Bulletin Daily Paper 10-28-13

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Serving Central Oregon since1903 75 $

MONDAY October 28,2013

Fixingflooddamage TEE TOGREEN• B7

LOCAL• A7

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD Golf-zilla drives —Atthe World Long Drive Champion-

ship, the top teeshot snags a $250,000 prize.Bl

HalloweenCrosswrapsupwith awealth of costumes,B1

Elephant obesity —A study of the population in U.S.

zoos is wrapping up.Thebig finding: Many elephants could stand to lose some weight.A3

COK ID's what it

Gold grown in treesAustralian researchers made the find.A3

wants in nextboss

CruiSe COnCernS —Luxury ocean liners are growing bigger and bigger, essentially turning into small cities but also worrying safety experts.A4

By Tyler Leeds Obituary —Velvet Underground leader Lou

The Bulletin

The Central Oregon Community College board approved a profile Wednesday that outlines the characteristics it hopes to see in President Jim Mtddleton'ssuccessor. Middleton announced in April he would retire in summer 2014, and the board is tasked with finding the college's fifth president in its 65year history. What is the board looking for? The presidential profile contains a list of desired qualifications, challenges the new president will face and ideal characteristics bifurcated into a section on leadership and experience. Board Chairman Bruce Abernethy admitted the document "is fairly genericon some levels." "It's just one of those things where, as a board member, you operate with a certain level of detail and understanding, and you don't want to get too much into detail so that it becomes micro-managing," Abernethy added. SeeCOCC/A5

Reedinfluenced

generations of rock musicians. A2

And a Web exclusiveLongest non-stop flight is end-

ing.dendbnlletin.com/extras

EDITOR'5CHOICE

With spinal fusions, a debate over necessity By Peter Whoriskey and Dan Keating The Washington Post

By some measures, Federico Vinas was a star surgeon. He performed three or four surgeries on a typical weekday at the Daytona Beach, Fla., hospital that employedhim, and a review showed him to be nearly five times as busy as other neurosurgeons. The hospital paid him hundreds of thousands in incentive pay. Yet given his productivity, some hospital auditors wondered: Was all of the surgery really necessary'? To answer that question, the hospital in early 2010 paid for an independent review of cases where Vinas and two other neurosurgeons had performed a common procedure known as a spinal fusion. The review was conducted by board-certi fied neurosurgeons working for A11Med, a company accredited to audit health-care businesses. Of 10 spinal fusions by Vinas that were selected, nine were deemed not medicallynecessary. Vinas is still working at Halifax Health, and a hospital spokesman said that, after the AllMed report, the hospital conducted an internal review that validated his surgeries. Another review conducted earlier this year in response to litigation also validated them, the spokesman said. Vinas "has never and will never perform an unnecessary surgical procedure on any patient," said his attorney, Robert Pritchard. More than 465,000 spinal fusions were performed in the United States in 2011, accordingto government data, and some experts thinkthat a portion of them — perhaps as many as half — were performed without good reason. SeeSpine/A6

Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

Workers dump gravel and shovel it out for further compaction as part of repairs for the sprayground in Redmond's Centennial Park. The city opted for pea gravel to refill the area rather than compacted dirt in hopes of avoiding more complications in the future.

On this list, a small college trumps elites

By Leslie Pugmire Hole The Bulletin

While the sprayground in Redmond's Centennial Park closed earlier than normal this year, it could be up and running by its usual May opening date. Crews in early September discovered the pavement settling near the fountain. Excavation

By Ariel Kaminer

revealed broken pipes and soil settling inside the 600-square-foot vault that holds the plumbing

New York Times News Service

and electrical systems for the fountain, which sprays water from a variety of openings embedded insidea concrete pad. "We brought in a geotechnical engineering firm to look at it, and they said it looks like the compacted soil used to backfill the vault was not solid enough," said City Engineer Mike Caccavano. Soil shifting and settlement provided too much leeway for the pipes to move; three breaks were found during the inspection. "It can be really difficult to

t

compact soil when there's so much (infrastructure) under there," he said. "You can't use a heavy roller in those situations." The sprayground was built in 2010 by Kirby Nagelhout Construction Co. and was no longer under warranty; a fact that has not stopped the company from assisting with the repairs, said Caccavano. See Redmond/A6

The

splashr

ground provides

r

a place

/

for kids to play in

summer.

NEW YORK — Looking out over the quadrangle before him as students dashed from one classto the next,Dr.James Muyskens was feeling proud one recent afternoon, and why not? The college he has led for the past 11 years had just been awarded second place in a new ranking — ahead of flagship state schools, ahead of elite liberal arts colleges, even ahead of all eight Ivy League universities.

The college is Queens ColAndy Tullis The Bulletin file photo

lege, a part of the City University of New York with an annual tuition of $5,730 and a view of the Long Island Expressway. SeeColleges/A4

At the Pentagon, Jedimaster vs.the budget sequester By Craig Whitlock The Washington Post

WASHINGTON — From his office deep inside the Pentagon, Yoda has outlasted the Cold War, countless military conflicts and 10 presidential

elections. But can he survive the sequester? Yoda is the reverential nickname for Andrew Marshall, a

legendary if mysterious figure in national security circles. A bald, enigmatic 92-year-old

Page B10

Assessment, which contemplates military strategy decades into the future. Over his long career, he has foretold the economic collapse of the Soviet Union, the rise of China and the spreadofrobotic warfare.

Today, confronting a budget crunch, Pentagon leaders are contemplating whether Marshall and his think tank have outlived their usefulness, or need to be reined in. See Pentagon/A5

The Bulletin

+ .4 We userecycled newsprint

INDEX

TODAY'S WEATHER Rain/snow High 39, Low 27

strategic guru, he resembles the Jedi master of "Star Wars" fame in more ways than one. Since the Nixon administration, Marshall has directed the Pentagon's secretive internal think tank, the Office of Net

Calendar A8 Crosswords Classified C 1 - 6Dear Abby Comics/Puzzles C3-4 Horoscope

C4 Local/State A 7- 8 SportsMonday B1-10 A9 Movies A9 Tee to Green B7-9 A9 Nation/World A 2 T elevision A9

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Vol. 110,No.301, 26 pages, 3 sections

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A2 THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2013

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W ASHINGTON — S e a n Jackson, like tens of t h ousands of other Americans, has had trouble signing up for medical coverage using the HealthCare.gov insurance marketplace, despite several attempts. "I was able to create an account on Oct. 2, and I haven't been able to get into there since," said Jackson, a sports journalist living in Ohio, a note of annoyance in his voice. "I'll try at random times, like late at night or early in the morning. I sign in. It just goes to a blank screen." The economists and policy wonks behind the Affordable Care Act worry that the technical problems bedeviling the federal portalcould become much more than an inconvenience. If applicants like Jackson decide to put off or give

up on buying coverage, rising

II'aq attaoks —A series of attacks in Baghdad, including car bombings, an explosion at a market and a suicide assault in a northern city killed at least 66 people Sunday across lraq, officials said, the latest in a wave of violence washing over the country.

Coordinated bombings hit lraq multiple times each month, feeding a spike in bloodshed that has killed more than 5,000 people since April. The local branch of al-Qaida often takes responsibility for

the assaults, although there was no immediate claim for Sunday's attacks.

Brnnklyn Stabbings —A Chinese immigrant, who neighbors

Now Democrats, too, talk of delay

said struggled to survive in America, was arrested Sunday on five counts of murder in the stabbing deaths of his cousin's wife and her

Lawmakers from both major political parties on Sunday expressed concern over the botched rollout of the new federal health insurance website, with two Senate Democrats saying the

problems are serious enough to justify delays to keyprovisions of the president's health-care law.

Republicans, meanwhile, said that the issueswere symptomatic of larger problems with the lawandthat many of the disadvantages of the program arebecoming glaringly apparent now that people arestarting to be able to seethe quality and cost of the coverageavailable under the law. Sens. Joe Manchin, D-WVa., and Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H., took to the Sunday talk shows to press for legislation they said would give

people moretime to comply with a rule requiring most Americansto carry health insurance starting nextyear or face a fine. Manchin advocated for a bill delaying the so-called "individual

mandate" for ayear. Shaheenproposed extending theopen enrollment period beyond its current end date of March 31 to account

four children in their Brooklyn home.Thesuspect, 25-year-old Mingdong Chen, implicated himself in the killings late Saturday in the Sunset Park neighborhood, police said. "They were cut and butchered

with a kitchen knife," said Chief of Department Philip Banks III. Phnenix Slayings —Authorities released details Sunday from a weekend shooting attack that left four family members andtwo dogs dead at a central Phoenix townhouse, before the gunman turned the weapon on himself. Michael Guzzo, 56, reportedly killed his next door

neighbors in a deadly confrontation Saturday that mayhavebeen touched off by loud barking, police said. Phoenix police Sgt. Tommy Thompson said there is "some indication that perhaps that was a

problem." But headdedthat because of the deaths, a motive may never be known. NSA manitOring —New details about the monitoring of Chancel-

for all the peoplewho havenot beenable to buy coveragethus far because of problemswith the online shopping site.

lor Angela Merkel's cellphone by the National Security Agency further stoked the German government's anger Sunday. The latest round of

Sedelius to face toughquestioning

published details from what it described as an entry from an NSA

Republicans saidSundaythey intend to press Health andHuman Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius on the Obama administration's troubled launch of healthcare.gov, the online portal to buy

insurance, andconcerns about the privacy of information that applicants submit under the new system. Medicare chief Marilyn Tavenner is to testify during a House

prices and even a destabilized hearing Tuesday,followed Wednesday bySebelius, before the insurance market could result. House Energy and Commerce Committee. The officials will also be The enrollment of people grilled on howsuch crippling technical problems could havegone like Jackson, who is 32, is vital undetected prior to the website's Oct. 1 launch. for the health care law to work. — From wire reports Younger people, who tend to have low anticipated medical costs, are supposed to help pay for the medical costs of older or Americans who go without inBut getting "young invincisicker enrollees. Without them, surance would face penalties, bles," as insurers sometimes call so-called risk pools in Ohio starting next year. But they them, to sign up for insurance is and other states might become said that the problems with the an uphill climb. Only about I in 4 too risky, forcing insurers to website posed a serious ques- 19- to 29-year-olds is even aware raisepremiums. Those higher tion about the enrollment bal- of the exchanges where they premiums c o ul d d i s suade ance in many state plans. might buy affordable insurance, "If there are significantly according to a survey this year more of the young and healthy from signing up, forcing insur- more of the older and higher- by the Commonwealth Fund, a ers to raise prices again. cost people purchasing cover- nonprofit research group. Economists warn that in its age than are expected, that's The Obama administration worst iteration it could lead to a going to have a significant has promised to fix the prob"death spiral" of falling enroll- impact on premiums for the lems with HealthCare.gov by ment and climbingprices. They following year," said Robert Nov. 30. Insurers would have and health analysts said the Zirkelbach, a spokesman for a good sense of any problems chances of such a spiral were America's Health Insurance because of under-enrollment slim in most states because Plans, a lobbying group. by next spring, they said.

recriminations cameafter Der Spiegel, the German newsmagazine, database, apparently from the trove of documents downloaded by Edward Snowden.Thedatabase entry, according to Der Spiegel and outside experts, seemed to indicate that the request to monitor her cellphone began in 2002. But the document refer to her as "Chancel-

lor," a position she hasheld only since late 2005.

Syria WeapOnS —Syria submitted a formal declaration of its chemical weapons program andits plans for destroying its arsenal three days ahead of the deadline, the international chemical weapons watchdog said Sunday. The watchdog, the Organization for the Prohi-

bition of Chemical Weapons, which hasbeencharged with monitoring and destroying Syria's chemical weapons program, said that it had received the Syrian submission Thursday and that the agency's

Executive Council would review the declaration's "general plan of destruction" by Nov. 15.

Tadioid hacking —The ethics of the once mighty and still powerful British newspaper industry go on trial in London today, with two former top editors from Rupert Murdoch's media empire facing crim-

inal accusations involving phonehacking and obstructing justice. The case features Rebekah Brooks and another editor who became a top aide to Prime Minister David Cameron, Andy Coulson.

Afghan diast —A minivan carrying nearly two dozen civilians to a wedding in eastern Afghanistan struck a roadside mine Sunday, kill-

ing at least17 people, mostly women. Theexplosion occurred around 4:30 p.m. in the Andar district of Ghazni, a restive province southeast of Kabul. The blast wounded five other passengers, two of whom

remain in critical condition, said Col. Assadullah Insafi, the deputy provincial police chief. — From wire reports

OBITUARY

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John, The Associated Press file photo

Cyclist, Charity Volunteer PINNACLE® Hip Implant patient

Lou Reed, pictured in1989, died Sunday morning in Southampton, N.Y., of an ailment related to his recent liver transplant, according to his literary agent.

Reed, whohelpedshape rock 'n' roll, dead at71 power, the alternative rock ethos of irony and droning muNEW YORK — Lou Reed sic and theart-rock embrace was a pioneer for countless of experimentation, whether bands who didn't worry about the dual readings of Beat-influtheir next hit single. enced verse for "Murder MysReed, who died Sunday at tery," or, like a passage out of age 71, radically challenged Burroughs' "Naked Lunch," the rock's founding promise of orgyof guns, drugs and oral sex good times and public celebra- on the Velvet Underground's tion. As leader of the Velvet Un- 15-minute "Sister Ray." derground and as a solo artist, Reed died in Southampton, he was the father of indie rock, NY., of an ailment related to his and an ancestor of punk, New recent liver transplant, accordWave and the alternative rock ingto his literary agent, Andrew movements of the 1970s, '80s Wylie,who added thatReed had and beyond. He influenced gen- been in frail health for months. erations of musicians from DaHis trademarks were a monovid Bowie and R.E.M. to Talk- tone of surprising emotional ing Heads and Sonic Youth. range and p ower; slashing, "The first V elvet U nder- grinding guitar; and lyrics that ground record sold 30,000 cop- were complex,yetconversationies in the first five years," Brian al, designed to make you feel as Eno, who produced albums by if Reed were seated next to you. Roxy Music and Talking Heads He had one top 20 hit, "Walk among others, once said. "I On the Wild Side," and many thinkeveryone who bought one other songs that became stanof those 30,000 copies started a dards among his a dmirers, band." from "Heroin" and " S weet Reed and the Velvet Under- Jane" to "Pale Blue Eyes" and ground opened rock music to "All Tomorrow's Parties." An the avant-garde — to experi- outlaw in his early years, Reed mental theater, art, literature would eventually perform at and film, from William Bur- the White House, have his roughs to Kurt Weill to Andy writing published in The New Warhol, Reed's early patron. Yorker, be featured by PBS in an "American Masters" docuRaised on doo-wop and Carl Perkins, Delmore Schwartz mentary and win a Grammy in and the Beats, Reed helped 1999 for Best Long Form Music shape the punk ethos of raw Video.

If you suffer from severe hip pain, attend this free seminar to learn about your treatment options.

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MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2013•THE BULLETIN

MART TODAY

A3

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

It's Monday, Oct. 28, the 301st day of 2013. There are 64 days left in the year.

DISCOVERY HAPPENINGS

ian reesa e o

Gay marriage —TheHawaiian Legislature begins a special session on the issue.

Home market —TheNational Association of Realtors

releasespending home sales index for September.

HISTORY Highlight:In1886, the Statue

of Liberty, a gift from the people of France, was dedicated in New York Harbor by President

Grover Cleveland. In1636, the General Court of

Massachusett spassedalegislative act establishing Harvard

College. In1776, the Battle of White

Plains was fought during the Revolutionary War, resulting in a limited British victory. In 1858, Rowland Hussey Macy opened his first New York store at Sixth Avenue and 14th Street in Manhattan. In1919, Congress enacted the Volstead Act, which provided

for enforcement of Prohibition, over President Woodrow Wilson's veto. In 1936, President Franklin D. Roosevelt rededicated the Statue of Liberty on its 50th

anniversary. In1940, Italy invaded Greece during World War II. In1958, the Roman Catholic

patriarch of Venice, Angelo Giuseppe Roncalli, was elected pope; he tookthe name John XXIII. In1962, Soviet leader Nikita

Khrushchev informed the United States that he had ordered the dismantling of missile

bases in Cuba. In1980, President Jimmy Carter and Republican presidential nominee Ronald Rea-

gan faced off in a nationally broadcast, 90-minute debate in Cleveland. In 1991, what became known

as "The Perfect Storm" began forming hundreds of miles east of Nova Scotia; lost at sea during the storm were the six

crew members of the Andrea Gail, a sword-fishing boat from

Gloucester, Mass.

In 2001, the families of people killed in the Sept. 11 terrorist attack gathered in New York for a memorial service filled with

prayer and song. In 2002, American diplomat

Laurence Foleywasassassinated in front of his house in Amman, Jordan, in the first

such attack on aU.S. diplomat in decades. Ten years ago:Firefighters beatbackflames on LosAngeles' doorstep, saving hundreds of homes in the city's San Fernando Valley from California's

deadliest wildfire in more than a decade. The Senate confirmed Utah Governor Mike

Leavitt as head of theEnvironmental Protection Agency. A

Soyuz spacecapsule carrying an American, a Russianand a Spaniard from the lnternational Space Station, landed in

Kazakhstan. Thesevenastronauts who died in the Columbia shuttle disaster were honored with the unveiling of their names carved into the national Space Mirror Memorial.

Five years ago:Former Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick was

sentenced to four months in jail for his part in a sex-andtext scandal. (Kilpatrick ended

up serving 99 days.) One year ago:Airlines canceled more than 7,000 flights

in advance of Hurricane Sandy; transit systems in NewYork, Philadelphia and Washington

were shut down, andforecasters warned theNewYork area could see an11-foot wall of water.

BIRTHDAYS Musician-songwriter Charlie

Daniels is 77. Olympic track and field gold medalist Bruce Jenner is 64. Actress Annie Potts is 61. Microsoft cofounder Bill Gates is 58. Actorcomedian Andy Richter is 47.

Actress Julia Roberts is 46. Actor Joaquin Phoenix is 39. — From wire reports

PHENOMENON

Ozone hole

Bll

slightly

Eucalyptus trees carry just a small amount of the metal — nowhere near enough to mine — but the discovery could clue future miners into where to dig to discover deposits. By Deborah Netburn Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — It turns out gold can grow on trees, given the right conditions. A team of Australian scientists has found small amounts of gold in the leaves, twigs and bark ofeucalyptus trees growing above gold deposits buried deep beneath the ground. Unfortunately, you won't get rich off these golden trees. The amount of gold detected was very tiny — just 80 parts per billion in the leaves, 44 parts

per billion in the twigs and just 4 parts per billion in the bark. You certainly could not see any gold with the naked eye. Still, as the scientists write in the journal Nature Communications, their study represents the first time, to their knowledge, that naturally occurring gold particles were imaged in the cells of biological tissue. Previous studies have shown that plants will uptake small amounts of gold that have been deliberately placed in the soil in laboratory experiments, but

smaller

the concentrations of gold in those experiments are much higher than what would typically be found in the natural environment. Gold is toxic to plants, which may explain why the eucalyptus trees moved much of the gold they absorbed from the ground to their leaves, says lead author Melvyn Lintern of The Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, Australia's national science agency. By shunting the gold to their

leaves, the trees can easily shed the gold deposits. Then the leaves decompose, dropping gold into the soil, and process begms again. Lintern and his team are not suggesting that anyone can start mining these golden trees, but they do think that gold prospectors could look to vegetation to learn where gold deposits might be. Instead of "There's gold in themthar hills,"futureprospectors might be shouting "There's gold in them thar trees!"

The Associated Press WASHINGTON Warm air at high altitudes this September and October helped shrink the manmade ozone hole near the South Pole ever so slightly, scientists say. The hole is an area in the atmosphere with low ozone concentrations. It is normally at its biggest this time of year. NASA said on average it covered 8.1 million square miles this season. That's 6 percent smaller than the average since 1990. The ozone hole is of concern because high-altitude ozone shields Earth from ultraviolet radiation. NASA chief atmospheric scientist Paul Newman said the main reason for this year's result is local weather. Warmer airhas led to fewer polar stratospheric clouds, where chlorine and bromine, which come from man-made products, nibble away at ozone. James Butler, director of the global monitoring division at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Earth S y stem Research Lab, said the new figuresare "sort of encour-

STUDY

Zoo elephantsgetting fat ... or isthat curvy. 1

By David Hunn

l.

St. Louis Post-Dispatch

K ANSAS CITY, M o . Don't tell Dumbo, but he's got too much junk in his trunk. That spherical silhouette, it turns out, isn't so healthyeven for elephants. Zookeepers have long suspected it. And now they have some science to back it up. America's zo o e l ephants have gotten fat. "Look at what percentage of the U.S. population is currently obese. Are we surprised that we're feeding our elephants a little too well?" said Anne Baker,former director of the Toledo Zoo. "We're feeding ourselves a little too well." This fall, zoo researchers from across the country are

An Asian elephant takes a stroll around its enclosure at the St. Louis Zoo.

/'

, <~~7'i ~

J.B. Forbes / St. Louis Post-Dispatch

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manners, such a s s w aying or pacing, which are often considered signs of mental or physical stress. But it's the study of elephant weight that has, so far, wrapping up the biggest study gathered the lion's share of of zoo elephant health in the attention. nation's history. And they've Researchers evaluated 240 uncovered a range of major elephants for body conditions. "It started by looking at a lot of findings, from the health of elephant feet, to the miles they elephant butts," Kari Morfeld, walk, to the prominence of a postdoctoral scholar at the their posteriors. Smithsonian Conservation BiOver threeyears, the team ology Institute, told conference examined more than 100,000 attendees in Kansas City. pages of medical records,6,000 Morfeld and her collaborablood samples and 4 0 ,000 torsdeveloped a scale,from 1 pounds of elephant dung. Sub- to 5, that rated every elephant jects included 255 elephants by the r o undness of t h eir in 70 zoos from Mexico to St. rumps and the bulge in their Louis to Miami. back bones, among other facResearchers hope to submit tors.Just4percent were tagged the study to scientific jouras too skinny. nals for publication as soon as And nearly three-quarters this winter. But even prelimi- of theelephants scored a 4 or 5 nary findings, they said, are — squarely overweight. revealing. Moreover, the study found Keepers and activists have a correlation between healthy long worried about elephant hindquarters and — u n surfoot and joint problems, at- prisingly — more exercise, and tributed to h ours spent on smaller, more frequent meals. hard concrete and stone. But Researchers point out that researchers counted 75 per- the issue really isn't funny. cent of the elephants in this Those hefty hineys can lead to, study without joint problems, for instance, a decline in female as well as a noticeable decline reproductivity — s omething in foot issues since 2011. Zoo- zoos monitor quite closely. keepers figured an increased Elephants in the wild can use of grass, rubber and sand ovulate, or "cycle," into their flooring in elephant pens has 50s, said Janine Brown, a helped. reproductive physiologist at "This is really good news," the Smithsonian. Yet zoo elJill Mellen, a scientist at Dis- ephant fertility can shut down ney's Animal Kingdom, told a decade earlier, Brown said. zoo professionalsat the AssoHer research, included in this ciation of Zoos & Aquariums' study, found that more than 40 annual conference last month percent of the Asian elephants in Kansas City. "This is cause and about half the African elto celebrate." ephants were having cycling In addition, elephants in issues. the study walked more than But the problem was less some believed — about 3.6 likely, she said, in elephants miles on average a day, up to with better body weights. a maximum of about 11 miles. The study had some logistiThat, said Cheryl Meehan, an cal challenges. The team had animal welfare scientist and to gather and track thousands the study's project manager, of photos, blood specimens, stacks up well against disfecal samples and other data tances documented inrecent points provided by zoos about studies of walking among wild their elephants. elephants. And the elephants didn't al"If you p a y a t tention to ways cooperate. "We had the the public press, often one of occasional smashing and eatthe main criticisms is that el- ingof the equipment," Matthew ephants don't walk enough in Holdgate, a Portland State Unizoos," Meehan said. "Those versity graduate student, told criticisms were made largely his colleagues at the Kansas in the absence of any validated Cityconference,regarding the scientific data." GPS ankle bracelets worn to The study also unveiled a track walking. few concerns. Two-thirdsof Some long-standing critics don't believe the study is worth the animals studied, for instance, behaved in repetitive much.

shape,"Fischer said thisweek. The zoo expanded the Forest Park elephant habitat to 2.5 acres in 2011. It added flooring of sand, mud, dirt and grass. And two cows, Ellie and Rani, have now birthed four calves, growing the herd to 10 — which makes the social el-

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aging news." Butler said it stopped getting worse around the late 1990s. But, "we can't say yet that it's a recovery."

ephants happy, she said. "Housing elephants in captivity in zoos is a growing controversy," said Nicole Meyer, director of the elephant protection campaign for the California advocacy group In Defense of Animals. The study, she fears, could justbe cover for the zoo industry. She has difficulty believing some of the initial results — zoo elephants, for instance, are still dying from their foot problems, she said. "That's why we're so interested in seeing the actual findings," she added. But Baker, the former Toledo director, thinks the study is good science,and great for elephants. Keepers are already talking about how to adjust their care, she said. For instance, some may begin feeding on hay, an elephant's main meal, with lower protein content. Others may have to stop giving quite so many treats, she said. Zoo-by-zoo results won't be released until December. Still, Martha Fischer, the St. Louis Zoo's elephant curator and a top expert in the zoo association, thinks she's got a good sense for how her herd will fare. "Intuitively, I think o ur elephants are i n g o o d

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TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2013

IN FOCUS:CYBERSECURITY

Colleges

Israeli tunnel sabotageconfirmed, linked tocostlydamage,experts say

Continued from A1 Catering to working-class students, more than half of whom were born in other countries,Queens does not typically find itself at the top of national rankings. Then again, this was not a typical ranking. It was a list of colleges that offer the "best bang for the buck." "Elation," said Muyskens, recalling his surprise when he learned of the honor. "Thrilled!" Purists might regard such bottom-line calculations as an insult to the intellectual, social and civic value of education. But dollars-andcents tabulations like that

By Daniel Estrin The Associated Press

HADERA, Israel — When Israel's military chief delivered a high-profile speech this month outlining the greatest threats his country might face in the future, he listed computer sabotage as a top concern, warning a sophisticated cyberattack could one day bring the nation to a standstill. Lt. Gen.Benny Gantz was not speaking empty words. Exactly one month before his address, a major artery in Israel's national road network in the northern city of Haifa was shut down because of a cyberattack, cybersecurity experts told The Associated Press, knocking key operations out of c ommission two days in a row and causing hundreds of thousands of dollars in damage. One expert, speaking on condition of a nonymity because the breach ofsecurity was a classified matter, said a Trojan horse attack targeted the security camera system in the Carmel Tunnels toll road on Sept. 8. A Trojan horse is a malicious computer program that users unknowingly install that can give hackers complete control over their systems. The attack caused an immediate 20-minute lockdown of

the roadway. The next day, the expert said, it shut down the roadway again during morning rush hour. It remained shut for eight hours, causing massive congestion. The expert said investigators believe the attack was the work of u n k nown, s o phisticated hackers, similar to the Anonymous hacking group that led attacks on Israeli websites in April. He said investigators determined it was not sophisticated enough to be the work of an enemy government like Iran. The expert said Israel's ¹ tional Cyber Bureau, a twoyear-old classified body that reports to the prime minister, was aware of the incident. The bureau declined comment, while Carmelton, the company that oversees the toll road, blamed a "communication glitch" for the mishap. While Israel is a f requent target for hackers, the tunnel is the most high-profile landmark known to have been attacked. It is a major thoroughfare for Israel's third-largest city, and the Haifa is looking to turn the tunnel into a public shelter in case of emergency, highlighting its importance. The incident is exactly the type of scenario that Gantz described in his recent address.

He said Israel's future battles might begin with "a cyberattack on websites, which provide daily services to the citizens of IsraeL Traffic lights could stop working; the banks could be shut down," he said. There have been cases of traffic tampering before. In 2005, the United States outlawed the unauthorized use of traffic override devices installed in many police cars and ambulances after unscrupulous drivers started using them to turn lights from red to green. In 2008, two Los Angeles traffic engineers pleaded guilty to breaking into the city's signal system and deliberately snarling traffic as part of a labor dispute. Oren David, a manager at i nternational s ecurity f i r m RSA's anti-fraud unit, said that although he didn't have information about the tunnel incident, this kind of attack "is the hallmark of a new era." "Most ofthese systems are automated, especially as far as security is concerned. They're automated and they're remotely controlled — either over the Internet or otherwise, so they'revulnerable to cyberattack," he said. Israel, he added, is "among the top-targeted countries." .

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one (which was compiled by Washington Monthly), are the fastest growing sector of the college rankings industry, with ever more analyses vying for the attention of financially anxious high school students and their parents. President Barack Obama sharply upped the ante this past August, with a plan not just to rate colleges on their value and affordability, but to tie those ratings to the $150 billion in financial aid that the federal government supplies each year. Should that plan come to pass, value would not just be a selling point for colleges, it would be a matter of life and death. But not only is there no agreement onhow to measure the value of a college, there isno agreement, or anything even close, on what value is in the first

place.

"It's a quest for the holy grail," said Judith ScottClayton, a professor of economics and education at Columbia University's Teachers College. "It sounds good, it sounds like something we'd love to know — to be able to rank the value of these institutions. But when it comes down to practicalities, it's very, very difficult." U.S. News and W orld Report, whose annual suite of academic rankings have long been derided — and obsessively followed — by college presidents, now publishes "best value" lists as

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well. Princeton Review, which has advised decades of prospective students on the best party

ment, no one yet knows how it will perform its evaluation. Arne Duncan, the education schools, 10 years ago began secretary, has said his goal is listing the best value schools, a ratings system, not a single too. Forbes Magazine got in the first-place-to-last-place r a nkis-it-worth-the-money game a ing, and that the ratings will few years ago, as did, among compare only schools that are others, The Wall Street Journal, similar in their mission, their The Alumni Factor, Kiplinger's student population and so on. Personal Finance and Payscale, Harvard and Yale, that is; not a company that gathers data Harvard and Soka University about the job market. of America. Some of t h ese a nalyses But Carolyn Hoxby, a Stanapproach value as largely a ford professor and an author of function of cost (How much is an influential study about the tuition? What subsidies do low- failures of college as an engine income students get?). Others for social mobility, said the efdefine it as return on invest- fort is doomed to fail. "I do not believe the federal ment (How much do graduates earn?). Some factor in student government currently has the satisfaction or academic rank- capacity to generate a ratings ing or graduation rates or eco- system that will even be neunomic diversity, all in varying tral," she said. "I think it's more quantities. likely that it will be harmful to These widely divergent defi- students." nitions produce wildly diverThe rankings approach is gent results. working just fine for Queens Queens College did splen- College, which w i l l p r o mididly in a list that emphasizes nently feature the Washington social mobility and civic virtue. Monthly list in its new recruit(Another New York City pub- ment materials, but even its lic college, Baruch, took third president has his misgivings. "I happen also to be a phiplace; No. I was Amherst.) But on a ranking that em- losopher," he said, "and I know phasizes a l u mn i sa l a ries, that if we go too far on the value l ike Payscale's list o f C o l - added and cost, we're going to leges Worth Your Investment, have people too focused on the Queens comes in 341st. The practical to explore." top spot there goes to Harvey As he spoke, students in the Mudd College, in Claremont, next room were participating in Calif., which has a much higher a study group about the Middle tuition but whose graduates East, learning how to engage d isproportionately enter t h e with opponents without getting lucrative field of engineering. bogged down i n a ccusation The top tier of U.S. News' list and retribution. Face-to-face somehow features Harvard, interactions like that can be the Princeton, Williams - and most enriching part of college, Soka University of America, a Muyskens said, but they never tiny Buddhist college in South- make it into any algorithm of ern California that admitted its value. first undergraduates in 2001. H e is proud ofthe school's The top f iv e schools on high score, he said, but added, Forbes' most recent list are all "if it isn't balanced by other pernational service academies, spectives, it's dangerous." which charge no tuition. And a list by the Education Trust, an advocacy group, of all the /' colleges that do right by lowincome students has only five STUDIO entries, including Queens. As for thefederal govern-

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Royal Caribbean's Allure of the Seas departs for the Caribbean earlier this month from Port Everglades in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. The ship — which has 2,706 rooms, 16 decks, 22 restaurants, 20 bars, 10 hot tubs and many other amenities — can accommodate nearly 6,300 passengers and 2,394 crew members. Such massive ships are worrying safety experts and lawmakers. •

Too i tosai? Gi antic

cruises i s acescrutin By Jad Mouawad

ing thousands without power for four days in the Gulf of One of the largest cruise M exico until th e s hip w a s ships in 1985 was the 46,000- towed to shore. Another blaze ton Carnival H o liday. Ten forced R o ya l Ca r i bbean's years ago, the biggest, the Grandeur of the Seas to a Queen Mary 2 , w a s t h r ee port in the Bahamas in May. times aslarge. Today's record Pictures showed the s hip's holders are two 225,000-ton stern blackened by flames and ships whose displacement, a smoke. measure of a ship's weight, Although most have not is about the same as that of a resulted in a n y c a sualties, Nimitz-class aircraft carrier. the string of accidents and Cruise ships keep getting fires has heightened concerns bigger, and more popular. The about the ability o f m e gaCruise Lines International As- ships tohandle emergencies sociation said that last year its or large-scale evacuations at North American cruise line sea. Sen. John D. Rockefeller members carried about 17 mil- IV, D-WVa., introduced legislionpassengers,up from 7 mil- lation this summer that would lion in 2000. But the expansion s trengthen f e d era l ov e r in ship size is worrying safety sight of cruise lines' safety experts, lawmakers and regu- procedures an d c o n sumer lators, who are pushing for protections. more accountability, saying Cruise operators point out the supersize craze is fraught that bigger ships have more with potential peril for passen- fire safety equipment, and gers and crew. contend they are safer.After "Cruise ships operate in a a fire aboard the Carnival void from the standpoint of Splendor three y ears ago, oversight and enforcement," Carnival adopted new trainsaid James Hall, a s a f ety ing procedures and a dded management consultant and safety features that itsays the chairman of the National helped with the rapid detecTransportation Safety Board tion and suppression of the between 1994 and 2001. "The fire on the Triumph. industry has been very fortuAfter the Triumph fire, Carnate until now." nival also announced it would The perils were most vis- spend $700 million to improve ible last year when the Costa its safety operations, including Concordia, owned by the Car- $300 million on its fleet of 24 nival Corp., which is based in Carnival Cruise Lines ships. Miami, capsized off Italy. The The company is the largest accident killed 32 people and cruise operator, owning about revealed fatal lapses in safety half of worldwide cruise ships. " We have over t ime i m and emergency procedures. In February, a fire crippled proved the safety of our vesthe Carnival Triumph, strand- sels by better training and New York Times News Service

better technology and learning from incidents that have happened over the years," said Mark Jackson, Carnival's vice president for technical operations, who joined the company in Januaryafter24 years with the Coast Guard. Some experts doubt that ships can grow much larger than the current behemoths, marvels of n aval engineering that combine cutting-edge technology and entertainment. Today's biggest ship, Royal Caribbean's Allure of the Seas, has 2,706 rooms, 16 decks, 22 restaurants, 20 bars and 10 hot tubs, as well as a shopping mall, a casino, a water park, a half-mile track, a zip line, mini golf and Broadway-style live shows. It can accommodate nearly 6,300 passengers and 2,394 crew members — the equivalent of a s m all town towering over the clear blue waters of the Caribbean Sea. It measures 1,188 feet long. Its sister ship, the Oasis of the Seas, is 2 inches shorter. Experts point out that larger ships have larger challenges. For instance, they have fewer options in an emergency, said Michael Bruno, dean of the engineering school at the Stevens Institute of Technology in Hoboken, N.J., and former chairman o f t h e N a t i onal Research Council's M arine Board. "Given the size of today's ships, any problem immediatelybecomes a very big problem," he said. "I sometimes worry about the options that are available."

