Serving Central Oregon since190375
FRIDAY November28,2014 S
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SPORTS• I LIKE PIERLIN PHOTOS,C1
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bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD Travelin' troubadourZachary Lucky, aCanadian country-folk singer-songwriter who has logged many mileson tour in recentyears, is bound for Bend.GO!
The Christmas Tree Project of Bendprovidestreesfor families inneed,D1 ST. CHARLES
AUTOMATED LICENSE PLATEREADERS
It's almost Civil War
time —OregonandOregon State meet Saturday. Can the upset-oriented Beavers slay another giant?C1
Plus: Civil War loreHow a tavern in tiny Monroe became acelebratory stopover for Ducks coaches.B2
Mirror Pond input —Bend
ro er overreac, ornee e oice oo~ • Car camera programs are rejected by somedepartments, embraced byothers ByTaylorW. Andersone The Bulletin
SALEM — Police hadn't seen Bradley Robinett since the convicted bank robber allegedly tried to
wants your thoughts on the future of Mirror Pond.B1
ram a Washington police officer with a stolen car in November 2009.
And a Wed exclusive —A
the Northwest eluding capture for nearly five years after violating his early-prison release on the
look back to a time theU.S. officially excluded anentire ethnic group — Chineseimmigrants. bendballetin.cem/extras
By Katie Thomas New Yorh Times News Service
Dr. Judson Somerville, a
pain specialist in Laredo, Texas, received $67,000 in speaking fees, travel and
Car theftsreporteddyPortland police since2002 m car»«le n and recovered 5,000 -4733-
-
-
-
-
S499
4,209
'1,640-
-1;712-
4 563
2003
the health system's 2013
3 07 6
The health system's
2004
2005
2006
2007
-
-
R
a
2008
2009
533 2010
560 a/a 20I2
2011
Andy Zeigert/The Bulletin
board of directorsdetermines the CEO's compensation. Dennis Dempsey, a boardmember,said Diegel was among the top executives who received incen-
He might still be on the
run if it weren't for a lucky catch by an all-seeing surveillancecamera Oregon police agencies began installing on patrol cars around 2008. Hillsboro police were in a grocery store parking lot in June 2014 when the officers
peutics, the Arizona com-
returned to the car.
to stop prescribing painkillers after it found that he had authorized employees to hand out presigned pre-
3 086
Source: Portland Police Department
they say Robinett was driv-
ber, the board ordered him
3,042
-6972002
and earned time off — on D iegel top ofh is salary. The figures come from
-
1,0000
retirement
all nonprofits submit. St. Charles provided the document through a public recordsrequest.
'vr&&
1,602-
-
passed a stolen Kia Sorento
investigation by the Texas Medical Board. In Decem-
benefitssuch as bonus pay,
document the Internal Revenue Service requires 3,167
a powerful and addictive painkiller called Subsys, according to a federal database of payments that drug companies make to physicians. But while Insys Thera-
to promote it, he was under
The total compensation
of St. Charles Health System's outgoing CEO, Jim Diegel, exceeded $1 million in 2013, due largely to the more than $500,000 he
Tax Form 990, a financial
5,284
3,0002,000 -
W Sto l en car-related
& Cars stolen and not recovered
-
meals in 2013 to promote
pany that makes the product, was paying Somerville
The Bulletin
received for
robbery conviction. After the near-collision in 2009, Robinett's whereabouts were unknown.
4,000-
Big money for doctors with spotty records
By Tara Bannow
Robinett allegedly stole a Glock 9 mm handgun and ballistic vest from Seattle police and roamed
4 --~ 6,000 ----- - - - - - - - - i,trdf
EDITOR'5CHOICE
Outgoing CEO'spay boosted by benefits
ing. The police car's license plate-readingcamera captured the Kia's license plate
and told the police it was reported stolen. The officers arrested Robinett when he Robinett's arrest is an
tive pay in 2013 for meeting a seriesofgoalstheyear
Ble 5trtt 5elp
before related to hospital
OK Back l Homei Copy cut Paste j Add Mete I Rint PreviewI Rnd VMail l First Prev Next Last l Help
finances, patient safety, quality of care and orga-
entity Maintain Person
nizational culture. Diegel
VehicteEnar sa Qoadamt BOLO rt& W[atntatn
received nearly $118,000 in bonus pay in 2013.
— BOLO/FYI
J~db
x gs
Qkl ~pT mle c etsaw 8 Q D i c e dw
SeeCEO/A4
Qs
~~s' ~sr~o tai ~gTM~
xi e ss ~ l tQN ao
Rernarke foa ID Thefa/Xorgery Il, Pc ao aareac Theft Ix ppe el2-93539. Htsntrooher cases also. please call officex 1709 s ~ l l) * T- F 0 70 0 8 M * Gl 14/7 S~ ( ra (desk). Wendell steeds ao be interviewed yzioz ao booking anst ohaainint
lawyer. I f in possession of vehicle oatr to find reasan tco aeaxch for check
nrakintr/id making maoaria1s.
example of a higher-profile story that Oregon law enforcement tells when talking
about automated license plate readers.
Portland Police Bureau
One alert in the system told officers driving cars with license plate-reading cameras to watch out for a plate connected to David Wendell, who was suspected of dozens of identity thefts when a camera found his car and police arrested him in April 2013.
By Jack Healy and Alan Blinder
But there are more mun-
dane cases in which the cameras are used as well.
Holiday a chance to heal in Ferguson
car, scanning plate numbers of other numbers. The cam- and geolocation information
New Yortt TimesNews Service
ALPR cameras read the li-
of millions of cars a year and e r as also capture color imag-
t h at is stored and mapped.
FERGUSON, Mo. — The
cense plate of every passing
sending them to a database e s and stamp them with time
SeePlate readers/A5
tor between August and December 2013, is one of
By Tina Susman
as they drove in Brothman's
years later, the 98-year-old
her 1950 arrest show Mos-
people who came to this boarded-up downtown Thursday knew they could not do much to salve Ferguson's wounds. But it was Thanksgiving, and they felt as though they could not just sit home, either. So they brought paint brushes and prayers, thermoses of coffee and trays of drop
the company's highly paid
Los Angeles Times
Pontiac from Manhattan to the
kowitz walking into court in
biscuits, hoping to counter-
doctors who have recently
W ASHINGTON TOWN SHIP, N.J. — It was the summer of 1950, and Miriam Mos-
Jersey shore.
retired teacher is battling to erase the conviction that has
Manhattan, beneath banner headlines blaring "Reds" and "Spy Plot." One of the prosecutors at the time called her and
balance the arsons, angry
Brothman's case a"dry run" for the trial four months later
26, as she painted a pastel
scriptions to patients and after it learned that three
of his patients had died in 2012 of drug overdoses, most likely from drugs he had prescribed. Somerville, who re-
ceivedmore money from Insys than any other doc-
faced legal or disciplinary trouble. Gavin Awerbuch, a Mich-
igan neurologist who received $56,000 from Insys, was arrested in the spring after federalprosecutors saidhe defrauded Medicare of $7 million and improperlyprescribed Subsys to patients who did not need it.
Woman fights to eraseMcCarthy-era scar kowitz was being followed. The men stalked Moskowitz on the subway. They trailed
Moskowitz knew from previous encounters that they were FBI agents and that they were interested in Brothman,
dromat. They followed her on
a chemical engineer whose associates included an admitted Soviet spy named Harry Gold.
a datewith her boss and secret lover, Abraham Brothman.
What Moskowitz didn't know is that the FBI also had
They shadowed the couple
her in its crosshairs. Sixty-four
her as she walked to the laun-
haunted her since the days of McCarthyism. "I don't like the fact that I'm
a convicted felon," said Moskowitz, who was found guilty of conspiracy to obstruct justice for lying to federal investigators who were looking into a suspected spy plot. Newspaper ciippings from
of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, who were convicted of spying for the Soviets and then
executed. See McCarthy/A4
protests and racial strife.
"This is a really small thing," said Darcy Edwin, oak tree onto the plywood boards covering an optical shop on South Florissant
Road. "It's not going to fix anybig issue." SeeFerguson/A4
Another top Insys speaker,
Jerrold Rosenberg of Rhode Island, was reprimanded in September for inappropriatelyprescribingpainkillers, including Subsys. SeeDoctors /A4
TODAY'S WEATHER
b
Cloudy; a little rain High 50, Low30 Page B6
INDEX All Ages Business Calendar
D1-6 Classified E1 - 6 Dear Abby D6 Obituaries B5 C6 Comics/Puz zles E3-4 Horoscope D6 Sports C1-5 In GO! Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State B1-6 N'/Movies D6, GO!
The Bulletin AnIndependent Newspaper
Q l ttre i userecycled newsprint
Vol. 112, No. 332,
e2 pages, e sections
o
IIIIIIIIIIIIII 8 8 267 02329
A2
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014
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NATION Ee ORLD
ran ea ersu o nuc ear e ension By Thomas Erdbrink
seven months.
New York Times News Service
TEHRAN, Iran —
Khamenei's opinion is cru-
I r a n 's cial because he will have the
supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, expressed support Thursday for the extension of talks with Western pow-
final say over any potential
and every day makes new statements," he said in comments that were to be delivered to an audience of para-
program. "I do not disagree with the
military Basiji forces, accordgram, which Tehran says is ing to his website, Khamenei. for peaceful purposes but the ir. "It also says different things West suspects is a ruse to ob- in public and in private." scure a bomb-making effort. Khamenei reiterated his His remarks ar e a l most support for the Iranian nego-
extension of the negotiations,
certain to mean that Iranian
ers on the country's nuclear
as I have not disagreed with negotiations in the first place," Khamenei said in a speech published on his personal website. On Monday, hours before the deadline for the talks was to expire, negotiators in Vien-
deal on Iran's nuclear pro-
hard-liners opposed to the
tiators, who in the past he has
called "children of the revolution." "They have been firm, have not caved in and are seripoliticians will not question ously trying hard," Khamenei the extension. said. Nonetheless, the I r a nian Khamenei said he was not leader attacked the United worried about whether the netalks will have to moderate their stance and assures that
States, describing its polices as
gotiations would lead to a deal.
"If there is no agreement, we wavering and unclear. "America is a chameleon, will not lose," Khamenei said. had been extended for another na announced that the talks
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SNOW IQnk ISSCIIS —Twoboys who had goneout to build asnow fort were inadvertently trappedfor severalhours in aNewburgh, New York, snowbankwhen aplow operator clearing aparking lot pushed snow overthem, not realizing theywerethere, officials said. The11-yearold and 9-year-old childrenwere takento the hospital. Officials said one child washospitalized for observation.Authorities said the boys' parents becamealarmedwhenthey didn't comehomefrom playing, andafter a fruitless searchthey called policearound11:50 p.m. Wednesday.Officials searching asnow bankata health centernearby foundthe boysaround 2 a.m. Thursday,after anofficer sawa shovelhalf buried. Theofficer took the shovelandstarted to digandsawa small boot. Othersjoinedin, some digging with barehands, andthe boys werefound.
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commanderwasdetained for questioning in Northern Ireland onThursday in connectionwith a notorious 1972murder case, hisassociates said. Bobby Storey,58, aprominent figure in the Irishnationalist political party Sinn Feinandaclose confidant of its leader, Gerry Adams,wasbeing questioned bythePoliceService of Northern Ireland's serious-crime office in Antrim, about40miles fromBelfast, theprovincial capital. Adamswas interrogatedfor four days inMayat the samepolice station concerning the samecase.Thepolice announced the arrestThursday but did not give Storey's name.Gerry Kelly, aSinn Feinrepresentative andlongtimeassociate of Storey's, confirmedin aBBCradio interviewthat it was Storey. The police areinvestigating the murder andsecret burial of JeanMcConville, awidowedBelfast motherof10, whichmany consider to beamongthe most tragic episodes inthe three decades ofconflict in Northern Ireland, which cost morethan 3,500 lives.
Oll prlCSS —Reflecting its lessening oil clout, OPECdecided Thursday to keep itsoutput target onholdandsit out falling crudeprices that will likely spiral evenlower asa result. Oilpricesfell sharply onthe news. Even though thedecision waslargelyexpected, it showed the once-powerful cartel is losing thepowerto pushup markets to its ownadvantage. OPEC has traditionally relied onoutput cuts toregulatesupplyand prices. But it appeared torealizeThursday that with cheapcrudein oversupply, areduction would onlycut into OPEC'share s of the market withouta lasting boost in prices andwith others outsidethe cartel making upthe difference.
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NOrthernIrelandkillingS — Aformersenior Irish RepublicanArmy
Reri CrOSS finanCeS — Underpressurefrom the numberandintensity of humanitarian crises,the International Committee ofthe RedCross said Thursday itwastrying to raise arecord $1.6billion to fund its 2015 operations. Thenewbudget, which is 25percent higher thanthe initial budgetfor 2014, isneeded"to meetthe needsandfit our responseto the changing nature ofarmedconflict," the organization's president, Peter Maurer, said in a statement. "Weare witnessing newkindsof crises, in new combinations, oftenwith a regional dimension. Weare no longer simplyfacing traditional internal orinternational armedconflict."
VIOLENCE IN NIGERIA
DEPARTMENT HEADS
LIdul SuiCide dnmbing —Asuicide bomberattacked aBritish Embassy vehicle inthe eastern part of theAfghan capital Thursdaymorning, killing six, including aBritish citizen, andinjuring morethan 30, according to law enforcement officials. Ten hours later, asuicide bomberand two gunmenattackedaforeign guesthousenearthe compound of the International ReliefandDevelopment Organization, ahumanitarian agency. The bomberdetonated his explosives nearthe guesthouseasthe gunmen tried to enterthecompound inthe affluent enclaveofWazir Akbar Khan, home toseveralembassiesandnongovernmental and mediaorganizations. Butguards atthe compound engagedin afirefight, driving away the gunmen,Deputy Interior Minister MohammadAyubSalangi told reporters at the scene.Oneofthe gunmenwas kiled, andaNepalese guard atthe compoundwasinjured, headded. Noother foreigners werewounded or killed, hesaid.
— From wire reports
Sunday Alamba/The AssociatedPress
Maria Mala, adisplaced woman with her newbornbaby,Namadi, who was bornThursday morning, was at thecampfor internally displaced people in Yola, Nigeria, on Thursday. Thousands ofpeoplehavefled their homes inrecent times dueto Boko Haram attacks. A roadside bombdetonated at a crowded busstation in northeastern Nigeria onThursday, killing at least 35 people, including fivesoldiers, the Naij.comwebsite reported. Government forceshadrecaptured thebusyMarabi-Mubi junction in Adamawastate nearthe Cameroon borderfrom Boko Haram militants two weeksago. Manyof the victims of theblast werethought to be peoplereturning from places
of refuge during theextremists' monthlong occupation, theNigerian Internet site said. No claim of responsibility was immediately issuedafter the blast, but suspicion fell ontheBokoHaram insurgency,whichhas ravaged the northeast since2009and taken thousands of lives.TheIslamic militants are attempting to establish
aMuslim caliphate inthe areaand impose sharia, astrict form of Islamic law. Nigerian newsagenciessaid the blast promptedthearmyto reimpose a"no-go" order onthe Mubi area, which hasbeenunder joint patrol of soldiers andlocal hunters since BokoHaramwasforced to flee Nov.13.
1. Compare plansbefore December 7th. Call your local experts! In Central Oregon:
541-678-5483
— Los AngelesTimes
TOII f I'ee (in Deschutes, Crook, JeHerson County):
Deal would giveScotland greater level ofautonomy By Stephen Castle New York Times News Service
LONDON — Scotland was
promised sweeping powers over taxation an d
tatives from Scotland's main political parties. Under its pro-
posals, the Scottish Parliament would have the power to set
w e l fare income tax rates, and some of
spending Thursday under a proposed deal meant to address concerns that helped
the revenues from sales taxes raised in Scotland would go to-
1-877-ZQ4-4567 Do your medicare health and drug plans cover what you need? Skilled volunteers from Oregon SHIBA (Senior Health Insurance Benefits Assistance) provide free, unbiased help to compare plans and costs.
2. Gee extra help! Some programs pay for prescription costs, or for Medicare Part B premiums. If you have Medicare, do you qualify?
ward the Scottish budget. The
Scottish government would cede from the United Kingdom alsobe able to control the duties in September. imposed on passengers travelThe groundbreaking propos- ing through Scottish airports. als have the backing of major In addition, Scotland would political leaders in both En- gain significant control over gland and Scotland, but a final welfare spending. Scotland vote on legislation to enact the generally leans more to the left changes is not expected until than England, and one of the next year after a new govern- main goals of many of those ment is elected. And even as the who pushed for secession was plan was commended by polit- to be able to spend more liberalical leaders, it was also raising ly onsocialprograms. new questions about how to The Scottish Parliament also share power equitably within would be given the power to althe United Kingdom. low 16- and 17-year-olds to vote. The proposed changes repBut even as political leaders resent the biggest shake-up of lauded the proposals Thursday, S cotland's relationship w i th tensions about their wider ramLondon since the Scottish Par- ifications were clear.
Individual
drive a Scottish attempt to se-
liament was re-established in
Prime Minister David Cam-
Edinburgh 15 years ago. Brit- eron on Thursday welcomed ish leaders, shaken by polls the commission's findings, saythat had showed momentum ing it was a "good day for the shifting toward independence, U.K." But he again called for promised Scots more autonomy curbs on the ability of Scottish if they rejected secession in the
lawmakers elected to the Brit-
referendum in September. (The independence bid lost by a vote of 55percent to 45 percent.) The plan announced Thursday was devised by a commis-
ish Parliament to decide on issues related solely to England. The opposition Labour Party opposes that idea because 41
sion that included represen-
from Scotland.
of its lawmakers were elected
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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014•THE BULLETIN
A3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Friday, Nov. 28, the 332nd
day of 2014. Thereare 33days left in the year.
HAPPENINGS BlaCk Friday — Anestimated 140 million U.S. shoppers are expected to hit stores and the Webthis weekend in search of post-Thanksgiving discounts, according to figures from the National Retail Federation.
HISTORY
SCIENCE
re o sso
o r smar rin ers
Both, it turns out. Even though dogs often send water splashing all about when drinking, they're
Previously, it was thought by some that dogs use their tongues like ladles, scooping up
employing a clever strategy to maximize every lap. By Amina Khan Los Angeles Times
Highlight:In1964, the United States launchedthespace probe Mariner 4 on acourse toward Mars, which it flew past in July1965, sending backpictures of the redplanet. In1520, Portuguesenavigator Ferdinand Magellan reached the Pacific Oceanafter passing through the SouthAmerican strait that now bearshis name. In1861, the ConfederateCongress admitted Missouri as the 12th state of theConfederacy after Missouri's disputed secession from the Union. In1905, Sinn Feinwas founded in Dublin. In1922, Captain Cyril Turner of the RoyalAir Force gavethe first public skywriting exhibition, spelling out, "Hello USA. Call Vanderbilt 7200" over New York's TimesSquare;about 47,000 calls in less thanthree hours resulted. In1942, nearly 500 people died in a fire that destroyed the
Cocoanut Grovenightclub in Boston. In1944, the MGMmovie musical "Meet Me inSt. Louis," starring JudyGarland, opened in New York, six daysafter its premiere in St. Louis. In1958,Chad,GabonandMiddleCongobecame autonomous republics within the French community. In1961, President JohnF. Kennedy dedicated theoriginal permanent headquarters of the Central IntelligenceAgency in Langley, Virginia. ErnieDavis of Syracuse University became the first African-American to be voted winner of theHeisman Trophy. In1979, an Air NewZealand DC-10 enroute to the South Pole crashed into amountain in Antarctica, killing all 257 people aboard. In1987,a South African Airways Boeing747crashedinto the Indian Ocean with the loss of all159 peopleaboard. In1994, serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer wasmurdered in a Wisconsin prison by a fellow inmate. Sixties war protester Jerry Rubin died in LosAngeles, two weeksafter being hit by a car; hewas 56. In2001,Enron Corp., once the world's largest energy trader, collapsed after would-be rescuer Dynegy Inc. backedout of an $8.4 billion takeoverdeal. Tea years ago: NBC Sports chairman DickEbersol was injured, his14-year-old son, Teddy, amongthree people killed, when acharter plane crashed during takeoff outside Montrose, Colorado. Al-Qaida in Iraq claimed responsibility for slaughtering membersof Iraq's security forces in Mosul, where dozens ofbodies had been found. Agas explosion in a central Chinesecoal mine killed166 people. Five years ago: Aconservative Iranian legislator warned his country might pull out of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty after a U.N.resolution censuring Tehran. One year ago: Chinasaid it had sent warplanes into its newly declared maritime air defense zone, daysafter the U.S., South Korea andJapansent flights through the airspace indefiance of rules Beijing said it hadimposed in theEast China Sea.
BIRTHDAYS Singer RandyNewmanis 71. Actor Ed Harris is 64. Former Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff is 61.Actor JuddNelsonis55.Rockmusician Matt Cameron is52. Actress JaneSibbett is 52. Comedian Jon Stewart is 52. Hip-hop musician apl.de.ap (BlackEyed Peas) is 40.Actress AimeeGarcia is 36. RapperChamillionaire is 35. Actress Mary Elizabeth Winstead is 30. — From wire reports
D ogs aren't known to be
water rather than
the most graceful of drinkers. Place a bowl of water in
manipulating it in complex ways. But now researchers say
front of a thirsty canine, and
you're likely to see much of itscontents splattered across the floor. But researchers who
that that's not the
have studied the exquisite lapping strategy of the cat have found that even though dogs seem sloppy when they have a drink, they have a clever
case at all. ter upward into a column at a blazing rate — hitting an acceleration of roughly five to eight times that of gravity when changing direction from downward to upward.
strategy of their own.
The findings, described at the American Physical Society's Division of Fluid Dynamics meeting in San Francisco, provide fresh insight on
That's much faster than cats
move their tongues, Jung said. And whereas cats barely flick the water, dogs use a
this basic and yet still myste-
rious animal behavior. When it comes to getting a mouthful of water, different
animals have distinct strategies, said research co-author Sunghwan Jung, an assistant professor at Virginia Tech. Some, like humans, employ suction — we use our cheeks to create negative pressure in our mouths, vacuuming in liquid from the lip of a cup or through a straw. Carnivores,
wide cross-sectionof tongue When drinking, dogs use their tongues to whack the water with a wide surface area, then pull the wa-
to plunge into the liquid. But dogs and cats, it turns
ter upward into a column at an impressive rate — hitting an acceleration of roughly five to eight times
out, time one key movement
that of gravity.
in the same way: Just before the column of water is about
Thinkstock
to collapse, they close their
the mouth. Using a tongue to get a lit-
mouths around the airborne closing their mouths over part surface. Then, to f u r ther liquid, maximizing their watle water into y our m o uth of the column. This innate mimic and model the move- ter intake. "Dogs use a very smart may seem far less efficient mastery of fluid dynamics ment of the dogs' tongues, including those from the ca- than simply sucking it in, is thesecret to their efficient they used t o ngue-shaped (mechanism) to optimize their nine and feline families such but in 2010, Jung and col- drinking. glass tubes and plunged them drinking," Jung said. as wolves and lions, lack com- leagues showed that cats, at Previously, it was thought into the water the way the Score one for the dogs. plete cheeks. least, have an unexpectedly by some that dogs use their dogs dld. So why did cats evolve to That's great for opening effective way of using their tongues like ladles, scooping There were key di ffer- be such dainty drinkers while their mouths wide to attack tongues to drink water. up water rather than manipences between cat and dog dogs are so sloppy? There's their prey, but it means they Cats extend their tongues ulating it in complex ways. strategies. The dogs extend- no way to say for sure at the can't close their lips fully to in a J shape, barely flick the But now researchers say that ed more of their tongues to m oment, but J un g s ai d i t create suction. So, instead, surface of the water and then that's not the case at all. whack the water with a much might be linked to cats' disthey use their tongues to lap quickly move their tongues They videorecorded ca- wider surface area, then used like of water compared with at liquid and bring it toward upward, pulling a column of nines lapping up water from their tongues to pull the wa- many dogs' love for it. water up into the air and then
above and below the water's
-- ygyg1m ILA g yRIDAV -
Plasmid DNA placed on rocket's exterior survives space trip By Monte Morin
STUDY
Los Angeles Times
DNA molecules smeared onto the exterior of a subor-
sistant to certain antibiotics
bital test rocket are capable of surviving a 13-minute trip into space and a scorching re-entry, European researchers say. The scientists' f i nding, published Wednesday in the journal PLOS One, suggests that genetic material is hardier than previously thought
glow under ultraviolet light.
and may have the potential
or making mouse tissue cells By engineering the plasmid DNA in this way, they would be able to see whether it was still functional when the rocket returned to Earth.
The researchers applied the DNA to various locations on the exterior of the rocket,
including a number of screw heads. During the experi-
to stow away on robotic land- mental flight, th e m aterial ers bound for other worlds was lofted 166 miles high and or within meteors, the report subjected to 6.3 G's of thrust, said. six minutes of microgravi"It is conceivable that life ty and temperatures higher e xists i n dependently f r o m than 1,832 degrees, the reour planet even under the searchers said. very hostile conditions preWhen the rocketpayload vailing on our neighbors like was recovered, scientists colMars," wrote senior study l ected some DNA f ro m a l l author Dr. Oliver Ullrich, a of the application sites and m olecular biologist at t h e found that as much as 35 perUniversity of Zurich, and his cent had retained its full biocolleagues. logical function, they said. "Already on Earth we are The authors said they were able to identify some extreme very surprised by the results. life forms which can survive The possibility that Earth physically and/or geochemi- DNA c o u l d co n t a minate cally harsh conditions, such e quipment searching f o r as very high or low tempera- signs of possible life on othtures, intense radiation, pres- er planets had to be seriously sure, vacuum, desiccation, considered, the authors said. " It i s e ssential t o k n o w salinity and pH. Many of these parameters also prevail whether th e d e tected bioin space and therefore the markers definitely o r i giquestion is whether terrestrinate from the analyzed site al organisms are able to sur- or if they could be potential vive a voyage through space." contaminations from ' stowaways' which traveled as The experiment was conducted on
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t h e T E X U S-49 hitchhikers on the spacecraft
rocket mission, which blasted off from Sweden in March
2011. The launch was part of a sounding rocket program in which
-
i n struments and
experiments are launched into suborbital space for brief periods. Researchers engineered plasmid DNA, or small ringlike strings of genetic material, that would confer special qualities to transfected cells,
such as making bacteria re-
or analytical equipment." The researchers said that
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should be conducted with sounding rockets. " A critical question is i f
microorganisms do not only survive the residence in space but would they also be able to withstand the hostile condi-
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A4 THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014
McCarthy
CEO
Continued from A1
Continued from A1
Moskowitz was sentenced to two years in prison. "All the time I sat in jail and
B ut Dempsey, also t h e
then in prison, I said I'm going to make these guys pay," she said of the judge, the prose-
Central Oregon educational leadershipsupervisor forthe University of Oregon, said St. Charles set a high bar for reaching those goals — so
cutors and the perpetrators
high that this is the second
of the system that convicted her. "That anger has lasted through the years." By returning to f ederal court, Moskowitz hopes to
®
clear her name and to remind
Americans of the horrors of the Red Scare, when U.S.
