JamesMadison at Ohio State 1 p.m. B i g Ten Men's college, NITSeasonTip-Off, Teams TBD 1:30 p.m. ESPNU Men's college, Orlando Classic, TeamsTBD 3:30 p.m. ESPNU Men's college, NITSeasonTip-Off, Teams TBD 4 p.m. E S PN2 Men's college, Rutgers vs. Vanderbilt 4 p.m. N B CSN Men's college, Monmouth at Maryland 4 p.m. B i g Ten Men's college, LasVegasInvitational, TeamsTBD 5 p.m. FS1 Men's college, Orlando Classic, TeamsTBD 6 p.m. E S PN2 Men's college, N.Carolina-Greensboro at Indiana6 p.m. B i g Ten Men's college, North Texas atArkansas 6 p.m. SEC Men's college, LaSalle vs. Virginia 6:30 p.m. NBCSN NBA, Memphis at Portland 7 p.m. CSNNW, KBND 1110-AM, 100.1-FM; KRC0 690-AM, 96.9-FM Men's college, North Dakota at Utah 7 p.m. P a c-12 Men's college, LasVegasInvitational, TeamsTBD 7 :30 p.m. FS1 Men's college,W ooden Legacy,Teams TBD 8:30 p.m. ESPN2 HOCKEY
10 a.m.
NHL, NewYork Rangers at Philadelphia
NBC
VOLLEYBALL
Women's college, Colorado at Utah 11 a.m. P ac-12 Women's college, Stanford at California 3 p.m. P a c-12 Women's college, Oregon atOregonState 3 p.m. Pac-12 (Ore.) Women's college, Washington at Washington St.5 p.m. P a c-12 GOLF
Emirates Australian Open
5 p.m.
Golf
Listingsarethe mostaccurateavailable. The Bulletinis not responsible for late changesmadebyTVor radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF FOOTBALL BurtOn Oiit aS COaCh at POrtland State —The flve-year run of Nigel Burton as head football coach at Portland State ended Wednesday when the university announced that his contract had been terminated. Offensive coordinator Bruce Barnum has been named interim head coach of the Vikings, who were 3-9 this season (2-6 Big Sky Conference) and were 21-36 overall under Burton. — From staffand wire reports
0 . 5 45285 219 0 . 5 45238 207 0 . 1 82177 303
South W L T 7 4 0 5 6 0 2 9 0
Indianapolis Houston
FRIDAY
Pac-12 AU TimesPST
Volleyball Class 5A AH-Stafe
P c t PF PA . 6 36333 256 . 4 55242 226 . 1 82192 293 .091161 305 P c t PF PA . 6 82246 234 . 6 36295 208 . 6 36288 263 . 6 36242 219
P c t 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
Eavl W L T 3 3 8 8
0 0 0 0
P c t PF PA . 7 27342 275 . 7 27292 240 . 2 73233 294 . 2 73217 273
W L 4 7 4 7 3 7 2 9
T 0 0 1 0
P c t PF PA . 3 64262 281 . 3 64288 286 . 3 18215 300 . 1 82207 300
8 8 3 3
Atlanta NewOrleans Carolina
TampaBay
South
North W L T 8 7 5 4
3 0 4 0 6 0 7 0 West W L T 9 2 0 7 4 0 7 4 0 4 7 0
Arizona Seattle SanFrancisco St. Louis
P c t PF PA . 7 27354 246 . 6 36197 190 . 4 55236 303 . 3 64202 244 P c f PF PA . 8 18240 195 . 6 36279 218 . 6 36228 225 . 3 64209 285
Today'sGames Chicagoat Detroit, 9:30a.m. Philadelphia at Dallas,1:30 p.m. Seattle atSanFrancisco, 5:30p.m.
Sunday'sGames Tennessee atHouston,10a.m. Oakland atSt. Louis,10a.m. CarolinaatMinnesota,10 a.m. Washingtonat Indianapolis, 10a.m. Cleveland atBuffalo,10 a.m. SanDiegoatBaltimore,10a.m. N.Y.GiantsatJacksonvile,10 a.m. Cincinnati atTampa Bay,10 a.m. NewOrleansatPitsburgh,10 a.m. Arizonaat Atlanta,1:05 p.m. NewEnglandatGreenBay,1:25p.m. Denverat KansasCity,5:30p.m. Monday'sGame Miami atN.Y.Jets, 5:30p.m. Injury Report NEW YORK—TheNationalFootball Leagueinjury report, as providedbytheleague(DUT- Definitely wil not play;DNP—Did not practice; LIMITED—Limited participation inpractice; FULL—Fuff participation in practice): CHICAGOBEARSaf DETROITLIONS— BEARS: OUT: LBLanceBriggs (groin), LB Darryl Sharpton (hamstring), WRChris Wiliams(hamstring). DOUBT FUL: DTJeremiah Ratliff (knee), DE Trevor Scott (knee).QUESTIONABLE: CBKyle Fuler (knee). PROBA BLE: GEben Britton (iffness), WR Brandon Marshall(ankle), TJordanMils (ribs), SBrockVereen (shoulder). LION S:OUT; DTNick Fairley (knee), GLarryWarford (knee).QUESTIONABLE: RBReggie Bush(ankle,back),TRiley Reiff(knee). PROBABLE: DE EzekieAnsah l (elbow), SJames Ihedigbo(knee), WR Cal vin Johnson (ankle),DE George Johnson (foot), CB Rashean Mathis (ankle), LBAshleePalmer (concussion),SGlover Quin(back). PHILADELPHIA EAGLES alOALLAS COWBOYS
— EAGLES: OUT:QBNickFoles(cofarbone).QUESTIONABLEL: BEmmanuelAcho(groin).PROBABLE:S NateAllen(ankle), DEBrandonBair (elbow),TEZach Erlz (obgque),WRJordan Matthews (knee), K Cody Parkey(right groin), T JasonPeters (quadriceps). COWBO YS:OUT:DEJackCrawford (thumb), CBTyler Patmon (knee,ankle), LBDekodaWatson (hamstring). PROBA BLE:DTJoshBrent(groin), DETyroneCrawford (knee),TDougFree(foot), DTNickHayden(shoulder), SJeffHeath (thumb), LBRolandoMcclain (knee), QB TonyRom o (back),WRTerranceWilliams (finger). SEATTLESEAHAWKS at SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS —SEAHAWKS: OUT:TECooper Helfet (ankle), LBKevin Pierre-Louis (shoulder), CMax Unger knee,ankle). QUESTIONABLE: DEDemarcus Dobbs knee), CB JeremyLane(glute). PROBABLE: CBMarcus Burley(hamstring), G James Carpenter (ankle), WR JermaineKearse (ankle), RB MarshawnLynch (back).49ERS:OU T: TEDerekCarrier (foot), T AnthonyDavis (concussion), DTGlennDorsey(forearm). QUEST IONABLE: CBTramaineBrock(hamstring), WR Bruce Effington (ankle), TEVance McDonald (back). PROBABLE: RBFrankGore(knee),WRBrandonLloyd (quadriceps),RBBruceMiler (shoulder),SEricReid (ankle), DT Justin Smith (back), SBubbaVentrone (groin).
Wednesday'sGames
College
PREPS
Friday's Games StanfordatUCLA,3:30p.m. ArizonaSt.atArizona, 3:30p.m.
Saturday'sGames
Utah atColorado,10a.m. NotreDam eat SouthernCal,12:30 p.m. BYUat California,1:30p.m. OregonatOregonSt., 5 p.m. WashingtonatWashingtonSt., 7:30p.m.
N.Y.Rangers NewJersey Philadelphia Carolina Columbus
TOP 25 No. 2Wisconsin72, UAB43 No. 3Arizona61,No. 15SanDiegoState59 No. 4Duke93, Furman54 Butler 74,No.5 North Carolina 66 No. 6Louisville 45,ClevelandState33 No. 10Gonzaga88,Georgia76 No.16DhioState91, Campbell 64 Georgetown 66, No.18 Florida65 (OT) No. 21West Virginia103, VMU72 Oklahoma75, No.22UCLA65
Nashville St. Louis Chicago Winnipeg Minnesota Dallas
EAST
Colorado
Albany (NY)75,Colgate71 Cornell67,Canisius60 America's Line George Washington91,Longwood66 NFL lona126,DelawareSt.76 (Hometeamsin Caps) Towson97,Goucher 43 Favorite Open Current0/U Underdog UMass79,Northeastern 54 Today Vermont 73, Bryant47 6'/z 7 47r/x Be a rs WestVirginia103VMI72 LIONS E a glesYale82,Lafayette60 COWBO YS 3 3 54r/z 1 t r / x 40r/x Seahawks 49ERS SOUTH Sunday Ameri canU.64,Hampton60 9r/x 9r/x COLTS 51 Washington Belmont78, Denver57 7 6 ' / z 42r/x Ti t ans Chattanooga TEXANS 61,Robert Morris 46 2'/x 2'/x 41r/z B r ownsCoastalCarolina61, Louisiana-Monroe48 BILLS 5'/2 5'/2 45'/x Charuers Davidson95,UCF69 RAVEN S 2 2 r /x 44r/x JAGUARS Duke93,Furman54 Giants 3r/x 4 44'/z BUCCAN EERS Jacksonville69,Trinity Baptist 57 Bengals 7 6 ' / z 42r/x R aiders RAMS son79,SacredHeart72 31/2 4 53r/z Sa i nts JamesMadi STEELE RS Kennesaw St. 84,Samford 71 3 2 r / 2 43 VIKINGS P a nthersLouisville45,ClevelandSt.33 1 2 r /x 44r/x FALCONS Cardinals St. 77,Marshall 68 P a triotsMorehead PACKES R 3 3 58r/x ate84,Richmond72 1 t r / x 49'/x C HIEFSNC St Broncos SE Louisiana 86,TennesseeTech65 Monday SouthCarolina89, UN CAshevile 75 5r/x e/x 42 Dolphins JET S Wake Forest83, MountSt. Mary's49 MIDWEST College E. Michigan 68, Rochester (Mich.) 35 Today G eorgi a St. 83, O akland 78 61/2 61/2 55'/z TE XAS Tcu lowa 70,N.Illinois 49 2I/2 Lsu 3 51'/x TEXASA&M Lehigh86,DePaul 74 Friday e81,Grambling St.54 V irginia t r/ x 1 40r/x VirginiaTech NotreDam 91/2 57r/x Ba l l St OhioSt.91,Campbell 64 BOWL GREEN 8 South Dak o ta86, Wayne(Neb.) 69 W. MICHIGAN 6 8 58r/x N. Illinois W. Carolina 66, Chicago St.61 B uffalo 2 2 UMASS MARSHALL 2tr/x 23 74r/x W. Kentucky YoungstownSt.66, UMKC63 SOUTHWE ST N Toledo 22 r /x22'/z 59'/z E. MICHIGA orthTexas67,MVSU52 IDWA PK 1 56r/x Nebraska N SMU 72, T e xa s S outhern 59 T U LSA E. Carolina t/r/x 17'/x 68'/x SMU TCU74,Radford 50 Houston 21r/x 22 48'/x FARWEST 91/2 54'/x S. ALABAM A Navy 9 MISSOUIR Arkansas E. Kentucky73,S.Utah64 E. Washi n gton 81, N. Kentucky60 UCLA 4r/x 5 50r/x S tanford ARIZON A ArizonaSt LoyolaMarymount 66,UCRiverside 62 75, Carroll (Mont.)52 Colorado St 7r/x 7 6(y/x AIR FORC E Montana C. Florida t f r/x 12 42'/x S. FLORIDA NewMexicoSt.78, Florida A&M33 O ral Roberts 69, Milwaukee66 K ENT ST Akron 4r/ x 3r/x 41'/z Utah85,Texas-PanAmerican48 Saturday OHIO ST 20 21 52r/x Michigan UtahValley60,IdahoSt.57 g Stetson41 BOSTON CDL ttp/z 11 41r/z Syracuse Wyomin65, FLAATLANTIC 4 4 67r/x Old Dominion TOURNAMEN T DUKE 19 19 43r/x Wake Forest Batlle 4 Atlantis IL Tennessee 16r/x 17 49'/z VANDERBT WISCON SIN t 2r/x 14 51r/x Minnesota Butler74,NorthCarolina 66 MIAMI-FLA 10 10 Pittsburgh Georgetown66, Flonda65, DT R utgersOklahoma75, UCLA65 MARYLAND 8'/z 8'/z 53r/x Ric e Wisconsin72, UAB43 LA TECH 6r/x 7 50r/z 6r/x 69r/x N c State CancunChallenge-Mayan N. CARO LINA 7r/x N'WEST ERN Br/x Br/x 52r/x ffl i nois NorthFlorida72, Elon65 2r/x 57r/x P u rdue Morgan St. 51, Liberty50 INDIANA 3 APP'CHIAN ST 16 17 6 4r/x CancunChallenge-Riviera Ida ho T EMPLEN. Iowa 61,Northwestern 42 Cincinnati 5 7 57'/z t 3I/2 62'/xGEORGI A ST VirginiaTech78,Miami(Ohio) 63 Texas St t 2'/x EA SporfsMaui Invitational IDWAST W. Virginia 61,SanDiegoSt.59 ARKANSAS ST 21'/z 22 65r/x NewMexico St Arizona Uab 4 4 57'/x SO MISS Pittsburgh70,KansasSt. 47 4'/x 60r/z Wyoming Purdue87,BYU85, DT NEW MEXICO 4 U t ah StMissouri74,Chaminade60 BOISE ST 9 9 55'/x SANDIEG OSTSanJoseSt Gulf CoastShowcase 3r/x 65'/z WASH ST Green Washington 4 Bay59, Florida GulfCoast 45 Baylor 23 r /x 25 80 Texas Tech Evansville79,SanFrancisco72 GEORGIA 13'/z 13 65r/z GeorgiaTech Hawai75, i EastCarolina 73 KANSAS ST 27'/x 28 51r/x K a nsasMarist 68,FresnoSt.64 CALIFOR NIA 4 4 72r/x Bvu MGMGrandMainEvent O regon 2 0 20 68 OREGON ST Auburn71,OregonSt.69 Michigan St t3r/x 13'/x 45'/x PENN ST NITSeasonTipoff ALABAMA 9'/x 91/2 53r/z A u burn Gonzaga 88,Georgia76 FLORIDA ST 10 8 52r/x F l oridaSt. John'70, s Minnesota61 N evada g r / x 10 6 3'/x UN L V GASOUTH ERN 13'/z 14'/z 54r/x Ul-Monroe Women's college CLEMSON 3r/x 31/2 S. Carolina Wednesday'sGames FRENSO ST 11 11 60 Ha waii TOP 25 Utah 10 9 57'/x COLORADO MEMPHIS 20 21 44r/x Connecticut Chattanooga67, No.4Tennessee63 ate27 LOUISVILLE 14 13 53r/x Kentucky No.7TexasA&M93,McNeeseSt MississippiSt 1 2 49'/x MISSISSIPPI No. 6Texas72, UTPanAmerican45 N o. 16 Mi c hi g an S t a te 79, O ak l a nd 64 UTEP 4 4 56r/x Mid TennSt UL-Lafayette 11 IIy/x 5 tr/x TRO Y No. 22West Virginia 83, Evansvile 39 UT-S.ANTONIO 6 5 41r/x N . Texas No. 22Georgia66, Colgate 35 USC 6r/x 7 62r/x Notre Dame EAST Albany (NY)64,Canisius 59 Cornell58,Marshall49 BASKETBALL Niagara63,Binghamton52 Pittsburgh72,Radford 47 Men's college SetonHall77,KennesawSt. 74 Pac-12 WestVirginia83, Evansville 39 AU TimesPST SOUTH Alabama 75,AlabamaA&M44 Wednesday'sGames Chattanooga67,Tennessee63 Oklahoma75,UCLA65 Georgia 66,Colgate 35 Utah85,UTPanAmerican 48 Indiana St. 74,SouthAlabama53 Auburn71,OregonState69 MIDWEST California72,CalPoly52 Dayton72,Providence56 Arizona61,SanDiegoState59 Indiana97, ETS U69 Today'sGames Kansas 90,lona49 NorthCarolinavs. UCLA,4p.m. Marquette85, Milwaukee80 SanJoseStateatWashington, 8p.m. MichiganSt.79,Oakland 64 WashingtonStateatUCSantaBarbara, 9p.m. S. Illinois82,Memphis 75 Friday's Game Xavier45,Presbyterian43 NorthDakotaat Utah,7 p.m. SOUTHWE ST Saturday'sGames Texas 72,Texas-PanAmerican45 Colgateat ArizonaState, TBD Texas ASM93, McNeeseSt. 27 Alabama State atUtah,TBD Texas-Arlington80,N.Arizona62 Sunday'sGames FARWEST Lipscomb at Colorado,11 a.m. BYU81,Butler 62 StanfordatDePaul,11:30 a.m. TOURNAMEN T SouthernCalat NewMexico,1 p.m. GCI GreatAlaskaShootout CaliforniaatFresnoState 3 pm Championship PortlandStateat Oregon,5 p.m. LongBeachSt.69, Alaska-Anchorage60 Third Place Wednesday'sSummary BoiseSt. 59,Yale53, OT
Auburn 71, OregonSt. 69
AUBURN (3-2) Harreff7-134-620, Bowers3-64-610, Ross-Miler2-47-811,Shamsid-Deen3-74-611, Granger1-2 0-2 2, Canada 3-33-4 11,Lang1-20-03, Purchase 1-3 0-0 3,Waddeg0-0 0-00,Stockton 0-00-00. Tofals 21-4022-32 71. Halftime —Auburn 41-35. 3-Point Goals—Oregon St. 6-19 (Duvivier 2-3, Payton II 2-4, Schaftenaa r 1-5, Morris-Walker1-6, Livesay0-1), Auburn7-17 (Canada2-2, Harreff2-6, Lang1-2, Purchase1-3, Shamsid-Deen1-4).FouledDut—Reid.ReboundsOregonSt. 30(Payton 0 12), Auburn24 (Bowers 8). Assists —Oregon St. 14(Duvivier, Gomis, Payton II, Schaftenaar3),Auburn5(Canada, Ross-Miler 2).Total Foul— s OregonSt.25, Auburn20.A—NA.
30 61 30 59 27 66 27 51 24 58 22 64 21 59
45 46 46 54 48 74 73
2 2 1 3 0 4 5
Today'sGame
EdmontonatNashvile, 8 p.m.
Friday's Games N.Y.Rangersat Philadelphia,10 a.m. ChicagoatAnaheim,1p.m. N.Y.IslandersatWashington,2 p.m. Winnipegat Boston, 4p.m. Montrealat Bufalo, 4p.m. Detroit atNewJersey, 4p.m. Carolinaat Pittsburgh,4 p.m. Vancou veratColumbus,4p.m. Ottawaat Florida, 4:30p.m. EdmontonatSt. Louis,5 p.m. MinnesotaatDallas, 5:30 p.m.
SOCCER MLS playoffs MAJORLEAGUESOCCER AH TimesPST
CONFERN ECEFINALS (Two-legaggregateseries) Saturday'sGame NewYorkat NewEngland,noon Sunday'sGame Los Angeleat s Seattle, 6 p.m.
DEALS Transactions BASEBALL
AmericanLeague BALTIMOR EDRIDLES—Agreedto termswith INF ReyNavarroonaone-year contract. CLEVELAND INDIANS— TradedLHPScottBarnes to Baltimore forcashconsiderations. LOSANGELESANGELS— AssignedLHPMichael Roth, CJacksonWiliams andOFAlfredo Marte outright toSaltLake(PCL). TAMPA BAYRAYS — Designated INFSean Rodriguezfor assignment. Agreedto termswith RHP ErnestoFrieri onaone-yearcontract. ReleasedCJose Molinaand28 Cole Figueroa. National League LOS ANGELES DODGERS — Traded INF Ryan Jackson to KansasCity for cashconsiderations. MILWAU KEEBREWERS— Assigned RHPAriel Penaoutright to ColoradoSprings (PCL). SAN DIEGO PADRES — Assigned OFYeison Asenciooutright to ElPaso(PCL). AnnouncedRHP BlaineBoyerdeclinedoutright assignment andelected freeagency. FOOTBALL
EasternConference Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA 1 33 61 32 81 5 2 9 64 1 2 7 59 3 2 5 70 4 2 4 58 6 22 4 2 2 14 37 2
2 1 14 5 2 2 14 6 2 2 13 8 2 4 12 9 2 1 12 9 22 9 9 2 3 8 10
WeslernConference Central Division GP W L OT Pls GF GA
Wednesday'sGames
NHL
2 3 16 6 2 3 15 6 2 2 12 5 2 3 13 9 2 2 11 8 2 1 10 7 20 8 6 2 2 6 14
62 63 66 63 76
Winnipeg 2, Buffalo1 N.Y.Islanders3,Washington 2,OT Detroit 5,Philadelphia2 Tampa Bay4, NrY.Rangers3 Florida1,Carolina0 Pittsburgh4, Toronto 3, OT Los Angele4, s Minnesota0 Chicago3, Colorado2 Calgary2, SanJose0
NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE AH TimesPST
Montreal Tampa Bay Detroit Boston Toronto Ottawa Florida Buffalo
22 60 21 53 19 59 15 48 14 51
Pacific Division GP W L OT Pls GF GA Anaheim 2 3 1 4 4 5 33 63 56 V ancouver 22 15 6 1 31 67 61 Calgary 24 1 4 8 2 30 75 64 L os Angeles 23 12 6 5 29 64 53 San Jose 2 4 1 0 10 4 24 62 66 Arizona 23 9 11 3 21 57 71 E dmonton 22 6 1 4 2 14 51 77
HOCKEY
OREGON ST. (3-2)
Payton 0 8-112-3 20, N'diaye1-10-0 2, Duvivier 4-10 2-512,Morris-Walker3-103-410, Schaftenaar 5-11 2-2 13,Robbins1-4 1-2 3, Gomis2-2 0-04, Reid 2-21-1 5,Livesay0-1 0-00, Dahlen0-00-00. Totals 25-5211-1769.
21 9 8 4 2 2 9 10 3 2 1 8 10 3 21 6 12 3 21 6 13 2
57 63 54 57 67 56 51 72
Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA P ittsburgh 21 1 5 4 2 3 2 7 6 49 N .Y.lslanders 22 16 6 0 3 2 7 2 59 W ashington 21 9 8 4 22 5 8 57
National Football League NFL — FinedDetroit 0 Dominic Raiola St0,000for his actionsinlast week's game. ARIZONACARDINALS — Released OT Kelvin Palmerfromthe practicesquad. ATLANT AFALCONS—ReleasedWRRyanSpadola from thepracticesquad.SignedWRFreddieMartino to thepracticesquad. BUFFALOBILLS— ClaimedWR/KRMarcusThigpenoff waiversfrom TampaBay.ReleasedDEBryan Johnson. CHICAGO BEARS—PlacedOLBrian delaPuente on injuredreserve.SignedDTBrandonDunnfromthe practicesquad. DALLAS COWBOYS— Placed DEJack Crawford on injuredreserve.SignedLBKeith Smith fromthe practicesquadandDTDavon Colemanto the practice squad. HOUSTO NTEXANS—ReleasedOTChris Martin from the practicesquad. INDIANAP OLIS CO LTS — ReleasedLB Victor Butler.ReleasedLBTrevardoWilliamsand RBMichael Hill fromthepracticesquad. ClaimedLBShaunPhillips off waiversfromTennessee. MIAMIDOLPHINS— Released DBJalil Brown. ReleasedDEEmmanuelDiekefromthepractice squad. SignedDBR.J. Stanford. SignedDBAhmad Dixonto the practicsqu e ad. NEWENGLANDPATRIOTS— SignedWRMatthew Slater to atwo-yearcontractextension. ReleasedLB DeontaeSkinnerandDBDaxton Swanson from the practicesquad.SignedTEXavier Grimble andLS CharleyHughlettto thepracticesquad. NEW YORKGIANTS—Signed DTMichael Bamiro to thepracticesquad. MINNES OTAVIKINGS—PlacedOTPhil Loadholt on injuredreserve.SignedOTJ'MarcusWebb. OAKLANDRAIDERS— PlacedTEDavidAusberry on injuredreserve.SignedDTRickyLumpkinfromthe practicesquad. ST.LOUI S RAMS— ReleasedWRDamianWilliams.SignedTEJustice Cunninghamfromthepractice squad. TAMPA BA YBUCCANEERS—SignedTED.J.Williams.SignedLBDenicosAllen andTECameronBrate from the practice squad.Released RBMarcusThigpen. Released DBQuinton Pointer andTETed Bolserfrom the practice squad. TENNESSEE TITANS— ReleasedTERichardGordon. Signed LBKaelin Burnett fromArizona's practice squadandLBChazSuttonto thepractice squad. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague CHICAG OBLACKHAWKS—AssignedGMacCarruth from Rockford (AHL)to Indy(ECHL). DALLAS STARS—Assigned FTaylor Petersfrom Texas(AHL)to Idaho(ECHL) and GMaximeLagace fromTe xasto Missouri (ECHL). NEWYORKRANGERS— AssignedFChrisMccarthy from Harfford (AHL)to Greenviffe(ECHL). MOTORSPORTS SPORTSCAR CLUB OF AMERICA — Named MitchellRootmanager of accounting andhumanresources. COLLEGE CLAYTO NSTATE—NamedBrittany Hall women's assistantbasketball coach. ST. JOS EPH'S (L.I.) — Announced the retirement of women'soc s cercoachJosephLee.
NHL ROUNDUP
Datsyuk returns to leadRedWingsto a 5-2 victory over Flyers The Associated Press
Mason's shoulder in the second period to give the Red Wings their third Wings were doing just fine without goal and chase the goalie, who was Pavei Datsyuk in the lineup, but he pulled after making just 11 saves. "I feel good," Datsyuk said after showed why they would still rather have him on the ice. his 33 career multi-goal game. "I Datsyuk scored twice in his re- had not played many games, and it turn from an injury to lead the Red feels like I had a iot of energy." DETROIT — T h e D e troit R ed
having Datsyuk in your lineup," coach Mike Babcock said.
Also on Wednesday: Islanders 3, Capitals 2: UNIONDALE, NY. — John Tavares scored a power-play goal late in overtime to lift New York over Washington. Blackhawks 3, Avalanche 2: DEN-
scored to lead Winnipeg to its second completed his second career hat road win in two nights. trick with a slap shot past Jonathan Kings 4, Wild 0: ST. PAUL, Minn.
— Dustin Brown's goal and assist helped spark a four-goal first period,
Bernier 2:07 into overtime to lift the
Penguins. Panthers 1, Hurricanes 0: SUNand Martin Jones earned his fifth ca- RISE, Fia. — Nick Bjugstad scored 21 reer shutout. seconds into the game, and Florida Lightning 4, Rangers 3: TAMPA, edged Carolina despite an injury to W ings to a 5 - 2 v i ctory over t h e Datsyuk knocked a rebound past VER — Bryan Eickell scored late in Fla. — Ryan Callahan scored twice RobertoLuongo. Philadelphia Flyers on Wednesday Ray Emery late in the period to send the third period and Chicago over- against his former team for the secFlames 2, Sharks 0: SAN JOSE, night. the Wings to intermission up 4-1. came strong goaltending from Cai- ond time in 10 days to lead Tampa Calif. — Karri Ramo made 32 saves Datsyuk, who had m i ssed DeThe Red Wings are 6-1-1 in games vin Pickard to beat Colorado. Bay over New York. for his third career shutout and Jiri troit's past four games with a sore the center has missed, but "I don't Jets 2, Sabres 1: BUFFALO, NY. Penguins 4, Maple Leafs 3: Hudier scored both goals to lead Caigroin, sent a slap shot over Steve think you can ever go wrong with — Bryan Little and Michael Frolik PITTSBURGH — B l ake C omeau gary to a victory over San Jose.
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
MEN'S COLLEGEBASKETBALL
NBA ROUNDUP
Hot-shooting Matthews leads Blazers toninth-straight victory The Associated Press C HARLOTTE,
rolled to its seventh consecu-
Wesley Matthews said he had a funny feeling on the way to the arena that his shooting slump might be coming to end.
Clippers 104, Pistons 98: m al Crawford scored25points and Chris Paul had 23, leading the Clippers to the road win. Raptors126, Hawks 115:AT-
Portland Trail Blazers defeated the Charlotte Hornets 105-
lillEg
liams added 22 and Toronto
their ninth consecutive victo-
beat Atlanta for its sixth con-
ry. The fifth-year NBA veteran was 10 of 15 from the field and 6 of 9 from 3-point range as Portland (12-3) improved to 7-0 against Eastern Confer-
secutive victory. Mavericks 109, Knicks 102:
Portland's LaMarcus Aldridge
set season highs with 17points and 25 rebounds against his former team, helping Dallas to an overtime victory against
(12) blocks a shot byCharlotte's Cody Zeller during the second
the New York Knicks. Thunder 97, Jazz 82:OKLA-
Chuck Burton /The Associated Press
Trail Blazers won105-97.
Over the p revious five Al Jefferson had 21 points
from 3-point range.
and 14 rebounds for his fifth
that stretch.
"It helps when you're winning games," he said. The Trail Blazers have been
getting production from up and down the lineup and that continued against Charlotte. Even with L a Marcus Al-
dridge struggling through a 3-of-18 shooting night, the Trail Blazers prevailed, getting 22 points from Damian
Spurs 106, Pacers 100:SAN ANTONIO — Manu Ginobili
double-double. Hornets coach Steve Clif-
had 28 points and San Antonio won without coach Gregg ford said he's not w o r ried Popovich, rallying for a victoabout his team's attitude amid
the losing streak, but said "we have to find a way to win."
ry over Indiana.
Rockets 102, Kings 89: HOUSTON — James Harden
Also on Wednesday: scored 26 points to lead HousCavaliers 113, Wizards 87: ton to a win over Sacramento. CLEVELAND LeBron Suns 118, Nuggets 109: James scored29 points,Kevin PHOENIX — Gerald Green Love added 21 and Cleveland
s cored 24 points and E r i c
exacted a little revenge on
Bledsoe had 20, leading Phoenix to a win over Denver.
like this with (Aldridge) struggling, Wes and Damian in particular really stepped up," coach Terry Stotts said.
help Milwaukee to a victory
the fourth quarter, and Brooklyn extended Philadelphia's s eason-opening skid to 15 games — matching a franB rian Roberts had a c a - chise record. reer-high 24 points for the Warriors 111, Magic 96: ORHornets, who have lost sev- LANDO, Fla. — Stephen Curen straight and nine of 10. ry had 28 points, including six
Bucks 103, Timberwolves 86: MINNEAPOLIS — Larry
Sanders had 15 points, seven rebounds and five blocks to over Minnesota.
Grizzlies 99, Lakers 93:LOS ANGELES — Marc Gasol had
19 points and 11 rebounds, Mike Conley added 19 points and Memphis held off the Los Angeles Lakers.
NBA SCOREBOARD All TimesPST Pct GB .867 .643 3'A .600 4 .563 4'/r .538 5 .533 5
500 5'/2
.429 6'/r .400 7 .353 8 .333 TA .250 9t/r
.250 9'/r .200 10 .000 13
Pct GB .867 .857 '/r .800 1 .800 1 ,714 2'/r .688 2'/r .643 3'/r ,625 3t/r
.600 4 .538 5 .467 6 .313 8'A .250 9t/r
.231 9 .200 10
Wednesday'sGames Brooklyn99,Philadelphia 91 GoldenStatet11, Orlando96 Portland105,Charlotte 97 Cleveland 113,Washington 81 Dallas109,NewYork102, OT Toronto126, Atlantat15 LA. Clipperst04, Detroit 98 OklahomaCity 97, Utah82 Houston102,Sacramento89 Milwattkeet03, Minnesota86 SanAntonio106,Indiana100
Phoenix120,Denver112 Memphis99,L.A,Lakers93 Today'sGames No games scheduled Friday's Games ChicagoatBoston,10a.m. GoldenStateat Charlotte, 4p.m. NewOrleansatAtlanta, 4:30p.m. Dallas atToronto,4:30p.m. Milwaukee atDetroit, 4:30p.m. NewYorkatOklahomaCity, 5p.m. L.A. ClippersatHouston,5 p.m. OrlandoatIndiana,5p.m. Sacramento atSanAntonio, 5:30p.m. Phoenixat Denver,6 p.m. MemphisatPortland, 7p.m. Minnes otaatLA.Lakers,7:30p.m.
Summaries
Blazers105, Hornets 97 PORTLANO (105) Batum4-11 2-2 10,Aldridge3-18 3-6 9, Lopez 6-103-3 t5, Lillard8-t72-322, Matthews10-152-2 28, Blake1-31-24, Kaman5-122-212,Crabbe1-3 0-03, Freeland 1-30-0Z Totals 39-9215-20105. CHARLO TTE{97) Henderson6-8 3-4 15,Wiliams0-10-0 0, Jefferson9-193-3 21,Walker 6-192-215, Stephenson 4-11 O-t 8, Zeller4-10 1-1 9, Biyombo1-3 0-0 2, Robertsto-tT 1-424, Hairston1-50-03, Maxiel 0-1 0-00.Totals41-9410-1597. Portland 28 17 34 26 — 105 Charlotle 26 30 20 21 — 97 3-Point Goal— s Portland 12-27 (Matthews6-9, Lillard 4-8, Blake1-3, CrabbeI-3, Batum0-4j, Charlotte 5-15 (Roberts3-4, Hairston 1-3, Walker 1-5, Stephenson0-1, Wiliams0-1, Henderson 0-tj. FouledOut—None. Rebounds—Portland 60 (Aldridge14j, Charlotte 56 (Jefferson14j. AssistsPortland21(Lilard 7j, Charlotte29(Walker 9). Total Fouls—Portland 18, Charlotte20. Technicals—Kaman, Portlanddefensive three second, Hairston. A—16,972(19,077).
Cavaliers113, Wizards87
Pierce4-5 7-1015, Httmphriest-71-2 3, Gortat 5-10 2-2 1 2, Wall 2-6 0 06, 6eal4-10 2-210, Porter1-4 0-02, Butler9-152-223, Gooden1-2 0-02, Seraphin 3-81-27, AMiler 3-41-27, Blair0-00-00, Temple 0-0O-O0.Totals33-7116-22 87. CLEVELAN O(113)
James7-1414-17 29,Love7-106-721, Varejao 5-5 0-010, Irving7-151-418, Marion1-44-4 6, Waiters6-172-215, Thompson4-4 2-2 to, Cherry 0-2 2-2 2, Amundson0-1 0-0 0, Harris t-2 0-0 Z Totals 38-7431-38113. Washington 18 28 21 20 — 87 Cleveland 31 27 23 32 — 113
Nets 99, 76ers91 BROOK LYN(99) Johnson8-12 2-2 21, Garnett3-5 3-4 9, Lopez 9-121-419, Williams4-10 7-717, Bogdanovic 2-5 t-2 6, Teletovic2-114-6 9, Anderson4-7 3-3 12, Jack 2-10-04, Plumleet-t 0-02, Jordan 0-10-00. Totals 35-7121-28 99. PHILADEL PHIA(91) MbahaMoute4-70-0to,Noel2-42-26,Sims 6-13 0-012,Carter-Wiliams1-91-2 4,Wroten6-18 6-818, Davies3-83-3 9, McDaniels 7-15 2-2 18, Thompson 5-70-014,GordonO-t0-00,Covington 0-3 0-0 0.Totals 34-8514-17 91. Brooklyn 32 17 23 27 — 99 Philadelphia 19 2 2 26 24 — 91
Warriors111, Magic 96 GOLDEN STATE(111) Barnes7-9 t-2 16, D.Green4-8 0-0 10, Bogttt 3-7 0-2 6, Curry9-134-5 28, Thompson6-14 0-0 t2, Iguodala4-8 2-4 13,Rush0-2 0-0 0, Speights 4-123-411, Livingston 7-101-215, Holiday0-20-0 0, Ezeli 0-00-0 0, Kttzmic0-0 0-0O.Totals 44-85 11-19111. ORLANDO (96) Harris 610 4 616, Frye14 0 0 2, Vucevic 415 3-4 t1, Oladipo4-172-2 12,Fotirnier 4-9 1-2 to, W Green 2-8 3-3 7, Payton 5-7 2-3 t3,Harkless 3-3 0-0 6,Ridnour0-10-0 0, B.Gordon 4-93-413, O'Quin n340-06.Totals36-8718-2496. GoldenState 31 34 27 19 — 111 Orlando 27 25 13 31 — 96
Raptors126, Hawks115 TORONTO(126) Ross4-72-212, A.Johnson5-80-010, Valanciunas4-83-4 11,Lowry3-12 6-814, DeRozan8-16 9-9 27, williams6-u 6-6 22,patterson1-1 0-03, Hayes1-30-2 2,J.Johnson2-40-04, Vasquez8-12 2-2 21.Totals 42-82 28-33126. ATLANTA (115) Carroll 5-u 2-2 14,Milsap3-9 2-4 8, Horford u-16 I-2 23,Tea gue7-14 8-8 24,Korver6-9 3-3 19, Antic 1-32-2 5, Scott2-5 0-0 4, Mack1-7 1-1 3, Schroder5-62-213, Bazemore 1-20-0Z Totals 42-82 21-24115. Toronto 34 30 27 35 — 126 Atlanta 24 37 27 27 — 115
Clippers104, Pistons98 LA. CLIPPERS (104)
Thunder97, Jazz82 UTAH (82) Hayward 8-15 7-1424 Favors5-91-1 it Kanter 6-134-516, Burke 5-100-012, Burks6-144-4 16, Ingle s0-20-00,Booker0-30-20,Gobert0-00-00, Exum 1-41-23. Totals 31-7017-28 82. OKLAHOM ACITY(97) Thomas 0-10-00, Ibaka9-190-120, Adams3-9 0-0 6, Jackson10-1t 0-0 22, Roberson2-4 1-2 5, Lamb 7-84-521, Perkins2-50-24, Collison1-40-0 2, Morrow4-110-012, Telfair 2-40-0 5, Smith0-0 0-00.Totals40-83 5-10 97. Utah 29 19 14 20 — 82 Oklahoma City 3 1 2 5 18 23 —97
Mavericks109, Knicks102(OT) NEWYORK(102) Acy 3-8 2-4 8, J.Smith7-200-2 15,Dalemb ert 5-10 3-413, Calderon 7-130-0 21,Shumpert 4-11 1-1 10,Stoudemire 3-8 4-510, Ja.|mith 2-5 0-0 4, Larkin 1-50-0 3, Prigioni 4-80-0 12,Hardaway Jr. 2-3 0-0 4,Wear1-10-0 2, Aldrich0-00-0 0. Talals 39-92 10-16102. DALLAS (109)
parsons4-144-7 13, Nowitzki u-24 t-7 30,
Chandler7-123-517, Harris2-104-6 9, Ellis 3-13 2-28, Wright3-70-06, Barea3-73-4to, Aminu3-4 0-06, Crowder243-37,Jeff erson0-03-43.Totals 38-95 29-38109. New York 2418 31 22 7 — 102 Dallas 19 27 25 24 14 —109
Spurs 106, Pacers100 INDIANA (100) S.Hill 4-80-010,Scola5-123-613, Mahinmi4-5 0-0 8, Sloan1-61-2 3,Stuckey9-204-522, Copeland 4-102-2 12, Miles2-6 0-25, Allen4-7 0-1 8, Price 4-70-0 11,Rudez3-6 0-0 8. Totals 40-87 10-18100. SANANTONIO(106) Leonard8-12 3-621, Duncan7-103-617, Diaw 1-3 0-0 2,Parker8-16 4-621, Greent-4 0-0 2, Ginobili 10-186-7 28, Belinelli 2-5 2-2 6, Bonner0-2 0-0 0,Baynes4-4 t-2 9.Totals 41-7419-29106. Indiana 27 28 21 24 —100 SanAtttonio 25 2 527 29 — 106
BUcks103, Timberwolves 86 MILWAUKE E(103) Antetokounmpo 6-121-213, Parker5-121-1 11, Sanders7-101-115, Knight3-118-8 15,Mayo3-11 2-2 to, Dudle3-31-1 y 8, Bayless1-20-02, Pachttlia 2-3 2-2 6,Middleton4-82-211, llyasova6-130-0 12, Marshal0-00-00. l Totals40-8518-19103. MINNESOT A(86) Wiggins4-144-814, Young1-101-4 3, Dieng 1-3 2-2 4,LaVine5-12 2-312, Brewer7-t 75-9 19, Budinger2-52-27, Bennett6-1t 0-0t2, Muhammad 5-93-413,Hummel0-02-22, RobinsonIII 0-00-00. Totals 31-8121-3486. Milwaukee 26 25 21 31 — 103 Minnesota 24 23 23 16 — 86
Suns120, Nuggets112
Bullock2-62-2 7,Griffin 6-173-315, Jordan2-4 DENVER (112) 004, Paul9122223, Redick363410,Turkoglu Chandler7-123-4 19,Faried3-8 2-48, Mozgo v 3-8 0-0 9,Crawford8-166-6 25, Hawes1-5 2-24, 8-131-218, Lawson 4-16 8-8 t7, Afflalo 6-114-5 Farmar1-2 0-0 3, Davis2-2 0-0 4. Totals37-78 18, Gallinari0-30-00, Arthur2-41-2 6,Gee5-9 1-1 18-19 104. 11, Hickson 2-5 3-4 t, Robinson2-9 3-48. Totals DETROIT (98) Smith7-172-217,Monroet-64-66, Drummond 39-90 26-34112. PHOENIX (120) 6-11 5-917, Augustin7-143-319, Caldwell-Pope Marc.uorris 5-9 2-4 14,Mark.Morris 6-173-3 5-11 4-4 17, Butler 1-3 0-0 3, Singler3-3 0-0 7, Jerebko1-30-0 2, Dinwiddie4-7 0-010, Martin0-3 15, Plttmlee38006, Bledsoe610782t, GDragic 8-133-420, G.Green 9-170-024, Len 4-52-210, 0-00. Totals 35-7818-2498. LA. Clippers 25 2 3 24 32 — 104 Tucker4-80-0 10,Tolliver 0-10-0 0. Totals 45-88 17-21 120. Detroit 27 24 22 25 — 98 Denver 30 34 22 26 — 112 Phoenix 34 30 29 27 — 120
Rockets102, Kings 89
SACRAM ENTO(89) Casspi5-94-41t, Thompson 3-90-0 6, Cousins
Grizzlies 99, Lakers93
MEMPHIS (99) Allen 2-8 0-0 4, Randolph7-10 2-4 16, Gasol 5-I0 9-10 19, Conl e y 6-11 6-619, Lee4-101-t 10, Landry2-3 0-04, Stauskas1-4 4-47, Moreland0-0 0-00. Totals 31-7122-2889. Prince0-32-2 2, Udrih2-6 0-04, Pondexter 2-72-2 HOUSTON (102) 8, Koufos3-50-06,Carter2-50-05, Leuer3-50-06. Ariza 5-12 1-2 t3, Motiejunas10-15 0-0 21, Totals 36-8022-2599. LA. LAKERS (93) Black 1-1 0-0 2, Canaan9-16 0-0 24, Harden 10-31 4-626, Dorseyo-t 0-40, Terry2-50-05, Johnson2-50 05, Boozer2-6024, Hill5-121-2 Papanikolaou2-5 t-2 5, Garcia 2-7 0-1 4, John- 1t, Lin 4-94-614, Bryant5-1510-10 22, Davis1-3 son t-t 0-02, Daniels 0-00-00. Totals 42-94 0-02, Young 4-143-313, Price5-81-1 11,Ellington 2-40-0 5, Sacre3-50 06. Totals 33-81 1924 93. 6-15 102. Sacramento Memphis 21 25 34 19 — 99 Houston LA. Lakers 26 25 23 19 — 93 9-18 u-t3 29, Sessions3-81-2 8, McLem ore 6-17 0-0 14, Williams2-2 2-5 7, McCallum0-1 0-0 0,
Ha w a i i
second Maui Invitational title
HOMA CITY — Reggie Jackson scored 22 points, and Oklahoma City snapped a sixgame skid with a victory over
Washington with a win over the Wizards. Lillard and 15 points and 10 Nets 99, 76ers 91: PHILArebounds from Robin Lopez. DELPHIA — Alan Anderson "To be able to have a game scored 10 of his 12 points in
Standings
L AHAINA ,
S tanley Johnson had 1 8 points and nine rebounds, helping No. 3 Arizona gut out a 61-59 victory over No. 15 San Diego State for its
Utah.
games, Matthews was 25 of 57 from the field and just 8 of 25
pressure on himself during
The Associated Press
DALLAS — Tyson Chandler
ing myself," Matthews said. half of Wednesday's game in "Hopefully tonight was a step Charlotte, North Carolina. The
Matthews said he never put
7
LANTA — DeMar DeRozan s cored 27 points, Lou W i l -
97 on Wednesday night for
in that direction."
r
AUBURN HILLS, Mich. — Ja-
Matthews scored a season-high 28 points, and the
WASHIHG TON(87)
Arizona ta es title in Maui
tive win.