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MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2013•THE BULLETIN

Pentagon Continued from A1 The Office of Net Assessment costs taxpayers only a bout $10 m i l lion a y e a r — pocket change in the $525 billion annual defense budget, but enough to face fresh scrutiny at a time of cutbacks. Few places, however, are tougher to scrutinize. Many of Marshall's studies and reports a re classified. And h e h a s to share them with only one Ifsb ls man: thesecretary of defense. Which reports actually get Department of Defense via The Washington Post read, and which ones end up in history's top-secret dustbin, is Andrew Marshail, respecteverybody else's guess. fully known at the Pentagon as " There's no r eal w a y t o "Yoda," is the director of the weigh it o r f i gure out how Department of Defense's Office much he pays" consultants for of Net Assessment, which over the reports, said a former sen- the course of his tenure has ior defense official who spoke foretold the economic collapse on the condition of anonymity of the Soviet Union, the rise of to talk candidly about the Of- China and the spread of robotic fice of Net Assessment. eYou warfare. can't quite tell what the nation is getting out of it." Even so, the mere sugges- Assessment should be reortion that the Pentagon might ganized and that it "can be force its nonagenarian futurist s trengthened potentially b y to retire has sparked a back- realigning it, so that it remains lash among Marshall's heavy- close to him and his senior weight corps of supporters. team." Several members of ConMarshall declined an intergress,from both parties,have view request placed through dashed offletters to Defense a Pentagon spokesman. He Secretary Chuck Hagel in pro- shuns public a p pearances, test. Former Pentagon chief doesn't testify before Congress Donald Rumsfeld tweeted that and permits himself to be quotit would be a "serious mistake" ed only on rare occasions. to close the Office of Net AsColleagues said he has alsessment and praised Mar- ways projected an inscrutable shall for being at the "forefront mystique. He generally keeps of strategy & transformation" his thoughts to himself at confor 40 years. ferencesand meetings, butcan Others described Marshall's c ommand attention just by intellect in Einsteinian terms. twitching an eyebrow. "Mr. Marshall's brain is highly Although he is little known n etworked," said John A r - among Americans, Marshall quilla, a professor at the Naval enjoys a n o u t size r e putaPostgraduate School in Mon- tion in Moscow and Beijing, terey, Calif., who has known where Russian and Chinese him for decades. He praised strategists have long admired Marshall's "mental supple- his ideas, even if their counness" and said advanced age tries were i n t h e s t rategic had not slowed him down. crosshairs. "His mind is as sharp as "Our great hero was Andy ever," Arquilla said. "He's got- Marshall i n t h e P entagon," ten not just a second wind but Gen. Chen Zhou of the Peoa third wind in recent years." ple's Liberation Army said in Marshall has also demon- an interview last year with the strated exceptional political Economist. "We translated evacumen, hanging on to his job ery word he wrote." under 13 defense secretaries. Marshall's national secuHe has nurtured generations rity career began in 1949, the of national security t h i nksame year that Mao Zedong ers and helped find them jobs proclaimed the creation of the on Capitol Hill, in academia, People's Republic of China. at private think tanks and in As a 28-year-old economist otherparts of the government. with a master'sdegree, MarThe last time the Pentagon shall joined the Rand Corp., a tried to close his office, almost nonprofit think tank that had two decades ago, his acolytes just been created to perform saved it with a furious lobby- research for the government. ing effort. He burrowed into analyses of Soviet military programs, Quiet campaign nuclear targeting and organiSensitive to Marshall's icon- zational behavior theory. ic status, Pentagon officials are After a stint at the White treading carefully this t i me House, Marshall was brought around; they declined to elabo- to the Pentagon in 1973 by then-DefenseSecretary James rate publicly on the future. "The Department of Defense Schlesinger to found the Office is currently assessing our mis- of Net Assessment. sions,structure and programs He concentrated on nuclear in light of an evolving set of strategy and specialized in strategic challenges, as well as forecasting apocalyptic scea constrained fiscal environ- narios, some seemingly lifted ment," Lt. Col. Damien Pick- f rom the satirical film " D r . art, a Pentagon spokesman, Strangelove." "We tend to look at not very said in an emailed statement. "It would be premature to com- happy futures," he once told ment on pre-decisional issues." The Washington Post in an Another defense official, interview. speaking on the condition of He also became a leading anonymity to d i scuss inter- proponent of a theory known nal deliberations, said Hagel as the "revolution in military thinks that the Office of Net affairs," which posits that the i

history of warfare has been marked by several brief but transformative bursts in technology an d o r g anizational strategy, from the chariot to the German blitzkrieg and the atomic bomb. Such thinking has led Marshall to argue that some foundational weapons of the armed services — the tank, the aircraftcarrier and short-range fighter jets — are doomed to obsolescence because of advances in missile technology. That has made him an unbeloved figure among some U.S. generals and admirals, who view him a s a n u n realistic radical and a threat to conventional military strategy. For the past two decades, Marshall's office has gamed o ut scenarios for wa r w i t h China.

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FREE for. One specific desire the board has is a president who Continued from A1 has experience working with A committee created the multiple campuses in b oth presidential profile, soliciting rural and urban settings. public input from across the O f course, not al l c h a lcollege district. A c cording lenges can b e a n t icipated. to the profile, the new presi- Middleton said the greatest dent should be an "articulate challenge he faced as COCC spokesperson" who actively p resident w a s "respondengages with "civic, industry ing to national and state exand other community lead- pectations for h i gher r ates ers" and a "fiscally respon- of degrees and c e r tificate sible manager o f c o m plex completion" w i t hout b e i ng budgets and l a rg e c a pital given additional resources. investments." When Middleton took office In total, there are 35 bul- in 2004, there was no talk of leted items in the profile list- 40-40-20, a plan that calls for ing various strengths and 80 percent of Oregonians to qualifications. receive some form of a postAbernethy said this broad secondary degree. brush approach makes sense, The q u a l it y M id d l eton given the board's intentions. identified as facilitating suc"Our g r eatest c h allenge cess in this area is fairly techis to find someone who can nical — the ability to "colkeep us on the trajectory we laborate with staff on data are on now," Abernethy said. analytics to help focus time, "We are operating from a po- staff and f i nances on prosition of strength financially, grams and services which and we have good facilities leverage greatest i m pact." and faculty. We do not need This illustrates the view that a turnaround specialist or COCC may be best served by someone who can cut stuff." looking for the most talented Abernethy did specify that candidate available, regardas the economy continues less of any specific traits the to improve, enrollment will board could have looked for. likely drop, a challenge for How does one find the best the new president, but one the candidate? COCC has hired college has already prepared Julie Golder, the Washing-

Claims of exaggeration Critics say he has exaggerated that and other threats as justification for fatter defense budgets. But fans say the Pentagon needs more long-range, out-of-the-box thinking, not less. "We think that office provides incredible value to the country at a t ime when we need strategymore than ever," said Rep. Randy Forbes, R-Va., a member of the House Armed S ervices C o mmittee, w h o helped sponsor a $10 million earmark last year for the Office of Net Assessment, nearly doubling its annual budget. Forbes said that the office needs to be k ept i n sulated from bureaucratic and political pressures and that it would fill an important niche long after Marshall steps down, whenever that might be. "Obviously, I have enormous respect for Mr. Marshall," Forbes said. "But this office is not just Andy Marshall. This office has spawned a number of great thinkers and ideas." The Office of Net Assessment contracts out much of its research to private think tanks. It recently commissioned a study titled "The Future of Africa" from Booz Allen Hamilton for $105,633, federal contracting records show. A primary recipient of Marshall's grant money is the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments in Washington. The defense think tank, headed by retired Army Lt. Col. Andrew Krepinevich, a longtime Marshall disciple, generally receives about $2.75 million to $3 million a year. The former senior defense official said the Office of Net Assessment pursues s o me worthwhile lines of study, but suggested that more oversight and accountability are needed. "How much money should we be dishing out to outside parties to restate (these findings) again and again?" he said. At the same time, the former official said Marshall is so well entrenched politically that it doesn't make sense for the Pentagon to try to change his ways or force him out before he is ready to go. "Everybody is worried about the perception that they would go against this legendary icon who brought down the Soviet Union single-handedly," the former official said. "It's not even worth it to challenge that narrative at this point."

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of evaluation, proper fit and ability to adapt to amplification. Dor hearing test and video otoscopic inspection are always free. I-learing test is an audiometnctest to determine proper amplification needs only. These are not medical exams or diagnoses nor are they intended to replace a physician's rare. If you suspect a medical problem, please seek treatment from your doctor. ©2011 Miracle-Ear, Inc.

— Reporter: 541-633-2160, tleedsCbendbuiietin.com

SPECIAPFINANCING AVAILK,BLE e SEE STORE FOR DETAILS


A6

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 20'I3

Spine

Redmond

according to the analysis of Horida records. Lumbar spinal fusions to treat stenosis, an ailment caused by a narrowing of the spinal canal, rosethe fastest, from 292 in 2000 to 2,565 in 2012. Medicare an d i n s urance companies could stop paying for such procedures, of course. When they object, however, their motivations are o f ten viewed as profit-driven as much as scientific.

Continued from A1 The rate of spinal fusion surgery has risen sixfold in the U.S. over the past 20 years, according to federalfigures. And the expensive procedure, which involves the joining of two or more vertebrae, has become even more common than hip replacement. It can be difficult, in individual cases, to get doctors to agree about when the procedure is warranted. But at a broader level, the rapid rise of spinal fusions in the U.S., especially for diagnoses that generally don't require the procedure, has raised questions from experts about whether, amid medical uncertainty, the financial rewards are spurring the boom. Advancements in diagnostic

Continued from A1 "Kirby's really stepped up and is standing behind their work," he said. The city i s p r o viding c r ews and s o m e eq u i pment, while Nagelhout is doing the rest without cost to Redmond. To avoid a similar probl em down th e l i ne, t h e city o pted f o r a n o t her approach to refilling the equipment vault now that plumbing r e p a ir s a re complete. Instead of compacted native soil again, or a weak cement/soil combination sometimes used in such applications, the city will refill th e area w ith

Unhappy patients

Ever since the news of BaklidKunz's lawsuit against the hospital, some of Vinas's patients, especially those who say the Phelan M.Ehenhack/ ForThe Washington Post surgery did nothing — or worse, Eunice Murphy was a retiree playing tennis four times a week before surgery by Dr. Federico Vines; harmed them — havebegun to she says she has had trouble walking since then. "I wasn't his patient; I was his victim," says Murphy, wonder whether their surgery shown inOrmond Beach, Fla. w as necessary afterall. pea gravel. "None of solutions are Eunice Murphy wasa retiree playing tennis four times a week f oolproof, but w i t h t h e and surgical technology may during the wait that she decided three former senior officials at forts at developing guidelines. before the surgery; she says she gravel we use a plate comexplain some of the increase in to file the lawsuit. Even after the Medicare agency and one has had trouble walking since pactor that v i brates the Patient requests surgery. And patients may have the A11Med report, she said, current one. then. gravel, so it settles into ev"I wasn't his patient; I was his become moredemanding. the hospital did little to curb his Moreover, when bureaucrats Moreover, Americans may ery niche," said CaccavaBut a Washington Post anal- practices. try to r estrict what surger- be demanding more mobility as victim," Murphy said. no. And while tedious, re"The hospital was caught in ysis of 125,000 patient records ies Medicare will pay for, they they age, surgeons say. William Scott, 62, a pipe fitter, moving small bits of gravel "Patients want to b e able had been having back pain for also shows that roughly half the act and did nothing," said sometimes face punishingpolitito access areas needing rethe tremendous rise in spinal Marlan W i l banks, B a k lid- cal backlash. to play tennis and golf and go years. He was diagnosed with pair in the future is simpler fusions in Florida has been on Kunz's attorney. "They didn't In 1978, Congress created the surfing at much higher ages lumbar stenosisand degenerathan tearing up chunks of patients with diagnoses that send anyone to extra training. National Center for Health Care than they did in the past," said tive problems. He was tired of concrete. expertsand professional soci- They didn't take any extra steps Technology, which among other Gunnar Andersson, chairman taking medication for the probIn a nother d e parture eties said should not routinely at all. They were making a lot of things recommended to Medi- emeritus of the department of lem and decided to see if the surfrom the i nitial installabe treated with spinal fusion. money." care what procedures it should orthopedic surgery at R u sh gery would help him. tion, the city added a ver"Vinas told me I'd be back on Normally, information that cover. University Medical Center in tical pipe in the vault that might shed light on the ways Satisfied patients It ran on a $4 million budget, Chicago and president-elect of my motorcycle in time for Bike will act as a drain if any that economics shape medical Hospital spokesman John and within just a few years of its the International Society for the Week" in a few months, he said. water builds up in the fudecisions by doctors and hospi- Guthrie said the A11Med report inception, it was estimated that Advancement of Spine Surgery, But instead of curing him, the ture. With membrane fabtals doesn't become public. But was "bogus" because it was its advice had saved the govern- a professional group. "They are surgery has all but crippled him, ric-covered slots along the a wide-ranging lawsuit at Hali- based on cases that Baklid-Kunz ment between $100 million and more likelyto seek out treatment he says. He can't stand for long; pipe to allow water to flow fax Health offers an unusual had selected. $200 million ayear. and more likely to accept sur- can'ttake walks because he is into the pipe, an automatic " The AIIMed report w a s glimpse into these issues. But two influential groups op- gery as an option." prone to falling. He had to sell sump pump will take out based on incomplete medical re- posed theagency's mission: the He added that some of the his motorcycle. any excess water. Whistleblower lawsuit "He took my life away," Scott cords that were cherry-picked," American Medical Association critics of the procedure, who Nagelhout w il l r e p air In 2009, a former compliance the hospital said in a statement. and the Health Industry Manu- believe spinal fusions are being said, his voice rising. "He took the concrete slab that covofficial at the hospital filed a "For the Post to accept this un- facturers Association. performed too frequently, are being a man and a husband ers the vault, said Caccavawhistleblower lawsuit alleging supported report as fact is irreMedical judgements are "bet- "not wrong." away from me. And for what'?" no, and the entire project "The problem is we don't illegal financial incentives for sponsibleand creates a grossly ter made — and are being rePritchard, Vinas's attorney, is expected to be wrapped doctors. The court filings make misleadingperception." sponsibly made — within the know what the rate of spinal fu- said his client was barred by law up before Thanksgiving. — Reporter: 541-548-2186; available an array of documents Pritchard, Vinas' attorney, medical profession," an AMA sions ought to be," he said. from commenting on individual emails, testimony, audits. said his client is a well-respected spokesman told Congress at The growth in spinal fusion patients. lpugmire@bendbulletin.com These and other sources allow surgeon, with almost 100 publi- the time. "The advantage the in the U.S. has been much faster a fuller depiction of the financial cations and book chapters to his individual physician has over than other surgeriesof wear rewards and relationships that credit, who takes steps to make any national center or advisory and tear, such as knee and hip depended on treatment deci- surethatsurgery isdone only as council is that he or she is deal- replacements. And Americans sions. They also show how hos- a last resort. ing with individuals in need of are far more likely to undergo pital administrators responded Vinas has never had a mal- medical care, not hypothetical the procedure than people from when suspicionsarose that a practice action filed against him cases." other countries. doctor, who wa s generating and, even though he has seen In 1981, Congress zeroed out The rate of spinal fusions in millions in profits, might have 15,000 patients in his career, the agency's budget. Again in the country is about 150 per been performing unnecessary only "a very small handful" ex- 1989, Congress decided that 100,000 people, according to fedsurgery. pressed dissatisfaction with his there shouldbe a government ef- eral data. In Australia, it is about The compliance official, Elin care, Pritchard said. fort to reviewthe effectiveness of one-third of that; in Sweden, it is Baklid-Kunz,couldn'tdetermine Some of Vinas's patients are medical treatments. about 40per 100,000; and in Britby herselfwhether any of the pleased with his work. It was called the Agency for ain it is lower still. surgeriesVinas had performed Steven Huntt, 62, a heavy- Health Care Policy and ReTo get a better understanding were unnecessary — she is not equipment mechanic, said Vi- search, and in its first years, it of thereasons forthe boom, the adoctor. nas operated on him four or five issued guidelines on how to treat Post reviewed 125,000 records of But just as the numbers of times. hysterectomies, strokes and patients who underwent spinal "I'd have one and then anoth- ulcers. spinal fusions in the U.S. have fusions in Florida. The data inraised questions about theproce- er," he said. "I can't explain it, but Then, in 1994, the agencypub- cluded primary and secondary dure'snecessity,audits she and Ihadtohavethem. Dr. Vinas said lished a set of guidelines on back diagnoses. * an outside firm had conducted if I didn't have it, I'd have been pain, discouraging spinal fusion The analysis shows that the showed unusual productivity paralyzed.Some people said to for some cases. procedure has been used more or more with rebates "For several low back disor- and more to treat ailments of the in parts of the hospital. Those let it go, but being a mechanic, I on qualifying purchases numbers, she says, demanded like to fix what's broken. ders, no advantage has been lower back thatexperts say are of Hunter Douglas "He's a gentle, kind man," demonstratedforfusionoversur- generally better addressed with further review. window fashions. "I don't think he Moreover, the compensation Huntt said. gery without fusion, and compli- safer and less-costlytreatments. agreements the hospital had ever did a surgery that was cations of fusions are common," Professionalsocieties and othwith Vinas and other doctors unnecessary." its researchers concluded. er expertsrule outordiscourage essentially offered large incenThe reactionfrom some sur- the routine use of spinal fusion FREE UltraGlide® lifting system on Duette® tives for more treatment, she has What is necessary? geons was furious. The North forseveralcommon problems of Honeycomb Shades alleged. The U.S. Department of As U.S. medicalcosts have American Spine Society sug- the lowerback — stenosis, herniFREE LiteRise® Lifting System on select products Justice has joined her lawsuit re- risen,questions about unneces- gestedthat the effort was awaste ated discs and disc degeneration garding illegal compensation. sary treatment have become of taxpayer money. A letter-writ- — when there are no accompaValid through November 4, 2013 As at many hospitals, the fi- frequent. By some estimates, ing campaign was launched. A nying problems of spinal instanancial benefits of operating at Americans are spendingbillions Virginia spine surgeon founded bility or deformity. Halifax Health extended to at every year in unnecessary sur- a group called the Center for PaYet about half of the rise least three groups. gery andothermedical care. tient Advocacy, which sought to in lumbar spinal fusions has Haateraaattlasg~. • Vinas and his colleagues in Medicare, the nation's health- kill the agency. come from its use for just such wlNDow neurosurgery earned as much care system for people older Some physicians rallied to ailments. •I C OV E R I N G S as thousands of dollars extrathan 65, is at the center of the its defense. But when the dust Between 2000 and 2012, the above their base salaries — for debate. settled in Congress, the agency's number oflumbar spinal fusions 1465 SW Knoll Avenue, Bend 541-388-4418 each procedure after a certain As the nation's largest insurer, budget was cut by 21 percent, for those ailments in the state www.classic-coverings.com ccB 157822 threshold. it is critical to determining what and the agency curtailed its ef- rose fivefold, from 2,014 to 9,887, • According to government kinds of surgeries in the U .S.are estimates,each neurosurgeon covered — and therefore, perat Halifax Health was generat- formed. Many privateinsurers ing more than $2 million a year look toMedicare when making in hospital profits. The hospi- their own decisions. tal charged fusion patients an Today, by its own admission, average of about $80,000, ac- Medicare may be spending bilcording to Florida records on lions annually on unnecessary Halifax Health analyzed by The medical treatment. Washington Post, ranking the The Medicare agency evprocedure as one of the more ery yearaudits a sample ofthe expensive. claims it has paid and deter• The companies that sell the mines how many of those have hardware — screws and braces "medical necessity" errors. The — already a multibillion-dollar agency estimated the amount of business in the U.S., also ben- money spent improperly on spiefited. Those companies often nal fusi ons was more than $200 I • have a representative positioned million in 2011, for example, inthe operatingroom, wherethe and most of that was because equipment for one fusion can the treatment was deemed unoxila typically amount to a $7,000sale, necessary, often because a more according to the Millennium Re- conservative course hadn't been search Group. tried, officials said. Baklid-Kunz detected Vinas' How could this happen? rapid pace of work in an audit The answer, in part, is that the and asked for further review of Medicare system is not designed hissurgeries,documents show. to discourage doctors from But she was discouraged from performing surgery, according investigating, she says. to pastand present Medicare "Hospital adm i n istrators offlcials. didn't want to touch Dr. Vinas," At a very practical level, the she said in an interview. bureaucracy offers little incenInstead, they referred to Vinas tive toweed out unnecessary and the hospital's two other neu- treatment: Medicare hires conrosurgeons as "our high rollers," tractors to issue payments to she said, and told her that rather doctors,and those contractors than crackingdown on theirbill- are paid based not on how many ing that "we need to make them claims they reject but on how

HunterDouglas

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season< S

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Save 3100

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happy."

many they approve.

More than two years would pass beforethe hospitalpursued the further review BaklidKunz had recommended — the AIIMed report — and it was

"The contractors are incentivized to efficiently process claims and not to accurately evaluate clinical effectiveness" of treatment, accordingto a paper by

• •

-


MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2013• THE BULLETIN

A7

LOCAL 4 T A TE CIVIC CALENDAR TUESDAY

DeschutesCountyBoard of Commissioners — The

County Commission will meetat 8:30 a.m. to tour the Cline Falls power plant, located at 300 N.W. 74th St., Redmond.

PacifiCorp in February sent notice to Central Oregon lrrigation District that it planned to

terminate its100-year leaseof the power plant at Cline Falls. A dispute arose between the utility

andirrigation district regarding PacifiCorp's responsibility to

clean upandrestore the site west of Redmond onthe Deschutes River.

County commissioners are now reviewing whetherPacifiCorp violated county code when it removed equipment from the

Cline Falls site, whichwasdesignated as historic in1992. The

CROOK COUNTY

NOV. 5 ELECTION

en encin exe e oa in case o sains ee 0 s Bulletin staff report Two brothers charged with killing three Great Pyrenees sheepdogs in the Ochoco Mountains in August 2012 are scheduled to be sentenced this morning in Crook County District Court. A county sheriff's deputy arrested bowhunters Paul Johnson, 67, of Roseburg, and Craig Johnson, 60, of Bend, at their camp near the spot where Peruvian shep-

herds discovered the dogs' bodies the previous day, Aug. 27, 2012, according to a Sheriff's Office account at the time. Crook County District Attorney Daina Vitolins said the Johnsons agreed to change their not guilty pleas and to other "certain things" regarding sentencing. But, reached in Salem Friday, Vitolins did not have access to the case file for details. The Johnsons in 2012

pleaded not guilty to three counts each of first-degree animal abuse, a misdemeanor, andfirst-degree criminal mischief, a felony. Their attorneys, J. Brendon Alexander for Paul Johnson and Jon G. Springer for Craig Johnson, could not be reached Sunday. The two are scheduled to appear at 8:45 a.m. in Prineville before Presiding Judge Daniel Ahern.

The dogs' owner, Gordon Clark, of Madras, said he's grazed sheep on three allotments in the Ochoco NationalForest for 20 years. The Great Pyrenees provide security against predators — in this area, that's coyotes and cougars. His operation has 15-20 Great Pyrenees at any time and another 12-15 border collies that herd the animals.

SeeDogs/A8

Ballots are in the mail. If you haven't received one yet, call

your county clerk's office: Deschutes.....541-388-6546 Crook.............541-447-6553 Jefferson.......541-475-4451

Ballots must be returned at

a drop box ormailed to your clerk's office by 8 p.m. Nov. 5. Postmarks do not count.

Here are the issues on local ballots: City of Bend

• Measure 9-94: Increase the temporary lodging rate from 9 to10 percent, then to

10.4 percent. Oeschutes County • Measure 9-96: Increase the

commission could rule bythe end of theyear.

transient room tax outside

WEDNESDAY

8 percent.

incorporated areas by 1 percentage point,from 7 to

ama e ein un one

DeschutesCountyBoard of Commissioners — The

County Commission will meet at10 a.m. at the commissioners' hearing room in the county

Oeschutes andCrookcounties • Measure 9-95: Form Alfalfa

Fire District and create apermanent taxing district at a rate

Administration Building, located

of $1.75 per $1,000 assessed property value.

at 1300 N.W. Wall St., Bend.

The agendaincludes avote on a resolution to dissolve a special tax district created in 1994 to pay for construction of

Oeschutes and Jefferson counties • Measure 16-69: Renewop-

library buildings in Bend.The

erations levy for Crooked River

Ranch Rural Fire Protection

library system is ready to make its last payment on the bond

District at a rate of 69 cents

-sm8f"

that financedthese construction

per $1,000 assessed property value.

projects. The Deschutes Public Library District remains in place

to raise tax revenue for library operations.

Jefferson County • Measure 16-70: Levy a five-year jail operations tax

Contact:541-383-0354, news@bendbulletin.com. In emails, please write"Civic Calendar" in the subject line. Include acontact nameandnumber.Submissions may be edited. Deadline for Monday publication is noonThursday.

of $1.24 per $1,000 assessed property value. • Measure 16-71: Approve $8 million in bonds for repairs

and improvements to schools in the Culver School District. -~

ss-4'

BRIEFING

Read ourstories Coverage leading up to the election is at bendbulletin.com/

election2013

Klamath Falls

Photos by Joe Kline/The Bulletin

Volunteers, some from other states, work to repair flood damage on public lands near the Steelhead Falls trailhead on Sunday in Crooked River Ranch. Keith Baker, right, of Buena Vista, Colo., a member of the Friends of Browns Canyon, and Brian O'Donnell, of Durango, Colo., a member of Conservation Lands Foundation, pile rocks into a wheelbarrow.

Have astory idea or sndmission? Contactns! The Bulletin

Search andrescue — A Southern Oregonwoman recently spent the night bundled with her infant son in a hollowed-out tree after wandering

away from camp.Now, shesaid

• Crew of volunteers works at SteelheadFalls WildernessStudyArea

she's training to become one of

By Hillary Borrud

the search-and-rescuevolunteers who spent aSeptember

The Bulletin

beanie, which fell from his head Sept. 17. "I took for granted I

knew wherewas I going," Biria

ing repairing flood damage from

said. With her son and two dogs in tow, Biria found the beanie but lost her way and had to take shelter. The next day, she heard her husband's truck and ran to

a storm earlier this year on public land overseen by the Bureau of Land Management. Many of the volunteers who worked on the project live in other states and traveled to Bend for a conference of the Conservation Lands Foundation. "It's a nice bunch of people, dedicated to conserving our public lands," said Jonathan Peart, executive director of Friends of Pompeys Pillar, which is based in Billings, Mont. The nonprofit helps to maintain the pillar, a rock formation that bears the only remaining physical evidence of the Lewis and Clark expedition that is visible along their route: William Clark's signature,

route to retrieving herson's red

a nearby road,whereshefound dozens of searchandrescue volunteers. "I didn't know I

was such abigdeal," Biria said. "Itwasalotof people. I was amazedand thankful."The

numerous volunteers werefrom Californiaand Oregonsearch and rescueteams. — Fromwire report

Bend ...................541-617-7829 Redmond ...........541-548-2186 Sisters ................541-548-2186 La Pine...............541-383-0367 Sunriver.............541-383-0367

n 0

CROOKED RIVER RANCH — The air was chilly Sunday morning as severaldozen volunteers gathered near a trailhead at Steelhead Falls Wilderness Study Area northwest of Terrebonne. The volunteers spent the morn-

night searching for her. BillieJean Biria got turned around en

Call a reporter:

v

Deschutes......... 541-383-0376 Crook ................. 541-383-0367 Jefferson...........541-383-0367

IgI

State projects....541-410-9207 Salem .................541-554-1162 D.C.....................202-662-7456 Business ...........541-383-0360 Education...........541-633-2160 Health..................541-383-0304 Public lands 541-617-7812 Public safety........ 541-383-0387 Special projects... 541-617-7831

Jonathan Peart, of Billings, Mont., executive director of Friends of Pompeys Pillar, helps plant vegetation Sunday near the Steelhead Falls parking lot. The area suffered erosion subsequent to summer flooding. which Clark carved in the stone in 1806. The pillar and the Steelhead Wilderness Study Area are both examples of areas the BLM manages for conservation purposes. The goal of the Conservation Lands Foundation is to support and expand upon the BLM's conservation work. To

do so, it connects a network of groups across the country. One such group is Friends and Neighbors of the Deschutes Canyon Area, which works with the BLM to maintain the Steelhead Falls Wilderness Study Area. SeeDamage/A8

Submissions: • Lettersand opinions: Mail:My Nickel's Worth or In MyView PD. 8ox6020 Bend, DR 97708 Contact: 541-383-0358, bulletin@bendbulletin.com

• Civic Calendarnotices:

Well shot!

Email eventinformation to news©bendbulletin.com,with "Civic Calendar" inthesubject, and include a contact name and phonenumber. Contact: 541-383-0354

reader PhotOS

• School newsandnotes:

• We want to seeyour photos of signs of winter foranotherspecial version of Well shot! that will run in the Outdoors section. Submityour best work atbendbulletln.com

/signsofwinterand

omments o en on orest t innin Deschutes

National Forest •

we'll pick the best for publication. • Email other good photos

of the greatoutdoors toreaderphotos© bendbulletln.com and tell us a bit about where and when you took them. We'll choose the best for

publication. Submission requirements: Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and phone number.Photos must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 din) and cannot be altered.

•Spokeswoman saysthatamonocul ture leaves thelandopen to parasitic infestation

Bend

18

By Scott Hammers The Bulletin

Sunriver

Rocket Newberry National Volcanic Monument

t project area

A proposed thinning project on an area of more than 35 square miles in the Deschutes National Forest southeast of Bend was opened to public comment last week. The Bend-Fort Rock Ranger District is recommending a combination of selective

logging, brush mowing and

LaPine Greg Cross/The Bulletin

fire treatment on a 22,680acre parcel near Lava Butte and primarily on the east side of U.S. Highway 97. The area

is divided in two by the lava flow. In the environmental assessment released Wednesday, the Forest Service outlined four possible courses of action for what it calls the "Rocket" project area. The proposals range from doing nothing to the most intensive of the four, which calls for logging and thinning on just under 10,000 acres, and brush mowing and controlled burning on nearly 8,000 of those acres.

Jean Nelson-Dean, spokeswoman for the Deschutes National Forest, said management of the area since it was

Email newsitemsand notices ofgeneralinterest to news@bendbulletin.com. Emailannouncementsofteens' academicachi evements toyouth©bendbulletin.com. Email collegenotes, military graduationsandreunion infoto bulletin©bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358

last logged, including sup-

• Community events:

pressionof fire,has created a monoculture dominated by 60- to 80-year-old ponderosa

pines. With all of the trees close to the same age and size, the area is susceptible to parasitic mistletoe, Nelson-Dean said, and pine beetle infestation. "All of the trees are kind of generally the same height, so there's kind of this dense canopy where beetles can go from onetree to another," she satd. SeeThinning /A8

Email eventinformationto communitylife©bend bulletin.comorclickon"Submit an Event"atwww.bendbulletin. com. Allowatleast10days beforethedesireddateof publication.Details:Thecalendar appearsinsidethissection. Contact:541-383-0351

• Births, engagements, marriages,partnerships, anniversaries: Details: TheMilestones page publishesSundayin Community Life. Contact: 541-383-0358


A8

TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2013

E VENT TODAY PUMPKIN PATCH:Featuring a pumpkin patch, petting zoo and various activities daily; hay rides, pony rides, train ride and face painting Sat.-Sun.; Cafe open Fri.-Sun; free admission, charge for activities; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; DD Ranch, 3836 N.E.Smith Rock Way, Terrebonne; 541-548-1432 or www. ddranch.net. PUMPKIN PATCH AND MARKET: Pick a pumpkin or visit the market; free admission; noon-6 p.m.; Central Oregon Pumpkin Co.,1250 N.E. Wilcox Ave., Terrebonne; 541-5041414 or www.pumpkinco.com. "KAWA":A screening of the film based on the semi-autobiographical novel "Nights in the Gardens of Spain" by Witi Ihimaera; presented by the Central Oregon Lesbian andGay Stars and Rainbows; $5, reservations requested; 7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881, payingitforward©gmail.com or wwwvolcanictheatrepub.com.