Carolyn Cole/Los Angeles Times/TNS
paranoia fueled persecution
Ninety-eight-year-old Miriam Moskowitz is appealing her felony
of suspected Soviet sympathizers and spies.
conviction for obstruction of justice in a1950 case. She still lives on herown inWashington Township, New Jersey.
Moskowitz says she was neither. Her conviction, she said, was based on lies Gold told to
Moskowitz acknowledges He never asked how it had that most people do not know been for me, so I knew," Mos-
save himself from the electric
about her past. Her parents
kowitz said. "I knew we were
chair — lies that did not come to light until decades later, ac-
are dead. So are her three younger siblings and most of
finished."
cording to her attorneys.
her friends. Brothman, who was con-
she considered suicide. Things turned around in
Last August, Moskowitz's
lawyers filed court documents seeking to clear her record. Among other things, the defense motion says that grand jury transcripts from 1947,
victed of conspiracy at trial
1970, when Moskowitz got
with Moskowitz, died in 1980.
a job teaching junior high school math in New Jersey. A
Gold, who served about half a 30-year prison term, died in 1972.
"They're all gone," Mos60 years ago, show that Gold kowitz said. "Nobody lives to testified that Moskowitz knew be 98. I'm an anomaly." nothing of h i s e spionage After her 1952 release from activities. prison, Moskowitz landed which were sealed more than
The U.S.attorney in Manhattan, Preet Bharara, says
Unable to find steady work,
a series of jobs, but her past
longtime violinist and violist,
she began playing in chamber orchestras. "It was the greatest time
of my life," Moskowitz said, smiling at the memory. "I have never known such bliss." But Moskowitz still regrets
always caught up to her, she that because of her felony reMoskowitz and her lawyers said. FBI agents hunting sub- cord, she never got to serve on have cherry-picked details versives would come around a jury. She shied away from from the transcripts to "man- trying to get information from seriousromances out of fear ufacture an inconsistency" in Moskowitz. Bosses would get that a boyfriend would learn Gold's testimony. edgy and tell her to find work of her past.Shenevermarried "Her claims, even if taken elsewhere. or had children. "I would have wanted that at face value, are insufficient She continued to see Brothto establish an error under man, who also was freed in very dearly," Moskowitz said, t oday's law, le t a l one t h e 1952, but their relationship looking around at a house law when she was convict- soured. The man she had been filled with mementos. "If it had never happened, ed in 1950," the prosecutor in awe of for his brains and said in a court document. It lyrical love letters revealed his I'd have had a houseful of chilalso said Moskowitz had not true self when they reunited dren. By now, grandchildren, proved that he r c o nviction after prison. "He embraced great-grandchildren," Moshad "significant and ongoing me and said, word for word, 'I kowitz said, sighing. "It would consequences." had a terrible time in prison.' have been nice."
Ferguson
prosecutor to examine Brown's In nearby St. Louis, the un- case. A federal civil-rights inContinued from A1 rest forced the city to put off vestigation into Brown's death It was cold and gray outside, its Thanksgiving Day parade, is underway, but charges are and the streets that had over- and in New York, protesters not expected against the police flowed with demonstrators for marched along the route of the officer, Darren Wilson. the past few nights were eerily Macy's parade, and seven demFor many residents here, still. Into this stepped Edwin, a onstrators were arrested in at- Thursday brought a moment Ferguson resident who works tempts to disrupt the parade. In to reunite with one another afas a teaching assistant. "It's Ferguson, officials postponed ter an anxious week of closed harder to stay in," she said. the Northern Lights celebration schools, police barricades and The looting and gunshots, — an annual post-Thanksgiv- relentless news media attenflaming buildings and dashes ing holiday festival — as people tion. At the Wellspring Church, that erupted Monday after a anxiously waited to see wheth- black families and white famgrand jury's decision not to in- ertensionswo uldflareagain af- ilies sat beneath blue staineddict a white police officer for fa- tertwo calmer nights of protest. glass windows, praying and "It's very unfortunate be- singing songs that said, "Open tally shooting Michael Brown, an unarmed black teenager, cause this festival is about the the eyes of my heart, Lord." Fitcast a pall on the holiday for community coming together," tingly, the pastor, E Willis Johnfamilies around the St. Louis said Ferguson's mayor, James son Jr., discussed the Book of area and beyond.While the Knowles. "We light the Christ- Job in his sermon, and spoke of governor of Missouri, Jay Nix- mas tree. We've got kids mak- faithfulness amid uncertainty on, ate a Thanksgiving meal ing gingerbread houses. We've and turmoil. "God is in control every day," with the National Guard troops got music and carolers and who have been called up to se- horse ~ e r i d es. There's nohe said, "not the governor, not cure the streets here, Brown's reason to disrupt it." the National Guard." But just family and activists nationwide On Thursday, there w as outside the church were more set aside empty chairs as din- again a heavy presence of concrete signs of control. A ner-table memorials. law-enforcement officials on National Guard vehicle was Around nndmorrung Thurs- the streets, guarding the police parked nearby, as were many day, Carlton Lee, pastor of the station and a shopping cen- police cars. Businesses were Flood Christian Church, stood ter, but few protesters were in boarded up, and South Florisin a pulpit here and talked sight. The night before, dozens sant Road was nearly empty. about the work of his congre- of marchers rallied, but they Afterthe service, as congregation. But Lee was not speak- were outnumbered by the hun- gants made theirwayto a lunch ing at Flood. Instead, he was at dreds of National Guard troops table of turkey, ham, dressing Wellspring Church, three days and the police who fanned out and pumpkin pie, Johnson said before he planned to hold a across the region. The march- the holiday's arrival was a"welSunday service in a parking lot. ersdispersedwith no reports of come relief." "In many respects, we've His own church had been de- damage andtwo arrests. dared a total loss, a casualty of Nixon, who has been criti- been locked in and on locka fire that burned late Monday cized for not deploying enough down," he said. "We have not amid the unrest. Guard forcesto prevent Mon- given over and expressed our He talked of rebuilding a day night's widespread chaos, bestselves toward each other, church from the rubble, even on Thursday thanked Guard and so the expression of gratithough questions remain about m embers forspending the hol- tude, the extending of gift and w hether aninsurance policy iday away from their families. grace through food and fellowwill underwrite the project. A spokesman for the gover- ship, that is what not only this "I don't know how," Lee said nor said separately that Nix- community strives toward, but in a soft voice. "I don't know on would not call for a special it's what we're called to be." when. But I trust God."
Doctors
doctors with troubled track records to market its product to
representatives. In a statement, Insys said it
Continued from A1 An analysis of the new fed-
other physicians. The aggressive marketing of Subsys, the company's only brand-name product, is especially remarkable, given that its use is highly restricted; it is approved only for cancer patients who are taking opioid painkillers around the clock. Previous analyses have shown
had appropriately marketed Subsys and that the drug had been successful because it
eral Open Payments database
shows that five of the 20 physicians who received the most money from Insys recently faced legal or disciplinary action, including three who were said to have inappropriately prescribed painkillers. Many of the 20 highly paid that 1 percent of prescriptions doctors — most of them pain for the product are written by specialists — were also top cancer specialists. prescribers of Subsys, accordSeveralformer sales repreing to prescribing information sentatives said in interviews from Tricare, the health in- that they were encouraged by surance program for military the company to call on pain families, and internal Insys doctors who treated patients documents. with a wide range of ailments, The data, which covered and to reward high-prescribonly that five-month period in ing physicians with benefits 2013, provides unusual insight such as paid speaking engage-
works better than its competitors. "We believe that existing
into the lengths that some
ments. And in a t l east two
drug companies go to cultivate relationships with doctors
cases, the company hired the adult children of top doctors
and shows that Insys enlisted
to serve as their parents' sales
20 doctors more than $30,000 each in speaking and consulting fees as well as perquisites such as travel and meals.
data strongly supports that prescribing decisions have been driven primarily by the clinical attributes of Subsys," the company said. Insys paid doctors $2.8 million in the final five months of 2013, a marketing budget similar to that of major drugmakers,including Boehringer Ingelheim and Novo Nordisk, which market several products that are used to treat common medical conditions such
as diabetesand heartdisease. During a five-month period at the end of 2013, Insys paid
"We wanted an incentive plan that made the people earn it, and we as a board, with consultants, are still trying to figure out how to set goals and to make them achievable." — Dennis Dempsey, St. Charles Health System board member
ly $273,000 listed on the tax time in nine years executives form as " Other reportable havereceived incentivepay. compensation." "The board did not want Much of that consists of an incentive plan that was earned time off — basicaljust a slam dunk, that you ly, vacation days that had could just assume you were not been taken — as well getting," he said. "We wanted as life insurance, Diegel's an incentive plan that made contribution to an executive the people earn it, and we as retirement plan and coma board, with consultants, pensation from an executive are still trying to figure out retirement plan that employhow to set goals and to make ees receive only once they've them achievable." been working for the health The difficulty of obtaining system for a certain amount the incentive pay b ecame of time, said Kayley Mendenan issue in the most recent hall, a spokeswoman for St. search for a CEO to succeed Charles. Diegel, who is stepping down Bruce McPherson, presifrom his position Nov. 30, dent 8z CEO of the Alliance Dempsey said. for Advancing Nonprofit "I can tell you our CEO Health Care, a group that candidates were researching supports n onprofit h e alth it," he said. careorganizations, said he's B oard
C h a irman T o m
Sayeg echoed that the in-
with a total compensation of
about $978,000. Beneath Diegel, Dr. Michel Boileau, St. Charles' chief clinical officer, was the second-highest paid administrator in 2013, with a total com-
pensation of about $726,000. Karen Shepard, St. Charles'
chief financial officer, came in third with a total compensationof about $668,000.
The majority o f St . Charles' executives are at or well below the 50th percen-
tile, according to data from Sullivan Cotter, Dempsey SBld.
Two exceed that threshold: Boileau and Rick Martin, St. Charles' vice president of
construction and real estate, whose total compensation was nearly $360,000. Sayeg, the board chairman, said compensating at
not a fan of retirement plans that reward incentive pay-
ments to employees who've high to ensure St. Charles ad- stayed with the health sysministrators are striving for tem for a certain number of excellence. years. Hospital leaders tend "There are a lot of systems to reason that if they don't that pay out as a matter of offer such benefits, anothcourse every year on their in- er health system will steal centive plan," he said. a dministrators a w ay. B u t Diegel received a rough- McPherson said there are ly $86,000bump in his base other ways of ensuring an salary, which Dempsey said administrator is adequately finally moved him into the compensated. "I think if you're paying 50th percentile for CEOs, according to the board's con- them well for the job they're sultant, Chicago-based Sul- doing from year to year, why livan Cotter. Diegel's base isn't that enough?" he said. salary was about $493,000 St. Charles c ontributed in 2012; his total compen- $105,000 to Diegel's retire-
the 50th percentile allows St.
sation that year was about
$864 million was $750,000. Diegel's base pay that year
centive pay threshold is set
$677,000.
Charles to recruit and retain quality individuals. "It's a very, very competitive industry," he said, "and the board believes to the extent that we're not paying
that particular percentile for qualified individuals, we would have a very difficult time both recruiting and retaining those individuals." A 2013 survey conducted
by the consulting firm Integrated Healthcare Strategies
found that median base salary for the CEO of a health system with a
ment accounts in 2013, and he received another $32,500
r e venue of
mittee set a goal to get all
in "nontaxable benefits," ac- was about $579,000, and the cording to the tax form. healthsystem's revenue was The highest-paid employ- about $632 million.
of its executives at the 50th
ee listed on th e 2013 tax
About a decade ago, the board's compensation com-
St.
percentile of what such exec- form was Dr. Angelo Vlesutives make nationally and sis,a cardiothoracic surgeon regionally, as determined by whose total compensation Sullivan Cotter. was nearly $1.2 million. A nother portion of D i The third-highest paid, e gel's compensation t h a t beneath Diegel and Vlessis, g rew substantially f r o m was Dr. John Blizzard, also previous years is the rough- a cardiothoracic surgeon,
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of years.Profits increased to
about $40 million in 2013, up from $30 million in 2012 and $18 mrlhon rn 2011. — Reporter: 541-383-0304, tbannow@bendbulletin.com
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541-385-7405 In the Costco Forum Shops Next to Jamba Juice
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014•THE BULLETIN A5
Plate readers
Portland police customized their li-
Continued from A1
cense plate-reading camera system so a
Police Bureau and a hand-
dispatch computer alerts officers when
ful of o t her m o stly m etro d epartments that u s e t h e
their cameras see a specific license
cameras. But civil rights and police watchdog groups say the program is ripe for abuse and needs oversight. Their
plate on the road, which is what happened in April 2013, when investigators
The proposal probably will The department's policy be ready in early December manual tells the officer using and ready to prefile soon the camera to capture license after, Straus said. Knopp plate images around major said data retention time will crime scenes to potentially likely face the hardest pushidentify criminal suspects later. back from law enforcement Its manual also says "ALPR groups. The longer law ensystem audits should be con- forcement is allowed to store ducted on a regular basis." images and data, the longer Support Capt. Bill Kler said the list of plates the cameras audits were simply to check can query from.
calls over the last two years for state attention have been
were looking for
that the program was work-
The system has become a handy tool for the Portland
heard by Sen. Tim Knopp, R-Bend, who is working on a bill that would rein in the
cameras a bit. A Bulletin review of Ore-
gon programs similar to others nationwide shows wide system tells officers in ALPR as are used. While agencies cars if they pass the license discretion on how the camer-
customized ALPR list, which
and suspects in hit-and-run
f luctuates, had about 2 0 plates, along with others from That's what h a ppened a state stolen car database. "I can see how privacy when police were looking for
cases, documents show po-
say the cameras are used primarily to find stolen cars
plate on the road.
David Wendell in April 2013,
c oncerns could turn u p o n
lice pulled over and queried accordingto records from the at least one driver who may case and a presentation Dow
this," Scruggs said. "But we're talking (about) 20 plates out of
not have been the primary
gave to thousands of law en-
a population base of 608,000."
subject of an investigation. The cameras can also find suspended and uninsured driversand scofflaws. The Portland Police Bureau recently finished customizing itsprogram soitscameras are linked with a computer dis-
forcementofficers ata m eetAbout seven months after ing in Portland last fall. Portland expanded the proOver the course of a year,
from 2012 to 2013, Wendell was suspected of nearly 100 identity thefts. He was pass-
ing bad checks at grocery stores, and Portland police
gram, the department also
increasedthe number of cars with the cameras to 16, each capturing between 3,000 and
8,000 images per officer shift, according to estimates by Scruggs and Dow. Dow, along with the team
were on his case. swath of open cases, a move One alert in the system told the department believes had the cameras to be on the look- that conducted the extensive never been done before. out for Wendell's SUV and for technology upgrade, was givPortland Police Lt . J ohn officers to call Officer Barba- en an achievement medal in Scruggs, who oversees the ra Glass, an investigator in January 2014 for his idea to ALPR program there, said the Portland bureau's ID theft expand the program. the readers aren't invasive unit, when they found him. Scruggs said other depart" Wendell needs to be inbecauselicense plates have ments have asked the Portno identifying information. terviewed prior to booking land department if they can "The allegations that they and obtaining a lawyer," the copy the upgrade, though he make that we can track peo- alert said. "If in possession said he didn't know w h ich ple's personal lives is just not of vehicle try to find reason departments. happening. The system is not to search for check-making" He said Portland is using that robust," Scruggs said. and other forgery materials. the cameras properly, adding But that h a sn't s t opped Police had been looking for that the department updated the work of Knopp and oth- Wendell for four months. A its policy in recent years at patch that can include a wide
as in 2014.
David Wendell for ID theft.
ing correctly. After queries from The Bulletin about the
lists into its ALPR database, claimed this September that
er lawmakers want to scale
aspects of its policy were ex-
and put in place state-ordered
empt from disclosure.
provisions to allow greater public disclosure of the surveillance programs. The debate over the cameras' use made its way into the Oregon Capitol in early 2014, and a bipartisan group, along with Straus and the
"I can tell you that in the
Legislature, depending on which legislator you talk to, audits, Kler said the depart- they'd be willing to accept Portland Police Bureau ment found its lone camera seven days to six months," Submitted photo wasn't correctly linking up Knopp said. w ith th e d a tabase, and i t Kevin Campbell, executive stoppedusing the camera. director of a group repreBend Police Chief Jim Por- senting Oregon police chiefs, from the system. ter said the department was has worked to scale back Some departments delete offered grant money to buy the proposed regulations. their images after two years, cameras but turned it down He outlined hi s o pposition while others, such as that in b ecause the o f f ic e w o u l d to an ALPR bill in testimoPortland, hold on to them for have seen other associated ny in February, taking issue up to four. costs and he didn't feel the with retention time and even The lack of uniformity and cameras would be a good fit the fact lawmakers used the outside oversight has created for the department. word surveillance to describe "It's a greatconcern ofpeo- the cameras. what Meyer calls a "patch quilt ple's privacy and the conver"In a worst-case scenario, of poli cies"overtheprogram. Departments also inter- sation revolving around that we would accept a six-month pret whether their p olicies today in America and the fear retention limit, but believe a are considered public records of government," Porter said. two-year period would better differently. serve Oregonians," Campbell Clackamas County, which Stateattention told lawmakers in February. Bend's Knopp and oth- Campbell didn't respond to a also adds "vehicle of interest"
"We don't have a policy for auditing our system. It simply does not exist. There are no results or audits. And our
request for comment on this article.
back the ALPR programs
The issue is one that civil rights groups such as the Electronic Frontier Founda-
tion and the ACLU say is best handled by the state while the
federal government hasn't updated digital privacy laws share it with you if it does," created decades ago. It's also an issue where said Lt. Adam Phillips, Clackamas County Sheriff's Office ACLU, has identified license some of the state's libertarRe p ublicans, spokesman. plate-reader oversight as a ian-minded Similar t o t h e P o r t land top goal for the 2015 session. such as Knopp and outgoing bureau, Clackamas County U nder a bill t hat w il l b e Sen. Larry George of Sheruses the technology to find proposed in early 2015, police wood, link up with liberals v ehicles associated w i t h would have to audit A L PR such as Sen. Chip Shields, high-profile cases, such as programs for effect iveness. D-Portland. "If the primary purpose is ers who are trying to put the camera spotted Wendell's car the request of the ACLU to Amber Alerts and h it-and- The bill will also limit how cameras under the spotlight. days after his case was put clarify that police wouldn't runs, to low-profile cases in- long law e n forcement can to find stolen cars, then we "It's also storing the infor- into the system. Wendell was send cars with cameras to re- volving uninsured and sus- store images sucked up by wouldn't be getting the kind mation whether i t p r o v i d- arrested, pleaded guilty to 10 ligious gatherings or protests. pended drivers. the cameras. of pushback that we're get"We've never had any kind ed a hit or not," said Becky charges and was sentenced to Oregon City, a town of The proposed bill would ting for retention of innocent Straus, legislative director of 15 years in prison. of incident happen of data be- about 32,000 below the Wil- also force police to post peoples' data," Straus said. the American Civil Liberties His defense attorney, Jason ing misused," Scruggs said. lamette Falls, had one car ALPR policies online in "con— Reporter: 406-589-4347, Union-Oregon. Steen, didn't respond to reequipped with ALPR camer- spicuous" view for the public. tanderson@bendbulletin.com peated requests for comment Privacy questions Portland expansion on the case. Criminal defense attorneys In late 2012, Portland OffiUnder the expansion, Port- and civil rights groups in Orcer Garrett Dow had an idea land police also pulled over egon have taken issue with that would make the cameras and queried a driver who different aspects of the ALPR more useful for his depart- may nothave been theprima- program. ment and potentially others ry suspect in a criminal case. Straus with the ACLU says nationwide. One officer wanted infor- police unnecessarily collect The department had been mation on the driver of a 2000 information o n i nno c ent using the cameras to find cars Dodge sedan that a camera people when they conduct a I I I • i I I that were being stolen at an photographed while the car dragnet for information on increasing rate in Portland, was parked in front of an "ac- potential criminals. I • I " Whether i t ' s a sto l e n • • I and early records showed the tive drug house," according technology was effective. to another report i n D o w 's car or a person driving to Dow proposed linking the presentation. church, it's collecting that • I e I policy wouldn't even let us
Find It All Online bendbulletin.com
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camera system with a comput-
ALPR officers were told
plate," Straus said. "They are
er dispatch containing police to "stop and (identify) if seen creatinga treasure trove of records. The idea was to auto- driving and send occupants' personal information about matically upload the records info to" the investigator, the Oregonians." into camera-equipped police report read. Attorneys wonder about cars, increasing the likelihood Police with ALPR cameras h ow pictures taken by t h e police would find the car they found the woman driving the cameras are used in court, were looking for quickly. car five days after the alert said Gail Meyer, a lobbyist That change would make was put into the system. with the Oregon Criminal De"Since Officer Harris found every officer with a camera fense Lawyers Association. "They don't let us know more effective at finding sus- the vehicle while it was occupects big and small, as long pied, he was able to (identify) if in the course of our cases as the license plate was con- the female driver. The investi- that, 'Oh, we found these usnected with the report, be- gation is ongoing," the report ing ALPR cameras,' " Meyer cause the camera would con- sald. said. "So it's remained untinuously query license plate Scruggs said it's difficult der the radar, so to speak, "hot lists." to say whether the car in that because there hasn't been "We're really using the ac- case was frequently seen at f orced d i sclosure o f thi s tual plate-reader system pret- the drug house and was part information." ty much to the highest degree of the investigation or if the Law enforcement agencies possible," Scruggs said. investigator just wanted more are also in charge of writing When investigators know information from the driver their own policies and dethe license plate of a suspect, on the suspected dealers. ciding how long images and they can upload a file into the He also said as of 2:30 p.m. time and location stamps are camera database so that the Wednesday the department's storedbefore they're deleted
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I(hgt l5 thf5 An Oregon jury found that BP West Coast Products LLC
notice about~ {' BPWCP") charged more for gas than the amount registered at the pump and failed to properly disclose its prices when it charged a 35-cent fee to consumers who used debit cards to pay for gas at Oregon ARCO stations. BPWCP has denied the claims in this case and plans to appeal the jury verdict. In the meantime, eligible consumers who have not received a direct notice in the mail may file claims.
Am I eligible if you purchased gas at Oregon ARCO or ARCO ampm to file a claim? locationsbetween january 1,2011 and August 30, 2013 and paid a 35-cent debit card transaction fee, you could get up to $200, minus applicable attorneys' fees and expenses, ifyou file a claim.
How can I File a claim online or by mail by December 31, 2014. If you QQ I Q)glrfl p file a valid claim, you will be eligible to receive up to $200, and you will give up your right to individually sue BPWCP for the claims in this case.
What are my You may also: other rights? • Choose not to file a claim and retain your right to
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FOR TEN YEARS, •
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ChalkboardProject has been partnering with teachersto make Oregon schools great — in fact, if every school in the state was apartofour CLASS program, Oregon schools would be in the top 10 in the country.
individually sue BPWCP; • Comment on or object to the handling of your claim, the claims and notice process used in this case, or the request for attorneys' fees and expenses by the attorneys representing you as a Class Member. The attorneys may request up to $40 (or up to 20%) in attorneys' fees from each claim and reimbursement of no more than $345,714.15 in total costs from all claims. They also intend to ask the Court to require BPWCP to payallorsome ofthefeesand costs. Acopyofthe fee petition will be at www.DebitCardClassAction.com. The earliest deadline for comments and objections is january 14, 2015. Other deadlines may apply. • The Court willhear objections and comments at a hearing scheduled for February 11, 2015.
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A6
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014
Now thru Cyber Monday. Ends December 1.