Call it a shooter's instinct.
EasternConference W L d-ToronIo 13 2 tt-Washington 9 5 d-Chicago 9 6 Milwaukee 9 7 Atlanta 7 6 Miami 8 7 Cleveland 7 7 Brooklyn 6 8 Indiana 6 9 Orlando 6 11 Boston 4 8 NewYork 4 12 Charlotte 4 12 Detroit 3 12 Philadelphia 0 15 WesternConterettce W L d-Memphis 13 2 d-Golden State 12 2 tt-Portland t2 3 Houston t2 3 SanAntonio 10 4 Dallas 11 5 L.A. Clippers 9 5 Phoenix to 6 Sacrame nto 9 6 NewOrleans 7 6 Denver 7 8 Utah 5 it oklahoma Cittr 4 12 Minnesota 3 10 L.A. Lakers 3 12 t -divisionleader
ROUNDUP
3-pointers, and Golden State
N .C.
ence teams. "I knew it was just a matter of time before that drought ended and I'm back to b e-
B3
John Locher /The Associated Press
Oregon State's Gary Payton II dunksagainst Auburn during the first half of Wednesday night's game in Las Vegas.
Beavers fall to Tigers inVegas The Associated Press
rell played a key role in the
LAS VEGAS — Auburn
c o m eback with his shoot-
guard KT Harrell didn't just want the ball in his
i n g, making a three-pointe r and a short jumper with
hands when i t
m a ttered 2 : 47lefttobreaka61-61tie. Wednesday night. A uburn sti ll He also wanted to needed tohold off
be in position to make a big defen-
'
sive stop.
:
Oregon State in the closing minutes. The Beavers
Wednesday night. Arizona (6-0) s u rvived a stiff semifinal challenge against Kansas State and faced a bigger one against the athletic Aztecs (5-1). The Wildcats traded blows in this heavyweight bout in paradise, coming up with the big plays down the stretch to win their 33rd straight regular-season n o n-conference
game. Rondae
Hol l i s-Jefferson
gave Arizona his usual exuberant boost and scored 14 points, while t h e
W i l dcats
closed in around San Diego State defensively in the second half to add to the Maui title they won in 2000.
Trey Kell had a four-point play with 17 seconds to go and Winston Shepard hit a 3
with less than a second left, but it wasn't enough for the Aztecs.
Also on Wednesday:
Pac-12
Harrell scored were within three 20 points but also points, 66-63, but took two charges ~ ext W V ictor Rob b i n s in the final minmissed a layup on Mississippi utes that helped ValleyStateat a f a st break and the Tigers beat Qregpn $tate L angston M o r r is-Walker was Oregon State 71- Ihes 9 p tTt 69 in the consola- Wednesday ' called for a charge tion game of the after converting a Bec 3 MGM Grand Main TV.Pac 12 floater in the lane. "We feel like we Event. "My coaches " "+ should've pulled elieve in me to KICE 940-AM; this o n e out make plays," Har- KRCO 690-AM, Beavers c o a ch . M rell said. "As a seW ayne Ti n k l e nior and a leader, said. "We shot
Oklahoma 75, No. 22 UCLA 65: PARADISE ISLAND, Bahamas — B ahamas native
I took it upon myself to try
tournament.
o u r selves in the foot with
and take over the game, not some turnovers and some only offensivelybut defen- breakdowns defensively. sively. Those two charges I
l o ve the fact we battled,
really got us back in the but we're disappointed we didn't pull this one out." game." Down 5 9-56,
A u bur n
Gary P a y ton II led Or-
wentona 13-4runduring egon State with a seaa six-minute stretch to s o n-high 20 points and 12 move in front69-63. Har- rebounds.
Buddy Hield scored 24 points, Frank Booker added 11 and Oklahoma beat UCLA in the
quarterfinals of the Battle 4 Atlantis.
Utah 85, Texas-Pan American 48: SALT LAKE CITY
— Freshman forward Kyle Kuzma scored 14 points and
Delon Wright added 12 to lead Utah to a victory over Texas-Pan American to open the
school's annual Thanksgiving California 72, Cal Poly 52: BERKELEY, Calif. — Jabari
Bird scored a season-high 18 points, Tyrone Wallace added 16 points and eight rebounds and California defeated Cal Poly.
Top 25 No. 2 Wisconsin 72, UAB 43: PARADISE ISLAND, Baha-
Skating
the most medals won by any single nation in the
Continued from B1 Winter Games. "I am ecstatic," said VivThe Americans accepted their bronze medals at a ian Joseph, who lives in ceremony at the Sheraton suburban Chicago. "I am Hotel in Chicago, and the sorry it wasn't done soonCanadian team of Debbi er, but I am happy it is fiWilkes and Guy Revell was nally done." honored with silver medals Vivian and Ronald Joat the 1967 Canadian na-
seph lamented that their
tional championships.
coach, Peter Dunfield, who
mas — Frank Kaminsky had 16 points and eight rebounds, Duje Dukan scored 11 points and Wisconsin had no trouble beating A l abama-Birmingham in the Battle 4 Atlantis
quarterfinals. No. 4 Duke 93, Furman 54: DURHAM, N .C. — Fresh-
man Jahlil Okafor had a season-high 24 points and Duke routed Furman.
Butler 74, No. 5 North Caro-
died at the age of 82 on
lina 66: PARADISE ISLAND, Bahamas — A lex B a r low
May 25, and their parents
scored 17 points, Kelan Mar-
mittee executive b o a rd were not able to witness meeting in I stanbul, the the change. Dunfield had
tin came off the bench to score
But in 1987, at an Inter-
national Olympic ComGermans were deemed
17 more and Butler hung on to upset North Carolina in the opening game of the Battle 4
"rehabilitated" and quiet-
spent much effort trying to rectify the results.
ly re-awarded their silver medals. The official Olym-
The Josephs have been invited to award the cham-
Atlantis.
pic results have never re-
pionship pairs medals at
land State 33: LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Montrezl Harrell had
flected the Josephs as the the 2015 U.S. Figure Skatb ronze medalists or t h e ing championships in JanCanadians as th e s i lver uary in Greensboro, North medalists. Carolina. " After more than t w o Until Tuesday. After an inquiry by The decades of confusion, we New York Times, which resulted in an a r ticle on D ec. 13, 2013, the I O C confirmed that the Soviet
15 points and 13 rebounds and Louisville beat Cleveland State for coach Rick Pitino's
700th college victory. No. 10 Gonzaga 88, Geor-
are pleased to see Vivian
gia 76: NEW YORK — Kyle
and Ronald Joseph as the rightful Olympic bronze
Wiltjer scored a career-high
medalists," David R aith,
Georgia in the NIT Season Tip-Off semifinals. No. 16 Ohio St. 91, Camp-
Union remained the gold the executive director of medal winner, Canada U.S. Figure Skating, said and West Germany shared in a statement. "We respect the silver, and the Josephs the way the Josephs have owned the bronze. In an
No. 6 Louisville 45, Cleve-
32 points and Gonzaga beat
bell 64: COLUMBUS, Ohio
— Marc Loving scored a career-high 18 points and Ohio State again shot well from the field in beating Campbell. Georgetown 66, No. 18 Flor-
email, the IOC said that de-
handled the issue, knowing that this confusion has
spite the information on its
caused them much heart-
website over the years, this was intended to be the offi-
ache and frustration." Meanwhile, Wilkes be-
cial result since 1987.
lieved her cause was one
After much effort by U.S. Figure Skating, the
that "had faded into the
ida 65: PARADISE ISLAND, D'Vauntes Bahamas Smith-Rivera made a jumper
past long ago." Over the years, she would be identi-
with 3.4 seconds left in overtime to give Georgetown a vic-
fied as a silver and bronze
tory over Florida in the Battle
medalist and always felt awkward disc ussing
4Atlantis quarterfinals. No. 21 West Virginia 103,
the matter publicly. She
VMI 72 : CHA R L E STON, WVa. — Freshman reserve
U.S. Olympic Committee,
Skate Canada and the Canadian Olympic Association, the IOC updated its
website on Tuesday. With the Josephs recognized by the IOC as bronze medalists, the U.S. now has a total of 48 Olympic figure skating medals-
worked for Skate Canada before retiring this year and called the IOC's web-
site update a "tremendous retirement gift."
Jevon Carter scored 28 points and West Virginia forced a school-record 36 turnovers in a win over VMI.
B4 T H E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2014
Enemy
After they graduated from OHSU, the couple moved to Corvallis. Slowly, Dottie began
ContInued from B1 to turn. They are not true platypuses — duck-billed, The Maleys had season tickets for OSU beaver-tailed mammals, and the nickname basketball, and the clincher for Dottie was given to those who root for both the Ducks following the A.C. Green-led teams of the mid-1980s. and the Beavers. "He was just such a gentleman," she says of No, these creatures are even rarer. These fans remain loyal to the rival school of their Green, who later had a long NBA career. alma mater. And some exist right here in Maley, though, held on to the Beavers even Central Oregon. after the OSU basketball program fell into Jeremy Dickman,a 36-year-old Bend law- decline. She is just naturally inclined to root yer who has a bachelor's and a law degree for the little guy, she says, and Oregon State from Oregon, is a passionate OSU fan. plays the role well. "It's kind of the underdog, and I kind of Dickman grew up in Junction City, between Corvallis and Eugene on state High- like that," says Maley, adding that she thinks way 99. His dad was a die-hard Beaver fan, some fans take the rivalry too seriously. "I who often took his children to Oregon State root for Oregon when they're not playing basketball games. Dickman's OSU fanhood the Beavers, but I feel like they have so much only grew when he spent his first two years money because of (former Nike CEO) Phil in college at Oregon State. Knight's stuff and Oregon State has none." But he decided he wanted to study journalThese UO/OSU turncoat fans seem to hold ism and felt that Oregon was a better bet for far less contempt for their archrivals than that field, so he transferred. the Civil War fans who have spent little or no "Academically, my interests more aligned time on their rival's campus. with Oregon, and that's why I went there," That does not surprise Christina Werder, a says Dickman, who is a former Bulletin copy 35-year-old from La Pine who currently lives editor.
in Nevada.
Dickman had fun at Duck games while
She has always despised Oregon State as a lifelong Duck fan and she has no plans to give "keep a low profile" as a Beaver fan while on up her UO allegiance. But the moment Werdthe UO campus, he says. er decided to apply to Oregon State — she His time at Oregon gave him a full perspec- expects to enroll in fall 2015 in OSU's human tive of the Civil War. development and family sciences programHe admits that he holds more of a soft spot she felt her anti-Beaver bent slip away. "I no longer make jokes about how the Beafor the Ducks than he lets on, yet there are few better at razzing a Duck-fan friend than vers' football team sucks, and I no longer give Dickman. people a 'yuck' look when they say they went "It's a weird love-hate thing with Oregon," to OSU or are a fan," Werder says. "So yes, Dickman concedes. "I t h in k f a m i liarity there's now a small soft spot for the Beavers. I breeds contempt a little bit. I went to school do find myself quietly rooting for them more there, so I know exactly how to bust the chops and more. "With that being said, Oregon is still my of an Oregon fan. The whole Nike thing, and with the hippies and the marijuana thing, you team, I am still a devoted fan and that will he was a student in Eugene, and he chose to
can always sort of out-smack someone. Even
people who got their degrees from Oregon, oftentimes they didn't spend as much time
never waiver."
Ramp knows the feeling. He still roots for the Beavers on occasion.
But there is no doubt where his loyalties lie. Dottie Maley, a 69-year-old who lives in This is a man who spent 10 years living in Sunriver, grew up in Michigan. But she chose Anchorage, Alaska, with a personalized li-
there as I did."
to attend Oregon in the 1960s.
cense plate that read "Dux Trx."
A basketball junkie, she initially adopted the Ducks as her favorite team. But after
two years in Eugene she decided to study dental hygiene at Oregon Health & Science University in Portland, where she met her future husband, Joe Maley — an Oregon State
graduate.
Woods
For him, the puzzled look he gets when somebody realizes that he is an OSU graduate but a Duck at heart is part of the joy. "It all worked out," recalls Ramp. "And I do have a lot of fun with it." — Reporter: 541-617-7868, zhall@bendbulletin.com.
ers, Woods turns 39 next
knee, and morerecently his
month.
back. Those injuries were a
ContInued from B1
Can he challenge him? matter of time. Considering the past five The biggest change instruck did far more damage, years as a whole, it might be volves his corporate deals. it was the fire hydrant he first too early to rule him out. Woods lost or did not reran over that became a sym• M cIlroy with 1 3 w i n s new sponsorship deals with bol of the before-and-after na- worldwide is the only play- Accenture, AT&T, Gillette, ture of his career. er to have won more than Gatorade, Tag Heuer and There is a fascination with Woods (nine) over the last EA Sports. He has replaced And while the tree his SUV
anniversaries. Is five years
five y ears. A da m
from the drop zone for par on the 18th hole and went on
fire hydrant. Otherwise, he would have won the PGA
to beat him in a playoff. That
Championship at Hazeltine.
Greg Norman. No problem. Woods was coming off another five-win
five games, including Sunday's Kaepernick was asked if he 19-3 victory over Arizona. believed that Harbaugh would "All throughout the season, return next season. "I think he'll be back," he you always have these oppor-
ContInued from 61 Now they play two of their nextthree games againstone another, and it looks like at
tunities to go one way or an-
sald.
other, and to grow, hopefully, Why? "His resume," Kaepernick least one of them could miss in the right direction," Carroll the playoffs. Season obituar- said. "We made a real nice replied. ies, at least rough drafts, will shift and took a nice step forHarbaugh is 43-15-1 in four be written for tonight's loser. ward to getting to where we seasons with San Francisco. "If we're good enough to be want to get." Two seasons ago, the 49ers lost in, we'll know," Harbaugh said Seattle's vital signs are the Super Bowl to Baltimore, of the playoffs. "We'll know strong — but so is the schedule. coached by Harbaugh's brothsoon enough." It has the league's top rushing er John. The problem for the 49ers offense (170 yards per game) But this season has been and the Seahawks is not just behind Marshawn Lynch, and rockier than any other. Lineone another, but the Cardinals, the NFL's top defense (297 backer Aldon Smith was suswho won nine of their first 10 yards allowed per game). pended for the first nine games games before losing in Seattle But the Seahawks sandwich for violating the l eague's on Sunday. Without a division their games with the 49ers substance-abuse and persontitle, the 49ers and the Sea- around a trip to Philadelphia to al-conduct policies. Accuhawks would be left fighting play the Eagles, then face the sations of domestic violence for two wild-card spots, along Cardinals in Arizona. It is as shadowed defensive end Ray with the likes of Detroit (7-4), difficult a stretch as any team McDonald — but did not bench him — for the first half of the Dallas and Philadelphia (both faces over the next month. 8-3). The onlycertaintyis that the season before an announceThe 49ers were 7-4 at this Seahawks will garner head- ment earlier this month that no point last year, too, and fin- lines. Last week, Lynch was charges were coming. ished 12-4. There is no palpa- fined $100,000 for not speakInjuries have hit several star ble sense ofconcern, at least ing to the media after a game. players, including linebackers within team headquarters. After playing the Cardinals, he Patrick Willis, who is out for "We're in the same spot answered questions — mostly the season with a toe injury, we were last year, something by answering "yeah," even if and NaVorro Bowman, who we're very familiar with," San the query was not a yes-or-no has not played since last season's playoffs because of a hurt Francisco quarterback Col- proposition. in Kaepernick said. "We just On Tuesday, cornerback knee. have teams that are in other Richard Sherman and receiver San Francisco's position positions now." Doug Baldwin took to the lec- presents a litany of points and Not only do the 49ers and tern with a bit of satirical per- counterpoints. The 49ers have the Seahawks play one anoth- formance art aimed at what a three-game winning streak, er again on Dec. 5 in Seattle, they see as the NFL's hypo- with each game decided in but they each play the Cardi- critical stances on news media the final moments, but those nals in late December. obligations, sponsorships and opponents have a combined "This season is just begin- player safety. 10-23 record t h i s s e ason. "Speaking of healthy, how They have the league's secning, with all of the games that we'll be playing here in the do you feel about the NFL ond-ranked defense, in yards next month and a half," Seattle making you play two games allowed, despite the player abcoach Pete Carroll said. in five days?" Baldwin asked sences, but their plus-3 point It has been a strange season from behind a full-size cutout differential (228 scored, 225 for both teams. Seattle opened of himself. allowed) is the worst among "Oh my gosh, geez," Sher- all NFL teams with winning by trouncing the formidable Green Bay Packers, then lost man said. "I almost didn't re- records. "You make a deposit in the three of its next five games. alize thatbecause they've been D issension festered i n t h e talking about players' safety so toughness account," Harbaugh locker room. Receiver Percy much. Two games in five days said of the close games. "And Harvin was traded to the New doesn't seem like you care you'll be able to make withdrawals from that later down York Jets amid reports that he about players' safety much." did not get along with teamThe 49ers have their own the road." mates. The Seahawks lost a issues and distractions. There Later has arrived, sooner game at CenturyLink Field, is persistent speculation that than expected. The Seahawks the best home-field advantage Harbaugh's relationship with and the 49ers have earned in the league, then struggled to his bosses has irretrievably the right to believe that seashake off the winless Oakland spoiled and that he may ex- sons are intended to last deep Raiders there. plore other coaching options into January, maybe even It looked likely that the Sea- after the season. (The Oakland February. hawks would be the 10th team
Raiders and the University of
in a row unable to successfully
Michigan, Harbaugh's alma mater,are among the presumed possibilities.) On a conference callwith reporters in Seattle on Tuesday,
defend a Super Bowl title. But an attitude adjustment
was credited for helping the Seahawks win four of the past
Yet it is still November. The
loser tonight may have more hope than, say, a cartload of turkeys at Thanksgiving. But they would rather not see
where that road leads.
S c ott, them with Rolex, a Japa-
any more meaningful than Martin Kaymer, Graeme nese heat rub, FUSE and four or six? Still, it seems ap- M cDowell, L u k e D o n a ld now Muscle Pharm. Nike propriate to raise one ques- and Lee W estwood a l so remains his biggest sponsor, tion as Woods prepares to re- have nine wins around the and Woods has made apturn to competition next week world. pearances in commercials after another long layoff. • Woods still has the high- and TV shows with McIlIs this where you thought est winning percentage (12 roy. There was a time when he would be five years later? percent) of anyone in the Woods did not share his He has g one t h rough lastfive years. Nike stage with anyone. two swing coaches. He has • In the past five years, His performance in the changed caddies. He has gone Woods has been at No. I in majors is the most glaring from married with children the world longer (60 weeks) difference, mainly because to being a single dad. He still than the other five players that always has been his ulhas 14 major championships. who have taken turns at the timate measure. And next week at the Hero top of the ranking, and he is In the 16 majors he has World Challenge will be his the only player to be No. I played since 2010, Woods fifth comeback from injury. for a continuous year. has only five top-five finishSo much has changed, exIt is not all that dire. es, and he has not been a secept for the expectations. Far more difficult to mea- rious factor in the final hour They are just as high. sure is how much Woods of any of them. He has not And that is why the last five has been affected physically broken 70 in the final round years — particularly the last and emotionally since the of a major since the Masters one — would seem to be a lost crisis in his personal life un- in 2011. cause. folded Thanksgiving weekHe remains stuck on 14 About this time a year ago, end in 2009. majors dating to the 2008 Woods was on the cusp of He does not seem to make U.S. Open. He is still four winning his World Challenge as many big putts. But that short of c a tching Jack until Zach Johnson holed out started before he hit the Nicklaus.
stuff used to happen only to
Seahawks
He has lost precious time
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giving, Woods gets back to work. And that leads to another relevant question.
because of his Achilles tenWhere will he be five don problems and his left years from now?
season on the PGA Tour that
only he can make look routine. He was PGA Tour player
of the year for the 11th time, won the money title for the 10th time and captured the
Vardon Trophy for the ninth time. But when he began this
year as the defending champion at Torrey Pines, no one
could have imagined what would follow. Woods has started only
eight tournaments this year and finished only three of them. For the first time in his
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career, he did not register a top-10 finish. There were two WDs (withdraws), two MCs (missed cuts) and one MDF (54-hole cut). He effectively was MIA.
• •
Recurring back pain led to surgery in March, which forced him to sit out t h ree
months and miss two majors. When he returned (earlier than he should have), he looked more like an old Woods than the Woods of old. And then he shut it down af-
ter the PGA Championship to get stronger. Is he as good as 25-year-old Rory McIlroy? No. For start-
•
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Oi%LY 10 AVAIL AS L K ~ . 'OF'FKlt OXLY VALIII OX SLACK liltII)AY •
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Opening on Black Friday at 10:00 a.m.
SGQ~QAQQS
g
•
B5 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2014
+
17,827.75
NASDAQ 4,787.32
+
O» To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbugetin.com/business. Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection.
S&P 500
+
20 07
Todap
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50$P 500
Thursday, November 27, 2014
Thanksgiving Holiday
2 040
The major U.S. stock exchanges will be closed today for Thanksgiving. The New York Stock Exchange and the Nasdaq Stock Market will reopen for business on Friday. However, trading will close at 1:00 p.m. EST. Overseas markets will be open.
.
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Change: 5.80 (0.3%)
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StocksRecap
16,000
S
HIGH LOW CLOSE 17833.76 17791.16 17827.75 DOW Trans. 9220.78 9189.33 9195.71 DOW Util. 594.90 590.41 593.54 NYSE Comp. 11049.31 11022.88 11047.91 NASDAQ 4788.00 4757.49 4787.32 S&P 500 2073.29 2066.62 2072.83 S&P 400 1456.03 1451.53 1454.22 Wilshire 5000 21829.11 21753.14 21826.24 Russell 2000 1190.70 1185.37 1190.62
DOW
NYSE NASD
Vol. (in mil.) 2,615 1,330 Pvs. Volume 3,266 1,618 Advanced 1927 1645 Declined 1206 1041 New Highs 2 00 1 2 4 New Lows 34 42
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CHG. %CHG. WK +1 2.81 $.0.07% -7.13 -0.08% 4 +3.17 $.0.54% T +18.54 $.0.17% 4 +29.07 $.0.61% +5.80 $.0.28% 4 +0.50 +0.03% +65.12 +0.30% +4.29 $.0.36%
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MO QTR YTD +7.55% L L +24.26% L +20.99% L L +6 .23% L +14.62% L L +12.14% L +8 .32% L +10.76% L +2 .32%
NorthwestStocks NAME
DE
Close:$86.99 V-0.80 or -0.9% The farming equipment maker predicted that sales and profit will keep falling in its new fiscal year as the sector remains weak. $90 85
«
S 0 52-week range
The National Retail Federation has forecast that holiday sales, which traditionally get in full swing on Black Friday, will rise 4.1 percent in November and December versus the same period last year. That would be the biggest gain in three years.
56.94 56. 2 0 +. 2 9 +0.5 4 L 35.98 34.2 9 +. 2 3 +0 .7 A T 18.03 17. 1 1 +. 0 1 +0.1 T L 10 2 .20 22 .58 -.02 -0.1 T + 144. 5 7 13 4.78 -.03 . . . X + 5.82 4 . 9 6 + . 0 2 +0.4 A T 0.3 6 28.00 +.03+0.1 L L L 44.99 44.40 + . 09 +0.2 A A 14 0.83139.75 + .88 $.0.6 > 18.30 13. 7 1 +. 2 6 +1.9 A T 37.42 3 1. 7 8 -.05 -0.2 4 T 38.25 39.16 +1.53 +4.1 A A 36.48 36. 9 0 +. 5 8 $ .1.6 A > 14.70 13.6 2 +. 0 8 + 0 .6 A A 59.38 59. 2 2 +. 4 0 +0.7 4 L 9.19 6.68 +. 1 3 + 2.0 A A 18.96 1 5. 5 2 -.37 -2.3 4 L 36.0 5 25 . 0 7 -.81 -3.1 T T 24.3 1 22. 4 1 + . 2 1 +0.9 L + 0.0 5 47.75 +.28+0.6 T A L 98.96 97. 8 0 +. 5 1 +0.5 4 4 77.15 75 .41 -.15 -0.2 A A 47.75 46.8 1 +. 5 3 $ .1.1 4 L 68.81 6 7. 3 6 - .58 -0.9 A A 7.94 7.41 +. 0 3 $.0.4 A > 46.99 41 .48 -.50 -1.2 A A 275. 0 9 23 9.07 +1.21 +0.5 X + 36.03 3 4. 8 0 -.03 -0.1 T A 33.32 2 3. 3 6 -.66 -2.7 T + 24 4 .86240.60 + . 78 + 0.3 T A 70.35 66. 5 9 ... ... L T 82.3 7 7 9. 7 0 -.51 -0.6 T A 24.74 24 .85 + . 27 +1.1 L + 9.6 5 17.30 +.04+0.2 a A a 44.49 44. 3 8 +. 3 7 +0.8 4 4 4.5 3 22.08 -.02 -0.1 L A 54.36 54.28 + .40 +0.7 L + 35.29 34 .92 -.31 -0.9 L A
dividend wasomitted or deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding 12months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash value on ex-distribution date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc — P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last12 months.
'::","" A disappointing outlook Although Deere reported better-than-expected quarterly results, its forecast for continuing sales declines weighedon the stock Wednesday. In the fourth quarter Deere earned $649.2 million, or $1.83 per share, down from $806.8 million, or $2.11 per share, a year ago. Its revenue was $8.97 billion, down from $9.45 billion a year ago. Analysts expected a profit of $1.57 per share and $7.73 billion in revenue for the quarter.
Deere & Company(DE) ~
~
Source: FactSet
~
Wednesday's close:$86.99 Price-earnings ratio:31
52-WEEK RANGE
$79 ~
But the world's biggest farm equipment supplier says its annual net income will drop about 40 percent in its new fiscal year and revenue from agricultural and turf equipment will fall further than it did in fiscal 2014. Falling commodity prices and lower farm income are hurting companies like Deere. In August, Deere lowered its outlook and said it would cut production in response to weak sales.
95
(Baeed on past 12 month results)
Dividend: $2.40 Div. yield: 2.8% Price change: Y T D DE -4.8%
*annualized
3-yr* 5. 7 AP
AmdFoctgs
SelectedMutualptgnds
Seadrill
iii)44
SDRL
Close:$15.99%-4.72 or -22.8% The offshore drilling contractor's quarterly profit results fell short of Wall Street expectations and it suspended its dividend. $40 30
$78.88~
S 0 52-week range
N $94 .89
$15.93~
N $4 3.4 1
Vol.:8.9m (2.2x avg.) P E: 9 . 8 Vol.:84.8m (8.6x avg.) P E: 1. 9 Mkt. Cap:$31.18b Yie l d: 2.8% Mkt. Cap:$7.5 b Yie l d : 25.0% NE Close: $19.71 T-1.05 or -5.1% The offshore drilling contractor and its competitors continue to feel the impact of weakening demand as oil prices remain low. $30
4 +53. 2 +4 5 .0 73 2 1 5 0. 5 0 A +21.6 +2 8 .7 2 9 4 1 1 1. 2 7 L +9.9 +8.7 2 5800 16 0 . 2 0 Retailers are hoping that many T -75.7 -72.3 162 d d 0 .88f consumers will not wait until 25 X -1.3 + 3 . 6 2 615 1 9 2 . 92 Friday to begin shopping for the 20 T -5.2 -2.9 27 holidays. +1. 9 +5 .5 193 18 0.64f And if recent years are any S 0 A + 12. 8 +3 3 .8 1 6 3 2 6 0. 6 0f indication, opening for business 52-week range L +17.4 +12 .0 1 582 30 1 . 4 2 317.93~ $38.71 on Thanksgiving Day will pay off T -16.5 -17.9 8 9 86 for many retailers. Some 44.8 Vol.:8.4m ( 1.1x avg.) P E:6. 2 4 +5.6 +8.4 705 23 0.4 0 Mkt. Cap:$4.99 b Yiel d : 7 .6% million people shopped on A +40. 0 +5 1 .0 24891 15 0 . 6 4 Thanksgiving last year, up 27 A +42. 2 $. 5 6.7 23381 18 0.96f Infoblox BLOX percent from 2012. Macy's, A +1.5 +6.8 64 5 1 1 3 0. 2 6 Close: $17.95%1.06 or 6.3% Wal-Mart and about two dozen 4 + 49. 8 +3 9 .8 2 284 19 0 .74f The network automation company other major retailers are schedT +21 . 7 + 1 9.3 5 7 9 3 0 reported better-than-expected quar4 - 16.2 + 0.5 4 836 d d uled to open today. terly profit and revenue results and T -17.9 -12.0 1352 16 0 .73f an upbeat outlook. L -6.9 - 0.3 34 8 1 9 0 . 20 $18 +2 7.6 +29.2 26465 19 1.24f 16 4 +24.4 +2 4 .2 1 926 33 1 .12f 14 A +22. 0 +2 3 . 4 980 20 1 .32 4 +9.3 +12. 4 92 21 1.8 6 f 0 N S A +13.8 $. 2 2.9 973 18 0 .88 52-week range A $.1 91.7 +206.2 4 2 3 4 4 $77.67~ $39.12 44 A - 10.8 + 1 . 3 1 220 4 0 1 . 76 Vol.:4.7m (4.3x a vg.) P E :.. X -11.2 - 7.7 51 5 1 9 0 . 12 Mkt. Cap:$1 b Yield: .. A +19. 4 +16 .3 1 0 05 3 0.92 T -28.5 - 17.5 186 8 1 0 . 75 Ctrip.comInternational CTRP A +31. 1 +3 0 .9 3 6 2 2 7 2. 2 0 Close:$53.50T-4.96 or -8.5% L +0.5 +5.7 94 13 1.3 0 f The Chinese travel services compaA +1.7 +0.7 29 4 1 2 9 1 . 28f ny reported better-than-expected quarterly financial results, but its L $.19 8.0 +222.1 2386 c c revenue outlook fell short. -9.6 -0.5 469 2 3 0. 6 0 $70 4 +9.9 +14 . 7 4 8 04 1 5 0 . 9 8 L -5.2 -2.8 21 5 1 4 0 . 59f 60 L +19 . 6 + 2 4.2 11494 13 1 .40 L +10.6 +2 2 .7 3 4 15 2 6 1. 1 6 Ready, set, shop! S 0 N Recent growth in retail sales and 52-week range an improvingeconomy have $35.96~ $6 9.74 experts projecting strong growth in DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenot included. b -Annual rate plus stock. 8 -Liquidating dividend. 8 -Amount declaredor paid in last12 months. f - Current Vol.:14.9m (6.8x avg.) PE: 62.2 holiday sales this year. annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafterstock split, ro regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent Mkt. Cap:$7.24 b Yield:...
Stores first, turkey later?
+
1.2514
20
Noble
52-WK RANGE o CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L TICKER LO Hl CLOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous) P/E DIV
Alaska Air Group A LK 34.81 ~ Avista Corp A VA 26.78 ~ Bank of America B AC 14. 37 ~ Barrett Business BB S I 1 8.25 o — Boeing Co BA 116.32 ~ Cascade Bancorp C A C B4 . 11 $y ColumbiaBnkg COLB 2 3.59 ~ 3 Columbia Sportswear COLM 33.46 — o CostcoWholesale COST 109.50— o Craft Brew Alliance BREW 10.07 ~ FLIR Systems F LIR 28.03 ~ Hewlett Packard HPQ 2 5 . 09 — o Intel Corp I NTC 23.40 ~ Keycorp K EY 11.55 ~ Kroger Co K R 3 5 .13 ~ Lattice Semi L SCC 5.30 ~ LA Pacific L PX 12.46 ~ MDU Resources MDU 24 . 85 o — Mentor Graphics ME N T 18.25 ~ Microsoft Corp MSFT 34.63 ~ 5 Nike Inc B N KE 69.85 ~ Nordstrom Inc JWN 54.90 — o Nwst Nat Gas N WN 40.05 ~ PaccarInc P CAR 53.59 ~ Planar Systms P LNR 1.93 ~ $y Plum Creek PCL 38.70 Prec Castparts PCP 215.09 ~ Safeway Inc SWY 26.69 ~ Schnitzer Steel SCHN 2 1.41 ~ Sherwin Wms SHW 170.63 — o StancorpFncl S FG 57.77 ~ StarbucksCp SBUX 67.93 ~ Triquint Semi TQNT 7.61 — o UmppuaHoldings UM PQ 14.94 ~ 1 US Bancorp USB 38.10 ~ WashingtonFedl WA F D 19.52 ~ 2 Wells Fargo & Co WFC 4 3.21 — o Weyerhaeuser WY 2 7 .48 — o
EURO
' 40
StoryStocks
Deere J
+
Stocks inched to another record high Wednesday after reports suggested the economy is strengthening. Orders for long-lasting manufactured goods rose in October, and another report showed U.S. consumers spent a bit more that month. Investors scooped up semiconductor stocks on expectations of strong earnings. But gains for the broader market were held back by slumping energy stocks. Investors sold as oil slid to a fresh four-year low in anticipation that an OPEC meeting Thursday will not result in a deal to cut supplies and lift prices. Eight of the 10 sectors in the Standard and Poor's 500 rose, led by telecommunications stocks.
1 0 DA Y S
2,000
1,900":"
$73.69
pow jones industrials ............ Close: 17,827.75 Change: 12.81 (0.1%)
18,000 ":.
2,100
CRUDEOIL
SILVER ~ $16.55
-.50
$1,196.60
Cubic
CUB Close:$50.92 %3.85 or 8.2% The electronics company reported better-than-expected quarterly financial results and increased its semi-annual dividend. $55 50 45
S 0 52-week range $46.69~
N $ 56.92
Vol.:894.4k (6.9x avg.) PE: . . . Mkt. Cap:$1.36 b Yie l d : 0.5%
Taser International
TASR
Close:$21.87%1.28 or 6.2% The maker of electrical weapons said it received additional orders from the Winston-Salem Police Department for body-worn cameras. $25 20 15 10
0 S 52-week range
$19.46~
N
$22.35
Vol.:9.3m (3.0x avg.) Mkt. Cap: $1.15 b
P E: 59.1 Yield: ...
Hain Celestial HAIN Close:$112.59 %4.02 or 3.7% The maker of organic and natural products said its shareholders approved a 2-for-1 stock split. $120 110 100
S 0 52-week range $8552 ~ Vol.:976.3k (1.7x avg.) Mkt. Cap: $5.68 b
N $ 113 57 PE: 42.8 Yield: ...
SOURCE: Sungard
SU HIS
The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 2.25 percent Wednesday. Yields affect rates on consumer and business loans.
AP
NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO
3-month T-bill 6 -month T-bill
. 0 1 .0 1 . 0 7 .07
52-wk T-bill
.12
.12
2 -year T-note . 5 2 .52 5-year T-note 1.56 1.57 10-year T-note 2.25 2.26 30-year T-bond 2.96 2.96
BONDS
... ...
4
L
4
.07 .10 .11
~
A
A
... T -0.01 T
L T
-0.01 T
T
.29 T 1.30 T 2.71 3.80
NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO
Barclays LongT-Bdldx 2.77 2.80 -0.03 T T Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.39 4.39 . . . T A Barclays USAggregate 2.21 2.23 -0.02 T A PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield 6.08 6.10 -0.02 T A RATE FUNDS M oodys AAA Corp Idx 3.88 3.94 -0.06 T T YEST3.25 .13 B arclays CompT-Bdldx 1.83 1.86 -0.03 T T 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 3.03 3.07 -0.04 T L 1 YRAGO3.25 .13
T T T A T T L
3.57 5.08 2.32 5.64 4.6 5 1.5 9 3.17
AP
MFS Municipal High-Income is described by Morningstar as one Marhetsummary that has done well during times Most Active of increased market volatility; NAME VOL (Bgs) LAST CHG the fund carries its silver-medal KindMorg 1834490 42.32 +1.57 analyst rating.
PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 Commodities American Funds AmBalA m 26 . 37 +.06+9.3 +11.3 +17.3+12.2 8 A A CaplncBuA m 61.78 +.35 +8.9 +10.9 +14.2 +9.3 A A A The price of oil CpWldGrlA m 47.98 +.24 +7.6 +10.2 +19.7 +9.5 8 8 D fell Wednesday EurPacGrA m 49.73 +.17 +1.3 +4.2 +15.3 +6.2 A 8 8 ahead of an FnlnvA m 56. 2 3 +.12+10.1 +13.8 +22.4+13.8 D C C OPEC meeting SeadrillLtd 826174 15.99 -4.72 GrthAmA m 47.63 +.07+10.8 +14.3 +23.8+14.0 C 8 D that is not exS&P500ETF 480747 207.64 +.53 MFS MuHilncA f MMHYX IncAmerA m 22.16 +.09 +9.8 +11.8 +16.0+11.5 A 8 A pected to result Apple Inc s 395467 119.00 +1.40 InvCoAmA m 41.66 +.18 +14.8 +18.5 +23.9+14.0 A 8 C in a reduction of LIMITED MODERATE EXTENSIVE iShJapan 350141 11.66 -.03 NewPerspA m39.51 +.11 +5.2 +8.2 +19.5+10.9 C 8 8 global supplies. Facebook 321103 77.62 +1.99 WAMutlnvA m43.53 +.13 +11.8 +14.6 +22.1+15.1 8 C A In metals tradMktVGold 300193 20.10 -.29 Petrobras 296863 10.60 +.21 Dodge &Cox Income 13.93 +.01 +5.5 +5 .5 + 5.2 +5.2 B A B ing, gold and CSVlnvNG 294344 2.99 +.16 IntlStk 45.40 +.10 +5.4 + 8.2 +20.2 +8.9 A A A TibcoSft 276154 24.03 +.09 Stock 184.81 +.48 +11.0 +14.6 +27.9+15.8 B A A silver dipped, Fidelity Contra 104. 8 2 +.32+10.2+13.2 +22.1+15.3 D C B copper was flat. Gainers ContraK 104 . 84 +.32+10.3+13.3 +22.2+15.4 D C B NAME LAST CHG %CHG LowPriStk d 50.82 +.03 +7.7 + 9 .9 +22.4+16.2 D D C Fideli S artan 500 l dxAdvtg 73.78 +.23+14.2 +17.3 +24.0+15.7 A 8 A UBS Gpwi 23.20 +5.72 + 32.7 Viggle n 3.43 +.77 + 2 8.9 FrankTemp-Franklin Income C m 2. 50 +.01 +6.1 + 7.9 +13.2+10.1 A A A BioBlast n 5.95 +1.25 + 2 6.6 IncomeA m 2. 4 7 ... +6 . 7 +8 . 5 +13.8+10.7 A A A UniQure n 14.82 +2.32 + 1 8.6 Oakmark Intl I 2 5.47 . . . -3.2 -2.1 +20.4+10.2 E A A CoronadoB 2.41 +.36 + 1 7.6 Oppenheimer RisDivA m 21 . 90 +.10 +11.7 +15.2 +20.0+13.3 C E D ChinaYida 3.18 +.44 + 1 6.0 RisDivB m 19 . 55 +.09 +10.9 +14.3 +18.9+12.3 C E E RXI Pharm 2.16 +.29 + 1 5.2 Morningstar OwnershipZone™ RisDivC m 19 . 42 +.08 +10.9 +14.4 +19.0+12.4 C E E AmrRlty 5.99 +.75 + 1 4.3 Vertical axis represents average credit SmMidValA m48.16 +.07 +9.1 +12.4 +20.6+13.5 C E E Innocolln 8.32 +1.03 + 1 4.1 quality; horizontal axis represents SmMidValB m40.48 +.05 +8.4 +11.5 +19.7+12.6 D E E HK Tv 11.39 +1.36 + 13.6 interest-rate sensitivity Foreign T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 34.81 + .03 +7.6 + 9 .8 +21.4+13.5 E D C Exchange Losers CATEGORY High Yield Muni GrowStk 57.9 4 .. . +10.2 +14.7 +24.9+16.6 C A A The dollar fell NAME L AST C H G %C H G MORNINGSTAR HealthSci 75.5 0 +.50+30.6 +33.4 +42.0+28.3 B A A versus the RATING™ * *** r r Newlncome 9. 6 0 +.01+5.7 + 5.2 + 3.5 +4.3 B C D Japanese yen, -1.03 -22.9 Quotinet wt 3.47 SeadrillLtd 15.99 -4.72 -22.8 ASSETS $1,501 million Vanguard 500Adml 191.92 +.58 +14.2 +17.3 +24.0+15.7 A 8 A British pound -3.39 -21.3 Quotinet n 12.55 500lnv 191.88 +.58 +14.1 +17.2 +23.9+15.5 A 8 A and euro. The EXP RATIO 0.69% InterCld wt 2.30 -.60 -20.7 CapOp 54.60 +.27 +18.2 +20.9 +29.0+17.1 A A A ICE U.S. Dollar MANAGER Gary Lasman -.51 -16.1 NAtlDrll n 2.66 Eqlnc 32.72 +.14 +12.1 +14.6 +22.3+16.1 8 C A index, which SINCE 2006-04-01 IntlStkldxAdm 27.49 +.10 +0.5 +2.4 +13.4 NA 8 D compares the RETURNS 3-MO +2.5 Foreign Markets StratgcEq 34.16 +.07 +13.9 +17.6 +27.6+19.9 A A A dollar's value to YTD +13.7 TgtRe2020 29.27 +.06 +8.0 +9.4 +14.0 +9.9 A A A a basket of NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +13.2 Tgtet2025 17.04 +.04 +8.2 +9.9 +15.4+10.5 A 8 8 currencies, -8.89 -.20 Paris 4,373.42 3-YR ANNL +7.4 TotBdAdml 10.89 +.01 +5.6 +4.8 +2.8 +4.0 C D D declined. London 6,729.17 -1.97 -.03 5-YR-ANNL +7.5 Totlntl 16.43 +.06 +0.4 +2.3 +13.3 +5.1 B D D Frankfurt 9,91 5.56 +54.35 + . 55 TotStlAdm 52.07 +.15 +13.0 +16.2 +24.1+16.1 8 8 A Hong Kong24,111.98 +268.07 +1.12 TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT TotStldx 52.04 +.15 +12.9 +16.1 +23.9+16.0 8 8 A Mexico 44,672.20 +231.18 + . 52 Liberty N Y DevCorp Rev RevBds5.25% Milan 19,938.42 -71.41 -.36 USGro 32.70 +.08 +14.0 +18.2 +25.0+15.4 A A B 1.04 -24.04 -.14 Tokyo 17,383.58 Welltn 41.13 +.13 +10.4 +12.1 +16.7+11.3 A A A Stockholm 1,457.81 -9.55 -.65 Tobacco Settlement Fing Corp NAsset 5% Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, or redemption Sydney 5,380.30 +59.40 +1.12 0.99 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or Zurich 9,058.94 +16.20 + . 18 Tobacco Settlement Fing Corp NAss 4.75% redemption fee.Source: Morningstar. FAMILY
h5Q HS
FUELS
Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) Heating Oil (gal) Natural Gas (mmbtu) UnleadedGas(gal) METALS
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz) AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 73.69 74.09 -0.54 -25.1 2.10 2.06 - 0.19 + 9 . 7 2.40 2.39 +0.07 -22.1 + 3 .0 4.36 4.28 - 1.12 2.04 2.03 +0.16 -27.0
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -0.4 1196.60 1197.10 -0.04 16.55 16.55 -0.03 -14.4 1228.40 1224.50 +0.32 -1 0.4 2.96 2.96 +0.10 -1 4.0 801.60 795.25 +0.75 +11.7
CLOSE PVS. 1.69 1.70 Coffee (Ib) 1.94 1.94 Corn (bu) 3.78 3.74 Cotton (Ib) 0.61 0.60 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 328.80 330.00 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.49 1.48 Soybeans (bu) 10.47 10.51 Wheat(bu) 5.62 5.52
%CH. %YTD -0.53 +25.8 -0.39 +74.8 +1.07 -1 0.4 +2.93 -27.5 -0.36 -8.7 + 0.68 + 9 . 2 -0.38 -20.2 -7.2 +1.90 1YR.
MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5801 +.0095 +.60% 1.6217 Canadian Dollar 1.1 2 32 -.0025 -.22% 1.0546 USD per Euro 1.2514 +.0044 +.35% 1.3574 -.19 -.16% 101.24 JapaneseYen 117.75 Mexican Peso 13. 7 224 +.0556 +.41% 13.0419 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.8737 +.0119 +.31% 3.5422 Norwegian Krone 6 . 8216 +.0076 +.11% 6.0984 South African Rand 10.9542 -.0075 -.07% 10.1312 Swedish Krona 7.3 9 28 -.0393 -.53% 6.5735 Swiss Franc .9607 -.0040 -.42% . 9 065 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.1695 -.0041 -.35% 1.0947 Chinese Yuan 6.1390 +.0008 +.01% 6.0922 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7541 -.0003 -.00% 7.7523 Indian Rupee 61.765 -.025 -. 04% 62. 520 Singapore Dollar 1.2973 -.0033 -.25% 1.2516 South KoreanWon 1104.60 -6.05 -.55% 1061.77 Taiwan Dollar 3 0.94 + . 0 3 +.10% 29.60
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2014
BRIEFING Apple exports hurt by slowdowns A shipping slowdown at West Coast ports over labor negotiations is hurting exports of a record apple crop in Washington. The president of the Washington State Tree Fruit Association in Wenatchee, Jon DeVaney tells the Capital Press the industry is losing tens of millions of dollars a week. He says sales to Asia, India and the Middle Easthavebeen affected since Nov. 1. Negotiations between terminal operators and the International Longshore and Warehouse Union are scheduled to resume Tuesday. The CEOof First Fruits Marketing of Washington in Yakima, Keith Mathews, says each week lost is irretrievable. He says Washington also is losing market share to other apple growers in Europe or elsewhere.
Regulator delivers OCB usiness wi ultimatum on rin e aro OL1 recalls to Takata • Taps Mobile Pub hasfound a niche in do-it-yourself weddings
In a continuing standoff
UB
gBBILE P EBPB + mpPILE P" IuPUB ppp mOBI L
BIZ CALENDAR TUESDAY • SCORE free business counseling: Business counselors conduct free 30-minute one-on-one conferences with local entrepreneurs; check in at the library desk on the second floor; 5:30-7 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St.; www. SCORECentral0regon.org.
of automotive parts, expand
the recall nationwide beyond the limited geographic area it
in a 2007 Ford Mustang that injured that car's driver. That
currently covers.
model was part of the June
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administra-
recall, but North Carolina was excluded because it was
tion told Takata in a letter
outside the high-humidity region. In his letter, Borris said that Takata must submit a
the recalls, which cover
report to the agency, identifying the defect in the airbags, penalties. regardlessofw herevehicles The recalls of vehicles with areregistered oroperated.If Takata airbags have mostly the company does not supply been limited to two states, a the information by Tuesday, commonwealth and a territhe agency may proceed to letory associated with high hu- gal steps for forcing a recall, midity, which can cause the including scheduling a public airbags to explode violently meeting, and begin to seek when they deploy, sending civil penalties of as much as metal fragments flying. Some $7,000 per violation. automakers, including HonA Takata spokesman said da, have expanded their rethat the company did not imcalls to other regions as well. mediately have a comment. "Despite the severe conseThe letter did not call for quences of airbag ruptures any action on passenger-side and mountingdata demonairbags, which have been instrating a safety defect, Taka- cluded in other Takata recalls driver' s-sideairbags,orface further legal action and civil
UIUUILEPU
Joe Kline/The Bulletin
receptions. By Joseph Ditzler
BEST OFTHE
in June that covered Florida, Hawaii, Puerto Rico and the
Virgin Islands, said that it learned of an airbag rupture in North Carolina in August
Wednesday that it had until Tuesday to expand
Blake Stamos built his Taps Mobile Pub to provide onsite beer and wine service to parties and
City of Bend • Third 8 Franklin LLC, 222 NEEmerson Ave., $700,000 • Bridges At Shadow Glen LLC,61083 SE Ambassador Drive, $162,682 • Bridges At Shadow Glen LLC,61079 SE Ambassador Drive, $198,995 • Barbara E. Sanguinetti, 923 NW AlbanyAve., $268,923 • Jerold G. Tuller, 63232 Boyd Acres Road, $318,884 • Bridges At ShadowGlen LLC,61096SE Manhae Loop, $296,702 • Chris Anderson, 20520 NE Gloucester Lane, $220,232 • Allybrooke Custom Homes Inc., 2372 NW Drouillard Ave., $335,772 • 360 Bond LLC,360SW Bond St., $224,500 • Chris Anderson, 2051 9 NE Avro Place, $198,448 • 360 Bond LLC,360SW Bond St., $150,000 • William V. Robbins, 61552 W. RidgeAve., $127,606 •ChackelFamilyLLC,2650 NE Keats Drive, $206,836 • Thuan T. Bennett, 3155 NEBeaufort Court, $178,309
a hearing on the airbags. The agency, which originally agreed to the limited recall
New Yorh Times News Service
over the recall of defective airbags, federal safety regulators have demanded that Takata, the Japanese supplier
— From Mire reports
PERMITS
By Danielle Ivory
The Bulletin
Tucked into a storage unit off Lower Meadow Drive in northeast Bend, an Inter-
state-brand cargo trailer converted to a mobile pub awaits its next call to duty. The interior features a
rustic wood finish, a bar
(Blake) Stamos got the idea that a mobile pub would work at self-catered wedding receptions where guests fended for their own drinks. He built the pub for about $10,000. He only provides beer, wine and sangria. Harder drinks require a more complicated set-up than he's equipped to offer, he said.
College, 2600 NWCollege Way, Bend; 541-383-7270. • Oregon Cattlemen's WEDNESDAY Association Convention • Business Startup Class: 5 Trade Show: Day1; Learn to turn a great idea Cattlemen's College; public into a successful business; lands roundtable; 9 a.m.-7 $29, registration required; p.m.; cost varies depending 11 a.m.-f p.m.; COCC on events anddaysof Chandler Building, 1027 attendance. TheRiverhouse NW Trenton Ave., Bend; Convention Center, 2850 NW 541-383-7290, sbdc© Rippling River Court, Bend; cocc.edu or www.cocc. 503-361-8941 or j.mp/ edu/sbdc. cattlemenconvention. • Financial Institutions, • First Thursday Luncheon: Taxes 5 Insurance: Learn League ofWomenVoters of to improve personal Deschutes County presents financial fitness; free, discussio non System registration required; 5:30- Development Charges; free; 7:30 p.m.; Neighborlmpact, 11 a.m.-f p.m.; Black Bear 20310 EmpireAve., Suite Diner, 1465 NE Third St., Affo, Bend; 541-323Bend; 541-382-2660 or 6567, homesource© kimsmith©bendcable.com. neighborimpact.org or www.neighborimpact.org/ DEC. 5 financialskills. • Oregon Cattlemen's Association Convention THURSDAY 5Trade Show: Day2; • Recruitment, Oregon BeefCouncil Interviewing and meeting; various committee Onboarding: Learn to meetings; 7 a.m .-5:30 attract good candidates p.m.; cost varies depending and hire the best fit; part on events anddaysof of COCC'sLeadership attendance. TheRiverhouse series; $95, registration Convention Center, 2850 NW required; 8 a.m.-noon; Rippling River Court, Bend; Central OregonCommunity 503-361-8941 or j.mp/
cattlemenconvention. • Open House: 8 a.m.-6 p.m.; Warren's WesternEmporium, 337 S. RailroadAve., Redmond; 541-350-2876or www.bubwarren.com. DEC. 6 • Oregon Cattlemen's Association Convention 8 TradeShow: Day3; annual business meeting, committee meetings and more; 7 a.m.-7 p.m. The Riverhouse Convention Center, 2850 NWRippling River Court, Bend; 503-361-8941 or j.mp/ cattlemenconvention. • Open House: 8 a.m.-6 p.m.; Warren's WesternEmporium, 337 S. RailroadAve., Redmond; 541-350-2876 or www.bubwarren.com.
DEC. 9 • SCORE free business counseling: Business counselors conduct free 30-minuteone-on-one conferences with local entrepreneurs; check in at the library desk onthe second floor; free; 5:30-7 p.m.; Downtown BendPublic Library, 601 NWWall St.;
but not in the June recall. At
agree with N.H.T.S.A.'s basis for a nationwide recall of driver's-side airbags," wrote
last week's Senate hearing,
Frank S. Borris, the director
of the agency's Office of De-
severallawmakers called for
Takata to include those airbags as well. The NHTSA's letter to
fects Investigation.
A week earlier, the safety agency publicly urged a
with five taps on two towers
mounted on a hinged table top that lifts to reveal a freez- on their rounds. er large enough for three Along the way, Stamos got half-barrel sofbeverage setthe idea that a mobile pub tled and chilled to 37 degrees. would work at self-catered The Taps Mobile Pub works wedding receptions where year-round at birthday parguests fended for their own ties, holiday parties and wed- drinks. He built the pub dings, said Blake Stamos, for about $10,000. He only owner and operator. provides beer, wine and sanStamos, who created The gria. Harder drinks require Bend Trolley in 2011, spun a more complicated set-up off the Taps Mobile Pub after than he's equipped to offer, hearing from brides-to-be he said. "This only works for wedthat the concept had a readymade clientele. The trailer dings that you do your own pub was a hit at the Central catering," Stamos said. Oregon Weddingand Event That adds up to quite a few Show in January, he said. weddings, in addition to the "The wedding show, that other events where he prowas huge," he said. "I knew vides drink service. Over the there was a way to get insummer, hehauled the pub volved in the wedding marto Elk Lake Resort, working ket since I already had a foot two big holiday weekends, in the door." plus another three or four The Bend Trolley, the Saturdays after finishing up familiar, bright red vehihis regular stop at the Bend cle that plies Bend streets, Farmer's Market, said resort co-owner Wendy Prieve. started out as a sightseeing "We enjoyed working with business. That plan faded quickly when Stamos said he Blake," she said Tuesday. "He cameup fora coupleof realized the narrow potential for sightseeing, but the wide random Saturdays after the opportunity available for a market to kind of help take shuttle. Now he books the 30- the pressure off the musicon-the-lake summer series." seat trolley for, among other missions, brew pub tours, A trailer system loaded ferrying resort guests to Mt. with kegs and hauled to speBachelor and carrying bach- cial events is not a new conelor and bachelorette parties cept. Deschutes Brewery, for
ta responded that it did not
example, sets up a trailer at
national recall of affected
the Munch & Music concerts.
vehicles, and the Senate held
Takata came a day after the safety agency demanded that Chrysler expand the scope of its recall to include a broader region.
Stamos'concept differs in that his trailer opens up to a bar; the Deschutes Brewery trailer has its taps affixed to the exterior. Also, Stamos must obtain
a separatetemporary permit for each event he works. An operation such as the Deschutes Brewery trailer falls
under the license held by the
Consumerspending reboundsni October
brewery, said Christie Scott,
Oregon Liquor Control Commission spokeswoman.
By Jim Puzzanghera Los Ange(es Times
Because the commission
issues more than 5,000 temporary licenses every year, it does not track individual
uses, Scott said. She said she doesn't know how many other mobile pubs are at work in
Oregon. However, Stamos said his concept left OLCC employees in Bend scratching their heads when time came for
WASHINGTON — Con-
sumer spending bounced back last month after a sluggish September and income growth held steady, positive signs heading into the holiday shopping season. Personal consumption expenditures rose 0.2 percent in October after barely budging the previous month, the
until he actually built the thing and showed them did
Commerce Department said Wednesday. Spending rose less than 0.1 percent in September, a figure
the idea become clear, he
that was revised up from the
said.
previous estimate of a 0.2 percent decline.
him to obtain a permit. Not
"It took me four months
to get OLCC to approve it," Stamossaid,"because there's nothing like it."
www.SCORECentral0regon. org. DEC. 13 • Homebuyer Education Workshop: Learn to save time and moneywhen buying a home;$45 plus fees; registration required; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; Neighborlmpact, 2303 SW First St., Redmond; 541-323-6567or www. neighborimpact.org/ homebuyerhelp. DEC. 16 • SCORE free business counseling: Business counselors conductfree 30-minuteone-on-one conferences with local entrepreneurs; check in at the library desk onthe second floor; free; 5:30-7 p.m.; Downtown BendPublic Library, 601 NWWall St.; www.SCORECentral0regon. Ol'g.
DEC.17 • Understanding 8 Managing Credit: Learn to improve your credit and how it affects you; registration required, 541-
— Reporter: 541-617-7815, jditzler@bendbulletin.com
Incomes grew 0.2 percent last month, the same as in
Ol Q.
accounts for about two-thirds of U.S. economic activity.
Income is a key to that spending, and income growth has been slow in the recovery from the Great Recession. Fortunately for consumers, inflation remained low in
October. The personal consumption expenditure price index rose 0.1 percent last month, the same pace as in September. For the 12 months ended
Oct. 31, prices rose 1.4 per-
September, the Commerce
cent, well below the Federal
Department said, but the
Reserve's 2 percent annual target.
growth was slower than in
323-6567 or homesource© neighborimpact. org; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Neighborlmpact, 2303 SW First St., Redmond. www.neighborimpact.org/ financialskills. DEC. 23 • SCORE free business counseling: Business counselors conduct free 30-minuteone-on-one conferences with local entrepreneurs; check in at the library desk onthe second floor; free; 5:30-7 p.m.; Downtown BendPublic Library, 601 NWWall St.; www.SCORECentral0regon.
previous months. Economists had forecast spending would rise 0.3 percent last month and incomes would jump 0.4 percent. Consumer spending, including mortgage payments,
••
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•
Z on e d " In d u st r i a l P a r k "
4 S.VS a c r e s Hwy 126 frontage, adjoins Facebook Campus and across the road from Prineville Airport. Owner terms possible. Owner will consider dividing.
JAN. 8 • Managing Day-to-Day Performance: Identify performance gapsfor improved productivity; part ofCOCC'sLeadership series; $95; 8 a.m.- noon; Central OregonCommunity College, Bendcampus; Boyie EdCenter Room154; 541-383-7270.
MW
PR
BIneer $ $
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• For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visit bendbulletilt.com/bizral
' I I I
•
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Calendar, C2 Obituaries, C8 Weather, C1 0
© www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2014
CLOSURES • Moststate andfederal offices will beclosed today. Cityand county offices will also beclosed Friday. • All schools will be closed todayandFriday, including CentralOregon Community Collegeand OSU-Cascades. • Banks will be closed today. • Mail will not be picked up or deliveredtoday. • Allbranches ofthe DeschutesPublic Library system will beclosedtodayand Friday.TheCrook County Library andthe Jefferson County Library will also beclosed today and Friday. • The BendSouth and Bend Eastliquor stores will be closedtoday. Giorgio's Liquor Store(Bend West) will beopenfrom 10a.m. to3 p.m.The Bend North LiquorStore will be openfrom11 a.m. to4 p.m. • Bend Garbage and Recycling,Cascade Disposal andHigh Desert Disposal will operateon their normalcollection schedulestoday.WildernessGarbageand Recycling will operate their routesearlytoday, but officesandrecycling will be closed.
KLAMATH BASIN DEAL
COMMUNITY CENTER
onen swan o ec ions All hands incu e In Wfl en lecol on deck By Andrew Clevenger The Bulletin
WASHINGTON — Several
Oregon groups that oppose the Klamath Basin deal
pending in Congress are concerned their objections weren't considered when
members of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee approved the leg-
"We'rejust concerned, and we want to find out,
testimony before they passed the bill on to the full Senate,"
if the committee was able to consider all of the
he said. "If they didn't, that's a real problem and a real mistake by the committee." McCarthy said he has been unable to get any answers from members of the com-
submitted testimony before they passed the bill on to the full Senate. If they didn't, that's a real problem and a real mistake by the committee." — Jim McCarthy, WaterWatch of Oregon spokesman
and the committee voted to approve the bill earlier this
islation earlier this month.
for inclusion in the written
WaterWatch of Oregon, the Hoopa Valley Tribe and Oregon Wild were not invited
record of the hearing, Jim McCarthy, a spokesman for WaterWatch of Oregon, told
to testify at a June 3 commit-
tee meeting, so the groups
The Bulletin this week. Their submissions were not in-
and we want to find out, if the committee was able to
submitted written testimony
cluded in the written record,
consider all of the submitted
month.
"We're just concerned,
mittee staff. Requests by The Bulletin
for comment from the offices of the Energy and Natural
The Bulletin
At Bend's Community
Center, the ritual of carving up the Thanksgiving turkey justbefore the bigmeal went out the window two
Resources Committee and
from Sen. Mary Landrieu,
for today's meal, kitchen
the Louisiana Democrat who chairs the panel, went
manager Heidi Renoud explained how a volunteer cut himself badly while carving up the birds at her first community center Thanksgiving three years ago. Greasy hands and sharp knives don't mix, she said, so
unanswered. SeeObjections/C2
since then, volunteers have
gotten even greasierunder Renoud's "no knife policy,"
i n 'so enin n i S B CMSS e
By Scott Hammers
years ago. Tuesdaymorning, midway through preparations
REDMOND ICE SKATING RINK
e S
for dinner
tearing up the turkeys into
serving-sized chunks with their bare hands. Linda Heatley, executive
Oc l l
BRIEFING
director of the community center, said gearing up an estimated 500Thanksgiv-
ing dinners is a monthslong process. The center relies almost exdusivelyon donations from individuals, she said, and through the
Galveston corridor meeting
fall volunteers have sorted
The city of Bendis inviting the public to offer feedback ondesigns for theGalvestonAvenue corridor at ameeting from 5 to 7p.m. Dec.4. Over the pasteight months, the city has been working with a community task force and advisorycommittee to develop astreetscape concept design forGalveston Avenue. With input from these community groups, staff ershavedeveloped preliminary concepts with the vision andgoals of the project in mind. The options areaimedat improving safety andreducing congestion at the intersection of Galveston Avenue andHarmon Boulevard andwill identify locations for additional on-street parking. The public is also invited to take anonline questionnaire about the Galveston Avenueproject at: https://www.surveymonkey.c om/s/Galveston Avenue Community Questionnaire. More informationis available at: www.bendoregon.gov/galveston. The preliminary roadway conceptscall for either a two-laneor three-lane section and propose either acontinuous center turn laneor a median with left turn pockets. Intersection improvements at Galvestonand Harmon couldentail an improved sidewalkand pedestrian crossing and mini-roundabout. The public meeting will be at City Hall council chambers, 710 NW Wall St, Bend.
contribute to today's feast. Jamie Giannioses, 57, got
Man arrested in la Pine scuffle A La Pine manwas arrested on multiple charges after an alleged dispute Tuesday evening, according to the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office. According to Sheriff's Sgt. Troy Gotchy, Monte Hamilton and Lars Harris, both of La Pine, got into a "physical confrontation" after one of Hamilton's dogs ran onto Harris' property on Railroad Street in La Pine. SeeLocal Briefing/C3
through their take to separate anything that could his start volunteering with
the community center on Thanksgiving five years ago. Now he's a regular fixture in the community
center's kitchen throughout the year, and for this year's Thanksgivingpreparations, he brought along his sons, 19-year-old Niko and 20-year-old Theodore. Giannioses said he's proud to help put together afreemeal foranyone who comes through the door, no questions asked.
"Tomorrow, we're open for everybody — it's not just the homeless or the less fortunate, we're open for everyone in the community who
wants to joinus," he said. Debbie Robibous, working her first Thanksgiving slllce slgnlng Upto vol-
unteer in the community center's kitchen two months
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Ice skaters of all ages fill the Redmond Ice Skating Rink, located at the downtown Redmond plaza
ago, agreed. "There's no judging — it's just, people are hungry, let's feed them," she said. Renoud saidbythe time they start servingup meals
on SW 7th sheet, during opening night on Wednesday. The rink is scheduled to be open (weather
today at 11 a.m., the kitchen will have turned out 15 to
permitting) until March 1. Hours vary by day and include free skate and skate-with-a-feeslots. For
20 gallons of gravy, and 10pans of stuffing, each one nearly as large as a
additional information, contact the rink at 541-977-7841.
child's sled. She said total
WIDGI CREEKDEVELOPMENT
Homeownerswill take concernsto state board By Ted Shorack The Bulletin
Homeowner associations near the Widgi Creek Golf Club will have to take their
objections about a nearby proposed development to the
Oregon Land Use Board of Appeals.
Opponents of the project argue that a master plan for land use in the Widgi Creek area, which was created in 1983, does not allow
for residential development of the property because it is considered a common area or open space.
Deschutes County com-
missioners chose not to hear an appeal from the group on Monday after reviewing a hearings officer's decision to approve applications for the 4.2-acre development.
The county planning department recommended the board not hear the appeal be-
causeofthe "comprehensive and substantial" findings by the hearingsofficer. Commissioner Tammy Baney said after reading the hearings officer's decision she believed "the best path" would be for it to go to LUBA next, if the home-
owners chose to do so. Baney
and Commissioners Tony DeBone and Alan Unger agreed that the decision by the hearings officer was comprehensive. LUBA would review the
approval and decide whether to uphold or remand the county's decision.
The proposed project by Arrowood Development LLC, a Bend company, entails developing 24 lots on a
off Cascade Lakes Highway. Opponents of the project argue that a master plan for land use in the Widgi Creek area, which was created in 1983, does not allow for residential development of the
property because it is considered a common area or open space. A portion of the property is within the 1983 plan boundary, according to documents submitted about the project.
site near Seventh Mountain
The county review of the
Resort and Widgi Creek, about 5 miles west of Bend
proposed Arrowood development concluded the master
plan doesn't apply to the property because of a county ordinance that was adopted in 2001, which designated the area a resort community zone.
Homeowner associations opposed to the project also point to a certain number of townhomes that are allowed under the master plan. They
argued that no more townhomes within the area are allowed. The county cited recent land use decisions involving the property in its decision
to disregard the master plan. The master plan was not addressed in the decisions,
according to county officials, "due to the inapplicability of the master plan to the
proposals, since the original master plan approval was replaced." — Reporter: 541-617-7820, tshorack@bendbulletin.com
immersion in Thanksgiving food for days on end will likely leave her ready for a hamburgerbythe time she's finished today, but she'll be dutifully heading home for Thanksgiving with her daughter. Giannioses said he also
expects to be abit weary by this afternoon, but will be rushing home to crank out
one last Thanksgiving dinner with his family. "I love beinginthe kitch-
en, so it's not a big deal to do one more tomorrow," he sald. — Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers@bendbulletin.com
Free dinnerfor Thanksgiving Bend's Community Center:11 a.m.-3 p.m. Redemption House, Prineville: 2 p.m. Redmond Senior Center: 12 p.m. Epikos Community Center andChurch, Bend: 5 p.m.-7 p.m. (registration requested) Stars Cabaret, Bend: 6 p.m.
C2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2014
E vENT TODAY I LIKE PIETHANKSGIVING DAY FUN WALK/RUN:Runor walk 2K, 5K,10K or10 miles and eat pie, with a baking contest; $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, Suite104; www. bendpilates.net or 541-647-0876. THANKSGIVINGWITHFRIENDS: 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©epiko scommunity.com or 541-610-8318.
FRIDAY BEND INDOORSWAP MEET: Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.;Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 SEThird St.; 541-317-4847. RAKU POTTERYSHOWAND SALE:Featuring works by local potters, plus jewelry and scarves;
free admission;10 a.m.-5 p.m.; The Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave., Bend; www. envirocenter.org or 541-410-5943. WONDERLANDEXPRESS AUCTION:A silent auction of unique creations; proceeds benefit Wonderland Express; free admission; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Sunriver Resort Great Hall, 17600 Center Drive; www.wonderlandexpress.
com. SANTALANDATTHE OLDMILL DISTRICT:Take aphoto with Santa, children's activities, Tree of Joy and more; free admission, additional cost for take-home photos, $5 donation for children's activities; 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; SantaLand, 330 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131.
ENDA R CARRIAGERIDES IN THE OLD MILL DISTRICT:Ride in the Cowboy Carriage, located between Ben 8 Jerry's and Francesca's; proceeds benefit the KIDS Center; weather dependent; donations accepted; 2-5 p.m.; Ben & Jerry's, 680SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. GRAND ILLUMINATIONAND HOLIDAYFESTIVITIES: Featuring a petting zoo, face painting, live entertainment and more, with a holiday lighting ceremony at 7 p.m; 3-8 p.m.; Sunriver Resort, 17600 Center Drive; www.sunriver-resort. com or 541-593-1000. POSSESSEDBYPAULJAMES:The Texas folk-blues artist performs, with Blackflowers Blacksun; free admission; 5 p.m.; Crow's Feet Commons,875 NW Brooks St., Bend; www.crowsfeetcommons. com or 541-728-0066. PRAY FORSNOWPARTY: Featuring live music by Brothers Gow, Tony Smiley and The Rum andTheSea; free entry; 5-9 p.m.; 10 Barrel Brewing Co., 1135 NWGalveston Ave., Bend; www.10barrel.com or 541-678-5228. SISTERS CHRISTMASTREE LIGHTING CEREMONY:Featuring the lighting of the holiday tree, carols, a"cookie crawl" and more; 5:30-6:30 p.m.; Fir Street Park, Fir Streetand Main Avenue; www.sisterscountry.
com, jeri©sisterscountry.com or 541-549-0251. "NATIONALLAMPOON'S CHRISTMAS VACATION": A showing of the classic holiday film, with a pre-show ugly sweater contest; $12 plus fees; 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700.
SATURDAY BEND INDOORSWAP MEET: Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10 a.m .-5 p.m.;Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 SEThird St.; 541-317-4847. RAKU POTTERYSHOWAND SALE:Featuring works by local potters, plus jewelry and scarves; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; The Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave., Bend; www.
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communityli feibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at tvtvMt.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
Wu and Paranome; $12; 10 p.m.; Domino Room, 51 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; www.j.mp/curveinbend or541-408-4329.
SUNDAY BEND INDOORSWAP MEET: Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; free admission;10a.m.-5 p.m.;Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 SEThird St.; 541-317-4847.
Submitted photo
Derek Sitter stars as fiction writer Katurian K. Katurian in the black comedy "The Pillowman." Katurian is under interrogation for a series of crimes against children that seemingly were inspired by his
dark stories. "The Pillowman" is backfor anencore performance Saturday at Volcanic Theatre Pub. envirocenter.org or 541-410-5943. WONDERLANDEXPRESS AUCTION:A silentauction 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 Sisters High School Nordic ski team; $10, registration required; 10:30 a.m.-1 p.m.; Lodge Restaurant at Black Butte Ranch,12930 Hawks Beard; www.blackbutteranch.com, recreation©blackbutteranch.com or 541-595-1282. SANTALANDATTHE OLDMILL DISTRICT:Take aphoto with Santa, children's activities, Tree of Joy and more; free admission, additional cost for take-home photos, $5 donation for children's activities; 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; SantaLand, 330 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. CARRIAGERIDES IN THE OLD MILL DISTRICT:Ride in the Cowboy Carriage, located between
Ben & Jerry's andFrancesca's; proceeds benefit the KIDS Center; weather dependent; donations accepted; 2-5 p.m.; Ben 8 Jerry's, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. SISTERS CHRISTMASPARADE:
NEws 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 541-383-0358.
BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at 9:46 a.m. Nov. 21, in the100 block of SE Bridgeford Boulevard. Theft —Atheft was reported at 9:16 a.m.Nov.25,in the20800 blockof Nova Loop. Theft —A theft was reported at 7:52 a.m. Sept. 21, in the 200block of NE Sixth Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at10:38 a.m. Nov.19, in the1200 block of NE
Objections Continued from C1 Federal legislation is needed to codify the Upper Klamath Basin Comprehensive Agreement, an effort to develop a water-sharing plan for competing claims on limited water,
includingthose of the Klamath Tribes, irrigators and ranch-
Shane Lane. Theft —A theft was reported at1:49 p.m. Nov. 19, in the63700 block of Hunters Circle. Theft —A theft was reported at 6:59 p.m. Nov. 22, in the1000 block of NE Purcell Boulevard. Theft —A theft was reported at10:49 a.m. Nov. 23, in the1500 block of NW Newport Avenue. DUII —Paulette Marie Hoffman,60, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 7:35 p.m. Nov.23, in the area of NE Third Street and NEGreeley Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at3:37 p.m. Nov. 24, in the 61100 block of SE27th Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 5:42 p.m. Nov. 24, in the1000 block of NE Ninth Street. DUII —Milton Melvin Jackson, 21, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 12:30 a.m. Nov.25, in thearea of SW
Hill Street and SWWilson Avenue.
PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 5:40 p.m. Nov.25, in the area of NWMadras Highway.
partment adjudicated the issue
following38years of litigation. Under the principle of first in time, first in right, the
Klamath Tribes were awarded top claim on much of Upper Klarnath Lake andportions
of its tributaries. But should high-priority rights holders
DUII —Thesa Louise Chambers, 51, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 10:09 p.m. Nov.25, in the area of S. U.S. Highway 97andBaker Road. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at11:20 a.m. Nov.25, in the area of U.S. Highway 97near milepost 164.
org, whitney©
aj. B~ du
John Day -
•
•
•
Burns Lakeview
La Pine 541.382.6447
bendurology.com
HunterDoielas
SEASGN OF STYLE e ven t
L
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$100 REBATE on any of the following purchases: 4 Duettee Honeycomb Shades or 4 Solerae Soft Shadee lue 25 rebate each additional unit
2 Pirouette Window Shadings or 2 Silhouettee Window Shadings
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view a number of times,so it's not as though their view wasn't heard. He respects their view,
of course, but ultimately thejudgment was to move forward due to the wide support in the basin." — KeithChu, spokesman forSen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore.
ing by some groups, it also over-promises onthew ater available, making massive fish die-offs like the one that
occurred in 2002 likely in drought years, he said. Sens. Ron Wyden and Jeff
Merkley, both D-Ore., are co-sponsorsof the bill formalizing the Klamath deal. As a member of the Energy and Natural Resources Committee, Wyden wasvocal in
claim during particularly dry years, ranchers and irrigators worry they wouldn't have enough water for their live-
port the bill when it was voted out of committee earlier this month.
the dealpromotes water shar-
EMPOWERING FAMILIES BREAKFAST:A breakfast fundraiser for the Latino Community Association; free, donations accepted, registration requested; 7:15-8:30 a.m.; Boys & Girls Club of Bend, 500 NWWall St.; www. latinocommunityassociation.
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 Bend Fire Department; free, one nonperishable food item suggested donation; 5:45 p.m.; Northwest Crossing, Mt. Washington and NW Crossing drives, Bend; www. northwestcrossing.com. "FINAL POSE":Featuring the award-winning documentary on the Peterson; $5; 8p.m.;Volcanic end-of-life journey of yoga instructor Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Myra Fisher; $5 plus fees in advance, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com $10at the door;7 p.m.; The Belfry, or 541-323-1881. 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; www. belfryevents.com or 541-815-9122. ROSE'S PAWNSHOP:The Los MONDAY Angeles Americana band performs; $8 plus fees in advance, $10 at "POSITIVE YOUTH":Screening of the door; 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre a film that follows four young adults Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; affected by HIV/AIDS in America; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or free; 5-8 p.m.; Bend Masonic Center, 541-323-1881. 1036 NE Eighth St.; 541-389-7407. ZACHARYLUCKY:The Canadian country-folk artist performs, with Pure. &rrad.6 t"a Second Son; $5; 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com Bend or 541-323-1881. Redmond
OREGOM STATE POLICE
"Senator Wyden's staff talked to the
urging his colleagues to sup-
did not agree to support the deal, McCarthy said. While
WEDNESDAY
COnSerVatiOniStS WhO flad a different POint Of
exercise a"call" on their water
stock and crops. While most of the participants in the Klamath Basin Task Force, formedby Gov. John Kitzhaber, signed off on the deal, WaterWatch, which participated in the task force,
GREEN TEAM MOVIENIGHT: A screening of "Salt of the Earth," a reenactment of a1951 strike at a zinc mine in New Mexico; free; 6:30-8:30 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 NE Ninth St., Bend; www.bendfp.org or 541-815-6504.
SEPTEMBER 16- DECEMBER 16, 2014
ers and environmentalists,
who want to see more water dedicated to fish and wildlife. The deal was signed in April, just more than a year after the Oregon Water Resources De-
2 p.m.; Hood Avenue, between Pine and Spruce Streets; 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. STARLIGHTHOLIDAY PARADE: The theme is "It's a Whoville Christmas," annual tree lighting by Santa Claus after parade in Centennial 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.; Drake Park, 777 NW Riverside Blvd.; www.j.mp/xmasbend or 541-788-3628. "THE PILLOWMAN":Encore performance of the play about a writer who is questioned about his stories and a possible connection to recent murders; $10 plus fees in advance;7:30 p.m.;Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. CURVE:A night of dance music, with DJs Jefe, Manoj, Barisone, Mr.
SANTALANDATTHE OLDMILL DISTRICT:Take aphoto with Santa, children's activities, Tree of Joy and more; free admission, additional cost for take-home photos, $5 donation for children's activities; 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; SantaLand, 330 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. CARRIAGERIDES IN THE OLD MILL DISTRICT:Ride in the Cowboy Carriage, located between Ben & Jerry's and Francesca's; proceeds benefit the KIDS Center; weather dependent; donations accepted; 2-5 p.m.; Ben & Jerry's, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. HIP HATCHET:The Portland folk-blues artist performs, with Christopher Paul Stelling and Micah
TUESDAY
Wyden spokesman Keith Chu said Wednesday he didn't know why the written testimony from WaterWatch and others hadn't been included in
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participated in a hearing on the matter in June 2013. "Senator Wyden's staff talked to the conservationists who
had a different point of view a number of times, so it's not
as though their view wasn't heard," Chu said. "He respects their view, of course, but ulti-
mately the judgment was to move forward due to the wide support in the basin."
Wyden does support having the testimony in the record, and his staff is following up with committee staff to
see how to make that happen, Chu said.
If the Klamath legislation is not passed before a new Congressis sworn in in January, it must be re-introduced and go
the written record of the June through the committee prohearing andreferred the mat- cess again because pending ter to the committee. Wyden is legislation expires at the end well-aware of the groups' con- of each Congress. cerns, Chu said, noting that a representative of WaterWatch
It's time to decorate your windows for the holidays.
— Reporter: 202-662-7456, aclevengeribendbulletin.com
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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
C3
REGON JACKSON COUNTY
FOLl SO
AROUND THE STATE
'ec 0 eu omosexua i
• Dace Cochran wrote in the letter that homosexual relationshipsare "un-Biblical"
POt ruling —The state of Oregon is appealing a Circuit Court ruling that a city in the heart of southern Oregonmarijuana country can ban medical marijuana dispensaries. TheGrants PassDaily Courier reported Wednesdaytheappeal was filed last week bythe Oregon Department of Justice on behalf of the governor and theOregon Health Authority. Josephine County Circuit Judge PatWolke ruled that the dispensary law enacted last year by theLegislature does not stop the city of CaveJunction from denying a business license to amedical marijuana dispensary. Thecity has also appealed.
WOman gaeS intO ladar On freeway — Atraffic backup late practices. "Conduct prohibited by
r esponse would be fo r t h e groups to counter with letters
these policies is unacceptable
to the editor of their own, or to talk to him personally and engage in debate.
in the workplace and in any work-related setting outside By Vickie Aldous entation, race, ethnicity, age or the workplace, such as during (Medford) Mail Tribune any other factor. business trips, business meetMEDFORD — Leaders of The sheriff's office on Tues- ings and business-related sogay rights, faith and social jus- day issued a statement saying, cial events," the policy states. tice organizations are calling "Dace Cochran sent the letter It continues, "It is the reon Jackson County leaders to during his own private time. sponsibility of th e various publicly repudiate a letter writ- He was not operating under supervisors, department diten by a sheriff's patrol ser- any authority of the Jackson rectors and elected officials to geant calling homosexuality County Sheriff's Office. Like ensure that harassment and an abomination. everyone else, he has a right to discrimination does not take In a letter to the editor pub- freedom of speech. His opin- place and to immediately corlished Nov. 3 in the Mail Tri- ions are his opinions, and his rect the problem should it be bune, Dace Cochran, a Jack- alone. They are not shared by discovered in their respective son County sheriff's patrol the Jackson County Sheriff's work units or departments." sergeant, quoted a biblical Office." Cochran, who in previous passage saying it is an abomiJackson County Commis- years wrote a column for the nation for men to lie with men. sioner Don Skundrick said Mail Tribune called "Cop's He said homosexual relation- Cochran is an employee of the Corner," said he wrote the letships are "un-Biblical." sheriff's department and is un- ters to the editor on his own In a 2013 letter to the editor, der the supervision of Winters, time, and they express his perCochran also used the biblical not the county commissioners. sonal views. "I didn't say the people are passage and said same-sex Skundrick said he personmarriages are "wrong no mat- ally does not agree with the an abomination. The act is ter how you spin them." statements Cochran made in an abomination," he said of On Friday, leaders from the letters to the editor. homosexuality. "I don't agree with his stateSouthern Oregon Pride, LoCochran said his personal tus Rising Project, Rogue ment, but there's not much we views are not his work views. "As far as my work goes, Valley LGBT Elders, the Med- can do. He was not speaking ford Congregational United for the county," Skundrick anybody, regardless of sexuChurch of Christ and Ore- sard. al preferences, race, or anygon Action called on Jackson S kundrick p r ovided a thing else, gets treated fairly County Sheriff Mike Winters copy of the county's non-dis- across the board," he said. and Jackson County commis- crimination and non-harass- "People still get treated with sionersto repudiate Cochran's ment policy for employees. It respect and get the rights they statements. states Jackson County will deserve." They also called on county not tolerate discrimination or Cochran said he is disapleaders to publicly affirm that harassment. pointed the various groups are the sheriff's department and The policy states employ- making an issue of the letters the county value and will pro- ees have the right to work in and have brought them to his vide equal protection to every- a professional atmosphere employer. one,regardless of sexual ori- that prohibits discriminatory He said the appropriate
"They don't want to have
an open dialogue. I'm willing to address their issues if they Caren Caldwell, associate minister of Medford Congreg ational United Church o f
Christ, said county leaders have a responsibility to say they do not agree with Co-
chran's letters. "Any of our leaders, whether the sheriff or the commis-
sioners, can be asked to state what our county's position is when an employee goes out on a limb and says something devastating to people in our community," Caldwell said. She said Cochran's letters show he is biased against gay and lesbian people. "He is a public employee. If he has certain beliefs that make it difficult to uphold the
rights of people in the county, I think that is a problem," Cald-
well said. She said if any public employee, such as a teacher, carried such views into the work-
place, that would be cause for concern.
"There would be great concern about the work that is done on our behalf," Caldwell
sard. She said faith should never be a justification for hate and
persecution.
Surveyfinds it's hardto pricemedical care The Oregonian
PORTLAND
—
Fe d e ral
employees posing as consumers dialed a dozen outpatient
clinics and hospitals in Portland last year, asking about the cost of two common pro-
cedures — a colonoscopy and a hernia repair. S ometimes they go t
Prices have become ever more important for consumers, who are often paying a larger share of their health care costs than in the past, (Government Accountability Office health care team director Linda) Kohn said. But consumers also want to know about quality, which might even trump priceas a priority.
an-
swers. Sometimes they didn't, even after calling three times. "A consumer who is going to call on their own isn't going to get very far," said Linda Kohn, director of the health
care team at the Government Accountability Office in Washington, D.C. "You have to be pretty persistent to get the information." T hat information was at
uninsured and needed either
Bostonranged from $6,834 to a colonoscopy or surgery to $21,554. repair a hernia. The two proPrices have become ever cedures are common and more important for consumcan be scheduled in advance, ers, who are often paying a making them good candi- larger share of their health dates for cost-comparison. care costs than in the past, Five of the clinics or hospi- Kohn said. But c onsumers tals did not reveal prices, even also want to know about qualafter three calls. Officials at ity, which might even trump the other seven responded, price as a priority. citing costs of $800 to $5,000 Determining quality is not for a colonoscopy and from easy, she said. "High cost does not always $3,139 to $12,000 for a hernia repair. One hospital said a equal high quality," Kohn hernia repair would cost any- said. "Sometimes it does, but where from $6,000 to $12,000. it's not automatic." Only one facility offered any information on quality, referring the caller to patient
the heart a report by the government watchdog agency on the transparency of health care costs and quality. The report, requested by four U.S. senators from O k lahoma, Minnesota, New Hampshire and Pennsylvania, unveiled a wide price range for similarservices in the same area metrics on its website. amid a lack of readily availLast year, another report able information. gave Oregon and 28 other GAO staffers sought price states an "F" for health care information at randomly se- transparency. Minnesota got lected, unidentified outpatient
clinics and outpatient hospi-
a "B" on that report, but when GAO investigators called fa-
cilities in Minneapolis this and Minneapolis, Minnesota. year, only six gave prices, The two cities were picked fewer than in Portland. because of "initiatives to proThe new report also looked mote transparency," such as at the cost of maternity care, Oregon's PricePoint system, an MRI of t h e l ower back which provides cost informa- and laparoscopic gallbladtion on hospitals. der surgery in Denver, Bos"We were looking for plac- ton and Indianapolis. Prices e s where there was a f a i r varied widely in each city amount of activity in terms of — usually by thousands of making information available dollars — even among facilto consumers," Kohn s aid. ities offering similar quality "We weren't trying to test the of service, the report said.For system." example, the cost of highly Staffers called 12 facilities ranked maternity care at sein Portland, saying they were lected acute care hospitals in tal departments in Portland
Weekly Arts 8r Entertainment Every Friday In
I Im hoazmz
TheBulletin
— From wire reports
want to talk about it," Cochran sard.