TUESDAY PUMPKIN PATCH:Featuring a pumpkin patch, petting zoo and various activities daily; hay rides, pony rides, train ride and face painting Sat.-Sun.; Cafe open Fri.-Sun; free admission, charge for activities; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; DD Ranch, 3836 N.E.Smith Rock Way, Terrebonne; 541-548-1432 or www. ddranch.net. PUMPKIN PATCH AND MARKET: Pick a pumpkin or visit the market; free admission; noon-6 p.m.; Central Oregon Pumpkin Co.,1250 N.E. Wilcox Ave., Terrebonne; 541-5041414 or www.pumpkinco.com. "A CLASSAPART:A MEXICAN AMERICANCIVILRIGHTS STORY": A screening of the 2009 film about an underdog band of Mexican American lawyers who tooktheir case to the Supreme Court; free; 4 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Hitchcock Auditorium, 2600 N.W. College Way,Bend;541-318-3726. KNOW CULTURA:TRADITIONAL

Damage

AL E N D A R

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

COOKINGWITH VERONICA CASTRO:A demonstration and tasting of traditional empanadas; bilingual; free, registration required; 6 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1032 or www.deschuteslibrary.org. THE RISE, FALLANDRISEOF SPORT HUNTINGIN AMERICA: Learn about the role ofhunting in 19th century America; $3, free for members, reservation requested; 6-8 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97,Bend;541-3824754 or www.highdesertmuseum. Ol'g.

OREGON ENCYCLOPEDIAHISTORY NIGHT:"Notorious Crimes of Central Oregon" presented by Oregon native and performer Alastair Jaques; free; 7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. BondSt., Bend; 541-3825174 or www.mcmenamins.com. THE MANHATTAN TRANSFER:The pop group performs; $45-$65 plus fees; 7:30 p.m., doors open at 6:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. INDUBIOUS: The Southern Oregon reggae band performs, with New Kingston and SolSeed;$8 inadvance plus fees, $10 at the door; 8 p.m.; Liquid Lounge, 70 N.W.Newport Ave., Bend. RAY TARANTINO: The Nashville, Tenn.-based singer-songwriter performs; free; 8 p.m.; Blue Pine Kitchen and Bar, 25S.W.Century Dr., Bend; 541-389-2558 or www. bluepinebar.com.

WEDNESDAY PUMPKIN PATCH: Featuring a pumpkin patch, petting zoo and various activities daily; hay rides, pony rides, train ride and face painting Sat.-Sun.; Cafeopen Fri.-Sun; free admission, charge for activities; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; DD Ranch, 3836 N.E.Smith RockW ay, Terrebonne; 541-548-1432 or www. ddranch.net. PUMPKIN PATCH AND MARKET: Pick a pumpkin or visit the market; free admission; noon-6 p.m.; Central Oregon Pumpkin Co.,1250 N.E.

Andy Tullie/The Bulletin file photo

The Old Mill District Halloween Party returns 4 to 7 p.m. Thursday. The shindig features wagon rides, crafts and trick-or-treating in stores and restaurants. For more information, visit www.theoldmill. com. Wilcox Ave., Terrebonne; 541-5041414 or www.pumpkinco.com. KNOW CULTURA:SUGARSKULLS: Prepare and decorate the traditional Day of the Deadtreat; grades 6-12; free; 2 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-3121034 or tinad©deschuteslibrary.org. KNOW CULTURA:DAYOFTHE DEAD &TITLAKAWAN:Explore the history and practice of Day of the Dead, build a typical alter and seea performance of Titlakawan; free; 6 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-312-1034 or tinad@deschuteslibrary.org. "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: THE NOSE"ENCORE:Starring Paulo Szotas a bureaucrat who has satirical misadventures in search of his missing nose; opera performance transmitted live in high definition; $24, $22 seniors, $18 children; 6:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX, 680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901.

THURSDAY PUMPKIN PATCH:Featuring a pumpkin patch, petting zoo and various activities daily; hay rides, pony rides, train ride and face painting Sat.-Sun.; Cafe open Fri.-Sun; free admission, charge

grasses and other plants in areas that suffered erosion near the Steelhead Falls parking lot. "We're excited to have this

legislation that called for the agency to create an invenContinued from A7 tory of land under its manBoard member Mona Steinagement that had wilderness berg said the Conservation characteristics. Lands Foundation helped the big group of people helping T he BL M c o m pleted it s group get started. "They gave us restorethis area," said first inventory in 1991 and us our first grant," Steinberg Carol Ben k o sky, d i s t r i ct t hat y ea r d e s ignated t h e s aid. The g r oup u sed t h e manager for the BLM PrineSteelhead Falls W i lderness $10,000 grant to establish it- ville District. Study Area. The study area self as a nonprofit, said PresiSteelhead Falls is o ne of is a temporary designation, dent Cindy Murray. 86 wilderness study areas, and the Oregon Natural DesA storm f r o m t h i s p a st which cover 2.6 million acres ert Associationhas for years summer sent a flood into the in Oregon and Washington, sought a permanent wildercanyon near Steelhead Falls said Jerry Magee, BLM Wilness area designation that that washed rocks f r om a derness and National Land- would prevent road construcculvert into th e w i l derness scape Conservation System tion and other development area, Steinberg said. On Sun- program lead. "BLM was a on the public land. d ay, volunteers rebuilt t h e land disposal service" durOnly Co n gress h a s t h e rock dams that are intended ing much of the 20th century, power to de signate wilderto slow water in the culvert. Magee said. That changed in ness areas, Benkosky said. They al s o pl a n ted n a t i ve 1976, when Congress passed "In the meantime, BLM man-

for activities; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; DD Ranch, 3836 N.E.Smith Rock Way, Terrebonne; 541-548-1432 or www. ddranch.net. PUMPKIN PATCHANDMARKET: Pick a pumpkin or visit the market; free admission; noon-6 p.m.; Central Oregon Pumpkin Co.,1250 N.E. Wilcox Ave., Terrebonne; 541-5041414 or www.pumpkinco.com. OLD MILLDISTRICT HALLOWEEN PARTY:Featuring crafts and trickor-treating in stores and restaurants, wagon rides, activities and more; free; 4-7 p.m.; Old Mill District, 661 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541312-0131 or www.theoldmill.com. REDMONDFIREANDRESCUE HALLOWEENPARTY:Trick-or-treat at the Redmond fire station, with games and information about fire safety; free; 4-8:30 p.m.; Redmond Fire 8 Rescue,341 N.W.Dogwood Ave.; 541-504-5000 or www. visitredmondoregon.com/. TRICK-OR-TREATON SIXTH STREET:Participating business will be identified by a "Welcome Here" pumpkin and will be handing out candy; free admission; 4-6 p.m.; downtown Redmond; www. visitredmondoregon.com/. TRICK-OR-TRUNK: A trick-or-treat out of vehicles (golf carts, trucks, wagons), ghostly photos, cookie decorating contest and more; free;

ages the areas to protect their wilderness character." The Conservation Lands Foundation was created as an advocacy organizationfor "all of BLM's lands that have a conservation mandate," said board Chairman Ed Norton. "Friends and neighbors of the Deschutes Canyon Area, and (Oregon Natural Desert Association), they've got terrific volunteers," said Meghan Kissell, ca mpaign c o mmun ications d i rector f o r t h e Conservation Lands Foundation. "It's a nice opportunity for folks outside Bend to see these c o n servation l a n d s right here." — Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrudC<bendbulletin.com

5-8 p.m.; Crooked River Ranch Administration Building, 5195 S.W. Clubhouse Drive; 541-923-2679. HALLOWEEN BASH: Featuring a haunted house, prizes, games, treats and giveaways; $5; 6-9:30 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. MainAve., Sisters; 541815-9122 or www.belfryevents.com. HALLOWEEN HALL: Trick-or-treat at the college's Juniper Hall; for ages12 and younger; free; 6-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600N.W.CollegeW ay,Bend; 541-383-7593. "SHAUN OF THEDEAD": A screening of the horror-comedy film (2004, rated R) aboutan aimless salesman dealing with his roommate andzombies;$9 plusfees;7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; TowerTheatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-3170700 or www.towertheatre.org. THE SCARE GROUNDS: Ahaunted house; recommended onlyforages 12and older; $12 for one haunt, $20 for two haunts, $25 for three haunts; 7 p.m., gatesopenat6:30 p.m .;old Parr Lumber buildings, 443 S.W. Evergreen Ave., Redmond; 541-5484755 or www.scaremegood.com. HALLOWEEN PARTY: Featuring a movie-themed costume party with prizes and live music by Moon Mountain Ramblers with Grit and Grizzle; $7; 8 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881. HALLOWEEN PARTY: M usic featuring Tony Smiley; free; 10 p.m.; Dojo, 852 N.W.Brooks St., Bend; 541-706-9091 or www.dojobend. com.

artist talks, live music, wine andfood in downtown Bendandthe Old Mill District; free; 5-9 p.m.; throughout Bend. COLUMBIARIVERCIRCUIT FINALS RODEO: Top cowboys in the Northwest compete inbareback, saddle back, roping, bull riding, barrel racing and more; tickets available at Big R in Redmond, Boot Barn in Bend and Prineville Men's Wear; $15, $10 for Saturday daytime; 5:30 p.m.; Deschutes CountyFair8 Expo Center, Hooker CreekEvent Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 888-849-2723. SAINTS GALA:AMoulin Rouge themedeventemceedby Mosely Wottaand auctioneer, Fred Northup, Jr., with games, a gourmet dinner, live auction and post-dinner after party; proceeds benefitthe St. Charles Foundation's programs; $150, $1350 for a table of ten; 5:30 p.m.; TheRiverhouseConvention Center, 2850 N.W.Rippling River Court, Bend; 541-706-6996 or www. stcharlesfoundation.org. AUTHORPRESENTATION:Rick Steber presents his new book"Red White Black: A TrueStory of Race and Rodeo"; $5; 6:30 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books,422 S.W. Sixth St., Redmond; 541-526-1491. THE SCARE GROUNDS:Ahaunted house; recommended onlyforages 12and older; $12for one haunt, $20 for two haunts, $25 for three haunts; 7 p.m., gatesopenat6:30 p.m .;old Parr Lumber buildings, 443 S.W. Evergreen Ave., Redmond; 541-5484755 or www.scaremegood.com.

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"I don't think we've lost a dog. This is such a bizarre thing."

Clark said. Deputy Sheriff Bryan BotContinued from A7 toms recovered a.223-caliber The Great Pyrenees are rifle he believed the Johnsons working dogs that take up to — Gordon Clark, used to shoot the dogs, actwo years to train, a process the sheepdogs' owner cording to a sheriff's account that can cost up to several in October 2012 at the Johnsons' indictment. The brothers thousand dollars, Clark said. The cost to simply replace the admitted shooting the dogs, animal is about $1,200. He bring a young Great Pyrenees thinking the a n imals were didn't necessarily bond with with him when he addresses wild, according to the Sheriff's the dogs —in this case, Elvira, the court today at the John- Office. Tony and Jackie Chan — al- sons' sentencing. He said the Clark on Sunday said he though the herders often do, breed has guarded sheep for learned that the pair shot the he said. thousands of years in France first two dogs as a flock of P eruvian s hepherds l i v e and Spain. Sheep and their sheep approached their camp withthe flocks duringthe sum- attendant dogs are common o n an a l l otment near t h e mer months, when as many as sights in the Ochocos, and unWalton Lake Sno-Park, then 9,000 ewes and lambs, broken lessattacked, the dogs are no walked through or past the into bands of 1,000, are graz- threat to people, he said. flock, fired eight more shots ing the allotments, Clark said. Because of the threat from and killed the third dog. "I don't think we've lost a predators, however, the aniA herder nearby said he dog," he said Sunday. "This is mals provide an instrumental heard theshots, but did not see such a bizarre thing." service. "Without the guard the shooters, Clark said. "If t hey k n o w a n y t hing Clark said he planned to dogs,we wouldn't have sheep,"

Thinning Continued from A7 All of the proposals call for maintaining trees larger than 21 inches in diameter. Fir and lodgepole p ine g r o wing i n areas historically dominated by ponderosa pines would be removed, as would trees with s i g n ificant mi s t l etoe infestation. The Rocket project area is home to hawk and deer habitat, and the Forest Service is proposing to preserve stands of trees and lower-lying vegetation that provide cover for deer, particularly near the two

about hunting, they should have moved to another location," Clark said. "Sheep would scareallthe game away."

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How tocomment To submit written comments about the Rocket Vegetation

Management Project, send them toForest Supervisor John Allen, c/oBeth Peer,63095 Deschutes Market Road,Bend,OR 97701; or email them to comments-pacificnorthwest-deschutes-bend-

ftrock©fs.fed.us. The project nameshould be inthe subject line.

migratory crossings beneath U.S. Highway 97. Although the area comes w ithin about a m il e of t h e Bend city limits, Nelson-Dean said, the situation is not being considered a l a rge w i ldfire risk that could threaten residential neighborhoods.

Bend

Individuals who wish to submit comments on the proposal have until Nov. 22. Barring an appeal or other obstacles, Nelson-Dean said she expects work within the Rocket parcel would begin in 2015. — Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammersCbendbulleti n.com

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For accommodation of persons with special needs at sales meetings call 541-241-6926 or 711 TTY. PacificSource Community Health Plans, Inc. is an HMO/PPO plan with a Medicare contract. Enrollment inPacificSourceMedicaredepends oncontract renewal. Asalesperson willbe present with information and applications. You must continue to pay your Medicare Part B premium. Limitations, copays and restrictions may apply. Premium maychange on January1 of each year. YOOZ1 MRKZ149


MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2013•THE BULLETIN

A9

ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT

en'?

i ' ra 'a orreurn 0' a TV SPOTLIGHT

TV TODAY 5:25 p.m. on ESPN,"NFL Football" —Two NFCWest foes come to loggerheads tonight at the Edward JonesDome, where Sam Bradford and the homestanding St. Louis Rams hope to right their season with a win over Russell Wilson and the division-leading Seattle Seahawks. The Rams will certainly have their work cutoutfor them, as the talentedSeahawks boastoneofthe game's best defensesand acrack running game led by Marshawn Lynch.

A

• No plans have been an• nounced by 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment to issue the subsequent seasons. That can be taken as an indication that season one wasn't a big seller. If it had been, the latter years of the show would have startedto be released by now. It's understandable that fans would want to have the "Newhart" series finale, with its twist ending. Maybe the resurgence of Newhart's visibility and recognition,cemented by his recent Emmy win — his first ever — for his guest role on CBS' "The Big Bang Theory" (which he'll reprise in a new episode Nov. 7) will inspire Fox to do something about those other "Newhart" seasons.

By Jay Bobbin © Zapzit

Q

• Since James Wolk is now • on "The Crazy Ones," does that mean he won't be in the next season of "Mad Men?" — Julie Marks, Milwaukee • The actor made such an • impression in season six of "Mad Men" as ever-chipper ad agency man Bob Benson, it's a good bet AMC and series mentor Matthew Weiner would like to have him back. It probably will end up depending on shooting schedules. And it may be a help that the seventh, and final, season of "Mad Men" will be split into two halves — the first being shown next year and the last in 2015.

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8 p.m. on H D, "The Voice" — The next phase of competition, the knockout rounds, begins in this new episode. Adam, Blake, Cee Lo andChristina pit two of their team members against each other. But this time the singers don't learn who their competition is until the last minute. The winners of each showdown will advance to the live rounds. Carson Daly hosts "The Knockouts, Part

Photos courtesy Newscom

Q

• Nowthat"Breaking Bad" • is over, what are Bryan Cranston's plans? — Gary Stewart, Youngstown, Ohio . He a l ready w a s i m . mersed in t hem w hen the much-praised AMC show ended its run last month. He was portrayingformer President Lyndon Johnson in Robert Schenkkan's play "All the Way" at the American Repertory Theater in C ambridge, Mass., and Cranston flew to Los Angeles — after a matinee performance one day — for a "Breaking Bad" event on the night of the series' finale. That was a lot of back and forth for him, since he'd also been in L.A. the previous week-

A

Q

James Wolk's, left, shooting schedule on "The Crazy Ones" could conflict with his returning to AMC's "Mad Men." But the latter's pending conclusion might necessitate his character's reappearance. Bryan Cranston, right, hasn't taken a break since the "Breaking Bad" finale — his starring role, in fact, didn't preclude him from appearing in a spate of other work while the award-winning drama was still being filmed. end for the Emmy Awards. Cranston didn't win an award himself that night, but he could console himself with the three Emmys he already had for his portrayal of Walter White. Movie work will be big on Cranston's agenda going forward, but it also was during his "Breaking Bad" run when he released "Contagion," "Larry Crowne," the remake of "Total Recall" and the Oscar-winning "Argo." He'll be among the voices in "Kung Fu Panda 3." He's completed "Cold Comes the

She played Beth Holloway, mother of the missing Natalee Holloway, in Lifetime movies It was interesting to see in 2009 and 2011, and she had • T racy Pollan o n h e r a multiple-episode arc on "Mehusband Michael J. Fox's new dium" in 2009. She also fared show. What else has she been well with guest roles on a coudoing lately? ple of the shows in the "Law & — Jim Rollins, Order" franchise. Palm Coast, Fla. • While her acting work The first season of the "Newhart" series came • hasn't been frequent in recent years — she and Fox in 2008 on DVD. Will the folalso have been raising their lowing seasons be released'? — Glen Ahlfield, four children — it's had impact when she's done it. Liberty, Mo.

Q•

seeing my girlfriend, "Stella," for a year and a half. She also has children. When we met, Stella's divorce was becoming final, and her house was near the tail end of foreclosure. The sheriff later removed her from her home. DEAR I bought a couple ABBY o f condos and l et Stella choose one she wanted to move into. She agreed she would pay the bills and rent once she settled in. Two weeks after she moved, she quit her job. It has been almost a year, and she hasn't gone on one job interview. I pay all her bills, and I'm getting resentfuL It's not the money, but I feel she continues to see me only so she can live rent-free. Our communication isn't the greatest, and she gets angry if this topic is brought up. — Don't Want to Be a Sugar Daddy in Chicago

Dear Sugar Daddy:Of course she gets angry. Have you never heard the saying, "The best defense is a strong offense"'? If you want to resolve this, you must be prepared for Stella to re-

perhaps it's time you asked him why. While it may be a display of immaturity on his part, it could also be that he is uncomfortable in front of a camera. Explain that you would love to have a picture of him that depicts h ow he really is, and ask if h e would be willing to sit for a session with a professional photographer. If he isn't, then perhaps he'd be more relaxed posing for a photo that you take. Dear Abby: My fiancee, "Tina," and I made a resolution to lose weight for our w edding. Everything has been going great, except for one thing.Because men lose weight faster than women, I now weigh less at 6 foot I than she does at 5 feet 4. Tina already has self-esteem issues. I want to look good for our wedding, but not at the cost of my fiancee's feelings. What can I do? — At a Loss Michigan ly say, "This is my son." Dear At a Loss: Continue being Johann i s a n ac c omplished supportive and help Tina to mainyoung man. But I can't reconcile tain her self-esteem. But her weight this picture with the man he is. issue is he r r e sponsibility, not — Freaked Out in Germany yours. Ifshe becomes frustrated, Dear Freaked Out:Your son is an suggestshe consult her doctor. adult. If he is making this expres— Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com sion in photographs on purpose, or PO. Box 69440, Los Angeles,CA 90069

general interest via email to tvpipeline®tribune.com. Writers must include their names, cities and states. Personal replies cannot be sent.

MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may beanadditional fee for 3-D and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to changeafter press time. I

I

Tonight: Getsomeextra Rand R.

OCT. 28, 2013:Thisyearyoudevelop a very gentle sidetoyour personality that seems irresistible to manypeople. This quality, combinedwith your innate magnetism, adds toyour ability to draw otherstoward Stars showthe kind you. You discover of day you'll have th atyour plans, ** * * * D ynamic ideas and projects ** * * P ositive n a turally seem to ** * A verage gai n support. Ifyou ** So-so are single, youmight * Difficult need a flyswatter to chase someof your manyadmirers away.Choosing the right personmight not bepossible with all this activity. If you areattached, your magic helps enhanceyour bond. Besureto letyour sweetie knowhowimportant he or sheis to you. LEO is asstrong-willed as you are, thoughyou usuallycomeoutontop because you endure difficultsituations moreeasily.

ARIES (March 21-April19) ** * * * I t might be Monday, but that is not enough of areason to sit on your creativity. There could be a number of inconsequential hassles that others needhelp resolving. Your ability to think outside theboxwill emerge. They valuethat quality in you. Tonight: Make itearly.

TAURUS (April20-May20) ** * If you can spend alittle more time at home and on yourself right now, youwill find that the benefits outweigh theproblems. Sometimes, youneed toslow downand relax. Invite afavorite person to join you. What was atask before now becomesfun! Tonight: At home.

YOURHOROSCOPE

Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 8 IMAX,680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • CAPTAIN PHILLIPS(PG-13) t, 2:55, 4:05, 6:25, 7:30, 9:35 • CARRIE(R) 1:30, 4, 6:35, 9:05 • CLOUDYWITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 2(PG)1:10,6 • CLOUDYWITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 23-D (PG) 3:35, 8:50 • THE COUNSELOR (R) 1:05, 3:40, 3:55, 6:40, 7:10, 9:30 • ENOUGH SAID (PG-13) 1:05, 3:25, 6:05, 8:55 • ESCAPE PLAN(R) 2:45, 6:20, 9:10 • THE FIFTHESTATE(R) 2:40, 6:15 • GRAVITY(PG-13) 1:25, 6:10 • GRAVITY3-D(PG-l3)3:45,4:25,6:50,9,9:55 • GRAVITY IMAX3-D(PG-13) 1:25, 4, 7, 9:25 • INSIDIOUS:CHAPTER2(PG-13) I • INSTRUCTIONS NOTINCLUDED (PG-13) 1:50, 4:45, 8 • JACKASSPRESENTS: 8ADGRANDPA(R) 1:35,1:45, 4:10, 4:15, 7:15, 7:35, 9:40, 10 • MACHETE KILLS (R) 9: l5 • RUSH (R)1:40, 4:35, 7:50 • WE'RETHE MILLERS (R) 1:15 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies. I

By Jacqueline Bigar

clearly. Youmight decide that it's time to get past a problemthat has beenslowing you down. Sometimes just expressing thecaring you feel canhelpclear up a hassle. Tonight: Head home early, while your luck is still hot.

CANCER(June21-July 22) ** * Focus on what is important to handle. Youcoul d betakenabackbywhatisgoing on andby how undisciplined youmight be. Realize that youare acreature of extremes. You need toletyour moods run their course without reacting to them.Tonight: Start a conversation.

LEO (July23-Aug.22) ** * * * You are in your element during the daytime. Yournatural responsepoints you in the right direction. Youwill not make a mistake byremaining open to others; in fact, you canonly gain. Maintain your normal routine andplay it low-key. Tonight Speak your mind.

VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) ** * T he daytime hours could be challenging, andtheymight be causing youa lot of tension, despite someone'ssupport and obvious caring. Knowthatyou will feel better as the dayends. Yourenergy changes asthe workday comes to aclose. Tonight: Chill out, then decide.

LIBRA (Sept.23-Oct.22)

** * * A meeting points to thebest path for success. Howyou saywhatyou need andhowyou expressyour need for acknowledgment is likelyto change. Bemore GEMINI (May21-June20) little less charming. ** * * * You speakyour mind loudly and forthright at times and a

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) ** * * You couldexci be ted byan upcoming event or by avisit from someone. This excitement flows into every other part of your life. Youmight want to revisit your impression of akeymatter. In a different mood, everything could change.Tonight: Outlate.

AQUARIUS (Jan.20-Feb.18) ** * * * You have the ability to visualize more of whatyou want from asituation and express it, which could affectyour friends. You probably don't realizethe impact that you have onothers. Tonight: Gowith a suggestion.

©20t3 by King Features Syndicate

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Madras Cinema5,1101 S.W. U.S. Highway97, 541-475-3505 • CARRIE(R) 5:10, 7:30 • CLOUDYWITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 2(PG)4:45 • THE COUNSELOR (R)5, 7:20 • GRAVITY(PG-13) 4:50, 7 • JACKASSPRESENTS: 8ADGRANDPA(R) 5:30, 7:40 • THE WIZARD OFOZ3-D (PG) 7:10

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• THE COUNSELOR (R) 6:15 • GRAVITY(Upstairs — PG-13)6:15 • The upstairsscreening roomhaslimited accessibility.

E LEVATIO N

PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * * You see a great deal ofsensitivity and understanding emerge asothers deal with their daily routines andevents. A sense of well-being will be contagious, and it might allow a difficult situation to beresolved. Tonight: Reach for the stars. Nearly anything is possible.

Mountain Medical

I

• BLUE CAPRICE (R) 3:30 • THE SUMMIT(R) 6 • TOUCHYFEELY(R) 8:15

CAPRICORN(Dec.22-Jan.19) ** * * C onsidergettingfeedbackfrom others about what theyfeel is necessary. A brainstorm session easily could evolve. Let a closeassociate take alead role in a key matter. Youmight not realize it, but this person expresseshis or hercaring bytaking action. Tonight: Becreative.

©Zap2it

McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 54I-330-8562 • Oue to Monday Night Football, nomovies will be shown today. • After 7 p.m., shows are2f andolder only. Younger than21 mayatt endscreeningsbefore 7p.m.ifaccompaniedbya legal guardian.

SCORPIO (Oct.23-Nov.21) ** * * You'll assume your normal role as leader of thegang.You handle responsibility well, though it takes its toll on you.Stress needsto be handledquickly right now, asyou have a lot of ground tocover. Tonight: Join a favorite friend.

8 p.m. on SYFY,"Scare Tactics" — A pre-Halloween marathon of new episodes of this series, which features pranks inspired by horror and sci-fi, opens with "Party Till You Nuke." Hidden cameras capture unsuspecting people's reactions as theywatch ecoactivisits blow up a nuclear reactor and a cult guru implementing his doomsdayplan.Anothersegment features a manwho knows he's on a prank show, but thinks the joke he just played has killed someone for real. Tracy Morgan hosts.

I

Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin Pan Alley, 541-241-2271

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFOR MONDAY,

8 p.m. on (CW), "Hart of Dixie" — After Lemon's (Jaime King) falling-out with the Belles gets her blacklisted from the Junior League Halloween party, sheasks her grandmother (guest star Maree Cheatham) for help landing a date. At the party, George (Scott Porter) runs damagecontrol for the local judges. AnnaBeth (Kaitlyn Black) has a health scare andconsults Zoe (Rachel Bilson). Cress Williams and Wilson Bethel also star in the new episode, "Help Me Make It Through the Night."

— Send questions of

A

act negatively. Start by s aying, "When you moved intomy condo, you agreed to pay your own bills and some rent. It's been a year, and you haven't even looked for a job." Then give her a date by which you want her to move out. Because she has been living there for some time, she may have certain tenant's rights that will have to be respected. You might have to evict her — so talk to your attorney before you discuss this with Stella. Dear Abby:I am the mother of a 31-year-old son, "Johann," who is in the Navy. He just posted a picture of himself in his uniform on Facebook. I am praying it's not his official photo, because he was making an incredibly stupid face. He used to do this when he was a child. It is embarrassing. I could never show it to anyone and proud-

8 p.m. on E3, "How I MetYour Mother" —Marshall (Jason Segel) panics when Daphne(guest star Sherri Shepherd) sends a potentially upsetting text message to Lily's (Alyson Hannigan) phone. He asks Ted,Barney and Robin (Josh Radnor, Neil Patrick Harris, Cobie Smulders) to help him delete the text before Lily can seeit in the new episode "NoQuestions Asked." Rhys Darby ("Flight of the Conchords") also guest stars.

A

Night" and next year's update of "Godzilla."

RaCkingLIPreSentment, liVingrent-free Dear Abby: I am divorced, successful and a father. I have been

• Could you tell me if "Le• verage" will be coming back — or was it canceled? — Judy Guarino, Depew, N.Y. • It w as c a nceled. TNT • showed the finale of the Timothy Hutton-starring series on Christmas in 2012. The episode had been made with the thought that it could be the last one. ION Television has had rights to repeats of the show's five seasons since last year, and (as of last month) all those seasons are available on DVD.

O

Find a week's worth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's

0 G O! Magazine • Watch movie trailers or buy tickets online at benddulletin.com/movies

E

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IN THE BACI4: WEATHER > Scoreboard, B2 Motor sports, B3

Community sports, B6

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2013

A rundown of games and events to watch for locally and nationally from the world of sports:

Today

Wednesday

Friday

Friday/Saturday

Saturday

Major LeagueBaseball, World Series Game5, 5 p.m. POT(Fox):

NBA Basketball, Portland at Phoenix, 7 p.m.:The Trail Blazers,

College football, USC at Oregon

Pro rodeo, Columbia River Circuit

Prep cross-country, OSAA state championships

Boston's 4-2 victory over St. Louis Sunday night has the series tied up at 2-2 heading to tonight's game, the last one that will be played in St. Louis. Game six will take place on Wednesday in Boston at 5 p.m., while Game 7, if necessary, will be held on

two seasons removed from their last

State, 6 p.m. (ESPN2):Oregon State, Finals in Redmond,performances comming off a tough loss to Stanford Friday at 7:30 p.m., Saturday

playoff appearance, open their 44th NBA season on the road against the

on Saturday night, will regroup and take on USC in a special Friday night

Suns. Portland welcomessomenew

game. TheBeavers (4-1, Pac-12, 6-2

Thursday, also at 5 p.m.

faces to the roster, including center Robin Lopez, to join veteran All-Star LaMarcus Aldridge and reigning NBA Rookie of the Year Damian Lillard.

overall) have a history of beating the

Trojans (2-2, 5-3) when they host them at Reser Stadium.

at1 aod 7:30 p.m.:The region's

top rodeo cowboys andcowgirls compete in three go-rounds over two days in the Hooker Creek Event Center at the Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center. Ticket info: 888-8492723.

respectively, at LaneCommunity College. Mountain View, one of six other Central Oregon high schools represented at the meet, will look to stick with Summit in the 5A competition, while Crook County, Ridgeview and Sisters vie for the 4A title. Class 5A Bend and 4A La Pine will not field complete teams,

but they will have individual runners competing.

• CIMB Cla sic s

've","pm e e'„'t'," hot tIp,',"„

TEE TOGREEN: I iNSiDE ON B7$9

io Eugene,10a.m.:The Summit girls and boys aim for their sixth and third straight Class 5A state titles,

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

stretched totoday,B7

• Scoreboard, B9

Longdrive: Biggesthittersprep,B7

Oregonmoves up to No. 2 in BCS Oregon passedFlorida State and moved into

PREP SPORTS

second place behind Alabama in this week's

COMMUNITY SPORTS

BCS standings.

The Ducks jumping the Seminoles wasnot

Central Oregon football teams

set for play-ins

a surprise. Florida State

had only a slim lead on the Ducks in the first standrngs last week.

Oregon's convincing 4214 victory against UCLA gavethe Ducksthe boost they needed.

•I

Oregon moved up to third from fourth in

the computer ratings and remained second

Bulletin staff report The regular season for area Class 5A and 4A football programs concluded Friday night with three Central Oregon teams advancing to the postseason. Mountain View and Summit earned bids to the Class 5A play-in round, as did Ridgeview for the 4A postseason. The top eight teams in the final Oregon School Activities Association 5A rankings, which were set late Saturday night, are awarded first-round state playoff games at home. Teams ranked nine through 16 host play-in contests, and those 17th through 24th go on the road. The Cougars (7-2 overall) won their seventh Intermountain Conference championship in eight years and finished 12th in the final 5A rankings, earning Mountain View a home play-in matchup against 20th-ranked Liberty

in both the USA Today

coaches'polland the Harris poll to give it a .9517 BCSaverage. Florida State, after

routing North Carolina State 49-17, has a.9211

BCS average.TheSeminoles are third in each poll, though they gained a little ground on the

Ducks, and second in the computer ratings. Two-time defending

national champion Alabama is firstacross the board.

Alabama's remaining schedule is LSU, Missis-

(5-4) of Hillsboro, presumably on Friday night, although a time has not been finalized. Summit (4-5) reached the play-in round by finishing 23rd in the final 5A rankings. The Storm will travel to No. 13 Sandy (6-3) on Friday with a spot in the state playoffs on the line. In 4A, champions from the Cowapa, SkyEm, Far Westand Greater Oregon leagues, as well as those from the Tri-Valley, Oregon West and Skyline conferences, earn firstround state playoff games at home. An additional spot is then awarded to the team with the highest power ranking as determined by the OSAA. Ridgeview (8-1) finished fourth in the final power rankings, but the at-large bid was awarded to Scappoose, the No. 2 team out of the Cowapa League and the third-ranked team in 4A. Instead, the Ravens, who have won seven straight, will host a play-in game on Friday night against Estacada (3-6), the No. 3 seed out of the TVC and 31st-ranked team in 4A.

Joe Kline / The Bulletin

Halloween Cross Crusade racers climb the stairs on the course during the Category A Men, Category A Women, Masters Category A 35+ race on Sunday in Bend.

possible Southeastern

Conference championship game. If the

Crimson Tide run the table, they will likely play in a third straight BCS

championshi pgame, and fourth in five years. Florida State has

• Dressed in a variety of costumes, competitors bring the HalloweenCrossCrusadeto an end By Beau Eastes The Bulletin

When Indiana Jones is cheering you on, anything is possible. With television and movie characters from the 1980s — hello Dr. Jones, Thomas Magnum (P.I.), and lots of Luke Skywalkers — breakfast cereal mascots and an army of Chinese paper dragons all racing and spectating, the 2013 Halloween Cross

in the Portland-based Cross Crusade cyclocross series.