ROBBERSON
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Must Qualifvfor RebatesandFMCC Pictures mavvarv fromactual vehide. OfferExpires Dec.1.2014Dealer code0205
includes $2,736 average dealer dlsoount based on survey of Seattle Region deslers afier $8,250 in Total Savings widch includes $'l,500XLT Special Customer Cash (PGM¹12508) + $1,500 Retail Customer Cssh (PGM ¹12638) + $1,000 Ford Credit Bonus Cash (PGM ¹12644) which requires Ford Credit financing + $1,500 Trade-In Asslstance Bonus Cash (PGM I/30060) which requires trade-In of 1995 or newer vehlde, or terminate lease 30 days prlor to or 90 days after new retail de¹very+ $2,000 XLT Luxury Pkg. (PGM ¹97322) + $750 Leather and HID Headlights Pkg. (PGM ¹97324). Not a¹ buyers will qualify for Ford Credit finencing. Not aveilable on F-150 Raptor. Residency restrictions apply. For ag offers, teke new retail delivery from dealer stock by 12/1/14. See desler for qualBcations snd complete details. *With Equipment Group 302A. Not a¹ buyers wfil qualify for Ford Credlt Red Carpst Lease. Payments msy vary, dealer determines prlce. Resldency restrictions apply. Security deposit waived. Tsxes, title and ¹cense fees extra. Cash due at signlng is after $2,000 cash back (PGM ¹50278). Lessee responsible for excess wesr and mileage over 21,000 miles at $0.20 per mile. Lessee has option to purchase vehicle at tease end st price negotiated with dealer at signing. Teke new reteil delivery from dealer stock by 1/5/15. See dealer for quelifications and complete details. Vehicle shown may have optional equipment not included in payment. 2014 F-150 SuperCrews XLT 4x4 with HID/Leather 302A Ecoaoos¹ V6 MSRP is $47,920. ' EPA-estimated rating of 16 clty/22 hwy/18 aombined mpg, available 3.5L EcoaoosP, 4x2. Actual mileage will vary.• Class is Full-size pickups under 8,500 lbs. GvwR. s when properly equipped. cless Is Full-size pickups under 8,500 lbs. GvwR. ' supercrew' model. cless is Full-size pickups under 8,500 lbs. GvwR. r $1,500 Retail customer cash (pGM ¹12638) + $1,000 Ford credit Bonus cash (pGM ¹12644) + $500 Retail Bonus Cash (PGM ¹12646). Not s¹ buysrs will quefify for Ford Credit financing. Rssidency restrlotions apply. For sfi alfers, take new retail delivery from dealer stook by 12/1/14. Ses dsaler for qualificstions and complete details. 'With Equipment Group 200A. Not ag buyers w¹l qua¹fy for Ford Credit Red Csrpet Lease. Payments may vary; dealer determines prlce. Residency restrictions spply. Security deposlt walved. Taxes, tltle and ficense fees extra. Cash due at signing ls after $1,750 cash back (PGM ¹50278). Lessee responslble for exoess weer snd mileage over 21,000 miles at $0.15 per mile. Lessee has option to purchase vehide at lease end at price negotiated with dealer et signing. Take new reteil delivery from desler stock by 1/5/15. See desler for qualificetions snd complete deteils. Vehicle shown mey have opfional equipment not Included in payment. 2014 Escape SE 4WD wlth SYNCs & Sound Discount 200A MSRP ls $28,195. • EPA-estimated ratlng of 23 clty/32 hwy/26 combined mpg, svs¹able 1.6L EcoBoosP, FWD. Actual m¹eage will vary. "Class ls Small Utilities. "Driving while distracted can result in loss of vehicle control. Only use SYNCs/MyFords Touch/other devices, even with voice commands, when it is sefe to do so. Some features may be locked out while the vehicle is in gear. Not a¹ features are oompatible with efi phones. 's$2,000 Reteil Customer Cash (PGM ¹12638) + $500 Retail Bonus Cash (PGM ¹12646) + $500 Ford Credit Bonus Cash (PGM ¹12644) + $500 Open Bonus Cash (unlts equipped wlth Fusion Gas SE 201A, PGM ¹11008). Not a¹ buyers will qualify for Ford Credit finsncing. Residency restrictions apply. For a¹ offers, take new retail dellvery from iiesler stock by 12/1/14. See deeler for quafiflcstlons and complete detafis.u Wlth Equipment Group 201A. Not a¹ buyers will quefify for Ford Creitlt Red Cerpet Lease. Psyments may very; dealer delermlnes price. Residency restrictions spply. Security deposit waived. Tsxes, title and llsxrnse fees extre. $1,500 cash back (PGM ¹50278) + $500 Special Package SE 201A Bonus Cash (PGM ¹11008). Lessee responsible for excess wear and mileage over 21,000 miles et $0.15 per mile. Lessee has option to purchase vehlcle at lease end at price negotlated wlth dealer st slgnlng. Take new retail de¹very from dealer stock by 1/5/15. See dealer for qua¹ficatlons and complete deta¹s. Vehicle shown may have optlonal equipment not included in payment. 2014 Fusion SE FWD 14 201A MSRP is $25,745. «EPA-estimated rsting of 25 city/37 hwy/29 combined mpg, availeble 1.6L Ecoaoos¹, manuel FWD. Actuel mileage will vary. •' Driving while distracted can result in loss of vehicle control. Only use SYNCs/Mypords Touch/other devices, even with voice commsnds, when it Is safe to do so. Some features may be locked out whfie the vehlcle is in gear. Not a¹ features are compatlble with afi phones. Vehicles are for representation purposes only. Vehicles shown may have optional equlpmsnt not Included. See Dealer for complete details.ONer Expires Nov.30th2014
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— ia.s
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zt. /8
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8183 ' N
2013 F150 SUPERCREW SALE PRICE:
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"'0'I
STOCK¹3436P VIN¹L05794
2013 F150 SALE PRICE:
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N
NEw: 2100 NE 3rd st. Bend, oR 97701 NEw 54 1. 3 8 2 . 4521 PRE-owNED: 2 77 0 NE 2nd st. Bend, oR 97701 541.312.3986 WWW.ROBBERSON.COM
Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6
© www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014
BRIEFING Killing of deer leads to jail A 54-year-old man was lodged in jail in connection with the killing of a trophy-class mule deer, according to Oregon State Police. Danny Davidson was being held on suspicion of illegal taking of a buck deer and hunting on the enclosed lands of another, according to anOSP news release. State police and Oregon Fish andWildlife troopers received information about a deer being killed Sunday in the Metolius Wildlife Management Unit. The investigation led to Davidson, who was taken to the Deschutes County jail.
wans u ic commen on e uureo IIYOI' Bulletin staff report Beginning Thursday, the public can weigh in on the future of Mirror Pond.
Four community meetings are set and a website is available to allow the community
to learn more about the proposed plan and provide feedback to the city of Bend and the Bend Park & Recreation District. The Mirror Pond Ad Hoc
Committee announced this month a proposal to take over the hydroelectric dam
operated by Pacific Power and replace it with a series of pools and riffles to hold back
the water. The committee's
proposal would pay for the
be generated from offering nearby properties for private
new structure and some modifications to the riverbank and
development. The first two meetings will
channel through the sale or lease of riverfront property currently owned by the city, the Bend Park & Recreation
take place from noon to 1:30
District and Pacific Power.
The city and the park district haven't reached an agreement with Pacific Power for the utility to surrender the
dam and nearby land, and the committee's proposal doesn't identify how much it would
cost to dismantle the dam and build a new structure,
or how much money could
p.m. and 5:30 to 7 p.m. Thurs-
day at Bend Park & Recreation District offices, 799 SW Columbia St.
In January, two more community meetings will take place. • 5:30 to 7 p.m., Jan. 7, Sky View Middle School, 63555 NE 18th St., in Bend
• 5:30to 7p.m., Jan. 12, at a downtown Bend location to be determined
The meetings will fea-
ture a presentation on the project, followed by a question-and-answer period. The public can also go to www.mirrorpondbend.com, to read more about the project, see images and offer feedback through a questionnaire. A paper questionnaire can also be requested, by calling 541-706-6151.
The final day to offer public input on the proposal is Jan. 31.
If public feedback on the proposal is positive, an independent commission
will be formed to handle the redevelopment.
— Bulletin staff reports
BEND COMMUNITY CENTER
PUBLICOFFICIALS • Sen. JeffMerkley, D-Ore. 107 RussellSenateOffice Building Washington, D.C. 20510 Phone: 202-224-3753 Web: http://rnrrkly. senate.gov Bendoffice: 131 NWHawthorneAve., Suite208 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-318-1298 • Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore. 223 DirksenSenate Office Building Washington, D.C. 20510 Phone:202-224-5244 Web: http://wyden.senate. gov Bend office: 131 NWHawthorneAve., Suite107 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-330-9142
unre s 0 e u ree a n s vi n in n e r
STATE SENATE • Sen. Ted Ferrieli, R-District30(Jefferson, part of Deschutes) 900 Court St.NE,S-323 Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-986-1950 Email: sen.tedferrioli© state.or.us Web: www.leg.state. or.us/ferrioli • Sen. TimKnopp, R-District27 (part of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,S-423 Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-986-1727 Email: sen.tirnknOpp state.or.us Web: www.leg.state. or.us/knopp • Sen. DougWhitsett, R-District28 (Crook, part ofDeschutes) 900 Court St.NE,S-303 Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-986-1728 Email: sen.dougwhitsett© state.or.us Web: www.leg.state. or.us/whitsett
• CannonBeach:A police dog hasbeen fired after receiving poor performance reviews,B3 • Clncknmns: Authorities have identified a manwho was killed after he was runoverbyabus,B3
Well shot! Readerphotos
Send us your best outdoor photos at H b endbulletin. cnm/readerphntns. Your entries will appear online, and we'll choose the best for publication in the Outdoors section. Submission requirements. Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took a photo, any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and contact info. Photos selected for print must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.
Have a story idea or submission? Contact us!
The Bulletin Call a reporter Bend ......................541-633-2160 Redmond...............541-617-7831 Sisters....................541-617-7831 La Pine ...................541-617-7831 Sunriver.................541-617-7831 Deschutes.............541-617-7820 Crook.....................541-617-7831 Jefferson...............541-617-7831 Salem ..................406-589-4347 D.c....................... 202-662-7456 Business ............... 541-617-7815 Education..............541-617-7831 Health ...................541-383-0304 Public lands..........541-617-7812 Public safety.........541-383-0376
• Rep. GregWalden, R-HeodRiver 2182 RayburnHouse Office Building Washington, D.C. 20515 Phone: 202-225-6730 Web: http://walden.house. gov Bendoffice: 1051 NWBondSt., Suite 400 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-389-4408 Fax: 541-389-4452 STATE OFOREGON • Gov. John Kitzhaber, D 160 StateCapitol, 900 Court St. Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-378-4582 Fax:503-378-6872 Web: http://governor. oregon.gov • Secretary of State Kate Brown, D 136State Capitol Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1616 Fax: 503-986-1616 Email: oregon.sos©state. oi'.Us • Treasurer TedWheeler, D 159OregonState Capitol 900 Court St. NE Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-378-4329 Email: oregon.treasurer© state.or.us Web: www.ost.state.or.us • AttorneyGeneralEllen Resenblum,D 1162 CourtSt. NE Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-378-4400 Fax: 503-378-4017 Web: www.doj.state.or.us • LaborCommissionerBred Avakian 800 NEOregonSt., Suite 1045 Portland, OR97232 Phone: 971-673-0761 Fax:971-673-0762 Email: boli.mail©state. oi;us Web: www.oregon.gov/ boli
STATE NEWS
Submissions • Letters andopinions: Email: letters@bendbulletin.com Mail:My Nickel's Worth or In MyView P.o. Box6020 Bend, OR97708 Details onthe Editorials page inside. Contact: 541-383-0358
• Civic Calendarnotices: Email eventinformation to news@bendbulletin.com, with "CivicCalendar" inthesublect, and includeacontact name and phonenumber. Contact: 541-383-0354
• School newsandnotes:
Meg Roussos/The Bulletin
Laurel Sorlie, of Bend, serves up Thanksgiving dinner on Thursday to Danny O'Neal, of Bend, at the annual holiday meal at Bend's Community Center.
"When you don't have any The Bulletin "When you don't have any family around, it's a family around, it's a great Bend's Community Cengreat place to be. If we didn't have thisplace to place to be," Eichelberger ter may have hosted the said. "If we didn't have this come to, we may get cabin fever." city's largest Thanksgiving place to come to, we may get gathering, with turkey- and — Arlene Eichelberger cabin fever." pie-seekers gathering outside Eichelberger's friend, Helin the drizzly weather before en Bortels, 69, said the crowd By Tyler Leeds
the meal began at 11 a.m.
at the center "is like family
Every fourth Thursday of November, the center hosts a
signed up for shifts, the center expected about 500
Arlene Eichelberger, 72, of Bend said she and her
free mealforthose in need of
guests to visit throughout the
husband came to the dinner
food or just a place to be. With about 50 volunteers
meal, which was set to end at 3 p.m.
because they don't have any relatives in Central Oregon.
to us," while her husband, Richard, 68, joked the place is "the Boys and Girls Club for seniors." SeeThanksgiving/B5
Email newsitemsand notices ofgeneralinterest to news@bendbulletin.com. Email announcements ofteens' academicac hievements to youth@bendbulletin.com. Email collegenotes, military graduationsandreunion infoto bulletin@bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358
• Obituaries, Death Notices: Details onthe Obituariespage inside. Contact: 541-617-7825, obits@bendbulletin.com
• Community events: Email eventsto communitylife@ bendbulletin.comorclick on "Submitan Event"onlineat bendbulletin.com.Details onthe calendarpageinside. Contact: 541-383-0351
• Births, engagements, marriages, partnerships, anniversaries: The Milestonespagepublishes Sunday inCommunity Life. Contact: 541-633-2117
T in yoLI'ie seeing morespi ers atey? YoLI're not By Dylan J. Darling
tape, and just this week the
The Bulletin
bottom of a snow boot!" wrote
They are creepy, crawly Wiederholt in the office's and wrapped in a web of Central Oregon Agriculture myths — spiders. And around e-newsletter for Nov. 21. this time every year, questions The annual phenomenon about them start pouring in to
spurred Wiederholt to study
the Oregon State University Extension Service. Over her 25 years with the Extension Service in
spiders and attempt to dispel the many spider myths, ranging from which spiders are in Central Oregon to spider
Prineville, Office Manager
behavior.
Pam Wiederholt has seen all
To start: the myth of spiders coming into homes in fall to
sorts of spiders. People come to the office with captured spiders, usually this time of year, hoping for an identification and clarification as to whether they could be a danger. "They have been brought in on tree limbs, fly swatters, pill bottles, the sticky side of duct
get out of the cold.
"I kind ofbelieved that myself for a long time," she said. While it may seem to be
cold-related, increased spider activity this time of year likely has more to do with males
looking for female mates,
Wiederholt said. Then there is the myth about spiders crawling through a drain and into a sink, shower or bathtub. "Well, they can't," Wieder-
holt said. Modern drains include a water-filled sediment trap that block spiders from
passing through. And the myth about brown
recluse spiders being found in Oregon? "We do not have brown re-
cluse here, period," she said. Wiederholt is not alone in being quizzed about spiders by people curious about their finds. And she is not the only person in the field eager to address myths. SeeSpiders/B5
Thomas Shahan/Oregon Department of Agriculture/Submitted photo
A female Eratigena atrica, the "giant house spider" found in
Oregon and a very close relative of Eratigena agrestis, the "hobo spider." Both are common and harmless. Around this time every year, questions about spiders start pouring in to the Oregon State
University Extension Service.
B2
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014
REGON CIVIL WAR
own's avernis a o s a e's oo a oi'e
By Jason Quick The Ore onian
t
MONROE — Driving away from the opponent's home, and feeling the urge to celebrate, Rich Brooks pulled over and off Highway 99 on his way back from the Civil
Ig
kL
War. The year was 1978. The town was Monroe. And the
place was the Long Branch Tavern. When
B r o ok s b a r r eled
through the tavern doors, his victorious Ducks coaching staff in tow, he figures you could hear the bubbles on a head of beer. "Most of
Judy Unquera has tended bar at the Long Branch for 18 years. For 30 years, the Long Branch was part of the Civil War experience for
t h e m," B r ooks
Oregon coaches whenthe games were played in Corvallis. After
recalled of the bar patrons,
Saturday's game in Corvallis, however, Ducks coaches won't be barreling through the Long Branch doors. The tradition is dead.
"were Beavers supporters." Population 680, Monroe is
And time moveson, leaving only memories of somewild Civil War
a proud farming town in the
nights.
Willamette Valley that serves as the closest thing to a demarcation line in t h e C ivil
Photos by Bruce Ely/The Oregonian via The Associated Press
War, one of college football's Joe Gibson, 33, is the owner of the Long Branch Tavern in Monroe. Population 680, Monroe is a proud oldest rivalries. It is 18 miles
from Oregon State in Corvallis and 23 miles from the Uni-
versity of Oregon in Eugene. The Long Branch is one of two watering holes in the town, a stone's throw from
farming town in the Willamette Valley that serves as the closest thing to a demarcation line in the Civil War, one of college football's oldest rivalries. It is 18 miles from Oregon State in Corvallis and 23 miles from the University of Oregon in Eugene. Under Gibson's ownership, the Long Branch — one of two
taverns in Monroe —has been refurbished. A thriving lumber town in
s tarted, there w a sn't a n y-
the stagnant Long Tom River across Highway 99. "Just a little ol' smoky
the early 1900s that has since body but the locals in there, settled in as a small farming and I think we took them by community, Monroe is best il- surprise," said Steve Greatcountry tavern," said Marilustrated by pickups, overalls wood, who started his Orelyn Lynn, who bought the bar and calloused hands. And a gon coaching career in 1980. "We would go tothe back, w ith husband Hamilton i n people set in their ways. "People in Monroe don't and pretty soon Rich would 1979 and ran it for 14 years. B ut after Brooks led h i s like change," says Judy Un- start holding court, telling group to a table in the back of quera, who has tended bar at stories, and we would have a the tavern on that November the Long Branch for 18 years. great time. It became a night night in 1978, Monroe and
There were back slaps and toasts and cheers. "And I'll tell you one thing: you didn't have to buy a beer," Greatwood said. "It was a pretty special night." B ellotti, wh o
"Early on, when it first started, there wasn't anybody but the locals in there, and I think
we took them by surprise. We would go to the back, and pretty soon Rich (Brooks) would start holding court, telling stories, and we would have a great time. It became a night to kind of let your hair down and have a lot of fun." — Steve Greatwood, assistant head coach, who joined the Ducks' staff in1980
w o ul d e n d
up being in charge of taking over the tradition two years later after Brooks left for the
NFL, remembers being in
two years prior," Greatwood
said. "And Chip was never one for that."
At the south end of town,
to kind of let your hair down
awe.
the Long Branch unknowingly became more than just
on the west side of the highway just before it curves left
and have a lot of fun." As the years went on,
"We couldn't even get in,"
So on the way out of Corvallis, Kelly turned to Great-
Bellotti said. "It was wall-to-
wood, the longtime Eugene
a small town and a smoky tavern.
and heads toward Junction City, sits the Long Branch.
Greatwood said the rendez-
wall people. Everyone was buying us beers, everyone hoisting a beer to the Ducks ... just pure jubilation. There was just a true joy in the air." Sixteen years later, the
resident, and asked where the
vous at the Long Branch be-
They were about to be
Before it was remodeled came a coveted reward for a last year by new owner Joe W1I1. "It was never a given we Brooks and his staff had Gibson, the Long Branch was such a good time, they re- dark, dingy and deteriorat- w ould w in , b u t w h e n w e t urned i n 1 9 80, t h e n e x t ing, and a favorite stop for did, i n t h e c o aches locktime the game was played in motorcycle groups cruising er room the Long Branch Corvallis. the valley. was definitely brought up," "Then," Brooks said, "it " It was a l i t tl e bi t o f a Greatwood said. "Definitely. b ecame something o f a roughneck joint," G ibson Definitely." says. "There would be the octradition." But eventually, in the late For 30 years — from the re- casional fight." 1980s and early 1990s, word gimes of Brooks, Mike BellotAdded Bellotti: "It was, uh started to spread about the ti and Chip Kelly — the Long ... not very impressive." coaches' secret p o s tgame B ranch became part of t h e So when Brooks in 1978 spot. Ducks fans, hopeful of Civil War experience when signaled right to turn off celebrating the game with the the games were played in the highway and pull into coaches, started heading to Corvallis. the Long Branch, none of the Long Branch in droves. "For the most part, I tried to the coaches in the caravan "Unfortunately, word got continue the tradition," Bel- behind him knew what to out, and itbecame a huge lotti said. "It was a neat time, expect. happening," Greatwood said. because it was somewhat a A nd never was i t b i getched into Civil War lore.
neutral site, and you d r ive
right by it. So you would go in
A tradition begins Perhaps i t ' s
ger than 1994, the night the
be c ause Ducks clinched the Rose
staff could go to celebrate in private. Greatwood chose the Prai-
Oregon coacheswillhave a Pac-12 title game to prepare
for after the Civil War, perhaps with a berth in the College Football Playoff at stake. "You know, back t hen when it started, the season was over after the Civil War;
that was our last game," Greatwood said. "You had
rie Schooner Tavern on Prai- time to recover. You didn't rie Road out by the Eugene have to worry about playing Ducks would have another Airport. a Pac-12 championship game "We didn't call a head, or any of that kind of stuff." meaningful Civil War victory. Led by coach Chip Kelly, didn't let t hem k n ow, and Also, the spotlight under the Ducks scored a 37-20 win we took the place by storm," which the program and anyand a berth in the national Greatwood said. "And now- one of note operate under has championship game. adays, with cell phones and intensified. With cell phones, As th e D u c ks' c a r avan everything, the word got out a light or celebratory moment rumbled t oward E u gene pretty quick, and it got pretty can turn into the next viral down Highway 99, an over- crowded there, too." video online. flow crowd w aited outside
One of the people in the
the Long Branch. crowd happened to be homeOn this night, they would less, and Kelly struck up a have to party alone. friendship. "One of the funny stories The Ducks, and t h eir
"In today's world, as a football coach, we have to protect
ourselves," Neal said. "In the past, being in a bar wouldn't be a big thing, but now we coaches, whizzed past. And from that night is we somehow have to protect ourselves with that, a tradition fluttered befriended a homeless guy, from being in an atmosphere and disappeared in the buses' and he ended up on the bus where people could perceive wake. with us," Neal said. "I can't re- us as going over the top. So I
The turning point
member his name, but he went
think that's why a really neat
on the bus with us from (Prai- tradition has broken down." it's drowning your sorrows or small California mining town In 2008, Bellotti's last sea- rie Schooner) and ended up Still, on Saturday night, having a drink to celebrate." of Grass Valley, or maybe it son, Oregon beat the Beavers with us at OES (Oregon Elec- when the Ducks' buses rum1994 But as the Civil War rolls was because he was an ac65-38, and the head coach tric Station). I think Chip paid ble down 99 and slow to go on, adding its 118th chapter complished amateur fighter When Danny O'Neil, Cris- kept the Long Branch tradi- for a taxi to get him home, or through Monroe,Greatwood this weekend in Corvallis, who never lost a smoker in tin McLemore and Dino Phi- tion going, bringing along his wherever he needed to be." said, he will position himself there won't be Ducks coaches college, that he didn't blink lyaw led the Ducks to victory staff, which included a bright, to look out the window on the barreling through the Long an eye walking into the Long that 1994 day, the Ducks were but shy, offensive coordinator Times have changed right side of the bus as it passBranch doors. Branch. headed to the Rose Bowl for named Chip Kelly. Gibson, the owner of the es the Long Branch. "It was just a r e gular, the first time in 37 years. "I remember it being a " Yeah, I'll l ook, and I ' m The tradition is dead. The Long Branch for t h e p a st bar has changed. And time small-town bar," Brooks reAnd the Long Branch par- fun thing, because it's a spot eight years, said he has tried sure there will still be a big that's in the middle of the two reaching out to Oregon to crowd in there," Greatwood moves on, leaving only mem- called. "I'm sure most of the tied like never before. "People were dancing on towns," Oregon defensive invite the coaches back and said. "It would be fun to go ories of some wild Civil War time it was pretty mundane nights. in there." the pool table, and we had to backs coach John Neal said. perhaps rekindle the tradi- back in there. But the logisTurns out, i t w a s j u st ask people to pass the drinks "I remember the place being tion under Mark Helfrich. tics nowadays ... you just An unexpected stop can't do that. It's kind of sad. perfect. b ecause w e c o u l dn't g e t really old, and the bathrooms The tavern has been reThe quickest, and straightThe people were friendly. through all the people," said were not what I would call furbished, ceiling to floor, But by the same token, mayest, route between Corvallis The darkness gave an ele- Unquera, the longtime bar- real pleasant. And it was un- and is now bright and clean be it's time to let that be for and Eugene is U.S. Highway ment of privacy. And the lo- tender. "A wild, wild time." believably crowded." with pristine bathrooms. The the fans now." 99, for years the state's main cation was far away from OrBrooks could hardly beIt was, to say the least, not roasted chicken and jojos that highway until construction of egon State, yet close enough lieve it when he rolled up with Kelly's scene. put the bar on the map in the Interstate 5 began in 1957. to home, that it made sense. the rest of his staff. It was a So when Kelly became 1980s have been resurrected, Cutting through fields of So it began. After the far cry from the quiet and head coach the next season, and the place is packed on fescue and flanked by winer- g ames in C o rvallis, t h e anonymous stop he made in and later coached his f irst Taco Tuesday's. ies and Christmas tree farms, Ducks players would board 1978. C ivil Wa r i n C o r v allis i n If anything, Gibson says he "It was a zoo," Brooks said. 2010, the coaches wondered would like to have the team Highway 99 winds through the team bus and head to EuMonroe and welcomes driv- gene. The coaches would ride "Fans by then had started to whether he would continue over for breakfast the day of ers with a signpost that reads back with t h eir w i ves and figure it out that we did that, the Long Branch tradition. the game. "We knew it was going to population 680, up from the veer off at the Long Branch. and it was packed. I mean, It doesn't sound as if it will Free pipeinstallation estimates " Early on, w hen i t f i r s t you couldn't move." 617 listed in the 2010 Census. be a zoo in there because of happen. Times have changed. and have a libation, whether
B rooks was r a ised i n
the
Bowl wit h a 1 7 -13 victory over the Beavers.
Where BuyersAndSeliers Meet
Ambre EnergyleavingNorth Americancoal market The Associated Press P ORTLAND — A n
latory filing, The Oregonian A u s - reports that Ambre Energy is
ny shareholders are expected projects. The Decker Mine to do the same in December.
tralian company proposing two coal export terminals in Oregon and Washington indicated in a regulatory filing that it is getting out of
selling its interests in its Ore- The Oregonian cites a sharp gon and Washington projects decline in international coal to a U.S.-based private equity prices. company, Resource Capital Ambre's Utah s u bsidiFunds of Denver. ary, Ambre Energy North the Nort h A m e r ican c o al The newspaper says Am- America, will be transferred bre's board has approved the to Resource Capital and remarket. Citing the Australian regu- $18 million deal and compa- main the face of the export
nline
bendbLllletin.COm
DOES EVERYONE MUMBLE?
HEARING AIDS
in Montana and Black Butte
Mine and BigHorn coal deposit in Wyoming are reportedly included in the deal. Neither Ambre Energy nor its Utah subsidiary responded to phone and email requests for comment Wednesday evening.
Food, Home & Garden
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Where Buyers
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541 382-6447 ~ 2090 NE Wyatt Court ~ Suite 101 Bend OR 97701 ~ bendurology.com
s d Urolo S~
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014• THE BULLETIN
XORT
B3
ST
e ex 0 ers are osin 'mi ions o 0 Brs 8 wee By Dan Wheat Capital Press
SALEM — The Washington
apple industry is losing tens of millions of dollars weekly in sales because of the longshoremen's work slowdown at
West Coast ports over contract negotiations. "Individual firms have lost
millions of dollars a week in orders. We're estimating tens of millions of dollars each week
throughout the industry," said Jon DeVaney,president of the Washington State Tree Fruit
Association in Wenatchee and Yakima. Sales to Asia, India, the Mid-
NorthWestCrossing
dle East and Caribbean have been affected since Nov. 1, DeVaney said. "There's an immediate nega-
2379 NWDroulllard Ave.
I
• 6-in. oak floors • Vaulted living area • Bright opengreat room • Quartz slab counters • Priced at554$,$00
$8
•a
tive impact on returns to growers and the industry as a whole.
A number of firms (packRyan Brennecke / Bulletin file photo er-shipper-marketers) have laid Contract negotiations at West Coast ports have cost the Washington apple industry "millions of doloff100to 200peopleorreduced lars a week" in orders. Sales to Asia, India, the Middle East and Caribbean have been impacted since hours because they're not mov- the first of the month.