PORTLAND
By Lynne Terry
Wednesday afternoon on Interstate 84 in Portland wasone part pre-Thanksgiving holiday crush andone part labor pains. Portland Fire Bureau Lt. DamonSimmons saidemergency crews responding to a highway department report of a stoppedvehicle with a womanin labor found the woman inhercar on the busy highway. Simmonssaid she was loaded into anambulanceand taken to Providence Medical Center. She was not identified.
Consumers
need
easy-to-understand and read-
LOCAL BRIEFING Continued from C1
Harris cameoutside with a rifle and repeatedly told Hamilton to get off his property, said Gotchy in a newsrelease early Wednesday. Hamilton allegedly returned to his home, loadeda shotgun and fired oneshot into the ground. Harris called 911to report the dispute. Deputies andOSPtroopers were dispatched to Harris' home for a weaponsoffense at about5:45p.m.Tuesday.W hile responding to the area, dispatch informed deputies that at least one shot had beenfired by a man who lived at anaddress on Skidgel Road in LaPine. Deputies secured theaddress on Railroad Street, while other deputie swatchedthehouseon Skidgel Road. A female living at the Skidgel Road address contacted dispatch andadvised them the weapon wasunloaded and secured inside the house.The occupants of the Skidgel Road home were called outside and detained while the investigation continued. There were no injuries or property damageresulting from the dispute, according to Gotchy. The shotgun was located and seized asevidence. Hamilton was being held Wednesday intheDeschutes
County jail on suspicion of unlawful use of aweapon, menacing, felon in possession of a firearm and other charges. Harris was cited and releasedfor felon in possession of a firearm.
Holiday lights contest OPenS Nominations are beingaccepted for the Central Oregon Association of Realtors' holiday lights contest. Bend residents may nominate individual homes or an entire neighborhood. The top three winners in each category will earn up to $500 in cash. Nominations must be submitted by Dec. 9,and members of the association will judge lights Dec. 10and11. Download a nomination form at www.coar.com, or contact KimGammond at541-382-6027 or kim@coar.com. — Bulletin staff reports
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ily accessible information on both price and quality, the report said.
COVERINGS
It also looked at comparative information on the federal Centersfor Medicare 8z
1465 SW Knoll Ave., Bend www. classic-coverings.com
Medicaid Services website, which has pages focused on hospitals, nursing homes, home care, dialysis and phy-
s• •
•
'
'
sicians. It identified "critical
weaknesses," saying the online tools had no information on out-of-pocket costs, provided few details about qual-
ity and were often difficult to understand.
"They couldmake the information easier to use," Kohn said, by letting consumers customize and summarize in-
formation based on individual preferences. Kohn said the GAO will re-
port back to Congress in five years on the progress made in the centers website.
er a I 98h C a s m e BEND, OREGON, LISA
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•
C4 T H E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2014
T HE
ES T
A ower ant oes uiet, utt estac ssti tower By Adam Nagoumey
and then released warm water to what might come next for on the other, drawing fish and the smokestacks. "It's got to be an incredibly in-the-know swimmers. "As kids, we loved it in the valuable and attractive piece of winter," Anderson said. "We property, so my mind always had warm feet while waiting wanders who would — want a for the waves." property like that right on the Were it not for the rock and beach'?" Hensley said. "A large
New York Times News Service
MORRO BAY, Calif. — The
showpiece of this sparkling California fishing village is a 581-foot-high mountain of volcanic rock rising from the water, drawing gawkers and tourists from up and down the
the stacks, this would be just
hotel'? We don't have a conven-
another in a string of tranquil tion center here." seaside communities along the Brent Haugen, executive di-
coast.Yet for 50 years, Morro
Bay, which likes to call itself the Gibraltar of the Pacific, has beenjust as defined by a no-less-assertive landmark, staring down the rock from acrossthe bay: three 450-feet-
highpower plant smokestacks, visible from 10 miles away. This incongruous clash between nature and industry, played out on a small bay bobbing with fishing boats and paddleboarders, has long
California coast, with stores
rector of the Morro Bay Tour-
selling saltwater taffy, tourists snapping photographs of yelping sea lions and people heading out with surfboards or fishing boats. Though the
ism Bureau, called the loss of the plant a "huge opportunity" for the community, but said
that whatever happened, the stacks should stay.
"Keeping the stacks is a way claim to fame: It was the home of keeping some tradition," he of fitness guru Jack LaLanne, said. "I often think about St. who died here in 2011. Louis and the arch. It could be And people are now turning a huge public art project." town does have one other
been a source of disquiet in this small community half-
waybetween Los Angeles and San Francisco. But in Febru-
Monica Almeida I The New York Times
g~s Pet Salon of Bend
People walk on the shore of Morro Bay, California, this month in view of smokestacks of a former
ary, the plant shut down, leav- power plant. The smokestacks, which would cost millions of dollars to dismantle and remove, share ing in its abandonment what the scenery with a mountain of volcanic rock, and will probably not be going anywhere soon. one business leader calls a
"three-finger salute" to Morro as children going to school or adults paying taxes, reaped the economic benefits of having a prosperous plant.
has become much harder now. "I looked at the ocean view, and I guess subconsciously, I
million; the general fund bud- name. Local stores display get for Morro Bay was about T-shirts that with depictions of $10 million this year. the rock — as well as T-shirts "Where is t h e c o rporate with depictions of the stacks. "For me, honestly — other responsibility in America today?" said Jamie Irons, the people are definitely going to mayor. "How many cities out say different things — when I therehave been impacted by am driving in from San Luis the closure of a steel mill or Obispo and I see at night the auto plant or food processing red little lights off of it, that plant'? It can take decades to means I'm home," said Edtransition and rebuild." wards, the owner of a skin Cyndee Edwards, president care salon. "If they were gone, of the Morro Bay Merchants you would look at the rock,
just fuzzed it out," said Rod-
Association, said the closing
from the plant."
Bay and a wake of frustration about what can be done about
what many see as a blight on their coast. For atime, peopleheregrew accustomed to — and on occasion, fond of — The Stacks, as they are known, accepting them as an unsightly price to pay for the local jobs, commerce and tax revenue. That
and it would look ancient. To-
ger Anderson, an owner of the was "a huge loss of revenue for tally different. The juxtapoAnderson Inn, which offers us. sition for me — this ancient rooms with a view of the rock She added: "We're a small rock, millions of years old, as well as rooms that look out community, under 11,000 peo- and thestacks,which are comat The Stacks. "Now, I'm just ple. How are we going to sus- pletely industrial — d oesn't saddened that it will be there tain what we've been doing bother me." in a deteriorating state for de- without that money?" But Gordon Hensley, who cades, even generations." The plant sprawls over 107 o versees this stretch of t h e "It's a nuisance," he said. "It acres of prime real estate in coast for the California Coastwill get eventually graffitied. the middle of town. The emp- keeper Alliance, an environIt's going to be an ugly neigh- ty parking lot, a reminder of mental organization, offered bor for years or decades." the loss of a plant that once a harsher view. "Personally, I The Morro Bay Power Plant employed 100 people, can be think it's an eyesore," he said. was built by Pacific Gas and seen through padlocked gates. "You have this relatively picElectric in the early 1950s, be- Signs warn of potential con- turesque fishing village with fore the days of the Clean Air tamination by cancer-causing this obviously industrial item Act or the Clean Water Act. chemicals. right in the shadow of the MorThe community, excited at the The relationship of this com- ro Rock, the Gibraltar of the promise of jobs and tax reve- munity to the Morro Bay Pow- Pacific." nue in the midst of a postwar er Plant is complicated, with There are people who cast recession, gave no thought to competition for i co n s tatus their eyes aside at the sight of including what today would be divided between its two fix- the stacks or are ready with a requisite provisions for the de- tures on each side of the bay. quick apologetic history for commissioning of a plant. City Morro Bay is often referred to how they got there. But Morro officials estimated that taking as Three Stacks and a Rock, Bay is also filled with people down the stacks could cost $30 a somewhat affectionate nick- who worked at the plant, or,
B LAC K F R I D A Y S PE C I A L 8:30 • 4pm
"At the time it was built, it was seen as a beautiful, mod-
•
ern plant," said Anderson, 65, the innkeeper, who was mayor for four years. "When we were in elementary school in the late '50s, there was growth and money, and we got books. We were able to incorporate because of the large tax base
5
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Nobody is sure who saw it first. A handful of National Park
Service employees think they were among the first, in early October.
would stop chewing them off each other's necks.
"It is a fairly unique thing we've done," he said. They had a gray wolf. Still,
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ple stroll around it, or gaze up from the ocean while surfing the waves. The power plant
drew water from one side of the rock to cool the turbines,
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The U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service has called the comeat the Kaibab Plateau, where it back a success and proposed has been spotted at least once in 2013 to remove the gray wolf about a mile north of the North entirely from the list of threatRim entrance of Grand Can- ened and endangered species.
5
ties to fence it off. Today, peo-
"She is very special. For every wolf that we discover, there are typically more that we haven't, and hopefully that means there are more wolves that are trying to recolonize this
Nobody is sure how the Arizona wolf ended up unscathed
5
I Tow srd eroo'ming s' ervices only
As for the rock, which is accessible by foot, there was a time when people would make the treacherous climb to the top — gathering for a bonfire or camping out — until a few fatal tumbles led the authori-
— Suzanne Stone, Defenders of Wildlife conservationist A turkey hunter snapped a fuzzy photo of it as the animal moved through a large open meadow surrounded by dense theywanted furtherproof. yon National Park. "She is very special," Stone conifer forest just north of That came Friday, when a Grand Canyon National Park. lab at the University of Ida- said. "For every wolf that we They had a mystery on their ho confirmed through DNA discover, there are typicalhands. Too big for a coyote. from the animal's scat that it ly more that we haven't, and And it couldn't be a wolf. No- is a female gray wolf who had hopefully that means there are body had seen a wolf there in roamed from t h e n o rthern more wolves that are trying to 70 years. Maybe a wolf-dog Rockies into Arizona — nearly recolonize this historic park." hybrid — a pet — had escaped 450 miles. Tens of thousands of wolves from its owner and had gotten Park officials and conserva- used to roam North America lost. tionists are wondering where from Mexico into Canada, but Workers with the Arizona she will go next, and conser- by the early 1900s the species Department of Game and Fish vationists are excited over the had been hunted nearly to exsaw it too and snapped their possible return of gray wolves tinction in the Lower 48 under own photos. This time they to Colorado — its presumed a government-backed predator saw something else: a black ra- travel route — or Arizona at control plan. dio-tracking collar. a time when the animals are The gray wolf was listed The radio wasn't transmit- in danger of losing federal as an endangered species in ting a signal and the animal protections. the 1970s, and in the 1990s "In October it was perplex- 66 gray wolves from Canada eluded park biologists' attempts to capture it. The photos ing — now it's exciting," said were brought into the northwere sent out to wolf experts park service spokesman Jeff ern Rocky Mountains to jumpa round the country i n t h e Humphrey. "But it certainly start the population. hopes someone might recog- continues to be mystifying." Now there are almost 1,700 nize the collar. There are no known gray wolves in the Rocky Moun"That was a telltale give- wolves in Colorado, though in tainsand more than 300 breedaway," said Mike Jimenez, the recent memory two wandered ing packs, Jimenez said. northern Rocky Mountains into the state and came to unThe p o pulations h a ve wolf management and science fortunate ends. One was killed swelled enough that the wolves coordinator for the U.S. Fish illegally and the other run over are no longer listed as endanand Wildlife Service. by a car, said Suzanne Stone, a gered in Minnesota, WisconJimenez recognized the col- conservationist with the group sin, Michigan, Idaho and Monlar. It was studded with little Defenders of Wildlife who has tana and in parts of the Dakometal cleats, designed so the studied wolves in Idaho for 27 tas, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Oregray wolves the government years. gon,Washington and Utah. tracks in the northern Rockies
5
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A surpriseGrandCanyonvisitor By Javier Panzar
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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
T HE
C5
ES T
As snow fades,California resorts face abrown future By John Branch
"I don't know of anybody in the industry who is saying that
tioned than most areas for this
possibility, the warmer temperaturesand less snowfall," for us," said Bob Roberts, pres- Chris Riddle, Big Bear's vice ident and chief executive of the president of marketing, said.
TWIN B R I DGES, C a l if. — At ski areas up and down
climate change is not an issue
the jagged peaks of the Sierra Nevada, where California's drought has hit historic
"We've lived that our entire
California Ski Industry Asso-
proportions and the broader threat of climate change hangs heavy over an industry built on optimism, the man-made snow is flying.
ciation. "If you're below 6,000 existence." feet, it's a real challenge." But making snow requires The industry was among the two things in short supply in first to push for awareness of California — t emperatures the threat of global warming, below freezing, generally, and long before the turn of the cen- ample water. And, despite adtury, led by resorts such as As- vances in efficiency in recent pen, in Colorado. The National years, snow making contribSki Area Association adopted utes to global warming, repa climate-change policy in resenting 15 to 20 percent of 2000. In 2007, snowboarder Squaw Valley's carbon footJeremy Jones founded Protect print, for example, according Our Winters to further rally to Squaw Valley officials. the winter sports community. Temperatures at Big Bear Squaw Valley's "Formal two weekends ago allowed the
A couple of resorts have
managed to open a few runs. But beyond the occasional strip of white, the mountains
remain mostly bare. "From a business perspective, I'm a farmer," said John
Rice, general manager of Sierra-at-Tahoe, a ski area south of Lake Tahoe. Last week, he
had a small pile of man-made
Sustainability I n i tiative," a report on the ways it intends
resort to run its snow-making
intention is to lead the fight
of water per minute from near-
against climate change," the report says — acknowledges that the company expects changing conditions.
by Big Bear Lake, at a cost of about $3,000 an hour, Riddle
equipment for 30 hours, Riddle to reduce its own carbon foot- sald. print and promote advocacy At full capacity, it pulls beamong its customers — "Our tween 6,000 and 7,000 gallons
snow, a mountain of naked runs and a hope to open in ear-
ly December. "I'm not in the ski business," Rice said. "I farm snow."
"We're certainly better posi-
sincefaded atskiareas.
New York Times News Service
Max Whittaker/The New York Times
A ski run, mostly bare except for small amounts of man-made snow, at Heavenly Mountain Resort in
The season is just starting, South Lake Tahoe, California. A snow drought and climate change present s growing challenge to the and snow may yet pile high, California ski industry, which increasingly relies on man-made snow and activities other than skiing but the harvest in California or snowboarding. the last three years was bleak, and the globe's long-range forecast is grim. Fortunes fighting with the immediacy of of the snow arriving late in the the next few years," Christoph are as unpredictable as ever, resorts in California. Resorts, season, skier and snowboard- M arty, a researcher for Switwith bigger swings of weather big and small, are combating er visits in this area were down zerland's Institute for Snow variability. While snow levels the trends with bigger invest- 25 percent from theseason be- and A v alanche R e search, have decreased drastically in ments in snow making ($8 fore, according to the National wrote in an email. "However, the West and are generally on million worth at Squaw Valley Ski Area Association. this does not change the fact decline elsewhere in the Unit- and neighboringAlpine MeadSimilarly meager snow that there will be less snow in ed States, the drop is hardly ows in the last three years) packs in 2012 and 2013 have the long run." uniform. Last week, for exam- and more activities less reliant exacerbated the s tatewide ple, the Buffalo area in New on snow, whether indoors in drought, wit h r a m ifications Climatechange York set records with an early the winter or outdoors in the far beyond the ski industry. A Troubling for ski areas now snowstorm. summer. fourth lackluster season would is the rising percentage of The ski industry, which exThey are moves to attract be unprecedented, according to precipitation that falls as liqpects highertemperatures, less more customers in the short snow records kept since 1879. uid, not solid, even in winter, snow and shorter seasons in run, but also hedges in a highSome dismiss the snow said Randall Osterhuber, a the comingdecades,is seen a stakes gamble with the future drought as an anomaly, point- researcher at the snow lab. In bit like the canary in the coal of snow ing to near-record snowfalls in the late 1970s, about 82 percent mine of climatology. Last year's snowpack at the Sierra Nevada as recent- of the annual precipitation at "This is avery serious and as the University of California, ly as 2011. When viewed on the lab, with a relatively high strategically significant a top- Berkeley, Central Sierra Snow graphs, the data is spikier than elevation of 6,900 feet, fell as ic as you can get," said Andy Lab, in the heart of California ever, but the trend lines point snow. These days, it is about 67 Wirth, president and chief ex- ski country near Lake Tahoe, down. percent. "It might well be that there ecutive of Squaw Valley, a ma- topped out at a depth of about If the debate about global jor resort near Lake Tahoe. 52 inches, the second-lowest will be more snow again on warming still echoes around No front line of skiing is of the last 90 years. With most the mountains of California in the world of politics, it has long
said, to the municipal water
district — about $90,000 for last weekend's snow-making to be 3-6 weeks shorter by the spurt. During dry seasons, the 2050s" in the Sierra Nevada, resort can spend millions on the report reads. water — a costreduced greatly "Will ski areas be around in by unpredictable bursts of nat30 to 40 years? The answer is ural snow. yes," Wirth said. "Will we look When Si er r a -at-Tahoe different than we do today? built a sprawling stone deck Yes. But we look dramatically off its base lodge last year, different now than we did 40 it considered heating it, to or 50 years ago, too." avoid the hassle of snow reThey may look more like moval. Instead, the deck is a Big Bear Mountain Resorts in 30,000-square-foot capturing Southern California. About a device for snow to be used on two-hour drive east from Los the slopes. Angeles, Big Bear can open Last year, employees formed — and sometimes has opened a bucket brigade to move snow — 100 percent of its 420-acre from the protected shade of "Ski seasons are projected
terrain at Bear Mountain and Snow Summit with nothing but man-made snow. It has
the forest onto the slopes for
skiers.
built a v ast snow-making operation since the 1960s, a strategy that has propped up ski areas on the East Coast for decades.
Alaska's newgovernor traversed an unlikely path to midtermvictory
I
o
"It's not like it matters if I have 6 feet," Rice said. "That would be nice. But it's what the
top 6 inches is like. If it's soft and white, that's what people want."
I
ByKirkJohnson New York Times News Service
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JUNEAU, Alaska — Sud-
den twists of fate make great political theater. In the rise of Bill Walker, Alaska's unlikely next governor, it was a missed airplane flight onthe Fridaybefore Labor Day. W alker, a 63-year-old businessman and lawyer who last
~C
( f
held elective office in the 1970s,
as mayor of the small town of Valdez, was running as an in-
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Joshua Corbett/The New Yorkrimes
Governor-elect Bill Walker, right, and Lt. Governor-elect Byron party, little money and almost Mallott talk in Walker's office in Anchorage, Alaska. no chance of victory going dependent candidate with no
into that holiday weekend two
months before Election Day, elections, in this or any state, Their last-minute "unity tickpeople inboth parties said. Mallott said he would forfeit the et," as the Walker-Mallott team The incumbent governor, Democratic Party nomination called it, squeaked through on Sean Parnell, a Republican in for governorand join forces Election Day, winningby about a right-leaning state, was fac- with Walker on the indepen- 6,200votes out of 285,000 cast ing two opponents on the bal- dent ballot line as Walker's lieu- — one of the closest elections lot — Walker and a Democrat, tenant governor candidate. for governor in state history. Byron Mallott — who would most likely split th e state's
moderates and liberals. And he had the wind in his sails, with
support for Republicans here and across the nation surging.
e reed<I
Ilo ur Hands Hurt'V
Re-election to a second full term looked like awalk.
But that Friday morning, just a few days before a state dead-
line to make any changes to the ballot, Walker missed his flight from Anchorage for a campaign swing to the rural communityof Bethel, in far western Alaska. As he fumed at the airport, he called Mallott.
Was there anyway, he asked, they might combine forces? Mallott, 71, a Native Alaskan
of Tlingit heritage, and a for-
Do your hands turn white, blue, purple or transparent when cold? Are the back of your hands shiny with no lines on your knuckles?Do you have unexplained weight loss? Do you experience shortness of breath? Do you have swallowing difficulties or heartburn?
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mer mayor of Juneau, had been
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soul searching on his own. He had taken a long walk alone
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near his home, he said in an
interview, and concluded that neither he nor Walker had any hope of winning alone. But he was also suddenly resolved that defeating Parnell, who turned 52 after the election,
was an absolute priority, and that together they might have
a chance. So in what may be perhaps the great thunderclap exam-
ple of ego-control in the 2014
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C6
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2014
EDj To
The Bulletin
s
e rocama ion 0
a n s l Yln
Editor'snota:In the midst of the trauma of the Civil War, Thanksgiving was made a formal, annual holiday. There was a lot for President Lincolnto be thankful for in the fall of 1863. The Union Army had triumphed over the Confederatesmonths earlier at Vicksburg and Gettysburg. Ultimate victory and an end to the war appeared that much closer.Lincoln's proclamation issued on Oct. 3, 1863 made the celebration a national holiday to be celebrated each year on the last Thursday of November. The proclamation was written by William Seward, the secretary of state. Here is the original text, without any corrected or modernized spelling or
grammar:
he year that is drawing towards its dose, has been filled with the blessings of fruitful fields and healthful skies. To these bounties, which are so constantly enjoyed that we are prone to forget the source from which they come, others have been added, which are of so extraordinaryanature, that they cannot fail to penetrate and soften even the heart which is habitually insensible to the ever watchfulprovidence of Almighty God. In the midst of a civil war of unequaled magnitude and severity, which has sometimes seemed to foreign States to invite and to provoke their aggression, peace has been preserved with all nations, order has been maintained, the laws have been respected and obeyed, and harmony has prevailed everywhere except in the theatre of military conflict; while that theatre has been greatly contracted by the advancing armies and navies of the Union. Needful diversions of wealth and of strength from the fields of peaceful industry to the national defence, have not arrested the plough, the shuttle or the ship; the axe has enlarged the borders of our settlements, and the mines, as well of iron and coal as of the precious metals, have yielded even more abundantly than heretofore. P opulation has s teadily i n creased, notwithstandingthe waste that has beenmade inthe camp, the siege and the battle-field; and the country, rejoicing in the consiousness of augmented strength and vigor, is permitted to expect continuance of years with large increase of freedom. No human counsel hath devised nor hathany mortalhand worked out these great things. They are the gracious gifts of the Most High God, who, while dealing
with us in anger for our sins, hath nevertheless remembered mercy. It has seemed to me fit and proper that they should be solemnly, reverently and gratefully acknowledged as with one heart and one voice by the whole American People. I do therefore invite my fellow citizens in every part of the United States, and also those who are at sea and those who are sojourning in foreign lands, to set apart and observe the last Thursday of November next, as a day of Thanksgiving and Praise to our beneficent Father who dwelleth in the Heavens. And I recommend to them that while offering up the ascriptions justly due to Him for such singular deliverances and blessings, they do also, with humble penitence for our national perverseness and disobedience, commend to His tender care all those who have become widows, orphans,mourners or sufferers in the lamentable civil strife in which we are unavoidably engaged, and fervently implore the interposition of the Almighty Hand to heal the wounds of the nation and to restore it as soon as may be consistent with the Divine purposes to the full enjoyment ofpeace, harmony, tranquillity and Union. In testimony whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and caused the Seal of the United States to be affixed.
M 1Vickel's Worth Businessasusual fromthe GOP
see anychange coming with a new Poor planning on the city's part had Congress outside of passing mea- better not be fining residents for not sures theyknow willbe vetoed. shoveling sidewalks. There were a lot I find recent letters crowing about Business as usual. of business owners who didn't have the Republicans taking over the SenRobert Smith their sidewalks cleared right away. ate amusing. The right is building this LaPine And the city should plan better for up as a national tsunami of public snowremovalon residential streets. opinion. The fact is they got in on one Troubles withcityplowing Barbara J. Thomas of the most apathetic midterm votes Bend in recent history.
the right time for agency
T
the need for them is greatest, gifts of time must be used when the donors makethem available. Afoodbankor other institution cannot simply stuff would-be volunteers into a doset to be pulled out six months later when their services are needed. So if you're indined to give money to your favorite worthy cause this month, by all means do so. That cause is no doubt counting on you
andyour gift. If it's time you have to give, you might check first. Some agencies are hard-pressed to put volunteers to use in winter months; knowing that might persuade you to put off your gift of time until it's needed by the agencyyou'retryingto help.
Bendzoningoutafstep
out in about 50 years. Just a handful
What Bend is facing are a multitude of development issues based on old visions, outdated zoning and
to free my car to be able to function if
of states surpassed 50 percent, induding Oregon.The GOP has had enough votes to block anything and everything for years. What's going to change? I think two-thirds of the country is so fed up, they just don't care. People want Republicans to actually do something and, God forbid, show they can govern. What are they doing? Suing a sitting president
Make your gift of time at he giving season is here. While most nonprofit agencies receive gifts year-round, most also get 15 percent or more of those gifts in December, according to Blackbaud, the developer of software and supplier of services for nonprofits. The holiday spirit and the end of the taxyear combine to persuade Americans to open their wallets more widely than, say, in August. The season also sees an uptick in m ore hands-on volunteereff orts. People step up to help deliver food baskets and takepart in other efforts to assist those less fortunate. If there's a downside to the holidayseasongenerosity, it's this: While gifts of money canbe usedwhenever
No, we didn't forget to shovel our
Nationally, about a third of those sidewalk after the recent snow dump. eligible cast ballots, the lowest turn- We did it on Saturday and managed need be. We also watched a big snow plow and a front loader drive aimlessly up and down SE Roosevelt doing nothing more than packing the snow and ice down. By Thursday it was fairly easy to get around with the melting. But suddenly, those large Tonka type road vehides are going up and down Roosevelt again and piling up berms that over the ACA and vowing to fight the would take a monster truck to break president tooth and nail on any immi- through. Then they go up and down gration policy whatsoever. This won't the north/south streets pilingup more change come January. berms of ice. President Obama is accused daiYes, I was out there taking pictures ly of not cooperating with Congress and posting them. Yes, I was on the when in fact that's a two-way street. phone being very vocal and quite His actions on immigration won't unhappy about the apparent lack of cause the right to bargain and quit common sense. Yes, I told one of the stalling, it will just give them more ladies I spoke to on the phone that I reason to foam at the mouth, be out- didn't appreciate that we were paying raged and do nothing, outside of "get- money to the city of Bend for dumb ting to the truth about Benghazi." decisions. And I did manage to get a Suing the president over the ACA is another kill-time stall tactic. I don't
poor development practices. There
are many issuesarising because Bend's zoning and development is out of touch with the current and fu-
ture needs. In addition, Bend has had a checkered past with development such as Juniper Ridge, UGB and now OSU-Cascades. Deb Brewer pointed out in her recent My Nickel's Worth letter that
the city planning mindset is limited to existing commercial zoning on Bend's west side. OSU-Cascades'
proposed new campus has more than demonstrated that Bend's zoning and development is inadequate and
dysfunctional. It is time for Bend's leadership to show some leadership and start shaping Bendinto afuturethatwillcontinue to make Bend a great place to live.
Richard Moms
couple of workers to come back to fix
their mess.
Bend
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Finding so many things for which to be thankful WASHINGTON — Before the tryp-
tophan in the turkey induces somnolence, give thanks for living in such an entertaining country. This year, for example, we learned that California's Legislature includes 93 persons who seem never to have had sex. They en-
At Broward College near Miami, a ty, unsleepingly vigilant, raided a Kan- advertised a job opening for a Web desas City shop to stop sales of panties veloper tobepaid$13 anhour. if they agreed that "big government emblazonedwith unauthorized Royals Joe Biden was off by 160,839 when sucks" was told by a campus ~ logos. A U.S. Forest Service article on citing the number of people killed in guard that she must take her question safe marshmallow toasting did not ne- the 2011 Joplin, Missouri, tornado. to the campus "free-speech area." She glect to nagus: It suggested fruit rather He said 161,000. But the former chairgot off lightly: The federal govern- than chocolate in s'mores. The droll man of the Senate Foreign Relations ment has distributed to local police, Orange County Register wondered, Committee expressed optimism about induding those of some colleges and "Why not replace the marshmallow "the nation of Africa." Barack Obama school districts, more than 600 surplus with a Brussels sprout?" The federal explained the Keystone XL pipeline: MRAP (mine-resistant ambush-pro- government's food policebegan crack- "It is providing the ability of Canada tected)armored vehides designed for ing down on schools' fundraising bake to pump their oil, send it through our Iraq and Afghanistan. sales: Step away from those brownies land, down to the Gulf, where it will The federal government, which has andputyour hands on a fruit cup. be sold everywhere else.Thatdoesn't Tomahawkcruisemissiles andApache Niagara County, New York, spent have an impact on U.S. gas prices." and Lakota helicopters, used the code $700,000 of its Tobacco Master Settle- Someone very patient should try to name "Geronimo" in the attack that ment Money not on fighting smoking explain to him thatprices of petroleum killed Osamabin Ladenbut objectedto but on golf course equipment. In Seat- are setby a global market. the name of the Washington Redskins. tle, the Freedom Socialist Party, which — George Willis a columnist for The Department of Homeland Securi- favors a $20-an-hour minimum wage, The Washington Post Writers Group. conservative who was asking students
GEORGE
WILL
acted the "affinmtive consent" law directing college administrators to tell students that sexual consent cannot
uncertalI1.
an individual is hesitant, confused,
ism said white people were not invited.
A severely moral California high school principal prohibited the football be silence but must be "affirmative, booster ciub from raising money by consciousand voluntary agreement" selling donated Chick-fil-A meals beand "ongoing throughout a sexual ac- cause this company opposed same-sex tivily." Claremont McKenna College marriage. The school superintendent requires "all" — not "both," which approved the ban because "we value would discriminate ~ gro u ps- inclusivity and diversity." Up to a point. participants in a sexual engagement to At a Washington state community colunderstand that withdrawal of consent lege, invitations to a "happy hour" celcan beany behavior conveying "that ebrating diversity and combating rac-
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
C7
REGON
i -va e wineries startin to attract attention By Bennett Hall Corvallis Gazette-Times
CORVALLIS — Devotees of the Willamette Valley's world-
class pinot noirs and other fine wines speak knowingly about
marketing consultant, thinks it will take more than a pas-
winemakers on a tasting room visit. Here in the Willamette
sion for pinot and a homespun, mom-and-pop image to make mid-valley wineries stand out from the crowd.
Valley, the state's most famous
"We've got, what'? 601 winer-
subregions such as the Dundee Hills southwest of Portland or
wine region, the areas around
Portland and Salem are better known because they have a higher concentration of winer-
ies in Oregon novP. And you've ies that have had time to develjust described 598 of them," he op a reputation.
the Eola Hills west of Salem. But nobody's talking about
"Are there advantages to be-
sald.
The vast majority of Oregon ingpartofalesser-known area wineries, he pointed out, are or group of wineries'? You bet small operations, and it's not there are," Danehower argued. uncommon to have personal "It's an area to explore. It's an contact with the owners and area for discovery."
the mid-valley, the stretch from
Monmouth through Corvallis down to Junction City — or, at
least, they weren't. That may be starting to change, thanks to some excel-
lent showings by local producers in recent competitions and a collaborative effort to build a distinctive identity in the in-
+Khttregr
The
CItattIIt
Htddstt Jsufel Df gertd
creasinglycrowded field of Willamette Valley wineries.
A h alf-dozen mid-valley
( « r r ttonefree <Itoiee Bqef
wineries — Lumos Wine Co.,
•
Airlie Winery, Tyee Wine Cellars, Spindrift Cellars, Emerson Vineyards and Brigadoon Wine Co. — took home multi-
•
Joseph B. Frazier/The Associated Press file photo
Oregon is home to some 500 wineries, with a growing wine tourism industry and a reputation for good
ple honors in this year's Ore- pinot noir. gon Wine Awards, including at least one gold or double gold apiece. Association, I got no love," he And in last month's edition lamented. "It's hard for these of Portland Monthly maga- small (mid-valley) wineries to zine, two mid-valley bottlings get recognition."
carveoutits own niche,brand- some really gteat wineries, and ing itself as the home of small, we're trying to get people to unpretentious wineries in off- take a drive." the-beaten-track locales, where Tabitha Compton of Spin-
made the list of Oregon's 50
visitors can chat with the own-
best wines, chosen through a Gaining traction double-blind taste test of more The group has a profesthan 1,000 entries by a panel sional, user-friendly website of experts. Brigadoon's 2012 (heartofwillamette.com) and Lylee Pinot Noir came in at No. has been working with Visit 13, and Tyee did better yetCorvallis to promote its memits 2012 Estate Hnot Noir was named the No. 1 wine in the state.
•
drift Cellars i n
Keyes jls effea ing
G~fII: Cex tMc@II:es
P h i lomath,
er over a friendly glass of pinot another Heart of W illamette or chardonnay while picking member, seconds that opinion.
et n IW ~ DjISCeILmt Bieejk Fjt'jld@y
"We're like this little hidden
up a fewbottles to take home. "We don't have the snooty
gem. Alot of times whenpeople come theyget the owners in the tasting fees, and our w ines winery," she said. "That's why we started our are cheaper than everybody else's. When you come up here winery in the Corvallis area. this weekend or next weekend We knew this was going to be (Thanksgiving is prime time an up-and-coming area (but) for tasting room visits and bot- we're not pretentious, we're tasting rooms and the high
bers as tourism attractions.
The campaign appears to be paying dividends. Johns said
from Sjpm te Spm g50 minimum
Panelist Savanna Ray, the his tasting room traffic is up 35 manager and wine direct or percent over last year, and he's of Portland's RingSide Fish getting a lot more visitors from tle sales at all Willamette Val- down to earth." House restaurant, had this to the a l l-important P o rtland ley wineries), you won't have to What'sin a nam e? say about Tyee's top-ranked market. stand in line," he said. "We're trying to say in the pinot: Johns sees that as a sign that But Cole Danehower, a long"It's really well made, it's the mid-valley is starting to backroads of Oregon there's time Oregon wine writer and nicely balanced, it's light but
sa ~
~
,
s •
$
•
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intense, it's got this powerful
elegance to it.... There's something wonderful happening there."
•
Spreading the word
.
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Mid-valley winemakers are inclined to agree — and they
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s
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want to make sure the rest of
the state gets the word.
•
For Merrilee Buchanan Ben-
son, the winemaker and vineyard manager atTyee Wine
DOORBUSTER
DOORBUSTER
Cellars just south of Corval-
1 9.9 9 RAMPAGE BOOTS Orig.* $59-$69, after 1pm: 29.99.
99.99 DIAMOND
lis, the award was a form of vindication.
"You're always kind of wondering, do people care'? Does anyone appreciate what we're doing? Yeah, it feels good," she said.
+ a
• a
• +
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Her father, Dave Buchanan, who started the winery in 1985
with wife Margy, thinks the recognition is important for the
DOOABUSTER
entire area.
"We're producing local grapes here that are just dynamite; they're breaking the barriers, but a lot of people don't
•
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•
J••
•
•
I
know it," he said. "It's time for the mid-Willa-
•
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mette Valley to start blowing
•
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their horn a bit." That's the job of Heart of
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Willamette Wineries, a group
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of 16 producers from Benton, Lane and Polk counties that
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the region as a destination for wine lovers. But that can be a tall order in a state that now boastssome 600 wineries.
CASHMERE Reg. $139, after 1pm:
after 1pm: 27.99.
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Also, Ali'ani
I
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00033303107518084118
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More than 400 of those are in the Willamette Valley, whose cool, moist climate and shel•
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J••
*
*
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.
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wOw! PASS
(EXCEPT DOORBUSTERS & DEALS
made famous by the greatestates of France's renowned Burgundy region. While Oregon winemaking is still a relatively young enterprise, dating back
•
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e
s
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APPAREL FOR HIM, HER & KIDS
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extra 15" OFF SELECT SALE & CLEARANCE
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ity pinot noirs as well as other •
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Also excludes: Everyday Values (EDV), specials, super buys, watches, furniture, mattresses,floor coverings, rugs, electrics/electronics, cosmetics/ fragrances, athletic shoes for him, her Br kids, Dallas Cowboys merchandise, gift cards, jewelry trunk shows, New Era, Nike onField, previous purchases, special orders, selected licensed depts., special purchases, services.Exclusionsmay differatm acys. com. Cannot be combined with any savings pass/ coupon, extra discount or credit offer except opening a new Macy's account. EXTRA SAVINGS% APPLIED TOREDUCEDPRICES. TEXT "SAVE" TO 62297 TO GET COUPONS, SALES ALERTS & MORE! Ntax 3msgs/wk. fftsg &data ratesmayapply. Bytexting SAVEfrom my mobilenumber, Iagreeto receivemarketing text messages generated by ae automated dialer from Macy's tothis number. i
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•
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cool-dimate grape varieties such as pinot gris, chardonnay and Riesling. Most of the valley's wineries
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CS TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2014
BITUARIES FEATURED OBITUARY
DEATH NOTICES Deborah Ann Vose, of Redmond April 28, 1953 - Nov. 24, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home, Bend, 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaties.com Contributions may be made to:
The ALS Association www.alsa.org
Lawrence 'Larry' D. Goff, of Silver Lake Sept. 22, 1928 - Nov. 23, 2014
Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel, La Pine, 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: As per Larry's request, no formal services will be held. His cremated remains will be interred at Silver Lake Cemetery.
Lloyd W. Gust, of Bend Sept. 1, 1928 - Oct. 1, 2014 Services: Memorial Service to be held at Trinity Episcopal Church, 469 NW Wall Street, Bend, OR 97701, Saturday, December 13, 2014, 11:00 a.m. Contributions may be made
Pioneering tennisgreat won hundredsof titles By Frank Litsky
"I wasn't that competitive as a youngster. Now, though, I'm quite a bit more fierce. As I've grown older, I've grown much more competitive. I really love to win."
New York Times News Service
Dodo Cheney, a daughter of tennis royalty who wore lace and pearls as she rolled through generations of competitors on the way to winning
— Dodo Cheney, in an interview with The New York Times in1999
391 tennis championships in the United States, most of them
after she turned 55, died on Sunday in Escondido, California. She was 98. The I nternational Tennis Hall of Fame announced her
death on Tuesday. At her induction ceremony
5-2, in the second set and serving for the match when she be-
Cheney, who was born Dorothy Bundy and acquired
gan tofeelsorry forheroppo-
the nickname Dodo in child-
knees," her daughter Chris"I gave her an inch, and she tine Putnam told The Times took a mile," Cheney said in an in 2004, "and that's slowed her interview with The New York down a bit. She does whatever
nent and eased up. She lost the match.
Times in 1999. She seldom made that mistake again. "I wasn't that com-
en's doubles at Grand Slam
of Bend
mixed doubles. In singles, she reached four
-i
semifinals of the U.S. cham-
Dec. 18, 1931 - Nov. 20, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net
Services: Private family services were held. Contributionsmay be made to:
Lewy Body Dementia Association, 912 Killian Hill Rd. S.W., Lilburn, GA 30047
Harold Land, of Bend June 6, 1922 - Nov. 24, 2014 Arrangements: Prineville Funeral Home, 541-447-6459 Services: Has elected to do a private family gathering.
pionships and one semifinal each at Wimbledon and the French championships. She
Agnes C. Wick,of Bend April 10, 1924 - Nov. 21, 2014 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel, Bend, OR 541-382-5592 www.deschutesmemorial chapel.com Services: Visitation will be from 10:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m., on Mon., Dec. 1, 2014, at Deschutes Memorial Chapel, followed by entombment at Deschutes Memorial Gardens. A Celebration of Life will be held at 10:00 a.m., on Fri., Dec. 5, at Bend Villa Retirement Community, 1801 NE Lotus Dr., Bend.
Weekly Arls & Entertainment
Victoria Arocho/Associated Pressfile photo
Deaths of note fromaround theworld:
Nancy Teeters, 84:A liberal economist who was the first
Jeanette "Sabah" Feghali, 87: Lebanese singer beloved for her powerful voice and
ranged a lifetime pass for his
Ars~xzrmg
considered brazen in the con-
woman appointed to the Federal Reserve Board and who broke with tradition by openly criticizing decisions of fellow board members that she felt
IDVBS R'EDR$94'E~
servativeArab world for her multiple marriages and playfully mocked in her later years for clinging to youth through plastic surgeries, flings with hurt consumers and w orkfar-younger men and garing people. Died on Nov. 17 in ish outfits. Died Wednesday Stamford, Connecticut, after a morning in Lebanon. series of strokes.
Thinking About. Vl/inter Getting You Down?
Obituary policy Death Notices are freeand will be run for oneday, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. Theymay besubmittedby phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.
Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second dayafter submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9 a.m. Mondayfor Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details.
Phone: 541-617-7825
Mail:Obituaries
8 inter ean be isolating, dtJftcult and expensive.
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enjoye danendlesssupplyoffreshcraband6sh. In addition to his wife, Geneis survived by his
son, Gary Richards(Tina), Issaquah,WA; daughters, KarenBarnsley(Ken), Yakima,WAand Janet Richards, Fresno, CA; granddaughters, Kristen Galloway (Pete), St. Petersburg, FL and Kelly Richards, Seattle WA;grandson, Loren Mott and great-granddaughter,Dani Mott, both ofYakima.
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the point: drop shot, slice, you name it. If her shoulder hurts
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Tennis great Dorothy "Dodo" Cheney, 87, of Santa Monica, Califorwife to accommodate her tennia, plays during an exhibition match prior to ceremonies celebrat- er had a lot of power, but she nis travels. was ranked third in the United ing the 50th anniversary of the Tennis Hall of Fame in Newport, would stay in the no-man's She is survived by her States in 1937, 1938 and 1941. Rhode Island, in 2004. The International Tennis Hall of Fame says land between the net and the daughters Christie P utnam Her highest world ranking was Cheney, a member of the Hall and the first American woman to win baseline and slice and chop and May Cheney; a son, Brian; No. 6 in 1946. the tournament now known as the Australian Open, has died at every ball that came her way. eight grandchildren; and 14 "Dodo land," her opponents great-grandchildren. But it was on th e senior age 98. circuit where she shined the called it. Cheney always kept her sucbrightest. After t u rning 55, A refined appearance was cess in perspective. She loved she competed in two or three Her mother, the former May bles titles from 1912 to 1914. important to Cheney. She telling the story of the time age groups in the same year Sutton, won the U.S. champiDorothy Bundy was born made her own tennis outfits: when she was 73 and played and won titles into her late 80s. onships in 1904 and went on to on Sept. 1, 1916, in Santa Mon- a lace dress with lace sleeves, a 10-year-old prodigy in Los Gardnar Mulloy, a male dou- become the first American to ica, California, and by 8 years lace socks, lace wristband. Angeles. "She blit zed me," Cheney bles specialist who turned 100 win the women's singles title at old she was swinging a ten- If she wore a knee bandage, last December, is second with Wimbledon, in 1905. She won nis racket with some author- it was lined with lace. When said. "She just wiped me off the at least 135 national titles. it again two years later. In 1912, ity. The next year, she won a she played, she always wore a court. For Cheney, tennis stardom she married Thomas Bundy, Southern California junior pearl necklace. The 10-year-old was Venus was practically a birthright. who won U.S. Nationals dou- title. Meanwhile, two youngBut she had a reputation for Williams.