"(Halloween Cross) combines our

Crusade weekend wound down Sunday with a flair all its own. Yes, 27different cyclocross race winners were declared on the second and final day of the weekend eventstaged atDeschutes Brewery's production facility in Bend. But Sunday was highlighted by more than 1,000 racers — most of them in costume — and the festival atmosphere surrounding the fifth of nine races

love of partying and biking and puts them together for the weekend," said Bend racer Ben Hoover, 32, a Category B rider who on Sunday bore a striking resemblance to Scottish revolutionary hero William Wallace ("Braveheart"), kilt and all. "We have so much fun this weekend, the rest of Oregon is willing to travel down here, and we're happy to have them." See'Cross/B10

Bend volleyball squads headed to postseason Red Sox evenseries with Cardinals MLB: WORLD SERIES

Bulletin staff report Three local Class 5A volleyball teams are headed for the postseason. Summit has earned an automatic berth into the 16-team state playoffs. The Storm finished seventh in the Oregon School Activities Association 5A rankings and will host a first-round contest on Saturday against a to-be-determined opponent. Bend High and Mountain View also advance, with the Lava Bears hosting a play-in contest Tuesday and the Cougars going on the road for a play-in match the same day. The top eight teams in the final OSAA 5A rankings, which were set late Saturday night, are awarded first-round state playoff home matches. Teams ranked nine through 16 host state playoff play-in contests against teams ranked 17 through 24. Bend, which was 13th in the final 5A rankings, went 6-0 against the 5A Intermountain Conference and will entertain 20th-ranked Parkrose of Portland on Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. Mountain View finished 17th in 5A and will travel to Portland to take on Jefferson, which was 16th in the final rankings, in a Tuesday matchup.

sippi State, Chattanooga and Auburn before a

By Ronald Blum

The Associated Press

ST. LOUIS — There's no telling how these wacky World Series games will end. One night after a rare obstruction call, Jonny Gomes hit a decisive homer when he wasn't even in the original lineup and Koji Uehara picked off a rookie at first base for the final out. An entertaining, even goofy World Series is tied at two games apiece following Boston's 4-2 victory Sunday night, which ensured the title will be decided back at Boston's Fenway Park. "Emotional roller-coaster here, obviously," Gomes said. Inserted into the lineup about 75 minutes before gametime, Gomes hit a tiebreaking, threerun shot off reliever Seth Maness in the sixth inning. Felix Doubront and surprise reliever John Lackey, both start-

Nextup

Miami on Saturday. The Ducks are off, but Ore-

gon's next gamecomes against fifth-place Stanford on Nov. 7.

Florida State's schedule after Miami has

Wake Forest, Syracuse, Idaho and Florida. — The Associated Press

NFL Lions 31 B engals 49 Cowboys 30 Jets 9 Chiefs 23 R aiders 21 Browns 17 Steelers 18 Patriots 27 Broncos 45 Dolphins 17 Redskins 21

Saints 35 Cardinals 27 Bills 1 7 F a lcons 13 Giants 15 Packers 44 Eagles 7 V i kings 31

World Series, Game5, Boston at St. Louis

49ers 42 Jaguars 10

• When:Today, 5 p.m. • TV:Fox• Radio: KICE-AM 940 ers during the regular season, picked up for a gritty Clay Buchholz to help the Red Sox hang on. And of course, another bizarre ending: Uehara picked off pinch-runner Kolten Wong — with postseason star Carlos Beltran standing at the plate. It was the first postseason game in history to end on a pickoff, according to STATS. Game 5 is tonight at Busch Stadium, with Boston left-hander Jon Lester facing Cardinals ace Adam Wainwright in a rematch of the opener won 8-1 by the Red Sox. SeeRed Sox/83

a chance to gain on Oregon this weekwhen it plays seventh-place

Lions rally for win over Gowboys Calvin Johnson has 329 yards receiving for Detroit,B3

PREP SPORTS

Look for prep slideshowonline

O0 Charlie Riedel/The Associated Press

Bostonrelief pitcher Koji Uehara, right, and first baseman Mike Napoli celebrate after the Red Sox defeated St. Louis in Game 4 of the World Series on Sunday in St. Louis.

The Bulletin

ta kes a look back at the week in

Central Oregon sports, in pictures. Visit the Bulletin's website at

www.bendbulletin.com/ preppics.


B2

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2013

SPORTS ON THE AIR TODAY HOCKEY NHL, Montreal at New York Rangers BASEBALL MLB, World Series, Boston at St. Louis FOOTBALL NFL, Seattle at St. Louis SOCCER

Time

Women's college, California at Oregon

7 p.m.

4:30 p.m.

NBCSN

5 p.m. F ox, 940-AM 5:25 p.m.

ESPN Pac-T2

TUESDAY HOCKEY NHL, Tampa Bayat New Jersey BASKETBALL NBA, Chicago at Miami

Time 4 :30 p.m.

NBA, L.A. Clippers at L.A. Lakers

7:30 p.m.

TV/R a dio NBC S N

5 p.m.

TNT TNT

Listings are themostaccurateavailable. The Bulletinis not responsible for late changesmade by Nor radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF RUGBY

his hometown Swiss lndoors title for the second straight

Bend topS CorvalliS — Led

year, winning the final 7-6 (3),

by Craig Branstad's two tries, theBend Rugby Club defeated the Corvallis Rugby Club 27-6

2-6, 6-4 on Sunday in Basel, Switzerland. The top-seeded Argentine clinched the title when Federer could not return a tough forehand. Federer looked

in Corvallis on Saturday. Sean Patton added a try and Mike

COREBOARD

TV/Radio

ON DECK Today Boys soccer:SistersatMountain View,4p.m. Girls soccer: Summiatt Sheldon, 6:30p.m.

Tuesday Boys soccer:Molaffaat Madras,4 pm.; CulveratIrrigon,4:30p.m. Girls soccer: Madras at Molaga,6 p.m.; Sistersat MountainView,4p.m. Volleyball: NorthBendatRidgeviewinClass4Aplayin, 6:30p.m.;Parkroseat Bend inClass5Aplay-in, 6:30 p.mzMountain Viewat Jefferson in Class5A play in,TBD;MadrasatCorbett, 5p.m. Thursday Girls soccer:Sistersat Summit,4 p.m. Boys waterpolo: MountainViewSummit, Madrasat 5A stateplayoffsatTualatin Hills AquaticCenter in Beaverton,12:30 p.m. Girls water polo: Mountain View,Summit, Madrasat 5A stateplayoffsatTualatin Hills AquaticCenter in Beaverton,5:10p.m. Friday FootbaII: LibertyatMountain Viewin Class5Aplay-in, 7p.m.,Summit atSandyin Class5Aplay-in, 7p.m., Estacada at Ridgeviewin Class4Aplay-in, 7 p.m.; CulveratCentral Linn,7p.m.

Saturday Cross-country: DSAA Class4Astatechampionships at Lane Community Collegein Eugene, 11:15a.m.; OSAAClass5Astate championships at LaneCommunityCollegeinEugene,1:15 p.m. Volleyball: TBD at Summit in first roundof Class5A state playolfs,TBD;TBDat Crook County in first roundofClass4Astateplayoffs,TBD,TBDatSisters in first round of Class4Astateplayoffs, TBD;TBD at Madras in first roundof Class4Astate playoffs, TBD

BASEBALL MLB MAJORLEAGUEBASEBALL

PostseasonGlance

Hunter kicked three conversions to the home comforts and rauand two penalty kicks for the cous support at Basel, where Roughriders of Bend. The BRC improved to 8-2 with the victory and 4-0 in the NW Rugby Union. The Roughriders are at Salem next Saturday.

TENNIS Serena wins WTAtitle

he is a five-time champion, to

revive his difficult season. He's won just one title in the past14

months.

WINTER SPORTS Ligety takes WorldCup

— Serena Williams endedher best season in style, rallying

OPellSi —Ted Ligety maintained his dominance in giant

past Li Na 2-6, 6-3, 6-0 on Sunday in Istanbul for her second

slalom by taking the season-

straight WTAChampionship and 1Tth title of the year. She

opening World Cup race by a 0.79-second winning margin

became the first player to suc-

Sunday in Soelden, Austria, while Bode Miller finished 19th

cessfully defend the WTA title since Justine Henin in 2007. This was Williams' fourth WTA

following a 20-month injury

Championship .Shealsowonthe elite tournament of the eight topranked players in 2001, 2009 and 2012.

upon his return to the circuit layoff. Ligety, who won six of eight races last season and defended his world title in GS, held on to his massive 0.90-

second first-run lead to finish

YOHZhnySCOreS ValenCia

in an aggregate 1 minute, 59.50 seconds. Alexis Pinturault of

OPen title —Mikhail Youzhny

France camesecond, and over-

claimed his 10th career title by beating top-seeded David Ferrer 6-3, 7-5 Sunday to win the Valencia Open in Spain. The 31-year-old Russian dominated

all champion Marcel Hirscher of Austria was 1.02 behind in third.

the No. 3-ranked Ferrer through-

SOCCER U.S. deats NewZealand

out, breaking the defending

champion and local favorite four times on the indoor hard court. Youzhny usedwell-placed ground strokes early on, breaking twice to take the first set.

Ferrer appeared to haverecov-

— Megan Rapinoe,Carli Lloyd, Christen Press and Heather O'Reilly scored to help the U.S.

women's team beatNewZealand 4-T in an international friendly

ered with a break in the second,

Sunday in SanFrancisco to

but Youzhny brokeback andthe

extend its unbeaten streak to 37 games.Hannah Wilkinson scored for New Zealand. The

Spaniard then started to berate

himself after each miss.

Del Potro takes Swiss IndOOrS final —Juan Martin del Potro denied RogerFederer

Americans are unbeatenat home since 2004, a stretch that

includes 75 games.

— From wire reports

AU TimesPDT

WORLDSERIES

(Best-of-7; x-if necessary) AU games televisedby Fox St. Louis 2, Boston2 Wednesday, Dct. 23: Boston8,St. Louis1 Thursday, Dct. 24:St.Louis4, Boston2 Saturday, Dct.26:St.Louis5, Boston4 Sunday, Oct.27:Boston4, St.Louis2 Today,Dct.28: Boston (Lester15-8) atSt.Louis (Wainwright19-9),5:07p.m. Wednesd ay,Dct.30:St.LouisatBoston,5:07 p.m. x-Thursday, Dct. 31:St. Louisat Boston,5:07p.m. Ssnday's boxscore

Red Sox 4,Cardinals 2 Boston

St. Louis ab r hbi ab r hbi Effsury cf 4 0 0 0 Mcrpnt 2b 5 1 2 1 Nava rf 4 0 0 0 Be tran rf 3 0 1 1

Pedroia2b 4 I I 0 Hoffidylf 4 0 0 0 D.Drtiz1b 3 2 3 0 MAdms1b 4 0 0 0 Berrypr 0 0 0 0 YMolinc 4 0 1 0 Lackey p 0 0 0 0 Jay cf 2000 Uehara p 0 0 0 0 Freese3b 4 0 0 0 JGomslf 2 1 1 3 Descalsss 3 0 0 0 Bogarts3b 3 0 1 0 Lynnp 2000 Drewss 3 0 0 I Manessp 0 0 0 0 D.Ross c 4 0 0 0 Choate p 0 0 0 0 Bchhlzp 1 0 0 0 SRonsnph 1 1 1 0 Carpph 1 0 0 0 Siegristp 0 0 0 0 Dourntp I 0 0 0 Axfordp 0 0 0 0 Breslwp 0 0 0 0 Craigph 1 0 1 0 Tazawap 0 0 0 0 Wongpr 0 0 0 0 NapoliIb 1 0 0 0 Totals 3 1 4 6 4 Totals 33 2 6 2 Boston 000 013 000 — 4 St. Louis 100 —2 001 000 E—Effsbury (2), Bogaerts (I). DP — St. Louis 1. LDB —Boston 5, St. Louis 8. 28—D.Drtiz (1),

YMolina (1), S.Robinson(1). HR J.Gomes(1) SB — Berry (1). SF—Drew. Boston I P H R ER BBSO Buchholz 4 3 1 0 3 2 D oubront W,1-0 2 2-3 1 1 1 0 3 Breslow 0 I 0 0 I 0 1 -3 0 0 Tazawa H,1 0 0 0 LackeyH,1 1 0 0 0 0 0 UeharaS,1-1 1 I 0 0 0 0 St. Louis 52-3 3 3 3 3 5 Lynn L,0-1 Maness 1 2 1 1 0 1 1-3 0 0 Choate 0 0 0 2 -3 1 0 0 0 0 Siegrist Axford 1 1-3 0 0 0 1 2 Breslowpitchedto 2baters inthe 7th. WP—BuchholzLacke , y. T—3.34.A—47,469(43,975).

FOOTBALL College Schedule

AU TimesPDT

(Ssbject tochange) Wednesday'sGame

Cincinnati atMemphis, 5 p.m.

Thursday'sGames

NHL ROUNDUP

Avs take out Jets The Associated Press

a shootout and Los Angeles DENVER — The Colorado beat Edmonton for its sevAvalanche showed they can enth victory in nine games. win playing from behind as The Kings outshot the Oiiwell as with a lead. ers 48-18 in regulation and Ya k u p ov Paul Stastny had a goal overtime. N a i l and an assist in the third scored for Edmonton on a period, Semyon Varlamov power play in th e second stopped 24 shots and the period and Mike Richards streaking Avalanche beat tied it less than 14 minutes the Winnipeg Jets 3-2 on later. Ducks 4, Blue Jackets 3: Sunday night. Matt Duchene and Jan He- COLUMBUS, Ohio — Cojda also scored and Gabriel rey Perry scored with 2:25 Landeskog added two assists remaining, an d A n a heim for the A v alanche. Under snapped Columbus' threefirst-year coach Patrick Roy, game winning streak. Perry they are 10-1 for the second wristeda shot over sprawled time in franchise history. goalie Sergei Bobrovsky for "That was the first time his sixth of the season. w e came from behind i n Sharks 5, Senators 2: OTthe third p eriod," Stastny TAWA, Ontario — A l ex said. "We got chances and Stalock stopped 38 shots in we didn't stop. We just kept his first NHL start to lead going." San Jose over Ottawa. The Blake Wheeler and Bryan 26-year-old Staiock made 16 Little had a goal and assist saves in the first period and each for the Jets. helped the Sharks jump out The Avalanche trailed 2-1 to a 3-1 lead. Lightning 4, Panthers 3: entering the third but came out strong at the start of the SUNRISE, Fla. — Steven period. They put nine quick Stamkos and Valtteri Fiishots on goalie Al Montoya p pula both scored in t h e b efore Hejda tied i t w i t h shootout to give Tampa Bay 12:47 left off an assist by a win over Florida. Stamkos made some nice moves and Stastny. Stastny netted the winner slipped the puck past Jacob with 5:28 left to give Colora- Markstrom for t h e d eciding goaL Stamkos, Radko do its fourth straight victory. Also on Sunday: Gudas, and Martin St Louis K ings 2, Oilers 1: L O S all scored in regulation for ANGELES — Anze Kopitar Tampa Bay, which has won scored the deciding goal in five of six.

SOUTH Louisiana-Monroe atTroy, 4:30p.m. SOUTHWES T South F orida atHouston, 4 p.m. Rice atNorthTexas,4:30 p.m. FAR WEST ArizonaSt.atWashington St.,7:30 p.m.

Friday's Games SOUTHWES T SouthernU.at TexasSouthem,6p.m. FAR WEST SouthernCalatOregonSt., 6 p.m. Saturday'sGames EAST

VirginiaTechatBoston College, 9 a.m. flinois atPennSt., 9a.m. Columbiaat Yale, 9a.m. Bryant atRobert Morris, 9 a.m. TempleatRutgers, 9a.m. N. Illinois atUMass, 9a.m. Pennat Brown,9:30 a.m. StonyBrookat Maine, 9:30a.m. WakeForestatSyracuse,9:30a.m. BuckneffatColgate, 10a.m. Holy CrossatFordham,10a.m. Lafayette at Georgetown,10 a.m. Jacksonvi leat Marist,10a.m. Cornell atPrinceton,10a.m. Monmouth(NJ)atSacredHeart, 10a.m. CCSUatWagner,10a.m. Dartmouthat Harvard,2 p.m. St. Francis(Pa.)at Duquesne,3:10p.m. DelawareatTowson, 4p.m. SOUTH SouthernMiss. atMarshall, 9 a.m. Bethune-Cookma nat NCCentral,9a.m. MississippiSt.atSouthCarolina, 9:21a.m. NorthCarolinaat NCState, 9:30a.m. Mercerat Davidson,10 a.m. Tennes seeSt.atE.Kentucky,10a.m. FurmanatGeorgia Southern, 10a.m. W. Kentucky atGeorgia St.,I0 a.m. Hampton at MorganSt.,10 a.m. Va LynchburgatNCABT,10a.m. Campbellat Stetson,10a.m. MiddleTennesseeat UAB,10 a.m. WarneratGardner-Webb,10:30 a.m. NewHampshire atWiliam8 Mary,10:30a.m. HowardatDelaware St., 11a.m. FloridaA8Mat Norfolk St.,11a.m. Rhode IslandatOldDominion,11 a.m. CharlestonSouthernat Presbyterian,11 a.m. SC StateatSavannahSt., 11a.m. SamfordatTheCitadel,11 a.m. MurraySt.at UTMartin,11 a.m. Viffanova at JamesMadison, 11:30a.m. CharlotteatCoastal Carolina, noon

MVSU at Grambling St., noon Chattanooga atAppalachianSt,12:30 p.m. Georgiavs.FloridaatJacksonvile, Fla.,12:30p.m. VMI atLiberty,12:30p.m. ClemsonatVirginia,12:30 p.m. Albany(NY)atRichmond,I p.m. Alabama AffMat AlcornSt., 2p.m. JacksonvilieSt.atAustin Peay,2p.m. Tu aneat FAU, 2p.m. NewMexicoSt.at Louisiana-Lafayette,2p.m. EastCarolinaat FIU,3p.m. PittsburghatGeorgiaTech, 4 p.m. Alabama St.at Kentucky, 4:30p.m.

ArkansasSt.atSouthAlabama,4:30 p.m. Miami atFloridaSt 5 p m SE Louisiana at McNeeseSt., 5p.m. Cent.ArkansasatNorthwestern St., 5p.m. MIDWEST Wisconsinatlowa,9a.m. OhioSt.at Purdue,9 a.m. Butlerat Dayton,10a.m. Tennessee Techat E.Illinois, 10 a.m. San DiegoatValparaiso,10am. MoreheadSt.atDrake,11 a.m. N. Iowaat fflinorsSt.,11a.m. IndianaSt.atMissouri St.,11 a.m. UrbanaatSEMissouri,11a.m. YoungstownSt.atSouth Dakota, 11a.m. S. Illinois atW.Illinois,11a.m. KentSt.atAkron,12:30p.m. MinnesotaatIndiana,12 30p.m lowaSt.atKansasSt., 12:30p.m. Michiganat MichiganSt.,12:30p.m. NorthwesternatNebraska,12:30 pm. Navy atNotreDame, 12:30p.m. Tennessee at Missouri, 4p.m. E. MichiganatToledo,4 p.m SOUTHWES T WestVirginiaatTCU,12.30 p.m. Kansasat Texas, 1230p.m. UTSAatTulsa, 12:30p.m. SamHoustonSt. vs. StephenF.Austin at Houston,1 p.m. AuburnatArkansas,4p.m. NichoffsSt.at Lamar,4 p.m. OklahomaSt.atTexasTech, 4p.m. UTEPatTexasABM6p.m. FAR WEST Army atAir Force,9a.m. Arizonaat California,12:30 p.m. MontanaSt.at N.Colorado,12:40 p.m. SanJoseSt.atUNLV,1 p.m. Hawaii atUtahSt.,1 p.m. WeberSt.atPortlandSt., 105p.m. MontanaatSacramento St.,1:05 p.m. TexasSt.at Idaho,2 p.m. E. Washingtonat IdahoSt., 2:05p.m. NorthDakotaat N.Arizona,4 p.m. CalPolyatUCDavis,4pm. ColoradoatUCLA, 4:30p.m. BoiseSt.at ColoradoSt.,5p.m. NewMexicoatSanDiegoSt., 5p.m. NevadaatFresnoSt., 7:30 p.m. AH 1. Alabama 1 2. Oregon 3 3. FloridaSt. 2 4. OhioSt. 4 5. Stanford 6 6 Baylor 10 7 . Miami 5 8. Clemson 11 9. Missouri 9 10. Oklahoma 7 11. Auburn 8 12. Texas ABM 16 13. LSU 20 14. SouthCarolina 12 15. Texas Tech 18 16. Fresno St. 13 17. N. Illinois 17 18. Oklahoma St. 19. Loursviffe 2 0. UCLA 2 5 21. Michigan 14 22. Michigan St. 23 23. UCF 24. Wisconsin 25. NotreDame 21

Polls

RB CM KM JS PW 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 4 3 5 4 3 1 2 3 3 8 5 4 4 5 4 6 6 11 7 1 2 9 10 15 6 7 8 9 7 11 10 11 8 9 8 5 10 7 6 9 11 1 3 1 2 18 10 6 7 5 1 9 13 13 1 8 1 4 1 0 23 15 20 1 6 8 1 8 9 16 13 1 4 16 22 2 2 2 1 25 14 - 14 11 12 12 14 3 15 17 20 - 19 23 22 17 24 1 5 18 17 16 25 - 21

20 25 22 17

1 3 21 20 2 5

23

Explanation Key TheBCSAverageis calculated byaveragingthepercent totalsoftheHarris Interactive, USATodayCoaches andCom puterpolls. Teampercentagesarederivedbydividing tea a m'sactual voting pointsbyamaximum2600 possiblepoints intheHarrrs InteractivePoll and1550 possiblepoints intheUSATodayCoachesPoll.

Houston38; BYU19; Florida 13, Minnesota9, Mississippi 9;Nebraska8; Ball State7; Duke5; Arizona 3; Washrngton 2.

11. (22)JeffBurton, Chevrolet, 500,90.4, 34,$94160. 12. (14)CarlEdwards, Ford, 500,78.5,32,$119,560. 13. (13)JuanPablo Montoya, Chevrolet, 500,98, 31, $111,899. 14. (6)JoeyLogano,Ford,500 90,30, $112,243. Bettinci line 15. (3)KyleBusch,Toyota,500,1034,30, $132993. NFE 16. (15) Martin TruexJr., Toyota, 500, 80.9, 28, (Hometeamsin CAPS) Favorite Opening Current Underdog 17.$115,910. (41) DanicaPatrrck, Chevrolet, 499, 64.7, 27, Today $85,035. Seahawks 10. 5 11 RAMS 18. (19) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 499, 74.4, 26, $109,155. 19. (I6) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, 499, 77, 25, HOCKEY $109,299. 20.(18)AricAlmirola,Ford,499,69.7,24,$119,871. NHL 21.(28)CaseyMears,Ford,499,61.9,23,$107,543. NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE 22. (23) Paul Menard,Chevrolet, 499, 65.1, 22, AU TimesPDT $111,101. 23. (27)DavidGiffiland,Ford,499,566,21,$96993. Eastern Conference 24. (32)TravisKvapil, Toyota,499,458,20,$102,743. Atlantic Division 25. (35)EffiottSadler,Toyota,499,57.6, 0,$88,860. GP W L OT Pts GF GA 26. (36) MichaelMcDo well, Ford, 498, 46.1, 18, Tampa Bay 11 8 3 0 16 39 31 $77,035. Toronto 12 8 4 0 16 40 30 27. (25) KaseyKahne,Chevrolet, 497 76.7, 17, Boston 10 7 3 0 14 30 17 $94,860. Detroit 12 6 4 2 14 27 33 28. (38)KenSchrader Ford,496,47 3,16,$91368. Montreal 11 6 5 0 12 33 22 29. (24) LandonCassig, Chevrolet, 495, 50.8, 0, Ottawa 11 4 5 2 10 30 32 $76,585. Florida 12 3 7 2 8 26 42 30. (37)J.J.Yeiey,Chevrolet, 495,43.1, 14,$81,010. Buffalo 13 2 10 I 5 20 37 31. (20) RrckyStenhouseJr., Ford, 495, 38.9, 13, Metropolitan Division $124,721. GP W L OT Pts GF GA 32. (34) BobbyLabonte,Toyota, 494, 40.2, 12, Pittsburgh 1 1 7 4 0 14 35 28 $96,332. Carolina 1 1 4 4 3 11 25 33 33. (40)JoeNemechek,Toyota,493,31.8,0,$76,160. N.Y.Islanders 11 4 4 3 11 35 36 34. (31)JoshWise, Ford,490,32,0, $76,110. Columbus 11 5 6 0 10 31 29 35. (30)ColeWhitt, Toyota,459,37.7,0, $76,060. Washington 11 5 6 0 10 32 35 36. (21) Mark Martin, Chevrolet, 455, 60.6, 8, NewJersey 11 2 5 4 8 24 36 $122,835. N.Y.Rangers 9 3 6 0 6 15 33 Philadelphia 10 3 7 0 6 18 27 37. (43)DavidReutimann, Toyota, reargear,451, 51, 7,$75,947. Western Conference 38. (17) RyanNew man, Chevrolet, 432, 68 1, 6, Central Division $105,408. GP W L OT Pls GF GA 39. (29) Dave Bl a ney, Chevrolet, accident,357,31.5, Colorado 11 10 1 0 20 35 16 5,$67,250. Chicago 11 6 2 3 15 34 32 40.(42) Reed Sorenson, Ford,rear gear,275,28.5, 0, Minnesota 12 6 3 3 15 29 26 $63,250. St Louis 9 6 1 2 14 35 23 41. (39) Tony Raines, Chevrolet, brakes,220, 27.9, 0, Nashvile 12 6 5 1 13 23 32 $59,250. Winnipeg 13 5 6 2 12 32 37 42. (26)KyleLarson,Chevrolet, engine,160, 39.7, 0, Dallas 10 4 5 I 9 26 31 $63,250. Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA 43. (8) DavidRagan,Ford, engine, 109,46.5, 1, $59,750. SanJose 1 2 1 0 1 1 21 48 20 Anaheim 1 2 9 3 0 18 39 31 Race Statistics Vancouver 13 8 4 1 17 38 37 Average Speed ofRaceW inner:70.337mph. Phoenix 1 2 7 3 2 16 40 39 Time of Race: 3 hours,44 mrnutes, 21seconds. LosAngeles 12 8 4 0 16 35 30 Margin of Victory: 0.605seconds. Calgary 11 5 4 2 12 34 39 Caution Flags:17for111laps. Edmonton 1 3 3 8 2 8 36 50 NOTE:Twopoints for a win, onepoint Ior overtime Lead Changes:15among8drivers. Lap Leaders: D.Hamlin 1-2; J.Johnson 3-24; loss. Ky.Busch25-36; M.Kenseth 37-110; J.Johnson Sunday'sGames 111-174; J.Burton175-179; J.Johnson180-216; TampaBay4, Fionda3, SD MKenseth217-237; C.Bowyer 238-281; J.Gordon Los Angele2, s Edmonton1, SD 282-338; D.Hamlin339-350, C.Bow yer 351-366; SanJose5, Ottawa2 M.Kens eth367;E.Sadler368-373;M.Kenseth374Anaheim 4, Columbus3 Colorado 3, Winnipeg2 479; J.Gordon 480-500. Today's Games Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Led, Laps Dallas atBuffalo, 4 p.m Led): M.Kenseth, 4times for 202 laps;J.Johnson, PittsburghatCarolina, 4 p.m. 3 timesfor123laps; J.Gordon,2 timesfor78 laps; MontrealatN.Y.Rangers, 4:30p.m. C.Bowyer, 2timesfor 60 laps;DHamlin, 2timesfor Chicago at Minnesota,5 p.m 14 laps;KyBusch, I timefor 12 laps; E.Sadler, I Washin gtonatVancouver,7p.m. time tor 6laps J.Burton,1 timefor 5laps. Tuesday'sGames Top13 in Points:1. M.Kense th,2,294; 2.J.Johnson, N.Y.Rangersat N.Y.Islanders, 4 p.m. 2,294; 3.J.Gordon,2,267; 4. K.Harvick, 2,266; 5. Anaheim at Philadelphia, 4p.m. Ky.Busch, 2,258;6. C.Bowyer,2,239, 7. D.Earnhardt Dallas atMontreal, 4p.m. Jr., 2,238;8.G.Biff le,2,236;9.Ku.Busch,2,219; TampaBayat NewJersey,4:30 p.m. 10. C.Edwards,2,218;11. J.Logano,2,209; 12. OttawaatChicago, 5p.m. RNewm an,2 188.13 K Kahne,2 170. Winnipeg atSt. Louis, 5p.m. TorontoatEdmonton, 6 p.m. NASCAR Driver Rating Formula LosAngelesatPhoenix,7p.m. Amaximum ol150 pointscanbeattainedinarace. The formu a combinesthe toffowingcategories: Wins, Finishes,Top-15Finishes,Average Running Position TENNIS While onLeadLap,AverageSpeedUnderGreen,Fastest Lap, LedMostLaps,Lead-LapFinish.

Professional

The APTop25 The Top25teams in TheAssociated Presscollege football poll, with first-placevotes in parentheses, records through Dct. 26, total pointsbasedon25 points for a first-placevote throughonepoint for a25th-place vote,andpreviousranking: R ecord Pts Pv 1. Alabama (55) 8 -0 1,495 I 2. Oregon (3) 8 -0 1,432 2 3. FloridaSt.(2) 7 -0 1,390 3 4. OhioSt. 8 -0 1,317 4 5. Baylor 7 -0 1,223 6 6. Stanford 7 -1 1,189 8 7. Miami 7 -0 1,149 7 8. Auburn 7-1 1,022 11 9. Clemson 7 -1 1,007 9 10. Missouri 7-1 87 3 5 11. LSU 7-2 81 8 13 12. Texas ABM 6-2 81 1 14 13. Oklahom a 7-1 7 9 1 17 14. SouthCarolina 6-2 7 0 1 20 15. Texas Tech 7-1 579 10 16. FresnoSt. 7-0 5 1 0 15 17. UCLA 5-2 48 9 12 18. Oklahoma St. 6-1 48 3 19 6-1 46 4 21 19.UCF 7-1 41 7 18 20. Louisville 8-0 29 0 23 21. N. Illinois 5-2 2 6 2 22 22. Wisconsin 6-1 19 9 24 23. Michigan 7 -1 16 6 N R 24. MichiganSt. 5 -2 13 3 N R 25. Arizona St. Dthers receivingvotes:NotreDame 132, Georgia 24, BYU22, Texas22, Mississippi 21,Virginia Tech 20 OregonSt. 17,Florida14, Washington6, Ball St 4,Minnesota4,Arizona2,Duke2.

WTAChampionships Sunday At Sinan ErdemDome Istanbul Purse: $6million (Tour Championship) Surface: Hard-Indoor Singles Championship SerenaWiliams(I), UnitedStates, det. Li Na(4), China,2-6,6-3, 6-0. Doubles Championship HsiehSu-wei,Taiwan,andPengShuai, China,def. EkaterinaMakarovaand Elena Vesnina, Russia, 6-4, 7-5.

USATodayTop26 The USA TodayTop 25football coachespoI, with first-placevotes inparentheses, recordsthroughDct. 26, total pointsbasedon 25 points for Iirst place throughonepornt for25th, andprevious ranking: Record Pts Pvs 1. Alabama (56) 8 -0 1,542 1

6-3, 7-5.