DIRECTIONRWestonSkyliners Rd., right on NWLemhi PassDr., riglrt onNWDrouil-
lard Ave.
ing inventory at the rate they
2433 NWDroulllard Ave.
planned to," he said. "It hurts and continues to the prior year and 20 percent hurt. We need to more than the record crop of Related find a s o lution. 2012. • How It's having a huge About 20 percent of the crop, A laska im p act," sa i d 32.4 million boxes, had been
a "full standstill;" now they're
Mathews said. "I don't have any hope it will functioning but with smaller crews, said T.J. Rogers, an ex- come back soon. It probably port salesman for Chelan Fresh will be this way all year. Unless Marketing. Shipments are growers have a pretty diverse
has fared, Todd Fryhover, B6 president of the Washington Apple Commission in Wenatchee. Negotiations between long-
sold as of Sunday, which is
down 60 percent to 70 percent,
portfolio of varieties, it will be
commensurate with the sales rate in 2012, DeVaney said. Of the 32.4 million, 22.4 million is domestic and 9.9 mil-
he said. Chelan Fresh
difficult to make an income,"
70,000 boxes last week when it should be exporting 140,000-
export, have been running 3
shoremen and terminal opera-
lion is for export, Riggan said. plus, Rogers said. Export would be 2 million to 3 With low prices, trucking
million boxes a week, but that's not enough, he said. "At this
apples to Prince Rupert, Brit-
pace we will either throw a lot
ish Columbia, or to the East
of fruit away or not have a market," he said.
tors have been suspended until Tuesdsay, and many industries million greater without the port are urging elected officials problems, he said. and the president to help bring November, December and about a settlement, DeVaney January normally are heavy sLud.
shipment months to Asia forthe
The Washington apple in- Chinese New Year in February. dustry has already seen prices Demand in Asia is strong, but plummet because ofoversup- product can't get shipped. ply. Prices are down 15 percent Each week that's lost is "irreto 20percent from a year ago, trievable," said Keith Mathews, said Tom Riggan, general man- CEO and general manager of ager of Chelan Fresh Market- First Fruits Marketing of Washing in Chelan. ington in Yakima. Shipments The crop was pegged Nov. 1 were 20 percent of capacity, he at 155 million 40-pound boxes. sald. That's 35 percent larger than
Two weeks ago ports were at
5
s
I
DIRECTIONS:WestonSkyliners Rd., right
on NW Lemhi PwsDr., righton NWDtouigard Ave.
e xported Mathews said.
Coast for overseas shipment is cost-prohibitive, he said. A nother r a m i fication i s Asian customers are turning
Shipments, domestic and
All Around Bend 20608 Cougar PeakDr. • • • • •
Bruce Grim, manager of the Washington Apple Growers Marketing Association in
to Europe and elsewhere with quality becoming secondary
Wenatchee, said 3 million boxes per week is good momen-
to getting fruit on their shelves,
tum. Once the industry sorts
Riggan said. out what sizes and grades it Loss of market share isn't al- can't sell, prices will rebound, ways easy to regain. he said. "The only alternative is to Sales toMexico were up put this fruit onto an already 100,000 boxes for the first two depressed domestic market, weeks of November from a which doesn't help at all," year ago, Grim said.
Q
•I
centage rates in crab like this
TriMet victim identified The Associated Press
proached, pushing a bicycle, CLACKAMAS — O r egon and began hitting the side of State Police have identified the the bus with his hands. When the bus pulled away, the man
run over Wednesday evening fell to the ground and was run by the rear wheels of a TriMet over by the rear wheels. He was transit bus.
pronounced dead at the scene.
The Oregonian reports that the victim was Elias French, 60. Lt. Josh Brooks said troopers
Brooks said the bus crossed the intersection and stopped. The Oregonian reports that
are investigating the fatal col- the bus driver, 46-year-old Jalision on state Highway 213 in son Wilhelm, has been put the Clackamas area southeast of Portland.
on administrative leave while
the Oregon State Police invesBrooks said the bus was tigates the i ncident, TriMet just getting ready to move af- s pokeswoman Roberta A l t ter a stop when the man ap- stadt said.
Help wanted:Policedog
(predecessorfired for cause) The Associated Press 2-year-old Belgian Malinois
of heights and had a barking problem.Noises would scare him. When he had to jump onto
was supposed to be the ninth
counters in search of drugs he
member of the police force in the Oregon coastal town of
showed too much resistance. He would often bark aggressively rather than go directly to drugs.
C ANNON BEACH —
A
Cannon Beach, but "Cash" just didn't have what it takes.
• Half-acre landscaped lot • Two master suites • Hardwood, granite & tile eSignature appliances • Priced atQ1$,000
815 NW HarmonBlvd.
The Associated Press week, Oregon Dungeness COOS BAY — Oregon's Crab Commission director commercial crab fishing sea- Hugh Link told the Coos Bay son is set to open on time af- World in a story Wednesday. ter encountering delays the The season is set to open past two years. Monday, with testing showBarring unex p ected ing the crab are filled with weather issues, Oregon crab meat. "We haven't seen fill percould begin showing up in
man who died afterhe was
'
20 979 Avery Ln.
DIRECTIONS: Easton SE ReedMarketRd., right onSEFargoLn., rightonSEPerrigan Dr., left onSEAvery Ln.
Crabbing seasonexpected to start on time
next
Master on mainlevel Wxurious appointments Hl>oEhi ™IL 5 Bonus room upstairs Mountain view from patio Priced at5357,$00
DIRECTIONS: Southon BmsierhousRd., left on MarbleMounhinLn., lefton RubyPeak Ln., home sbaightahead.
OREGON COAST
s tores by th e en d o f
• The Commons model home • 1 & 2 BR clustercoltages • Energy-eNcient construction • Landscaped commonarea • Homes priced from5342,$00
eeW
The dog was dismissed from Cash was returned to his the force before seeing any ac- original owner, and the Cantion or gaining any glory. non Beach Police Department Cash was skittish and afraid is searching for a replacement.
in my 11 years that I've been
doing this," Link said. Crab boats can begin dropping gear at8 a.m .today and begin pulling up pots at 9 a.m. Monday. The 73-hour gap marks an increasefrom the old 64-hour presoak period, allowing the season to start during day-
18b II
I• I
DIRECTIONR Fromdowntown Bend, west on NWFranklin Ave.,continueon NW
light hours to improve safety and enforcement efforts.
Rivemide Blvd. 8 NWTumalo Ave., righton
NW Harmon Blvd.
Fishermen and processors
have agreed on an opening price of $3.10 a pound, up 45 cents from lastseason's start. M arket forces wil l d r i v e the price up or down as the
62782 Imbler Dr.
Ij '
, sas.» •
•I
aI
season progresses.
• Gated golf community • Hardwood floors • Slab granite counters • Coffered LR, master ceilings • Bright island kitchen • Six-bumergasrange • Built-in cabinetry • Priced at$41$,$00
Sherwood shooting —Authorities said a domestic dispute in Sherwood ended with two people dead and one injured. Sherwood police said a man fatally shot his girlfriend and injured her sister before turning the gun on himself early Thursday morning. The Oregonian reports that the injured woman escaped from the home and sought help from a neighbor. She is being treated and is expected to survive. Police tried for several hours to make contact with the couple, who lived together in the home, before a SWAT team broke down the back fence with an armored vehicle and entered the home. The manwas found dead inside, his girlfriend outside.
20227 MurphyRd. • Golf courseviews • Remodeled in 201 I • Luxurious finishes • Outdoor living areas • Vaulted ceilings • Hardwood flooring • Granite kitchen counters • Priced at54$$,500
Tree trimmer diSS —A sheriff said a 59-year-old Sweet Home man died after falling about 50 feet while trimming a tree. Linn County Sheriff Bruce Riley said deputies responded Wednesday to a report of a fatal accident. They learned that Raymond Launder had been trimming trees with a friend and was wearing a safety harness. The friend told deputies that Launder had detached the harness to move to a different location in the tree. The friend heard him yell, turned around and found Launder lying on the ground. Sweet Home firsfightsrs pronounced him dead at the scene. The friend described Launder as an excellent tree trimmer, and deputies found no malfunction with the man's equipment.
63109 Turret Ct. • Luxurlous finishes • Wide-plank hardwood • Slab granite counters • Cuslom cabinetry • Mashr on mainlevel •Bonusroom andofice • 0.26 ac. cul-de-sac lot • Priced at53$5,000
State parks discount ending —Oregonstate parks are
— From wimmports
•CascadeMountainview • Mashr on mainlevel • Stainless Dacor appliances • Hardwood & tile flooring • Terraced bluff in rear • Shop areainoversize garage • Priced at5$7$,$00
3081 NWClubhouseDr.
AROUND THESTATE
ending their annual winter discounts on camping fees. The Oregon Parks and Recreation Department said the across-the-board discounts will be replaced by targeted deals starting next year. The 20-year-old "discovery season" program reduced tent and recreational vehicle campsite fees by $4 a night. They will remain in effect through the Bnd of April at all state park campgrounds. The (Medfordj Mail Tribune reports that parking and camping fees provide $21 million of the $48 million it costs to operate state parks each year. The rest comes from a portIon of RV licensing revenue and state lottery proceeds. The parks department said a decline in lottery revenue is part of the reason for eliminating the seasonal discount. Officials estimate the change will generate $400,000 to $500,000 in additional yearly revenue.
• Near Mirror Pond,parks • Two mastersuites • Outdoor living areas • Hardwood floors • Priced at 5$25,000
The Garner Group Real Estat
0 Nor of the ye,r •
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hat makes people nervous about the state pushing Bend toward more infill development is what that might look like and what it will do for Bend's livability. u
Bend's Planning Commission got a preview Monday night of just such a project. If it comes off as planned, it should relieve some of that nervousness, though the city's code mayneed some tweaking. The project is called Base Camp. It's a set of 25 townhomes, each with a small apartment or "accessory dwelling unit" on the ground floor. It will be located on 1.7 acres of property that is Bend's version of blight. It's that eyesore nestled between Industrial Way, Arizona Avenue and Wall Street, across from the brownstone-style Mill Quarter townhomes. Base Camp's design has a number of refreshing things about it. It is not a solid wall of buildings. It's broken up. There are gaps between the units in places. There's also alternating variability in the design: Some have decks facing the street, and others do not. Base Camp doesn't mimic the look of the Mill Quarter townhomes, which may disappoint some, but it has its own
appealing mix of wood and glass. The residents of the Mill Quartertownhomes should be pleased, because they still should have
mountain views. They also now know what their new neighbor will be. In fact, the only testimony Monday night from residents of the Mill Quarter townhomes was highly supportive. One issuethat may be problematic is parking. Each unit comes with atwo-car garage and has two additional spaces on the driveway in front of the garage. That should be more than enough for most residents. But if the small apartment in a unit is rented out and that individual has a car, it could create problems by blocking a car in the garage. A landlord might be tempted to tell a renter that he cannot block the driveway.There are a handful of spots for street parking in the immediate area. The city's affordable housing committee has encouraged the Bend City Council to support adding more accessory dwelling units — even to existing properties. If the city is going to do so, it needs to ensure that the parking needs of the added units are met without causing problems in the neighborhood.
Problem ballots are a factor in GMOrecount
T
heymaynotbe aware of it, but more than9,000 Oregonians lost their say in the November election because of some problem with their ballots. Most often, the signature on the ballot did not match the signature on file at the county derk's office. That's down from the original number of uncounted ballots, about 13,000 shortly after the election this month. Secretary of State Kate Brown madethenames on problem ballots public for the first time, and about 4,000 on that list took the time togo in andmake theirvotes count. The4,000ballots countedlatelikely did make a difference. The Secretary of State's office will be required to recount votes cast on Measure 92, which would require labels on geneticaliy engineered food products sold
gin between winners and losers has narrowed fmm an early postelection-night gap of more than 10,000 to 809votes out of more than 1.5 million cast. That's well within the 0.02 percent difference at which a recount become automatic. Clearly much of the shift came in ballots that did not have problems but were not counted election night, parlicularly in Multnomah and Lane counties. But something else happened,as well.Backers of Measure 92 really pulled out the stops to get likely supporters to fix their ballot problems,once names of those who had cast problem ballots became
K5 N68X57ll%5
t
bank boxes at least once a month, while shelters and other meal pro-
churches and several other organizations — about 300 volunteers — to
viders hand out nearly 4 million meals to all ages each year.
dish up dinner three nights a week (Tuesday, Thursday and Friday),
!i
/
By Morris B. Hoffman
arediscrete aspects of the systemthat are driving sentence lengths too high, ne of the common and in- and that may even be the principal creasingly popular critiques culprits in the "mass" part of mass of the American criminal incarceration. In fact, there is a large justice system is that it "mass incar- body of criminological research that cerates" our citizens. This critique shows that a handful of criminal law often drips with accusations of rac- doctrines — including three-strikes ism. A recent book called mass in- laws and mandatory minima for simcarceration the "new Jim Crow." But ple drug possession — drive sentencthis idea that teeming racists have es substantially higher than the averhijacked our criminal justice system age citizen believes is just. These are is nonsense and threatens to inter- also the kinds of sentences that are fere with meaningful reform. jacking up imprisonment rates. ElimI don't sentence groups of people to inating these overly harsh doctrines prison; I sentence individuals. I don't would go a long way toward solving sentence people to prison for being the problem of exploding prison popin certain groups; I sentence them ulations, without conflicting with our because they committed crimes. deepest notions of what is and is not The disparate impact that the crimi- just punishment. nal law has on some socio-economic But cries to reformthe waywe sengroups is a stark reality that requires tence violent offenders — eliminating some honest reflection — not just life sentencesforfirst-degreemurder, as to whether, and where, the sys- for example — would not only not tem may be skewed against certain put any significant dent in the "mass" groups, but also whether, and why, part of mass incarceration, but many those groups may be committing cer- would also be dangerous rejections tain kinds of crimes at higher rates of our shared notions of what is just. than other groups. But disparate imPunishment is so deeply ingrained pact is not proof of racism, any more in all of us — probably a remnant of than it is proof of group criminality. our evolution in small groups — that One of the hidden truths of the every human society that has left a criminal justice system is that most record has left evidence that it punjudges, including me, give most crim- ished its wrongdoers. inalschance afterchance on probaWe can, and should, argue about tion before we pull the plug and sen- whether there are too many Ameritence them to prison. There are, of cans in prisons, but the positions we course, important exceptions, indud- take on that issue should not be driving mandatory sentences for violent en by misguided feelings that punishcrimes and for some drug crimes. But ment is wrong, that only backward we sentence most felons to probation, societies punish their wrongdoers, andmost of themthen seriallyviolate and therefore that all types of prison their probation until, finally, we send sentences should drastically be cut them to prison. back. Tribune News Service
O
Still, the critics are right that there
failed to make the same effort. The law making public the list of those who cast problem ballots was passed by the Legislature last year, in Oregon. and itappears it's ahmdy had an State law requires such a recount, impact, and a pretty substantial one and with good reason. Shortly after at that. We suspect — hope — voters the election, votes against the mea- will check the public lists of problem slne were about 1.2 percent ahead ballots routinely in years to come, of votes for it. But while the final even without the nudge from supoutcome hasnot changed, the mar- porters ofcausesorcandidates.
f you believe you're still suffering from yesterday's tryptophan-laced turkey, think again. As one scienJANET tist noted recently, turkey contains STEVENS less of the enzyme than does cheddar cheese. No, what made you sleepy after your Thanksgiving feast was not the tryptophan but the whole, huge In the latter group is Bend's FamThanksgiving meal. Overeating does, ily Kitchen, an ecumenical effort in fact, make you sleepy. to feed the community's hungry Be thankful you could afford to now in its 28th year. The first day it eat that much. For about 15 percent opened at Trinity Episcopal Church of Oregonians, including far too — which I attend — in 1986, no one many children, food insecurityshowed up to eat. By the end of the the lack of assurance there will be year, it was serving between 40 adequate food on the table when it's and 50 peopleat its once-a-week needed — is an unhappy fact of life, sit-down dinners. This year it will and the Thanksgiving eat-a-thon a serve about 60,000 meals, including mere dream or memory. about 15,000 to children under the Among that 15 percent, the Orage of 18. egon Food Bank says, are some Today it takes the combined ef92,000 children who eat from food forts of members of at least 12 local
/
High prison rate may not be bad
public. Opponents of the measure
T in o t osew
~//
0
Politicians will not heed calls to
reducesentences for serious crimes such as murder, rape and aggravated robbery, because ordinary citizens in fact do not support such reductions.
Even less violent crimes, such as burglary or theft, often deserve prison sentences, because they tear the social fabric more broadly, even if not as deeply, simply because they are more frequent. The rule of law, just like any rule, needs the deterrent bite of punish-
ment to be effective. In fact, maybe high incarceration rates are not entirely something about which societ-
ies should automaticallybe ashamed. Part of the reason for relatively high incarceration rates in Western societ-
ies is that those societies tend to have functioning governments that take the rule of law seriously.
Almost no one disagrees that our Americanrate of 700 prisoners per 100,000 is unacceptably high, and that that high rate is largely drivenby our drug laws and by some of these discrete sentencing doctrines such
as mandatory minima sentences and three strikes. But in our zeal to
reform our system, the goal should not simplybe to reduce the number of prison sentences we impose.
Instead, we should be asking how to reduce the number of unjust prison sentences. Asking that question
may lead us to targeted reforms that go a long way toward reducing the number of days Americans spend in prison, without doing violence to our
intuitions of just punishment and our commitment to the rule of law. — Morris B. Hoffmanis a state trialjudge in Denver and the author of "The Punisher's Brain: The Evolution of Judge and Jury."
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ave itteto eat t
lunch on Monday,Wednesday, FriUnfortunately, that meal is heavy day and Saturday and sack lunch- on salt and fat, and fresh fruits and es for Central Oregon Veterans vegetables are nonexistent. Outreach on Tuesday. Those latter A Family Kitchen meal, by conmeals are distributed to the area's trast, is generally higher in both homeless camps. protein and vitamins and virtually For at least some of its guests, always includes a salad. Your chilFamily Kitchen's meals are an al- dren are welcome, and the food ternative to the only other really is both nutritious and free. It also inexpensive places to eat in Central comes without proselytizing. Oregon: fast-food restaurants. One Your two-cheeseburger meal will sad truth about food insecurity is contain at least 810 calories, a whopthat McDonald's, Burger King and ping 1,500 milligrams of sodium othersare popular in part because and 33 grams of fat. they're cheap. At Family Kitchen, dinner might A woman with t hree children be barbecuedchicken thighs, colecan feed the entire family for about slaw, baked beans and cornbread, $22 at McDonald's, with more than 866 calories, 25 grams of fat and enough food — two cheeseburgers, 1,110 mg of sodium. In a ddition, fries and a drink per person — to fill you'll get 100 percent of your daily every belly. vitamins C and A, and you elimiIf you, like she, have worked all nate 55 grams of sugar. Plus, there's day and know nottoo much about frequently free bread, donated by loeither cooking or nutrition, it sounds cal businesses, to take home. likea very good deal,indeed, and B end Family K i tchen isn't t h e your kids will love it. only agency helping feed those in
Please address your submission to either My Nickel's Worth or In My View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin. Email submissions are preferred. Email: lelters©bendbulletin.com Write: My Nickel's Worth / In MyView P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804
i s year need inCentral Oregon, of course. Neighborlmpact supplies food to 40 sites in the region, and food box-
es and bags are available in all the region's larger cities, as are brownbag programs. Even with the food banks and donations, Bend Family Kitchen and similar charitable efforts need
money, and not just during the holidays. This year the kitchen will have spent about $80,000 on food,
up from less than $40,000 in 2010. That's partly because food costsare going up, partly because demand is rising, as well. This is the season not only of tryptophan, but also of cookies and rich
drinks and all sorts of good things. Don't skimp, if you don't want to. But do keep in mind the need to feed
those of our neighbors who cannot always feed themselves. — Janet Stevens is deputy editor of The Bulletin. Contact: 541-617-7821, jstevens@bendbulletin.com
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014• THE BULLETIN
B5
BITUARIES FEATURED OBITUARY
T e' ueeno Crime'eevate the status o themystep novel Photos by Meg Roussos /The Bulletin
Sandy Humphreys, 57, shares a Thanksgiving Day meal with her mother, Ellen Humphreys, 96, at
Bend's Community Center. Ellen Humphreys said shewas enjoying the meal and that dessert was her favorite part.
Thanksgiving Continued from 61 Sandy Humphreys, 57, of Bend, brought her mother,
Ellen, 96, to the meal. "It's a great place, and she can meet other people her own age," Humphreys said, referring to the cen-
"It's a great place, and she can meet other people her own age. There's always a really good feeling of giving and cheer here, and I"m just really grateful for it." — Sandy Humphreys, above left, about her mother, above right
"I'm trying hard not to
Linda Heatley, the center's
look at the pies," he said.
executive director, said the center used to host its annual
she told the British critic and writer Julian Symons in 1986,
She went to work for the ¹ tional Health Service and at-
ter's senior meals program. "There's always a really good feeling of giving and cheer here, and I'm just really grateful for it." Ellen said she was enjoying the meal and said the dessert was herfavorite part. Distributing dollops of whipped cream for the pies — berry, pumpkin and apple
Phyllis D orothy J ames was to create a detective "quite White, who became Baron- unlike the Lord Peter Wimsey ess James of Holland Park in kind of gentlemanly amateur" 1991 but was better known as popularized by Sayers. James the "Queen of Crime" for the envisioned a realistic cop as her multilayered mystery novels protagonist, a dedicated and she wrote as P.D. James, died skilled professional — and yet Thursday at her home in Ox- "something more than just a ford, England. She was 94. policeman, you see, a complex James' death w a s an- and sensitive humanbeing." In "An Unsuitable Job for a nounced by her publisher in Britain, Faber & Faber. Woman" (1972), James introJames was one of those rare duced Cordelia Gray, a young authors whose work stood up private investigator whose proto the inevitable and usually fessional competence and ininvidious comparisons with dependent spirit put her in the dassic authors of the detec- vanguard of an emerging gentive genre, including Agatha eration of female sleuths. Christie, Dorothy L . S ayers James' forthright portrayand Margery Allingham. A al of a strong, free and highly consummate stylist, she accu- intelligent young woman de-
tended night classes in hospital
— was David Morman, 58, a
of his oversized hat. "Cran-
administration. It took her three years to write her first mystery novel,
volunteer from Bend.
berry sauce is my favorite."
Ruth Fremson /The New York Times
Phyllis Dorothy James White, better known as the acclaimed mystery novelist P.D. James, aboard the Queen Mary 2 in New York in 2010. White, known as the "Queen of Crime" for her complex, psychologically dense mystery novels, died at home in Oxford, England, on Thursday. She was 94.
By Marilyn Stasio New York Times News Service
"Cover Her Face," by working in the early morning, hours before going to her hospital job. She was 42 when it was pub-
lished in Britain in 1962. After the death of her husband at 44 in 1964, James took a civil service examination and
Sprightly running around the tables refilling coffee was feast on the Sunday after, but volunteer Christian Fabela,
"It wasn't the same as having
8, a second-grader from Jewell Elementary School. "I love Thanksgiving because there's so, so much food," Christian said, sunglasses resting on the brim
it on Thanksgiving." "It's a place open to the public to gather and meet
friends," she said. "It just means a lot to have a special place to go." — Reporter: 541-633-2160, tleeds@bendbulletin.corn
tl I'trtstse; Qe srrravtj
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became an administrator in the forensic science and criminal law divisions of the Depart-
. L.
ment of Home Affairs, a career that supplied her novels with the realistic procedural detail
onwhich she pridedherself. Although she rarely describedactualmurder, the dead
bodies in her novels always the 13 crime novels produced made an indelible impression during a writing career span- — andthe author's. on the charladies, small boys "Perhaps Adam Dalgliesh and otherinnocentbystanders ning a half-century. Seven of her mysteries were adapted for is an idealized version of what who chanced upon them. "Tomanyofthem, it's areally the public television program I'd have liked to be if I had been "Mystery!" and were broad- born a man," she said. appalling and dreadful discovmulated numerous awards for
cast in Britain and the United States. James bristled at the fre-
lighted her readers. But it was Dalgliesh who won their hearts
Phyllis Dorothy James was
ery," the author said. "I think
born Aug. 3, 1920, in Oxford, that the reader should share the eldest of three children of that horror and that shock, so quent comparisons to genre Dorothy and Sidney James, a I make the descriptions just as authors who wrote during the civil servant who did not be- realistic as I can." golden age of the English mys- lieve in inflicting too much edHer novel "Innocent Blood," tery novel in the 1930s. ucation on his daughter. The appearing in 1980, was consid"That kind of crime writ- family settled in Cambridge ered her breakthrough book ing was dull," she said, "in the when she was 11, and before in Britain and North America. sense that it was unrealistic, she left the Cambridge High Since then, her novels have prettifying and romanticizing School for Girls, at 16, she al- sold more than 10 million copmurder, but having little to do ready knew that she wanted to iesin America alone and have with real blood-and-guts trag- be a writer and that mysterious been translated into m a ny edy. One simply cannot take death intrigued her. languages. "When I f i rst heard that these as realistic books about Her last novel, "Death Comes murder, about the horror of Humpty Dumpty fell off the to Pemberley" (2011), is a sequel murder, the tragedy of murder, wall," she was fond of saying, and homage to Jane Austen's "I immediately wondered: Did "Pride and Prejudice." It was the harm that murder does." Many critics and many ofher he fall — or was he pushed?" adapted for a television minisepeers have said that by virtue of But an early marriage to Ernest ries in Britain in 2013. the complexity of her plots, the C.B. White, a medical student, James is survived by her psychological density of her and the outbreak of World War daughters Clare and Jane as characters and the moral con- II halted her plans for a writing well as several grandchildren text in which she viewed crim- career. and great-grandchildren. inal violence, James surpassed James gave birth to the first For all her fidelity in depicther dassic models and elevated of her two daughters in 1942, ing the dark side of human nathe literary status of the mod- during a bombing blitz. She ture, James took no joy in the ern detective novel. She is of- served as a Red Cross nurse chaos of criminality. "I think I'm very frightened ten cited, in particular, for the during the war. When her huscerebral depth and emotional band returned from military of violence," she said. "I hate it. sensibilities of Adam Dalgliesh, service with a severe mental And it may be that by writing the introspective Scotland Yard disability, marked by bouts of mysteries I am able, as it were, detective and published poet violence, that kept him virtu- to exorcise this fear, which may who functions as the hero of ally confined to hospitals and verywellbethesame reason so virtually all ofher novels. unable to work, James was many people enjoy reading a Her intention with Dalgliesh, forced to support her family. mystery."