Patricia Ann Lannigan, of Redmond June 8, 1936 - Nov. 23, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Redmond - 541-504-9485 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A private gathering of family and friends will take place at a later date.
gles title, her 303rd national title. "For the last 10 years or so, she's had arthritis in the
petitive as a youngster," she and she can't serve overhand, said years later. "Now, though, she'll serve underhand." I'm quite a bit more fierce. As Cheney's husband, Arthur I've grown older, I've grown Cheney, was a former pilot
tournaments and four times in
Gene Arthur Richards,
(which turned out to be a false
balls back and forth with him afterward.
her 80s, chose John McEnroe
runner-up three times in wom-
Partners In Care (542-382-5882)
wah, New Jersey, her sleep was interrupted by a fire alarm
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Island, in 2004, Cheney, who played competitively well into
pionships, now known as the Australian Open, a feat accomplished in 1938. She was
(www.pcta.org) or
day in 1999 at a hotel in Mah-
fied from a junior tournament
to win the Australian cham-
Pacific Crest Trail Association
toughness. At 1 a.m. on a Sun-
nounce Dorothy gave her the nickname that would one day appear in headlines. She was not hypercompetitive at first. She was disquali-
alarm). "I walked down 15 flights," for not showing up; she had she said. "I was afraid my met some teenage boys and knees wouldn't make it." gone fishing. In another junior Twelve hours later, she won tournament, she was leading, the national women's-80 sin-
at the Hall, in Newport, Rhode
hood, was the first American
to:
er brothers who couldn't pro-
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2014
W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather, Inc. ©2014
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TODAY
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TONIGHT
HIGH Increasing clouds, a shower in the p.m.
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Yesterday Normal Record 66' in 1950 -4'in 1993
PRECIPITATION
Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset
Today 7:15 a.m. 4:30 p.m. 11 : 29 a.m. 10: 21 p.m.
CENTRAL: Mild again 67/so today with clouds and somesunshine;spotty Lincoln showers will move in 57/52 this afternoon.
57/50
56/52
Fu l l
Nov 29 Dec 6
New
D e c1 4 D ec 21
6:29 a.m. 2:09 p.m.
•~ 2
High: 66' at Brookings Low: 25' at Lakeview
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Bandon
/45
Gra
57/
Bro ings
The higherthe AccuWesurer.cemHVIndex number, the greatertheneedfor eysandskin protscgcn.0-2 Lcw, 34 Moderate;6-7 High;8-10VeryHigh; II+ Exlrsme.
ROAD CONDITONS I-84 at Cabbage Hill: Mostly cloudy todaywith a little rain possible. Nomajor delays. US 20 at SantiamPass:Mostly cloudy today with occasional rainandareas of fog. US26at Gov't Camp: Mostly cloudy today with periods ofrain andareasof fog. US 26 at Dchoco Divide:Mostly cloudy today; a couple ofshowerscanbring wet travel. DRE 58 atWigamette Pass:Wet travel today with plenty of cloudsandperiods of rain. There can also befog. DRE138 at Diamond Lake: Mostly cloudy today; a couple ofshowers can bring wet travel.
SKI REPORT In inches ss cf 5 p.m.yesterday
Ski resort New snow Base AnthonyLakes Mtn:est.opening Nov.29 HoodooSkiArea: est, openingDec.1 Mt.Ashland:est.opening Dec.4 Mt. Bachelor 0 19-3 0 Mt. Hood Meadows 3 19-21 Mt. HoodSki Bowl: esL opening Dec.13 9-9 Timberline Lodge 0 Willamette Pass:est. opening Dec.5 Aspen / Snowmass, CO 1 16-16 Vail, CO 9 29-2 9 Mammoth Mtn. Ski, CA 0 14-18 Squaw Valley,CA 0 18-1 8 ParkcityMountain,UT 1 30-30 Sun Valley, ID:est. opening Nov.27 Source: onTheSnnw.cnm
Ham ton
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Cold with snow tapering off, 1-3"
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Beaver Marsh
55/4
52/33
'Baker C eu /33
tario
53 / 3 9
47 40
Velen 48/38
• Burns Junture 53/38
Nysse 48/39
Ch ristmas alley
Jordan V Hey
Frenchglen
52/39
56/37
• Burns Jun tion • 57/38
• Paisley
Rome 60/36
• Lakeview
McDermi
53/31
56/38
Yesterday Today Friday C i ty Hi/Ln/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Ls Grande 55/46/0.00 52/43/pc54/36/sh La Pine 55/26/0.00 50/36/pc 47/31/r Me d fnr d 51/4 1 /0.00 53/43/r 5 4/44/r Ne w port 61/5 0 /0.00 57/52/sh 55/41/r NorthBend 63/48/0.01 59/53/c 59/45/r On t ario 54/33/0.00 47/40/sh 50/37/sh Pendleton 62/50/0.00 60/47/pc 57/35/sh
city
Yesterday Today Friday Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Lo/W
Portland Prineviiie Redmond Rnseburg Salem Sisters The Oalles
62/5 5/0.0059/49/sh 54/39/r 54/ 3 0/0.0057/38/pc47/30/ sh 57/ 29/0.0059/38/pc 53/29/ sh 59 / 46/0.00 57/49/c 55/43/r 62/51/0.00 59/50/sh 56/39/r 53/26/0.00 57/40/pc 53/31/sh 6 3 / 48/0.00 59/46/pc 54/37/sh
NATIONAL WEATHER ~ os
~ t o s ~ 2 08 ~ 308 ~ 408 ~ 50s ~e os ~7 08 ~ 8 08 ~ 9 08 ~t oos ~ttos + ++ + +
NATIONAL EXTREMES YESTERDAY (for the
58/so ~
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59/49
9-
5
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48 contiguousstates) National high:92 at Corona, CA National low: -8'
• Billings 49/39
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agsnm
Hi/Lo/Prec. HiRo/W 61/38/0.00 61/42/s 40/29/0.00 38/23/sf 38/35/0.50 37/23/c 61/29/0.00 59/33/s 32/25/0.01 25/1 4/s 57/42/Tr 49/30/s 46/45/0.96 43/32/c 76/39/0.00 62/37/s 42/39/1.19 42/26/c 45/28/0.26 49/39/c 58/34/0.00 48/29/s 17/-2/0.02 19/14/sn 60/37/0.00 56/42/pc 50/34/1.20 40/29/sf
Baltimore Billings Birmingham Bismarck Boise Boston Bridgeport, CT 44/39/1.01 Buffalo 33/31/0.05 Burlington, VT 37/36/0.21 Caribou, ME 41/30/0.00 Charleston, SC 58/52/0.80 Charlotte
Chattanooga Cheyenne Chicago
Weether(WHs-sunny,pc-partlycloudy, c-clnudy, sh-shnwers,t-thunderstnrms,r-rnin, sf-sncwflurries, sn-sncwI-ice,Tr-irsce,Yesterday data ascf 5 p.m. yesterday
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* **
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41/27/c 35/24/sf
34/22/sf 29/8/sn 58/34/s 52/44/1.11 52/27/pc 54/39/0.00 47/26/s 34/22/0.10 55/41/pc 29/17/0.00 25/13/c
Cincinnati
40/27/0.00 38/20/c Cleveland 37/31/0.00 36/24/sf ColoradoSprings 39/23/0.00 63/38/pc Columbia, Mo 41/26/0.13 34/25/s Columbia, SC 58/48/0.98 56/29/s Columbus,GA 60/42/0.07 53/29/s Columbus,OH 39/28/0.00 38/22/sf Concord, NH 39/31/1.05 36/21/sf Corpus Christi 73/42/0.00 68/52/s Dallas 64/37/0.00 57/39/s Dayton 34/26/0.00 38/20/sf Denver 45/23/Tr 66/44/pc oes Moines 32/29/0.24 21/18/pc Detroit 34/29/Tr 36/19/sf Duluth 20/17/0.01 10/2/pc El Paso 67/30/0.00 66/37/s 15/-10/0.27 -1/-17/s Fairbanks Fargo 6/2/0.04 12/7/pc Flagstaff 62/22/0.00 63/25/s Grand Rapids 30/28/Tr 32/16/sf Green 6ay 26/11/0.00 20/6/sn Greensboro 45/43/0.75 49/27/pc Harrisburg 41/36/0.53 39/26/c Harffnrd, CT 42/41/1.04 39/24/c Helena 35/30/0.45 51/38/c Honolulu 82/70/0.00 83/72/s Houston 73/43/0.00 63/40/s Huntsville 55/31/0.02 46/27/s Indianapolis 34/26/0.01 33/1 8/c Jackson, MS 67/29/0.00 52/29/s Jacksonville 63/49/0.39 60/34/s
Hi/Lo/W 70/47/s 33/28/pc 34/18/s 61/35/s 26/20/c 50/34/s 41/31/s 68/50/c 39/26/s 51/25/pc 54/37/s 33/23/pc 53/41/pc 37/22/sn 39/22/s 31/28/c 32/18/pc 21/5/sf 52/28/s 48/26/s 49/34/s 60/40/pc 34/31/c 38/31/s 33/28/pc 66/32/pc 53/40/s 51/27/s 54/32/s 34/30/s 34/6/pc 73/58/pc 67/50/s 34/31/s 69/40/pc 44/31/pc 32/27/sn 19/13/sn 66/38/s 2/-3/s 24/15/c 63/26/s 29/27/sn 26/23/sn 44/29/s 37/25/s 38/18/s 47/17/sh 83/71/s 68/55/s 53/36/s 38/30/pc 61/42/s 56/35/s
Amsterdam Athens
49/41/r 56/52/pc 66/58/pc 68/48/s 93/79/I 46/30/c 64/54/pc 39/30/pc 67/47/I 36/32/pc 82/66/s 90/59/s 68/55/pc 27/8/sn 79/67/s 48/44/c 46/38/pc 53/40/c 89/61/s 79/744 49/44/pc 51/45/sh 70/56/I 74/65/pc 59/50/I 53/48/pc 53/44/I 87/78/I
Juneau Kansas City Lansing Lss Vegss Lexington Lincoln Little Rock Lcs Angeles Louisville Madison, Wl Memphis Miami
Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New YorkCity Newark, NJ Norfolk, VA OklahomaCity
Omaha Orlando Palm Spdngs Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME
Providence Raleigh
Rapid City Reno Richmond Rochester, NY
Sacramento SI. Louis Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco San Jose
santa re
Savannah Seattle Sioux Falls Spokane Springfield, Mo Tampa Tucson Tulsa W ashingt on,OC Wichita Yskima
Yuma
50/35/pc 61/56/sh 64/54/sh 66/45/pc 93/79/1 49/27/s
65/54/pc 37/28/s 70/47/c 35/33/sh 82/69/s 89/60/s 70/54/s 9/-10/sn 78/65/s 52/46/c 50/45/pc 52/41/pc 93/64/pc
son4/pc 53/47/s 55/44/pc 77/57/pc 75/64/pc 58/49/pc 56/45/pc 51/42/I
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$39,998 Lowmiles! VINdBA74006
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OREGON EXTREMES YESTERDAY
THE PLANETS T he Planets R i se Set Mercury 6:47 a.m. 4: 0 9 p.m. Venus 8:00 a.m. 4 : 5 7 p.m. Mars 10:56 a.m. 7 : 5 4 p.m. Jupiter 10:17 p.m. 1 2:22 p.m. Saturn Uranus
•
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SUNDAY
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SATURDAY
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LOW
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FRIDAY
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Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W 39/31/Tr 25/10/s 41/31/0.05 36/28/s 31/28/Tr 34/17/sf 68/42/0.00 70/44/s 44/26/0.00 39/19/pc 37/34/Tr 36/27/s 58/31/0.00 85/53/0.00 43/26/0.00 24/8/0.00 52/29/Tr 83/63/0.02 31/14/0.00 26/22/0.17 51/28/0.04 69/38/0.00 43/38/1.13 44/37/1.04 50/47/1.89 57/35/0.00 40/25/0.02 60/55/1.73 79/49/0.00 32/22/Tr 45/40/0.98 74/44/0.00 34/28/0.06 43/40/0.95 46/41/1.90 50/42/1.74 31/24/0.01 67/28/0.00 45/44/1.35 37/31/0.07 68/39/0.00 36/27/0.18 61/35/0.00 74/37/0.00 80/53/0.00 68/49/0.00 70/42/0.00 54/29/0.00 62/51/0.58 58/54/0.03 24/23/0.09 42/33/0.05 46/26/0.01 65/55/1.03 75/35/0.00 57/39/0.00 51/36/1.06 49/40/0.00 48/34/0.00 77/49/0.00
81/47/s 50/37/s 44/32/c 48/33/s 60/45/pc 82/53/s
HiRo/W 21/11/s 55/39/s 29/27/sn 70/46/s 40/32/s 55/31/pc 58/45/s 80/57/s 43/36/s 30/25/sf 55/44/s 71/62/pc 32/28/sf 28/24/sf 50/38/s 61/48/s 38/30/s 39/25/s 43/30/s 66/44/s 49/32/pc 64/47/s 85/54/s 42/34/pc 39/28/s 80/51/s 35/27/pc 35/13/pc 38/18/pc 45/25/s 56/38/pc 62/37/pc 44/25/s 32/28/c 63/49/pc 51/40/pc 58/41/pc 70/53/c 76/56/s 61/53/r 65/46/pc 59/29/s 55/31/s 51/32/r 40/25/pc 49/27/r 58/44/s 60/47/s 81/46/s 64/48/s 42/33/s 62/36/s 57/31/sh 81/53/s
89/65/s 65/33/pc 35/26/sf 24/11/c 79/61/I 78/66/pc 80/53/pc 61/43/s 41/40/c 34/22/c 54/48/pc 80/72/r 66/55/I 83/53/s 74/64/r 50/40/c 57/40/pc 67/55/s 89/77/I 37/31/c 71/62/sh 79/71/pc 66/58/sh 62/55/s 36/21/sf 55/41/r 37/34/pc 34/23/pc
92/65/s 68/38/s 31/21/pc 22/1 5/c 80/61/I 76/67/s 82/54/pc 66/52/sh 42/40/c 29/20/c 60/42/pc 78/72/r 69/57/sh 81/52/s 74/64/sh 47/33/c 52/40/r 64/55/c 88/77/I 36/29/c 74/62/s 83/71/s 68/55/pc 63/59/c 31/26/c 46/26/r 37/35/sh 28/20/s
50/31/s 87/58/s
41/24/pc 18/8/c 47/31/s 73/53/s
26/11/c 11/6/pc 43/25/s 59/41/s
39/30/c 40/26/c 47/33/sh 55/37/s
30/25/s 69/42/s 84/56/s
26/16/pc 40/28/c 82/52/s 39/26/sf 38/19/sf
39/24/c 50/28/pc 45/33/pc
66/37/pc 47/28/sh 35/26/sf 68/41/pc 34/25/pc 57/38/pc 65/44/s 81/57/s
65/49/pc 70/41/s 57/28/s 58/35/s 58/50/r
20/16/pc 51/43/sh 41/30/s 68/42/s
I
Mecca Mexico City
88/68/0.00 69/47/0.00 Montreal 36/23/0.00 Moscow 21/20/0.39 Nairobi 81/63/0.04 Nassau 86/76/O'.14 New Delhi 81/52/0.00 Osaka 60/51/0.09 Oslo 30/28/0.00 Ottawa 30/25/0.00 Paris 55/48/0.20 Ric de Janeiro 91/75/0.04 Rome 63/55/1.13 Santiago 86/46/0.00 San Paulo 82/70/1.02 Sappcrc 44/26/0.00 Seoul 59/41/0.00 Shanghai 62/45/0.00 Singapore 84/79/0.39 Stockholm 31/28/0.00 Sydney 75/64/0.06 Taipei 75/68/0.02 Tei Aviv 65/55/1.01 Tokyo 50/48/0.75 Toronto 34/32/Tr Vancouver 52/41/0.00 Vienna 39/36/0.00 Warsaw 37/35/0.17
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Nutrition, D2 Fitness, D3 Money, D4-D5 Medicine, D6-D8 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2014
O www.bendbulletin.com/health
MONEY
'We havethis barrier': How to get teens to see their doctors? • Providers say screening adolescents now will help preventhealth issuesdown the road By Tara Bannow
care for the local OHP population. "So it's kind of a gap."
The Bulletin
Ah, the teen years. Many parents know them as a time when their kids don't
seem to listen. Maybe they talk back. Dress funny.
Andy Tulks/The Bulletin
Jody DeLand, the owner of Imaging Alternatives in Bend, looks at an image of her taken using the digital infrared thermal imag-
ing camera she uses onclients. Thermography proponents say this kind of imaging candetect breast cancer early without using radiation, but the FDAhasnot approved the device as a stand-alone screening method for breast cancer.
Not surprisingly, it's also hard to get young people to see a doctor, especially if they feel healthy. It's a problem not only in Central Oregon, but across the state and the
country. Among the nearly 11,000 eligible adolescents in Central Oregon who rely on the Oregon Health Plan, Oregon's version of Medicaid, about
1,600 — roughly 15 percent — had been to the doctor for their annual well-care visit as
of September.
Courtesy Imaging Alternatives
meet a number of health goals among their OHP populations, and getting a certain proportion of adolescents ages 12 to 21 in for their annual exams is
one of those. In Central Oregon, the goal is to screen 31.4 percent of
eligible adolescents by the end of 2014. With Central Oregon half way there in September,
Wells said it's unclear whether the region will meet the goal. Wells pointed out that the
number of people who are determined to be eligible for the screenings — the 11,000 figure — tends to go down after the end ofthe year because state officials realize that not all of
"We have this barrier
A sample of images taken using thermography byJody DeLand of Imaging Alternatives in Bend.
The state provides financial incentives to communities that
around culturally bringing your adolescent in, who seems to be perfectly healthy, annually for a check-up the wayyou would for your baby or your
them were enrolled in the pro-
Source Community Solutions,
with other parts of the state.
gram for the entire year. That will likely boost the 15 percent
figure,shesaid.Lastyear,29.3 percent of eligible adolescents toddler or yourself," said Kate in Central Oregon who rely on Wells, director of community OHP got the screenings, the health development for Pacific- fourth-highest rate compared the company that manages
SeeTeens/D4
NUTRITION
By Tara BannoweThe Bulletin
ody DeLand's last mammogram several years ago resulted in a biopsy that was painful, expensive and did notrevealcancer.Instead,the spotson the mammogram were calcifications, which commonly show up on the imagesusually as benign spots, although sometimes as signs of cancer. DeLand, a massage therapist for more than a decade,
feels like she got a"bad read" on her mammogram. Had she known then about a
screening technique called thermography, she said she would have avoided the
procedure. She's since become a thermographer. She purchased a digital infared thermal imaging camera and — within the past year — set up an office
Courtesy U.S. Food and Drug Administration
An X-ray image of a breast taken
usingmammography inwhicha cancerousmass shows up inwhite.
least eight years. Only a bimographycan detectbreast opsy can determine whether Thereamography, the cancer earlybypickingup cancer exists. "You get one everyyear, use of nonradiation digital on h eat patterns generated infrared thermal imaging by a n giogenesis, the creation you're goingto see if someto detect patterns of of new blood vessels thing starts happening," heat and blood flow ME D I C I NE in the development a DeLand said of thermography. "You're not going to get near the surface of tumor. thebody,iscommonly used T hermography, DeLand into hot water. You're not by providers who believe it s a i d, can detect tissue chang-going to all of a sudden have aids in the early detection es th a t may indicate tumor somethingreally, really critofbreast cancer. The idea, de v elopmentwithin its first ical if you keep up with your according to DeLand and year, whereas mammograannuals." manyof thetechnique's phy wo u ldn'tpickitup for at SeeThermal/D8 within Baker Family Naturopathic in Bend.
p r o ponents, is that ther-
Medical organization positions onthermography: American CancerSociety: "Thermography has been around for manyyears, but studies have shown that it's not an effective screening tool for finding breast cancer early. Although it has been promoted as helping detect breast cancer early, a 2012 research review found that thermography was able to detect only a quarter of the breast cancers found by mammography. In other words, it failed to detect 3 out of 4 cancers that were
known to be present in the breast."
Susan G.Komen:"Thermography uses infrared light to measure temperature differences on thesurface of the breast. Both breast cancer andbenign (not cancer) conditions can causeabnormal heat patterns. Thermography cannot distinguish between cancerous andbenign heat patterns. And, because thermography measures heat at the surface of the breast, it is not good at finding cancers deeper within the breast tissue."
American College of Radiology:"The position of the American College of Radiology is that thermography has not been demonstrated to have value asa screening, diagnostic or adjunctive imaging tool."
Exercise's effect onthe mind:placebo? By Gretchen Reynolds
FITNESS
New York Times News Service
Exercise seems to be good for the human brain, with
many recent studies suggesting that regular exercise improves memory and thinking skills. But an interesting
minds sharp throughout our lives. In experimental science, the best, most reliable studies
randomly divide participants into two groups, one of which
new study asks whether the
receives the drug or treat-
apparent cognitive benefits from exercisearerealorjust
ment being studied and the other of which is given a placebo, similar in appearance to the drug, but not containing the active ingredient. Placebos are important, because they help scientists tocontrolforpeople'sexpectations. If people believe that
a placebo effect — that is, if we think we will be "smarter"
afterexercise,doourbrains respond accordingly? The answer has significant implications for any of us hoping to use exercise to keep our
a drug, for example, will lead
effect. While many studies
to a certain outcome, their
suggest that exercise may have cognitive benefits, those
bodies may produce that result even if the volunteers are taking a lookalike dummy pill. That's the placebo effect, and its occurrence suggests that the drug or procedure
experiments all have had a notable scientific limitation:
They have not used placebos. This issue is not some abstruse scientific debate. If the
under consideration isn't as effective as it seems; some of the work is being done by people's expectations, not by the medicine.
cognitive benefits from exer-
Recently, some scientists
benefits could be ephemeral and unable in the long term
have begun to question whether the apparently beneficial effects of exercise on
thinking might be a placebo
ciseare a resultofa placebo effect rather than of actual
changes in the brain because of the exercise, then those to help us remember how to
spell "ephemeral."
See Placebo/D3
Brian Stauffer / New York Times News Service
Fish is better for you than red meat and poultry. It's not a popular choice in the kitchen, but there are ways to fix that.
Picking apart objections to eating fish orseafood By Jane E. Brody
remains so unloved in com-
New Yor" Times News service
parison with the other sources
I grew up eating fish. My family enjoyed a fish meal at least once a week, usually
of a n imal protein: red meat and p oultry. I kno w all the excuses: "I
mackerel, salmon trout (now
don ' t know what to buy." "I
called steelhead) or flounder. d o n't know how to prepare Lox, pickled herring, smoked i t ." "It smells up the kitchen." "I once ate bad fish whitefish and sable B» were occasional treats. and never touched it ' Tlps to In summer, when I again." There are ways eatlng caught little sunfish to overcome these obflsh m«e j e c tions. (A decade ago, and perch in a local responslbiy I produced a seafood lake, my mother duti~2 fully cleaned and pancookbook with Richfried them. Yum!
ard Flaste to facilitate
My sons like fish, and this.) And it helps to know how fishing, too. They often took a n d why to choose certain fish sardine sandwiches for lunch a n d shellfish over others. at school; I knew they would
L et's start with health. Fish
not be traded for PBkJ. When is good for you, better than they pulled a 5-pound carp hea r t -damaging red meat and from a Minnesota river, I
even b e t ter than lean poultry.
stuffed and baked it, to the delight of dinner guests. I'm
Oil y fish like salmon, mackere l , bluefish, herring and sardines are rich in omega-3 fatty acids.
thrilled, too, that all four
grandsons like fish. So it baffles me that fish
SeeFish /D2
I know all the excuses: "I don't know what to buy." "I don't know how to prepare it." "It smells up the kitchen." "I once ate bad fish
and never touched it again." There are ways to overcome these objections.
D2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2014
HEALTH
NUrarnoN
EVENTS
MONDAY
Relearninghowto eat fish moreresponsibly
UNDERSTANDINGMEDICINES IN OLDERADULTS, GENERAL PRINCIPLES:Learn how medicines affect older adults differently, presented by Oregon Care Partners; free, registration required; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Red Lion Hotel, 1415 NEThird St.,
On a weeklong cruise along the shores of southeast Alaska this year, the dining room menu included wild salmon,Dungenesscraband sablefish.Many ofmy fellow 63 passengers had neither heard of nor tasted sable. No wonder: Almost all of this delectable, nutritious fish caught by Americans is exported, along with about one-third of all our wild catch. Instead, we dine on farmed seafood imported from countries such asChina, Thailand andChile; 86 percent of the seafood weconsume is imported. Despite the overwhelming popularity of shrimp among Americans, nonewasserved on thetrip. A naturalist who lectured on board cautioned that almost all the shrimp reaching American tables is imported, half of it farmed in Asia — mostly under conditions that would ruin eventhe most voracious appetite. Shrimp farms in Asia havebeenswept by bacterial and viral infections. When asite becomes unusable, shrimp farmers simply moveon, destroying more miles of mangrove along the shoreand wrecking habitats for all manner of wildlife, including spawning fish. There is nothing inherently wrong with farmed seafood, says PaulGreenberg, the author of two books on seafood, "Four Fish: TheFuture of the Last Wild Food" and "American Catch: TheFight for Our Local Seafood." Greenberg describes several efforts to produce andmarket farmed seafood in anenvironmentally sound manner. Fish and shellfish are byfar the most nutritious sources of animal protein, more sothan land animals, and we shouldbeeatingmuchmoreofthem.Evennow,however, it is not possible to satisfy the world's appetite with the wild catch from oceans, rivers and lakes. Thatamounts about170 billion pounds of fish a year,Greenberg said in an interview. If everyone were toeat at least two servings of fish a week, including one oily fish such assalmon, as nutritional guidelines suggest, 60 billion more pounds wouldbeneededto meetthedemand. So the farming of fish and shellfish is here to stay. But if we must farm, it must be doneresponsibly, with an emphasis on safety and future viability. And those who shopfor and dine onfish, whether wild or farmed, must do soknowledgeably if future generations are to havethesame options. We've beenadmonished to avoid farmed salmon, for instance, a relative bargain that sells in most markets for $9 or $10 apound. Yet wild salmon costs at least 50 percent morebecausethesupplyhasbeendevastatedmainly by the thousands of dams onAmerican rivers that
Bend; www.oregoncarepartners. com, info@oregoncarepartners. com or 800-930-6851.
WEDNESDAY COFFEE 8CONNECTION: Meet other people whose lives have been affected by cancer; free; 12:30 p.m.; St. Charles Cancer Center, 2100 NE Wyatt Court, Bend; www.stcharlescancer.org or 541-706-3754.
FjTNESS EVENTS
TODAY RUNNING PERFORMANCE BIOMECHANICSCLASS: Designed by Jay Dicharry and taught by Jen Luebke; for runners 15 to 105, beginners and elites; Level1, 6:30 p.m.; Level 2, 5:30 p.m; $72 for six weeks; Rebound Physical Therapy and Biomechanics Lab, 1160 SW Simpson Ave., Ste. 200, Bend; info@REPoregon. com or 541-322-9045. THANKSGIVINGDONATION MAT CLASS:A pilates class to benefit the Bethlehem Inn; free, donations accepted, registration requested; 10-11 a.m.; Bend Pilates, 155 SWCentury Drive, Suite 104; www.bendpilates.net or 541-647-0876.
Dec.4 RUNNING PERFORMANCE BIOMECHANICSCLASS: Designed by Jay Dicharry and taught by Jen Luebke; for runners 15 to 105, beginners and elites; Level1, 6:30 p.m.; Level 2, 5:30 p.m; $72 for six weeks; Rebound Physical
Therapy andBiomechanics Lab, 1160 SW Simpson Ave., Ste. 200, Bend; info©REPoregon. com or 541-322-9045.
Dec. 5 LIVING APEACEFULAND JOYFUL LIFE:Increase inner
awarenessthrough proper breathing, positive focus exercise and silencing mind chatter; $20 per class or $75 for series; 6:45-8:15 p.m.; Namaspa,1135 NW Galveston Ave., Bend; www.namaspa.com, angelheartofmotivations©gmail. com or 971-217-6576.
Fish Continued from 01 These are polyunsaturated fatty acids that may protect a gainst heart
a t tacks a n d
stroke, help control blood clotting and build cell membranes in t h e
RESTORATIVEYOGA WORKSHOP: Workshop
will focus onpostures and breathing exercises designed to strengthen immunity, increase your energy and reduce stress; $20; noon-2 p.m.; Juniper Yoga, 369 NE RevereAve., Ste. 104, Bend; 541-389-0125.
development.
Omega-3s may also help ameliorate a variety of conditions, such as cancer, de-
pression, inflammatory bowel disease, and autoimmune disorders like lupus and rheumatoid arthritis.
The best evidence for the of people who have long eaten fish, as opposed to taking supplements of omega-3s. Nearly three decades ago, Dutch researchers published
a groundbreaking study in The New England Journal of Medicine. Intrigued by the extremely low death rate from coronary heart disease among Greenland Eskimos, the Dutch
team followed 872 men aged 40 to 59 for 20 years and found that those who ate as little as
PEOPLE •DavidHolloway,MD,CPE, FAAFP,hasjoined Bend Memorial Clinic as chief medical officer. Holloway was previouslythe chief medical officer at Salem Health.
Howto submit Events:Email information to healthevents@ bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at bendbulletin. com. Allow at least10 days before thedesired date of publication. Ongoing class listings must be updated monthly and will appear at bendbulletin.com/ healthclasses. Contact: 541-383-0358. Announcements: Email information about local people or organizations involved in health issues to healthevents© bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358.
Two useful bits of advice for consumers: • At fish counters, look for the eco-label of the Marine Stewardship Council, which represents the international gold standard for sustainable fishing practices. • When shopping or eating out, consult the color-coded guideproducedbytheMontereyBay Aquarium, selecting mostly fish on the green list and avoiding those red-listed. popular shellfish. Butmanyother species haveall butdisappeared fromseafood counters andrestaurant menus. Where is the orange roughy that wasall the rage a decadeago?When wasabalonelastonaregularseafood menu? Thinkstock Consumers must begin to consider alternatives. Oily We've been told to avoid farmed salmon, for Insubstitutes for salmon, for instance, include mackerel, stance. But wlth wild salmon belng so expensivebluefish, herring, sardines andanchovies. (Most of the is farmed salmon really so bad? latter are used to make fish meal for farmed salmon.) Stocks of cod havedeclined so muchfrom overfishing that many Northeastern fisheries were forced to shut "If we are going to continue to eat down before the entire species disappeared. Those wild salmon, we must eat them seeking a flaky, "nonfishy" wild alternative might select sparingly as the rarest of delicacies, Alaskan pollock, popular in fish sticks, fast-food fish sandwiches andCalifornia rolls. and their price should reflect their In the best of all worlds, mussels, nearly always sold rarity in the world." from hygienically farmed stock, would replace shrimp as the leading shellfish. Like other bivalves, mussels are — Paul Greenberg, author filter feeders that cleanse thewater they live in, stocking up on valuable omega-3 fatty acids from algae in the process. Mussels arealso low in calories, and muchlower in choprevent the fish from spawning. "If we aregoing to continue to eatwild salmon, wemust lesterol thanshrimpandsquid. Greenberg argues that the harvest of wild fish must eat themsparingly asthe rarest of delicacies, andtheir price be better controlled if we are to maintain sustainable should reflect their rarity in theworld," Greenberg wrote. But how manyfamilies of modest means canafford to populations. Weneedan"ocean policy that looks at wild and domesticated fish as two components of a common do so? And is farmed salmon really so bad? future," he wrote in "Four Fish." Some critics haveworried that farmed varieties might He pleads for a standard that will boost fish supplies in contaminate the genepool of wild salmon. But as Greenas sustainable amanner aspossible. berg noted, almost all the farmedsalmon we're now "Humans should purposefully select a handful of fish eating comes from Chile, where there are nowild salmon. There is little chance that those farmed fish will cross the species that stand up to industrial-size husbandry with the goal of compensating for the hugegap betweenwild equator and mingle genetically with our wild stock. supply and growing humandemand," Greenberg wrote. Along with salmon,the most popular fish onAmerican — Jane E.Bredy, NewYork TimesNews Service plates areseabass, cod andtuna. Shrimp is byfar the most
If choosing which fish to buy is your issue, search out a specialty store or supermarket seafood counter that hasa knowledgeable clerk. Ask for recommendations and preparation ideas. Plenty of stores will have recipes available.
one or two fish meals a week had a 50 percent lower death rate from heart attacks than those who did not eat fish.
bendbulletin.com
still at 100 pounds per capita. appear a little raw when takPoultry intake has risen from en from the oven or stovetop, 41 pounds in the 1960s to 99 Greenberg suggested. "By the pounds a person today. time it gets to the table, it will If choosing which fish to be properly done," he said. I buy is your issue, search out agree. a specialt y store orsupermarSome people have to be cauket seafood counter that has a tious about seafood. Anyone knowledgeable clerk. Ask for with a clear-cut allergy to any recommendations and prepa- fish or shellfish, which can be ration ideas. Plenty of stores life-threatening, should avoid will have recipes available. it and learn what other varietMake sure you're getting ies may cross-react. fresh fish, which should not Pregnant women are adsmell "fishy." The freshest fish vised to limit their consumpis sold frozen, unless it comes tion of fish like tuna and from local waters. I avoid buy- swordfish with high levels of ing fish on Mondays because m ercury, which can injure the most wholesale markets are developing fetal brain. But priclosed on Sundays and Mon- or pregnancy restrictions on day's fish is more likely to be raw fish (sushi and sashimi) old. have been lifted, so long as the I f the fish you buy i s fish has been frozen at 0 to miwrapped in plastic, it will be- nus 4 degrees Fahrenheit for come smelly unless it's frozen at least three days to kill any right after purchase. I always parasites. rinse and pat dry fish before cooking it. Weekly If you live near a c oast,
Other studies linked fish consumption t o
Find It All Online
b r a in. T hey
are also important to an infant's visual and neurological
benefitscomes from studies
Dec. 6
Tips
check out farmers markets or a r e d uced stores for locally caught fish
risk of strokes, although later and shellfish, which is likely to research concluded that the be freshest and more flavorfuL lifesaving benefit was limited Farmed fish is not necesto people at high risk of car- sarily the ecological or health diovascular disease. disaster some claim it to be. Given that heart d i sease American catfish, for examand stroke are the leading ple, is "our most successfully causes of death among Ameri- farmed fish, and the process cans, you'd think this research creates wetlands that birds use might have drastically lifted a lot," Greenberg said. Farmed our consumption of fish. Alas, salmon now comes mostly relatively little change has from Chile, where it cannot occurred. disrupt wild populations. Fish consumption reached Most mussels come from a high of 16.6 pounds per per- farms and help to clean the son a year in 2004, and has water they live in. They are declined slightly since, ac- low in fat and calories, are cording to the Department of good sources of omega-3s and Agriculture. are very low in cholesterol. On "Asians eat about 35 pounds the other hand, shrimp (half of fish a year, including bony of it farmed, often under quesfish," Paul Greenberg,the au- tionable conditions), squid and thor of two popular books on lobster are high in cholesterol. seafood, said. Those c oncerned a b out This may help to explain the cooking fish and its odoriflonger life expectancy of the erous aftereffect have two Japanese. options: Grill it outdoors, or Although meat intake by choose fish when you dine out Americans ha s n o se-dived or take out. from a peak of nearly 150 A frequent kitchen mistake pounds a person in 1971, it is is overcooking fish. It should
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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN D 3
FrmEss Using your hand on the farm can grant Don't let winter wreck
you a leg up for arm-wrestling success your workout routines By Des Bieier The Washington Post
I have never seen the Sylvester Stallone arm-wrestling movie "Over the Top," and I
her to get a little wild; now, as a farmer near Leesburg, Virginia, Ives also appreciates the opportunity to "put on a nice
By Lance Benzel Winter brings an unde-
done was to compete, as "The
Wrestlers, is a means to several Crone," in the very first CLAW ends. Ives told me she was at- organization, and the friend tracted to CLAW because of its
was inspired to set up an affilmission of "empowering wom- iate in Upstate New York Ives en through theater, philanthro- participated in several Hudson
py and arm-wrestling." Valley Broads Regional Arm There is certainly a strong, Wrestling League events, winand highly entertaining, the- ning one, but eventually decidatrical component to CLAW
ed that she wanted to switch
events, which usually occur
careers and get into farming, two to four times a year. Each u ltimately finding work i n wrestler adopts a persona, Virginia. complete with an elaborate cosAt Potomac Vegetable Farms tume, stage mannerisms and in Purcellville, Virginia, last an entourage. month, I watched her climb The events are essentially atop a truck loaded with bales fundraisers, with all proceeds of hay and toss about 50 to the going to local charities. In ad- ground, so they could be used dition to purchasing tickets, for mulching. Another farmspectators are encouraged to er estimated that each bale bet on the bouts (part of the weighed about 35 pounds, but entourage's job is to cajole the that some of the hay would be crowd into making these bets), wet and thus weigh much more. and packages of donated goods Ives also planted garlic that and servi ces are auctioned off . October afternoon, moving By the end of SuperCLAW along a row and pushing the 2014, held at Atlas Performing bulbs into the dirt, then coverArts Center in Washington, it ing them with soil. Such work was announcedthat more than is good for sttengthening the $7,000had been raised forM ir- hands and simply building up iam's Kitchen, which works to endurance, both of which she alleviate the plight of the city's says have helped her in arm homeless. wrestling. Ives mentioned other Ives competed in her usual chores, such as lifting crates of guise of "Jackie O'Nasty," a nod produce and pounding stakes to the"Kennedypride" she feels for tomatoes, that sounded, if as a Massachusetts native. She not like a barrel of laughs, at said that in earlier years, when least like activities that could she worked as a math teach- lead to abarrel chest. er in Brooklyn, she enjoyed Of course, not everyone who the way the character allowed wants to getinto arm-wrestling,
With ice and snow on many trails, you'll w ant t o t r a ck
your workout routine. Snow, biting wind and gray skies can sap motivation and leave you
/
ton recently and describingthat
of the Collective of Lady Arm
spending wisely.
niable beauty, but let's be honest: It can be a killer for
outfit." don't plan to. But I did go to see But make no mistake, the SuperCLAW 2014 — "The Na- women at SuperCLAW were tional Championship of Lady in it to win it, and Ives would
Arm Wrestlers" — in Washing- never have made it out of the first round without some serias "over the top" seems like an ous strength. She possesses a understatement. solid frame and power built up Washington's r e p resenta- from an athletic background tive at the competition, Maida — induding playing on her Ives, didn't quite reach the top, high school football teambut she more than did herself but in preparation for Superand the hometown contingent CLAW, her workouts had less proud, advancing to the semifi- to do with cross-training than nals out of a field of 16. As for crop-planting (plus, of course, a what got Ives into arm-wres- lot of arm-wrestling, induding tling shape, give some credit against any man willing to take to topsoil — her training regi- her on). men essentially consists of the Ives was living in New York chores she performs every day in 2008 when a friend menas a farmer. tioned "this crazy thing her Arm wrestling, as practiced mom did i n C h a rlottesville by the two dozen or so chapters (Virginia)." What the mom had
thebank. For runners, it's a matter of
The Gazette(CoiotadoSprings, Colo.)
/
PeteMarovich/The Washington Post
down a pair of trail running shoes with deep, aggressive treads. Wearing "microspikes" — which resemble snow tires housebound. for your shoes — can be an It doesn't have to be so. advantage or even a necessity With grit, the right gear on some snowbound runs and and a little creativity, win- hikes. If you're active early in the ter doesn't have to be a setback in your fitness. Here morning or late afternoon,
Maida Ives, of Washington, left, dressed as "Jackie O'Nasty," com-
are a few simple steps that
headlamps are essential -
petes against Shannon LupIen, of Rochester, New York, dressed as "ErIn Go Bra," at SuperCLAW 2014, the National Championship of Lady Arm Wrestiers, on Nov. 15 In Washington.
can keepyour momentum going and help you reclaim your offseason. • Strength in numbers: Join a MeetUp group.At Meetup.com, you will find people who share your love
not just to illuminate the way ahead,but to ensure thatcars see you coming. And, please, repeat after us: Bring layers.
or simplybuild up strength, can most weight she could manage drop everything and make like — and to work on being "quick Old MacDonald. Ives told me off the grab" (i.e., the start of a that gymgoers could mimic bout). It all paid off at a December stacking crates by doing dead lifts and isolated biceps curls. 2013 event. Competing as the A nother member o f
t h e "Silent Killer," a beret-topped mime, Whitney took the whole
District of Columbia chapter (called D/CLAW) did employ an extensive gym regimen while preparingfora previous event.
thing, leaving foes "really, really, really surprised — did not
Susan Whitney is one of the
An ankle injury sustained while running took Whitney
founders of D/CLAW; she told me that, while house-bound during 2010's snowywinter, she read about the Charlottesville group in a Washington Post article and immediately went
expect me to win."
expeditions throughout the
It's a winter redoubt for the
out of this month's action and
season as part of the us-
region's mountain bikers, run-
openedthedoor forIvesto rep-
er-driven website. When wind is battering
ners, hikers and bird watch-
resent D/CLAW. Jackie O'Nas-
ty, dad in a pillboxhat and sunglasses, took out fightin' Irish-
to the group's Facebook page, woman "Erin Go Bra" in the seeking like-minded people first round, winning twice with from the District. her weaker left arm (contesWhitney said she has always tants alternated arms inbest-ofsurprised people by how strong three bouts; the initial side was she is for her size (5-feet-2, 120 chosen by coin flip). pounds), and after training "a Ives then beat "Steel Maglot" for D/CLAW's first event, in nolia" ("a Southern belle on June 2010, she got all the wayto the rampage")before running the final. But in later events, she
into a buzzsaw, almost literal-
found herself being eliminated increasingly early, and became sodiscouraged that she stopped competing altogether. After some prodding by her husband, though, Whitney researched arm-wrestling-spe-
ly, in Maine's Lumbersmack Sally, who revved arealchain-
cific workouts, which noted the
"You start out and it's cold,
and you get halfway out and of the outdoors, whether you're hot, then it's cold again you run, hike, cross-coun- — lots of layers," said Josh try ski, snowshoe or make Herman, a founding member snow angels. of the Attack Pack running There's a psychological group, which has endured winadvantage in surrounding ter morning runs since 2009. yourself with other hardy • Head south: For example, souls, says Brian Kerkhoff, outside of Colorado Springs, of Colorado Springs, who Lake Pueblo State Park is loorganizes mountain bike cated about 45 minutes south.
saw (with its chain and teeth
removed) on her way to the stage. The final was a whenHelga-met-Sally affair, with the imposing, Viking-helmeted "Helga Hammerfist" taking
importance of pulling an oppo- the SuperCLAW2014 title back nent's hand toward her. She be- with her to Minneapolis. After the event was over, Ives gan simulating the action with pulley weights at the gym and told me she was delighted that she "got as far" as she did. Her practicing different grips. She put less focus on her bi- day had begun at 6 a.m., when ceps and more on her entire she awoke to haul produce to upper body, doing push-ups a Leesburg farmer's market. and pull-ups as well as work- Now, dose to midnight, she ing her triceps and forearms. said, "I'm just really happy. This is very, very different from She alsoheeded advice to "max out" — doing eight reps of the life on the farm."
your windows and the view
ers, boasting an extensive trail networkthat is sometimes free
outside is dreadful, it helps
of snow for weeks at a stretch.
knowing there's a group Farther south, of course, it'll that will be waiting outside, be even warmer. bundled up and ready to • Indoor options: As Hersuffer with you. man emphasizes, it's import" Sometimes, just t h e ant to recognize your limits. motivation to get out of the
When temperatures fall into
house and go do it can be the single digits or worse, the huge," he said. risks of outdoor activity rise It also offers a chance to dramatically (another reason commiserate. to stick with a group). "There are times when it's • Gear: The tab for workout gear can add up fast, not such a good idea," Herman but it doesn't have to break said.
mobile
Putting Care Back Into Health Care
dentures j g g 0% Discountapplieswhenadis mentioned for a full set ofdentures...