2. Oregon(6) 3. FloridaState 4. OhioState 5 Baylor 6. Miami(Fla.) 7. Stanford 8. Clemson 9. Oklahoma 10. Missouri

11 Auburn 12. Oklahoma State 13. LSU 14. TexasABM 15. Texas Tech 16. SouthCarolina 17. Louisville 18. FresnoState 19.UCLA 20. Northernfflinois 21. Michigan 22. CentralFlorida

8 -0 1,483 2 7 -0 1,419 3 8 -0 1,375 4 7 -0 1,293 5 7 -0 1,190 6 7 -1 1,182 8 7 -1 1,064 10 7-1 93 3 12 7-1 8 3 4 7 7-1 8 0 4 17 6 -1 8 0 3 t 1 3 7-2 8 0 2 t 1 3 6-2 7 5 8 15 7-1 67 3 9 6-2 6 2 7 20 7-1 579 16 7-0 5 4 2 18 5-2 43 2 11

8-0 373 6-1 30 9 6-1 30 0 5-2 25 3

22 23 25 24

23. Wisconsin 24. MichiganState 7 -1 2 3 7 N R 25. NotreDame 6-2 8 3 NR Othersreceivingvotes.ArizonaState57; Virginia Tech53;Texas31; OregonState 22; BrighamYoung 21; Houston21; Georgia20; Duke8; Minnesota6; Mississippi 6; Nebraska6; Ball State 4; Florida4, lowa1. Harris Top25 The Top25teams inthe Harris InteractiveCollege FootballPoll,withfirst-placevotesinparentheses, records through Dct. 26, total pointsbasedon25points fora first-place votethrough onepointIor a25th-place vote and previous ranking: R ecord Pts P v 1. Alabama (94) 8 -0 2,590 1

2. Oregon(10) 3. FloridaState 4. OhioState 5. Baylor 6. Stanford 7. Miami(FL) 8. Clemson 9. Missouri 10. Oklahom a

11. Auburn 12. LSU 13. Texas ABM 14. Texas Tech 15. Oklahoma State 16. Louisville 17. SouthCarolina 18 FresnoState 19.UCLA 20. Northernfflinois 21. Michigan 22. CentralFlorida 23. MichiganState 24. Wisconsin 25. ArizonaState

8 -0 2,492 7 -0 2,386

8 -0 2,301

2 3

4

7 -0 2,130 5 7 -1 2,035 8 7 -0 1,977 7 7 -1 1,767 10 7 -1 1,510 6 7-1 1,475 14 7 -1 1,453 15 7-2 1,408 12 6-2 1,364 13 7 -1 1,093 9 6-1 1,081 17 7-1 1,056 16 6-2 1,043 20 7-0 9 6 5 18 5-2 68 3 11

Swiss Indoors Sunday AtSt.JakobshaUe Basel, Switzerland Purse: $2.72million (WT600) Surface: Hard-Indoor Singles Championship JuanMartindelPotro(1), Argentina,del. RogerFederer(3),Switzerland,7-6(3), 2-6,6-4. Valencia Open 600 Sunday At Ciudad delasArtes y las CiencasValencia Valencia, Spain Purse: $2.97million (WT500) Surface: Hard-Indoor Singles Championship MikhailYouzhny,Russia, del.David Ferrer(1), Spain,

SOCCER MLS MAJORLEAGUESOCCER AU TimesPDT

EasternConference W L T Pts GF GA x-NewYork 17 9 8 59 58 41 x-Sporting KansasCity 17 10 7 58 47 30 x -New England 14 1 1 9 51 49 38 14 11 9 51 41 41 xHouston x-Montreal 14 13 7 49 50 49 Chicago 14 13 7 49 47 52 P hiladelphia 12 1 2 1 0 46 42 44 Columbus 12 17 5 41 42 46 Toronto FC 6 17 11 29 30 47 D.C. 3 24 7 16 22 59 WesternConference W L T Pts GF GA y-Portland 1 4 5 15 57 54 33 x -RealSaltLake 1 6 1 0 8 56 57 41 x -Los Angele s 1 5 1 1 8 53 53 38 x-Seattle 15 12 7 52 42 42 x-Colorado 14 11 9 51 45 38 SanJose 14 11 9 51 35 42 Vancouver 13 12 9 48 53 45 FC Dallas 11 12 11 44 48 52 ChivasUSA 6 20 8 26 30 67 NOTE: Threepointsfor victory, onepointfortie. x- clinched playoffberth y clinched conference

Sunday'sGames Houston 2, D.C.United I NewEngand1, Columbus0 NewYork5, Chicago2 Vancouver3,Colorado0 SeattleFC1,LosAngeles1, tie End ofRegularSeason

MOTOR SPORTS NASCAR

Formula 1 Indian GrandPrix Sunday At BuddhInternational circuit New Delhi Lap length: 3.19miles 1. SebastianVettel, Germany,RedBuff, 60 laps, I:31:12187,125.598 mph. 2. NicoRosberg, Germany,Mercedes,60,131 42.010. 3. Romain Grosjean, France, Lotus, 60,13152.079. 4. FelipeMassa,Brazil, Ferrari,60,1:31:53.879. 5. SergioPerez, Mexico, McLaren,60,1:31:56.016. 6. Lewis Hamilton, England, Mercedes, 60

1:32'04.662. 7. KimiRaikkonen,Finland,Lotus,60,1:32:20.175. 8. PauldiResta,Scotland,ForceIndia,60,1:32:25.055. 9. AdrianSutil, Germany,ForceIndia,60,1:32:26.921. 10. Daniel Ricciardo, Australia, Toro Rosso, 60, 1:32:28.424. 11. Fernando Alonso, Spain, Ferrari, 60,1:32:30.484.

12. Pastor Maldonado,Vene zuela, Williams, 60,

1'32'31.138. 13. Jean-EriVe c rgne,France,ToroRosso,59, +1lap. 14. Jenson Button, England,McLaren,59,+1 ap. 15. Esteban Gutierrez, Mexico, Sauber, 59,+1lap. 16. ValtteriBottas,Finland,Wiliams,59, +1lap. 17. Max Chilton, England, Marussia, 58,+2laps. 18. JulesBianchi,France,Marussia, 58,+2laps. 19. NicoHulkenberg,Germany, Sauber, 54, +6 laps, Retired. Not Classfied 20. MarkWebber, Australia, RedBuff,39, Retired. 21. CharlesPic,France,Caterham,35, Retired. 22. Giedovander Garde, Netherlands, Caterham,I, Retired.

Drivers Standings (After 16 of 19races) 1. SebastiaV nettel, Germany,RedBuff,322 points. 2. Fernando Alonso,Sparn,Ferrari,207. 3. KimiRaikkonen,Finland, Lotus,183. 4. LewisHamilton, England, Mercedes,169. 5. MarkWebber,Australia, RedBull,148.

6.NicoRosberg,Germany,Mercedes,144. 7. RomaiG nrosjean,France, Lotus,102. 8. FelrpeMassa,Brazrl, Ferran,102. 9.Jen sonButton,England,McLaren,60. 10. Pauldi Resta, Scotland, ForceIndia, 40. 11. NicoHulkenberg, Germany,Sauber,39. 12. SergioPerez,Mexrco, McLaren,33. 13.AdrianSutil, Germ any,ForceIndia,28 14. DanieRil cciardo,Australia,ToroRosso,19. 15.Jean-EricVergne,France,ToroRosso, 13. 16. Esteban Gutierrez, Mexico, Sauber, 6. 17. Pastor Maldonado,Venezuela, Wiliams,1. Constructors Standings 1. Red Bull,470 points. 2. Mercedes, 313. 3. Ferrari309. , 4. Lotus,285. 5. McLaren,93. 6. ForceIndia, 68.

7. Sauber,45. 8. ToroRosso,32. 9. Williams,1.

DEALS Transactions BASKETBALL National Basketball Association PHILADELP HIA 76ERS — Waived G RodneyWilliams andFGani Lawal. HOCKEY National Hockey League BUFFALO SABRES Traded FThomasVanekto the New YorkIslanders for FMatt Moulsonanda2014 first-rounddraft pickanda2015 second-round draft pick. DALLAS STARS — Recalled F Travrs Morin from

Texas(AHL). Sprint Cup MONTR EALCANADIENS—Recalled FPatrick HolGoody'He s adacheReliefShot600 land and FLouis Leblancfrom Hamilton(AHL). Sunday NEW YORKRANGERS— AssignedG Jason MisAt MartinsviUeSpeedway siaen toHarfford(AHL). Ridgeway,Va. PHOENIC XOYOTES—Recalled FAndyMiele from Lap length: .626miles Portland (AHL). AssignedFBrandonYipto Portland. (Start position in parentheses) 1. (9) JeffGordon,Chevrolet, 500laps, 127rating, 47 points,$183,596 FISH COUNT 2.(4) MattKenseth,Toyota,500,I34 6,44,$177736. Upstream daily movement ol adult chinook,jackchi3.(5) ClintBowyer Toyota,500, 122,42,$141478. s 4. (11) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 500, 102.1, 40, nook,

$153,436. 5. (2) JimmieJohnson, Chevrolet, 500, 126.4,40, $144,046. 8-0 650 21 6. (10) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 500, 98 5, 38, 6-1 52 8 22 $133,846. 6-1 50 2 2 5 7. (1)DennyHamlin, Toyota,500,108.2, 38,$110,560. 7-1 391 NR 8. (12) DaleEarnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 500,1015, 36, 5-2 3 5 0 24 $101,060. 5 -2 13 5 N R 9. (33)GregBifle, Ford,500,79.1,35,$100,460. Otherteamsreceiving votes: NotreDame 91, Vir10. (7) JamieMcMurray, Chevrolet, 500,85.8, 34, ginia Tech 79; OregonState62; Georgia 50;Texas40; $114,555.


MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2013• THE BULLETIN

NFL ROUNDUP

MOTOR SPORTS ROUNDUP

Victory at Martinsville Gordon's first of the season The Associated Press MARTINSVILLE, Va. — Jeff Gordon pulled into the championship picture Sunday with a win at Martinsville Speedway, his first of the season. It was Gordon's eighth career win at Martinsville, but first since he swept the two races at the track in 2005. He's tied with Hendrick Motorsports teammate Jimmie Johnson for Martinsville victories, but both trail Richard Petty (15) and Darrell Waltrip (11) on the career list. Most important, though, is that the victory moved Gordon from fifth to third in the Chase for the Sprint Cup championship. Matt Kenseth and Johnson left Martinsville tied atop the standings with three races remaining, and Gordon sits 27 points behind the leaders. Kevin Harvick is 28 points out, while Kyle Busch is 36 points behind. Kenseth led a race-high 202 laps and was out front on the final restart with 77 laps remaining and Gordon lurking in t h i rd. Gordon stalked him for more than 50 laps, thinking to himself, "What would Jimmie Johnson do, or better yet, what would Richard Petty do?" before finally making the pass for the lead with 21 laps remaining. Gordon didn't look back in snapping a 32-race losing streak dating to last year's season finale at Homestead. "Matt drove a really first-class caliber race today and I didn't know if we were going to get him, but it sure was awesome when we finally did and just kind of hoped there were no cautions," Gordon said. The victory clinched the manufacturers' championship for Chevrolet, which won for the 11th consecutive season and 37th time overall. Chevrolet did it this year in the debut season of its SS race car. Kenseth tied his career-best with a sec-

ond-place finish, closing the gap on Johnson, who was up four points as they came into one of Johnson's best tracks and one of Kenseth's worst tracks. He had to drive from the middle of the pack to save his finish after a call not to pit midway through the race backfired, but Kenseth was still a bit disappointed not to leave with the victory. "Whenever your team puts you in front for that last run and you're out there leading, you get beat, you're always a little bit disappointed," Kenseth said. "I just got beat by honestlyexperience and a better driver of this track. I was hesitant to change my line and do the things he was doing because what I was doing got me there. Just got too tight at the end. Wish I could do it over." In other events on Sunday: Vettei claims 4th straight F1 world title: GREATER NOIDA, India — Red Bull's Sebastian Vettel claimed his fourth straight Formula One championship after turning in a trademark clinical performance to win the Indian Grand Prix. Starting from pole, Vettel again dominated the Buddh International Circuit to join Fl greats Juan Miguel Fangio and Michael Schumacher as just the third driver to win four consecutive championships. Vettel finished almost 30 seconds ahead of second placed Nico Rosberg in a Mercedes, with Lotus driver Romain Grosjean taking his second straight third after starting from 17th on the grid. With Vettel's win, Red Bull has also claimed its fourth straight constructor's title, despite losing Mark Webber to mechanical problems while in second place. John Force wins 16th NHRA title: LAS VEGAS — John Force won his record 16th Funny Car title, beating daughter Courtney Force in the final round in the NHRA Toyota Nationals. The 64-year-old Force has won three straight events and four overall this season to push his record career total to 138. He won the final with a 4.062-second run at 310.63 mph. Matt Smith also won at The Strip at Las Vegas Motor Speedway to wrap up the Pro Stock Motorcycle season title. Antron Brown won the Top Fuel event, and Shane Gray topped the Pro Stock field. The season-ending Auto-Plus NHRA Nationals is next week in Pomona, Calif.

ionsra o e a

ow o s

The Associated Press DETROIT — Calvin Johnson thought Matthew Stafford w as going to spike the ball for at least another snap. The Dallas Cowboys did, too. Stafford's 1-yard lunge over a pile of linemen with 12 seconds left and Johnson's 329 yards receiving lifted the Detroit Lions to a 31-30 win over Dallas on Sunday. "I was yelling that I was going to spike the ball," Stafford recalled. "But their linebackers were just standing there." The Cowboys weren't just standing around letting Johnson make catch after catch, but he made them look helpless as he tied Hall of Famer Lance Alworth's mark

for 220-plus yards receiving in a game by doing it for a fifth time. Johnson almost broke an NFL record, and could celebratethe feat because of a comeback from a 10-point, fourth-quarter deficit that some people who entered Ford Field didn't see because they had left. "Even our fans didn't think we could pull this one out," he said. "They were leaving, but we knew we could do it." Johnson's total trails only the 336 yardsreceiving Flipper Anderson had for the Los Angeles Rams against New Orleans on Nov. 26, 1989 in a game that went into overtime. Anderson had 296 yards receiving in regulation. The Cowboys dared Detroit to throw to Johnson with a lot of oneon-one coverage. They usually asked cornerback Brandon Carr to do the improbable by defending him by himself, and sometimes attempted to slow him down with a zone. "He had his way," Carr said. "And, we couldn't find a way to

Duane Burleson /The Associated Press

Detroit Lions wide receiver Calvin Johnson (81) breaks free for a 87-yard reception against the Dallas Cowboys in the first half of Sunday's game in Detroit. Johnson had 329 yards receiving on the day. alty, I think they probably had 20 seconds orso left,"Romo said. With no t i meouts, the Lions went from their 20 to the Cowboys end zone thanks in large part to a 17-yard pass to Johnson, a 40-yard connection with Kris Durham and Johnson's 14th reception that gave them the ball at the Dallas 1. Instead of spiking the ball, Stafford took the snap and leaped with his arms extended to beat the team

Also

losing their past 10 games out of the bye. games,B4 Cardinals 27, Falcons 13: GLENDALE, Ariz. — Rookie Andre Ellington rushed for 154 yards on fourth quarter to preserve a victory and remain the NFL's lone 15 carries, including an 80-yard undefeated team. T h e C h i efs touchdown run, and Arizona in(8-0), off to their best start since tercepted Matt Ryan four times. 2003, built a 20-7 lead late in the Ellington's big run, tied for third first half before the Browns (3-4) longest in Cardinals history, was made it a game. part of a 21-point second quarter Broncos 45, Redskins 21: DEN- that put the Cardinals (4-4) in conhe rooted for growing up in High- VER — Peyton Manning over- trol for good. land Park, Texas. Patriots 27, Dolphins 17: FOXcame four turnovers and Denver "I was just as fooled as the de- scored the last 38 points against BOROUGH, Mass. — New Engkeep him from rolling." fense was," Lions offensive guard former Broncos coach Mike Sha- land shook off a dismal first half Larry Warford said. nahan and his new team. Man- and another mediocre perforJohnson noticed. "It was crazy," he said. "We had Stafford was 33 of 48 for 488 ning finished with 354 yards and mance by Tom Brady to beat a lotofone-on-one coverage today, yards — his second-highest total four touchdown passes to offset Miami. Trailing 17-3 after gainand we were able to take advan- — with a 2-yard TD pass to John- his three interceptions and lost ing just 59 yards in the half, the tage and hit some deep balls. Matt son in the first quarter and two fumble. His first two turnovers led Patriots quickly turned the game made some great throws to me." interceptions. Reggie Bush had 92 to points that gave the Redskins around in the third quarter with The Lions (5-3) overcame four yards rushing and a score. (2-5) a 21-7 lead early in the third two touchdowns in a span of sevturnovers without forcing a turnRomo was 14 of 30, failing to quarter. From there, Manning led en plays. over, becoming the first team to do complete half his passes for the the Broncos (7-1) on two long scor49ers 42, Jaguars 10: LONDON that and win since New England first time since 2009, for 206 yards ing drives, then the go-ahead score — Colin Kaepernick led the way did against Miami in 2007, accord- without a turnover. on a 35-yard touchdown pass to with his arm and with his feet, ing to STATS. Dallas began the game without Knowshon Moreno. throwing for one touchdown and Saints 35, Bills 17: NEW OR- running for two more to lead San On their last d r ive, Stafford two starters on both sides of the threw a 22-yard pass to Johnson ball: DeMarco Murray and Miles LEANS — Drew Brees passed for Francisco over Jacksonville at to set up the winning score. The Austin on offense and DeMarcus five touchdowns and 332 yards, Wembley Stadium. K aepernick quarterback caught at least some Ware andJ.J.Wil cox on defense. and New Orleans pulled away for ended up with 164 yards passing Cowboys by surprise, including Late in th e f i rst h alf, Romo a victory over Buffalo. Saints tight and 54 yards rushing, and Frank l inebacker Sean Lee, who a p - threw two straight passes to Bry- end Jimmy Graham played after Gore alsoran for two scores for peared to expect him to spike the ant — after not making him the missing practice most of the week the 49ers (6-2). ball to stop the clock. intended receiver once — and he with a left foot injury and scored Giants 15, Eagles 7:PHILADEL"He kind of caught us off-guard," caught the second one with his left on 13- and 15-yard passes over the PHIA — Josh Brown kicked a cadefensive tackle Jason Hatcher hand, pinning it against his shoul- middle, powering through tackles reer-high five field goals, Eli Manningplayed error-free and the New acknowledged. der pad for a go-ahead, 5-yard TD at the goal line both times. Dallas (4-4) seemed to set itself with 46 seconds left in the first Bengals 49, Jets 9:CINCINNATI York Giants beat Philadelphia. Mihalf. — Andy Dalton threw a career- chael Vick returned for the Eagles up to win three straight for the high five touchdown passes, four (3-5) after missing 2'/~ games with first time this year to build a bigger D espite leading by six i n t h e lead atop the NFC East when Tony third quarter, Bryant didn't look of them to Marvin Jones for Cin- a hamstring injury, but clearly Romo threw his secondtouchdown happy. He flapped his arms and cinnati. Jones set a Bengals record wasn't healthy and was removed — and third of the game — to Dez screamed at Romo on the sideline. for touchdown receptions, scoring for rookie Matt Barkley late in the Bryant with 6:45 left to take a 27-17 After the loss, Bryant insisted his on catches of 9,6, 17and6yards. second quarter. lead. demonstrative actions were a reRaiders 21, Steelers 18: OAKPackers 44, Vikings 31:MINNEThe Cowboys, though, allowed sult of his positive passion. LAND, Calif. — Terrelle Pryor APOLIS — Aaron Rodgers threw "People who have a problem ran 93 yards on the f irst play Reggie Bush to cap an 80-yard for 285 yards and two touchdowns drive with a I-yard TD with 3:33 with me are the people that don't from scrimmage for the longest to lead Green Bay to a victory over left. They also had to settle for understand what is going on," he touchdown run by a quarterback, Minnesota. Rodgers completed 24 Dan Bailey's third field goal with said. and the Raiders won following a of 29 passes and Jordy Nelson had I:02 left after Tyron Smith was Also on Sunday: bye week for the first time since 123 yards receiving for the Pack2002. Darren McFadden added ers. Micah Hyde returned a punt flagged for holding on third down, Chiefs 23, Browns 17:KANSAS a mistake that stopped the clock CITY, Mo. — Alex Smith threw two touchdown runs and the de- 93 yards for a touchdown late in even though Detroit declined the for 225 yards and tw o t o uch- fense did the rest for the Raiders the second quarter, and Eddie Lacy downs, and K ansas City h e ld penalty. (3-4), who had been outscored by rushed for 94 yards and a score for "If we don't get called for a pen- off scrappy Cleveland late in the more than 13 points a game in Green Bay (5-2). • Boxscores for all of Sunday's NFL

Red Sox Continued from B1 Gomes helped get Boston started in the fifth when he followed David Ortiz's leadoff double with a 10-pitch walk that tired starter Lance Lynn, who had faced the minimum 12 batters through the first four innings. Stephen Drew's sacrifice f ly tied the score l-all, erasing a deficit created when center fielder Jacoby Ellsbury's third-inning error advanced Matt Carpenter into scoring position for Beltran's RBI

single.

Steve Helber /The Associated Press

Jeff Gordon celebrates winning the NASCAR Sprint Cup at Martinsville Speedway in Martinsville, Va., on Sunday.

B3

Ortiz, who homered in the first two games of the Series, had three of Boston's six hits and was the club's leader, smacking his hands together and screaming at teammates to get going when he pulled into second base on his double. Then, after the fifth i nning, he huddled the Red Sox for a pep talk in the dugout. Not long after, Gomes' drive put Boston ahead 4-1 in the sixth. With adrenaline taking over, Gomes spiked an arm t h rough the air as he rounded first base, yelled and banged his chest with a fist twice. Teammates tugged on Gomes' beard for good luck when he got back to the dugout, including a two-handed pull by Mike Napoli. While talk o f u m p ires' calls

,E

David J. Phillip/The Associated Press

Boston Red Sox first baseman Mike Napoli celebrates after tagging out St. Louis Cardinals' Kolten Wong on a pick-off attempt to end Game 4 of the World Series on Sunday in St. Louis. The Red Sox won 4-2 to tie the series at 2-2. dominated discussion following two of the opening three games, this one turned on a manager's pregame decision. John Farrell's original Red Sox lineup didn't include Gomes, but Victorino's back had been bothering him since Saturday, so Daniel Nava was moved from left field to right and from fifth to second in the batting order. Gomes was inserted into the No. 5 hole behind

Ortiz. "Since I signed up for this game, all I wanted was the opportunity," Gomes said. "I just wanted to be in the box." G omes hadbeen zero for 9 in the Seriesbefore the home run, and Red Sox outfielders had been 4 for 40 with no RBIs. Following Dustin Pedroia's two-out single and a four-pitch walk to Ortiz by Lynn, Maness threw five straight sliders

to Gomes, who sent the last one into the Red Sox bullpen in left as Matt Holliday kept running back only to run out of room. "I take a lot of pride in the atbat in front of me and behind me," Gomes said. "Obviously, Big Papi is pretty much an intentional walk. I did what I could to give him a little protection." Carpenter singled in a run in off Craig Breslow in the seventh after pinch-hitter Shane Robinson doubled with two outs against Doubront on a ball that skidded away from Gomes. Junichi Tazawa came in and got Holliday to hit an i n n ing-ending grounder to second, a night after allowing a tiebreaking, two-run double to Holliday. Doubront got the win with 2'/3 innings of one-hit relief. Lackey, the Game 2 loser and Boston's probable Game 6 starter, pitched the eighth for his first relief appearance in nine years, overcoming a two-base throwing error by third baseman Xander Bogaerts — Boston'sseventh error ofthe Series — and a wild pitch. With a runner on third, Lackey got Jon Jay to pop up and David Freese to ground out. Uehara, Boston's sixth pitcher, got three outs for his sixth save this postseason, completing a six-hitter.


B4

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 20')3

NFL SCOREBOARD American Conference

Summaries

Atlanta Arizona

3 3 0 7 — 13 0 213 3 — 2 7 First Quarter Atl —FGBryant 24,3:23.

SecondQuarter Ari—Fltzgerald10passtromPalmer(Feely kick),

14:55. Atl—FGBryant30, 7:38. Ari Egington 80run(Feely kick), 7:25.

Ari—Floyd 15 passfrom Pamer (Feely klck),

1:55.

Third Quarter Ari — FGFeey39, 7:07. Fourth Quarter Ari — FGFeely 38,8.40. Atl — Dr.Oavis 4 passfromRyan(Bryant kick),

4:38. A—60,671.

Atl

Ari

20

17

2 92 34 8 14-27 30-201 265 147

Rushes-yards Passing PuntRetums KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet.

2-27 2 +4)

W 6 4 3 3

L 2 4 4 5

T 0 0 0 0

Pc t .7 5 0 .5 0 0 .4 2 9 .3 7 5

PF PA 179 144

W Indianapolis 5 Tennesse e 3 Houston 2 Jacksonville 0

L 2 4 5 8

T 0 0 0 0

Pc t .7 1 4 .4 2 9 .2 8 6 .0 0 0

PF PA 187 131 145 146 122 194 8 6 264

Cincinnatl Baltimore Cleveland Pittsburgh

W 6 3 3 2

L 2 4 5 5

T 0 0 0 0

Pc t .7 5 0 .4 2 9 .3 7 5 .2 8 6

PF PA 197 144 150 148 148 179 125 153

KansasCity Denver San Dlego Oakland

W 8 7 4 3

L 0 1 3 4

T 0 0 0 0

P c t PF PA 1 . 000 192 9 8 .8 7 5 3 4 3 21 8 .5 7 1 1 6 8 14 4 .4 2 9 1 2 6 15 0

NewEngland N.Y.Jets Miaml

Buffalo

SecondQuarter

Pit —FGSuisham47, 14:14. Oak —McFadden4run (Janikowski kick),1:55. Fourth Quarter Pit Sanders9passIromRoethlisberger(Suisham kick), 12:11. Pit—Bell2 run(Sanders run), 1:24. A—52,950. Pit Oak 20 13 2 76 27 9 19-35 38-197 241 82 4 -47 1 - 14 1 -25 3 - 46 2-20 2-1 29-45-2 10-19-2 5-34 2-6 7-42.7 8 46.5 0-0 2-1 3 -12 6 - 39 29:59 30:01

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Pittsburgh: Bell 13-24, Dwyer3-9,

A.Brown1-2, Roethlisberger1-1, FJones1-(minus 1). Oakland: Pryor9-106, McFadden24-73, Reece 3-10 Jennings 2-8. PASSING —Pittsburgh: Roethlisberger 29-452-275.Oakland: Pryor10-19-2-88. RECEIVING —Pittsburgh: A.Brown9-82, Sand-

ers 7-88, Bell 5-27, Cotchery 3-39, Miller 3-19, FJones2-20. Oakland: Streater4-45,D.Moore2-32,

McFadden 2-5, Mastrud1-9, Ford1-(minus3). MISSEDFIELDGOALS—Pittsburgh: Suisham 34 (WR),32(WR).

Giants15, Eagles 7 N.Y. Giants Philadelphia

6 6 D 3 — 15 0 0 D 7 — 7

First Quarler NYG —FGJ.Brown40, 7:30. NYG —FGJ.Brown44, 2:59.

SecondQuarter

NYG FG J.Brown 33,10 22 NYG —FGJ.Brown46, 2:24.

Fourth Quarter NYG —FGJ.Brown27,12.23. Phi Goode 2 fumble return(Henerykick), 4:11 A—69,144. N YG Phi 16 15 3 25 20 0 31-88 19-48 2 37 15 2 2 -9 1- 1 6 1 -4 2 - 56 2-1 0-0 25-39-0 23-35-2 1 -9 4- 3 6 5-43.8 6-44.3 1-1 5-1 1 1-92 4 - 4 8 38:05 21:55

First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards Passing PuntRetums KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-Yards Lost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —N.y. Giants: Hillis 20-70, Cox919, Weatherford1-0 Manning1-(minus1).Philadelphia: McCoy15-48,Vick1-1, Brown3-(minus I). PASSING —N.Y. Giants: Manning25-39-0-246. Philadelphia: Barkley17-26-1-158, Vick6-9-1-30. RECEIVING —N.Y. Giants: Cruz 7-86, Nicks751, Myers 3-42,Jernigan3-29, Hilis 3-15,Conner112, Coxt-tt. Philadelphia: Jackson8-63, McCoy 4-17, Avant3-54, Celek2-17, Cooper2-13, Casey 1-11 D.Johnson1-6,Ertz1-5,Brown1-2. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None.

143 211 152 167 176 213

N FC D i v 3-0-0 3-1-0 2-0-0 2-1-0 1-1-0 0-2-0 1-1-0 1-2-0

H o me Away AFC 3 - 1-0 2-1-0 3-2-0 2 - 2-0 1-2-0 3-2-0 1 - 2-0 1-3-0 2-2-0 0 4 0 0-4-0 0-5 0

N FC D i v 2-0-0 1-0-0 0-2-0 0-1-0 0-3-0 1-0-0 0-3-0 0-1-0

H o me Away AFC 4 - 0-0 2-2-0 4-1-0 2 - 1-0 1-3-0 3-3-0 2 - 2-0 1-3-0 2-3-0 1 - 2-0 1-3-0 2-3-0

N FC D i v 2-1-0 1-1-0 0-1-0 1-1-0 1-2-0 1-1-0 0-2-0 1-1-0

Ho m e 5- 0 - 0 5 - 0-0 2- 1- 0 3- 1- 0

N FC D i v 3-0-0 1-0-0 4-0 0 1-0-0 2-0-0 0-1-0 0-1-0 1-2-0

A FC 5 -0-0 3 - 1-0 2 - 3-0 3 - 3-0

National Conference East L 4 5 5 6

T 0 0 0 0

Pc t .5 0 0 .37 5 .28 6 .25 0

PF PA 230 186 176 211

H o me Away NFC 3 - 1-0 1-3-0 4-1-0 0 - 4-0 3-1-0 3-2-0 1 - 2-0 1-3-0 1-4-0 1 - 2-0 1-4-0 2-4-0

173 229 141 223

A F C Div The Associated Press 0-3-0 3-0-0 0-3-0 2-2-0 Kansas City Chiefs wide receiver Dexter McCluster (22) celebrates 1 -1-0 0-2-0 a touchdown with fans during the first half of Sunday's game at Ar0 -2-0 1-2-0

rowhead Stadium in Kansas City, Mo. The Chiefs took their record to 8-0 with a 23-17 victory over Cleveland.

South Pc t PF PA .85 7 196 120 .571 1 70 96 .286 166 184 7 0 .00 0 100 163 L I 3 5

H o me Away NFC 4 - 0-0 2-1-0 4-0-0 2- 1 -0 2-2-0 4-2-0 2 - 2-0 0-3-0 2-2-0 0 -4-0 0-3-0 0-5-0

T 0 0 0

52 (WL).

A F C Dw 2-1-0 2-0-0 1 -1-0 2-1-0 Lions 31, Cowdoys30 2 -0-0 1-1-0 213 206 1 -1-0 0-3-0 Dallas D10 3 17 — 30 163 225 Detroit 7 0 0 2 4 — 31 First Quarter West Det — Johnson2 passfrom Staford (Akerskick), W L T Pc t P F PA H o m e A way N F C A FC D i v :54. Seattle 6 1 0 .85 7 191 116 3 - 0-0 3 - 1-0 3 - 0-0 3-1-0 2-0-0 SecondQuarter S an Francisco 6 2 0 .7 5 0 218 145 3 - 1-0 3 - 1-0 3 - 1-0 3-1-0 2-1-0 Dal — FGBailey53, 5:39. Arizona 4 4 0 .500 160 174 3 1 0 1- 3- 0 4 - 4-0 0-0 0 0-3-0 Dal — Bryant5 passfromRomo(Bailey kick),.46. St. Louis 3 4 0 .42 9 156 184 2 - 1-0 1 - 3-0 1 - 4-0 2-0-0 1-1-0 Third Quarter Dal — FGBailey53, 3:02. Thursday'sGame Thursday,Oct. 31 Fourth Quarter CincinnatiatMiami,525p.m. Carolina31,TampaBay13 Det — FGAkers20, 13:13. Sunday'sGames Sunday, Nov.3 Dal — Wiliams 60 passfrom Romo (Bailey kick), Kansas City23,Cleveland17 Minnesota atDallas,10a.m. 11:32. Tennesse eat St.Louis,10 am. NewOrleans35, Butfalo17 Det—Bel l Irun(Akersklck),7:38. NewEngland27, Miami17 AtlantaatCarolina,10 a.m. Dal — Bryant 50 passfromRomo(Bailey kick), Detroit31,Dalas 30 NewOle ransatNYJets,10 am. 6.45. NY.Giants15, Philadelphia7 KansasCity atBuffalo,I0 am. Det — Bush I run(Akerskick), 3:33. SanFrancisco42,Jacksonvige10 SanDiegoat Washington,10a.m. Dal — FGBailey44,1:02. Oakland21,Pitsburgh18 Philadelphiat a Oakland,l:05 p.m. Det — Stafford 1run(Akerskick),:12. Tampa Bayat Seattle, I:05 p.m. Cincinnati49,N.Y.Jets 9 A—64,379. Arizona 27,Atlanta13 BaltimoreatCleveland,1:25p.m. Denver45,Washington21 Pittsburgh atNewEngland,1:25p.m. D al De t Indianapoliat s Houston,5:30pm. GreenBay44,Minnesota31 First downs 13 29 Open:Baltimore,Chicago,Houston,lndianapois, San Open:Arizona,Denver, Detroit, Jacksonvile, N.YGiants, Total NetYards 2 68 62 3 Diego,Ten nessee SanFrancisco Rushes-yards 26-62 29-143 Today's Game Monday, Nov. 4 Passing 2 06 48 0 SeattleatSt. Louis, 5:40p.m. ChicagoatGreenBay,5:40p.m. PuntRetums 2-25 1-4 KickottReturns 4 -126 1 - 44 Interceptions Ret. 2-89 0-0 AH TimesPDT Comp-Att-Int 14-30-0 33-48-2 Sacked-YardsLost 0-0 1-8 Punts 7-44.7 4-50.8 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 2-2 KC — FGSuccop42, 11'22. Penalties-Yards 2 -31 8 - 61 KC — FGSuccop35,4.46. Time ofPossession 24:49 3 5:11 Patriots 27, Dolphins17 SecondQuarter KC — Sherman 12 passIrom A.Smith (Succop Miami 710 0 0 — 1 7 kick), 10:26. INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS NewEngland 0 3 17 7 — 2 7 RUSHING —Dallas: Randle 14-26, Ounbar Cle — Gordon 39 passfrom Campbell (Cundiff 5-16, Tanner2-8, Romo3-6, Wiliams1-5, Bryant First Quarter 2:44. Mia — Gibson4 passfromTannehig (Sturgis kick), kick), 1-1. Detroit: Bush21-92, Bell 4-32, Stafford3-12, KC McCluster 28 passfrom ASmith (Succop 6.32. Riddlck1-7. kick), 1:11. SecondQuarter PASSING— Dallas: Romo 14-30-0-206. DeCle — FGCundiff44 10 Mia — Dan.Thomas5 pass tromTannehig (Sturgis troit: Stafford33-48 2-488. Third Quarter kick), 9:55. RECEIVING —Dallas: Bryant3-72,Randle 3-18, Cle — Whittaker 17 passfrom CampbeI (Cundiff NE — FGGostkowski 34, 3:43. Williams2-64,Witten2-15, Hanna2-12, Tanner1-17, kick), 9:58. Mia — FGSturgis 52,:30. Beasley1-8 Detroit: Johnson14-329 Bush8-30, Fourth Quarter Third Quarter Durham4-54, Pettigrew3-31, Bell 1-22, Broyles1-8, KC — FGSuccop40,:17. NE — Dobson 14 passtrom Brady (Gostkowski Riddick1-7,Ross1-7. A—74,307. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None. kick), 8:28. NE — Bolden2run (Gostkowski kick), 6:42. Cle Kc NE — FGGostkowski 48,:08. First downs 13 20 Fourth Quarter Total Net Yards 3 40 33 1 Saints 35, Bills17 NE — Ridley 3run (Gostkowski kick), 7:14. Rushes-yards 15-57 29-136 A—68,756. 2 83 19 5 Buffalo Passing 0 10 0 7 — 1 7 4 -19 5 - 3 8 New Orleans PuntReturns 7 14 7 7 — 3 5 Mia NE 3 -76 2 - 52 Kickoff Re t u rns First Quarter First downs 23 19 0-0 0-0 I n tercepti o ns Re t . NO — M oore 15 pass from Brees(Hartley kick), Total NetYards 3 01 25 2 Comp-Att-Int 22-36-0 24-36-0 4:44. 31-156 37-152 Rushes-yards Sacked-Yards Lost 1 -10 6 - 30 SecondQuarter Passing 145 100 6 46.7 5 48 0 Buf Johnson 13 pass from Lewis (Carpenter PuntReturns 3 -28 3 - 1 3 Punts 1-1 1-0 Fumbl e s-Lost kick),10:44. KickoffReturns 3 52 2 - 46 Penalties-Yards 9 -70 5 - 31 Buf — FGCarpenter 37, 4:35 1-2 2-2 InterceptionsRet. 23:55 36.05 NO Stigs 69 pass fromBrees(Hartley kick), Comp-Att-Int 22-42-2 13-22-1 Time ofPossession 3:43. Sacked-YardsLost 6 -47 3 - 16 INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS NO — Graham15 passfrom Brees(Hartley kick), Punts 4-40.3 5-43.4 R USHING — C level a nd: McGa hee 9-28, Ca m p:30 Fumbles-Lost 1-1 0-0 aya3-12. Kansas City: Charles Third Quarter Penalties-Yards 7 -61 5 - 3 5 bell 3-17, Ogbonn 18-74, A.Smith 6-40, Davis 3-13, McCluster 1-5, NO — Graham13 passfrom Brees(Hartley kick), Time ofPossession 34:59 25:01 Avery 1 4 5:15. PASSING — Cleveland:Campbell22-36-0-293. Fourth Quarter INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS Buf Jackson1run(Carpenterkick),14:20 RUSHING —Miami: Miller 18 89, Dan.Thomas KansasCity:A Smith24-36-0-225. RECEIVING —Cleveland: Gordon5-132, CamNO — Stigs 42 passtrom Brees(Hartley kick), 9-47, Tannehig1-12,Walace1-8, Clay1-1, Thigpen 1-(minus1).NewEngland: Ridiey14-79,Blount11- eron 4-81,Bess3-27, Ogbonnaya3-15, Whittaker2- 7 34. 22, McGahee 2-0, Li t tle 1-8, Gray 1-5, Barni d ge 1-3. A — 72,405. 46, Bolden 8-22, Brady4-5. Kansas City: McCluster7-67, Charles5-46, Avery PASSING —Miami: Tannehig 22-42-2-192. 3-31, Sherman 3-23, McGrath 2-25,Fasano 2-14, Buf NO New England:Brady1322-1-116. RECEIVING —Miami: Clay 5-37, Hartline4-37 Wallace3-41, Matthews3-30, Miller 3-23, Egnew 1-11, Dan Thomas 1-5, Gibson1-4,Sims1-4. New England: Dobson4-60,Amendol a 3-15,Gronkowski 2-27, Bolden 2-7, Edelman2-7 MISSED FIELDGOALS—Miami: Sturgis 46 VOTE g; ~ T 0 0 0 0

Pc t .71 4 .6 2 5 .5 7 1 .1 4 3

PF PA 212 158 217 197

H o me Away NFC 3 - 0-0 2-2-0 3-1-0 3 - 1-0 2-2-0 4-2-0 3 - 1-0 1-2-0 2-3-0 1 - 3-0 0-3-0 0-5-0

N.Y. Jets

0 6 3 0 — 9 1 4 14 14 7 — 49

Cincinnati

First Quarler Cin — M.Jones9passfrom Dalton (Nugentkick),

9.59.