..F,
Christian Fabela, 8, helps clean up during the Thanksgiving Day meal at Bend's Community Center. Christian is a second-grader at Jewell Elementary School.
Spiders
necessarily creeped out by them.
"People should try to exContinued from B1 Andy Eglitis, entomologist hibit more tolerance than for the Deschutes National they do," he said. "... They Forest in Bend, and Thomas are not as menacing or as Shahan, imaging specialist aggressive as people like to for the Oregon Department think." of Agriculture's entomology So, the myth about spilab, are familiar with the inders being aggressive and creasein spider discoveries looking to bite people? "They are actually realduring fall. Entomologists study insects. ly unconcerned about you," Spiders are actually not Eglitis said. "They don't insects — rather they are care....They are just doing arachnids — but entomol- their own thing." ogists often end up fielding He also said it is a myth spider questions. that all spiders should be put The Oregon Department outside if found in a home. "If it w a nted to be outof Agriculture's spider information Web page is sec- doors, that is where it would ond in hits only to the agen- be," he said. cy's home page, Bruce PoMany of thepeople who karney, Department of Ag- come into or call Shahan's riculture spokesman, wrote laboratory wonder whether in an email. the spider they have found is "That is one that people a hobo spider, which has an flock to," he said. undeserved infamous repuGiven a chance to dispel tation in Oregon. "A lot of people are worspider myths, Eglitis emphasized that people get un- ried about them," Shahan
said. Enter another myth: that
hobo spiders are dangerous. While some people even call hobo spiders "aggressive house spiders," Shahan said they are benign, like most spiders in the state.
The black widow spider does have toxic venom and
is found in Central Oregon, but the chances of being bit by one are slim. "Spiders don't bite with-
out direct reason," Shahan said. Such a reason would
be if a person presses down on the spider or traps a spider — if, for example, a spider was in a shoe someone tried to slip onto his foot. Wiederholt, Eglitis and Shahan said the scariest things people have heard about spiders are probably myths. "So Oregon is a g reat place to not worry about spi-
ders," Shahan said. — Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarling@bendbulletin.com
DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around theworld:
Frank Yablans, 79: A former president of Paramount Pictures in t h e
including "The Godfather," phers in France and a founder "Chinatown," "Paper Moon" and "Murder on the Orient Ex-
press." Died Thursday at his
1970s who home in Los Angeles.
of an annual festival in Arles
that has become a mainstay of the art photography world. Died Nov. 15 in Nimes, in the
oversaw the release of severLucien Clergue, 80: One of al groundbreaking pictures, the most acclaimed photogra-
south of France.. — From wire reports
Obituary policy Death Notices are freeandwill be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes.They may be submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. TheBulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of theseservices or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825. Phone: 541-617-7825
Email: obits©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254
Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box 6020
Bend, OR97708
Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Mondaythrough Friday for next-day publication and by4:30 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the seconddayafter submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication,and by9a.m. Monday for Tuesdaypublication. Deadlines for display adsvary; please call for details.
Robin Loznak/ Great Falls Tribune via The Associated Press
A black widow spider walks on a mirror in a garage at a home in Great Falls, Montana. The black widow spider does have toxic venom and is found in Central Oregon, but the chances of being bit
by one are slim.
B6
W EAT H E R
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014
Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather, Inc. ©2014 I
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Yesterday Today Saturday
UV INDEX TODAY 10 a.m. Noon
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Yesterday Today Saturday Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Lo/W
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I-84 at Cabbage Hill: Mostly cloudy todaywith rain at times. Nomajor delays. US 20 at SantiamPass:Mostly cloudy today with occasional rainandareas of fog. US26at Gov't Camp: Mostly cloudy today with periods ofrain andareasof fog. US 26 at Dchoco Divide:Mostly cloudy today; a couple ofshowerscanbring wet travel. DRE 58 atWigamette Pass:Wet travel today with plenty of cloudsandperiods of rain. There can also befog. DRE138 at Diamond Lake: Mostly cloudy today; a couple ofshowers can bring wet travel.
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41/35/pc 53/40/pc 38/26/s 43/36/pc 82/51/s 79/52/pc 30/26/pc 46/41/c 34/12/pc 33/24/pc 36/18/sn 37/29/pc 44/28/s 52/36/s 54/37/pc 54/6/c 62/41/c 53/36/pc 43/27/s 51/36/pc 30/24/c 39/37/c 62/48/c 57/49/sh 50/39/pc 61/51/pc 60/40/pc 57/41/c 70/54/pc 76/63/pc 76/56/s 70/56/s 61/53/c 59/53/r 65/45/pc 59/50/r 59/29/s 60/28/s 54/33/s 63/42/s 52/32/r 36/26/sn 40/25/pc 46/14/pc 50/26/r 27/10/pc 58/44/s 66/55/pc 59/45/s 70/54/s 81/46/s 81/46/s 64/49/s 72/54/pc 41/31/s 49/39/pc 61/37/s 65/36/s 59/30/sh 38/15/pc 83/54/s 80/54/pc
I
48/43/0.38 54/48/0.51 Hnp 337 Auckland 68/57/0.38 National low: -28' ,o o, 54/37 Baghdad 66/54/0.00 hn at Jamestown, ND Cheye 8/af" ' Bangkok 90/79/0.10 50 2 59/39 Precipitation: 1.38" aadelphin eeijing 44/34/0.00 hicng Col mb ines •3 8/26 Beirut 66/55/0.39 at Shelton, WA n n mxco Sn h Lske ny • Den 60/40 40/31 Berlin 40/33/0.00 dt/53 ington In inches ss of 5p.m.yesterday ux ae gm 41 eogots 64/44/0.17 71/ Ski resort New snow Base S t. u' 43/s e Budapest 34/32/0.02 54/42 Buenos Ai r es 82/55/0.00 AnthonyLakes Mtn:est.opening Nov.29 • nxhvil Churlo Los An Isx csbc Ssn Lucss 88/62/0.00 HoodooSkiArea: est, openingDec.1 50/3 0 k."* ' 1/se • L' Cairo 66/57/0.00 phuen Mt.Ashland:est.opening Dec.4 * ~chorngu Albuque ue klnhoma Ci • A' cslgary 24/23/0.43 • 82/81 8 48 '„~ * „ 3 7/2 Mt. Bachelor 0 19-3 0 n 4 61/35 50/34 Cancun 77/72/0.20 O 7 /54 • Daan Mt. Hood Meadows 0 19-21 Hl Pu Dublin 48/28/0.01 ai ingha J e7/S Edinburgh 48/42/0.03 Mt. HoodSki Bowl: esL opening Dec.13 83 32/1 Geneva 52/48/0.04 9-9 Timberline Lodge 0 • rlnndc Hsrsre 88/60/0.00 Wigamette Pass:est. opening Dec.5 w Orleans 8/se 6 45 Hong Kong 76/69/0.15 Honolulu Chihuahua 62/49 Istanbul 46/42/0.00 Aspen/Snowmass,CO 0 t6-28 83/72 .I 71/33 Iyiiami Jerusalem 51/47/0.41 Monte rey Vail, CO 0 28-2 8 70/ike, 7O/4e Johannesburg 72/53/0.60 Mammoth Mtn. Ski, CA 0 14-18 Lima 74/64/0.00 Squaw Valley,CA 0 18-1 8 Lisbon 57/49/0.96 Shown aretoday's noon positions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. ParkCityMountain,UT 0 30-30 London 52/46/0.20 T-storms Rain Showers Snow F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front Sun Valley, ID:est. opening Nov.27 55/43/0.09 Manila 86/78/0.24 Source: OnTheSnow.com
Nationalhigh:93 4u 4u u4u 8~ /m sa" • ~ at Woodland Hills, CA, 4, 4 » • 5~/4
~
TRAVEL WEATHER
OREGON WEATHER
Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows. EAST:Mostly cloudy ria TEMPERATURE / today with a few umatiga Seasid Hood Yesterday Normal Record 59/37 showers. Mostly 53/40 RiVer Rufus • ermiston 54 42 67' i n 1929 cloudy tonight with Cannon lington 62/38 48' 25' -1'in 1993 Portland Meac am Losti ne rain and snow 53/41 7/ 9 • W co 5 38 dle+ n5 0/ 50/ 3 1 Enterprise showers. PRECIPITATION •2 he Daa • 4@31 Tigamo • 61/ 24 hours through 5 p.m.yesterday 0.01 " CENTRAL:Mostly andy • 53/38 Mc innviu 4/37 • 57/38 0.65"in 1910 cloudy, breezyand Joseph Record • He ppner Grande • Gove nt • upi Condon 8/33 54 34 • 54 Month to date (normal) 2.1 5 " (1.20") still mild today with a Lincoln Union 44/ Year to date(normal) 8.56 " (8.97") few showers. Some 55/42 Sale • pray Graniteu Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 29 . 9 3" clouds tonight; a stray 56/ • 6/34 'Baker C Newpo 45/29 shower or flurry. • 54 ~ SUN ANDMOON 4/39 55/40 • Mitch 8 49/32 0am PSh man R6tI I\ WEST:Mostly cloudy 52/32 Today Sat. O TV g8j uu Yach 49/30 • John Sunrise 7:16 a.m. 7: 1 8 a.m. today with occasional 55/43 55/39 • Prineville oey 32 tario Sunset 4:30 p.m. 4: 2 9 p.m. rain. Mostly cloudy 54/31 • Pa lina 51/ 3 4 38 Moonrise 12: 06 p.m. 1 2 :40 p.m. tonight with some Floren e • Eugene ' Se d Brothers Valeu 55/44 Moonset 11: 32 p.m. none additional rain. Su iVeru 5O/30 50/39
MOONPHASES
~
Rain; ice at night
Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday
First
TUESDAY
SKI REPORT
49/35/pc 60/56/sh 66/54/sh 65/44/pc 94/80/I 50/29/s 65/54/pc 36/28/s 69/48/c 35/34/pc 85/70/s 88/61/s 70/55/s
94/79/I 45/34/c 67/56/pc 34/27/pc 69/48/c 38/32/c
87/65/pc 87/61/s 72/56/pc 0/-8/sn 79/69/s 54/44/pc 50/43/sh 55/42/pc 87/62/pc 81/74/r 56/48/pc
9/-9/sn 77/65/s 52/45/pc 50/43/pc 53/41/pc 91/65/pc 81/74/pc 53/48/pc 56/44/pc 57/47/c 78/55/pc 77/56/c 75/65/c 74/65/c 58/49/I 61/52/pc 56/47/pc 55/42/pc 51/44/r 59/49/sh
gom/pc ssm/I
Mcccs Mexico Cn y
90/68/0.00 66/42/0.00 Muntreal 32/28/0.00 Moscow 23/17/0.15 Nairobi 81/63/0.01 Nassau 75/71/O.O4 New Delhi 82/54/0.00 osaks 62/45/0.00 Oslo 28/25/0.20 Ottawa 27/23/0.07 Paris 54/48/0.02 Rio de Janeiro 81/73/0.25 Rome 68/55/0.21 Santiago 81/54/0.00 ssp Paulo 75/68/0.06 Sappcm 49/34/0.03 Seoul 57/32/0.06 Shanghai 67/46/0.02 Singapore SS/77/O. O7 Siockholm 36/29/0.12 Sydney 68/66/0.05 Taipei 76/71/0'.08 Tei Aviv 64/54/0.57 Tokyu 61/48/0.00 Toronto 36/30/0.01 Vancouver 57/51/0.03 Vienna 37/36/0.00 Warsaw 32/31/0.08
89/65/s 68/40/s 30/20/pc 22/16/c 80/60/I 76/68/c 82/55/pc 67/52/pc 42/39/pc 27/15/s 60/41/pc 77/72/r 69/58/sh 79/53/c 75/63/r 46/34/c 52/38/r 63/55/sh 88P6/I 37/28/pc 74/64/s 82/72/pc 68/55/pc 63/59/c 29/21/pc 47/25/r 37/35/pc 30/22/s
93/69/s 72/42/s 31/28/pc 23/1 2/pc 80/61/I 77/7O/s 83/55/pc 68/51/r 42/40/pc 32/27/sn 53/37/pc 78/71/sh 69/59/pc 64/47/r 75/64/c 48/32/sh 56/42/pc 65/60/r 87/77/I 34/29/pc 79/66/s 84/70/s 68/56/c 67/55/r 39/35/sf 32/21/s 38/35/c 27/20/pc
WEST NEWS
WeSt COaStPOrtSOW OWn By Coral Garnick
tive operations are in terms of
The Seattle Times
groceries." The ILWU has been in con-
TACOMA, Wash. — 7/trice
a week, ships leave Tacoma bound for Alaska, carrying everything from food and clothing, to Xboxes and con-
tract negotiations since May with the Pacific Maritime As-
sociation, which represents terminal operators and ship-
ping lines at 29 West Coast ports. Their previous six-year cent of water-bound goods to agreement expired July l. struction materials. With more than 7 0 p er-
Alaska crossing the Tacoma
Due to t h e
n egotiations,
docks, the slowdown related international container opto ongoing contract negoti- erations at West Coast ports ations could have left stores have been reported as runacross the 49th state bare. ning at about half speed since But u n l ik e i n t ernational Halloween, leaving containimports and exports, Hori- ers of apples, potatoes and zon and Totem Ocean Trailer Christmas trees at risk of goExpress, the primary compa- ing bad, truck drivers out of nies that ship to Alaska, have work and goods destined for not missed a sailing. holiday shoppers stuck. " TOTE and H o rizon ar e Ed Fitzgerald, CEO of Pathe lifeline and bloodstream cific Alaska Freightways, to Alaska," said Dean Mc- ships 100 to 150 containers Grath, president of International Longshore and Warehouse Union Local 23. "We understand how time-sensi-
problems. Fred Meyer, which has
es are not PM A
ll locations in Alaska, uses TOTE almost exclusively to
and arenot loaded by ILWU members, they also have
Because these business-
ship product north and has
kerk, assistant store manager tract negotiations.
m e mbers for Super Bear Supermarket
avoided the slowdown. "We've been getting our not seen any impact at those l ocations f r o m t h e s l o w - shipments on time, and somedowns in Tacoma, company times early," said John Ouderspokeswoman Melinda Mer-
In 2002, when the PMA
in Juneau, which ships goods locked the union members with Samson. "Our shelves out of the port for 12 days, are full," he said. I LWU c o ntinued t o w o r k T his isn't th e f i r st t i m e AlaSka has aVOided getting stuck in the middle of con-
with TOTE to move containers to Alaska, McGrath from Local 23 said.
rill said. "You've got to be a few weeks ahead of everyone d own in t h e L o wer 4 8 i n
terms of ordering," said Stephen Longnecker, store director for one of the Anchor-
age Fred Meyer locations. "Logistically there are challenges with shipping at times, but right now we are not seeing that." While the majority of Alaska-bound cargo is shipped with T OT E
a n d H o r i zon,
than some traffic delays at
some is barged out of the Port of Seattle with companies
the Port of Tacoma, he said
such as Alaska Marine Lines
the company hasn't had any
and Samson Tug and Barge.
to Alaska a week, and other
eaVeSAaS aLI nSCat e
Californiaseesrecord-breaking P Thanksgiving temperatures The Associated Press
Los Angeles had a high of 86 — one degree hotter than
SAN DIEGO — While the East and Midwest shivered,
the 1977 record.
Thanksgiving was h o tter than a roasting turkey in California as a high-pressure ridge caused record-breaking highs in several cities. The
Palomar Mountain and Lake
Cuyamaca. In Phoenix, Arizona, tem-
Santa Ana's 90 toppled a
peratures reached 87 de1922 reCOrdof 86. RiVerside'S grees, tying Nov. 23, 1950, 91 beat the 89 set in 1945, for the warmest Thanksgivand Escondido's 89 broke the ing on record, according to 1945 record of 86. Records also were tied or
N a t i onal We a t her
Service says San Diego's Lindbergh Field hit 85 degrees Thursday, breaking a 111-year-old record by two degrees.
broken in downtown Oakland, Paso Robles, Santa Ma-
ria, Sandberg, the Salinas airport, Oceanside, Vista, El Cajon, Alpine, Big Bear,
12 News meteorologist Matt
Pace, the Arizona Republic reported. Sea breezes should start
returning today, dropping temperatures through the
iimbermens I NSUR A N C E
AND
R ISK S O L U T I O N S
weekend.
We offer a wide array of auto insurance coverages and companies. We'll review your options and find the combination that's right for you.
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Call uS fOr a diuOte at (541) 382-2421, or visit us at our new offices in downtown Bend's FranMin Crossing.
IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 College basketball, C3 Sports in brief, C2 Golf, C4 Skiing, C3 NHL, C4 NBA, C3 NFL, C5 THE BULLETIN •FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014
O
OLYMPICS
ww w .bendbulletin.com/sports
COLLEGE FOOTBALL: CIVIL WAR
U.S. urged to keep price down COLORADO SPRINGS,Colo. — The magic number for the U.S. cities hoping to host the 2024Olympics is $5 billion. Boston, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Washington haveall submitted spending plans under that mark for their bids to host the Olympics. Keeping the price tag down is akey goal of any future Olympic bid. TheU.S.Olympic Committee is less than two months awayfrom deciding which city, if any, it will back asa candidate for the 2024
After Aamo Bow, Ducks' season hasLoneStar roots By Ryan Thorburn
the returning players wanted to
The (Eugene) Register-Guard
experience again this year. So after the holiday break, vet-
EUGENE — The Ducks have not forgotten the Alamo Bowl.
Oregon's 30-7 victory over Texas last Dec. 30 provided retiring
eran players made a commitment to lead the talented 2014 Ducks to
greater heights.
defensive coordinator Nick Aliot-
"It started from the Alamo
ti with a more gratifying send-off than longtime Longhorns head
Bowl against Texas," senior center Hroniss Grasu said last
coach Mack Brown had in San Antonio.
Saturday after third-ranked
But after the UO program had
Oregon improved to 10-1 with a 44-10 victory over Colorado.
appeared in four consecutive BCS
"The very next week we all sat
bowl games under Chip Kelly, including a national championship game,competing in aDecember bowl game was not something
down and talked about our goals
Games. The International Olympic Committee has put an emphasis on staying awayfrom skyrocketing spending. It's an especially touchy subject in the United States, where, unlike most countries, the federal government does not help bankroll the Olympics. None of the cities are offering specifics about their budgets, though all are coming in between $4 billion and $5 billion. Thosenumbersalmost always grow after the Olympics are awarded. The preliminary budgets also don't include infrastructure improvements — airport expansions, highways, railways and
Civil War No. 3 Oregonat Oregon State When:5 p.m., Saturday TV:ABCRadio: KBND 1110AM, 100.1-FM; KICE 940-AM;
KRCO690-AM, 96.9-FM
Can Beaversadd to the Giant Killers mystique? By Anne M. Peterson
of juice, a lot of intensity, and we
The Associated Press
have to be prepared for that,"
CORVALLIS — Going back to
the "Giant Killers" football team of 1967, Oregon State has built a
But first a little history: In 1967,
reputation on pulling off big upsets at home.
the Beavers beat top-ranked USC
This season, the Beavers toppled No. 7Arizona State at Reser
3-0 on Nov. 11 at what was then known as Parker Stadium. Ore-
gon State's defense withstood the
Stadium, adding to the mystique.
nation's top rusher, O.J. Simpson,
The team will get another chance
and his 188 yards. Oregon State, which also
on Saturday when its hosts No. 3 Oregon in the annual Civil War rivalry game. "We understand that Oregon State's going to come out and
and talkedabout what we needed to do to achieve those goals. SeeDucks /C5
Ducks quarterback Marcus Mariota said.
knocked off No. 2 Purdue that season to earn the Giant Killers nickname, finished with a 7-2-1 record.
SeeBeavers/C5
play with a lot of fire, with a lot
THANKSGIVING RUNS d Q tt t tt,:
the like — that often
make the overall budget skyrocket. "We've strongly encouraged eachof the cities to makesure that whatever newinfrastructure is needed in connection with the Games is part of the long-term plan for the city even if they don't host the Olympics," USOCCEOScott Blackmun told TheAssociated Press. Russia's total bill has been widely reported as $51 billion for the Sochi Games andChina spent around $40 billion for the 2008 Olympics. Those numbers arepart of the reason cities have grown more reluctant to get involved. The2022 Winter Olympics has just two candidates, China and Kazakhstan.
Above left,
runners start the I Like Pie Run in downtown Bend.
Above right, pies line the tables for the runners at
the conclusion of their runs. Left, Amy Tinderholt
(left) and Amy Racki, both of Bend, run through Drake Park on Thurs-
dny. Photos by Meg Russos/ The Bulletin
— The Associated Press
NFL
unners and walkers braved rain and wind Thursday morning all in the name of pie and community support. More than 1,000 participants took part in Bend's I Like Pie Run, which raised money for NeighborImpact. Most involved did a 5,000-meter trek that took participants around Mirror Pound and then along the First Street Rapids Trail. The untimed run, which also sponsored distances of 2,000 and 10,000 Seattle running back Marshawn Lynch runs
meters, also served as a food drive, as those involved were asked to bring at least five cans of non-perishable
against San Francisco Thursday.
food. Coffee, hot chocolate and just about any kind of pie imaginable awaited runners and walkers at the finish
Defense leads 'Hawks over49ers
line. The race started and finished at downtown Bend's Riverfront Plaza, just outside of Crow's Feet Commons.
Seattle takesa19-3 win over SanFrancisco, CS Lions Bears
3 17
GOLF COMMENTARY
Eag es Cowboys
3 10
An excusivecuba pioneer canbeproud of
er Charlie Sifford, 92, received the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President
By William C. Rhoden
Barack Obama on Monday.
1
49ers
3
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Former PGAgolf-
nation's highest civilian honor. New York Times News Service There wasStevieWonder close WASHINGTONemotion. by, Meryl Streep behind him, Isharlie Sifford is a man of On Monday, Sifford, 92, a retired abel Allende and Ethel Kennedy few words. But this week, he golfer, allowed himself to smile. down the row to his right. All had
ijCLA falls to ijlIIC
CNearly.
The TarHeelsbeat the Bruins 78-56,C3
Decades of fighting, breaking barriers and enduring the slings
was nearly moved to tears.
and arrows of discrimination can build an immunity to displays of
And why not?
contributed to the nation's cultur-
He was among an illustrious group of 18 recipients of the Pres-
al richness. Sifford had broken
idential Medal of Freedom, the
barriers. SeeSifford /C4
f" .
s
Mark Duncan/The As s ociated Press
C2
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014
ON THE AIR
COREBOARD
TODAY SOCCER England, West Bromwich Albion vs Arsenal
Time T V/Radio 4:45 a.m. NBCSN
PREPS
FOOTBALL
College, Northern lllinois at Western Michigan College, Nebraska at lowa College, Central Florida at South Florida College, Western Kentucky at Marshall College, Arkansas at Missouri College, Stanford at UCLA College, Arizona State at Arizona College, Virginia at Virginia Tech College, EastCarolina atTulsa
8 a.m. E S PNU 9 a.m. ABC 9 a.m. E S PN2 9 a.m. FS1 11:30 a.m. CBS 12:30 p.m. ABC 1 2:30 p.m. F o x 5 p.m. ESP N 5:30 p.m. ESPNU
BASKETBALL
Men's college, Tennesseevs. Kansas 9 a.m. ESPN Men's college, Butler vs. Georgetown 11 a.m. ESPN Men's college, SantaClaravs. Rhode Island 11:30 a.m. ESPNU Men's college, Prairie ViewA&Mvs. Brown 11:30a.m. FS1 Men's college, UTEP vs. Xavier 12:30 p.m ESPN2 Men's college,Oklahoma vs.W isconsin 1 p.m. ESPN Pac-12 Women's college,NebraskaatUCLA 1 p.m. Men's college, Yale atProvidence 1 p.m. FS1 Men's college, JamesMadison at Ohio State 1 p.m. Big Ten Men's college, Minnesota vs. Georgia 1:30 p.m. ESPNU Men's college, Rider vs. GeorgiaTech 3:30 p.m. ESPNU Men's college,St.John'svs.Gonzaga 4 p.m. ESPN2 Men's college, Rutgers vs. Vanderbilt 4 p.m. NBCSN Men's college, Monmouth at Maryland 4 p.m. Big Ten Men's college, SF Austin vs. Austin Peay 5 p.m. FS1 Men's college, Michigan State vs. Marquette 6 p.m. ESPN2 Men's college, N.Carolina-Greensboro at Indiana6 p.m. Big Ten Men's college, North Texas atArkansas 6 p.m. SEC Men's college, LaSalle vs. Virginia 6:30 p.m. NBCSN NBA, Memphis at Portland 7 p.m. CSNNW, KBND 1110-AM, 100.1-FM; KRCO 690-AM , 96.9-FM Men's college, North Dakota at Utah Pac-12 7 p.m. Men's college,Long BeachStatevs.Washington 8:30 p.m. ESPN2 HOCKEY
NHL, NewYork Rangers at Philadelphia
10 a.m.
NBC
VOI.LEYBALL
Women's college, Colorado at Utah 11 a.m. P ac-12 Women's college, Stanford at California 3 p.m. P a c-12 Women's college, Oregon atOregonState 3 p.m. Pac-12 (Ore.) Women's college, Washington at Washington St.5 p.m. P a c-12
Goi.F Emirates Australian Open
5 p.m.
Golf
SATURDAY SOCCER England, Manchester United vs. Hull City England, Sunderland vs. Chelsea MLS, NewYorkat New England Australian, Wellington vs. Melbourne City
7 a.m. N B CSN 9 :30 a.m. N B C noon NB C SN 8 p.m. FS2
FOOTBALL
College, Michigan at OhioState College, South Carolina at Clemson College, Kentucky at Louisville College, lllinois at Northwestern College, Cincinnati at Temple College, West Virginia at lowa State College, Purdue at Indiana College, GeorgiaTechat Georgia College, Utah atColorado College, Grambling State vs. Southern College, Wyoming at NewMexico College, TexasTechat Baylor College, Mississippi State at Mississippi College, Notre Dameat USC College, Florida at Florida State College, Michigan State at PennState College, Rutgers at Maryland College, Minnesota at Wisconsin College, Connecticut at Memphis College, Kansas atKansasState College, Tennessee atVanderbilt College, BYU at California College, Pittsburgh at Miami College, WakeForest at Duke College, Auburn at Alabama College, Oregon atOregonState College, Utah State at BoiseState College, Nevadaat UNLV High School, Newport vs. Bothell College, Washington at Washington State
7:30 p.m. ESPNU 7:30 p.m. R o ot 7 :30 p.m FS 1
BASKETBALL
Men's college, NewMexico State at Wyoming Men's college, BarclaysClassic, TeamsTBD Men's college, AlabamaState at Utah Men's College, Barclays Classic, TeamsTBD
3:30 p.m. Root 4 p.m. NBCSN 6 p.m. Pac-12 6:30 p.m. NBCSN
GOLF
Emirates Australian Open
5 p.m.