•
Placebo Continued from 01 Studying this issue, however, is difficult. There is no placebo for exercise and no way
to blind people about whether they are exercising. They know if they are walking or cycling or not. So researchers at Flori-
In actual experiments, stretching and toning regimens generally have little if any impact on people's cognitive skills. Walking, on the other hand, seems to substantially improve thinking ability. But some survey respondents believed the opposite ... and mental multitasking. The
driving the improvements in
da State University and the
other volunteers were asked
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaigncame up with a clever workaround. They decided to focus on expectations, on what people anticipate that exercise will do for thinking. If people's expectations jibe closely with the actual bene-
the same questions but about a
cognition seen in studies after exercise, Stothart said, then
fits, then at least some of those
improvements are probably a result of the placebo effect and not of exercise.
The scientists had seen this situation at work during an
earlier study of video games and cognition. Past research had suggested that playing action-oriented video games improved players' subsequent thinking skills. But when scientists in the new study asked
video-game players to estimate by how much the games would improve their t h inking, the
players' estimates almost exactly matched the gains seen
regular walking program. people should have expected In a ctual e x periments, walking to be more beneficial stretching and toning regi- than stretching. They didn't, mens generally have little if implying that the changes in any impact on people's cog- the brain and thinking after nitive skills. Walking, on the exercise were physiologically other hand, seems to substan- genuine. tially improve thinking ability. Of course, this study was But some survey respon- small and involved a self-sedents believed the opposite, lected group of people who estimating that the stretching happened to like completing and toning program would be online surveys.Some said more beneficial for the mind they exercised; others said than walking. The volunteers' they did not. None claimed to estimates of the likely cogni- be familiar with the science retive improvements from gentle lated to exercise and the brain, toning averaged about a 3 on but it is impossible to know if a scale of 1 to 6. The estimates they were being forthright. of the benefits from walking Still, the findings are strong were lower. enough to suggest that exThe data, while it did not ercise really does change involve any actual exercise, is the brain and may improve good news for people who do thinking, Stothart said. That exercise. conclusion should encourage "The results from our study scientists to look even more suggest that the benefits of closely into how, at a molecuaerobicexercise are not a pla- lar level, exercise remodels the cebo effec t, " said Cary Sto- human brain, he said. It also
on cognitive tests after playing. In other words, the cognitive benefits of playing video games appearedto be largely thart, a graduate student in the result of a placebo effect. cognitive psychology at FloriFor the new study, which da State who led the study. was published last month in If expectations had been PLOS One, the researchers re-
should spur the rest of us to
move, since the benefits are, it seems, not imaginary, even if they are in our head.
peated this experiment but fo-
cused on exercise. Recruiting 171 people through an online survey system, they asked half of these volunteers to estimate by how much a stretching and toning program performed three times a week might im-
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2014
MoNEY
mart ones: t e uture rontiero eat care? By Eryn Brown
ing to assemble the empirical
from earlier health education
Los Angeles Times
evidence needed to persuade
The West Hollywood club scene was just picking up as Charles Lea and other UCLA grad students fanned
health systems and insurers to embrace — and pay forlarge-scale m-health systems. "We have all of this cool technology, and all kinds of
research effortsthat sought to tap into gay social media
out a l on g
S a nt a M o n i ca
Boulevard. Their goal that evening: Find young black men, gay and bisexual, willing to participate in a study on how smartphone apps can help improve overall health and combat diseases such as AIDS and
n etworks
w i t h out a l w a y s
working with those networks. Online Buddies — which owns Manhunt and Jack'd and bills
show that."
itself as the world's largest gay brand centered on connecting people in search of friendships or lasting relationships — is collaborating on the project. "We're going back to the drawing board," said David
Dobkin is using custom, mobile-phone-linked motion
Novak, formerly of the Centers for Disease Control and
It wasn't easy. Relatively few young black men, a group with rising rates of HIV, congregate at go-to gay hot spots such as West Hollywood. This night, most of those approached by Lea
sensors to monitor the gait of
Prevention and now the se-
stroke and hip-replacement patients. Developing the proprietary technology is necessary becausefitness trackers commonly available, such as
nior health strategist at Online
Fitbit, don't provide the spatial
would be meaningful?"
and the recruiters declined to participate.
data or level of accuracy he
I n West H o l lywood t h e night Lea and his team were
cool applications," said Bruce
Dobkin, director of the neurologic rehabilitation program at UCLA. "But will anything meaningfully improve healthcare? We need clinical trials to
diabetes.
MichaelRobinson Chavez/Los Angeles Times
"People don't want to talk," Thomas Davis works the streets of West Hollywood on Sept. 16, talking with young black males about Lea said. "They want to party." participating in a study about mobile apps and their ability to help in medical conditions, in Los AngeB ut t h e r e s earch t e am les. With more andmore people glued to cellphones than ever, technologists, physicians, researchers pressed on, eager to assess and patients are trying out how to use the gadgets to improve people's health. how mobile phones can be used to spread information on testing and safe sex among to monitor and manage con- among Los Angeles AIDS minority men most likely to ditions that plague millions of workers trying to figure out engage in risky behavior. Americans and drive up med- how best to use smartphones. The effort reflects both the ical costs. specific potential and the challenges Wireless phones are feeding Reaching a facing investors, medical ex- real-time data to doctors from demographic perts and government officials heart and blood glucose monWhile rates of HIV infection who want to harness the reach itors, and from Bluetooth-en- have plateaued nationwide, and power of mobile phones to abled inhalers. Built-in camer- they have risen among youngrevolutionize health care. as are being used to snap pho- er men who have sex with tos and diagnose suspicious men, and most acutely among A mobile generation growths, and GPS technology young men of color, said Ian By some estimates, 90 per- and cell phone accelerometers Holloway, an assistant procent of adults in the United are tracking patients' physical fessor at the Luskin School of States have access to cell- activity. Text and other mes- Public Affairs at the Universiphones, which makes mo- saging systems are remind- ty of California, Los Angeles, bile health, sometimes called ing patients to exercise, watch and lead researcher on the m-health, promising terrain what they eat, use condoms, Healthy Selfie project involvfor innovation — particular- check blood sugar and take ing the grad students. ly when it comes to targeting medications. Despite some early warihard-to-reach groups such as Some physicians hope to ness among members ofthose one day use phone-connected groups, as well as app develyoung, gay black men. "History will show that the sensors to catch serious con- opers, Holloway said mobile mobile phone will be one of ditions, such as asthma and technology can offer young, the most profound influences cardiac irregularity, before pa- gay black men something they for improving public health tients know anything is wrong. don't currently have: a central-
HNsoN
National Institutes of Health.
That sort of advancement
ized spot, at their fingertips, to
get authoritative health guid-
ers and technologists are try-
sald. T he street i nterviews in West Hollywood are part of
the cause, developing and testing a wide range of apps a larger trial-and-error effort
Teens Continued from D1 Nationally, about half of adolescents ages 12 to 21 are getting the annual exams, according to a February report by the U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
Oregon has set a statewide goal of getting 57.6 percent of adolescents on OHP in for their annual checks in 2014,
which would require a significant increase from 2013, in
which 29.2 percent received the checks statewide. The emphasis on getting teens to see doctors has only come about in recent years. In Oregon, it began in 2012 when the state included adolescent well-care visits as one of the
17 measures used to gauge the success of reaching OHP patients in communities.
The medical community has been slow to recognize the importance of checking adolescents for serious issues that
tend to crop up during those pivotal developmental years, said Ellie Milan, a pediatric nurse practitioner for Mosaic Medical, a provider that sees
31 percent of the adolescents in Central Oregon who rely on OHP and are eligible for the screenings. During their teen years, kids are faced with a number
of choices whose decisions can have negative consequences, such as smoking, riding in cars with people who have been drinking and having a poor diet, Milan said. "What we're really trying to address is preventative care for these high-morbidity and
high-mortality issues that go
needs, Dobkin said. Scientists must figure out
~ lell+
Patrick, director of the Univer- presents a major opportunisity of California, San Diego, ty to make medicine more Center for Wireless and Pop- cost-efficient and more reulation Health Systems."The sponsive, said cardiologist potential is huge." Leslie Saxon, founder of the But for that promise to pan digital-health-focused Center out,researchers,medical pro- for Body Computing at the viders and technology compa- University of Southern Calinies need to find a sweet spot, fornia.Shesaid sheforesees a combining user appeal with future "of everyone being contools that deliver valuable in- tinually diagnosed and continformation and clear medical ually treated." "If you could virtualize the benefits. That's no simple task, as the care of many patients, you can West Hollywood HIV study save hospital beds for those hinted. who really need them," Saxon Entrepreneurs a n d r esearchers are committed to
how do they want them'? What
recruiting subjects, Markqes how to effectively collect and Johnson, 24, said it m akes analyze the mountains of data sense to use mobile technolmobile devices could one day ogy to educate people about stream to health professionals. HIV. But, he a dded, many And s ecuring p e rson- could find the information Googleand Apple,are among al information is vital to for irritating. "People don't want to look at those funding m-health re- m-health development and search and development. acceptance. One stroke patient that," he said. "It's like going to The attraction of m-health who refused to be monitored Pandora or YouTube and havtechnology, for health-care told Dobkin "the NSA knows ing to watch an ad." experts and investors alike, is e nough about me," the r e the vast reach of smartphones searcher recalled. across geographic, ethnic and Commitmentconcerns socioeconomic groups. s ~re kere! But fully realizing the poEven among those already Step up tential of mobile health tech- using cellphones to manage to Bosch! nology requires protecting the their health, there remains a Stainless steel privacy of health information question of commitment. SurSupenor deaning and building user-friendly veys have found that half who &uel!!! apps for patients that capture use mobile fitness trackers to the sort of medical data pro- keep tabs on their workouts or fessionals need. diets stop using the programs "A lot of what's being built is within six months. still in the research stage," said Holloway said the Healthy TV.APPLIANCE Wendy Nilsen, who tracks de- Selfie project was a departure velopments in the field for the There's a widespread sense, she said, that much of what's being offered isn't yet delivering proven benefits. In clinical settings, research-
ever invented," said Dr. Kevin
Buddies. "Let's ask black men what they think of health messaging. If they want messages,
541 382-6447 ~ 2090 NE Wyatt Court ~ Suite 101 Bend OR 97701 ~ bendurology.com
ance on HIV.
S U r olo S~
"The new venues are phone applications, websites, chat rooms and message boards," he said. "These are the places guys meet each other, for a variety of purposes. Why not bring prevention to those digital spaces'?" Investors have poured about
$3 billion into digital health startups this year alone, including hundreds of millions into mobile health, according to MobiHealthNews, an online newsletter.
Los Angeles billionaire Dr. Patrick Soon-Shiong, along with Samsung, Qualcomm,
when she didn't spend time
talking about diet when she being injury, substance abuse, could tell the patient was achigh-risk behaviors, STDs," tively suicidal or was having she said. "It's really about pre- multiple sexual partners. vention at this age so we're Providers in Central Orenot getting adults in the office gon have gotten creative to try with issues that really could to reach all of the adolescents have been prevented at an ad- who need the screenings, even olescent visit." sneaking them into visits for About six months ago, Mo- sprained ankles or pink eye, saic began screening all of its Milan said. adolescent patients for depresM osaic providers, w ho sion or suicidal thoughts, Milan sponsor and staff the schoolsaid. Deschutes County also b ased health clinic a t E n has high rates of chlamydia, a sworth Elementary in Bend, sexually transmitted infection, routinely perform sports physwhich can be asymptomatic icals on any students who need in both males and females, so them. If those students happen screening teens annually for to be Mosaic patients, they'll chlamydia and gonorrhea and make the sports physicals talking to them about safe sex double as their annual wellis important, too, she said. care visit, Milan said. Com"That's one of the most im- bining the two visits does not portant things I touch on with increase the amount of time theseteenagers," Milansaid. it takes to perform the exam, The state of Oregon has a as sports physicals should alstrict set of guidelines around ready include questions about what an adolescent well-care a patient's health history and visit must include. In addifamily health history, she said. "You essentially can just tion to the standard physical exam, it's an assessment of the sign off on the paperwork as patient's medical and family long as you've done the exam medical history, their emotion- and identified any reason why al and mental well-being, their they couldn't participate in academic performance,their sports, which you should be diet and exercise and a time doing regardless," Milan said. for the provider to educate Wells said she thinks comthem on topics such as their bining the sports physicals reproductive health, the dan- and well-care visits holds gers of alcohol and tobacco promise, and she's hoping and injury prevention. more providers will start usAt Mosaic, all of that hap- ing the sports physicals as an along with adolescence — that
pens in a 20-minute visit, Mi-
llg
Thursday, November 27 10pm select stores" open until 2am 6am — 8pm on Black Friday all stores reopen Saturday 9:30am -8pm 4 Sunday 1 lam - 6pm Starting at Moonlight Madness, the Salvation Army and Toys for Tots will be collecting donations until 12/17! *Visit our website for more information and extended holiday hours
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Factory Stores 61334 South Highway 97, Bend, OR 97702 bendfactorystores.com
541.382.4736 &0
o pportunity to p erform t h e
lan said, adding that some- well-care visits.
"We have to think about has to prioritize and skip some where we can reach them," things if others seem more im- she said. portant. For example, Milan — Reporter: 541-383-0304, times that means the doctor
said there have been times
a ness.
oonig t
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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
MONE Y
ANALYSIS Taking aimat consumer inertia People who bought Affordable CareAct health plans for 2014 but who don't go back to shop again for 2015 will automatically keep the plans they first chose, even if the price of the plan goes wayup. Now the federal government is proposing thatwhen people sign up, theyshould geta choice of defaults for future years:to stay in the same plan, or switch to a cheaper one inthe same category if theirs gets too pricey. The proposed regulation, published Friday, suggests phasing in the additional choice, first giving states with their own exchanges theoption of offering it. By 2017, if the proposal becomes final, everyone who buys a plan through the federal system will be subject to such a policy of having a choice of defaults. Of course, customers who shop everyyear will get to pick whatever plan they want. AndThe New York Times' Upshot bloggers havebeen recommending that everyone buying insurance through the system do just that, becausethere are big price differences in many markets between the most popular plan from 2014andthe cheapest possible alternative plan in 2015. The proposal highlights a keyfeature of the Affordable Care Act's marketplaces, which has both benefits and drawbacks. It relies on competition between private health plans to keep prices low. That means that shoppers in many markets can find good deals, but only if they're willing to stomach the disruption of switching insurance every year. Some people will want to stay in a particular plan, even if the premium goes up, because they prefer its network of doctors or structure of deductibles and co-payments. Others will be more concerned about the price. The downside to the current policy is that people who donothing could getstuck withbig bills. The downside to the new option is that people who donothing could lose access to the doctors and drugs they rely on. There will surely be a lot of discussion about these trade-offs before the proposed rule becomes final. The potential impact is large. Wedon't know exactly how manypeople will go the auto-renew route eachyear, but historical evidence from other government programs suggests the preponderance will. Shopping for health insurance is hard and time-consuming, and inertia tends to takeover. A recent Gallup poll found that 68 percent of customers who were surveyed say they plan to renew their current plan. That meansthat whatever default policy the government chooses will have abig effect. There are alot of people who might experience sticker shock under the current policy — or unexpected changes under the new one.
i ionaires' mission: ar e in ea cos s By Alex Wayne
Making exchangespaytheirownway
Bloomberg News
PeWASHINGTON ter Peterson, the Blackstone
Group co-founder who has championed the cause of U.S. debt reduction, is now taking
aim at some $800 billion in annual waste in the nation's health care system.
The billionaire's New Yorkbased Peter G. Peterson Foundation will announce a $200 million offshoot next month,
the Peterson Center on Healthcare. The new organization
boasts a boldface-name advisory board — including Mic-
The AssociatedPress file photos
Bill Gates, left, and Peter Peterson — men who made their money
in tech and finance, respectively — are part of a new effort launch— and big goals. Peterson and ing next month that will try to find ways to slow the increase in U.S. his son Michael Peterson, the health care costs while improving care for patients. rosoft co-founder Bill Gates
president of the foundation,
are seeking to further slow the increase in U.S. health care
"As wemeasure performance itis outcomes
costs while improving care for patients.
and cost. I don't think there's anyone in the
"Health care is one of the
single greatest fiscal and economic challenges facing the country," Michael Peterson said in an interview. "We
spend twice as much as many
countrywho should be opposed to having better health care delivered to Americans at more efficient prices." — Michael Peterson, president of his father's foundation, the Peter G. Peterson Foundation
other advanced nations and have outcomes that are often
no better. We have an important opportunity to significantly improve the health and health care provided to our citizens and also improve our
economy." The United States spent about 17 percent of its gross
domestic product on health care in 2012, at least 5 percentage points more than any other developednation,according to the Organisation for Economic Co-operationand De-
velopment in Paris. The Institute of Medicine, a nonprofit that advises the
U.S. government, has estimated that about 30 cents of every dollar spent on health
care in 2009, or $765 billion, was wasted on unnecessary s ervices, i n efficient p r a c -
tices, high prices, excessive administrative costs, f r aud
as Obamacare. resources that states and local T he f o u ndation a l s o governments could otherwise reached out to Baker to solicit use for schools, and rising costs suggestions for the new health to employers for health benefits center's advisory board, Bak- suppresses raises in take-home er said. He said he declined to pay for workers, he said. "Everyone should be rowrespond. "Our main focus is to drive ing in the same direction in g reater performance in t h e terms of trying to improve perRon Pollack, executive disystem," Michael Peterson formance," Peterson said. rector of Families USA, a said. "As we measure perforDrew Altman, president health consumer advocacy mance it is outcomes and cost. and chief executive officer of group in Washington that is I don't think there's anyone in the Kaiser Family Founda- closely allied with the White the country who should be op- tion, a Menlo Park, Califor- House, said he sees a sepaposed to having better health nia, research group, said that ration between the Peterson care delivered to Americans at he seldom joins the boards health center and Peter Petermore efficient prices." of other organizations. He son's views on the federal budTo urge the government agreed to advise the Peter- get and debt. "Whether it's the p r ivate to cut the national debt, the son Center because he is Peterson Foundation f u n ds convinced that its mission is sector, employer-sponsored insurance, or individual coverresearch and holds an an- unique, he said. "It's the only organized ef- age that people buy, this initianual summit, among other activities. fort I know of to try to focus tive is designed to really make Peter Peterson, 88, was U.S. on actually gathering the evcommerce secretary under idence and validating what
and missed opportunities to prevent costly illnesses and
former President Richard Nixon from 1972 to 1973, then led conditions. Th e P e tersons' Lehman Brothers until 1984. new center wants to spend its He co-founded the Blackstone
money promoting practices by hospitals, doctors and others that cut that waste. The new organization will have to overcome the skepticism of Peterson's liberal crit-
delivery and payment reform and actually scaling it up across the entire country," Alt-
tersons' new health center is intended to further its namesake's political agenda. "Everything he's done has a clear bias toward cutting public-sector programs, Social Securityand Medicare," Baker said. "I worry this will carry in that same vein."
Michael Peterson said the health center has no politi-
and Affordable Care Act, is a
better value proposition," Pol-
lack said in a phone interview. "It doesn't come from the perspective of, our top priority is cutting the federal budget."
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clined to offer specific examples of projects the health care
center will support ahead of its Dec. 4 announcement. Jeffrey
Selberg, the center's executive director, said that the initial focus will include primary care and patients who require an inordinate amount of health
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that their quality of life is imsaid in an interview.
Education and wage stagnamember of the center's advi- tion, both issues of interest to sory board, as is Joseph An- liberals, are affected by high tos, a health economist at the U.S. health care costs, Michael American Enterprise Institute, Peterson said. Health care which opposes the law known spending "crowds out" budget
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care services,such as frail el-
mer senior adviser to President proved, their clinical condition Barack Obama who helped is as good as can be," Selberg design the Patient Protection
insurance system is a much
dation in 2008, he co-founded
cal agenda and deliberate- w ith t h ose p r oviders w h o ly sought out advisers from know how to care for these across the ideological spec- people very effectively so trum. Ezekiel Emanuel, a for-
sure that A m erica's health
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Group a year later. Before man said in an interview. creating the Peterson Foun-
focus on debt reduction is misM ichael P e t erson, 45 , guided and potentially harm- worked on the campaigns ful to the beneficiaries of pro- of President Bill Clinton and grams such as Medicare and Michael Dukakis, both DemSocial Security. One of those ocrats, and for former House critics, Dean Baker, co-direc- Majority Leader Dick Getor of the Center for Econom- phardt, a Democrat. ic and Policy Research, said The younger Peterson dehe wonders whether the Pe-
— The Associated Press
works and what doesn't in
the Concord Coalition, a budget watchdog group. He also owns the Fiscal Times, a digiics in Washington, who have tal news organization based in said the Peterson Foundation's
The federal government shelled out billions of dollars to get health insurance marketplaces going in the 14states that opted to run their own. Nowthey must act like true marketplaces andstart paying for themselves. Under President BarackObama's Affordable CareAct, state-run health insurance exchangesneed to befinancially self-sustaining starting in January. Someappear to be onthat path, while others have shaky funding models or evennoneat all. Some states, prohibited from using state money,are imposing fees on plans sold on themarketplaces. Others arespreading costs more widely — which, in one instance, hasdrawn afederal lawsuit. Rhode Island received high marks for the smooth rollout of HealthSource Rl amid last year's stumbles by the federal government (and by some states, including Oregon) and the agency director says the state's health care reform "revolution" has begun. But the state does not have away to pay for the exchange's long-term operations, and some lawmakers in the state General Assembly have suggested shifting to the federal exchange. The cost to operate Rhode Island's exchange is estimated at $17 million a year, although anearlier estimate pegged the cost at $24 million. Republican state Rep.Patricia Morgan introduced a bill last session to transfer its operations to the federal government, but the legislation was held for further study. "Think of what wecan dowith $24 million," she said. Some states havedecided to tap existing revenue. NewYork is relying on two agencies' general revenue, while Maryland is using money from anexisting 2 percent tax on insurance plans. Tocut costs, Colorado's state-run exchangehas reduced overall spending 18 percent, including on technology andmarketing. Earlier this year, California's exchangesaid it was setting aside $184 million in federal money to fight off projected budget shortfalls through 2016. About1.1 million people enrolled in the first year, exceeding projections, and officials hope to grow that to1.7 million during the second round of openenrollment.
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D6 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2014
MEDjctNE
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a ic i onswi a i e r e n r u
By Sandi Doughton ~The Seattle Times
because somebody might be a majority of patients I see, it is good candidate, and they re- literally a lifesaver," she said. ally need this drug, but I can't That includes Ian, a 30-yearSEATTLEtake them." old Pierce County man who The Affordable Care Act spoke on the condition of anomber Mellen was a newlywed when her requires Medicaid and most nymity because of the stigma privateinsuranceto coversub- associated with heroin. soldier husband was killed in Iraq. Just 18 stance-abuse treatment. That Addiction runs in his family, includes buprenorphine, which he said. His first taste was in can cost $300am onth ormore. high school, when he was preyears old, she turned to pain pills to dull But many physicians don't scribed Vicodin after a football the grief. want to work with addicts or injury. By the time he started add a new type of treatment taking Suboxone about a year But Mellen got hooked on the drugs and spiraled to their already-busy prac- ago, Ian was homeless and out tices. None of Grande's five ofwork. "I didn't have anything but into addiction. Before long, she was shooting up Thinkstock partners at Pioneer Family Experts believe recent regulation, which has made it tougher to get Practice decided to prescribe the clothes on my back." heroin. painkillers such as oxycodone, has caused an increase in the use buprenorphine. Today he has a job, a car, a "It's a very demanding house — and the ability to feel of heroin. "It was so easy to get, and so patients overcome addiction group of patients," said Dr. Ed- joy and happiness again. "I've many people are doing it," she without having to travel to a ward Cates, one of those part- experienced a level of normalsaid. "People who you see in methadone dinic every day. ple who need some form of ad- residents also can benefit sig- ners. He also worries that the cy I didn't think possible for the grocery store, people you Buprenorphine, marketed diction treatment are getting it, nificantly, because most of the benefits of the medication have me," he said. "I know the chalwould never expect are using under the name Suboxone, is said Dr. Charissa Fotinos, dep- state's methadone clinics are in been exaggerated. lenges I still face on a day-toit." available for addiction treat- uty chief medical officer for the urban areas. C linical trials show t h at day basis, but to me, it's a mir"Getting to a m e t hadone buprenorphine is slightly less acle drug." New data from the Univer- ment. But an analysis pub- Washington State Health Care sity of Washington show that lished this year found that less Authority. clinicevery day can be a pain effective t h a n me t h adone Addiction is a chronic, reheroin use among young adults than a third of certified physiLike methadone,"bupe," as in the butt for a lot of people," in eliminating opioid abuse. lapsing condition, and many in Washington state is soaring, cians surveyed were giving pa- it is sometimes called, blocks he said. Like methadone, it can also be people have to go through mulparticularly in rural and subur- tients the drug. symptoms of withdrawal and By the time Mellen decided dangerous. tiple cycles of treatment before ban areas where treatment and Many doctors who don't pre- craving, and it helps users to seek treatment, she had been The drug is an opioid and it sticks, Banta-Green said. But counseling can be hard to find. scribe buprenorphine said they avoid the temptation to relapse. shooting up for three years. "I can generate a high in people decadesof studies show that Last year, heroin was the were wary of working with The risk of overdosing on bupe was the worst of the worst," she w ho aren't regular users.Ithas maintenance medication, such leading reason people ages 18 addicts without a more robust is much lower than on meth- said. "At the end, I was on the become part of the illegal drug as methadone and buprenorto 29 sought treatment for sub- system of counseling and so- adone. And whilemethadone street." market — diverted by unscru- phine, is the mostpowerful tool stance abuse, far surpassing cial assistance. must be administered at a dinShe tried methadone, but it pulous patients and purchased available to help users stay off "It's really a crisis," said Dr. ic, buprenorphine can be pre- put her into a stupor. Suboxone by recreational drug users heroin and related drugs. admissions for alcohol, methamphetamine or prescription Roger Rosenblatt, an author of scribed for use at home. eased the gnawing desire for and addicts who can't get a Meanwhile, health experts That's particularly helpful heroin, and helped dear her prescript drugs. The number of young the study and associate director ion. Buprenorphine also hope to raise awareness of people admitted for h eroin of the University of Washing- for young adults, who may be head. has also been linked to sever- an antidote that could reduce "It made me myself again," al hundred overdose deaths the number of overdose deaths treatment has more than qua- ton's Rural/Underserved Op- facing years of treatment while drupled since 2007. portunities Program. "People juggling school, work and fam- she said. nationwide. In most cases, in the state if administered Experts believe many drug are suffering, people are dying ilies, said Caleb Banta-Green Now 26, Mellen has been though, the victims had ingest- quickly. users are turning to heroin be- and we have the therapy for it." of the university's Alcohol and o n the medication for t w o ed several different drugs. Naloxone, sold under the "I'm not trying to undersell trade name Narcan, can save cause recent rules have made Only 10 to 20 percent of peo- Drug Abuse Institute. Rural years. She gets it from Dr. Luit harder to get prescription cinda Grande, a primary-care its risks," Banta-Green said. people who take too much herpainkillers such as oxycodone. physician in Olympia. With "But I personally don't have oin, methadone or prescription a long-standing interest in any doubts that the benefits pain pills. Drug cartels have rushed to fill Last year, heroinwas the leading reason people Some ambulance crews carthe gap with Mexican black ages 18 to29 sought treatment for substance chronic pain and drug abuse, outweigh the risks." tar and other forms of heroin, abuse, far surpassing admissions for alcohol, Grande was eager to take the Grande, who accepts only ry the drug, and several phareight-hourclass required of highly motivated patients, said macies around the state stock a which can sell for as little as methamphetamine or prescription drugs. The $20adose. doctors who want to prescribe it's rewarding to see people im- nasal-spray version. It's available without a doctor's visit to Yet, many doctors remain number of young people admitted for heroin buprenorphine for addiction. prove so dramatically. "Buprenorphine d o esn't opiate users and their friends reluctant to prescribe a medGrande often has to turn paication that can help some treatment has more than quadrupled since 2007. tients away. "I just feel so guilty work for everyone, but for the and families.
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Prodiotics: little soldiers against illness spectively. Species within these families include acidophilus andcasei. Probiotics are further identified by distinct strains with specific actions within the body. For example, Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG is awell-studied probiotic for digestive health found in aproduct called Culturelle. Bifodobacterium lactis — a probiotic found in Activia yogurt — was found to protect the lining of the intestinal tract in people with a sensitivity to gluten. Perhaps the most studied useof probiotics is in the prevention of diarrhea due to antibiotic use. Lactobacillus GC, L.rhamnosus, andS.boulardi havebeen shown to be effective good guys in this arena. DanActive — ayogurt that rounds up L. bulgaricus, S.thermophilus, and L.casei — lowered the risk for antibiotic-associated diarrhea causedby the bad germ, Clostridium difficile (aka "C.diff").
W ho would haveguessedthatcowboys sitting around acampfire eating beans would befeeding their bodies' good bacteria? In our gut (a cowboy term for "intestinal tract") we havetrillions of good guys called "probiotics"beneficial bacteria that protect us from the bad bacteria that can make us sick. Here's how they work: More than athousand species of microbes live in our digestive tract. Some are beneficial and someare harmful. When the goodguysoutnumberthebad, we digest our food better, have less diarrhea and constipation, and areprotected from infectious diseases. Someevidence even suggests that good bacteria can help us stay lean. Probiotics don't wear white hats but they can beidentified by their distinctive titles. Commonfamily names include Lactobacillus and Bifidobacteriumsometimes abbreviated L. and B.re-
Probiotics in food run with the cultured crowd. Yogurt, buttermilk and kefir as well as fermented vegetables like kimchi and sauerkraut are home tomany of these good guys. Look for products that feature "live andactive cultures." Just like rough andtough cowboys, good gut bacteria need to befed. They thrive on fibers found in whole grains, fruit, vegetables andbeans, of course. These "prebiotic" dietary fibers thus nourish the good "probiotics" that keep us well. When weeata varied diet, we ingest aposseofthesegoodguystomore effectively fight the badguys. A2014 update on probiotics for human health from Martin Floch atYale University lists how specific strains of probiotics have beenused to prevent or control diseases of the digestive tract, especially those related to diarrhea and bowel disease.Yet westill have much to learn about which probiotics are useful
Thinkstock
A lot of microbes that live in our digestive tract are beneficial; some are not.
Probiotics can help put your gut back in balance. for certain medical conditions. One caution: Eventhough probiotics are"Generally Recognized AsSafe" by the U.S. Foodand DrugAdministration,
they should not be usedwilly nilly, especially in people with critical illnesses. — Barbara Quinn, The MontereyCounty (Calif) Herald
:anin ertii issuet atis itteun erstoo By Jane E. Brody New York Times News Service
Without being extreme, women with PCOS should reduce their
Sometimes medical syndromes are named long before they are fully understood. Take polycystic ovarian syndrome, or PCOS, which affects asmany as 10 percent of women of childbearing age, often impairing their
carbohydrate intake overall and in particular avoid sugars and refined carbohydrates (white bread, white rice and anything stripped of its natural fiber or made with refined white flour). They should instead select foods high in fiber made from whole grains,as unprocessed as possible. They arealso advised to avoid eating isolated servings of carbohydrate-rich foods, and tospace them out during the day.
fertility. But not all of these women
have polycystic ovaries, a fact that can result in misdiagnosis. As it turns out, cysts-
strual cycles and reduced lev-
sacs of fluid on the ovaries-
are just one manifestation of a complex hormonal condition. First described i n
1 9 35,
PCOS was initially called Stein-Leventhal syndrome, for the two American gynecologists who identified it, Dr. Thinkstock Irving Stein and Dr. Michael Not all of the women with polycystic ovarian syndrome, or PCOS, Leventhal. They recognized have polycystic ovaries, a fact that can result in misdiagnosis. that ovarian cysts can interrupt ovulation and cause infertility in significant num-
depending on the goals of each patient, Lucidi said. For women with prolonged intervals between menses or excessive hairiness, or both,
In women, symptoms can
bers of women. vary from being very mild to Irregular menstrual cycles extensive. and difficulty conceiving are Some experts believe that among the most common the fundamental defect may symptoms, the result of ovar- not be insulin resistance, but contraceptives containing esian follicles that fail to ma- hormonal dysregulation by trogen and progestin are used ture fully and to release eggs. or of the hypothalamus. This to regulate the menstrual cyAffected women often have small region at the base of cle and suppress the producenlarged ovaries and, when the brain produces hormones tion of androgens. menses does occur, prolonged that stimulate the pituitary Often, the blood pressure bleeding. gland, which in turn affects drug spironolactone is also Over time more cystsorgans throughout the body. given to counteract androswollen follicles, really In most women with PCOS, gen-caused acne orhirsutism may form. On an ultrasound the pituitary gland produces in adult women. exam, they resemble a string excessive amounts of luteinFor a woman trying to of pearlsstretched over the izing hormone, which, like become pregnant, adiff ersurface of the ovary. Yet some i nsulin, ca n s t i mulate t h e ent regimen is needed. Two experts believe cysts are a re- ovaries to secrete androgens, drugs, clomiphene and letrosult, rather than the cause, of according to a practice guide- zole, are commonly prethe syndrome. "Whether t h e c o n d ition starts in the ovaries is not certain," Dr. R. Scott Lucidi, an
expert on PCOS at Virginia
carbohydrates (white bread, levels from spiking. Consumwhite rice an d a n ything ing four or more small meals stripped of its natural fiber insteadof a few large ones or made with refined white each day is also helpful. flour). Regular moderate or viging and maintaining weight They should instead select orous exercise done five or loss is low in carbohydrates, foods high in fiber made from more times a week is an imrather than low in fat. whole grains, as unprocessed portant part of the regimen. Without being extreme, as possible. They are also adels of testosterone, Barbieri wrote. For women with PCOS, the most effective diet for achiev-
women with
P COS should vised to avoid eating isolated
reduce their carbohydrate intake overall and in particular avoid sugars and refined
Weekly Arts 5 Entertainment
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children." Perhaps the most
challenging therapy involves weight reduction. Losing 10 percent of body weight can result in more regular men-
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cysts on the ovaries, as seen on an ultrasound. Lucidi and others have suggested that insulin resistance could be the underlying factor
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are thin. PCOS tends to cluster in
families, with predisposing genes passed from either parent to both daughters and sons. In affected males, early balding or excessive hairiness can be a sign that the genes have been inherited.
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This year's theme is
sulin, the hormone does not
drome and insulin resistance
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symptoms of PCOS. In people resistant to in-
women with a lot of ovarian cysts do not have PCOS, some women with metabolic syn-
s4 4
The Christmas Parade will be on Soturday, December 6, 2014 at noon in Downtown Bend
responsible for the disparate
obese. Insulin also can stimulate the ovaries to produce androgens. But just as some young
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HRISTMAS PARAD BEND OREGON
dergo ovulation induction go on to conceive and bear
prolonged periods between cycles.
can women with PCOS are
teestside.
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in weight gain and obesity. About half o f A m eri-
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male-pattern hair loss.
fat storage and can r esult
Aauard-aeinning neighborhood on Bend,'s www.northwestcrossing.com
can include acne, excessive hairiness a n d so m e times
Excess insulin promotes
CROSSING
line written by D r . R obert scribed to stimulate ovulaBarbieri, head of obstetrics tion. Both these drugs prompt and gynecology at Brigham the pituitary to secrete fola nd Women's Hospital i n licle-stimulating h o r mone Boston. (FSH), which enhances the
nosed with PCOS. According gesterone, resulting in a thick to the so-called Rotterdam uterine lining and over time criteria, a woman with any an increased risk of endometwo of the following may have trial cancer. the condition: There is no cure for PCOS, • Symptoms of e l e vat- and the best approach to ed levels of androgens, or treatment is i n dividualized, male sex hormones, which
lower it.
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Commonwealth U n i v ersity, When ovarian follicles are growth of small follicles and said in an interview. enlarging, women with PCOS thus can trigger ovulation. Indeed, women with few or also produce high levels of Barbieri noted that "most no ovarian cysts may be diag- estradiol but low levels of pro- women with PCOS who un-
effectively transfer glucose from blood to body cells to be used for energy. As blood levels of glucose build, more insulin is produced to try to
servings of carbohydrate-rich foods, and to space them out during the day to keep insulin
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M EDI C I N E
Thermal
thermography with their phy- website under "clinical applisicians, especially if the images cations" of thermography — a Continued from D1 show abnormalities, and unlist that indudes more than 70 From now on, DeLand said dergo mammograms if neces- health conditions. thermography will be her pri- sary. She even sends results diIn Oregon, a Medford thermary means ofbreast can- rectly to patients' primary care mography clinic closed in 2009 cer screening. So long as her providers. as part of a settlement agreethermograms come back norUltimately, though, it's up to ment with then-Attorney Genmal and her doctor says it's the patient, she said. eral John Kroger. The clinic OK, she will no long receive Mainstream medicine is dif- had claimed its thermography mammograms. ferent from naturopathic med- device could detect the presDespite the e n thusiasm icine in that it relies on drugs, ence of breast cancer seven to among thermography pro- surgeries and its own imaging 10 years before other diagnosponents, most of the medical methods, DeLand said. tic procedures, including mam"It'san enormous business, mography. Kroger said the community cautions women against forgoing regular mam- with the insurance, with the clinic also did not advise wommograms in favor of thermo- hospitals and with the doc- enwho receivedthermography grams, even if the technique tors," she said, "and people, in to also receive mammography. "Putting the lives of womdoes hold promise. The FDA fear, just get swept into it, and issued a warning in 2011 re- they're really not making their en at risk is unconscionable," minding the public that scien- own decisions.... But some Kroger wrote in a statement. tific data has not found ther- people believe strongly enough "Given the lethal consequencmography to be an effective in their own health and the es of delaying detection of screening tool for any medical strength of their immune sys- such a deadly cancer, I am condition, including the early tems that they feel comfortable giving medical imposters fair detection ofbreastcancer,and withit." notice that these types of misis not a substitute for or superiDeLand said she was men- representations will not be or to mammography. toredinthermographythrough tolerated." There aren't many scientific fellow thermographer Karmen The dinic's operators had studies that support the effec- Lawson, who travels to Bend alsobeen engaging in fraudutiveness of thermography, and a handful of times a year and lent billing practices. the small ones that do say it provides thermography at may be useful in helping to de- two local clinics: the Westside 'Just the image-taker' tect cancer if used in conjunc- Family Clinic and High Desert DeLand received board certion with mammography. Most Chiropractic. tification from the American major medical organizations, Evelyn Brust, the naturo- College of Clinical Thermoloincluding the American Can- pathic physician who serves as gy, which she said required 16 cerSociety and the American medical director for the West- hours of classroom learning College of Radiology, do not side Family Clinic, said she has and about 50 hours of working recommend the screening. patients who receive annual closely with other thermoloD r. Ray F r iedman, w h o thermograms and do not re- gists that had completed adw orked as a radiologistfor 50 ceive mammograms. ditional training. She said the "I don't tell people what to years and taught at Oregon Health & Science Universi- do," she said. "A lot of people ty for the latter half of those feel better with thermography years before retiring in April, because theirbreasts are not said angiogenesis, which the squished. There is no pain. proponents say happens in the There is no radiation. They're early stages of tumor develop- low-risk anyway, and if somement, does not begin in ductal thing abnormal shows up, they carcinoma in situ tumors until go straight to ultrasound." they're between 4 and 6 milliW hen r eminded o f th e meters large — still moderately FDA's warning against forgoearly, but after the tumor has ing mammography in favor had time to develop, he said. of thermography, Brust said "It (thermography) can see Americans can discern what's cancer, no problem, as long as best for their health. "The FDA has put drugs on the cancer is big," he said, "and by big, I mean, about the size of the market that have killed agolfball. Wewant to find can- people, caused cancer and cer that's about the size of your done all kinds of nasties.... fingernail, or small. Therein Don't even get me started on lies the problem." the FDA," she said. By the time a tumor is 2 centimeters or larger, the patient's
program and the True Family
to operate the camera.
DeLand sends the thermal images she takes of patients to a third-party interpretation
service called Electronic Medical Interpretation, where she said physicians "primarily on the East Coast" perform a thorough evaluation of the images and send DeLand their report
usually by the end of the following day. If those physicians find something abnormal, they will indicate in the report that the patient should follow up
with his or her primary care physician, DeLand said. While she's in the room with
patients, however, DeLand said she cannot say anything about the images, although they're right in front of her onthe com-
puter screen, even if there is an area that seems to show con-
centrated heat. DeLand said she encourages patients to look at the images during the visit, but cannot discuss them until
she gets the results from Electronic Medical Interpretation.