Cin — Gresham4 passIromDalton (Nugentkick),

4:21.

SecondQuarter

NYJ—FGFolk 45,9:09.

Cin M.Jones6passfrom Dalton (Nugentkick), 6:13. NYJ—FGFolk 47,1:08.

Cin — M.Jones14 passfromDalton(Nugentkick),

:16.

Third Quarter Cin—Crocker 32interception return(Nugentkick),

14.45. NYJ FG Folk50,4:49

Cin — M.Jones6passfrom Dalton (Nugentklck),

1:13.

Fourth Quarter Cin — A.Jones60 interception return (Nugentkick),

13:09. A—62,576.

First downs TotalNetYards

Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-Yards Lost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession

N YJ Cin 15 20 2 40 40 2 24-93 25-79 1 47 32 3 2 -10 4 - 20 6-139 4-133 16 2- 9 2 23-37-2 19-30-1 4-29 1-2 5-49.6 3-53 7 0-0 2-0 4 -69 4 - 45 33:17 26:43

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —N.y. Jets: Simms3-35, Green320, Powe810-19, Ivory 6-11,Smith2-8. Cincinnati: Green-Ellis 11-33, Bernard5-18, J.Johnson3-17, Peerman 6-11. PASSING —N.y. Jets: Smith 20-30-2-159, Simms3-7-0-17. Cincinnati: Dalton 19-30-1-325. RECEIVING —N.Y. Jets: Nelson8-80, Hil 4-23, Poweg4-20, Kerley3-27 Sudfeld2-10,Cumberland 1-9, Green1-7. Cincinnati: M.Jones8-122, Green 3-115,Eifert2-23,Sanzenbacher2-18, Gresham2-14, Sanu1-24,Bemard1-9 MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None.

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

Broncos 45, Redsktns 21 Washington Denver

Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns

KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Int

Sacked-YardsLost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession

SF

Ja x

25 20 3 98 31 8 38-221 25-90 1 77 22 8 2 -4 1 - 16 3-73 7 -136 0-0 0-0 11-17-0 29-45-0 0-0 0-0 1-61.0 4-44.5 3-1 1-1 4 -35 6 - 76 28:29 31:31

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —San Francisco: Hunter 984, Gore 19-71,Kaepernick7-54, K.Wigiams1-10, Dixon1-2 Miger1-0. Jacksonville: Jones-Drew19-75,Robinson4-15,Henne1-1,J.Blackmon1-(minus I). PASSING —San Francisco: Kaepernick 1016-0-164, McCoy1-1-0-13 Jacksonville: Henne 29-45-0-228. RECEIVING —San Francisco: Boldin 4-56, V.Davis3-52, Mdler 2-56, K.Wigiams1-7, Gore1-6. Jacksonville: Shorts III 7-74, Jones-Drew6-47, J.Blackmon4-31, Brown3-43, Forsett 3-6, Ta'ufo'ou 3-3 Sanders1-11,Harbor1-7,Lewis 1-6. MISSEDFIELD GOALS— None.

8

Cleveland KansasCity

0 10 7 0 6 14 0 3

First Quarter

— 17 — 23

First Quarter Min — Patterson 109 klckoti return (Walshkick),

14:47.

GB — Nelson11 passfromRodgers (Crosbykick),

14:19.

Den—FG Prater 19,11:14. Den —D.Thomas 35 pass from Manning (Prater

HIGH DESERT BANK I

SecondQuarter

GB — FGCrosby30,10:29. Min — FG Walsh36,5:09. GB — Nelson76 passfromRodgers (Crosbykick), 3:38. GB — Hyde93punt return(Crosbykick), I:30. Min — Peterson8run (Walsh kick),:04. Third Quarter GB — Lacy1run (Crosbykick), 6:50. Fourth Quarter G8 — Starks 25run (0rosby kick), 14:16. GB — FGCrosby20,6:10. Min — Gerhart13 run(Walsh kick), 4.42. GB — FGCrosby45,2:53. Min — Ponder19 run(Walshkick),1:24. A—64,134. GB

First downs

Total NetYards

Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet. CompAtt-Int Sacked-YardsLost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Green Bay: Lacy 29-94, Starks 7-57, Rodgers6-31. Minnesota: Peterson13-60, Ponder5-38, Gerhart1-13 PASSING —Green Bay: Rodgers24-29-0-285. Minnesota: Ponder14-21-0-145. RECEIVING —Green Bay: Nelson7-123, Boykin 5-89, White5-35, Lacy4-18 Quarless 2-13, Kuhn 1-7. Minnesota: Rudolph4-51,Peterson3-23, Patterson 2-26,Gerhart 2-15, Simpson1-18, Jennings 1-9 Carlson1-3. MISSEDFIELD GOALS— None.

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Bend, OR 97702 Inquire about trading goods for services.

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Measure 9-94 will boost Bend'seconomy and vital public services through a 1.4% increase in the roomtaxguestspaytostayin Bend hotels,motels,andvacation rentals.Thesefundswillsupercharge Bend's economy bysupporting local businesses, the arts, police, firefighters, and tourism promotion. Bend's current lodging tax rate is below manysimilar cities. Measure9-94 will bring Lis up to par and will benefit every segment of 0Lir community.

Blll Smith Old Mill District

Mlke Hollern BrooksResources

Matt Williams Pine RidgeInn

Erick Trachsel Phoenix Inn

Julio Ongpin TowneplaceSuites

AnnyTykeson BendBroadband

PamelaHulseAndrews CascadePublications

DaveRathbun Mt. Bachelor

Bob Nosler Nosler, Inc

Annie Goldner Hillside InnBed8 Breakfast

Ben Perle OxfordHotelGroup

Brent McLean BrasadaRanchand Eagle Crest

David Bafford Mill Inn

Scott Woods Greyst oneHotels

Bend Dutch Vacati onRentals

Les Stiles Desch.CountySheriff (ret.)

BruceAbernethy FormerBendMayor

Kathie Eckman FormerBendMayor

Jim Clinton Mayor ofBend

Jodie Barram BendMayorProTem

Doug Knight BendCit'yCouncilor

Sally Russell Bend CttyCouncilor

Mark Capell Bend CityCouncilor

OranTeater FormerBendMayor

Arts & CultureAlliance

Cristy Lanfri Art in PublicPlaces

Jody Ward Art in PublicPlaces

Sue Hollern Art in PublicPlaces

RaySolley TowerTheatre

Frank Groundwater BendFilm

Arts, Beautification ib Culture Commission

Cate O'Hagan Arts Central

DeschutesHistorical Society

Kelly Cannon-Miller

AnnyMentuck The Nature ofWords

ReneMitchell Scalehouse

Jade Mayer BrooksResources

ChuckArnold DowntownBendBusiness Assoc.

Noelle Fredland Old Mill District

TeagueHatfteld Footzone

Doug La Placa

Dennis Oliphant Sun CountryTours

DaveNissen WanderlustTours

Vislt Bend

Also Endorsed by: Bend Cha m be r o f C o m m e r ce , B u l l e t i n E d i t o r i a l B o a r d , C a scade B u s i n ess New s, C entral O r e g o n A s soci a t io n o f R e a l t o r s , D o w n t o w n B e n d B u s i n ess Associat i o n ,

Visit Bend Board of Directors, Old Mill District, Police Chief's Advisory Board I

Chiefs 23, Browns17

7 17 7 13 — 4 4 7 10 0 14 — 31

TOURIShh, ARTS at PUBLIC SAFETY

S an Francisco Jacksonville

First downs Total NetYards

0 7 14 0 — 2 1 7 0 7 3 1— 45

First Quarter Den —Welker 6 passfromManning (Praterkick), 10:02. SecondQuarter Was —Hankerson7 passfrom Griffin III (Forbath kick),:19. Third Quarter Was —Morris I run(Forbath kick), 11:34. Was —Hall 26 interception return(Forbathkick), 11:25. Den —Ball 4 run(Prater kick), 7:48 Fourth Quarter Den —Dreessen I passfromManning(Prater kick), 14:56. Den—Moreno 35passfromManning(Praterklck),

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14 1 4 7 7 — 4 2 0 3 7 0 — 10 First Quarter SF — Gore19 run(Dawsonkick),11:42. SF Kaepernick12run(Dawsonkick), 2:36. SecondQuarter SF V.Davis 2 passfrom Kaepernick (Dawson kick), 11:52. SF — Kaepernick9run (Dawson kick), 7.49. Jax FG Scobee 38,:10. Third Quarter Jax — Brown 29 passfrom Henne (Scobeekick) 3:00. SF — Gore2 run(Dawsonkick),:52. Fourth Quarter SF — Skuta47fumble return(Dawson kick), 13:24. A—83,559.

20 21 2 99 38 6 25-88 2 6-77 211 309 1-4 1-0 0 -0 2 - 51 0 -0 1 - 12 22-39-1 26-34-0 4 -23 4 - 23 3-45.7 4-46 8 4-2 0-0 6 -45 8 - 59 27:30 32.30

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Buffalo: Jackson 15 45, Choice735, Lewis2-5,Summers1-3. NewOrleans: Thom as 14-65, K.Robinson 7-9, Stills1-4, Brees4-(minus1). PASSING —Buffalo: Lewis 22-39-1-234. New Orleans: Brees 26-34-0-332. RECEIVING —Buffalo: Chandler 7-72, Johnson 7-72,Goodwin 3-56, Graham 2-19,Jackson 2-8, Woods1-7.NewOrleans: Sproles4-0, Stigs3-129, Watson 3-45,Graham 3-37,Moore3-34,Thomas329, Colston3-18, Hill 2-17, Meachem1-15,Collins 1-8 MISSED FIELDGOALS —Buffalo: Carpenter 50 (WR).NewOrleans: Hartley47(WL), 38(WL).

(WR),39(BK).

49ers 42, Jagnars10 Bengals 49, Jets 9

Packers 44, Vikings 31 GreenBay Minnesota

7:23.

A F C Div 2 -1-0 2-0-0 0 -1-0 1-0-0 0-3-0 1-1-0 0-2-0 0-3-0 Davis1-12,Bowe1-7. MISSEDFIELD GOALS— Kansas City:Succop

North L 2 3 3 6

22 29 266 446 28-112 34-107 154 339 2 -36 1 - 10 0 -0 1 - 30 3 42 4 97 20-39-4 30-44-3 3 -26 2 - 15 7-39.1 3-49.0 3-1 1-1 1 -5 6- 5 7 28:00 32:00

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Washington: Morris 17-93, Helu Jr 5-11,Griffin Ill 5 7,Cousins1-1. Denver: Moreno 14-44,Ba811-37,Anderson4-22, Hogiday1-7, Manning 4-(minus3). PASSING —Washington: Griffin III 15-30-2132, Cousins5-9-2-48. Denver: Manning30-443-354. RECEIVING—Washing ton:Reed 8-90,Garcon 7-46, Moss 2-20, Helu Jr. 1-14, Hankerson1-7, Morgan1-3.Denver: D.Thomas7-75, Moreno6-89, Welker6-81, Decker4-42,J.Thomas3-29, Dreessen 2 9 Tamme115,Caldwell114. MISSEDFIELD GOALS— None.

West A way 3 - 0-0 2 - 1-0 2 - 2-0 0 - 3-0

W as D e n

First downs Total NetYards Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-YardsLost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession

North

2-54 0-0 1 -1 4- 4 4 34 61 4 13 18-1 4 -36 3 - 25 4-45.8 5-46 4 0-0 1-0 Fumbles-Lost 1 0-55 8 - 52 Penalties-Yards W Time otPossession 34:19 25:41 Dallas 4 P hiladelphia 3 INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS W ashington 2 RUSHING —Atlanta: Ryan 1-13, Rodgers2-8, N .Y. Giants 2 Jackson 11-6 Arizona:Egington15-154, Taylor 1438, Palmer1-9. PASSING —Atlanta: Ryan 34-61-4-301. AriW zona: Palmer 13-18-1-172. N ew Orleans 6 RECEIVING —Atlanta: Douglas12-121,Dr.Davis C arolina 4 5-77, D.Johnson 4-40, Gonzalez3-26, Jackson3-7, Atlanta 2 Toilolo 3-6, DiMarco 2-13, Rodgers2-11. Arizona: Bay 0 Fitzgerald4-48,Floyd3-30, Egington2-8, TWigiams T ampa 1-51 Housler1-14,Peterson1-13,Roberts1-8. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None. W GreenBay 5 Detroit 5 Raiders 21, Steelers18 Chicago 4 Minnesota 1 Pittsburgh 0 3 D 1 5 — 18 Oakland 14 7 D 0 — 21

First Quarler Oak —Pryor 93run (Janikowski kick),14:41. Oak —McFadden7run(Janikowski kick), 7.28.

H o me Away AFC 4 - 0-0 2-2-0 3-2-0 3 - 1-0 1-3-0 2-4-0 1 - 2-0 2-2-0 2-3-0 2 - 2-0 1-3-0 2-4-0

South

Comp-Att-Int Sacked-Yards Lost Punts

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

A—77,031.

East

Cardinals 27, Falcons13

First downs TotalNetYards

kick), 6:35. Den—Rodgers-Cromartie 75 interception return (Praterkick), 2:07.

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THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2013

O M M U N IT Y

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

P OR TS

classes; at InMotion Training Studio, N.E. Second St., Bend; www.poweredbybowen.com or REDMOND HIGHYOUTH 541-977-1321. BASKETBALLMEETING: TRINITY BIKESRIDES: Group road Informational meeting for boys and mountain bike rides starting youth basketball players that will in Redmond at Trinity Bikes; attend Redmond High; grades Wednesdays, 5:30 p.m., road ride; 4-8; Oct. 28,7 p.m.; at Redmond Thursdays, 6 p.m.,mountain bike High; youth league will start Nov. ride; casual pace; 541-923-5650. 4 and runthrough February; redmondhch@gmail.com or PINEMOUNTAIN SPORTS BIKE 541-480-2901. RIDE:Twice-monthly guided mountain bike rides hosted by Pine REDMOND AREAYOUTH HOOPS: Mountain Sports and open to all Open to girls in grades 4-8; November-February, Wednesdays, riders; 5:30 p.m. on the first and third Wednesdays of each month; Thursdays, Saturdays; Redmond High and Elton Gregory Middle free; rental and demo bikes available at no charge (be at the shop at 5 School; practice and skill sessions start Nov. 3; games begin in p.m.); meet Pine Mountain Sports in Bend; 541-385-8080; www. February; $40, includes reversible pinemountainsports.com. jersey; directed by Redmond High girls basketball coach Angela Capps; WORKING WOMEN'SROAD RIDE: angela.capps©redmond.k12.or.us Casual-paced road bike ride for or 541-923-4800, ext. 2175. women,90 minutes-2 hours;5:30 LAVA BEARCOBO GIRLS p.m., Mondays; meetatSunnyside PROGRAM: Tryouts for Bend High's Sports in Bend; 541-382-8018. girls basketball COBO teams; grades EUROSPORTS RIDE: Group road fifth, sixth, seventh, and eighth bike ride starting in Sisters from will each field a team; Nov. 4, 7-9 Eurosports; Saturdays, Tuesdays, p.m.; at High Desert Middle School; Thursdays; check with the shop for volunteer coach for fifth-grade team start time; all riders welcome; 541needed; call Scott McCleary at 541- 549-2471; www.eurosports.us. 390-1300 for more info. HUTCH'SNOON RIDE:Group road MOUNTAINVIEW GIRLS YOUTH bike ride starting in Bend from HOOPS: Mountain View's girls Hutch's Bicycles east-side location, youth COBO team tryouts; Hoops: at noon on Mondays, Wednesdays, Open to girls. Nov.12, 6-8 p.m. Fridays; and from Hutch's westfor grades 7-8 at Mountain View; side location at noon on Tuesdays, Nov. 14, 6-8 p.m. for grades 5-6 at Thursdays; pace varies; 541-382Mountain View; volunteer coaches 6248 or www.hutchsbicycles.com. needed for both teams; www. mvgirlsbasketball.com, or contact Steve Riper at 541-355-4527 or HORSES steve.riper©bend.k12.or.us. RIDGEVIEWYOUTH HOOPS: WINTER JUMPINGSERIES: Jumper Ridgeview boys youth basketball Jackpot Series; Nov.16, Feb.15 tryouts; Nov. 11 and 13, 6-8 p.m.; and March15, noon each day; grades 5-8; nathan.covill©redmond. Fruition Farm, Redmond; www. k12.or.us or 541-504-3500, ext. coeventers.com. 6248. ROLLINGRANCH INSISTERS: Open for trail-course practice and shows; ongoing; $10 per horse; CYCLING 69516 Hinkle Butte Dr., Sisters; Shari, 541-549-6962. YOUTH CYCLOCROSSTEAM: Bend Endurance academyyouth team; four-day- and two-dayNORDIC SKI a-week programs; ages10-18; through November, $550, four-day STRENGTH ANDCONDITIONING: program; $290, two-day program; Through Nov. 15; 10-week www.bendenduranceacademy. preseason conditioning camp; org Fix-a-Flat Clinic: Learn howto Wednesdays1 to 4:15 p.m. repair a punctured mountain- or or Fridays 3 to 5:30 p.m.; road-bike tire; 10 a.m. Sundays; one-day a week, $150 or twoSunnyside Sports in Bend; free; day a week for $280; www. 541-382-8018 Bend Bella Cyclists: bendenduranceacademy.org. W eekly women-only group roadand mountain bike rides; see website for DRYLANDTRAINING: MBSEF's additional dates and meeting times; fall training program; through November; www.mbsef.org. bendbellacyclists.org NORDIC FALL LADIES: Eight-week INDOOR CYCLINGCLASSES: fall nordic training session for Bowen Sports Performance; women; throughOct. 29, every workouts start Oct. 29; classes Tuesday from 9 to11:45 a.m; $120; Monday-Friday; $10 for first www.bendenduranceacademy.org. class; $15 after first visit with discounts available for multiple COMPETITIVENORDIC PROGRAM:

BASKETBALL

Through May1; for athletes14 (approximately), Larkspur Park in and over; five or six days a week; Bend; weather permitting; rsss© $2,200; or $1,500 from Nov. 19-May bendbroadband.com; Saturdays, 8-10 a.m., Mountain View High 1; www.bendenduranceacademy. Olg. School tennis courts, $3-5 donation HIGH SCHOOLNORDIC TEAM: Nov. requested; Monday, Wednesday, 20-March19; additional training for Friday, 9-11 a.m., Summit High nordic athletes who are still involved School tennis courts, weather with high school skiing; one to three permitting; Mondays, 12:45-2:45 p.m., Wednesdays, 8-10 a.m., and days a week, Wednesday through Saturdays, 8-11 a.m.; Athletic Club Sunday; starts at $375; www. of Bend (indoors), $15 drop-in fee bendenduranceacademy.org. (includes full club usage), 541-385YOUTH PROGRAM:MBSEF 3062; Mondays, Wednesdays, Stevenson Youth Program; ages Thursdays, 9-11 a.m., Valley 7-11; Dec. 26-March; www.mbsef. View tennis courts, 3660 S.W. OI'g. Reservoir Drive, Redmond, weather MIDDLESCHOOL PROGRAM: permitting, jsmckINhotmail.com; MBSEF middle school program; Mondays and Wednesdays, 4-6 ages11-14; Nov. 12-March; www. p.m., indoor courts at Sage Springs mbsef.org. Club & Spa, Sunriver, $7.50 drop-in fee (includes full club usage), call HIGH SCHOOLPROGRAM: MBSEF 541-593-7890 in advance to sign high school program; ages14 and up;weeklyplayschedules also older; Nov. 12-March; www.mbsef. available at The Racquet Shoppe in OI'g. Bend; www.bendpickleballclub.com; MASTERS PROGRAM: MBSEF bendpickleballclub@hotmail.com. masters program; ages 21 and older; Nov. 12-March; www.mbsef. Ol'g.

SHE'S ONSKIS: Mount Bachelor's women's only nordic program; Wednesdays or Saturdays; sixweek and 12-week programs available; at the Mt. Bachelor Nordic Center; www.mtbachelor.com. DAWN PATROLS:Nordic dawn patrols with Dave Cieslowski; Wednesdays, 10-11:30 a.m.; Dec. 4-March 5; limited to 15 advanced skiers; sfoster@mtbachelor.com. BABES IN SNOWLAND: Mt. Bachelor program for kids ages 4-5; Sundays, 9-10 a.m.; four different four-week sessions, the first starts Dec. 4.; at Mt. Bachelor Nordic Center; $105 clinic only, $125 clinic and rentals; sfoster@mtbachelor. com. K'S FOR KIDS: Ages 6-8; Sundays, 10:30-11:30 a.m.; three four-week sessions, first starts Dec. 4; at Mt. Bachelor Nordic Center; $105 clinic only, $125 clinic and rentals; sfoster@mtbachelor.com. INTRO TO SKATESKIING: Skate skiing clincs; Wednesdays, Fridays or Saturdays; four-week sessions starting in December; $120 for clinic and trail pass; $160 for clinic, trail pass and rentals; at Mt. Bachelor Nordic Center; sfoster@mtbachelor. com. INTRO TO CLASSIC SKIING: Classic skiing clinics; Fridays or Sundays; four-week sessions starting in December; $120 for clinic and trail pass; $160 for clinic, trail pass and rentals; at Mt. Bachelor Nordic Center; sfoster©mtbachelor.com.

PICKLEBALL BEND PICKLEBALLCLUB: Mondays-Fridays, 10 a.m.-noon

RACEWALKING FREE CLINIC:Presented by veteran racewalker Gary Firestone; Nov. 9, 9:30 a.m.; at FootZone; free; tips on rules, technique and racewalk workout.

RUNNING YOUTH CROSS-COUNTRY:CORK cross-country program for grades 2-8; Monday,Tuesday, Wednesday, 4 p.m.; Oct. 28-Dec. 14; at Drake Park; contact Max King at cork. youth.running@gmail.com or at 541-420-1401. MONSTERDASH5K: Monster Dash 5K and Little Monsters' Mile; Oct. 27, 10 a.m.; starts at Bend's Highland Elementary; $25 preregistration, $30 day of, $12 for Little Monsters' Mile; www.fleetfeet. com CORK CROSS-COUNTRYRACE: Cross-country race at River's Edge Golf Course, Oct. 29; signups at race 5-5:30 p.m.; races start at 5:35p.m.;$5 forCORK members, $10 for non-members; contact centraloregonrunningklub©gmail. com for more information. HAPPY DIRTYGIRLS: Nov.1; 8 a.m.; race begins at FivePine Lodge & Conference Center in Sisters; registration open for half marathon and 5K trail runs; $25-$80; happygirlsrun.com/dirtygirls. LORD'SACRE10K/5K:Tenthannual church fundraiser; at Powell Butte Christian Church on Highway126 between Redmond and Prineville; Nov.2,9 a.m.;pickhardt5@yahoo. com. I LIKE PIERUN: I Like Pie 2K/5K/ 10K; Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 28,

9 a.m.; Bend's Riverfront Plaza in front of Crow's Feet Commons; $5 donation and 5 pounds offood; www.footzonebend.com/events. JINGLEBELL RUN/WALK FOR ARTHRITIS: Dec. 7;11a.m.; Brandis Square, downtown Bend; 5K run/walk, 1-mile walk and kids' fun run; proceeds benefit the Arthritis Foundation; $20 adults, $10 kids; registration requested; 888-3919823; www.bendjinglebellrun.org. REDMOND OREGON RUNNING KLUB (RORK):Weekly run/walk; Saturdays at 8 a.m.; all levels welcome; free; for more information and to be added to a weekly email list, email Dan Edwards at rundanorun19©yahoo.com; follow Redmond Oregon Running Klub on Facebook. REDMOND RUNNINGGROUP: Weekly runs on Tuesdays at 6:30 p.m.; meet at 314 S.W.Seventh St. in Redmond for runs of 3-5 miles; all abilities welcome; free; pia©runaroundsports.com; 541-639-5953. MOVE IT MONDAYS: Mondays at 5:30 p.m.; carpool from FootZone to trailhead when scheduled (first and third Mondays of each month); all other runs start and finish at FootZone, downtown Bend; 3-5 mlles; paces 7-12 mlnutes per mile; melanieINfootzonebend.com; 541-317-3568. PERFORMANCE RUNNINGGROUP: 5:30p.m.onTuesdays;with M ax King; locations vary; intervalbased; all ability levels; max© footzonebend.com; 541-317-3568. ASKTHE EXPERTS:Tuesdays; 6 p.m.; atFootZone,downtown Bend; informal, drop-in Q-and-A session with a physical therapist; teague© footzonebend.com; 541-317-3568. LEARN TORUNGROUPRUN: W ednesdays, 5:30 p.m.;meet at FootZone, downtown Bend; conversational-paced runs of 2-3 miles; beginners and all paces welcome; 541-317-3568. YOGA FORRUNNERS: Wednesdays at 7 p.m.; at Fleet Feet Sports Bend; $5 per session or $50 for 12 sessions; focuses on strengthening andlengthening muscles and preventing running injuries; 541-389-1601. CORK WEEKLYPERFORMANCE

RUN: Thursdays; 5:30 p.m.; locations vary; call Roger Daniels at 541-389-6424 for more information. STRENGTH TRAININGFOR RUNNERS: Thursdays; 5:15 p.m.; WillPower Training Studio, 155 S.W. Century Drive, Suite 110, Bend; weekly workouts for runners, triathletes and cyclists; $5; 541-350-3938. FUNCTIONALSTRENGTH FOR ENDURANCERUNNERS: Produced by FootZone and Athlete Wise Performance Coaching; Wednesdays, 7:15-8:15 p.m. and Thursdays, 7:15-8:15 a.m; at FootZone; $5; kraig©footzonebend. com.

ALPINE SKIING/ SNOWBOARDING MBSEF RACEPROGRAMS: Runs from Nov. 30 through March; www. mbsef.org. DRYLAND TRAINING: MBSEF fall dryland training for freeskiers and snowboarders; through November; www.mbsef.org. DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM: MBSEF development for freeskiers and snowboarders;Dec.7-March; www. mbsef.org. COMPETITIONPROGRAMS: MBSEF competition programs for freeskiers and snowboarders;Dec. 30-March; www.mbsef.org. FULL-TIMEPROGRAM: MBSEF full-time program for freeskiers and snowboarders; Nov. 20-April; www. mbsef.org.

VOLLEYBALL REDMOND CLUBPROGRAM: Juniper Volleyball Club in Redmond is looking for players and coaches; ages 8-18; www. junipervolleyballclub.com; Amy Remick, junipervolleyballclub@ gmail.com.

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Babcock,254.

Monster Dash5K Bend Oct. 27 I, AndyYoung,16:25.2, Erik Heflefinger,17:15. 3, Justin Grady,17:57. 4, RigoRamitez,1028. 5, Fisher Bien, 19:33.6,5 MalBIIOdealj,19:33. 7, SIalia Smith, 20:04 8,RosDeems„ztt10.9,Kim Swasson 22:16. 10, StephaniW e arilz22:17. II, Joe Sonor„22:17.12,NathanRobbins, 22:38. 13, DavidPresland,22.51. 14, CalebKrause,23:20. I5, JoeMendez„23:20 16,Scott Feldslein,23:31.17, Lauracooper,23:36. 18, christophercooper, 23:40. I9, KurtNoonas,2430. 20,Carina Rosterolla, 24:34 21, JaeqllellneMCKinney 24:39. 22, MarkLOVejOy, 24:48. 23, GreggSwanson, 25:07. 24, KyleBoas„ 25:15.25, EmilyMiler, 25:27.26, ValerleEllis, 25:36. 27, MichaelEllis, 25:37.28, Angie Hsbler, 25:38.29, Kelly Btawtlet,25:44. 30,LeneRichelsen, 25:55. 31, AnneSjogren, 25:55. 32, MarcusCrocker 25:59 33, MarkReynolds, 26:04. 34, GregRobbins, 26:09. 35,Jenniffersmith, 26.15.36, Jennifer Hunt, 26:46 3t, David Biork, 26:50. 38 GunnarBjork, 2050. 39, LaurenManley, 26:5L 40, SarahBeck,

Week8 50+league Team highs — Scratchseries: Fireballers, 2,075; Scratch game:HotShots, 637;Handicapseries: It's a U Turn, 2,420,2469; Handicapgame:A8 A Enterprises,850. Men's highs — Scratchseries: BobCollins, 579; Scratch game:Paul Asman, 198; Handicap series, Mike Koivisto, 633; Handicapgame: Buzz Stringer,219. Women's highs — Scratchseries LauraHawes, 561; Scratchgame:Stel Oja,216; Handicapseries: cheri Goodm an,612;Handicapgame: Be tty,227.

26:51.

291.