Golf
VOI.LEYBALL
Women's college, Nebraska atPennState
Football playoffs All TimesPST
Class 6A Semifinals at Hillsboro Stadium
Today'sGames No. 4Sheldonvs. No.1 Central Catholic, 5 p.m. No.11WestSalemvs. No. 2Tigard, noon Championship atHilsboroStadium Saturday,Dec.6at1 p.m.
5:30 p.m. Big Ten
Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. The Bulletinis not responsible for late changesmadeby TI/or radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF
— Fivm wire report
TOURNAMEN T Battle 4 Atlantis
Semifinals Oklahoma 59,Butler 46 Wisconsin68,Georgetown65 Consolation Bracket Florida56,UAB47 NorthCarolina78,UCLA56 GCI GreatAlaskaShootout First Round Mercer77,Rice71, DT OrlandoClassic First Round Kansas76, RhodeIsland60 Marquette72,GeorgiaTech70 MichiganSt. 77,Rider45 Tennessee 64, SantaClara57
WoodenLegacy First Round LongBeachSt.73,W.Michigan55 UTEP 62,Princeton 56 Washi ngton78,SanJoseSt.56 Xavier82,SanDiego71
Class 3A Championship atHermistonHigh School Saturday'sgame No.7Valevs.No. 4Harrisburg,2:30p.m. Class 2A Championship atHermistonHigh School
Wo m e n's college
Saturday'sgame No. 3Heppner vs. No.1Burns,11a.m.
Thursday'sGames TOP 25 No. 1SouthCarolina67,Wisconsin44 glinois 77,No.9 Kentucky71 No. 19OregonState 85, Butler 53 No. 22Syracuse69,East Carolina58
Class1A
Championship atHermistonHigh School Saturday'sgame
No. 8Shermanvs. No.2Adrian,6p.m.
FOOTBALL
SOUTH llinois 77,Kentucky71 OhioSt.86,Clemson77 NFL SanDiegoSt. 68,IdahoSt.53 NATIONALFOOTBALLLEAGU SouthFlorida83, Oklahoma68 All TimesPST "Runners to your mark ... Set! ... SOUTHWE ST Montana67,Charlotte 58 AMERICAN CONFERENCE Wait. OK, lane two! Bring me those Princeton72,WakeForest 55 East Washington80,Florida St.68 scissors this very instant!!" W L T P ct PF PA FARWEST 9 2 0 . 8 18357 227 BYU73, BYU-Hawaii 52 6 5 0 . 5 45285 219 OregonSt.85,Butler 53 6 5 0 . 5 45238 207 TOURNAMEN T 2-1 1-1 Saturday 2 9 0 . 1 82177 303 Fumbles-Lost JunkanooJam-Lucaya Penalties-Yards 4 -20 6 - 42 OHIO ST 20 21 51'/~ Michigan South First Round 30:25 29:35 BOSTON CDL 10'/~ 11 41'/~ Syracuse SouthCarolina67, W W L T P ct PF PA Time ofPossession isconsin 44 31/2 67ra Old Dominion FLAATLA NTIC 4 Indianapolis 7 4 0 . 6 36333 256 Syracuse 69 E ast C a rolina58 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS DUKE 19 19 431/2 WakeForest Houston 5 6 0 . 4 55242 226 RUSHING —Philadelphia: McCoy 25-159, Polk Tennessee 16Ht 17 491/2 VANDER BILT Tennesse e 2 9 0 . 1 82192 293 WISCON SIN 12H 14 51H Minnesota Jacksonvile I 10 0 .091161 305 11-49,Sanchez7-28, Sproles1-13, Huff1-7. DalHOCKEY las: Murray 20-73, Dunbar 2-15, Ra n dl e 2-6, Rom o MIAMI-FLA 10 10 Pittsburgh North MARYLAND 8'/t 8'/t 531/2 Rutgers W L T P ct PF PA I-(minos1). NHL PASSING —Philadelphia: Sanchez20-29-0-217. LA TECH 6'/t 7 50/2 Rice 7 3 I .6 82246 234 N. CARO LINA 7'/z 6 69t/t Nc State 7 4 0 . 6 36295 208 Dallas: Romo18-29-2-199. NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE RECEIVING —Philadelphia: Maclin 8-108, If WESTERN 8'/t 8 52'/t fflinois 7 4 0 . 6 36288 263 AU TimesPST 4-51, Cooper4-32, Sproles3-19, Celek INDIANA 3 3 57/t Purdue 7 4 0 . 6 36242 219 J.Matthews 1-7. Dallas: Murray6-40, Bryant 4-73, Beasley APP'CHIAN ST 16 17 65H Idaho West EasternConference 7 57/t TEMPLE W L T P ct PF PA 4-41, Williams2-38, Witten1-8, Randle1-(minos Cincinnati 5 Atlantic Division Texas St 12Ht 13'/~ 62'/~GEORGIAST Denver 8 3 0 .7 2 7332 260 I). GP W L OT Pls GF GA MISSED FIELDGOALS—None. IOWA ST W. Virginia Montreal K ansas Cit y 7 4 0 .63 6 261 195 2 3 16 6 I 33 61 57 ARKANSAS ST 21'/t 23'/t 66'/t NewMexicoSt Tampa SanDiego 7 4 0 . 6 36245 216 Bay 2 3 15 6 2 32 81 63 Uab 4 4 57/t S O MISSDetroit Oakland I 10 0 .091176 285 Lions 34, Bears17 2 2 12 5 5 29 64 54 NEW ME XI C O 4 4 57/t Wyomi n g NATIONAL CONFERENCE Boston 2 3 13 9 I 27 59 57 BOISE ST 9 East 9 55H Utah St Toronto 2 2 11 8 3 25 70 67 Chicago 14 B 3 0 — 1 7 SANDIEG OSTW L T P ct PF PA Detroit S an Jose S t Ottawa 2 1 10 7 4 24 58 56 321 0 10 — 34 3'/t 65'/~ Philadelphia 9 3 0 . 7 50375 285 Washi n gton 4 WASH ST Florida 20 8 6 6 22 42 51 First Ouarler Dallas 8 4 0 . 6 67302 273 23H t 25 80 TexasTech Buffalo 2 2 6 14 2 14 37 72 Chi — Jeffery 10passfromCutler (Gouldkick), B aylor N.Y.Giants 3 8 0 . 2 73233 294 10:33. GEORGIA 13'/t 13 65t/t GeorgiaTech Metropolitan Division Washington 3 8 0 . 2 73217 273 KANSAS ST 27 t/t 28 51'/t Kansas GP W L OT Pls GF GA Det—FG Prater 46,6:51. South NIA 4 4 72'/~ Byo Pittsburgh 2 1 1 5 4 2 32 76 49 Chi — Jeffery6passfromCutler(Gould kick),3:35. CALIFOR W L T P ct PF PA O regon 2 0 20 67 OREGO NST N .Y. Islanders 22 16 6 0 32 72 59 SecondGuarler Atlanta 4 7 0 . 3 64262 281 St 13 t/t 13'/t 451/2 PENN ST Washington 21 9 8 4 22 58 57 Det—C.Johnson 25 passfrom Stafford (Prater Michigan NewOrleans 4 7 0 . 3 64288 286 kick), 12:55. ALABAMA 9'/t 9 531/2 Auburn N.Y.Rangers 21 9 8 4 22 60 62 71/2 52'/~ Carolina 3 7 I . 3 18215 300 FLORIDA ST 10 Florida N ew Jersey 22 9 1 0 3 21 53 63 Det — B el l 1 ron (Prater ki c k), 318. t/t 63t/t TampaBay 2 9 0 . 1 82207 300 Nevada 9 10 UNLV P hiladelphia 21 8 1 0 3 19 59 66 Det—C.Johnson6passfromStaford (Praterkick), North GA SOUTHERN13'/t 14'/t 541/2 Ul-Monroe C arolina 2 1 6 12 3 15 48 63 W L T P ct PF PA :24. CLEMSDN 3H 3H S. Carol ina C olumbus 21 6 1 3 2 14 51 76 Third Ouarter 8 3 0 .7 2 7354 246 FRENSD ST 11 11 60 Hawai i Western Conference Chi — FG Gould35,8:54. 8 4 0 . 6 67231 207 Utah 10 9 57ra COLOR ADO Central Division Fourth Guarler 5 7 0 . 4 17253 337 MEMPHIS 20 21'/t 441/2 Connecti c ut GP W L OT Pls GF GA Det—Bell1ron (Praterkick),1457. 4 7 0 . 3 64202 244 LOUISVILLE 14 13 52'/~ Kentucky Nashville 2 2 15 5 2 32 62 45 Det — FGPrater40,6:16. West Mississi p pi St I 2 491/2 MISSISSIPPI St. Loui s 2 2 14 6 2 30 59 46 A—64,175. W L T P ct PF PA UTEP 4 4 561/2 Mid Tenn St Chicago 2 2 13 8 I 27 66 46 Arizona 9 2 0 . 8 18240 195 UL-Lafayette II 10'/~ 56'/~ TROY Winnipeg 2 4 12 9 3 27 51 54 C hi D e t UT-S.ANTONIO 6 Seattle 8 4 0 . 6 67298 221 First downs 5 40H N. Texas Minnesota 2 1 12 9 0 24 58 48 18 28 SanFrancisco 7 5 0 . 5 83231 244 TotalNetYards U SC 6'/z 7 62'/t N otre Dam e Dallas 22 9 9 4 22 64 74 2 69 47 4 St. Louis 4 7 0 . 3 64209 285 Colorado 2 3 8 10 5 21 59 73 8-13 23-91 Rushes-yards Passing 2 56 38 3 Pacific Division BASKETBALL Thursday'sGames 2 -25 2 - 14 GP W L OT Pls GF GA PuntReturns Detroit 34,Chicago17 1 -24 3 - 65 Anaheim 2 3 1 4 4 5 33 63 56 KickoffReturns Philadelphia 33, Dagas10 NBA 0-0 2-0 V ancouver 22 15 6 I 31 67 61 InterceptionsRet. Seattle19,SanFrancisco 3 Comp-Att-Int 31-48-2 34-45-0 C algary 24 1 4 8 2 30 75 64 N ATIONAL B A S K E T B A L L A SS O CIATION Sunday'sGames 3-24 2-7 L os Angeles 23 12 6 5 29 64 53 Sacked-YardsLost AU TimesPST Tennessee at Houston,10a.m. 6-48.0 3-51.0 San Jose 2 4 1 0 10 4 24 62 66 Punts OaklandatSt. Louis, 10a.m. 0-0 2-1 Arizona 23 9 11 3 21 57 71 Fumbles-Lost EasternConference CarolinaatMinnesota,10 a.m. 5 -41 5 - 38 E dmonton 23 6 1 4 3 15 51 78 Penal t i e s-Yards W L Pd GB Washingtonat Indianapolis, 10a.m. d-Toronto Thursday'sGames Timeof Possession 26:35 33:25 13 2 867 Cleveland atBuffalo,10a.m. d-Washington Nashville I, Edmnoton0, DT 9 5 643 3'/t SanDiegoatBaltimore,10a.m. d-Chicago Today'sGames INOIVIOUAL STATISTICS 9 6 600 4 Nr Y. GiantsatJacksonvile,10 a.m. 563 4'/t N.Y.Rangersat Philadelphia,10 a.m. RUSHING — C h icag o: Ca r ey2-8, Forte 5-6, Cut l e r Milwaukee 9 7 Cincinnati atTampa Bay,10 a.m. I-(minos1).Detroit: Bell23-91. Atlanta 7 6 538 5 ChicagoatAnaheim,I p.m. NewOrleansatPittsburgh,10 a.m. PASSING —Chtcago: Cutler 31-48-2-280. Oe- Miami 8 7 533 5 N.Y.IslandersatWashington, 2p.m. Arizonaat Atlanta, I:05 p.m. troil:Stafford34-45-0-390. Cleveland 7 7 500 5V2 Winnipegat Boston, 4p.m. NewEnglandatGreenBay,I:25p.m. RECEIVING — C h ic ag o: Jeffery 9-71, Bennet t Brookl y n 6 8 429 6'/t Montrealat Bufalo, 4p.m. Denverat KansasCity,5:30p.m. 8-109, Forte6-52, Marshall 6-42, Carey1-7, Perry Indiana 6 9 400 7 Detroit atNewJersey, 4p.m. Monday'sGame I-(minos1). Detroit: C.Johnson11-146,Tate8-89, Orlando 6 11 353 8 Carolinaat Pittsburgh,4p.m. Miami atN.Y.Jets, 5:30p.m. Riddick6-54,Ebron3-23, Bell 2-16,Ross1-31,Fuller Boston 4 8 333 7'/t Vancouverat Columbus,4 p.m. 1-21, Fauri a 1-8, Petti g rew1-2. New York 4 12 250 9'/t Ottawaat Florida, 4:30p.m. Thursday'sSummaries MISSED FIELDGOALS—None. Charlotte 4 12 250 9'/t EdmontonatSt. Louis,5 p.m. Detroit 3 12 200 10 MinnesotaatDallas,5;30 p.m. Seahawks19, 49ers 3 Philadelphia 0 15 000 13
Fourth Quarter Sea —FGHauschka46,10:11. A—70,799.
First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns Interceptions Ret. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-Yards Lost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession
Sea 16 3 79
SF 16 16 4
34-157 18-64 2 22 10 0 4 -29 2 - 12 1 -23 3 - 62 2-6 0-0 15-22-0 16-29-2 4 -14 4 - 21 4-44.5 5- 47.6 3-0 1-1 14-105 3 - 20 35:19 24:41
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-tfeagle: Lynch 20-104, Wilson7-35, Michael3-10, Torbin4-8. SanFrancisco: Gore1028, Hyde 5-19, Kaepernick 3-17. PASSING —Seatlle: Wilson 15-22-0-236. San Francisco:Kaepernick16-29-2-121. RECEIVING —Sealtle: Wiffson4-39, Kearse3-34, Torbin 2-47, Baldwin2-28, Moeaki1-63, Michael 1-12, Lynch1-7, Richardson1-6. San Francisco: Hyde3-38, S.Johnson3-28, Boldin 3-18, Crabtree 3-10, VDavis2-13,Gore1-8,Lloyd1-6. MISSED FIELDGOALS—None.
Philadelphia Dallas
NO. 6 TC!j rampS TeXaS —Trevone Boykin passed for two touchdowns and ran for another, andNo. 6 TCUdominated Texas in a 48-10 victory Thursday night that kept alive its hope of pushing into the College Football Playoff. The win kept the HornedFrogs (10-1, 7-1) in the hunt for their first Big 12 title. The question is whether it was impressive enough to impact the playoff standings, where they sit at No. 5, onespot out of contention for a national championship. The Horned Frogs had animpressive defensive effort, forcing six turnovers, five byTexasquarterback Tyrone Swoopes. Defensive end Terrell Lathan scored the game's first touchdown on a40-yard fumble return. TCUmadeTexas (6-6, 5-4) pay for every mistake. Boykin's10-yard scoring run in the fourth cameafter a muffed punt return. Defensive endJosh Carraway returned an interception for the final touchdown. TCU plays lowa State, the last-place team in the Big 12, to end the regular season onDec. 6. Theplayoff pairings will be announced the next day.
llizIE
Class 4A Championship atHigsboroStadium Saturday's game No.2NorthBendvs.No.TGladstone,5p.m.
Eagles 33, Cowboys10
FOOTBALL
In the Bleachers O 2014 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Ucnck www.gocomrcs.com/inthebreachers
Class 5A Championship atHigsboroStadium Saturday'sgame No. 5Hermiston vs. No.2Silverton,1 p.m.
9 a.m. ABC 9 a.m. ESP N 9 a.m. E S PN2 9 a.m. E S PNU 9 a.m. E S PNN 9 a.m. FS1 9 a.m. B i g Ten 9 a.m. SEC 10 a.m. P ac-12 11:30 a.m. NBC noon Root 12:30 p.m. ABC 12:30 p.m. CBS 1 2:30 p.m. F o x 12:30 p.m. ESPN 12:30 p.m. ESPN2 12:30 p.m. ESPNU 12:30 p.m. Big Ten 1 p.m. E S PNN 1 p.m. FS1 Seatlle 7 6 3 3 — 19 SanFrancisco 0 0 3 0 — 3 1 p.m. SEC First Guarler Sea — T orbi n 13 pa ssfrom Wilson (Hauschkakick) 1:30 p.m. Pac-12 1:29. 4 p.m. E S PN2 SecondQuarter Sea —FGHauschka 21,11;07. 4 p.m. E S PNU Sea —FGHauschka 36,5:40. Third Quarler 4:45 p.m. ESPN Sea—FGHauschka 35,8:05. 5 p.m. ABC SF — FGDawson 40,1:06. 7:15 p.m. ESPN2
FARWES T AustinPeay79, Brown58 llinois 88,IndianaSt.62 StephenF.Austin 73,Prairie View61
IN THE BLEACHERS
14 9 7 3 — 3 3 0 7 3 0 — 10 First Guarler Phi — Sanchez2ron(Parkeykick), 11:55. Phi — J.Mathews 27 passfrom Sanchez (Parkey kick), 4:08. SecondQuarter Dal — Murray1ron (Baileykick),14:56. Phi — FGParkey31,12:10. Phi —FGParkey22, 1:35. Phi — FGParkey26,:21. Third Guarler Dal — FGBailey 28,9:12. Phi — McCoy38 run(Parkeykick), 7:20. Fourth Quarter Phi — FGParkey25, 11:01. A—91,379.
First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards
Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns Interceptions Ret. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-Yards Lost Punts
College
WesternConference
Pac-12 All TimesPST North Conf Overall W L 7 1 4 4 3 5 3 6 2 6 2 6
Oregon
Stanford Washington California OregonSt. WashingtonSt
W 10 6 7 5 5 3
South W L W 6 2 9 6 2 9 6 2 9
ArizonaSt. Arizona UCLA SouthernCal Utah Colorado
L I 5 5 6 6 8
d-Memphis d-Golden State d-Portland Houston P F P A SanAntonio 5 04 260 Dallas 2 7 7 182 L.A. Clippers 3 7 0 304 Phoenix nto 4 2 4 435 Sacrame 2 8 9 332 NewOrleans 3 6 9 432 Denver Utah City P F PA Oklahoma 4 0 9 290 Minnesota 3 9 8 271 LA. Lakers 3 8 5 299 d-divisionleader
L 2 2 2 7 4 3 7 2 271 Thursday'sGames 7 4 3 2 4 280 scheduled 2 9 3 0 8 430 No games
6 3 4 4 0 8
NFL
(Home teamsin Caps)
Favorite Open Current 0/U Underdog Sunday 9'/t 9t/t 51 Wa shington COLTS
RAMS STEELE RS VIKINGS Cardinals PACKE RS
Broncos
643 3'/t 625 3'/t
600 4 538 5 467 6
313 8'/t 250 9'/t 231 9
Dallas atPhiladelphia,4p.m. NewOrleansatWashington, 4p.m. CharlotteatAtlanta,4:30p.m. Indianaat Cleveland,4:30p.m. LA. Clippers atUtah,6p.m. Houstonat Milwaukee,6p.m.
Men's college
7 7 42t / t Tita n s Pac-12 2t/t 3 4 1H Brow n s 5'/t 5'/t 4 5'/t Ch argers AU TimesPST 2 3 44' / z JAGUARS Thursday'sGames 3'/t 3'/t 44'/ t BUCCANEERS 7 6 'I ~ 42'/t Rai ders NorthCarolina78, UCLA56 3 t/t 4
3 I 3 I
Dolphins 5 t/t
53t / t
3 2 3 2
42t / t 44H 58t / t 49' / t
Monday
6 t/t 4 2
College Today
Sain t s
Washi ngton78,SanJoseState56
Barbara71,Washington State43 Pa n thers UC Santa Today'sGame FA LCONS Pat r iots NorthDakotaatUtah,7p.m. Saturday'sGames CHI EFS ColgateatArizonaState, TBD Alabama State at Utah,TBD
Sunday'sGames
Lipscomb atColorado,11a.m. Stanford at DePaul 1130a m Virginia 1H I 40t/t Virginia Tech Southern CalatNewMexico,1 p.m. BOWLGREEN 8 9 ' / t 57H Ba l l St Californiaat FresnoState, 3p.m. 7 58t/t N . Illinois PortlandStateatOregon,5p.m. W. MICHIG AN 6 2 2 55'/z U MASS Buffalo Thursday'sGames MARSHA LL 21'/t 23'/t 74H W. Kentucky 22'/t 23 TOP 25 P hi Da l Toledo 59H E.MICHIGAN 56t/t N ebraska No.2Wi sconsin68,Georgetown65 26 16 IDWA PK I TU L SA No. 5NorthCarolina 78,UCLA56 4 64 26 7 E. Carolina 17'/t 17'/t 68'/t 45-256 25-93 Houston 21H 22 49H SMU No.11Kansas76,RhodeIsland60 9 9 1 /2 54t/t S. ALABAMA 2 08 17 4 Navy No.18 Florida56, UAB47 3-32 0-0 44t/t A rkansas No. 20MichiganState77, Rider45 Arkansas NL 3 0-0 6 -167 41/2 5 50r/t S t anford UCLA 2-1 0-0 ARIZON 21/2 62t/t Ar izona St A EAST 60'/z AIR FORCE W.Kentucky62,SaintJoseph' 20-29-0 18-29-2 ColoradoSt s59 1 -9 4 - 2 5 C. Florida 11H 11H 42Yt S. FLORIDA SOUTH 41'/t K E NT STCal St.-Fullerton 3-49.0 5-45.6 Akron 67, WrightSt.62
SOCCER MLS playoffs MAJORLEAGUESOCCER AU TimesPST CONFERN ECEFINALS
(Two-legaggregateseries) Saturday'sGame
NewYorkat NewEngland,noon
Sunday'sGame
Los Angeleat s Seattle, 6 p.m.
DEALS
200 10
Saturday'sGames
America's Line
Bengals
714 2'/t 688 2'/t
NewOrleansatAtlanta, 4:30p.m. Dallas atToronto, 4:30 p.m. Milwaukee atDetroit,4;30 p.m. NewYorkatOklahomaCity,5 p.m. LA. Clippers atHouston, 5 p.m. OrlandoatIndiana,5 p.mr Sacramento atSanAntonio, 5:30p.m. PhoenixatDenver 6pm MemphisatPortland,7 p.m. Minnes otaatL.A.Lakers,7;30p.m.
Thursday'sResults TCU48,Texastg LSU23,TexasA&M17
BILLS RAVEN S Giants
Pd GB 867 857 '/t 800 I 800 I
Today'sGam es Chicagoat Boston,10a.m. Golden StateatCharlotte,4 p.m.
Today'sGames StanfordatUCLA,3:30p.m. ArizonaSt.atArizona,3:30 p.m. Saturday'sGames Utah atColorado,10a.m. NotreDam eat SouthernCal, 12:30p.m. BYUat California,1:30p.m. OregonatOregonStr, 5 p.m. WashingtonatWashington St., 7:30p.m.
TEXANS
W L 13 2 12 2 12 3 12 3 10 4 11 5 9 5 10 6 9 6 7 6 7 8 5 11 4 12 3 10 3 12
Transactions BASEBAL L
AmericanLeague CHICAGOWHITESOX— AssignedRHPRonald Belisariooutrightto Charlotte (IL). National League ATLANTA BRAVES— Assigned 28 Ramiro Pena outright toGwinnett (IL). SAN FRA NCISCO GIANTS — Announced RHP JoanGotierrezdeclinedoutrightassignmentandelect-
ed free agency.
FOOTBA LL National Football League ARIZONA CARDINALS— SignedLBKion Wilson to thepracticesquad. BALTIMORERAVENS — PlacedTE Konrad Reoland onthepracticesquad-injured list. SignedTE EmmanuelDgboehi fromthepracticesquad. DENVERBRONCOS — SignedPKConnorBarth. SignedRBKapri Bibbsto thepracticesquad. HOUSTONTEXANS— PlacedQBRyanMalletton injured reserve.SignedQBThad Lewis. SignedDB Terrance Parksto thepractice squad. INDIANAP OLI S COLTS — Rel eased CB Loucheiz Purifoy.Agreedtotermswith CBJalil Brown.Signed DT KelcyQuarlesandRBJeff Dempstothepractice squad. KANSASCITY CHIEFS — Rel eased G Jarrod Poghsleyfromthepractice squad. SignedOTCurtis Feigt tothepractice squad. OAKLANDRAIDERS— SignedDBJansenWatson to thepracticesquad. SANDIEGOCHARGERS— SignedGJeff Bacato the practicsqu e ad. SANFR ANCISCO49ERS— PlacedTEDerekCarter on injuredreserve. Released LBChaseThomas. ActivatedTEGarrett Celekfromthe PUPlist. Signed TE Asante Clevelandfromthepractice squad. SEATTLE SEAHAWKS — Released DTAndrew McDonaldfromthepracticesquad.SignedDTJimmy Statento thepracticesquad. WASHINGTONREDSKINS — Placed CB Tracy Porter on injured reserve.SignedDBChaseMinnifield from the practicesquadand DBsThomasWolfe and ChibuikemDkoroto thepracticesquad. HOCKEY
National HockeyLeague NHL —SuspendedWinnipegFAdam Lowryone gameforboarding during Wednesday's game and Dallas FRyanGarbutt twogamesfor kneeingduring Tuesday'gam s e. FLORIDA PANTHERS— PlacedFScottieUpshag on injuredreserve,retroactiveto Nov.24. Recaled G DanEllis fromSanAntonio(AHL). NASHVILL E PREDATORS — Activated C Mike Fisherfrominjured reserve. NEWYOR KISLANDERS—AssignedFAlexMalet to Stockton (ECHL).
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014• THE BULLETIN
WINTER SPORTS:SKIING
War Horsechaseselusive World Cuppodiumfinish By Pat Graham The Associated Press
C OPPER
M O U N T A IN,
Colo.— The end of a ski season usually brings another surgery for Andrew Weibrecht, followed by weeks and weeks of recovery. No operations this past summer, though. Not one ache or pain, either.
It has been ages since he has felt this good. And
W e ibrecht's c o nfi-
MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL ROUNDUP
North Carolina cruises past UCLA
dence is healed — but that is expected, since he did capture a surprise silver medal
in the super-G at the Sochi Olympics last February. That medal pairs nicely with his bronze from the 2010 Van-
The Associated Press PARADISE ISLAND, Ba-
hamas — North C a r olina coach Roy Williams walked
couver Games — both en-
cased in glass and on display at his family's resort in Lake
into the postgame interview
room and immediately rearranged the place cards that signified where Marcus Paige and Justin Jackson would sit. Even after an easy win he was still tinkering. Paige scored 21 p oints and had five assists, Jackson
Placid, New York.