"It's not my job," DeLand said. "I'm just the image-taker." Some research has been
performed on thermography. One study examined the technique's ability to detect tumors
by performing the imaging on 92 patients who were already recommended toreceive biop-
sies based on abnormal mam- subjects already had cancer, mogram or ultrasound results. said Dawson, of Swedish HosBiopsies found that 60 of the pital in Seattle. They don't re92 pati entshad cancer,andthe veal how many women have thermography detected58 of had normal thermograms and those cancers,according to the developed cancer, she said. study, published in 2008 in the Recent research has cast AmericanJournalofSurgery. doubt on the value of mamTheresearchers concludedthat mography. Earlier this year, thermography could serve as a study in the British Medical a "valuable adjunct" to mam- Journal concluded annual mography and ultrasound. mammography in women ages A 1998 study in The Breast 40 to 59 does not reduce morJ ournal f ound t h at , w h e n tality from breast cancer bepaired with mammography, yond physical exams or usual thermography increasedthe care. The study also found one sensitivity rate, the proportion over-diagnosed breast cancer of cases correctly identified, for every 424 subjects who reby 10 percent. On the flip side, ceived mammography. thermography resulted in a Mammogram recommen19 percent false-positive rate, dations vary as well. The U.S. meaning the test affirmed an Preventative Services Task abnormality that further test- Force recommends maming found to be benign. That mograms every other year study also concluded ther- for woman ages 50 to 74. The mography could be valuable American Cancer Society, by if used in conjunction with contrast, recommends them mammography. annually for women starting at Mammography also has a age 40. high rate of false positives. ReMammography is not persearch has shown that some- fect, Dawson said, but that one who receives mammo- doesn't mean women should grams annually for a decade use a method that's not been has between a 50 and 60 per- scientifically proven. "I don't know any physicent chance of receiving a false positive, according to Susan c ian who w ouldn't love t o G. Koman, a foundation that have a more reliable way of raises money for breast cancer diagnosing breast cancer," research. she said. "But we want it to be The problem with the ther- well-proven." mography studies that have — Reporter: 541-383-0304, been performed is that their tbannow@bendbuIIetin.com
SCADE COTTONS
sured temperature variations
Find the perfect gift for everyone on your listl
son, a breast surgeon at Swed- without touching the skin in ish Hospital in Seattle and 1985, Sanaz Jansen, a reviewmedical director of the Swed- er and biomedical engineer in ish Cancer Institute's breast
Meditherm headquarters in Florida, was "strictly" on how
FDA warnings
survival rate drops to less than The FDA cleared the first 50 percent, Friedman said. thermography device that meaLikewise, Dr. Patricia Daw-
classroom training, held at the
rp
' Ay
the FDA's Center for Devices and Radiological Health, wrote
in an email. All thermography until more research supports devices are cleared as adjunct thermography's effectiveness, tools for measuring temperashe would not recommend it to ture variations on the body's patients, even if used in addi- surface, meaning they can tion to mammography. not be used as a stand-alone "I think sometimes women screening method for any conare being oversold on ther- dition, including breast cancer, mography and I worry," she Jansen said. "FDA has a longstanding said. "I've seen enough women come in with late cancers concern regarding the promowho've been followed by tion of thermography devices thermography." for breast cancer screening and diagnosis, for which there
:GN—hi
Women's Cancer Center, said
'I don't tell people what to do'
is no demonstrated effective-
way it works that I k new I needed to make this my prima-
The FDA sent a w arning letter in 2011 to a C a l ifor-
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ness," Jansen said. "In women Candace Parmer, a massage who opt for thermography intherapist who lives in Portland, stead of screening mammogfirst learned about thermog- raphy, the diagnosis and treatraphy earlier this year from ment of breast cancer may be DeLand, whom she has gone significantly delayed." to for massages. It sounded The agency has since issued interesting, so she did some a number of warnings to comresearch. panies whose advertising falls "I was so impressed by the outside of thoseboundaries. ry means of detection for any nia-based th e r mographer problems or abnormalities," asking that provider to stop said Parmer, 53. making a number of claims So far,her breast thermo- t hat did not fall w i thin t he grams have turned up nor- uses the device was approved mal. A full-body thermogram for, including, "Detects breast showed her knee pain was tissue abnormalities 8 to 10 not joint related, as she had years before a mammogram guessed, but the result of a tight can detect a mass." This claim muscle in one of her calves. is similar to one that appeared She solved the problem by re- on Imaging Alternative's webleasing the muscle tension. site: "Thermograms can detect "I was able to avoid X-rays," tumor cells as much as 8-10 she said. years before mammograms." From here on out, Parmer The claim was removed from plans to travel to Bend to re- Imaging Alternative's website ceivethermograms annually last week. from DeLand. Like all new
patients, she must first have two breast thermograms per-
formed three months apart to establish a baseline reading. DeLand charges $195 for each breast thermogram visit. Full-body thermography costs $395. If her thermograms show abnormalities, Parmer s a id she'll monitor their growth us-
Jansen, of the FDA, wrote that that claim supports using
port them to heal cancer." DeLand said she encour-
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jArtistry in Design",
thermography as a sole screening method, which the devices are not approved for. In a2011warningletter to an
Illinois-based thermographer, an FDA official w rote that
the business' website claimed thermography can detect conditions like bursitis, herniated
discs, ligament or muscle tears, ing thermography while work- nerve problems, whiplash and ing to change her lifestyle or risk of stroke, among others. diet — "whatever I think might The letter directed the provider be the cause of it." to immediately cease making DeLand s a i d Par m er's such claims or face regulatochoice is a personal one, but ry action, as thermography that she thinks many people devices such as the Medithare doing the same. erm Med2000 Thermographic " At that p o int, yo u c a n camera are not approved to change things and your body be used alone to diagnose and can heal it," she said. "Our bodies can heal cancer if we sup-
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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
D9
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
e mem erin e i e o
i n ro s
TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports 9 a.m. on 5, 8, "Macy's
multi-tasker. He was a giant in the music world, a radio icon,
were always included in adult the street to Lucy's and had a functions. We were never, like, cup of hot tea, which I thought seen and not heard ... And was the most romantic thing Dad said to me, he said, 'You that had ever happened to know, you're really smart, but anybody." if you talked less and listened She says dinner followed more, you might be smarter.' and the routine continued "till And it was advice that I hold to I'd enjoyed about as much of this day." that as I could stand. "And then he said, 'How His son Harry, a guitarist and businessman, says his fa- a bout dinner?' And I s a i d, ther would sneak him out of 'Thank you, no. I've been to
Thanksgiving Day Parade" — It's a holiday tradition on the streets of New York, just as it is in many living rooms. Matt Lauer, Savannah Guthrie and Al Roker segue from their weekday"Today" jobs into their hosting roles as the 88th annual edition of this gala is televised. New character balloons include Thomas the Tank Engine and Pikachuof"Pokemon" fame.
a movie star, a world famous
school on Fridays at noon so
golf enthusiast and a television
they could go duck hunting for the weekend. "It was a special
are KISS, Hilary Duff, Idina Menzel, NickJonas,M eghan Trainor, the Muppets and Cirque du Soleil.
TV SPOTLIGHT "Bing Crosby Remembered" 8 p.m. Tuesday, PBS By Luaine Lee Tribune News Service
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif.
-
For more than 30 years, Bing Crosby was the epitome of a
tradition.
Those over 40 probably know him for his evergreen Christmas movie, "White
time, the age of 12, 13, to spend
a good couple days with him, just father and son," he says.
"American Masters" hopes to change that with "Bing CrosTribune News Service by Remembered," a documen- Bing Crosby's life will be re-examined on"American Masters" on tary by Robert Trachtenberg PBS on Tuesday and encoring Dec. 26. premiering Tuesday and encoring on Dec. 26. Old timers remember that 'I disciplined the kids. Maybe of sports together. We would wife and two boys and a girl with his second. It was a shock
when his oldest son, Gary, wrote a book about his youth and depicted his father as a
cruel disciplinarian. But Crosby never held anything back from the public, insists Trachtenberg. "In the
mid-'50s, Bing says, 'I disciplined these boys.' ... You have to put it into context of the
time. Corporal punishment, spanking your kids, was the norm. Bing says it in his autobiography. Bing says it in interviews throughout the '50s.
got married the next day. And the first time I spoke to him for
family, unique, couldn't do it today, where we would go
the whole last year ... before
t o Mexico where w e
Crosby and comedian Bob Hope were not only a riot-
we married was 'I do.'"
kind
of home-studied. Mom was a substitute teacher at our school, so we kind of got the free pass to go.... We had to do the curriculum, but we spent
ous hit in their "Road" pic-
tures, they were close friends. "When they would do the 'Road' movies, during lunch I was too hard on them.' He's have season tickets to the 49er completely transparent about games at Candlestick, and he two solid months together in they would go to Lakeside and it, so it's interesting what the would wear the overcoat and Mexico where we all learned play golf," says Mary Crosby. public chooses to remember the hat, and nobody — except Spanish and got the chance to "And the A.D. (assistant diand to forget and then remem- the people in the immediate spend that time with Dad." rector) had to come retrieve ber again, because he never section — even knew who he The mother of the three, the them off the golf course to get kept anythingback." was. He was veryunassuming, former Kathryn Grant, was a them to go back to work. And His latter-day children, Har- and was concentrating on me contract player at Paramount so they were very, very dear ry, Nathaniel and Mary, all say during those games, unless he when they met. "I was 18 years friends. And the day Dad died he was a kind and loving par- had to go down and sing the old. I was walking down to was, as Mom says ..." "It was the only day Bob left ent. "He was an unbelievable 'Star Spangled Banner,' which the drama department with a father for different reasons, he did once," recalls Nathaniel. bunch of horsehair petticoats a show," recalls Kathryn Crosbut he really concentrated on Mary Crosby, best known and my tennis racket, which by. "He was supposed to do a us one-on-one," says Nathan- as the actress who plugged had the brace on it, and I was charity show in New York, iel, who is a golfer. J.R. on "Dallas," says he was just walking down the road, and the word came through "With Harry, it was hunta wise and gentle father. "He and I heard this voice behind that Bing had died. And he ing and taking him to the actually gave me specific ad- me say, 'Hi, Tex. What's your just said, 'Get me out of here,' duck club on the weekends. vice as a child... I was pretty hurry?'... He invited me for a because it was the first time he With me, we shared our love young. I was maybe 8. And we cup of tea, and we went across had ever missed a show."
Sister's teasin stea strave er's 0
MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-D and IMAXmovies • Movie times are subject to change after press time. t
Dear Abby:I am a single woman who raised three kids on one averageincome.They are allgrown
through. Dear Abby: I've
Dear ln Limbo:You will find the answers you need as soon as you decide that, regardless of whether your husband is willing to go to counseling, it's time for you to go. Having already caught him in a compromising position, you have every right to be suspicious. There's nothing wrong with you — except
been with my second
perhapsthatyou are TOO "nice."
husband for almost five years, married
You are going to have to decide if living like brother and sister is an arrangement you are willing to live with forever because the relationship you have described isn't a normal marriage, and the longer it continues, the worse you will feel about yourself. Dear Abby:I would like to know why people say, "Oh, you have a new hairdo," and then never say if itisgoodorbad.Or,"Youhavenew curtains or new flooring," and then never say another word. Why don't they just say nothing?
You might be subjected to this
less ifyou become more closem outhed about what you're doing and on their own now. I still save and where you're going. Give it a and have a tight budget, but now I try. But if the "teasing" continues, can spend some money on travel. tell "Sissy" she's going to be seeing I have opportunities to travel with
friends and do it as often as I can afford. The problem is my sister love to tease, and they tell everyone
DFP,R
ABBY
that I'm "the rich sister." Abby, I am far from rich. I have asked them both to stop and told
them their teasing hurts my feelings — that I simply choose to spend my money differently than they do. Our relationship has now become very strained. I have only one sister and would like to be close to
a lot less of you and then follow
for two. After a year,
we became more like roommates than spouses. At one point, I caught him kissing a mutual friend in our bathroom. When I
confrontedthem, they assured me it was innocent. Her husband has
now confirmed his suspicions with me that something was going on, but there was never any solid proof.
her, but I can't laugh off their teasMy husbandenjoysmy compaing any longer. ny, but the lack of affection and my — Hurt Traveler
Dear Hurt Traveler:When people persist in doing — or saying — something after being told it's hurtful, one has to wonder if it's not
about humor at all. I suspect that your sister and her husband are
continued suspicion are affecting
my self-esteem. The other day I askedhim why he marriedme, and
— Curious in Colorado
Dear Curious:Perhaps because people often notice change before He refuses to go to counseling and making up their minds whether said he doesn't want a divorce. they think it's positive or negative, I feel like an idiot, but I just don't and they are speaking to you withhe answered because I was "nice."
somewhat jealous over the friend- want to leave. What is wrong with ships you have and the adventures me? What should I do? — In Limbo in Washington you are enjoying.
I
I
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Noon on 5, 8, "The National Dog Show" —An annual television tradition of the Thanksgiving holiday is maintained as the Philadelphia Kennel Club's event — showcasing more than 2000 canines of 170-plus breedsis broadcast again. John O'Hurley ("Seinfeld") is back as host, with David Frei returning to offer commentary while Mary Carillo adds reports from the sidelines. The ultimate aim for the four-legged contestants and their owners, of course, is to be declared "Best in Show." 8 p.m. on 2, 9, "Thank You, America! With Robin Roberts" — The "Good Morning America" co-host spotlights the positive efforts of people throughout the country in this new speci al.Among those featured: a sanitation worker and his wife, founders of a food pantry for the homeless; and a couple who have been foster parents to nearly100 children. Also, Taylor Swift talks with Roberts about the meaning of Thanksgiving for her, and Jimmy Kimmel helps stage a surprise for someone in his talk show's studio audience. 8 p.m. on10, ugox's Cause for Paws: An All-Star Dog Spectacular" —Two-time Oscar winner — and longtime animal advocate — Hilary Swank is a co-host (with Jane Lynch) and executive producer of this new two-hour special, which en-
courages theadoption of rescue dogs through relevant stories. The show also has a sense of fun, honoring canines with such titles as best howler and best celebrity lookalike. Other participating stars include Betty White, Scarlett Johansson, MirandaLambertand spouses Fergie and Josh Duhamel. © zep2v
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Among scheduledperformers
we flew to Las Vegas and we
"We spent some time as a
Christmas" but little else. PBS'
Crosby also fathered two families: four boys with his first
dinner.' And then he wanted to visit with me again. I said, 'Thank you, no.' And then he talked to Aunt Mary, and then
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HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORTHURSDAY, NOV. 27,2014:Thisyearyou opt to walk a more bohemian, or offbeat, path. You also tend to push past mental boundaries that perhaps you never knew existed. If you are single, you might enjoy your "unattached" status, as you could find yourself in a rich period for meeting people. Your circle of friends is likely to expand, and with Stars showthe kind it the possibility of of dayyou'Ilhave meeting Mr. or Ms. ** * * * D ynamic Right. If you are ** * * Positive at t ached, the two
*** Average ** So-so * Difficult
SCORPIO (Dct. 23-Nov.21
YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
could have an unpredictable quality to them today. You could be surprised by what goes on. Tonight: Get into the warm, friendly nature of the day.
CANCER (June21-July 22)
** * You might choose to make this a low-key Thanksgiving, where you prepare dinner for justyou and your immediate of friends. You will enjoy the process o fyou enjoy a lot of circle as much as the turkey. Make an important quiet time together call to a relative who might be alone today. at home in front of the fireplace or out Tonight: Enjoy some free time.
on your front porch. Schedule a long-desired vacation. AQUARIUScan be difficult to relate to.
LEO (July23-Aug.22)
** * * You could have more invitations comingyourway thanyou know whatto do with. Try not to hurt anyone's feelings ARIES (March21-April 19) ** * * You can't seem to get enough of while making the social rounds. Consider the social nature of the day. Whether you bringing a thank-you gift as you go from one get-together to the next. Tonight: are the host or the guest, you are likely to have a great time. You might decide to Touchbasew ithsomeone ata distance. watch the Thanksgiving parade or reach VIRGO (Aug.23-Sspt. 22) out to someone at a distance. Don't wait! ** * You could be quite busy, whether Tonight: Catch up with a friend. you have to do some work or handle a domestic responsibility. A loved one would TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * * Your role could be quite import- be only too happy to pitch in, so let him or her take the reins. Otherwise, you might ant, as you might be enlisted to pitch in feel overburdened on some level. Tonight: and make dinner at the last minute. As a Take care of loose ends. result, don't expect to have much private time to catch up with loved ones and LIBRA (Sept. 23-Dct. 22) friends. A dear friend is likely to step in ** * * Your natural self-expression and help. Tonight: Finally, some time for sometimes can be flirtatious. Be careful, yourself! as someonewho doesn'tknow youwell GEMINI (May 21-June 20) might misread you. On the other hand, a ** * * Your mind seems to drift to loved one might decide that he or she has family or friends at a distance. If you can, hadenough,and could demand allofyour take the day off to visit with them. People attention. Tonight: Make amends.
** * * You might decide to stay close to home. You enjoy visiting with others and catching up, buta relaxed pace of staying put might be more appealing right now. Maintain a sense of humor as everything falls into place. Tonight: Know that you can finally veg a little.
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SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dsc. 21) ** * The doorbell might be ringing all day long, as family members seek you out. You have achoice to make:Stay present with the moment, or respond to these incoming requests. Either way, you will enjoy a lively day of conversation and turkey. Tonight: Visit with those around you.
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GAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan. 19) ** * * You could get stuck running some last-minute errands and end up arriving late to Thanksgiving dinner. Many of you who visit with several different families will have a little more flexibility than others. Tonight: Try not to overindulge.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 29-Feb.18) ** * * * Y ou'll smile, and others can't help but be pulled in. You might be concerned about helping others feel at home. Others could seekyou out, butyou'll have your hands full doing everything you need to do while still remaining sociable. Tonight: Let the party begin!
PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * Tension seems to build around a matter that you might not be able to discuss right now. You could feel quite frustrated as you try to accommodate others while holding this information back. You might decide to excuse yourself early from what is going on. Tonight: Not to be found. © King Features Syndicate
Madras Cinema 5,t01 1 SW U.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • BIG HERO 8 (PG)12:10, 240, 5, 720, 940 • HORRIBLEBOSSES 2(R)noon,2:20,4:45,7:t0,9:30 • THEHUNGER GAMES: MOCKINGJAY — PART1 (PG-13) 1:20,4:10,7,9:35 • INTERSTELLAR (PG-13) 1, 4:30, 8 • PENGijINS OFMADAGASCAR(PG) 12:20, 5, 7:t5, 9:25 • PENGUINSOF MADAGASCAR 3-0 (PG)2:40 Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt.,541-416-1014 • THE HUNGER GAMES: MOCKINGJAY — PART1 (Upstairs — PG-13) t, 4, 7 • PENGljINS OFMADAGASCAR (PG)12:30,3:30,6,8:30 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.
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Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GD! Magazine
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EVERGREEN
In-Home Care Services Care for loved ones. Comfort for all. 541-389-OOOG www.evergreeninhome.com
%ILSONSof Redmond 541-548-2066
Adjustable Beds
IjV&TRESS
G allery - B e n d 541-3$0-50$4
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2014
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HOSTED BY:
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CRYSTAL RSWAROS PROGRAM •
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115 SWAllen Road, Bend, Oregon 97702
6 41.330.6 6 6 1 Spa 8 Laser Center
esthetixmd.com
ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2014 •
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Ads starting as low as $10/week rivate art onl
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Call for package rates
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Packages starting at $140for28da s
Call for prices
Prices starting at $17.08 erda
Run it until it sells for $99 oru to12months
:'hours:
contact us: Place an ad: 541-385-5809
Fax an ad: 541-322-7253
: Business hours:
Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the
Includeyour name, phone number and address
. Monday - Friday
businesshours of8 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Subscriber services: 541-385-5800
: 7:30 a.m. -5 p.m.
. .Classified telephone hours:
Subscribe or manage your subscription
: Monday- Friday 7:30 a.m. -5 p.m.
24-hour message line: 541-383-2371 Place, cancel or extend an ad Th
e
On the web at: www.bendbulletin.com
B u I I e t i n :
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C h a n d l e r
00 203
Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows
... A BIG Deal ...
• VENDORS WANTEDe
Items for Free
212
240
242
246
Antiques & Collectibles
Crafts & Hobbies
Exercise Equipment
Guns, Hunting & Fishing
> TheBulletin >
Beautiful Oval Table Pets & Supplies • P ets & Supplies Solid walnut, handcrafted by an Amish artisan for Schanz Donate deposit bottles/ The Bulletin recomcans to local all vol., Furniture Co. Excellent mends extra caution non-profit rescue, for condition w/lovely patina. when purc h as- feral cat spay/neuter. 27" H, top 30" L and 20" ing products or serT railer a t Jak e 's wide. Graceful curved vices from out of the legs with 2-1/2n D iner, Hwy 2 0 E ; area. Sending cash, Petco (near Wal-Mart) hand-turned center checks, or credit insupport. Orig. $649; in Redmond; or dosell $200. f ormation may b e nate M-F a t S mith 541-385-4790 subjected to fraud. Sign, 1515 NE 2nd For more informaBend; or CRAFT in tion about an adver- Tumalo. Can pick up G ENERATE SOM E EXCITEMENT in your tiser, you may call large amts, 389-8420. neighborhood! Plan a the O r egon State www.craftcats.org garage sale and don't Attorney General's forget to advertise in Office C o nsumer German Shepherds www.sherman-ranch.us classified! Protection hotline at
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Dachshund CKC mini fe2 00+ Make i t wit h male wire/smooth hair Leather 8 other cataloqs/ $500 available 12/5. email patterns,1940s to 2011, highdeserldogs@live.com FREE! 541-390-8972 or 541-350-9506
Whoodle pups, 8 wks., 1st shots, dewormed, 1 male left. Guaranteed. SOLD! 541-410-1581
9 7 7 0 2
210
541-385-5809.
CA King Henredon Sleigh Bed with Organic Mattress and Bedding. It's magnificient. $4500 Cash only. 541-390-7109
Total Gym XLS kit, all
Serving Central Oregon since i903
212
Antiques & Collectibles Antiques wanted: Tools, furniture, pre-'80s John Deere toys, pre-'40s B/W photography, beer cans. 541-389-1578
Three Chinese Men produced in solid teak. Dimensions: n 15 n high x 6.5 wide. Figures were produced in Thailand in 1978. $200 for all 3 statues,cash. 1-231-360-5105 (in Bend)
Quilting Machine-
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H u sqvarna/
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$ 85oo.
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Viking, 10-ft bed, computerized,
i5 41-416-0538
J
35s/~n diameter, has
image of sailing ship on the top. Base is oak capstan. Very unique piece, could sell separately. $400
541-633-5496 Treadmill, Proform XP Crosswalk 580, $300. 541-382-9211
300 Weatherby magnum Mark V German made, with Leupold 3x9x50 scope. $1600 obo. 541-480-9430
LISE THE CLASSIFIEDS!
241
Bicycles & Accessories
Door-to-door selling with fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell.
Childrens bikes, girls 20", $60. Boys 16", $40. 541-382-9211
The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809
Need to get an ad in ASAP? You can place it online at: www.bendbulletin.com
541-385-5809
245
Golf Equipment
Bird 8 Big Game hunting access in Condon, OR. 541-384-5381
CHECK YOUR AD
Men's Enhanced Aluminum Alloy-constructed Crossroads Sport 2012, S/N ENI14764,has never been used or ridden. Wheel 8 rear reflectors, removable front basket, special order comfort seat, Planet Bike eco-rack, unisex bar, Shimano non-slip gear system. Was $940;selling for $775cash, firm. 1-231-360-5105 Santa Cruz Solo mtn. racing bike, med. full-suspension, good cond, must sell, $2000. 541-480-2652
on the first day it runs to make sure it isn corn rect. 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
CASH!! For Guns, Ammo 8 Reloading Supplies. 541-408-6900.
IOI'T IIS TII DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL FOR $500 OR LESS? Non-commercial advertisers may place an ad with our "QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week 3 lines 12 oi'
Takara bikes, mens 8 womens, ridden once,
~ee eks eo !
Stocking Stuffers!
$75/ea. 541-382-9211 242
Exercise Equipment Anti ue table Top
accessories including Cyclo Trainer. $1348 value, selling $525.
Pilates XP297 w/riser like new, $175 obo. 541-408-0846 Schwinn low-profile Wash bowl 8 pitcher set, large, exc. cond. recumbant exercise bike, in great cond. Reduced! $125 541-419-6408 Now $100. 541-548-6857
Mint condition, hit one time, Cobra Baffler Irons 3-5-HB with covers, 6-PW, senior graphite.
$350.
951-454-2561
(in Redmond)
Ad must include price of s~il e te oi Seoo or less, or multiple items whose total does not exceed $500.
Call Classifieds at 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com
• 1.
541-419-6408.
GbGhv
Mahogany GlassChina Closet, 68nH x 39 nW x
3 d r awers, glass front d o ors, good shape. $425. 16 nD,
0 0
541-382-6773
Special Rates Extended
Massage Chairs Paid over $4,000; selling for $750 each. Call Gary, 541-419-8860
SOFA - dark brown leather, Hit a c hi brand, l i k e n e w, $300; and matching chair and ottoman like n ew , $ 2 0 0. 541-280-0892
Milk bottle crate 20 glass bottles marked Dahlia Dairy $125 obo 541-419-6408
Motorola
later. 35nW x 9.5
deep x 42" high. Asking$2500 cash 231-360-5105(Bend)
0 OP
radio,
13sanwx7ndx8ygn Great
Must See! South Korean Apothecary chest typical of what was used decades ago to sell herbs and medicinals. This piece is believed to have been produced in 1940sn or
TihroughhI2015! STARTING AT
cond. but non-working $80, 541-419-6408
SUNRIVEIr
205
O r e g o n
Furniture 8 Appliances
208
for Craft Fair Dec. 6, 9-5; Dec. 7, 10-3 Booths: Crafts, $30; 541-281-6829 1-877-877-9392. Commercial, $50. Norwich Terriers AKC, Accepting Donations The Bulletin rare! House raised, good for Rummage Sale thru gerving Centrel Oregonstnce tggg family dogs. M ales, Dec. 5th (recelpis avail.) TACK & EQUIPMENT Adopt a rescued cat or $2000. 541-487-4511 or email sharonm@peak.org 15% Consignment. kitten! Altered, vacciLet us sell your tack! nated, ID chip, tested, POODLE or POMAPOO For more information: more! CRAFT, 65480 puppies, toy. Adorable! 541-548-6088 or 541-475-3889 78th, Bend, Saf/Sun, ~kmberl . rffthset 1-5. 5 4 1 - 389-8420 ore oostete.ee ~ www.craftcats.org ... A BIG Deal ... Blue Heeler, 1-1/2 yr M, (Benefitting 4-H) smart, hagpy, wants to • Craft Fair please. ouse trained, g en • Rummage Sale shots utd, needs room to Pug pups-1/4Chi. • Tack & Equip. Sale! run, free to good home. Healthy noses & eyes. M Dec. 6, 9am-5pm & 541-419-8249 Dec. 7, 10am-3pm $400; F $450. Champ Deschuies Co. Fairgrounds Cava Tz u p u ppies.stud.541-389-2517 text ok Kid friendly activities! Only three males left. Queensland Heelers Admission: $1.00 Ready now. First shot Standard 8 Mini, $150 (or a non-perlshable food and worming. $300 & up. 541-280-1537 item to be donated to Kelly at 541-604-0716 www.rightwayranch.wor local food banks). or 541-489-3237 dpress.com Proceedsbenefit Deschutes County4-H. Chihuahua teacup pup Scotty AKC pups, ready pies (2) 1st shots, now! Mom/Dad on site, dewormed. $250. 1st shots. 541-771-0717 What are you 541-977-0035 Siberian Husky/Wolf looking for? pups, bundles of love! Want to impress the You'll find it in $400. 541-977-7019 relatives? Remodel The Bulletin Classifieds your home with the help of a professional from The Bulletin's 541-385-5809 "Call A Service Professional" Directory St. Bernard puppies, 1st shots, deworming, dewclaws removed, $450. 541-77'I -0956 R ESO R T A DESTINATION RESORT T oy A u ssies. T w o 13th Annual Traditions ASDR registered red Holiday Marketplace merle males. F i r st shot and w orming. Fri., 11/28, Sat., 11/29, Chihuahua-Yorkies (2) 10:00 am - 4:00 pm non-shedding, allm eds, $600 Kell y at Homestead/Heritage $200 ea. 541-420-1068 541-604-0716 or 541-489-3237 in the Great Hall. 70+ Artisans Free Admission SOLD!
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208
264- Snow Removal Equipment 265 - BuildingMaterials 266- Heating and Stoves 267- Fuel and Wood South Korean 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers Blanket Chest ¹11948 built in 1870 typical of storing 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment Yorkie. Super healthy. by New England blankets for frigid 270- Lost and Found Organ Co. Fixed. Ready! $600. nights. Dimensionsn IT O'ORKS! Local only 541-977-7773 GARAGESALES are 31n long x 14.5 Beautiful carved 275 - Auction Sales wide x 22" high. cabinet. In 1878i it 210 280 - Estate Sales Asking$800 cash. took 2nd place in Furniture & Appliances 1-231-360-5105 281 - Fundraiser Sales Sydney, Australia. (Bend) Was presented to a 282- Sales NorlhwestBend minister after his serA1 Washers&Dryers 284- Sales Southwest Bend vice in the Civil War. Full warranty. 286- Sales Norlheast Bend $300. 541-385-4790 FREE dellvery! Also The Bulletin 288- Sales Southeast Bend Wanted: used W/D's. recommends extra ' 290- Sales RedmondArea 541-280-7355 I caution when pur-I The Bulletin reserves 292 - Sales Other Areas chasing products or • right to publish all I services from out of I the FARM MARKET from The Bulletin 8 the area. Sending 8 ads 308- Farm Equipment andMachinery Need to get an ad • cash, checks, or • newspaper onto The 316- Irrigation Equipment Bulletin Internet webin ASAP? I credit i n f ormationI site. 325- Hay, Grain and Feed may be subjected to 333- Poultry,RabbitsandSupplies For moreI Fax it to 541-322-7253 I FRAUD. Bulletin 341 - Horses andEquipment information about an 8 The Serving gentrel Oregon sincelglB I 345-Livestockand Equipment advertiser, you may I The Bulletin Classifieds 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 8 call t he Ore g on8 ' State Atto r ney ' 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers I General's O f f i ce I 358- Farmer's Column Consumer Protec- • 375 - Meat andAnimal Processing tion h o t line at I I 383- Produce andFood i 1-877-877-9392. 208
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• B en
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Pets & Supplies Yorkie M, 8 wks, docked, 1st shots, dewormed, $550 obo. 541-416-1615
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
A v e .
Dining Table (with 2 leaves) 8 chairs with burgundy upholstered seats, hutch and buffet, built in 1927, a beautiful set! Seats 10-12. Paid $4500; asking $1800 obo. 541-548-2797
s~ lh e hs t Dark Itaiwn son leath er chair, ottoman arid couch set. Excellent condition: no tears, stains. Very comfortable. Was $1600 new, offering for only
Item Priced af: Your Total Ad Cost On . • Under $500 ......................................................... $29 • $500 fo $999.....................................................$39 • $1000 to $2499................................................ $49 • $2500 and over................................................. $59
$700 541-000-0000
Includes: 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold headline and price. Some restrictions apply
The Bulletin se~t'ng c«grei o«g«» «e
igg-:t
54],-385-5gQ 9
Yourad will also appear in:
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'Private party merchandiseonly - excludespets 8 livestock, autos, RVs,motorcycles, boats, airplanes, andgarage salecategories.
E2 THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 269
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
Gardening Supplies & Equipment
:I Qfy J~;QJI)I ~
INI] y y
~
Can be found on these pages:
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES
For newspaper
delivery, call the
Dept. at Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Circulation 541-385-5800 To place an ad, call Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. 541-385-5809 or email Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. The Bulletin Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed.
claaaified@bendbulletin.com Serrlny Central Oreyon sincefyte
270
Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Lost & Found air tool in case on Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri. Found Bear Creek Rd, 11/19.
421
Schools & Training IITR Truck School REDMOND CAMPUS Our Grads Get Jobs! 1-888-438-2235
EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools andTraining 454- Looking Ior Employment 470- Domestic & In-HomePositions 476 - EmploymentOpportunities 486 - IndependentPositions
WWW.IITR.EDU
FINANCEANDBUSINESS 507- Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 528- Loans andMortgages 543- Stocks andBonds 558- Business Investments 573 - BusinessOpportunities
476
476
466
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Independent Positions
470
Sales Help Wanted:
E nergetic kios k Looking for your next Domestic 6 sales person needed employee? Call to ID, 541-388-8956 immediately for the In-Home Positions caution when purPlace a Bulletin help Bend-Redmond chasing products or I wanted ad today and area. Secured locaGet your services from out of s reach over 60,000 Therapeutic Foster tions, high commisbusiness readers each week. P arents ar e ur - I the area. Sending sions paid weekly! Your classified ad c ash, checks, o r gently needed for For more informawill also appear on youth in your com- I credit i n f ormation t ion, p l ease c a l l bendbulletin.com a ROW I N G Place aphotoin yourprivate party ad munity! Work from I may be subjected to PRIVATE PARTY RATES Howard at FRAUD. which currently home part-time and foronly$15.00par week. Starting at 3 lines 541-279-0982. You For more informa- I receives over 1.5 get reimbursed up with an ad in c an a l s o em a i l *UNDER '500in total merchandise tion about an adver- • million page views OVER '500 in total merchandise to $1800 per month The Bulletin's every month at tcoles©yourneighfor each youth in I tiser, you may call 7 days.................................................. $10.00 4 days.................................................. $18.50 "Call A Service the Oregon State no extra cost. borhoodpublications. your care (max 2). 14 days................................................ $16.00 7 days.................................................. $24.00 Bulletin Classifieds I Attorney General's com for more inforFor more info call Professional" *Illlust state prices in ad Office C o n sumer I Get Results! 14 days .................................................$33.50 1-888-MSOREGON mation. Directory Protection hotline at l Call 385-5809 www.maplestaror.org 28 days .................................................$61.50 Garage Sale Special Advertise your car! or place I 1-877-877-9392. Add A Picture! 4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00 lcall for commercial line sd rates) your ad on-line at Reach thousands of readers! LThe Bulletin 476 bendbulletin.com Call 541-385-5809 REIIIIEMBER:If you Employment The Bulletin Classigeds have lost an animal, A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Opportunities Just bought a new boat'? don't forget to check Check out the Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. Sell your old one in the The Humane Society ciassifieds oniine • Ij!CC) * classifieds! Ask about cur BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN ( ) Bend CAUTION: www.bendbulletin.com Super Seller ratesl ® RIAR(SM 541-382-3537 REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well Ads published in Updated daily 541-385-5809 Redmond "Employment Opas any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin 541-923-0882 portunities" include Madras bendbulletin.com reserves the right to reject any ad at employee and indeIS 541-475-6889 pendent positions. any time. is located at: Prineville Ads for p o sitions 541-447-7178 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. that require a fee or or Craft Cats 528 upfront investment Bend, Oregon 97702 541-389-8420. must be stated. With Loans & Mortgages any independentjob 286 PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction Sales Northeast Bend opportunity, please WARNING i nvestigate tho r The Bulletin recomis needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right oughly. Use extra to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these mends you use cauLead Network Engineer caution when aption when you pronewspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party ** FREE ** plying for jobs onvide personal Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. Responsible for engineering, configuration and line and never proGarage Sale Kit information to compainstallation of the company's internal data vide personal inforPlace an ad in The communication systems. T h i s p o s ition nies offering loans or 249 257 260 265 mation to any source Bulletin for your gacredit, especially designs, evaluates and installs LANs, WANs, Art, Jewelry Musical Instruments • Illisc. Items Building Materials you may not have those asking for adrage sale and reand other Internet, data communications researched and & Furs ceive a Garage Sale vance loan fees or systems and voice systems. Candidate must 7' ft pre-lit (multi-color) Bend Habitat deemed to be repuKit FREE! companies from out of have extensive knowledge of LAN/WAN, data Grand Piano Christmas tree & storage RESTORE table. Use extreme state. If you have c ommunications systems, i nternet a n d Beautiful American bag. $150. 541-388-9270 Building Supply Resale KIT INCLUDES: c aution when r e concerns or questelecommunications protocols, remote access made (1928) Quality at LOW • 4 Garage Sale Signs s ponding to A N Y systems, PC and LAN hardware systems, tions, we suggest you Buying Diamonds Kurtzmann parlor • $2.00 Off Coupon To PRICES online employment consult your attorney routers, switches, and firewall. /Gold for Cash grand piano for Use Toward Your 740 NE 1st ad from out-of-state. or call CONSUMER sale. 5'5", maSaxon's Fine Jewelers Next Ad 54'I -312-6709 We suggest you call HOTLINE, Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent 541-389-6655 hogany case, • 10 Tips For "Garage Open to the public. the State of Oregon 1-877-877-9392. customer service and over 400 stores in the matching bench, reSale Success!" Above artwork, BUYING Consumer H otline western United States. We offer competitive BANK TURNED YOU cently serviced and created in 1975 in at 1-503-378-4320 Lionel/American Flyer • Cambria Quartz pay, excellent benefits, retirement and cash tuned. Family DOWN? Private party Bangkok, Thailand, n trains, accessories. For Equal OpportunBellingham, PICK UP YOUR bonus. Please goto www.lesschwab.com to owned since origiwill loan on real esis fabricated from lit541-408-2191. nity Laws contact nx36", nearly 55 GARAGE SALE KIT at apply. No phone calls please. nal purchase. tate equity. Credit, no erally thousands upon Oregon Bureau of 1-1/2n thick, never 1777 SW Chandler $3200 (appraised BUYING & SE LLING thousands of wax problem, good equity Labor & I n dustry, installed, $300 or Les Schwabis proud to be an Ave., Bend, OR 97702 value) or OBO. All gold jewelry, silver particles, and can is all you need. Call Civil Rights Division, best offer. equal opportunity employer. 541-306-6770. and gold coins, bars, only be described as Oregon Land Mort971-873- 0784. The Bulletin unimaginable art! rounds, wedding sets, Ssrrlny Central Oregon sinceiyiu gage 541-388-4200. class rings, sterling sil- • Bronze & Crystal Painting is 44" x 32". The Bulletin LOCAL MONEyiWe buy 2-tier, 6-arm chanyerriny Centrel Oreyon sinceSiu ver, coin collect, vinAsking$2,500 cash Health Technician 286 secured trustdeeds & tage watches, dental delier, 22" across, 231-360-5105 (Bend) 541-385-5809 note, some hard money go)d. Bill Fl e ming, $300 or best offer. Sales Southeast Bend (Medicalj loans. Call Pat Kellev 541-382-9419. 541-923-7491 $28,269.00 to $41,122.00/ Per Year 541-382-3099 ext.13. your web address 255 Black Friday Indoor Sale! Add Thisannouncement closes on Garage door openerto your ad and readday only, 9-3. EveryTuesday, December2, 2014 Computers Craftsman 3/4hp belt Sisters Habitat ReStore 1thing ers onThe Buiietin's must go! Name drive DC motor with Building Supply Resale your price web site, www.bend- no reasonIndian Health Service is seeking 2 Health TechniT HE B ULLETIN r e Balji)Rnlh battery backup. Brand Quality items. bulletin.com, will be Wurlitzer able offers refused! Furcians (Medical) for the Warm Springs Indian quires computer adnew still in box. $150. LOW PRICES! able to click through niture, household items, Health Center and will assist registered nurses Ultra Console vertisers with multiple 541-280-0966 150 N. Fir. automatically to your art work & collectibles. Model ¹2636 and/or physicians in general care to patients by ad schedules or those 541-549-1621 website. Credit cards accepted. Serial ¹1222229. taking vital signs, obtaining history of chief comGE indoor/outdoor xmas selling multiple sysOpen to the public. 20278 Badger Rd. (east plaints of patients, administering yaccines, imMade in USA. lites: 35 l ites/box $5 tems/ software, to disAutomotive of 3rd St.) No earlybirds! munizations and approved medications, permaple wood. each. 541-388-9270 close the name of the Genuine 266 forming venipuncture procedures, setting-up Includes matching ROBBERSON y business or the term 292 Holiday Classic super bench.$900. Heating & Stoves patients for exams and/or procedures, perform"dealer" in their ads. Llncesn ~ Stsyea ing a variety of supporting diagnostic tests, en598-4674 days, spear 6" color lites, 3 Sales Other Areas Private party advertis- (541) @$20ea. 541-388-9270 Natural gas h e ater, suring general cleanliness of the exam rooms by or (541) 923-0488 Vacation Rentals Service Technician ers are defined as straightening up between patients, replenishing evenings. free standing, & Exchanges NOTICE -Robberson Ford those who sell one How to avoid scam Abalon, supplies, disposing of contaminated waste and 38,000 BTU, w/cecomputer. and fraud attempts ramic harth and stove Remember to remove Robberson Ford, cleaning contaminated area utilizing universal your Garage Sale signs Central Oregon's ¹1 yy'Beaware of internaprecautions and performing administrative medi- :) Ocean front house pipe, like new, $700. (nails, staples, etc.) Dealership is accept- cal off ice duties such as answering phones, and beach walk from town, tional fraud. Deal loMadras 541-325-6791 after your Sale event ing applications for an receiving patients. These positions report to the 2 bdrm/2 bath, TV, cally whenever posis over! THANKS! Clinical Nurse Supervisor. fireplace, BBQ. $95 experienced full time sible. TURN THE PAGE From The Bulletin Service Technician at Follow Link to Announcement to apply: per night, 3 night Min. u' Watch for buyers and your local utility htt s:I/www.usa'obs. ov/GetJob?V!ewDetails/387 For More Ads our Bend location. Gift? 208-369-3144 who offer more than companies. 455800 your asking price and The Bulletin Ford experience prewho ask to have ferred. Top pay and The Bulletin Call 54 I -385-5809 Rooms for Rent Serving Central Onyon sinceSyy money wired or benefits are offered NOTICE TO General to ro m o te ou r s ervice handed back to them. from our growing ADVERTISER The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Saturwww.bendbunetin.com Furn. room quiet home, Fake cashier checks quality organization Since September 29, day night shift and other shifts as needed. We no drugs, alcohol or and money orders including: Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care 1991, advertising for currently have openings all nights of the week. smoking. $450/mo. 1st & are common. Medical & Dental insurused woodstoves has Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts last . 541-408-0846 VNever give out perance; Vacation & NOTICE: Oregon state been limited to modstart between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and sonal financial inforHoliday Pay; 401k; law requires anyone els which have been end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. AllpoGarage Sales Profit sharing, etc. who con t racts for mation. certified by the Orsitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. YTrust your instincts construction work to egon Department of Email resume to Starting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we pay a Garage Sales Serving Central be licensed with the and be wary of Environmental Qualtweber@robberson.com minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts Oregon Since 2003 Construction Contracsomeone using an ity (DEQ) and the fedor apply in person at are short (11:30 1:30). The work consists of Garage Sales tors Board (CCB). An Residental/Commercial escrow service or eral E n v ironmental loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackRobberson Ford- ask active license agent to pick up your Protection A g e ncy for Duane. ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup Find them Sprinkler means the contractor merchandise. (EPA) as having met and other tasks. For qualifying employees we 2100 N.E. 3rd Street, 325 is bonded & insured. in BIOW-Out smoke emission stanoffer benefits i ncluding life i n surance, Bend, OR 97701. Verify the contractor's The Bulletin dards. A cer t ified Hay, Grain & Feed Robberson Sprinkler Repair short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid Serving Central Oregon since fyyy Ford is a The Bulletin CCB l i c ense at w oodstove may b e drug free workplace. vacation and sick time. Drug test is required www.hirealicensed1st Quality mixed grass Classifieds Maintenance Lawn Crypt for two at identified by its certifi- hay, prior to employment. EOE. contractor.com no rain, barn stored, Deschutes Memorial • Fall Clean up cation label, which is www.robberson.com or call 503-378-4621. .Weekly Mowing $250/ton. 541-385-5809 Gardens near the Pond. permanently attached Please submit a completed application attenThe Bulletin recom- & Edging Call 541-549-3831 $15OO. 541-771-48OO ' to the stove. The BulDRIVERS tion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available mends checking with •Bi-Monthly & Monthly will not know- Patterson Ranch, Sisters at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chan- Room for rent in RedPalm tree plant, live letin the CCB prior to con- Maintenance $425, incl utilities. dler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be mond, healthy 7t/y' pot roller. ingly accept advertis- Wheat Straw For Sale tracting with anyone. No smoking. Mature, reing for the sale of obtained upon request by contacting Kevin sponsible, also weaner pigs. Some other t rades $75. 541-388-9270 8 stable. Call uncertified 541-546-6171 Eldred via email (keldred@bendbulletin.com). Jim, 541-419-4513 ~Lnndeon in also req u ire addi-•Landscape woodstoves. No phone calls please. Only completed applitional licenses and Construction cations will be considered for this position. No Sysco is now hiring certifications. Looking for your 267 .Water Feature resumes will be accepted. Drug test is re• Delivery Drivers & Condo/Townhomes next employee? Installation/Maint. quired prior to employment. EOE. Fuel & Wood • Shuttle Associates Place a Bulletin for Rent Debris Removal •Pavers based out of help wanted ad •Renovations The Bulletin Bend, Oregon. SerrrnyCenrrel Oregon once tyny today and Eagle Crest Townhome JUNK BE GONE •Irrigations Installation Olhaunsen regulaWHEN BUYING Earn a $2000 2 bdrm/2 bath. Includes tion size pool table reach over I Haul Away FREE FIREWOOD... Sign-on Incentive. Senior Discounts sports ctr privileges. No in very good shape 60,000 readers For Salvage. Also $18.90-$23.62 DOE. To avoid fraud, Bonded & Insured NEWSPAPER pets. $1200/mo + dewith cues, balls, each week. Cleanups 8 Cleanouts The Bulletin Route delivery driving 541-815-4458 posit. For inquires, email misc. accessories. Your classified ad Mel, 541-389-8107 (18-25 stops daily), LCB¹8759 recommends paysusan per@msn.com $1000. will also ment for Firewood unloading 800-1400 541-389-1272 or appear on cases per route at only upon delivery Handyman Where can you find a 541-480-4695 Call a Pro bendbuHetin.com customer locations, while and inspection. helping hand? Whether you need a which currently • A cord is 128 cu. ft. providing excellent The Bulletin is looking for a resourceful and enI DO THAT! SANTA SUIT 4' x 4' x 8' receives over From contractors to customer service. thusiastic reporter with broad sports interests to fence fixed, hedges Home/Rental repairs Complete XL 1.5 million page To be considered join a staff that covers the wide range of com- trimmed or a house • Receipts should Small jobs to remodels yard care, it's all here exc. cond., wig, include name, views every please go to our petitive and recreational activities for which our Honest, guaranteed in The Bulletin's beard, topcoat, pants, built, you'll find website: region is famous. phone, price and month at no work. CCB¹151573 white gloves, hat, boot "Call A Service kind of wood www.s sco ortland.com extra cost. professional help in Dennis 541-317-9768 covers, belt. $150. to download and We are seeking a reporter who can cover ev- The Bulletin's "Call a purchased. Bulletin Professional" Directory 541-598-6486 • Firewood ads complete an application erything from traditional sports to the offbeat Classifieds LandscapingNard Care or you can apply in and extreme, with particular emphasis on com- Service Professional" MUST include Wanted- paying cash Get Results! species & cost per person at: munity (participation) sports and preps. NecesDirectory Painting/Wall Covering for Hi-fi audio & stuCall 541-385-5809 NOTICE: Oregon Land26250 SW Parkway sary skills include feature writing, event covercord to better serve dio equip. Mclntosh, 541-385-5809 or place your ad scape Contractors Law our customers. Center Drive, age, and the ability to work well on deadline. A ALL AMERICAN JBL, Marantzi Dyon-line at (ORS 671) requires all Wilsonville, OR 97070 college degree is required. Reporting experiPAINTING naco, Heathkit, SanbendbuHetin.com businesses that adMon-Fri 9am -4pm. ence, polished writing skills and a track record Interior and Exterior Bulletin sui, Carver, NAD, etc. The vertise t o pe r form Sersiny Central Oreyon since tyte of accuracy and reliability are a must. Many of Apt JMultiplex GeneralI Family-owned Landscape Construc- Residential 8 Commercial Call 541-261-1808 Heavy Equipment 341 the duties of this position require evening and tion which includes: 40 yrs exp.• Sr. Discounts WHEN YOU SEE THIS All year Dependable Mechanic weekend availability. CHECK YOUR AD Horses & Equipment l anting, deck s , needed for work on 5-vear warranties Firewood: Seasoned; ences, arbors, HOLIDAY SPECIAL! Northern California Also important is the ability to conceptualize the Lodgepole, split, del, water-features, and inCall 541-337-6149 logging & sawmill multimedia components that might complement B end, 1 f o r $ 1 95 stallation, repair of irM Ore P i X a t B e n d ii j l e ti n . C O r n CCB ¹193960 rolling stock, ,I®, stories, including video, audio and slide show or 2 cords for $365. rigation systems to be On a classified ad Burney, California. elements. Experience using social media sites, Call fo r m u lti-cord l icensed w it h th e Good classified ads tell go to Call 530-335-4924 including Facebook and Twitter, is preferred. discounts! on the first day it runs Landscape Contrac- the www.bendbulletin.com essential facts inan 541-420-3484. to make sure it isn cortors Board. This 4-digit to view additional n The Bulletin is an independent, family-owned 5th wheel 3-horse rect. Spellcheck and number is to be in- interesting Manner.Write Masters Level photos of the item. newspaper in Bend, a vibrant city of 80,000 surSilverado 2001 human errors do occluded in all adver- from the readers view - not Clinician/Site Pine ut Juniper Split rounded bysnow-capped mountains and home 29'x8' trailer. Deluxe the seller's. Convert the cur. If this happens to tisements which indiSupervisor (Bendi • • I i to unlimited outdoor recreation. The Bulletin is a showman/semi living cate the business has facts into benefits. Show your ad, please condrug-free workplace and an equal-opportunity PROMPT DELIVERY quarters, lots of extact us ASAP so that a bond,insurance and the reader how the item will Energetic, self-mo54XN89-9663 employer. Pre-employment drug screening is tras. Beautiful condicorrections and any workers compensa- help them insomeway. Looking for Carol C., tivated, M a s ters required prior to hiring. tion. $21,900. OBO tion for their employadjustments can be This Happy Birthday Dec. Level clinician/site 541-420-3277 ees. For your protecmade to your ad. advertisingtip 20th! Call Linda Mont269 supervisor to proTo apply, please email cover letter, resume tion call 503-378-5909 541-385-5809 brought toyouby gomery at 208-908-8562 Gardening Supplies One gently used single vide tre a tment, and writing samples to: or use our website: The Bulletin Classified manage staff and s ortsre orter@bendbulletin.com Western Washington pony cart with 53" www.lcb.state.or.us to & Equipment The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon sincetyly Guy seeks gal 50-66, shafts, $450. 2 Head communicate ef Senior Apartmentcheck license status No phone inquiries please. slim/average build, to stalls and harness set fectively. Send reIndependent Living before contracting with share quiet t i mes; BarkTurfSoil.com up for Shetland pony sumes and quesALL-INCLUSIVE the business. Persons C & H Painting, LLC trips, walks, nature, but can be adjusted t ions to K ri s a t with 3 meals daily doing lan d scape"For a SweetPaint Job" moon-light, cuddling! PROMPT DELIVERY for a mini horse. $100. kris@hhtreatmenMonth-to-month lease, maintenance do not Commercial/Residential r equire an LC B l i - Lic'd, bonded, insured. Greg, PO Box 3013 Phone eve n ings, tidaho.com. check it out! 542-389-9663 5erving Central Oregon since I903 cense. ccsf7oss7541-977-4360 Arlington, WA 98223. 541-443-4301. Call 541-233-9914
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOV 27, 2014
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
DAILY BRIDGE CLUBThursday, November27,2014
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Exercise in stability By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency "I wasn't born with 'card sense,"' Unlucky Louie said to m e. "Is it really vital?" "It is, to play bridge well," I said. "And a sense of humor and a touch of horse sense don't hurt." "And horse sense is just stable thinking," Cy the Cynic observed. Today's West led the ace and a low diamond against four spades. South ruffed, led a trump to dummy aud returned the deuce of clubs:three, seven, jack. East won West's lowclub return and led a heart, but South rose with his ace and led the ten of clubs, discarding dummy's last heart when West played low. Making four.