41, CarolSpaw,2702. 42, Alison Em erson27:24. 43, RobertEmerson, 27:25. 44, BelindaBriit, 28:09. 45, AmberPetersenze:I2. 46, Fred Masnlla 28:26. 47, LisaSmith,29:14. 48, Kaitlinn Moody29:14.49, DevlnWlbel,29:I5. 50, KatleFord, 29:51. 51, MattWright,29:52. 52, LeahCook, 29:52.53, Alicia Lovejoy,29:54. 54, Mitchell White,30:00.55, KeeleyMannila,30:02 56, KatrinaDunmire,30.23. 57,Susan Newton 3030.58,Judith Rosetl,3043. 59, MichelleHardesty,3u44. 60, Kaillis Breuillard

Week9 Grizzly Mountain Men'sLeague Team highs — Scratchseries: KBWEngineering, 3,075; Scratchgame:Oregon vision Center,1,074; Handicap series: CougarCuts,3,194; Handicapgame: The Udder Guys,1094. Individual highs — Scratchseries: Alan Anderson ,687;Scratchgame:EdWhale,299;Handicap series:LarryGerke,733; Handicapgame: BenAllen,

300/81I; MaryStratton, 212/571. Guys andGals —Keepil Rollin; JosiahOhlde, 268/738 ;MargaretDonohue,233/535. LavaLanes Classic — ArmyoITwo;Dave Grimes,247/649; BevStlnderllll, 253/629. Rejects —AlleyOlps!; DougGray, 238/682; IIazel Keeton200/53a Have-A-Ball —RyanPierce, 200/55I; AlexisHil Grsenberg,196/486. WednesdayInc. — Up YourAlley; TravisHolmes,300/713,GarryBaglien,279/760. Tea Timers —InspirationStrikes; DonnaBrown, 238/536. TNT —GarrettWaltosz,253/663; Patll SIIndlla, 201/577. Progres sive— G'sUp;JasonDylla,248/66a Laiecomers — Split Ends: Tami Smith, 194/523. FreeBreaihers —SweetSixteen:John Scott, 258/670 ;JoanMalhews,192/536. TJLI.E — MauiBullt; JesseWhitson, 278/656; Shari Hamel247/656. , Draft — Outlaws;Ken Fisher, 236/643; Susan Waltosz,177/489.

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MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2013• THE BULLETIN B7

T EE TO

R EEN

ere's e n o earna o t seemed fitting to E r i k Nielsen when he drove past C olwood N ational G o l f Club in Portland last week that he saw two teenagers toting their golf bags across the street. The kids, both about 13 or 14 years old, Nielsen estimates, were apparently walking home following an afterschool round at the inexpensive publiccourse near Portland International Airport on a beautiful, sun-drenched fall afternoon. N ielsen, the head pro a t Bend Golf and Country Club,

t

was in Portland for the annual Pacific Northwest PGA MerZACIC chandise Show, where PGA HALL professionals fro m a r o und the regionpreview next year's hot new equipment and get together to discuss the state of go play golf, walk home across golf. four lanes of traffic, get home A common theme in t h e at 6:30 (p.m.), have dinner and meetings was ways to make do their h omework. That's golf more accessible, so the im- a good image and a healthy age of two teen boys squeez- image." ing in a few holes after school I did not attend the show, resonated with Nielsen. which was held at the Port"It was a pretty cool image land Metro Expo Center and to see that," Nielsen says, add- featured 1 4 0 rep r esentaing that the kids "come home tives showing the wares of from school, grab their clubs, more than 250 companies

to more than 400 attendees, most of w ho m w er e P GA professionals. Thankfully, most of Central O regon'sprofessionals did attend. So I picked a few brains, so to speak, to get an idea about what we golfers might expect to see in the 2014 golf season. P layer development w a s a hot topic among his PGA peers, Nielsen says. A point of emphasis for the year ahead, as has been the case in recent years, is finding ways to draw more women and children to the game. And

an o s ow the PGA professionals from around the region swap information about programs that are working. One avenue explored is the expansion of the PGA Junior League, a Little League Baseball-inspired golf league that teed off in Central Oregon this year for the first time. In addition, clubs from around the Northwest are seeing success with Golf 2.0, a PGA initiative to lower the barriers with programs such as Get Golf Ready, which are group clinics designed to be more affordable and less daunting than con-

ventional golf lessons.

"(Golf 2.0) is heavily focused

on making sure that PGA Professionals are doing what we do best, which is actively

promoting, growing, teaching and playing the game to ALL," says Dan Wendt, head pro at Brasada Canyons Golf Club. Of course, nothing sparks excitement in a golfer more than new golf clubs. Most new equipment will be released inJanuary, after the annual national PGA Merchandise Show in O r lando, Fla. See Show/B8

Offseason update: Meadow Lakes Golf Course By Zack Hall This is the latest installment of a weekly Tee To Green feature in which we check in via email with C entral Oregon golf facilities for an offseason update. This week we contacted Zach Lampert, head golf professional and facility manager at Meadow Lakes Golf Course in Prineville. Lampert, who grew up in Prineville, has been in charge of Meadow Lakes golf operationsfor two golf seasons. This is what he had to say about the current business of golf and about Meadow Lakes, Prineville's municipal

of thereds from 5,155 yards to 4,858. The white and blue tees also m oved f o r w ard. The whites changed f r om 5,849 to 5,308 and the blues went from 6,398 to 5,942. Our new set of tees are the green tees, measuring 6,453 (yards), 55 yards longer than the old blue tees. The black tees became slightly longer, from 6,731 to 6,783. Our reasoning for the tee change was simple: create more options for golfers to help them have a better time. Golf courses can just be too long for some players, and shortening up the course helps them to enjoy their round while also

golf course:

speeding up play. The back

The Bulletin

• How w as b usiness in • 2013'? • Business in 2 013 has • been great. Our rounds a re up f o r t h e y e ar, a n d rounds have been up every month over last year except for January and September, b oth of w h i c h w e r e p o or weather months t hi s y ear. Overall facility r evenue i s also up in 2013 as compared with 2012. .-' ll

any changes of Q•• Were note made to the facility during the past year'? • Yes. I n Mar c h w e • a dded a f i f t h s e t o f t ees to every h ole. I n d o ing so, we built six new forward tee boxes. The red tees moved up on those six holes,

A

changing the total yardage

tees remained challenging for the low handicaps. Overall, we are really happy with the

change. • Are any changes and/or • improvements to the facihty scheduled for 2014? • We are scheduled to re-

• place half our golf cart fleet with new carts in July 2014. The r emaining carts are budgeted to be replaced in 2015. This will be a nice upgrade forour golfers. We also have some minor upgrades planned for the course, including filling in the pond on hole No. 10, adding additional tee boxes on the par 3s to add more variety, and resurfacing a few of the tee boxes that have become crowned over the years. See Update/B9

GOLF ROUNDUP

REiMAX World Long Drive Championsh'Ip

Golfer Aaron Mansfield, from Washington, Pa., competes in the super 16 event of the World Long Drive Championship in Mesquite, Nev., in September. Mansfield is among eight finalists who will gather at the Las Vegas Motor Speedway on Thursday for the World Long Drive Championship.

on r ivers o merica: e as r o e r s 0 0 By Doug Ferguson The Associated Press

The passion for Aaron Mansfield became a pain for some Pennsylvania farmers. Mansfield, one of the eight finalists for the World Long Drive Championship, found the perfect spot to practicing launching tee shots. The range went 250 yards down a slope, then up a hill for about 50 yards until it reached a row of tall trees. A drive would have to travel 340 yards in the air to leave the property. That was no problem for Mansfield — but it was for the farmers. "They had to go through the fields to pick up golf balls so they didn't get in the bales of hay," Mansfield said. The next stage will have a little more glitter.

Mansfield and seven others will compete on a makeshift grid at the Las Vegas Motor Speedway. They each get six drives, and the longest shot that stays within the 50-yardwide grid claims the winner-takeall prize of $250,000. Golf Channel is televising the final round live on Thursday, and then NBC Sports will have a 60minute special in December. It will be the first time the World Long Drive Championship is seen on network television. Indeed, it has come

a long way. For competitors like Mansfield, the stage could lead to even greater opportunities. To watch these guys hit 400-yard drives — aswing speed of 150 mph with 48-inch drivers — is a spectacle. Whatever they earn in long drive competitions is nowhere near

what they can get in corporate outings and clinics. Jamie Sadlowski, perhaps the most famous of this current crop of bashers, does some 40 outings a

year. Golf Channel has been highlighting the Long Drivers of America in October, and it invited Sadlowski and Mansfield to the Frys. com Open to play the pro-am with Peter Jacobsen. Jacobsen caught one drive flush on the par-5 12th hole and admired his shot when he reached it in the fairway — a few feet beyond where Sadlowski hit it. "A big moment in my career," Jacobsen said. "My driver got past his 4-iron." Sadlowski and Mansfield had to hit 4-iron off the tee because of a creek that crossed the fairway. See Drivers /B9

Woodland, Moore to

compete in playoff The Associated Press K UALA L U M P UR, M a laysia — After a day of constant lead changes and rain delays, Gary Woodland and Ryan Moore will have to wait one more day to decide who takes home the CIMB Classic trophy. Woodland and Moore finished tied for the lead at 14under 274 after the final round on Sunday, a stroke ahead of K iradech A phibarnrat a n d Chris Stroud at 13 under. The s udden-death p l ayoff w a s postponed until this morning due to darkness. In a steady rain with shad-

ows being cast by the floodlights overhead, Woodland had a chance to win the title on the 18th hole but missed a 10-foot birdie putt wide by just an inch. "I thought I made it when I looked up and it just broke too much at the end there," he said. "But it was a tough day and obviously to come down to the last putt, obviously I'd like to have made it." Moore, th e c o - overnight leader, made a nice up-anddown recovery after hitting into the rough to salvage par and force the playoff. See Playoff /B8

GOLF IN BRIEF Gentral Oregon residents reCOgnizedbyOGA — Two Central Oregon residents were honored last week at the Oregon

Golf Association's annual meeting, which was held this year at Oswego Lake Country Club.

Chris Condon, the 41-year-old superintendent at Tetherow Golf ClubinBend,was named by the

OGA as the co-superintendent

of the year. He shared the award with Richard Flink, of Reames Golf 8 Country Club in Klamath

Falls. And Roger Mink, a 71-year-old Sunriver resident, was named the OGA's co-director of the year for his volunteer work with the OGA. He shared the award with the Portland area's Howie Smith. — Bulletin staff report


BS

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2013

u or co , a cee ra ion or usraia By Doug Ferguson

and what a top bloke he is for that kind of reaction." Leishman was in the running for a green jacket, too. He was paired with Scott in the final round. They both w ere 6-under t h r ough 1 2 holes, two shots behind Angel Cabrera, and heading into the pivotal six-hole stretch on the back nine of Augusta National. Disappointment set in when Leishman's approach to the par-5 15th came up just short and into the water.

The Associated Press

Adam Scott considers it the signature moment of his career, even if it wasn't the putt that made him the first Australian to win the Masters. It was the stage — the 18th green Sunday afternoon at Augusta National. It was the moment — tied for the lead, a 20-foot birdie putt across the green to a front left pin, the kind of putt Masters champions make. It was the reaction when it swirled into the cup. The right uppercut. He planted his feet so he could pump both arms, the left one still holding his long putter, and he let loose a spontaneous scream that reverberated Dow n U n d er. "C'MON AUSSIE!" Even more meaningful was the photo. Scott didn't see it until a couple of days after he slipped on that green jacket. The photo was sent to him by some A ustralian caddies, and i t touched him the way it did so many others. As Scott lined up the biggest putt of his life, he could not have seen Marc Leishman standing b ehind him. The putt disappeared into the cup. Scott cried out with the purest joy. And there was Leishman, pumping his right fist to celebrate. Scott was blown away by the photo. "I immediately texted Marc after that, because that's one of my favorite things of the whole experience," Scott said. "From the point of that putt going in, the next two hours

"He had just as good a

Darron Cummings /The AssociatedPress file

Adam Scott of Australia celebrates after a birdie putt on the18th green durIng the fourth round of the Masters In April ln Augusta, Ga. In rear Is fellow Australian golfer Marc LeIshman.

was just a wealth of incredible experience. Your senses can't handle all that stuff. But then when I saw that w ith

Playoff Continued from B7 "I was scrambling there on the last hole just to somehow make a par and kind of see what happens at that point, and fortunately, I still get another shot at it," he said. The back nine was filled with suspense as the names atop the l eaderboard kept shuffling back and forth and thunderstorms twice delayed play for a total of about 3~/z hours. Woodland, Moore and Kiradech made the turn with a share of the lead, but Woodland moved one clear with a 10-foot birdie putt on the 10th hole — his first outright lead of the tournament. He didn't hold onto it for long, however, bogeying the 11th to move back into a three-way tie. Kiradech also had chances to move ahead with two birdie putts within six f eet on the 11th and 12th holes that he missed by inches. On the next hole, a much longer birdie putt caught the outside edge of the hole and curled away, causing the Thai golfer to cringe and drop his head in frustration. Woodland birdied again on the 14th to go up a stroke be-

fore play was suspended by

lightning for the second time, with only nine golfers left on the course. When they returned to the course in a driving rain, however, Moore holed a 4-footer for birdie on the 16th to tie it up again and both players parred the rest of the way. Both Woodland and Moore a re aiming fo r t h eir t h i r d PGA Tour title. Woodland, w hose w o r ld

golf ranking had dipped to 268th thissummer, has been

Lai Seng Sin/The Associated Press

Ryan Moore of the U.S. hIts a shot on the18th hole during the final round of the CIMB Classic at the Kuala Lumpur Golf and Country Club In Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, Sunday. in excellent form since August when he won the RenoTahoe Open and earned a last-minute spot in the PGA Championship. He then finished in a tie for second behind Adam Scott at The Barclays a couple weeks later. Moore is coming off a top10 finish at the Shriners Hospitals for Children Open in Las Vegas last weekend, an event he won in 2012. " Obviously w e ' r e bo t h playing really well," Woodland said. "We're going to come out and you're going to try to have to make birdies because Ryan is going to do that and I'm going to tryto do the same.

Leish, now I look back on that as one of my favorite things at Augusta, and an incredible sense of national pride there,

opportunity to b ecome the first Thai winner on the PGA Tour and earn a two-year tour exemption and invitations to the Masters, PGA Championship and a host of other lucrative tournaments. Also on Sunday: Spaniard takes BMW title: SHANGHAI — Gonzalo Fernandez-Castano chipped in for birdie on the tough 17th hole that became more important than he realized in winning the BMW M asters. The 33-year-old Spaniard was flawless at Lake Malaren until it no longer mattered. The birdie gave him a three-shot lead going to the final hole, and Fernandez-Castano n e eded every one of them. He hit into two bunkers and had to make a 2-foot putt for double bogey to close with a 4-under 68 and win by a shot. Fernandez-Castano finished at 11-under 277, one shot clear of Francesco Molinari (64) and Thongchai

Jaidee (66).

"Changing a flight is not

Pettersen cruises to victory: Y ANGMEI, Taiwan — S u zann Pettersen successfully defended her title in the LPGA T aiwan C h ampionship f o r her fourth tour victory of the year and third in her past five starts. The Norwegian star closed with a 3-under 69 for a five-stroke victory over Solheim Cup teammate Azahara Munoz. Pettersen f i n ished at 9-under 279 and earned $300,000 for her 14th LPGA Tour title. She has five LPGA Tour victories in Asia and won a Ladies European Tour event in China this year.

the end of the world to come back an d h a v e a p l a y off tomorrow." For Kiradech, who won the Malaysian Open title earlier this year on the same course in Kuala Lumpur, it was a lost

claiming AT&T: SAN ANTONIO — Kenny Perry made an 8-foot birdie putt on the first hole of a playoff with Bernhard Langer to win the Champions Tour's AT8tT Championship.

Show ContInued from B7 But the Northwest pros saw enough at the Portland show to believe that the new equipment should be at least subtly different from the

gear of previous years. The most glaring change in both apparel and equipment is that it likely will not be so, well,

glaring as in years past. "Although colors in apparel were still vibrant, it appeared they have been toned down slightly," says Pat Huffer, head pro at Crooked River Ranch. "There were somewhat more pastel than real bright (colors) as was the case last season." A couple of items at the show caught Huffer's eye, though, including a small, audio GPS yardage indicator that clips onto a hat or belt, he says, and heated golf cart blankets that stay warm for "five or six hours." Manufacturers also seem to be moving away from long putters in the wake of the ban on anchored putters that was adopted earlier this year by the United States Golf Association,

chance as me to win," Scott said. "So it's a big thing to think you've got a chance to win the Masters, and then you're standing on the 18th g reen and yo u k n o w y o u don't. But to have the character to stand there and be happy forsomeone else just says a lot about Marc, for sure." His actions spoke for all of Australia. Jim Ferrier was the f irst Australian-born golfer to finish second at the Masters in 1950. Greg Norman turned it into an art form, building Aussie hopeswith each close call. But after Norman lost a duel with Jose Maria Olazabal in 1999, no one seriously challengedforthe green jacket again until 2011. Scott, Jason Day and Geoff Ogilvy all were in the mix on the back nine until Charl Schwartzel of South Africa won by closing with four straight birdies. "It was every second year with Greg, and then we had the tease two years before with Jason and Adam," Ogilvy said. "That got everyone back into it."

Perry and Langer each shot 5-under 67 to finish at 13-under 203 on TPC San Antonio's ATS.T Canyons Course. Perry saved par on the final hole of regulation with a 20-foot par putt. Fred Funk, Colin Montgomerie and Kirk Triplett tied for third, two shots back. Funk shot 67, Triplett had a 68 and Montgomerie a 69.

Ogilvy failed to qualify this year for the first time since 2005. He was driving from San Diego to Phoenix during the final round, getting updates by the minute on Twitter. Like so many other Australians, as thrilled as Ogilvy was for his mate, the photo caught his attention. His eyes immediately went to the one part of the photo not in focus — Leishman. "There are not many photos that the most important part of the photo is not the start of it," Ogilvy said. "There's Leish. And you see Adam. And you say, 'Is that not the best photo ever?' And it's not because of Adam. There are thousands of photos of him fist-pumping. It's just a moment in time. It sums up what it meant to Australia, and it sums up w hat A u stralians admire in a person or want to

be. "Everyone thinks of their mates," he said. "And great mates, that's what they do. At that point, it was the biggest moment in sport for us. We climbed every other Everest in sport. That was the one thing we hadn't done." Leishman pumping his fist was as spontaneous as Scott's own reaction. He was simply caught up in th e r awest of emotions. The only other time he could recall celebrating so publicly was for an Aussie Rules football team. "Not for another golfer that's on the course with me at the same time," he said.

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Nielsen says. Instead he found myriad putters, including putters with shafts of less than 40 inches but more than the standard 35 inches and some with back-weighting in the grip that "helps some people keep the club steady when putting," Nielsen says. "The industry doesn't quite know where they are going to go with (putters)," Nielsen adds. Maybe most important is that actual attendance by PGA professionals at the show appeared to be up, says Josh Willis, head golf pro at Sunriver Resort's Crosswater Club. Willis says that after years of the golf industry struggling in a poor economy, several things could be gleaned from the sight of some familiar faces returning to the show. "One, they had very good seasons and their owners and themselves are much more confident now," Willis says. "And I believe it definitely shows an uptick in golf as a whole." If true, maybe we will all soon see a few more kids crossing a street with their golf clubs strapped to their back.

"I was just hoping he would hole the putt — for him, for Australian golf, fo r e v erything it meant," he added. Leishman had 3 feet left for par to tie for fourth, his best finish in a m a j or. He was lucky it w a sn't longer. Leishman could barely hold the putter after Scott made birdie, more out of pain than emotion. "He c ame over an d h i t my hand and was screaming, 'C'mon, Aussie!' And he hit it h ard," Leishman said with a grin. "My right hand, I couldn't feel it. It was bright red. I put my hand on the club and said, 'Please, please go in.' It was a pretty big putt for me. It went right in the middle. It was worth it." L eishman walked i n t h e door of his rented house in time to catch th e w i n ning moment — Scott making a 12-foot birdie putt at No. 10 to win on the second playoff hole against Cabrera. Another celebration, this one more private. He first saw the photo the f ollowing day when it w a s posted on Facebook pages. "I obviously knew t h ere were a lot of cameras around. I just didn't think I would be in the photo," Leishman said. "It really captured the moment well of what it meant to him. He doesn't go off like that often — ever. I was proud to know that I did that for a fellow Aussie. I was just happy for my friend. "It was a cool photo."

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

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2013 C3

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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9

C4 MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2013•THE BULLETIN

D AILY B R I D G E

CLU B

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD will sh ortz

M onday,octobe r 28,2013

or a hint for the ends of 20-, s Do a voice28-, 41- and over for, as 52-Across a foreign3e Sneezing sound language film e Cube or sphere 4o Regrets 4i Look of ia Gave a hand infatuation i s Cute bu t t o n44 Muslim leader is More than fat 4e 53-Down grad: i7 Hawk i n s Abbr. Day 4e Ruckus is Places where so Mexican dish only guys go sometimes zo Food described as "hot" preparation cutting sz Fancy dress technique affairs zz And so on and ss In the opposite so forth: Abbr. order 23 Eisenhower, ss Gullet parts affectionately se Dodge 34 Cleaning tool Bo "Barbara 37 School (Beach Boys charges? hit) zs School basics Bi Waste carrier 32 Thailand, Bz John who formerly succeeded 33 Bronco great William Henry John Harrison i Actor Pitt

By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency

"I was declarer in a d u plicate event,"a reader's e-mail says, "and m y play came i n f o r a l o t o f comment, not all favorable. What do you think?" Against three spades, West led the jack of hearts: queen, king. "I ruffed East's ace of hearts and drew trumps with the king and ace," my fan writes. "Next I led a low diamond, and when West ducked,I put up the queen. I reasoned that if East had the king, West would hold the ace of clubs for his raise to two hearts, so I would always take nine tricks. "When the queen won, I returned a diamond to the ace and led toward the ten. I lost one trick in each side suit, making four. Some people said I was lucky."

one spade, you respond two hearts, he rebids two spades and you try three clubs. Partner then bids three diamonds. What do you say? ANSWER: In th e ory, p artner shows a minimum opening bid with six spades and four diamonds. In practice, he may have bailed out to three diamonds with K Q 8 7 6 5, 4, A 7 6, K 6 3. Bid three spades, which, after your bid of three clubs, partner will treat as forcing. East dealer Both sides vulnerable

NORTH 4K87 9 Q64 0 Q10 3 2 4KQ6

WEST EAST 464 4J3 Q AK8 7 2 9 J 1093 0 J5 South's play didn't have to turn out 0 K 9 8 7 4IA J 108 so well, but i t s eems thoughtful A 7 4 3 enough. Hesafeguarded hiscontract SOUTH and had a chance for an overtrick. 4AQ10952 East, for his part, would have done 95 better to shift to the jack of clubs at Trick Two. O A64 4 9 52 Readers arewelcome to send me questions a n d com m ent s at East Sou th West North frs1016@centurylink.net. 1Q 14 2Q 2 NT OVERTRICK

DAILY QUESTION

34 "Let's go!" ...

ACROSS

Provocative play

P ass

3 41

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE L I A RS U N D O C K S AS S O N S T WO S T E P F ORE T E L U RB S P I LD S B A T L ET T C ONC E T O U G H R C O N G A S L OC A L S A L E NCON M ED I A T E P RE S T O S

All Pa s s

Opening lead — 9 J Youhold: 4J 3 Q A K 872 0 J5 4 A J 1 0 8 . Yourpartneropens (C) 2013 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

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

S L A T E R O O F

B LA S T C O M E O SA NT A F ET T S SL U MA T E R A L I ON RMEN T O S S A D M A LO H O M EV E R I CA RES R E S E S ON

I T N S NA ER RS S

e3 Bellum's opposite e4 Small songbirds

2

3

4

13

5 14

6

7

8

15

17

DOWN i Short-legged 20 21 hound 3 Theater district 22 3 One who's 27 28 hooked 4Clearswith a 32 scraper, say s " Yankees" 34 3 5 36 s Secondhand 39 7 Stagecoach robber 41 42 BWizards 48 49 e lnstrument used to set the 52 pitch for an orchestra io Novelist Tolstoy 55 56 57 ii Suffix with 59 capital or Marx iz Moi n es, 62 lowa i4 Bug spray PUZZLE BY SUSAN GELFAND ingredient ie One of an 37 Wed. preceder 4s Indian minority 3e West: Sp. zi Part of a play after intermission, 3e 18, e.g., as a maybe minimum for voting 34 Whine

46

zs Said aloud ze College subj. with experiments ze Breakfast meat 3o Fingernail file 3i "Evil Woman" grp 33Watched protectively 34 Clickable symbol 3s Pres. Jefferson 36 Soak, in dialect

EA G I E R S H TO E S DE

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43 French river

30

12

24

25

26

45

46

47

31

33 37

38

40

43

44 50 53

51

54 58

60 63

64

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s3 Annapolis inst.

s4 Tailless cat

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44 Turkish inn

11

19

23

29

10

16

18

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43 Snare

9

ss One who might care for a sick cat ss Wall-climbing plant s7 Where L.A. is

For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.49 a minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800-814-5554. Annual subscrlptlons are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT8T users: Text NYTX Io 386 Io download puzzles, or visit nytlmes.com/mobllexword for more information. Online subscrlptlons: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nytlmes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytlmes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytlmes.com/learnlng/xwords.

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cheese 15 Lao Tzu's "path 16 Slangy prefix meaning "ultra 17 Computer stor medium 19 When repeated island near Ta 20 Male sibs 21 Kadett automa 22 Apple music

players 23 Vintner's prefix 24 Quick-on-theuptake type, in

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THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME by 04I4d L. I4oyl and Jeff Knurel

This baby was equlpped with 128 kIlobytee of RAM. 11

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BAMMO

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33 Used-up penci 37 Cartoncushioning uni 40 Latin being 41 Latin love word 42 Muslim pilgrim destination 43 Tombstone lawman Wyatt 45 Mischievous trick 46 Showy authority figure 51 Facebook notes, briefly 54 Put back to zero 55 Orator's place 56 Vivacity 57 Fitzgerald of jazz

58 Tense predeadline period ... or when to eat the ends of 17-, 24-, 37- and 46-

1

2

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suggestedby the above cartoon.

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J umbles: VALVE EL E C T FLE E C E AnSWer: You knOW it'S autumn When theLEAVES LEAVE

ABA C U S

60 Bedframe part 61 Notes after dos 62 Pop singer Spector who fronted a '60s girl

4

5

6

7

14

9

10 1 1

20

31

37

32

33 3 4

38

39

41

42

53

44

48

49

54 57

52

28

30

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25

27

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19

21

23

12

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N0W arrange the CirCled letterS 10 farm the SurPriSe anSWer, as

"Your honor, if my client is found 'Not Guilty,' he could lose more than $2 million in book royalties alone."

26 Athenian walkway 28 Otherwise 29 Persian rulers 31 Irene of "Fame

30 6'3", 5'4", etc.: 45 D i scern DOWN 1 U p-tempo Abbr. 46 Take by force Caribbean dance 31 Close associates 47 "Is anybody 2 River of Grenoble 32 Roadside here?" 3 Kids' imitation assistance org. 4 8 Quran religion game 34 Preparing to use, 49 Underlying 4 Vietnam as a hose reason neighbor 35 Tampa BayNFLer 50 Relatives 5Partof USDA: 36 RR stop 52 Mrs. Eisenhower Abbr. 38 Jamie of 53 Snide smile 6 Multiple Grammy"M*A*S*H" 56 Sicilian volcano winning cellist 39 Arabian leader 58 F r ench vineyard 7 Catchall option in 44 Play a part 59 Earth chopper a sulvey question 8 They're related to ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE: the severity of the crimes H 0 T H 0 R S D 0 E U V R E S 9 Caveman Alley A M M U N I T I O N P O U C H 10 Summoned as a G R E A T G R A N D N I E C E witness W H A M D R E D 11 Novel on a small S I N C OT Y A R F S screen, perhaps 12 "Falstaff" was his A C A R SM E E S O S last opera D OM E S T I C P A R T N E R 13 Wipe clean E P I S C 0 P A L P R I E S T 18 Tax pro: Abbr. P A S T 0 R A L E S 0 N A T A 22 Cyclades island TY S R I S E E K E S 24 Nothing to write home about S E C S T V A D 25 Applaud A D I N BR I M P E I 27 Feats like the M I L I T A T E A G A I N S T Yankees' 1998, P R E P A R A T I O N T I M E '99 and 2000 World Series wins S T R E N G T H T R A I N E R 29 Opposite of NNW xwordeditorfeaol.com 10/2B/1 3

50

51

55

56

58

59

group named for 60 her 63 Alley prowlers 63 64 FunCtion 65 Chuck who broke the sound barrier By Steve Blals

61

62

64

65

(c)2013 Trfbune Content Agency, LLC

10/28/1 3


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

~

e

I •

f •

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 28 2013 C5 e

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- New Listings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744 - Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746- Northwest Bend Homes 747 -Southwest Bend Homes 748- Northeast Bend Homes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- Redmond Homes 753 - Sisters Homes 755- Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson CountyHomes 757- Crook County Homes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational Homes andProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780- Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land

RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605 - RoommateWanted 616- Want To Rent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomes for 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 NEBend 652- Housesfor Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Housesfor Rent SWBend 658 - Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for RentSunriver 660 - Houses for Rent La Pine 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 - RV Parking 676 Mobile/Mfd.Space

648

Houses for Rent General

'.0 0 627

Vacation Rentals & Exchanges

PUBLISHER'S

NOTICE All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the F air H o using A c t which makes it illegal to a d v ertise "any preference, limitation or disc r imination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, marital status or national origin, or an intention to make any

5m ©nlls

'po 0

775

860

870

Manufactured/ Mobile Homes

Motorcycles & Accessories

Boats & Accessories

FACTORY SPECIAL New Home, 3 bdrm,

541-548-5511

541-548-5511

541-548-5511

®

o 0 0

21' Crownline Cuddy Cabin, 1995, only 325 hrs on the boat, 5.7 Merc engine with outdrive. Bimini top & moorage cover, $7500 obo. 541-382-2577

$17,000

541-548-4807

Suzuki DRZ400 SM 2007, 14K mi.,

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

4 gal. tank, racks, recent tires, $4200 OBO.

Need to get an ad in ASAP?

541-385-5609

The Bulletin

Serving Central Oregon srnte t903

Fax it to 541-322-7253 The9 llet C lessteds

Snowmobiles • 1994 Arctic Cat 580 EXT, $1000. • Yamaha 750 1999

Mountain Max, SOLD! • Zieman 4-place trailer, SOLD! All in good condition. Located in La Pine.

745

Homes for Sale

Call 541-408-6149.

Yamaha 1980s, (2) with tilt trailer, 340cc's. run great. lots of extras. $1,200 takes all. Call 541-390-1755

KOUNTRY AIRE 1994 37.5' motorhome, with awning, and one slide-out, Only 47k miles and good condition.

Jayco Eagle 26.6 ft long, 2000

$25,000.

(phcto aboveis of a similar model & not the actual vehicle)

8 air, queen walk-around bed, very good condition, $10,000 obo. 541-595-2003

NATIONAL DOLPHIN 37' 1997, loaded! 1 slide, Corian surfaces,

Keystone Laredo 31'

541-379-3530

Completely Rebuilt/Customized 2012/2013 Award Winner Showroom Condition Many Extras Low Miles.

541-383-2847.

:e.

wood floors (kitcheni, 2-dr fridge, convection microwave, Vizio TV & roof satellite, walk-in shower, new queen bed. White leather hide-abed & chair, all records, no pets or s moking. $28,450. Call 541-771-4800

h o u seboat, Find It in The Bulletin Classifieds! www.centraloregon 541-385-5809 houseboat.com.

$85,000. 541-390-4693

Triumph D a ytona GENERATE SOME ex2004, 15 K m i l e s, citement in your neigborhood. Plan a gaperfect bike, needs rage sale and don't nothing. Vin forget to advertise in ¹201536. classified! 385-5809. $4995 Dream Car Auto Sales Servrng Central Oregon since 1903 1801 Division, Bend

The Bulletin

541-678-0240 Dlr 3665

875

R V 2 006 w ith 1 2 '

slide-out. Sleeps 6, queen walk-around bed w/storage underneath. Tub 8 shower. 2 swivel rockers. TV. Air cond. Gas stove & refrigerator/freezer. Microwave. Awning. Outside sho w er. Slide through stora ge, E a s y Lif t . $29,000 new; Asking $18,600 541-447-4805

Rexair 28-ft motorhome, 1991Ideal for camping or hunting, it has 45K miles, a 460 gas engine, new tires, automatic levelers, Onan generator, king-size bed, awning. Nice condition Sell or trade? $8700. 541-815-9939

Where buyers meet sellers

Classifjeds •

Front 8 rear entry doors, bath, shower, queen bed, slide-out, oven, microwave, air conditioning, patio awning, twin propane tanks, very nice, great floor plan, $8895. 541-316-1388

Orbit 21'2007, used only 8 times, A/C, oven, tub s hower, micro, load leveler hitch, awning, dual

batteries, sleeps 4-5, EXCELLENT CONDITION. All accessories are included. $14,511 OBO. 541-382-9441

u . e

Tango 29.6' 2007, Rear living, walkaround queen bed, central air, awning, 1 large slide, $15,000 obo (or trade for camper that fits 6 t/9' pickup

bed, plus cash). 541-280-2547 or 541-815-4121

WEEKEND WARRIOR

Toy hauler/travel trailer. 24' with 21' interior. Sleeps 6. Self-contained. Systems/ appearancein good condition. Smoke-free.

Tow with t/9-ton. Strong

suspension; can haul ATVs snowmobiles, even a small car! Great price - $8900. Call 541-593-6266

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

o ur

For an additional GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPPIES,

('Special private party rates apply to merchandise and automofit/e categories,)

QUAINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES! Modern amenities and all the quiet you will need. Room to grow in your own little paradise! Call now.

FORD F150 XL 2005. This truck can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4X4,

and a tough V8 engine will get the job done on the ranch!

'. a~~i 1C S T o pl a ce y o ur

a d, visit

ww w.b end b ul l et i n . com or

CHECK YOUR AD

on the first day it runs to make sure it isn correct. nSpellcheck 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

•n Fleetwood Prowler 32' - 2001 2 slides, ducted heat 8 air, great condition, snowbird ready, Many upgrade options, financing available! $14,500 obo.

Keystone Challenger 2004 CH34TLB04 34'

fully S/C, w/d hookups, new 18' Dometic awning, 4 new tires, new Kubota 7000w marine diesel generator, 3 slides, exc. cond. ins ide & o ut. 27 " T V dvd/cd/am/fm entertain center. Call for more details. Only used 4 t/9

y ears.. No pets, no smoking. High r etail $27,700. Will sell for $24,000 including sliding hitch that fits in your truck. Call 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. for appt to see. 541-330-5527. USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Door-to-door selling with fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell.