Healthy for once heading into a season, Weibrecht chases after a n
C3
o m i ssion
from his portfolio — a World Cup podium finish. In 99 career World Cup starts, the
hard-charging skier nicknamed "War Horse" has yet
scored 12 points and after
shaking up its starting lineup No. 5 North Carolina rode the
to finish better than seventh.
"A lot of guys win World Cup races and then Olympic
Alessanro Trovati/The Associated Press file
strength of two big runs on the
Andrew Weibrecht of the United States speeds down the course during an alpine ski men's World Cup super-G competition in Kviiffjell, medals," said the 28-year- Norway, in March. Healthy for once heading into a season, Weibrecht chases after his first World Cup podium finish.
way to beating No. 22 UCLA 78-56 on Thursday night in the
old Weibrecht, who is scheduled to compete in the speed
consolation round of the Battle 4 Atlantis.
events at Lake Louise, Alberta, this weekend. "I just did it backward, that's all."
Then again, Weibrecht's career has not exactly taken the most conventional route, which was never more evident than in Sochi when he
took the off-the-beaten-path route to a medal.
He started late in the field that day and was hardly considered a favorite, especially since he was not skiing all that well entering the race. Bursting out of the start-
ing gate, he quickly noticed that all the tracks in the snow
from otherskiers were considerably higher than his intended path down the hill. He stuck wit h h i s p l an,
though, and did not follow the crowd, finding speed in areas where others could not.
He finished less than half a second behind winner Kjetil
"I went in and finally had comes down to, anyway. I've never really sought the media a shred of confidence in my er and Jan Hudec of Canada attention. I do this because I skiing," Weibrecht said. "I down a position and into a tie love it. It's as simple as that." was able to parlay that (confifor third. That medal, though, rep- dence) into that run." "I made my plan and said, resented more than just WeiThe coolest thing he has 'Whatever happens, hap- brecht's ability to shine on the r eceived since h i s S o c h i pens.' I was going to be true to biggest of stages, when the success? myself," Weibrecht recount- world is watching. He overEasy: a t r i p t o H a w aii. ed. "I had nothing really to came quite a bit to achieve While there, he had a chance lose. Because nobody really i t: four o p erations i n t h e to visit with the troops as he pays attention that much if last four years — to fix each joined fellow Olympic medalyou don't do it. shoulder and ankle — losing ists Kelly Clark (snowboard) "People pay attention only funding from the U.S. Ski and Steven Holcomb (bobif you do." Team at one point, and not sled) for a goodwill event. Unless your name is Bode even a lock to make the roster A nd the best part of h i s Miller, of course. for Sochi. summer? Again, easy: no opT he headlines after t h e For I m i n ute, 18.44 sec- erations or recovery time on race werenot so much Wei- onds, he lived up to his "War the couch. "I'm so far ahead of where b recht-oriented a s Mil l - Horse" nickname, attacking er-driven. Not that Weibrecht the course with unbridled I have been. That's a huge minded taking a back seat to fury. Just like he did that af- boost," Weibrecht said. "My Miller after the iconic skier ternoon in V ancouver four body feels good and I'm not captured his sixth Olympic years earlier, when he fin- going at this halfway." medal. ished behind winner Aksel Weibrecht was quite active "Bode's Bode," Weibrecht Lund Svindal of Norway and this past offseason, trainsaid. "That's basically what it runner-up Miller. ing in Park City, Utah, conJansrud of Norway, which pushed teammate Bode Mill-
ducting a ski camp with Ted Ligety and spending weeks honing his technique on the slopes in New Zealand,
Austria and Chile. All to step onto that World
Late this past summer, as
taken that feeling to heart.
In what has amounted to
a monthslong media tour, Roberts has told and retold her personal back story and, increasingly, detailed her personal problems with the
augment them.
Johnson and J.P. Tokoto off the bench. And the Tar Heels
even had a
W e ibrecht
c o nversation
beled its entire cadre of own-
in the starting lineup, electing to use Kennedy Meeks, Brice
along those lines with teammate Marco Sullivan before
(4-1) didn't miss a beat, clos-
Sochi. "I remember saying if the one medal is all I accomplished with my career, I
run and putting the game absolutely away with a 15-0 sec-
wouldn't be really that satisfied with it," Weibrecht said.
"Two medals are a lot better, but there's still a lot to do in the sport.
"It's motivating me to keep moving hard. I'm really looking forward to World Cup success. Because that would be a huge deal for me."
ing the first half on a 32-11 ond-half run.
Also on Thursday:
Pac-12 Washington 78, San Jose State 56: FULLERTON, Ca-
lif. — Donaven Dorsey scored 17 points and Robert Upshaw
tied his own school record with seven blocked shots, powering Washington to a rout of San Jose State in the opening round of the Wooden Legacy tournament. UC Santa Barbara 71, Washington State 43: Anchorage, jumped out to a 34-12 lead in the first half and never looked back in a rout of Washington
State in the opening of the Great Alaska Shootout.
Top 25
thinkable that he could continue as the owner of the Los
and scoffed at Silver's notion that one-third of the league's
sports labor expert at Stan-
No. 2Wisconsin 68,George-
Angeles Clippers.
teams were unprofitable.
ford, said the various public statements from Roberts were
town 65:PARADISE ISLAND, Bahamas — Sam D e k ker
Acting in determined fash-
"Whether the issues will later allow it or not, she can
create the perception that she will be Adam's equal," said Len Elmore, a former player and agent who is a college
basketball commentator now working at ESPN. "It's imNBA's business structure. She portant that she have their has forcefully questioned the attention, and not just when
league's pay model and la-
Williams put Joel James,
Alaska — UC Santa Barbara
Michele Roberts was finish- ion, Silver was able to get ing up one of her first long what he wanted — Sterling's interviews as the newly ap- ouster. Silver popped up on pointed executive director various magazine covers and of the N ational Basketball cultivated an image as somePlayers Association, she con- one who was smart and perfessedto feeling some dread sonable and effective. about moving into the spotConcurrently, Roberts has light of the news media. felt compelled to establish her At the time, she was still own presence on the national weeks from the official start- stage so that she can compete ing date of her new job and with Silver's growing aura. not yet comfortable articulatShe is aware that Stern was ing positions on league mat- able to overshadow her predeters. She said, too, that she did cessor, Billy Hunter, who was not particularly like talking ousted from the union in 2013 about herself. after 17 years on the job. As a But as Roberts and a vis- result, it has become imperaiting reporter walked back tiveforherto come across as down to the lobby of her office a strong figure to the players, building that afternoon, she unify them, and, as well, inlet out a sigh of resignation. fluence public opinion — even "Well, it will be good for the if the expected negotiations union," she said. for a new labor deal will not After a few months on the take place until 2017. job, it is clear that Roberts has
some decisions and it worked out fine." Isaiah Hicks and Nate Britt
NBPAdirector establishing her position in the post New Yorh Times News Service
said. "I was ticked off, made
Cup podium. To do so would not so much to authenticate those Olympic medals as
NBA
By Andrew Keh and Harvey Araton
"Theypay me a lotofmoney to make decisions," Williams
they get around to collective bargaining."
ers as replaceable. She has directly criticized Adam Sil- Shaping perception ver, the commissioner of the In a telephone interview league, accusing him of vio- this week, Roberts said her lating the collective bargain- recent visibility in media outing agreement. lets had "helped set the table" All of this has apparently as she has settled into her new been done with a purpose. role. Players she has not yet Last February, Silver, 52, met have reached out to her made his entrance onto the after reading about her or seepublic stage after taking ing her being interviewed on over the position from Da- television. vid Stern, and he earned fast Just as important to Robpraise for his handling of a erts has been inserting hervariety of issues, including self into the public conversawhat to do about Donald Ster- tion. Any substantive negotialing, whose inflammatory tions with the league will take remarks made it virtually un- place in private, but she said
The article drew a statement of rebuttal from Silver,
W illiam B .
G ould IV , a
signs that she wanted to "rally
scored 17 points, Nigel Hayes'
who, among other things,
the troops, restore their con-
acrobatic tip-in with 20 sec-
noted that the salary cap had been in place since the 1980s.
fidence in collective bargaining, instill some credibility in
onds left capped his 15-point day, and Wisconsin needed to
In the telephone interview,
terms of her own leadership"
Roberts clarified that she was
and to show her constituents
rally in the second half to beat Georgetown in the Battle 4 At-
expressing her personal feel- that she was willing to chalings and principles — "What lengeSilver,however popular executive director would ac- he may now be. "This guy (Silver) is kind of tually favor a system that sup/ ports an artificial suppression walking on water right now," of player salaries'?" — and not Gould said. "I think probably a road map of the union's fu- she wants to chip away at that ture negotiating strategy or a a little bit and also feel him signal that she wanted to dis- out, see what his reaction is." mantle the salary cap. Gabriella Demczuk/The New YorkTimes It was not the only back Keeping themengaged Michele Roberts, director of and forth she has had with Roberts praised Silver as the National Basketball Players Silver recently. On Nov. 19, "a smart guy" but said she did Association, in Washington in Silver issued a long statement not feel intimidated. Elmore August. explaining his decision to im- suggested that NBA players pose a 24-game unpaid ban tended not to become unified on Jeff Taylor of the Char- or educated on the issues until the continuing act of shaping lotte Hornets, who last month it was too late andthat Roberts the perceptions of the NBA pleaded guilty in a domestic seemed int ent on keeping her was crucial, even at this early violence case involving an constituents engaged, even if stage. In her opinion, Hunt- altercation in a hotel hallway that requires her to maintain a er did not do enough to pro- with a woman he knew. consistently high profile. tect the image of the players The next day, Roberts reInevitably, t hi s p e r iod or fight what she saw as the leased her ow n s t atement of rhetoric will give way to predominant narrative of the characterizing Silver's ac- a time of action. Charles 2011 lockout — that the play- tions against Taylor as "exces- Grantham, who worked for ers were money hungry, and sive, without precedent and a the union from 1978 through that the owners were the ones violation of the collective bar- 1995 and was the executive taking risks. gaining agreement." director over the final seven "To the extent that there's "Whether or not the union years, said unions too often going to be any pressure on responds to what it perceives approached negotiations as the players to accept some as a violation of the CBA, a "single bargaining transacproposal from the owners, that's not the player's call, tion and not enough as a longthat pressure will come from that's the union's responsibil- term business relationship" fans, and it will come from ity," Roberts said of the Taylor and that Roberts needed to fans if they have an image of case. "The point needed to be form a framework of partnerthe players as greedy and un- made to the league and the ship with Silver. appreciative," Roberts said. public." He pointed to the way that "So I felt early on that concedRoberts, who is the first fe- Silver and the players union ing the airwaves to the own- male head of a major sports cooperated in the Sterling erswould be am istake." union, said the fact that she matter and said that could be Receiving particular at- was questioning the punish- a template for the future for tention wa s a n in t e rview ment Silver imposed in a do- both Roberts and the league. "Adam is very popular right with ESPN the Magazine in mestic violence case did not which Roberts called salary give her any hesitation. now, and that could be a chal"As a lawyer, what is fair caps "un-American," challenge," Grantham said. "But lenged owners to play the or what is not fair, to me, has her relationship with Adam is games themselves, described nothing to do with gender or going to be very important as the league as a monopoly race," she said. they go forward."
lantis semifinals. No. 18 Florida 56, UAB 47: PARADISE ISLAND, Baha-
mas — Michael Frazier scored 14 points, Chris Chiozza add-
ed 13 and Florida survived another rough offensive night to beat Alabama-Birmingham in the Battle 4 Atlantis conso-
lation round. No. 11 Kansas 76, Rhode lsland 60: LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. — Perry Ellis scored 17 points to help Kansas beat
Rhode Island in the opening round of the Orlando Classic. No. 20 Michigan State 77, Rider 45: LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. — Denzel Valentine
had a career-high 19 points, Bryn Forbes added 15 and Michigan State rolled past Rider in the first round of the
Orlando Classic.
,,v
Tim Aylen/The Associated Press
UCLA's Kevon Looney gets caught between UNC's Brice
Johnson and TheoPinson during Thursday's game in Paradise Island, Bahamas.
C4 THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014
GOLF COMMENTARY
Womensee in paro t e reensin en er ias Piller, who represented the United States
NAPLES, Fla. he woman wanted to practice with her -
T
6~:
W hy can't boys havefemale role m odels?
By Karen Crouse New York Times News Service
boyfriend, a professional golfer, at TPC Scottsdale, a regular stop on the PGA
Tour. Her boyfriend, Martin Piller, received a
free bag of pristine golf balls and access to the backrange, where he could work inpeace, close to the chipping area and practice green and away from the 30-handicappers and snowbirds. The woman was told she would have to buy a bag of balls and could not practice alongside her boyfriend. She would have to hit in the area set aside for the general public although she was also aprofessionalgolfer. The memory does not sit well with Gerina Piller, who returned to the course the next year as Martin Piller's wife.
"And they rolled out the red carpet," Gerina Piller said, adding: "It was just like, this is kind of ridiculous. I get more playing privileges as a wife than as a player." Piller's husband, who was in her gallery Sunday at the LPGA's Tour Championship at
Tiburon Golf Club, said he struggles with the fact that in the couple's visits to courses outside their home base in Texas, Piller's LPGA status
golf culture that one of the most tireless advo-
cates of the women's game was guilty of it. Mike Whan, the LPGA commissioner who took over the tour when it was ailing and has
nursed it back to robust health, stood up at a gala recently and told the top-ranked Inbee Park and the second-ranked Stacey Lewis, "I
have three boys, but if I had daughters, they'd
Jacquelyn Martin/The AssociatedPress
President Barack Obama awards professional golfer Charlie SIfford, center, the Presidential Medal
of Freedom on Monday durIng a ceremony In the East Room of the White House in Washington.
Sifford
have posters of you in their bedrooms." Why can boys not have female athletes as
ContInued from C1
role models? The kind of cultural conditioning
ican to join the PGA Tour, ending an arduous climb that had begun decades earlier as a caddie. Often called the Jackie Robinson of golf, Siffordmight have endured even more than Rob-
thatcauses men to sometimes say the darned-
est things is a source of fascination for Michelle Wie, the reigning U.S. Women's Open champion, another player used to being told she hits it
In 1961, he became the first African-Amer-
really far for a girl. As a student at Stanford, W ie researched and wrote a paper fora sociology class on the role children's toys play in gen-
inson. There was no national scrutiny, no daily
cause you tell them LPGA pro, and they say we der identification. don't do anything with the LPGA." "A lot of people spend a lot of time talking
mates to lean on. There was Sifford, walking
is likely to be trumped by her marital status. Gerina Piller said, "It's a little frustrating beWith fewer exceptions, the golf course no
•
at last year's Solheim Cup, said her pro-am partners were not kidding when they asked if she uses women's clubs. Brittany Lincicome, the LPGA leader in driving this year with a 271.5-yard average, said she has often heard, "Wow, you hit it far for a girl," from pro-am partnerswhose balls seldom carry more than 220 yards. The tendency to tack on qualifiers when talking about women is so deeply rooted in the
about gender roles but more in the adult life rather than in child development," Wie said. "If
longerisviewed as a place where men can escape from their wives and children, an idea sent you don't change how kids are being brought up this month in a cartoon in The New Yorker up, then nothing will be changed in the future showing two men seated in a golf cart, with one because everything they're brought up with as remarking to the other, "A man can't fully enjoy a kid will stick to them as adults. I thought that golf until he has a family of his own to avoid." was really interesting and how in 2014 it's still This year has been filled with several encour- like that." aging milestones for women in golf. Last week Heather Daly-Donofrio, who won twice on
media, to record his struggles. There was no Branch Rickey to run interference, no teamalone on golf courses where hateful spectators were free to spit, swear and intimidate. It was awful.
He was not part of a grand plan to integrate golf. He was doing it on his own, largely for a pragmatic reason. "I had to make a living," he said. And the keepers of the gate were deter-
• aa
mined not to let him. The PGA's Caucasian-on-
--=:-p
Suzy Whaley was voted the first female officer
the tour before moving to the administrative
ly clause kept everybody who was not whitenot only black people — off the PGA Tour.
of the PGA of America. The 260-year-old Royal and Ancient Golf Club in Scotland opened its Golf Club added a third female member, Virginia Rometty, IBM's chief executive. And for the
side, was adamant that her daughter Hannah, born in 2006, be exposed to more nurturing surroundmgs. Daly-Donofrio, senior vice president for tour operations, said she told her husband, Ray
years later he wouldbe at the White House beThe Associated Press file ing honored by the first black president of the Charlie SIfford throws up his arms after he United States, "I wouldn't have believed it," he dropped a short par putt on the18th green to said. tIe Harold Henning of South AfrIca at the end of
first time, four players finished the year with
Howell, a retired teaching professional and a
scoring averages under 70. For all those gains, gender bias remains as ingrained in the game as subtle breaks in a green. After Ted Bishop, the PGA of America president, derided English golfer Ian Poulter as a "li'I
lifetime member of the PGA of America, "We're not joining a club that has restrictions against
the most gripping part of the ceremony came tournament on Jan. 13, 1969. when President Barack Obama introduced
women because I don't want my daughter to
the daughter of James Chaney, the brother of Andrew Goodman and the widow of Michael
they fought for equal rights. In 2014 the United
Schwerner. The three young civil rights work-
States wages war on multiple fronts, still in the
ers, participants in the Freedom Summer cam-
name of democracy, while police violence and mass incarceration continue to be plagues.
membership to women, and Augusta National
girl" in a tweet last month, leading to Bishop's
grow up in an environment where she could be the best player at the club but she's not allowed to tee it up on a Saturday or Sunday morning."
Daly-Donofrio and Howell joined Oceanside ries of private clubs where women are still not Country Club in Ormond Beach, Florida, which welcome to tee off before noon on weekends, she said placed no restrictions on when her women's locker rooms are tucked away in the daughter could play. "We've got people coming up to us on the basement or farthest corner of the clubhouse from the first tee, and women are restricted to range all the time and talking about how great associate nonvoting memberships. it is that she's playing and how cool it is, it's "I think it's the little things we find when such acoolgame, you can play together, "Datraveling around that makes one realize it's ly-Donofrio said. still a man's world at these golf courses," said ouster, New York Times readers sent me sto-
Had someone told Sifford in 1954 that 60
I had come here to write about him, but
72 holes In the $100,000 Los Angeles Open golf
paign to register black voters who were systematically being blocked from the voter rolls, were murdered in Mississippi in 1964. Sifford was 42 at the time and living in Charlotte, North Carolina. As he listened
The sacrifices of Chaney, Goodman and
avid player who is halfway through her quest of Whaley, a Connecticut club professional, has playing the top 50 courses in the United States. seen the challenges facing women in golf from
Schwerner, and Sifford,too,endureasa blueprint for what will be required to slay the new dragons. The blueprint calls for perseverance, to the president recite the history and back- courage and determination. ground of the murdered men, he felt the same At a reception before the ceremony, Obama feeling coming back and taking over. "I got told the families of Chaney, Goodman and mad," he said. Schwernerthat he would not have become I remember 1964 as a year when America's president had it not been for the courage of obsession with sports clashed with its ambiva- men like them. lence about racism. Had Sifford not endured, had he not helped In 1964, Bill Russell led the Boston Celtics remove the Caucasian-only clause, which con-
The LPGA's motto is "See Why It's Different Out Here." But at last week's state-of-the-tour ad-
to another NBA championship. Jim Brown led the Cleveland Browns to the NFL champi-
fined access and opportunity, there might not
cation and occupation, lived together, worked
States placed the Presidential Medal of Free-
Carol Ammon of Wilmington, Delaware, an
A new perspective
all sides. She played on the tour and, at the 2003
Greater Hartford Open, became the first wom-
dress, the people trotted on stage — the master of an in 58 years to qualify for a PGA Tour event. ceremonies, the commissioner, the chief market-
Her election, on the first ballot, to become the
ing director, the tournament director of the major next secretary of the PGA gives women much at Rancho Mirage and an airline executive rep- more than a token voice on how the organizaresenting that tournament's new sponsor — were tion is operated; Whaley is in position to beall men, even though four of the seven members come the association's first female president in of the LPGA's executive committee arewomen. four years. "It's huge for women in the sports world," In the first half of the hourlong address, the only women on the stage were two uniformed said Laura Diaz, 39, a two-time tour winner flight attendants representing the sponsor, who turned professional in 1997. ANA Air, and they never spoke. In the last half She said Whaley would provide "a new perhour, the flight attendants were joined by six spective." Diaz added: "She not only has made women who had won the Rancho Mirage event. an impact in the teaching world, but she's been They were ushered onto the stage for a ques- a player. I think that it's great that everyone is tion-and-answer session wearing bathrobes kind of opening their minds and broadening with the new sponsor's logo. Defending cham- them." pion Lexi Thompson, whose galleries consist Wie, 25, said great strides had been made in of ponytailed girls and Puma-attired boys, was eliminating gender barriers in golf since she asked by a male journalist what it was like to
burst onto the LPGA as a teenager.
havebeen aPresidentObama, either. onship. And Bob Gibson pitched the St. Louis Late Monday evening, at a room inside the Cardinals to a World Series title. Capitol, about 150 people gathered to honor Fifty years later, blacks have virtually dis- Sifford. They were politicians, family memappeared from baseball; only a few black bers and a contingent from the University of golfers are on the PGA Tour; and no black Maryland Eastern Shore's golf team and golf women currently play on the LPGA Tour. The management program. NFL and the NBA are dominated by highly They knew aboutthe Sifford legacy and skilled, well-compensated and largely silent talked about carrying the torch — as players, African-Americans. instructors and entrepreneurs. The communities from which most of them Monday wasa good day forSifford.W eakcome arenowhere near as united — physical- ened by failing kidneys and a weak heart, the ly or philosophically — as they were in 1964, first black golfer to earn a PGA card sat proudwhen African-Americans, regardless of edu- ly as the first black president of the United together and struggled together against rac- dom around his neck and as the families of ism and oppression. Chaney, Goodman and Schwerner looked on. In 1964, the United States preached democThis was a wonderful moment and a reracy and freedom to the rest of the world even minder, still, that there is no freedom without as its own citizens were being brutalized as sacrifice.
"Yeah, I think that it's gotten to a point where be a role model for so many young girls. She replied, "It is great to tee it up every day out there you don't really notice anymore where you feel and see the little girls and boys out there follow- different," she said. "If you get treated the same, it's like, 'Wow, we're treated the same.' It's like a ing us and looking up to us." Asked about the exchange later, Thompson, passing thought now." 19, said: "It's not just little girls we're inspiring. She added: "I think that a lot of great things It's little boys, even adults. I have adults coming are happening. I think we just need to keep this up to me saying, 'I want to be just like you when forward momentum going and build on top of it s I grow up' and jokes like that."
•
•
NHL
Predators beat Oilers in overtime The Associated Press
closing his hand on the puck
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Fil-
while it was i n
t h e crease.
ip Forsberg scored at 3:55 of overtime to give the Nashville
Rinne made the ensuing stop
Predators a 1-0 victory over
Edmonton on Thursday night, handing the Oilers their eighth
against the post. The Predators finished 0 for 5 on the power play. They
consecutive defeat.
are an NHL-worst 1 for 37
Pekka Rinne made 37 saves for the Predators, who have
at home this season with the man advantage. Nashville center Mike Fisher appeared in his first game
won three straight. He stopped
Jordan Eberle on a penalty shot early in overtime. Viktor Fasth had 24 saves for Edmonton, which fell to
of the season. Fisher sustained Mark Humphrey/The AssociatedPress
0-11-2 against Western Con- Nashville goalie Pekka Rinne ference teams. blocks a shot against EdmonSeconds after Nashville de- ton In the second period of fenseman Roman Josi hit the crossbar with a shot, Forsberg
Thursday's game In Nashville,
Tennessee.
spun to free himself from a defender and beat Fasth with a wrist shot from the left circle.
an Achilles tendon injury while training over the summer and missed the first 21
games. Oilers forward Matt Hendricks was i njured at 2 : 12
of the first period when he blocked a shot from Weber. The shot hit Hendricks in the
he denied Eberle's penalty Rinne's best save came 13 shot after Predators captain
seconds into overtime when
• •
on Eberle with his left skate
Shea Weber was called for
left leg. The team announced that he would not return to the
game due to a leg injury.
% •
•
%
%
•
•
NFL
Tou
lme e enSe ea SSea aW SOVer49erS ~«d>:«
spikesduring
Janie McCauley
home games
The Associated Press
SANTA CLARA, Calif. — R
Sherman provided the momen game againstthe 49ers once again, a mere 10 months after his touchdown-saving deflection in the NFC
Roberto Ferdman The Washington Post
championship that sent the Seattle Se-
What better time to steal something than when an entire
ahawks to the Super Bowl. Sherman setup the only touchdown with another key defensive play in this heated rivalry, then made a second interception with the 49ers driving late, and theSeahawks ended a five-game losing streak on San Francisco's home field with a 19-3 win Thursday night.
city is fawning over a sporting event?
Football games are associated with upticks in city crime, according to a r ecent study,
which observed crime rates in eight separate cities — Detroit,
The brash cornerback offered plen-
Miami, New Orleans, New-
ty without opening his mouth this time: Blowing kisses to the crowd, then putting a finger to his lips to make the hush sign before waving goodbye.
ark, Philadelphia, St. Louis, Baltimore and Washingtonover the course of a two-year
period. Specifically, the study found that days on which cities
Steven Hauschka kicked four field goalsand the Seahawks' stout defense
hosted home games for their
held Colin Kaepernick and Michael Crabtree in check as Seattle (8-4) overcame 14penalties for 105 yards, including an offensive pass interfer-
respective professional football teams coincided with a nearly 3
i
percent increase in total crime,
includingamorethan4percent increase in larceny and almost 7 percent increase in the num-
ence that negated a touchdown.