A SIGN OF ME TIMES
SOHolds 52 Bosom buddies All the puzzles this week, from Monday to Set- 56Where the ball
DAILY QUESTION
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Y ou hold: 4s A 8 7 4 3 9 Q 5 Openinglead — 0 A 0 9 87 4 4 Q 2. Y o u r partneropens one heart, you respond one spade, he (C) 2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO
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bids two clubs and you return to two hearts. Partner then bids three hearts. What do you say? ANSWER: Your tw o-h e a rt preference showed at most nine points, but partner tried again for game, and you have the best possible eight-pointhand. You have an ace plus two valuable honors in his long suits. Bid four hearts. He may hold 2, AK7 6 4 2 , A 6, K J94. North dealer N-S vulnerable
COUNT TO FOUR East's defense was unstable. A rule may advocateplaying "second hand low," but an East with a sense of the cards — and the ability to count to four — would beat the contract. West must hold a high heart for East-West to have a chance. Even so, they need two club tricks. On the first club, East must put up his king to shift to a heart. West will score his king before South sets up a c l ub dtscard.
No. 1023
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11/27/14
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27 2014 E5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
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RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605- RoommateWanted 616- Want ToRent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648- Houses for RentGeneral 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for RentSunriver 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663- Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RVParking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space
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682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726- Timeshares for Sale 730 - NewListings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744- Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746- Northwest BendHomes 747 - Southwest BendHomes 748- Northeast BendHomes 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
775
860
880
880
882
882
Manufactured/ Ililobile Homes
Motorcycles & Accessories
Motorhomes
Motorhomes
Fifth Wheels
Fifth Wheels
Alpenlite 28 ft. 1987, New stove, fridge. Good furnace, AC. Stereo, DVD player. Queen bed WITH bedding. 20 ft. awning. Good shape. $4500 541-977-5587
Snowbird Special! Open Road 36' w/3 slides! King bed, hide-a-bed, glass shower, 10 gal. water heater, 10 cu.ft. fridge, central vac, satellite dish, 27" TV /stereo system, front power leveling jacks & scissor stabilizer jacks, 16' awning. 2005 model is like new! $25,995 541-419-0566
List Your Home JandMHomes.com We Have Buyers Get Top Dollar Financing Available. 541-546-5511
New Dream Special 3 bdrm, 2 bath $50,900 finished on your site. J and)vl Homes 541-546-5511
®'
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Yamaha V-Star, 250cc 2011 motorcycle, new custom seat for rider, vinyl coating on tank, 2 helmets included. Gets 60mpg, and has Allegro 32' 2007, Iike Ready to make memories! 3,278 miles. Asking $4700, firm. new, only 12,600 miles. Top-selling Winnebago original owners, nonCall Dan 541-550-0171 Chev 6.1L with Allison 60 31J, transmission, dual ex- smokers, garaged, only haust. Loaded! Auto-lev18,800 miles, auto-level870 eling system, 5kw gen, ing jacks, (2) slides, upBoats & Accessories power mirrors w/defrost, graded queen bed, bunk slide-outs with awbeds, micro, (3) TVs, 17.5' Bayliner 175 Capri, 2 nings, rear c a mera, sleeps 10! Lots of storlike new, 135hp I/O, fow trailer hitch, driyer door age, maintained, very time, Bimini top, many w/power window, cruise, clean!Only$67,995! Exextras, Karavan trailer exhaust brake, central tended warranty and/or fiwith swing neck current vac, satellite sys. Asking nancing avail to qualified registrations. $7000. $67,500. 503-781-8812 buyers! 541-388-7179 541-350-2336 881
Travel Trailers
850
Snowmobiles
4-place enclosed Interstate snowmobile trailer w/ RockyMountain pkg, $8500. 541-379-3530 860
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
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
Motorcyclss & Accessories
648
CHECK YOURAD
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 cond., very clean. Lots of bonus features; many have never been used. A sking $18,000. C a l l Lisa, 541-420-0794 fo r more info / more photos.
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
885
Canopies & Campers 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„ Fantastic Fan, lots of storage, sleeps 4, $3750. 541-617-0211 People Look for Information About Products and Services Every Daythrough The Sulletie Classiffeds
Have an item to Freightliner custom • Redmond Homes • 1965 Harley Davidson Dutchman Denali sell quick? 5th wheel puller, 1200C with S portster 32' 2011 travel sleeper cab, rebuilt frame and '05 Harley If it's under Looking for your next crate motor. Rat Rod trailer. 2 slides Evengine with 20k miles, PUBLISHER'S emp/oyee? erything goes, all 6.5 generator, 120 cu. look, Screaming Eagle '500 you can place it in Fleetwood D i scovery NOTICE Place a Bulletin help tips, leather saddlebags, kitchen ware, linens ft. storage boxes - one All real estate adverThe Bulletin 40' 2003, diesel, w/all wanted ad today and e xtras. S a crifice a t etc. Hitch, sway 8' long. Gets 10.9 tising in this newspaoptions - 3 slide outs, bars, water & sewer reach over 60,000 $4000. Call Bill Logsdon, Classifieds for: mpg, many more per is subject to the satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, readers each week. 456-206-8446 (in Bend). hoses. List price features. All in good F air H o using A c t etc., 32,000 m iles. Your classified ad $34,500 - asking shape. See to appre'10- 3 lines, 7 days which makes it illegal 745 Wintered in h e ated will also appear on $26,800 Loaded. ciate (in Terrebonne to a d vertise "any '16 - 3 lines, 14 days shop. $79,995 obo. Homes for Sale bendbulletin.com Must see to appreciarea).$24,000. preference, limitation 541-447-6664 which currently re(Private Party ads only) ate. Redmond, OR. 503-949-4229 or disc r imination$140,000 Go r geous ceives over 541-604-5993 based on race, color, views. 6.4 Acres and 1.5 million page religion, sex, handi- borders BLM land. On views every month cap, familial status, Cul-de-sac, electric at at no extra cost. Four Winds 2008 Harley Davidson marital status or na- street and septic ap Bulletin Classifieds 2001 FXSTD, twin 18' travel trailer tional origin, or an in- proved. Get Results! cam 86, fuel injected, tention to make any Veronica Theriot, Broused very little Call 365-5809 or Vance & Hines short Keystone Everest 5th such pre f erence, ker 541-610-5672 place your ad on-line Freightliner 1994 $8500. shot exhaust, Stage I Wheel, 2004 limitation or discrimiWindermere at 2007 Bennington Custom with Vance & Hines 541-719-1217 Model 323P - 3 slides, nation." Familial staCentral Oregon bendbugetin.com fuel management Pontoon Boat Motorhome rear island-kitchen, tus includes children Real Estate system, custom parts, 2275 GL, 150hp Will haul small SUV fireplace, 2 TV's, under the age of 16 extra seat. Honda VTEC, less or toys, and pull a CD/DVR/VCR/Tuner living with parents or 51460 Lasso Lane, La $10 500 OBO than 110 hours, trailer! Powered by w/surround sound, A/C, legal cus t odians, Pine Charmer - 3 Lots Call Today original owner, lots 6.3 Cummins with 6 custom bed, ceiling fan, pregnant women, and bdrm, 2 bath, 1160 sq • 541-516-8684 of extras; TennesW/D ready, many extras. speed Allison auto people securing cus- ft home. Gas f ire- Lot Awaits your Dream see tandem axle New awning & tires. trans, 2nd owner. tody of children under place, large kitchen Home - Build your trailer. Excellent Excellent condition. Very nice! $53,000. Heartland P r owler 16. This newspaper i sland with l ots o f dream Wes t side condition, $23,500 $18,900. Morepics 541-350-4077 will not knowingly ac- storage. Open great- home on this 0 .18 2012, 29PRKS, 33', 503-646-1804 like new, 2 slides-liv- available.541-923-6408 cept any advertising r oom concept 8 acre lot in the covi ng area 8 la r g e for real estate which is double rear entry ga- eted Awbrey Ridge. closet, 15' power awin violation of the law. rage. Large lot, built in Located on a 2008 11'x2' Zodiak, like O ur r e aders a r e 2005. $137.500 cul-de-sac near parks Harley Fat Boy 2002 ning, power hitch & ,•a new, ActiV hull, safe stabilizers, full s i ze hereby informed that and trails. $139,000 14k orig. miles.. ExMLS¹201404934 lock canister, 15HP all dwellings adverMLS 201405653 queen bed, l a rge Scott McLean, cellent cond. Vance & Yamaha w/ t r olling shower, porcelain sink tised in this newspaCall Terry Skjersaa, Principal Broker Hines exhaust, 5 plate, 6 gal Transom Keystone Raptor, 2007 per are available on 541-363-1426 & toilet. 541-408-6908 spoke HD rims, wind tank, less 30 hrs, 2 HOLIDAY RAMBLER an equal opportunity Duke Warner Realty VACATIONER 2003 $25,000or make offer. 37 toy hauler, 2 slides, Realty Executives vest, 12" rise handle chest seats, full Bimini 541-999-2571 generator,A/C, 2 TVs, basis. To complain of 541-362-6262 V6 Gas, 340 hp, bars, detachable lugtop, Transom wheels, 6.1L satellite system w/auto d iscrimination ca l l 65390 NE Stacy Lane- Waterfront lot on Lake gage rack w/back cover, RV's special. workhorse, Allison 1000 seek, in/out sound sysHUD t o l l-free at 3 b drm, 2 . 5 b a t h speed trans., 39K, $5500. 541-923-6427 5 Baert. A 0 .27 acre rest, hwy pegs & many tem,sleeps 6,m any ex1-800-677-0246. The NEW TIRES, 2 slides, home with 1921 sq ft waterfront l o t in chrome accents. Must tras.$29,999. In Madras, 5.5w gen., ABS toll f ree t e lephone of living space. Large see to appreciate! Ads published in the Onan Va l l ey, $10,500. call 541-771-9607 or number for the hear- m aster suite w i t h Christmas "Boats" classification brakes, steel cage cockIn CRR area near world class sand 541-475-6265 washer/dryer, fireing im p aired is soaking t u b call 530-957-1865 and dune recreation area. include: Speed, fish- pit, lace, mw/conv. oven, 1-800-927-9275. walk-in closet. Close Great hunting, bird ing, drift, canoe, Look at: ree standing dinette, Keystone Laredo31' to schools & shop- watching and hiking. house and sail boats. was Bendhomes.com $121,060 new; now, RY 2006 w i th 1 2 ' 652 For all other types of $35,900. ping.MLS¹201404922 Park the RV and play. HDFatBo 1996 541-536-1008 slide-out. Sleeps 6, for Complete Listings of Houses for Rent watercraft, please go $229,000. MLS ¹201409930. queen walk-around Area Real Estate for Sale to Class 875. NW Bend Scott McLean, Brad Whitcomb, bed w/storage under541-385-5809 Principal Broker Broker neath. Tub 8 shower. 541-408-6906 Laredo 30'2009 House for rent/sale! 3 541-350-3449 2 swivel rockers. TV. Realty Executives bdrm 2 bath, newly reAir cond. Gas stove & John L. Scott Servin CentralOre on since 1903 mod. thru-out, 134 NW Real Estate, Bend refrigerator/freezer. Colorado. $1200/mo. 1st/ Completely www.johnlscottbend.com Bayliner 185 2006 Microwave. Awning. NOTICE last/sec. 541-389-2028 Rebuilt/Customized Outside sho w er. All real estate adveropen bow. 2nd owner Providence 2005 2012/2013 Award Fully loaded, 35,000 — low engine hrs. Slide-through stortised here in is sub658 Winner — fuel injected V6 miles, 350 Cat, Very a ge. E a s y Lif t . Acreages ject to th e Federal Houses for Rent Showroom Condition clean, non-smoker, — Radio & Tower. $29,000 new; AskF air Housing A c t , overall length is 35' Many Extras 3 slides, side-by-side ing $13,600 Redmond which makes it illegal 360 degree breathtakGreat family boat has 2 slides, Arctic Low Miles. refrigerator with ice 541-447-4805 Priced to sell. to advertise any pref- ing mtn views. Sister, package, A/C,table maker, Washer/Dryer, erence, limitation or Oregon. 105 acres, $75,000 $11,590. & chairs, satellite, Eagle Crest Custom Flat screen TV's, In 541-548-4607 541-548-0345. Arctic pkg., power Home -3 bdrms/3 baths, discrimination based borders BLM. Bring RV motion satellite. awning, in excellent upstairs family room, of- on race, color, reli- offers. $64 9 ,000. CONSIGNMENTS 875 $95,000 condition! More pix fice, large deck, 3-car gaion, sex, handicap, www.johnlscott.com/5 541-480-2019 WANTED at bendbulletin.com raqe. Includes sports ctr amilial status or na- 163'I Watercraft We Do The Work ... pnvileges. $2400/mo + Kellie Cook, Broker tional origin, or inten$22,500 HD Softtail Deuce 2002, You Keep The Cash! deposit. Inquire by email tion to make any such 541-406-0463 541-419-3301 RV broken back forces ds published in "Wa On-site credit susan per©msn.com preferences, l i mitaJohn L. Scott sale, only 200 mi. on tercraft" include: Kay CONSIGNMENTS approval team, tions or discrimination. Real Estate, Bend WANTED motor from Har- aks, rafts and motor 675 web site presence. We will not knowingly www.johnlscottbend.com new Ized personal ley, new trans case We Do The Work ... We Take Trade-Ins! RV Parking accept any advertis- HARD TO FIND 5 acre and p arts, s p o ke watercrafts. Fo You Keep The Cash! ing for real estate flat buildable corner wheels, new brakes, "boats" please se On-site credit BIG COUNTRY RV Full hookup RV s ite which is in violation of lot located in Lake approval team, n early all o f b i k e Class 870. Bend: 541-330-2495 avail. through April this law. All persons 541-385-5609 brand new. Has proof web site presence. P ark Estates w i t h Redmond: 30th, $325 + e l ec. are hereby informed mature MONTANA 3585 2008, We Take Trade-Ins! l a ndscape. of all work done. Re541-548-5254 Central Oregon KOA that all dwellings ad- MLS¹ exc. cond., 3 slides, 201 4 06959 movable windshield, 541-546-3046 veitised are available $135,500 king bed, Irg LR, T-bags, black and all Serving Central Oregon since 19D3 BIG COUNTRY RV on an equal opportu- Pam Lester, Principal chromed out with a Arctic insulation, all Bend: 541-330-2495 Looking for your 880 The Bulletin's nity basis. The Bulle- Broker, Century 21 options - reduced by Redmond: next employee? willy skeleton theme "Call A Service tin Classified $3500 to $31,500. Motorhomes 541-548-5254 Place a Bulletin help Gold Country Realty, on all caps and cov541-420-3250 Professional" Directory wanted ad today and Inc. 541-504-1338 ers. Lots o f w o rk, 750 heart and love went reach over 60,000 is all about meeting Redmond Homes readers each week. RV into all aspects. All your needs. • I CONSIGNMENTS done at professional Your classified ad • Pgg will also appear on WANTED Call on one of the $519,000 - 6555 NW shops, call for info. We Do the Work, 61st St., Redmond. Must sell quickly due bendbulletin.com professionals today! C edar siding, m a which currently reYou Keep the Cash! to m e d ical bi l l s, Fall Clearance On-site credit hogany decking, wall $6250. Call Jack at ceives over 1.5 mil3 Bdrm, 2 Bath, 2007 Winnebago Winnebago 22' Need to get an of windows, hickory 541-279-9536. lion page views evapproval team, 1601 sq.ft., Outlook Class "C" 2002 - $28,500 web site presence. ad in ASAP? cabinets, vaulted ceil ery month at no RETAIL 31', solar panel, Chevy 454, heavy ings. extra cost. Bulletin We Take Trade-Ins! KAWASAKI You can place it $65,609 catalytic heater, duty chassis, new Cherly Tanler, Broker Classifieds Get ReSALE KLX125, 2003, excellent condition, batteries & tires, cab online at: 541-410-7434 sults! Call 385-5609 BIG COUNTRY RV $77,599 Finished good condition. more extras. & roof A/C, tow hitch Bend: 541-330-2495 Windermere or place your ad www.bendbugetin.com On Your Site. $1100. Asking $55K. w /brake, 21k m i ., Central Oregon on-line at Redmond: J & M Homes 541-593-6746 Ph. 541-447-9268 more! 541-280-3251 541-548-5254 Real Estate bendbulletin.com 541-385-5809 541-546-5511 Houses for Rent General
BM R@Raas
o 00
00 908
Aircraft, Parts & Service
1/3interest in
Columbia 400,
Financing available.
$150,000
(located © Bend)
•
541-268-3333
1/3 interest in wellequipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. $65,000. 541-419-9510 www.N4972M.com
The Bulletin
The Bulletin
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 Bellanca 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, 541.788.5546
Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 1968 A e r o Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time, full panel. $21,000 obo. Contact Paul at 541-447-5184.
A dd color photos and sell yeuI stuff fa s t . In Print Clnd Online With The BL!Iletin'S CICISSifjeCjS. A dd color photos for pets, real e s t a te , a ut o 8
more! I I
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e Mlpws,& g
GOLDENRETRIEVERPUPPIES,we Q U AINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES! FORD F150 XL 2005. Thistruck
are three adorable, loving puppies Modern amenities and all the quiet can haul jt all! Extra Cab, 4X4, and looking for a caring home. Please youwillneed. Roomtogrowinyour a t ough V8 engine will get the job own little paradise! Call now. call right away. $500 done on the ranch.
a
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*SpeCjal priVate party rateS apply to
BSSl 1C S
merchandise and automotive categories.
www.bendbulletin.com
To place your photo ad, visit us online atwwnv.bendbulleti n. com
or call with questions, 5 41 -38 5 - 5 8
09
E6 THURSDAY NOVEMBER 27 2014 • THE BULLETIN
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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
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AUTOS8ETRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916 - Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles
916
933
935
Pickups
Sport Utility Vehicles
BMW X335i 2010 Exlnt cond., 65K miles w/100K mile transferable warranty. Very clean; loaded - cold weather pkg, premium pkg & technology pkg. Keyless access, sunroof, nayigation, satellite radio, extra snow tires. (Car top carrier not included.) $22,500. 541-915-9170
Peterbilt 359 p otable 2005 Diesel 4x4 water truck, 1 990, Chev Crewcab du3200 gal. tank, Shp ally, Allison tranny, pump, 4-3" hoses, tow pkg., brake concam!ocks, $25,000. troller, cloth split 541-820-3724 front bench seat, only 66k miles. Very good condition, SEMI-DRY VAN Original owner, 53' long x102" wide, $34,000 good tires, no dings, or best offer. $8500. 541-408-7826 541-719-1217 931
CAL LW
541-447-7272 932
Antique & Classic Autos
Chevelle Malibu 1966 Complete restoration, $32,900.
Sport Utility Vehicles
Sport Utility Vehicles
Automobiles
Automobiles
GMC Yukon
PRICE REDUCED!
BuickLaCrosse
•
2006- 4x4, room for everyone. VIN¹121999 $16,977 ROBBERSON LINcoLN ~
IM RO R
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. pricing good thru 11/30/14
JeepCommander
2007 - Loaded, awesome. Vin¹569977 SOLD! ROBBERSON'L mama ~
~
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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
Mercury Mariner
2009 - All wheel drive, same vehicle asthe Escape, in great shape! Vin¹J13074 Only $13,977
Dlr ¹0205. pricing good thru 11/30/14 Jee Libert 2012
LINcoLII ~
I M ROQ
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. pricing good thru 11/30/14
2011 Has everything, seriously!! Vin¹301832 $49,977 ROBBERSON LINCOLII ~
~
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. pricing good thru 11/30/14
SubaruLegacy LL Bean 2006, (exp. 11/30/1 4) Vin ¹203053. Stock ¹82770
mama ~
541-312-3986
Dlr ¹0205.Price good thru 11/30/1 4 JEEP WRANGLER
Chevy Si i v erado 1500 20 1 4 , L T , Chevrolet Trailblazer 4 WD, crew c a b , 2008 4x4 short box, 5.3L, new Automatic, 6-cylinder, Feb. 28, 2014. Not tilt wheel, power windriven since June dows, power brakes, 2014. Gar a ged. air conditioning, keyLoaded, brown tan less entry, 69K miles. cloth interior, 4900 Excellent condition; mi., $34,9 9 0. tires have 90% tread. 541-480-5634 $11,995. gythrp@gmail.com Call 541-598-5111
2009 hard top 18,000 miles. automatic, AC, tilt & cruise, power windows, power steering, power locks, alloy wheels and running boards, garaged.
$22,500.
541-419-5980
BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS Chevy Silverado 2011 Search the area's most The Bulletin EX cab 4x4 LTZ comprehensive listing of To Subscribe call canopy, Z71 off classified advertising... 541-385-5800 or go to leather, road. ¹105059 estate to automotive, www.bendbulletin.com Black Frida Blowout real merchandise to sporting $23,495 goods. Bulletin Classifieds appear every day in the print or on line. Call 541-385-5809 541-598-3750 www.bendbulletin.com
Hybrid Limited, Honda Ri d geline 2009 AWD, great tires. RTL 2006. 2nd owner VIN¹ A17570 112,000 mi.. Records $23,977 since owning car for 5 years. Truck crew cab ROBBERSON w ith 3. 5 V 6 , a u t o u eeoar~ ~lla aa a trans, very clean with most options, 17" al541-312-3986 loy wheels with Toyo Dlr ¹0205. pricing Tires at 80%. Custom good thru 11/30/14 t onneau cover f o r bed, and tow hitch. Price to sell $13,997. dagreene75© hotmail. com or 610-909-1701
The Bulletin Seving Central Oregonsince19N
turbo, Cadilliac red, very clean, must see! $14,995 obo. 541-382-0194
Chrysler 200 LX 2012, (exp. 11/30/1 4) VIN ¹292213 Stock ¹83014
$13,979 or $195/mo.,
®
GIJBARIJ.
Chrysler Pacifica 2005, (exp. 11/30/1 4)
Tick, Tock Tick, Tock... ...don't let time get away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today!
$2500 down 72 mo. 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title included in payment.
©
MercedesGLK350
SUSARUOPSEHD.OtM
Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS
940
Vans
(exp. 11/30/1 4) Vin ¹535474 Stock ¹83015
$13,979 or $195/mo.,
$ 2000 down 72 mo 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title i ncluded in payment.
®
s u a aau
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 ChevyExpress Cargo Dlr ¹0354 Van 2011, (exp. 11/30/1 4) Vin ¹126159 Stock ¹44535A
$22,979 or $279/mo.,
$3000 down, 84 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p -
proved credit. License Honda Accord SE 2006, and title i ncluded in
4-cyl, great mpg, nonsmoker, well maint'd, mi., clean. 1 owner. S UBA R U . 95K Reduced $8250 firm. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 480-266-7395 (Bend) payment.
2010 - Gorgeous, AWD. Vin¹310777
$26,977. ROBBERSONL
®
877-266-3821 Dlr¹0354
Hyundai Eiantra
Ford Escape Mercedes 380SL 1982 Roadster, black on black, Nissan Extra Cab soft & hard top, excellent 4X4 Pickup 1994 condition, always garaged. 155 K m i les, V-6 manual 2nd owner. Gem Top $11,500. 541-549-6407 canopy, roof rack, bed liner, tow hitch. Extra: 4 tires, 2 wheels. Body good shape. High miles, runs great. Excellent maintenance records. Below Mercedes Kelly Blue $2500. 541-419-7866. 450SL, 1975 97K Miles $8999. 541-504-8399
Limited 2010, (exp. 11/30/1 4) Vin ¹B21115 Stock ¹83028A
Dlr ¹0205. pricing good thru 11/30/14
$17,979 or $199/mo.,
'„'Pribe Re~dcedi '
541-312-3986
Chrysler Town & Country LXI 1997, beautiful inside & out, one owner, nonsmoker, loaded with options! 197,892 mi. rec o rds © s uNIMkUOPEEND.OOII a a au Mercedes MBZ ML500, Service 2003, loaded, 102K, fac- available. $4 , 950. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. tory rims w/snow tires incl. Call Mike, (541) 815877-266-3821 All records, exlnt cond., 8176 after 3:30 p.m. Dlr ¹0354 $9,500. 541-322-6281 $3500 down, 84 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title included in oavment.
$11,977 ROBBERSON I I N c 0 I II ~
IM RO R
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Special
1000
1000
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
exander Boyd IN THE CIRCUIT and/or Charles Boyd COURT OF THE h ave each c onSTATE OF veyed title to North OREGON Unit Irrigation DisFOR THE COUNTY MAZDA 3 S2011 trict. The object of OF DESCHUTES the Complaint is to NORTH UNIT IRRIquiet title of any unGATION DISTRICT, k nown heirs a nd an Irrigation District o rganized u n d e r devisees of Alexand/or Oregon R e v ised ander Boyd Statutes C h a pter Charles Certified preowned thereby vesting fee 545, Plaintiff, vs. with warranty. title of s ai d r e al The unknown heirs ¹401047 property in N o rth and devisees of Oni $16.947 Unit Irrigation DisCHARLES BOYD, trict. deceased, and the ROBBERSON DEMAND FOR REunknown heirs and I I N c 0 I II ~ IM RO R LIEF devisees of ALEXANDER BOYD, de- - 1 - SUMMONS BY 541-312-3986 PUBLICATION Dlr ¹0205 price c eased, Def e nPublication - Sumd ants. Case N o . good thru 11/30/14 mons 1 4CV075 SUM MONS BY PUBLI- (a) Requiring the unk nown heirs a nd CATION. devisees of Charles TO: THE UNKNOWN Boyd and/or AlexHEIRS AND DEVIander Boyd to set SEES OF forth their claims, if CHARLES BOYD, any, as to the real Deceased; and THE Scion XB2013, property described UNKNOWN HEIRS (exp. 11/30/1 4) herein. AND DEVISEES OF Vin ¹034131 1 - SUMMONS BY ALEXANDER Stock ¹83065 PUBLICATION $15,979 or $199/mo., BOYD, Deceased. Publication - SumI N THE NAME O F $ 2000 down 84 m o mons 4 .49% APR o n ap - T HE STATE O F proved credit. License OREGON: You are (a) Determining all adverse and title i ncluded in hereby required to payment. Defendant(s); appear and defend the complaint filed (a) Declaring Plaintiff SUBA R IJ. in fee simple of the against you in the real property de2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. above-entitled scribed herein, and c ause within 3 0 877-266-3821 entitled to possesdays from the date Dlr ¹0354 sion thereof, free of of first publication of any e state, t i t le this summons on claim, lien or interyou; and if you fail est of Defendant(s) to appear and deor those c laiminq fend, the plaintiff will under Defendant(s) apply to the court for in quieting title to the relief demanded SubaruLegacy 3.0R t he p remises t o in the complaint. Limited 2008, Plaintiff NOTICE TO DEFEN(exp. 11/30/1 4) DANT: READ (a) Enjoining DefenVin ¹207281 THESE P A P ERS dant(s) and those Stock ¹82547 claiming under DeCAREFULLY. $21,979 or $259/mo., You must "appear" in fendant(s) from as$3600 down, 84 mo., serting any estate, t his case o r t h e 4 .49% APR o n ap - other side will win title, claim, lien or proved credit. License a utomatically. T o interest in the preand title included in "appear" you must mises or any porpayment. tion thereof. file with the court a S UHA RU legal paper called a eusmuommnaom "motion" or GLENN, REEDER & 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. "answer." The "moGASSNER, LLP 877-266-3821 DONALD V. tion" or "answer" Dlr ¹0354 REEDER, OSB must be given to the ¹810196 Of AttorToyota Camry LE 2007 court clerk or adneys fo r P l aintiff ministrator within 30 73,200 miles, newer GLENN, REEDER & days of the date of tires, includes keyLLP pub l ication GASSNER, less start after factory, first 205 SE 5th Street, her e i n 4 studless snow tires s pecified Madras, OR 97741 along with the renot on rims. $9300. quired filing fee. It (541)475-2272; 541-771-0005 or Fax (541) 475-3944 must be in proper 541-389-3550 E-mail: form and have proof gsr.dvr@gmail.com of service on the Date of first plaintiff's a t torney publication: or, if t h e p l aintiff Nov. 27, 2014 does not have an 1 SUMMONS BY attorney, proof of PUBLICATION service on the plainToyota Corolla 2013, Publication tiff. If you have any - Summons (exp. 11/30/1 4) questions, you Vin ¹053527 should see an attorStock ¹83072 ney immediately. If LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE TO INTER$15,979 or $199 mo., you need help in $2000 down, 84 mo., finding an attorney, ESTED PERSONS. 4 .49% APR o n ap - you may contact the RICHARD F. FORD, proved credit. License Oregon State Bar's J R. has been a pand title included in Lawyer R e f erral pointed Per s onal payment. S ervice online a t Representative of the ESTATE OF HELEN www.oregonstate© su a aau bar.org, or by call- LOUSE FORD, NIMkUOPEEND.OOII De2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. ing (503) 684-3763 ceased, by the Circuit 877-266-3821 C ourt, State of O r(in the Portland metDlr ¹0354 ropolitan area), or egon, Des c hutes toll-free elsewhere County, under Case Number14PB0122. All in Oregon at (800) 452-7636. p ersons having a claim against the esSUMMARY STATEMENT OF THE OBtate must present the J ECT O F C O M - c laim w i thin f o u r PLAINT: The months of th e f i rst VOLVO XC90 2007 Complaint is to quiet publication date of this AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L, title to real property notice t o He n drix, power everything, Brinich & B e rtalan, to N ORTH U N IT grey on grey, leather IRRIGATION DISLLP, at 716 NW Harheated lumbar seats, riman Street, Bend, TRICT. Said r e al 3rd row seat, moonproperty i s deOregon 97701, ATTN: roof, new tires, als cribed as D e s - Lisa N. Bertalan, or ways garaged, all chutes County, Orthey may be barred. maintenance up to Additional information egon, Tax Lot Map date, excellent cond. No. may be obtained from A STEALAT $13,900. the court records, the 171221DC00900, 541-223-2218 P roperty I D No . Personal Representative or the following193449, and more WHEN YOU SEE THIS particularly denamed attorney for the Personal Represcribed in the Complaint to Quiet Title sentative. Date of first in Deschutes publication: NovemMorePixat Bendbjjlletij.com filed County, O r e gon, ber 27, 2014. HENOn a classified ad D RIX BRINICH & Circuit Court Case go to No. 14C V -0750. BERTALAN, LLP, 716 www.bendbulletin.com The known heirs NW HARR I MAN, to view additional and devisees of AlBEND, OR 9 7 701, photos of the item. 541-382-4980. pricing good thru 11/30/1 4
®
®
Toyota FJ Cruiser 2012, 4WD, w/traction control, alloy wheels, mud 8 snow t ires, tow p kg. + PT Cruiser 2007, 5spd, trailer break, back 32 mpg hwy, 80K miles, up camera, r oof new tires + mounted rack, ABS breaks + studded snow tires, independent system, $7250. 541-433-2026 blue tooth connection, hands free cell phone c a p ability, compass, o u tside temp, inclinometer, 32K mi. , p r istine condition, $31,900. DodgeAvenger 2013, 541-549-1736 or
MERCEDES-BENZ GL450 2 0 10 Im -
541-815-3049
s u a aau
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
541-647-0081.
maculate, custom wheels and new 20" tires. 2nd set MBZ wheels with snowflake tires. Full new car ext. warranty March 2017. 59,500 miles. Fully loaded incl. DVD and NAV. $34,500.
s u a aau
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
Vin ¹315989 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Stock ¹44375A 877-266-3821 $12,979 or $169/mo., Dlr¹0354
I".;.
irv
Buick LeSabres, 2002 132k $3999; 2005 179k $4999. 541-419-5060 Chevrolet Cruze 2013, 2700 actual miles, 4-cyl
$17,979 or $199/mo.,
$3500 down, 84 mo. at 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title included in payment.
Nearly perfect! Must see! vin¹ 142671
~
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 11/30/14
®
ROBBERSON'L ~
LIIICOLII ~
$2000 down, 72 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title included in payment.
t
21,977
2006 - Great runner, must see. VIN ¹159299 $9977. ROBBERSON
ROBBERSON
541-312-3986
Limited Edition. PRAYING FOR SNOW! Vin¹149708
Chevy Silverado Take care of 2012 4x4 Crew Cab 39K miles, your investments White Diamond paint, with the help from Tonneau cover, leather heated seats, running The Bulletin's boards, tow-ready, "Call A Service new tires (only 200 miles on them), like Professional" Directory CHEVELLE MALIBU new inside and out! 1969 350-4spd, 3" $29,900. exhaust. $12,000. 541-350-0775 Ford Escape 541-788-0427
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
975
Cadillac Escalade
(509) 521-0713 (in Bend, OR)
1965 Mustang
975
TODAYA
Chevy Pickup 1978, long bed, 4x4, frame restoration. 500 2 Studded snow tires. up en g i ne, LT235/85R16, on rims Cadillac fresh R4 transmisfrom 1975 Ford 3/4 w/overdrive, low HD pickup, used less sion no rust, custom than 150 mi., $100. mi., interior and carpet, 541-389-8789 n ew wheels a n d (4) Les Schwab studded tires, You must see snow tires, 265/70R16, it! $25,000 invested. reat shape, 90% tread, $12,000 OBO. 285 obo. 541-382-4144 541-536-3889 or 541-420-6215. 4 studded P205/75R-14 tires on GM wheels, approx 500 miles on them $350. Bob, 541-548-4871
(4) studded tires on rims, L235/75R-15 (fit SUV or truck), excellent cond, $400. 541-388-3022 '65-'66 Mustang original bucket seats, completely rebuilt, better than new. Price lowered, must sell.
935
•
Trucks & Heavy Equipment
Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 935
2013,loaded,
sporty, nearly
perfect. VIN¹624801 $17,977
ROBBERSON LINcoLII ~
I M RDR
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 11/30/14
gO Og
YOUR AD WILL RECEIVECLOSETo z000,000 EXPOSURESFOR ONLY$2SO! OegoeCl~i~Adw1umgN ~kvas ~c eoflheOngon Nms~P bial A ~ ~ > ~n .
Weekof November 24, 2014
The Bulletin
Nissan Frontier 2013, (exp. 11/30/1 4)
Serving Central Oregon since1903
Vin ¹717729
541-385-5809
Stock ¹83155 Oldsmobile CUSTOM CRUISER WAGON 1991 $25,979 or $299/mo., 1 owner, 8 seatbelts, $3900 down, 84 mo., 118K mi, 350EFI V8, 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License auto, $3000 and title included in 541-385-6168 or payment. Norm06©msn.com
s u a a au Plymouth Duster, 1974, ® sound body, 360 engine 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. (needs work). $2300. 877-266-3821 Call 541-390-2454 Dlr ¹0354
Toyota Tundra 4x4, 2002 SR5 access cab, with canopy, $8500 o bo. 541-280-1650 VW CONV. 1 9 78 $8999 -1600cc, fuel injected, classic 1978 Volkswagen Convertible. Cobalt blue with a black convertible top, cream colored interior & black dash. This little beauty runs and looks great and turns heads wherever it goes. Mi: 131,902. Phone 541-504-8399
PRICE REDUCED
Toyota Tundra Ltd. Ed. CrewMax, 2011 - Only 29,700 miles & loaded! 381hp, TRD off road pkg, Bilstein shocks,18" alioys, sunroof, rear s l i ding window, backup camera, 12-spkr JBL sys, running brds, hitch/trailer sway Call The Bulletin At kg, 10-way adj leather td seats, dual climate 541-385-5809 control, sonar, 6-disc CD, Place Your Ad Or E-Mail Bluetooth, more!$34,900. At: www.bendbulletin.com 541-390-6616
DIVORCE $155. Complete preparation. Includes children, custody, support, property and bills diViSiOn. ND
Buy 5 Sell Safely In TheBulletin Classifieds Unlike unregulated Internet advertising, we make every attempt to ensure that products sold in our classifieds are from a valid source.
Call 541-385-5809 toplaceyour adtoday.
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