• uu Keystone Raptor, 2007 37' toy hauler, 2 slides, generator, A/C, 2 TVs, satellite system w/auto seek, in/out sound system, sleeps 6,m any extras. $32,500. In Madras, call 541-771-9607 or 541-475-6265

Monaco Lakota 2004 5th Wheel 34 ftq 3 s lides; immaculate c o ndition; l arge screen TV w / entertainment center; reclining chairs; center kitchen; air; queen bed; complete hitch and new fabric cover. $20,000 OBO. (541) 548-5886

I

MONTANA 3585 2008,

exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, Irg LR, Arctic insulation, all options $35,000 obo. 541-420-3250

Nuyya297LK HitcHiker 2007, Out of consignment, 3 slides, 32' perfect for snow birds, left kitchen, rear lounge, extras. First $25,000 buys it. 541-447-5502 days & 541-447-1641 eves.

u .

Full Color Photos

We are three adorable, loving puppies looking for acaring home. Please call right away. $500.

541-382-2577

The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809

In The Bulletin's print and online Classifieds.

'15 per week * '40 for 4 weeks *

Non-smokers, no pets. $19,500 or best offer.

times total in last 5

ow ou r

Alpenlite 2002, 31' with 2 slides, rear kitchen, very good condition.

Layton 27-ft, 2001

The Bulletin

Fifth Wh e els

Call Dick, 541-480-1687.

Watercraft NOTICE All real estate adver860 Ads published in eWatised here in is sub/F fg tercraft" include: Kayject to t h e F e deral Motorcycles & Accessories t aks, rafts and motorF air H o using A c t , Ized personal which makes it illegal watercrafts. For to advertise any pref"boats" please see such pre f erence, erence, limitation or Christmas at limitation or discrimiClass 870. discrimination based the Coast nation." Familial sta- on race, color, reli541-385-5809 WorldMark Victory TC 2002, tus includes children gion, sex, handicap, Depoe Bay, OR runs great, many under the age of 18 2013 Harley familial status or na2 bedroom condo, living with parents or tional origin, or intenDavidson Dyna accessories, new sleeps 6 legal cust o dians, tion to make any such Wide Glide, black, tires, under 40K 12/22 - 12/29 or 880 pregnant women, and preferences, l i mitaonly 200 miles, 12/23 -12/30. miles, well kept. people securing cus- tions or discrimination. brand new, all stock, Motorhomes TIFFIN PHAETON QSH $1500 $5000. tody of children under We will not knowingly plus after-market 2007 with 4 slides, CAT 541-325-6566 541-771-0665 18. This newspaper accept any advertisexhaust. Has winter 350hp diesel engine, will not knowingly ac- ing for r eal e state $129,900. 30,900 miles, cover, helmet. 865 great condition! 630 cept any advertising which is in violation of Selling for what I Extended warranty, for real estate which is this law. All persons owe on it: $15,500. ATVs Rooms for Rent dishwasher, washer/ in violation of the law. are hereby informed Call anytime, dryer, central vac, roof O ur r e aders a r e that all dwellings ad541-554-0384 Eastside Room: large, Coachman Freelander satellite, aluminum hereby informed that vertised are available separate e n trance/ 2008 32' Class C, wheels, 2 full slide-thru all dwellings adver- on an equal opportu- Buell 1125R, 2006 15k bath. Furn. No smkM-3150 - pristine with basement trays & 3 TV's. ers or pets. $365 mo tised in this newspa- nity basis. The Bulle- miles, reg. s ervice, just 23,390 miles! EffiFalcon-2 towbar and per are available on tin Classified + dep. 541-389-0034. well cared for. factory cient coach has Ford Even-Brake included. an equal opportunity Buell optional fairing V10 w/Banks pwr pkg, Call 541-977-4150 Look at: basis. To complain of HUNTERS! 14' slide, rear qn walkWhere can you find a kit, Michelin 2cc tires, Bendhomes.com Honda Fat Cat 200cc discrimination cal l will trade for ie: En- w/rear rack 8 receiver around bed, sofa/hidehelping hand? HUD t o l l-free at for Complete Listings of Tioga 24' Class C abed,cabover bunk, duro DR 650, $5700 hitch carner, used very 1-800-877-0246. The Area Real Estate for Sale Motorhome From contractors to ducted furn/AC, flat obo. 541-536-7924. little, exlnt cond, $1875 toll f re e t e l ephone Bought new in 2000, screen TV, skylight, yard care, it's all here obo. 541-546-3330 750 currently under 20K number for the hearpantry, 16' awning. No in The Bulletin's miles, excellent ing im p aired is pets/smkg - a must see! Redmond Homes 1-800-927-9275. shape, new tires, "Call A Service $57,900. 541-548-4969 professionaly winterProfessional" Directory ized every year, cutLooking for your next Just too many off switch to battery, emp/oyee? collectibles? plus new RV batterLaundry and k i tchen Place a Bulletin help Health Forces Sale! ies. Oven, hot water privileges, fully f u rwanted ad today and 2007 Harley Davidson Polaris Outlaw 450, 2008, Sell them in heater 8 air condinished. $300 mo. FLHX Street Glidereach over 60,000 MXR Sport quad, dirt & tioning have never 357 Sena Ct, Bend The Bulletin Classifieds readers each week. Too many extras to list! sand tires,runs great, low been used! 541 -977-7479 6-spd, cruise control, ste- hrs, $3750 541-647-8931 Fleetwood Discovery Your classified ad $24,000 obo. Serious reo, batt. tender, cover. will also appear on 2009 40X, Corian inquiries, please. 541-385-5809 870 Set-up for long haul road 631 bendbulletin.com counters, convection/ Stored in Terrebonne. trips. Dealership svc'd. Boats & Accessories which currently remicro, 2-door fridge/ Condo/Townhomes 541-548-5174 687 Only 2,000 miles. ceives over freezer, washer/dryer, for Rent PLUS H-D cold weather 1.5 million page central vac, new tile & Commercial for gear, rain gear, packs, Just bought a new boat? carpet, roof satn 3 TVs, views every month Rent/Lease Furnished 1 bdrm condo helmets, leathers Sell your old one in the at no extra cost. window awnings, levelInn of 7th Mtn, utils + & much more. $15,000. classifieds! Ask about our ers, ext'd warranty, multiBulletin Classifieds cable & Wifi pd, deck, Fenced storage yard, 541-382-3135 after 5pm Super Seller rates! media GPS, 350 CumGet Results! pools, $750 + dep. No building an d o f f ice 541-385-5809 mins diesel, 7.5 gen. Call 385-5809 or smkg/pets. 541-979-8940 trailer for rent. In con16'9 n Larson All Ameri- Many extras! $129,900. ad on-line venient Redmond lo- place your can, 1971, V-hull, 120hp 541-604-4662 at cation, 205 SE Rail632 I/O, 1 owner, always gabendbulletin.com road Blvd. $800/mo. raged, w/trlr, exc cond, Apt./Multiplex General Avail. 10/1. $2000. 541-788-5456 541-923-7343. '9n" 54 What are you CHECK YOUR AD Harley Davidson Winnebaqo Suncruiser34' looking for? 2004, 35K, loaded, too 2011 Classic LimL You'll find it in much to list, ext'd warr. ited, LOADED, 9500 Fleetwood D i s covery thru 2014, $49,900 Denmiles, custom paint The Bulletin Classifieds "Broken 40' 2003, diesel monis, 541-589-3243 Glass" by w/all Nicholas Del Drago, 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, torhome on the first day it runs options-3 slide outs, inboard motor, g r eat new condition, to make sure it isn cor541-385-5809 cond, well maintained, satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, • Tra v el Trailers heated handgrips, rect. eSpellcheck and $8995obo. 541-350-7755 etc. 3 2 ,000 m i les. 763 auto cruise control. human errors do ocWintered in h e ated cur. If this happens to $32,000 in bike, only Recreational Homes shop. $84,900 O.B.O. You know what $23,000 obo. your ad, please con541-447-8664 8 Property 541-318-6049 tact us ASAP so that they say about n corrections and any one man's trash". PRICED REDUCED adjustments can be Advertise your car! cabin on year-round made to your ad. Add A Picture! creek. 637 acres sur- Reach There's a whole pile Sunchaser Pontoon 541-385-5809 of readers! Cougar 33 ft. 2006, rounded federal land, CaII thousands of "treasure" here! boat - $19,895 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified 14 ft. slide, awning, Fremont Nat'I Forest. The Bulletin 20' 2006 Smokercraft Classifieds 541-480-7215 easy lift, stability bar, cruise, S-8521. 2006 648 G ulfstream S u n bumper extends for 75hp. Mercury. F u ll n extra cargo, all acHouses for camping e n c losure. sport 30' Class A Say ngoodbuy 1988 ne w f r i dge, cess. incl., like new Pop u p cha n ging Rent General to that unused TV, solar panel, new condition, stored in room/porta-potty, BBQ, RV barn, used less Thousands ofedsdaily swim ladder, all gear. refrigerator, wheelitem by placing it in 4 Bdrm, 2 t/9 bath family in print andonline. Trailer, 2006 E a sy- c hair l i ft . 4 0 0 0W than 10 t imes lohome, AC large fenced The Bulletin Classifieds Harley Davidson Sport- loader Goo d c ally, no p et s o r gal v a nized. g enerator, back-yard, mint cond. ster 2 0 0 1 , 12 0 0cc, P urchased new, a l l condition! $12,500 smoking. $20,000 in great neighborhood. 9,257 miles, $4995. Call records. 541-706-9977, obo 541-447-5504 obo. 541-536-2709. $1350. 541-617-7003 5 41 -385-580 9 xl» Michael, 541-310-9057 cell 503-807-1973.

I'

Sleeps 6, 14-ft slide, awning, Eaz-Lift stabilizer bars, heat

541-548-0318

Beautiful

DreamCarsBend.com

Travel Trailers • 4 Iigs.

20.5' Seaswirl Spyder 1989 H.O. 302, 285 hrs., exc. cond., stored indoors for l ife $ 8900 O B O .

on your site. J and M Homes

JandMHomes.com Rent /Own 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes $2500 down, $750 mo. OAC. J and M Homes

Motorhomes

NICE RNUCN~

HDFaf Bo 1996

$46,500 finished

LOT MODEL LIQUIDATION Prices Slashed Huge Savings! 10 Year conditional warranty. Finished on your site. ONLY 2 LEFT! Redmond, Oregon

882

ca l l 54 1 -3 85 - 58 0 9


TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9

C6 MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2013•THE BULLETIN 933

• n

s •

BOATS &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 andCampers 890 - RVs for Rent

v

Pickups

AUTOS &TRANSPORTATION 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 908

Fifth Wheels

Aircraft, Parts 8 Service

975

Automobiles

Chevy Wagon 1957, Save money. Learn 4-dr., complete, to fly or build hours BMW X3 2 0 07, 9 9 K sofa, 3 slides, glass $7,000 OBO / trades. with your own airmiles, premium packshower, 10 gal. waPlease call 975 c raft. 1 96 8 A e r o age, heated lumbar ter heater, 10 cu.ft. 541-389-6998 supported seats, panCommander, 4 seat, Automobiles fridge, central vac, oramic moonroof, 150 HP, low time, s atellite dish, 27 " Bluetooth, ski bag, Xefull panel. $23,000 TV/stereo syst., front non headlights, tan 8 obo. Contact Paul at "My little red front power leveling black leather interior, Corvette" Coupe jacks and s c issor 541-447-5184. n ew front 8 rea r ieu stabilizer jacks, 16' brakes @ 76K miles, awning. Like new! 916 one owner, all records, 541-419-0566 Ford Model A 1930 very clean, $16,900. Trucks & Coupe, good condition, 541-388-4360 Heavy Equipment $16,000. 541-588-6084 Chevrolet Tahoe 1996, 350 auto, 2001 4x4, 4.8L V8. 132,000 miles. Dark green w/gray Non-ethanol fuel & leather interior. synthetic oil only, Good condition. P ilgrim 27', 2007 5 t h premium Bose ste$3900. Ford Ranchero 1965 wheel, 1 s lide, AC, reo, always garaged, 541-390-3326 Freightliner COE 3- Rhino bedliner cusTV, full awning, exc. 1987 axle truck, Cummins en- tom wheels, 302V-8 $77,000. shape, $19, 5 00.gine, 10-spd, runs! $3900 a uto. R un s 541-923-1781 go o d Ford Explorer XLT 2012 541-350-8629 obo. 541-419-2713 $9,995. 541-389-0789 dark blue, 10,720 mi, ¹A370009, $34,995. AUDI 1990 V8 QuatFord 1965 6-yard tro. Perfect Ski Car. dump truck, good LOW MILES. $3,995 Oregon paint, recent overobo. 541-480-9200. Autosouree Price Reduced! haul, everything 541-598-3750 works! $3995. Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 www.aaaoregonautoBMW 525 2002 Recreation by Design 541-815-3636 engine, power everysource.com Luxury Sport Edi2013 Monte Carlo, 38-ft. thing, new paint, 54K tion, V-6, automatic, Top living room 5th U original m i les, runs loaded, 18 new wheel, has 3 slideouts, 2 great, excellent condiFord F350 2006 tires, 114k miles. A/Cs, entertainment tion in/out. $7500 obo. $7 900 obo center, fireplace, W/D, 541-480-3179 (541) 419-4152 garden tub/shower, in great condition. $42,500 or best offer. Call Peter, lnfiniti FX35 2012, 307-221-2422, Buick CX Lucerne Platinum silver, ( in La Pine ) 2006, 82k mi., 24,000 miles, with WILL DELIVER T ruck ha s V - 1 0, cream leather, Black factory wa r ranty, 21,000 m i . , HD Beauty - Stunning SANDPIPER 2002 27' f ully l o aded, A l l GMC r/e ton 1971, Only winch w/ c u stom eye appeal, $6900. with hitch too many Wheel Drive, GPS, $19,700! Original low No charge for extras to list, $13,000. HD front bumper, mile, exceptional, 3rd sunroof, etc. air load bags w/12' looking. Call 541-923-8322. $35,500. owner. 951-699-7171 dump bed, dually, 541-318-9999 541-550-7189

4x4, new high profile tires. $26,900 54 I -350-3393 GMC 2004 16'

I

Aircraft, Parts & Service

refrigerated box van, gvw 20,000, 177,800 mi, diesel, 6 spd manual with on-spot automatic tire chains. Thermo-King reefer has 1,635 engine hours. $19,995.

Want to impress the relatives? Remodel your home with the help of a professional from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

Cadillac El Dorado 1994 Total Cream Puff! 9 Body, paint, trunk as showroom, blue Bu leather, $1700 wheels w/snow tires although ELK HUNTERS! car has not been wet in Jeep CJ5 1979, orig. 8 years. On trip to owner, 87k only 3k on Boise avg. 28.5 mpg., new 258 long block. $4800. 541-593-4016.s C lutch p kg , W a r n hubs. Excellent run-

ner, very dependable. Northman 6 i/e' plow,

541-419-4172.

2003 6 speed, X50 added power pkg., 530 HP! Under 10k miles, Arctic silver, gray leather interior, new quality t i res, and battery, Bose premium sound stereo, moon/sunroof, car and seat covers. Many extras. Garaged, perfect condition $5 9 ,700. 541-322-9647

Warn 6000¹ w i nch. $9500 or best reaoffer. bed, exlnt o r iginal sonable (phoro forillustration only) or cond., runs & drives 541-549-6970 Chevy M a l ibu L T Z 541-815-8105. great. V8, new paint 2010, V6, auto and tires. $4950 obo. w/overdrive, leather, 541-504-1050 loaded, 21K m i les, Vin ¹103070

People Look for Information Toyota Matrix S 2009, FWD, power window, About Products and p ower locks, A / C . Services Every Day through Vin ¹023839 The Bulletin Classifieds $13,488

. SU B A R U .

BUBBRUOBBRND COM

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

Toyota A valon L M T Toyota Prius III 2010, black, 45,814 miles, 2007, V6, 3.5 L, auto, F WD, M oo n r o o f , ¹A0183210, $17,295. leather, alloy wheels, Vin ¹178907

Oregon

$19,488 Porsche Carrera 911 2003 convertible with hardtop. 50K miles, new factory Porsche motor 6 mos ago with 18 mo factory warranty remaining. $37,500.

sport sedan, plus set of snow tires. $6000. 541-317-0324. Mercedes Benz E500 4-matic 2004 86,625 miles, sunroof with a shade, loaded, silver, 2 sets

Autogouree

541-598-3750 www.aaaoregonautosource.com

S UB A R U . 9UBBRUOl BRND COM

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend.

541-322-6928

877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

Toyota Celica Convertible 1993

of tires and a set of chains. $13,500. 541-362-5598

P~

9

Automo b iles

541.410.6904

Lincoln LS 2001 4door

GMC 1995 Safari XT, seats 8, 4.3L V6, studs on rims, $2300 obo. 541-312-6960

Automobiles • Subaru STi 2010, 16.5K, rack, mats, cust snow whls, stored, oneowner, $29K,

9

9UBBRUOlBRNO COM

9

Au t o mobiles Porsche 911 Turbo

new engine, trans. recently s e rviced, Autosouree original owner, nice Toyota RA V4 2 007, 541-598-3750 c ond. $4,00 0 . L imited, V 6 , 3. 5 L , www.aaaoregonauto541-508-9882/local auto, 4WD, leather, source.com p rivacy glass, t o w pkg., alloy wheels. Call a Pro VIN ¹015960 $19,788 Whether you need a I nternational Fla t +©~ SUBARU. fence fixed, hedges Bed Pickup 1963, 1 ton dually, 4 s pd. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. trimmed or a house trans., great MPG, 877-266-3821 built, you'll find could be exc. wood Dlr ¹0354 professional help in hauler, runs great, new brakes, $1950. The Bulletin's "Call a 940 541-41 9-5480. Service Professional" Vans Directory 935 541 9385-5809 Sport Utility Vehicles

OPEN ROAD 36' 2005 - $28,000 King bed, hide-a-bed

9

Lexus RX 350 2009, charcoal gray, 38K mi, ¹C108142 $27,495.

Ford XL T F 250 1977, long bed, a/c, auto trans, 30K on

W~m~~

Ne//ze

Sp o rt Utility Vehicles

Pontiac G6 2007, low miles, $8900. 541-548-1422

Porsche 911

Carrera 993 cou e

G T 2200 4 c y l , 5 Scion XA Hatchback speed a/c pw pdl c o n vertible 2005, 1 .5L, a uto , nicest F WD, 2 7/35 M P G . around in this pnce V in¹ 089650. N o w range, ne w t i r es, wheels, clutch, tim$8,888. ing belt, plugs, etc. S UB A R U . 111K mi., r emarkable cond. i n side 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend and out. Fun car to 877-266-3821 d rive, M ust S E E ! Dlr ¹0354 $5995. R e dmond. I The Bulletin recomH 541-504-1 993 mends extra caution I when p u r chasing ~ f products or services from out of the area.

©3

9UBBRUOl BRNO COM

I

J

1996, 73k miles, Tiptronic auto. transmission. Silver, blue leather interior, moon/sunroof, new

quality tires and battery, car and seat covers, many extras. Recently fully serviced, garaged, looks and runs like new. Excellent condition $29,700

or credit inI checks, formation may be I

/ sublect to FRAUD. Subaru Outback 2.5i more informawagon 2005, AWD, Toyota C o r olla L E f For about an adver2 .5 L , a u t o , a l o y 2011, Air, w i n dow, tion tiser, you may call wheels, roof r a c k, locks, cruise, auto. I the Oregon Statef Vin ¹362964 Vin ¹630707 Attorney General's I $9,988 $13,998 Office C o nsumer I

541-322-9647

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2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 Dlr ¹0354

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1-877-877-9392.

The Bulletin eeruog ceoBCBIoregoo sloc9 u03

1000

1000

Legal Notices LEGAL NOTICE E state of A n n e K . Hutchison. N O TICE TO INTE R ESTED PERSONS. Cas e Number: 13PB0117. Notice: Th e C i r cuit Court of the State of

f

f Protection hotline at

BUBBBUOBBBND COM

Legal Notices ject of the complaint and the demand for relief are: The plaintiff seeks to foreclose its trust deed on the subject real property described in the complaint as d e scribed below in the amount of $149,705.00, plus interest, late charges, costs, advances, and attorney's fees, and to cause th e s u b ject property to be sold by the Sheriff of D e schutes County, foreclosing the interests of all defendants in the real property with the proceeds applied to satisfy Plaintiff's lien. The real property is described as follows: Lot 14 , B l o c k 3, TAMARACK P A RK, City of B end, Deschutes County, Oregon. Commonly k nown as 2801 N E S ycamore Cou r t , Bend, Oregon 97701. NOTICE TO DEFENDANT: READ THESE

Legal Notices may be forfeited even if you are not convicted of any crime. To claim an interest, you must file a written claim with the forfeiture counsel named below, Th e w r itten claim must be signed by you, sworn to under penalty of perjury before a notary public, and state: (a) Your true name; (b) The address at which you will a c cept f u t u re m ailings f ro m th e court and f o rfeiture

Oregon, f o r the County of Deschutes, has appointed Steven V. Nelson as P e rsonal Representative 1/3 interest in Columbia of the Estate of Anne 400, $150,000 (located K . H u tchison, d e O Bend.) Also: Sunri- JCB 2006 214 E diesel ceased. All persons ver hangar available for backhoe wi th Ham$18,888 having claims against sale at $155K, or lease, mer Master 360U rock t he estate ar e r e hammer 18 dig ©+ S U B ARU. O $400/mo. BUBBBUOBBRNDCOM counsel; and (3) A quired to present the bucket, quick coupler, 541-948-2963 s tatement that y o u Jeep Grand Chero- 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. same, with p r oper 'I backhoe has 380 hrs, kee 1996 4x4, autohave an interest in the 877-266-3821 vouchers to the Perrock hammer has 80 seized property. Your matic, 135,000 miles. MGA 1959 - $19,999 Dlr ¹0354 sonal Representative, hours. Like new, Great shape - very deadline for filing the Convertible. O r igic/o David E. Petersen, $32,500 obo. claim document with nice interior, $3,900. nal body/motor. No Merrill O'S u l livan, 541-350-3393 BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS 541-815-9939 forfeiture cou n s el rust. 541-549-3838 LLP, 805 SW IndusSearch the area's most n amed below is 2 1 t rial Way, S uite 5 , comprehensive listing of days from the last day 1/3 interest i n w e l lB end, O R 97 7 0 2 , classified advertising... ~©i of publication of this equipped IFR Beech Boreal estate to automotive, within f ou r m o nths nanza A36, new 10-550/ notice. Where to file MOrePiXat Bendbulletilj.CO m from the date of first merchandise to sporting a claim and for more prop, located KBDN. publication of this nogoods. Bulletin Classifieds $65,000. 541-419-9510 Peterbilt 35 9 p o table i nformation: Da i n a tice as stated below, appear every day in the Vitolins, Crook County (photo for illustration only) or t he y m a y be water t r uck, 1 9 9 0, print or on line. District Attorney OfJeep Patriot 2010, 4 3200 gal. tank, 5hp barred. All p ersons 9 Call 541-385-5809 fice, 300 N E T h i rd p ump, 4 - 3 hoses, cyl., 2.4 L, auto, 4WD, whose rights may be www.bendbulletin.com PAPERS CA REStreet, Prineville, OR camlocks, $ 2 5,000. R oof r a c k , all o y affected by this pro541-820-3724 wheels, privacy glass. ceeding may obtain F ULLY! Yo u m u s t 97754. The Bulletin Notice of reasons for Plymouth B a r racuda Vin ¹522540 BBOMDCB UBt Oregan lmc9 1999 additional information "appear" in this case or the other side will Forfeiture: The prop931 1966, original car! 300 $14,488 from the records of erty described below 1/5th interest in 1973 hp, 360 V8, centerthe court, th e P e r- win automatically. To Automotive Parts, lines, 541-593-2597 gg S UBA R U 0+'.L'js¹iue Cessna 150 LLC Service & Accessories sonal Representative, "appear" you must file was seized for forfeiture because it: (1) 150hp conversion, low or the Attorney for the with the court a legal U 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. time on air frame and Hancook DynaPro tires PROJECT CARS: Chevy Personal Representa- paper called a mo- Constitutes the p ro877-266-3821 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) & tion" or "answer." The ceeds of the violation engine, hangared in tive. Dated and first Dlr ¹0354 s tudded o n rim s , Chevy Coupe 1950 "motion" or "answer" of, solicitation to vioBend. Excellent perpublished October 21, 225/70R/16, like new rolling chassis's $1750 CORVETTE COUPE iormance & afford2013. Personal Rep- must be given to the late, attempt to vio$400. 541-593-4398. ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, Glasstop 2010 able flying! $6,500. resentative: Steven V. court clerk or admin- late, or conspiracy to complete car, $ 1949; Grand Sport - 4 LT istrator within 30 days violates, the criminal 541-410-6007 Nelson, 1050 LarraCadillac Series 61 1950, loaded, clear bra of the date of f i rst laws of the State of Les SchvirabMud & bee Avenue, S uite 2 dr. hard top, complete hood & fenders. Snow blackwall 104-344, Bellingham, publication specified Oregon regarding the w /spare f r on t cl i p ., New Michelin Super Murano Washington 982 2 5. herein along with the manufacture, distribu$3950, 541-382-7391 Jeep Wr angler 4 . 0 Sports, G.S. floor tion, or possession of P245/50/R-20 102T Attorney for Personal required filing fee. It Observe G02, used Sport 2004, 5 s p d , mats, 17,000 miles, Representative: David must be i n p r oper controlled substances 1 winter. Pd $1200. 4WD, tow pkg., ally Crystal red. E . Petersen, O S B form and have proof (ORS C h apter475); Will take reasonable wheels, privacy glass, $42,000. ¹82104, Merrill o f service o n t h e and/or (2) Was used offer. 541-306-4915 wide tires. 503-358-1164. plaintiff's attorney or, or intended for use in O'Sullivan, LLP, 805 1974 Bellanca e. if the plaintiff does not committing or f aciliVin ¹749542. SW Industrial Way, 1730A have a n at t o rney, tating the violation of, $15,988 Suite 5, B end, O rproof of service on the solicitation to violate, VW Bug Sedan, 1969, egon 97702, Office: 2180 TT, 440 SMO, S UB A R U . plaintiff. If you have attempt to violate, or fully restored, 2 owners BUBBBUOBBRNDCOM ( 541) 389-1770 o r 180 mph, excellent questions, you should conspiracy to violate with 73,000 total miles, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Facsimile: (541) STUDDED condition, always the criminal laws of $10,000. 541-382-5127 389-1777, Email: red- see an attorney im877-266-3821 hangared, 1 owner SNOW TIRES mediately. If you the State of Oregon side O merrill-osulliDlr ¹0354 size 225/70-R16 for 35 years. $60K. need help in finding regarding the manuHonda Civic LX Sedan van.com. ' and Hyundai Santa an attorney, you may facture, distribution or Wg 2010, 4 Cyl., a uto., LEGAL NOTICE Fe wheels, new! call the Oregon State p ossession of c o nIn Madras, F WD, 25/36 M P G . IN T H E CI R C UIT Bar's Lawyer Referral trolled $600. 541-388-4003 2003 Dodge Ram 1500 sub s tances call 541-475-6302 V in ¹ 0 86931. N o w COURT O F THE S ervice a t (503) (ORS Chapter 475). 4x4 single cab, 4.7 L, $12,788. STATE OF OREGON 684-3763 or toll-free auto, new tires, new FOR D E S CHUTES in Oregon at (800) IN THE MATTER OF: 2011 Flight Design CTLS 932 front brakes, 95,500 mi, Nissan Pathfinder SE 4 @ S U B A R U . Liqht gSport, 75 TTSN C OUNTY. WEL L S 452-7636. H E R S HAntique & exlnt cond, $7400 firm. 1998, 150K mi, 5-spd NDH, loaded, hanFARGO BANK, NA; NER HUNTER, LLP, (1)US Currency in the Call 541-475-6901 or 4x4 Ioaded very good 2060 NE Hwy20 • Bend Classic Autos gared, Bend. $149K 877-266-3821 Plaintiff, v. FRANK R. very 'good cond By/s/Nancy K. Cary. amount of 3,873.00 In 541-325-6147 firm. 541-389-7108 DAVILA; LAURIE M. Dl"¹0354 Nancy K. Cary, OSB US Currency, Case $4800 503 334 7345 DAVILA; and DOES 902254, Of Attorneys Dodge 2007 Diesel 4WD No 13-59, Seized on Executive Hangar 1-2, being all occu- for Plaintiff, 180 East SLT quad cab, short box, F ebruary 14, 2 0 1 3 at Bend Airport (KBDN) pants or other perauto, AC, high mileage, ~l am absolutely amazed. The 1 1th Avenue, P . O . from Apolanio Olivera. 60' wide x 50' deep, 1921 Model T sons or parties claim$12,900. 541-389-7857 ~ car sold by noon on Saturday. I Box 1475, Eugene, w/55' wide x 17' high biLEGAL NOTICE ing any right, title, lien, Oregon 97440, TeleDelivery Truck fold dr. Natural gas heat, USDA - Forest Service or i nterest i n t h e I have been trying to sell it for a phone: (541) Deschutes National offc, bathroom. Adjacent Restored 8 Runs property described in 686-8511, Fax: (541) $9000. to Frontage Rd; great Forest I year. Please take the ad oLl." the Complaint herein 344-2025, visibility for aviation busi541-389-8963 F350 4-dr diesel Sisters Ranger and located at 2801 ncary@hershnerness. Financing availI Thankyou, Karen M. District 2004 pickup, auto, NE Sycamore Court, h unter.com. able. 541-948-2126 or Firs t King Ranch, 144K Central Electric Buick 1983 Bend, Oregon 97701; Publication Date: Ocemail 1jetjock@q.com I Cooperative, Buried excellent, extras, Defendants. Case No. tober 28, 2013. Regal, T-type $16,995 obo. Electrical Line Transmission rebuilt 8 13CV0274. SUMTake care of 541-923-0231 LEGAL NOTICE Replacement Project 3000 rpm stall converter; MONS. TO:DEFENPreliminary Decision 750 Holley double DANT F R AN K R. NOTICE OF SEIZURE your investments FOR CIVIL Memo pumper w/milled air horn Mr. Red DAVILA: I N THE with the help from FORFEITURE TO ALL (flows 850 cfms); turbo 1968 Mustang NAME OF THE POTENTIAL On October 23, 2013 rebuilt. Have receipts for convertible, orig. STATE OF OREGON: The Bulletin's all 3 items. Plus addiDistrict Ranger Kristie owner, orig. 289 You are hereby re- CLAIMANTS AND TO "Call A Service tional work done. $3300 ALL UNKNOWN L. Miller signed a prerebuilt, new quired to appear and obo. Call for addtional deci s ion radiator, floor Professional" Directory defend the complaint PERSONS READ THIS liminary info 541-480-5502 CAREFULLY memo to a u thorize pans, carpeting.. filed against you in the FORD XLT 1992 Central Electric Coabove case w i t hin Piper A rcher 1 9 8 0,Chevy 1955 PROJECT 3/4 ton 4x4 If you have any inter- operative to replace Get Results from Qualified thirty days after the based in Madras, al- car. 2 door wgn, 350 matching canopy, est i n t h e s e i zed an existing, b uried Central Oregon Buyers! first date of publicaways hangared since small block w/Weiand 30k original miles, d e s cribed electrical line which tion of this summons, property Call us at 541-385-5809 and ask new. New annual, auto dual quad tunnel ram possible trade for below, you must claim serves Wizard Falls and if you fail to apabout our Wheel Deal special! pilot, IFR, one piece with 450 Holleys. T-10 classic car, pickup that interest or you will Fish Hatchery located pear and defend, the windshield. Fastest Ar- 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, motorcycle, RV automatically lose that on National F orest plaintiff will apply to cher around. 1750 to- Weld Prostar wheels, $13,500. interest. If you do not S ystem land. Th e the court for the relief tal t i me . $ 6 8 ,500. extra rolling chassis + In La Pine, call project is located on demanded i n the file a c laim for t he 541-475-6947, ask for extras. $6500 for all. 928-581-9190 lands managed by the property, the property complaint. Th e o bRob Berg. 541-389-7669. GMC Sierra 1977 short

ash ,J

J S ending c

Legal Notices Deschutes N a tional Forest.

This project is consistent with the Deschutes National Forest Land and Resource M anagement Pla n , as amended. This preliminary decision memo is subject to notice, comment,

and appeal pursuant to 36 CFR 215. The preliminary d ecision m emo will h ave a

30-day comment pen od. T h e 30- d ay comment period will begin on October 23, 2013 and concluded o n N o vember 2 2 , 2013. Only those individuals who s ubmit timely comments will be accepted as appellants. C omments will be reviewed and a ddressed in a R e sponse to Comments section in the final decision memo. Submit y our comments t o Central Electric Coo perative, Buri e d E lectrical Line R e placement P r o ject, Attn: Sommer Moore, Project Manager, Post Office Box 249, Sisters, Oregon 97759; FAX (541) 549-7746. E-mail com m ents s hould be s e n t t o comments-pacificnorthwest-deschutessisters@fs.fed.us. Those submitting electronic comments must do so only to the e-mail address listed above, must put the specific project name in the subject line, and must either s u bmit comments as part of the e-mail message or as an attachment only in one of the following t hree f ormats: M i crosoft Word, rich text format (rtf), or Adobe Portable D o cument Format (pdf). For further information about the comment process or a copy of the preliminary deci s ion memo, please contact Michael Keown, Environmental Coordinator, Sisters Ranger District, Post Office Box 249, Sisters, Oregon 97759 (541) 549-7735.

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