Russell Wilson passed for 236 yards and thoroughly outplayed Kaepernick, who had one of his worst perfor-
Marcio Jose Sanchez/The Associated Press
Seattle running back Robert Turbin, right, scores on a 13-yard touchdown reception in front of San Francisco defensive back
mances for the 49ers (7-5) in a game Chris Culliver during the first quarter of Thursday night's game in Santa Clara, California. with high stakes for the teams' playoff hopes. "My team's all together, we are bud- Also it with less than a minute remaining to The 49ers were held to three points see seal the Seahawks' 23-17 victory. Sher- or fewer for the first time since a 29-3 dies. It's a hard thing to do, winning • For boxscores and standings for NFL Scoreboard,C2 on their turf," Wilson said. "The NFC man later called Crabtree"mediocre." Week 2 loss at Seattle last year. is not easy to win against. We are exSan Francisco's offense might have Sherman got things started when he cited about that opportunity." earned that distinction after its latest intercepted Kaepernick's deep thirdAfter his second pick, Sherman er want to hear that," Sherman said. dud snapped the Niners' three-game down pass on the right sideline in the looked at those fans still remainKaepernick was 16 for 29 for 121 winning streak. first quarter to help set up Wilson's 13ing in the half-empty stadium on a yards and the 49ers were outgained In the waning moments with thou- yard touchdown pass to Robert'Ittrbin. Thanksgiving night and waved. The 379-164. sands of red seats already empty, A wide-open Turbin easily took the Seahawks won by the identical score Sherman andCrabtreewere atthe 49ers CEO Jed York posted on Twit- ball down the left sideline on a pretty they beat first-place Arizona five days center of the decisive play in January's ter: "Thank you (hashtag)49ersfaith- catch-and-run beforebeating cornerearlier. N FC titl e game, when Sherman deflect- ful for coming out strong tonight. back Chris Culliver into the end zone. "Their fans were saying some pret- ed a pass headed his way in the end This performance wasn't acceptable. I Hauschka kicked field goals of 21, ty vulgar things to us earlier, you nev- zone and Malcolm Smith intercepted apologize for that." 36, 35 and 46 yards.
Eagles roll to win over Cowboys The Associated Press ARLINGTON, Texas LeSean McCoy threw open
his arms just before crossing the goal line on a touchdown run that essentially put away
another big win over the Dallas Cowboys. While Philadelphia didn't walk off with a playoff berth in hand after beating the Cowboys 33-10 on Thursday, it was a sweet Thanksgiving for McCoy, Mark Sanchez and the Eagles. McCoy ran for 159 yards
d
and a touchdown, Sanchez
had his first scoring run in almost three years and the Eagles rolled in a matchup of NFC East co-leaders on the
field where McCoy clinched last season's rushing title and
Philadelphia won a playoffsor-bust finale. "This really felt like last
year," said McCoy, who had a season-high 25 carries. "It really did." Jose Yau/The Waco Tribune Herald
Tony Romo wasn't around
Dallas running back Delarco Murray is tackled by Philadelphia forthatgame because he was nose tackle Bennie Logan, right, in the end zone during the second two days removed from back
half of Thursday's game inArlington, Texas.
Ducks
surgery. This time he was
ber of carthefts. "NFL home games are correlated with a higher incidence
of crime compared to nongame days or days when the team is playing an away game in another city," the researchers wrote.
Early afternoon games which begin at 1 p.m. Eastern time, are the most closely con-
nected to higher crime rates — they were found to be associated with a 4 percent increase
in total crime and economic crime,considerably more than those beginning in the late afternoonor night.The association is probably a reflection of a more general trend, which shows criminals tend to act during the daytime (roughly 40 percentof property crime occursbefore6p.m.,whileonly about 13 percent takes place between then and midnight,
according to the 2008 Nation-
ROUNDUP
every week is a whole differ-
al
trying to play a quick turnaround for the first time, and
ent deal, a whole different animal." McCoy, who led the NFL
Survey). There are a few reasons why footballgames present so many
with 1,604 yards last season, had his fourth 100-yard
opportunities for criminals.
game in the past seven after
find themselves with more op-
going without one the first five weeks and secured his
tions in crowded places where people gather to watch games.
fourth
Consider car thefts, the form
after yet another back inju-
ry. He looked ragged as the Cowboys (8-4) lost their third straight home game. "It was definitely short just from the Sunday night coming to here," said Romo, who threw two interceptions with-
1 , 000-yard s eason
since 2010. Although his deficit to
Second-year head coach Mark Helfrichsaid the
Beavers
For one, criminals likely
of criminal activity most significantly correlated with NFL
out a touchdown, snapping a Dallas' DeMarco Murray in streak of 38 straight games the rushing race is probably with at least one TD toss. "I insurmountable, McCoy outdon't really think that had gained Murray, who was held much to do with the outcome under 100 yards for just the of the game. I think they just second time this season. played better than us." Also on Thursday: The Eagles (9-3) opened Lions 34, Bears 17: DEwith quick drives of 80 and TROIT — Calvin Johnson 88 yards for touchdowns. caught 11 passes for 146 They took sole possession of yards with a pair of first-half the division lead with four touchdowns, a n d De t r oit games remaining, including boosted its postseason hopes a rematch in less than three with a victory over Chicago. weeks. After losing at Arizona and "We're not i nt o s t a te- New England and falling ments," Eagles coach Chip out of first place in the NFC Kelly said. "We've given North, the Lions (8-4) spotted ourselves the opportunity to Chicago a 14-3 first-quarter play meaningful football in lead before rallying with relaDecember, and in this league, tive ease in the second.
offseason approach was tweaked with the hope of Continued from C1 finishing stronger. "Everybody hasn't stopped doing whatever it takes Oregon was 2-2 last November, including a to accomplish those goals." last-minute 36-35 victory over Oregon State. So far Winning the North Division, something the 2012 the Ducks are 3-0 this November, outscoring oppoand 2013 teams were unable to do, was an important nents 140-53. "There's tremendous leadership on this team, trefirst step. Now Oregon, which is 7-1 in Pac-12 play, is in posi- mendous maturity and guys that have been around tion to win the conference championship and play its here forever," secondary coach John Neal said. "There are a lot of guys that have been in our proway into the inaugural College Football Playoff. Regardless of what happens this week at Oregon gram and have been successful in our program. State, the Ducks will face the South Division winner Those kids want to keep the momentum going." on Dec. 5 at Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara, CaliforThe light bulb went on early for several true freshnia, for the Pac-12 title. men, including leading rusher Royce Freeman and The up-and-down Beavers (5-6, 2-6) can erase special teams star Charles Nelson. "That's the hardest thing, I think, is making sure Oregon from the projected final four bracket with a Civil War upset on Saturday at Reser Stadium. in recruiting you identify the guy that wants to be "There's like a Dr. Jekyll-Mr. Hyde kind of attitude a part of that kind of thing," Helfrich said. "We tell that they've had as far as playing," Oregon running them, and very honestly, it's exceptionally difficult. backs coach Gary Campbell said of Oregon State, It's unconventionally hard, and we're going to supwhich followed an impressive upset of Arizona State port you unconventionally because of it." with a 37-13 loss at Washington. "But you can bet In order to play, newcomers must completely buy when they suit up against us they're going to give us in. "The shorter the time lapse from you showing up their best game." The Ducks believe that the key to beating their to jumping in the system, the better," Helfrich said. rivals will be to treat them the same way they did "For guys who show up and go, 'I used to power clean Colorado. this way, I played man coverage like this, I studied Since the Alamo Bowl, Oregon's players have re- like this.' And then a year and a half later they go, dedicated themselves to the "Win the Day" process 'Yeah, you were right about everything.'" established by Kelly. Helfrich said he does not make rah-rah speeches It started with the winter strength and condition- in the locker room before the games. "You need tohave a pep talk to have a great Moning program. Players say they are eating better, getting more rest and going out to socialize less. day, agreat Tuesday and a great Wednesday," Hel"We're a lot smarter than we have been in previ- frich said. "If you're not ready to go on Saturday, we ous years," senior linebacker Derrick Malone said. screwed up in recruiting." "We're paying more attention to our bodies and what The Ducks have been grinding toward their lofty we put into them and what we have to do to keep goals since circling the wagons after the Alamo it going and keep it fresh. I have to commend the Bowl. "It's cool when players control that. We don't concoaches. They've done their research, they've done their studies, and we're an elite program because we trol everything," Neal said. "I always tell my guys, don't go with tradition. We're always trying the next I'm the most useless guy in the game. What do I do'? I step and always trying to get better." stand there, I've got a good seat."
C r i m inal Vi c t imization
games, for instance. "If stadium, restaurant, bar,
and other parking lots are full of cars, it will be easier for thieves to find suitable cars to
steal, "theresearcherswrote. The same can be said for the
sheer concentration of people, and, therefore, personal belongings. A sea of targets might mean an increased likelihood of finding one that is particularly susceptible for theft.
But large gatherings — of cars and people — don't merely present options; they also tempt criminals with the po-
tential for increased stealth. Large crowds mean criminals more easily lurk, and even loot, unnoticed.
sentative from the North Division; the South has yet to be determined.
Continued from C1 W hile the Ducks depend on a vicBut it was not enough to get the Bea- tory to keep them in the chase for the vers to a bowl game. Southern Califor- playoffs, the stakes are also high for nia claimed the Pac-8 Conference title the Beavers (5-6, 2-6), who need one that year and went on to beat Indiana more win to become bowl eligible. in the Rose BowL Bud Riley, the father of current Bea-
vers head coach Mike Riley, was an assistant coach on that 1967 Oregon State team.
Other big upsets would come in more recent years. In 2012, the Beavers upset No. 13 Wisconsin — which would
go on to the Rose Bowl that season-
And there is this: The Ducks have
won the past six games overall in the series, and the past three at Reser Stadium.
"We aregoing to be amped up for that game because it is at home and it
shouldbe fun," Oregon State receiver Jordan Villamin said. "Hopefully we can get that win and end the streak
10-7 at Reser Stadium. In 2008,the Beavers were 26-point
that we have got going."
underdogs when they knocked off
gene the Beavers nearly pulled off an upset. Oregon State took the lead on
then-No. 1 USC 27-21 on a Thursday
Last year at Autzen Stadium in Eu-
night in Corvallis. Freshman Jacquizz Victor Bolden's 25-yard run with 1:39 Rodgers ran for 186 yards and two left. But Mariota orchestrated a drive touchdowns for Oregon State. that was capped with a 12-yard touchTwo years earlier, Oregon State top- down pass to Josh Huff with 29 secpledthethen-No.3TrojansatReser33- onds to go for a 36-35 victory. 31, snapping a 38-game regular-season Mike Riley said Oregon State can winning streak for USC. Oregon State draw inspiration from the victory over knockeddown a two-point conversion Arizona State, but Oregon's trajectory, with seven seconds left that would the Beavers' own possible bowl eligibilhave tied the game. ity and the fact that it is the state's big This season's 35-27 win over then rivalry give this game an entirely difseventh-ranked Arizona State snapped ferent dimension. "We certainly understand how good a four-game losing streak for the Beavers. The Sun Devils, then No. 6 in the
they are and where they sit in the col-
College Football Playoff rankings, appeared to be on their way to the Pac-12 championshipgame oreven beyond. Oregon (10-1, 7-1) is currently No. 2 in the CFP rankings, which determine
lege football world, but our focus is, really, entirely on us. We've got to put a good game together," Riley told reporterson a conference callSunday. "We've got to orchestrate good prac-
tices for our team. We've got to get game's inaugural playoffs. The Ducks prepared to play against the best we're havealready secured a spotin thePac- going to play against this year. So it is 12 championship game as the repre- definitely about us in our preparation." the four teams that will appear in the
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014
Central Oregon fuel prices Price per gallon for regular unleaded gas and diesel, as posted Wednesday at AAA Fuel Price Finder (aaa.opisnet.com): REGULARUNLEADED: •SpaceAge,20635 Grandview Drive, Bend,........... $2.81 • FredMeyer, 944 SW Ninth St.,
Redmond, ...... $2.82 • Fred Meyer, 61535 S. U.S. Highway97, Bend,........... $2.82 • Ron'sOil, 62980 U.S. Highway 97, Bend,........... $2.91 • Chevron, 2005 S. U.S. Highway97, Redmond, ...... $2.95 • Chevron,1745NE Third St., Bend, $2.97 • Texaco, 539 NWSixth St., Redmond, ... $2.99 • Chevron,1501SW Highland Ave., Redmond, ...... $2.99 • Chevron, 3405 N. U.S. Highway 97, Bend,........... $3.05 • Shell,16515 Reed Lane, LaPine, ... $3.05 • Safeway, 80 NECedar St., Madras, ..... $3.05 • Sisters Country Store, 591 E. U.S.Highway20, Sisters, ......... $3.07 • Chevron, 2100 NEU.S. Highway 20, Bend,........... $3.09 • Chevron, 398 NW Third St.,
Prineville, ....... $3.09 • Chevron,1001 Railway, Sisters,..... $3.09 • Chevron,1400 NW CollegeWay, Bend,........... $3.09 • Texaco, 2409 Butler Market Road, Bend,........... $3.09 • Rohinsons Shell, 51511 U.S.Highway97, LaPine,......... $3.09 • Chevron,1210SW U.S. Highway97, Madras, ........ $3.09 • Shell,15 NE15th St.,
Madras, .........$3.11 • Texaco, 178 SW Fourth St.,
Madras, .........$3.15 • Chevron, 1095 SE Division St., Bend, $3.55 DIESEL • Chevron, 2005 S. U.S. Highway97, Redmond, ...... $3.49 • Chevron, 1095 SE Division St., Bend, $3.55 • Chevron, 398 NW Third St.,
Prineville, ....... $3.55 • Chevron, 1501 SW Highland Ave., Redmond, ...... $3.55 • Texaco, 178 SW Fourth St.,
Madras, ........ $3.63 • Texaco, 539 NWSixth St., Redmond, ... $3.67 • Safeway, 80 NECedar St., Madras, ..... $3.67
DISPATCHES
DESCHUTES COUNTY
inter- oi a saes rus o ua ionu means irin in summer ercen, mos insae By Tim Doran
Oregon's total population es-
The Bulletin
timate: nearly 3.4 million. Staff at the Population
Deschutes County was the
fastest-growing county in the state during the last year, ac-
Research Center attributed
cording to the latest population estimates from Portland State University.
population growth in the last year to people moving into
Countywide, the population grew 4.2 percent from
the number of deaths minus the number of births — ac-
July 1, 2013, to July 1, 2014, according to estimates re-
counted for 26 percent, ac-
166,400.
Hood River County recorded the second-highest growth
moved to the state, natural increaseaccounted more for
rate, 1.9 percent, during the
population growth, according to PSU.
schutes County added 3,875
people, bringing its total population to an estimated
Mohu employee Joel Elder assembles HDTV antennas at the manufacturer of high-definition TV antennas in Raleigh, North Carolina. Small businesses such as Mohu used to wait until the holiday season to begin hiring extra workers. Now that process begins while most people are still in shorts, although Mohu CEO Mark Buff says, "We don't know yet about this year."
By Joyce M. Rosenberg The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Chris Mann learned it's better to hire help for the November
and December holidays while people in many parts of the U.S. are still wearing
shorts and tank tops. Mann used to wait until the
holidays were at hand before hiring. But the brand-new workers peppered managers
Seasonal hiring isn't as temporary as it Used to be for some small businesses. Hiring extra help takes time. And then there's the extra
training and supervision. Thin staffing at many small businesses makes the process of assimilating seasonal workers harder than at larger companies. up from 850 last year. Like
Ohio, areas — just as the managers were trying to help
job not likely to lead to yearround employment. The owner of Uncommon Goods, an online retailer of clothing and home goods, brings in recruiters to screen prospective staffers
an influx of extra customers.
and try to weed out ones
promotions so they're able to supervise the seasonal
with questions about prod-
ucts and procedures at his two Woodhouse Day Spas in the Cincinnati and Dayton,
"It's nearly impossible
to train in the busiest time
of the year," says Mann, whose spas offer services such as massages, facials, manicures and pedicures. Now he hires in August. By mid-November, the holiday staffersareup tospeed,and the spas run efficiently, he says. Seasonal hiring isn't as temporary as it used to be
who look as if they won't be a good fit. Finding staffers is complicated by the location ofhis business. Uncommon Goods is based in the New York
other smaller companies,
Vermont Teddy Bear begins its seasonal hiring in late
summer. The company gives yearround staffers short-term
using computers or packing boxes," Shouldice says.
for some small businesses.
Hiring extra help takes
ery year," Bolotsky says.
Too soon to tell
Big-time planning
But not every company can hire months in advance.
on holiday-season employees as early as summer — or making other preparations to get ready for the influx of business near the end of the year.
Seeking the right fit David Bolotsky starts
systems.
Vermont Teddygrammar Bear Co., which sells stuffed toy bears that wear outfits
Some owners have to wait until the last minute because
they can't predict staffing needs that early. Mohu, a
manufacturer of high-definition TV antennas, usually has a surge in orders around the holidays, when people buy new TVs. Last year, CEO Mark Buff had to double his staff from 25 to 50 to
for holidays, graduations and other occasions, has
manufacture, pack and ship
about 135 year-round staff-
to a summary report.
counties added 9,475 and
9,245 people respectively.
Statewide, Oregon added 43,545 people, or 1.1 percent.
— Reporter: 541-383-0360, tdoran@bendbulletin.com
Early bargainhunters fill storesbeforedawn discountsand specialoffers.
"It's a mountain to climb, and it's a huge mountain ev-
It adds up to owners taking
The Nov. 18 estimates are preliminary. PSU expects to certify final population estimates by Dec. 15, according
Clackamas — saw the greatest increases in population during the last year, adding 24,165 people combined. Washington and Multnomah
WASHINGTON — By the time she arrived at Kmart
be talking to customers or
Some small businesses
to PSU.
Washington, Multnomah and
man resourcespeople temporarily to screen prospective employees and make sure they're right for the job.
and a longer search process.
take on so many seasonal staffers they transform into large companies for a short time. That requires well-organized hiring and training
counties around Portland-
advantage of an outpouring of
a smaller pool of candidates
extra training and supervision. Thin staffing at many small businesses makes the processofassimilating seasonal workers harder than at larger companies.
In sheer numbers, the
added 435 people for a total estimated population of 23,730 as of July 1, according
The Washington Post
Manhattan. That makes for
time. And then there's the
borders the Columbia River,
By Sarah Halzack
bunch of people who don't show up, who didn't really understand they're going to
staffers would rather work in
period. The county, which
workers. And it hires hu-
"You don't want to hire a
City borough of Brooklyn, and some potentially good
Oregon. Naturalincrease-
cording to the summary. During the 1990s and up to 2009, people migrating to Oregon from elsewhere drove the state's population growth. However, during the recession, when fewer people
leased Nov. 18 by PSU's Population Research Center. De-
Gerry Broome/The Associated Press
about 74 percent of the state's
the antennas, but the hiring
ers. This year the Shelburne, spurt didn't happen until Vermont, company expects early December.
hiring in August to be sure he gets seasonal staffers who have a good attitude,
1,000 temporary workers to
"We don'tknow yetabout
take telephone orders, pack boxes and work in the retail
this year," says Buff, whose company is located in Ra-
work well with others and
store at its factory, CEO
leigh, North Carolina. "It re-
are willing to commit to a
Bill Shouldice says. That's
ally depends on the orders."
Analysts and economists say this holiday season is just before 6 a.m. Thursday, poised to give retailers more Antoinette Wood had already reason for Christmas cheer seasonedher turkey. The sweet than ones of the recent past. potatoes were done, the decoThe economy is healing, the rationswere up, and the house jobless rate is down, and conwas deanedto welcome her sumers have fatter wallets guests. thanks to lower gas prices, And with her Thanksgiving which could encourage shoppreparati ons set,W ood sought pers to spend less cautiously. One-quarter of U.S. shoppers to get a jump-start on Christmas, loading up her cart with a said they planned to spend $4.99iron, an $8.99Operation more on holiday shopping this game and a $10Barbie convertyear, compared with the 20 ible and doll set. percent who said the same in Wood was luredto thebig2013, according to a survey by boxretailer's outpost in HyAccenture. attsville, Maryland, by the low The National Retail Federaprices, but also by the tradition tion expects the industry to see of meeting her sisters for some 4.1 percent sales growth during early-morning deal-chasing. the holiday, compared with the "It makes for fun for the holi- 3.1percentreported forthepeday," Wood said. riod lastyear. Millions of consumers were Black Friday's creep into expected to join Wilson on Thanksgiving, of course, has Thursday in taking their turbeen a turnoff for some shopkeywith a side of shopping. pers. Petitions on Change.org As the retail industry has and chatter on social networks pushedit sannualbarrage of showthat some consumers door-busterdeals from Black planned to steer clear of stores Friday into what some now call Thursday to demonstrate to Black Thursday, deal hunters
retailers that they don't think a
were flocking to the mall or firingup their computers to take
family holiday should be transformed into a spending spree.
• Oregon Spirit Distillers, of Bend,
recently released Kirschwasser, aGerman spirit made with Oregon cherries. • Lava Love plans to begin selling its line of bath and body products on Amazon.com today. The Bend-based company sells bath and body products from volcanic minerals sourced in Oregon. • Hobby Lobby
is scheduled to open in January in the Bend River Promenade onN. U.S. Highway 97, in the former Sears location. The company plans to hire 35 to 50 employees. • Peach Pilates
is scheduled to reopen Dec. 11 in NorthWest Crossing. The business closed in August after a car drove through its front window.
BEST OFTHEBIZ CALENDAR TUESDAY •SCOREfree
business counseling: Business counselors conductfree 30-minute one-on-one conferences with local entrepreneurs; check in at the library deskon the second floor; free; 5:30-7 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www. SCORECentral0regon. org. WEDNESDAY
• Business Startup Class: Learn to turn a great idea into a successful business; $29, registration required; 11 a.m.-1 p.m.; COCCChandler Building, 1027 NWTrenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7290, sbdc@cocc.edu or www. cocc.edu/sbdc/ • Financial Institutions, Taxes 8 Insurance: Learn to improve
personal financial fitness; free, registration required; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Neighborlmpact, 20310 Empire Ave., Suite A110, Bend; 541-3236567, homesource@ neighborimpact.org or www.neighborimpact. org/finaocialskills. THURSDAY • Recruitment, Interviewing and Onboarding: Learn to attract good candidates and hire the best fit; part of COCC's Leadership series; $95, registration required; 8 a.m.noon;Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NWColl egeWa y, Bend; 541-383-7270. • Oregon Cattlemen's Association Convention 8 Trade Show: Day 1; Cattlemen's College; public lands roundtable; 9 a.m.-7 p.m.; cost varies depending on events
and days of attendance. The Riverhouse Convention Center, 2850 NW Rippling River Court, Bend; 503-361-8941 or j.mp/ cattlemenconvention. • First Thursday Luncheon: League of Women Voters of Deschutes County presents discussionon System Development Charges; free; 11 a.m.-1 p.m.; Black Bear Diner, 1465 NE Third St., Bend; 541-382-2660 or kimsmith©bendcable. com. FRIDAY • Oregon Cattlemen's Association Convention & Trade Show: Day 2; Oregon Beef Council meeting; various committee meetings; 7 a.m.-5:30 p.m.; cost varies depending on events and days of attendance. The
Riverhouse Convention Center, 2850 NW Rippling River Court, Bend; 503361-8941 or j.mp/ cattlemenconveotion. • Open House: 8 a.m.-6 p.m.; Warren's Western Emporium, 337 S. Railroad Ave., Redmond; 541-350-2876 or www. bubwarren.com. DEC. 6 • Oregon Cattlemen's Association Convention It Trade Show: Day 3; annual business meeting, committee meetings aod more; 7 a.m.-7 p.m. The Riverhouse Convention Center, 2850 NW Rippling River Court, Bend; 503-361-8941 or j.mp/ cattlemenconveotion. • Open House: 8 a.m.-6 p.m.; Warren's Western Emporium, 337 S. Railroad Ave., Redmond;
541-350-2876 or www. bubwarren.com. DEC. 9 •SCOREfree business counseling: Business counselors conduct free 30-minuteone-on-one conferences with local entrepreneurs; check in at the library deskon the second floor; free; 5:30-7p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www. SCORECentral0regon.
• SCORE free buslness counseling: Business counselors conduct free 30-minute one-on-one conferences with local entrepreneurs;check in at the library deskon the second floor; free; 5:30-7 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www. SCORECentral0regon. Oig.
DEC. 17 • Understanding It OI Q. Managing Credit: Learn to improve DEC. 13 • Homeduyer Education your credit and how it Workshop: Learn to save affects you; registration required, 541-323time and money when 6567 or homesource© buying a home; $45 neighborimpact. plus fees; registration org; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; required; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; Neighborlmpact, 2303 Neighborlmpact, 2303 SW First St., Redmond. SW First St., Redmond; 541-323-6567 or www. www.neighborimpact. org/financialskills. neighborimpact.org/ DEC. 23 homebuyerhelp. DEC. 16 • SCORE free
buslness counseling: Business counselors conductfree 30-minuteone-on-one conferences with local entrepreneurs; check in at the library deskon the second floor; free; 5:30-7 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www. SCORECentral0regon. org. JAN. 8 • Managing Day-to-Day Performance: Identify performance gaps for improved productivity; part of COCC's Leadership series; $95; 8 a.m.- noon; Central Oregon Community College, Bend campus; Boyle Ed Center Room I54; 54 I-383-7270. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visit bendbulletirt.com/bizral
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W 50-Plus, D2-3 Parents & Kids, D4 Pets, D5 O< www.bendbulletin.com/allages
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014
BRIEFING
Senior odesity
programunused Lessthan 1 percent of Medicare beneficiaries havetaken advantage of a program that offers at least six months of free weightloss counseling sessions to obeseseniors, according to a report from Kaiser Health News. Only120,000 seniors have used the program since it was launched in November 2011,the report says. It's estimated that 30 percent of the country's seniors would qualify for the program because they havea body mass index that is 30 or higher. Under the program's rules, seniors who meet this criteria can receive one month of weekly counseling sessions and five months of counseling sessions that take place every other week to help them lose weight. If they lose 6.6 pounds or more during this initial period, they qualify for another six months of free monthly weight-loss counseling sessions. The report's authors said seniors may not be using the program because of a lack of promotion of the counseling sessions, because of rules that limit what providers can offer the sessions or the fact that providers are only paid $26 for each15-minute session.
Homecaregroup
aids needyseniors Bend's HomeInstead Senior Care franchise is helping needy seniors again this holiday season with its Santa for a Senior program, which assists elderly Central Oregon residents who cannot afford Christmas gifts or who cannot leave their homes. According to the company's website, Christmas trees decorated with information about seniors and the items they needareat the following locations: • Bend Senior Center, 1600 SEReedMarket Road. • Erickson's Thriftway,561 SWFourth St, Madras. • Fred Meyer, 61535 S. U.S. Highway97, Bend. • Home Instead Senior Care, 497SW Century Drive, Suite
•
•
By Mac McLeaneThe Bulletin
indsay Greco and 15 other volunteers with the Christmas Tree Project of Bend gathered in an airplane-sized garage last weekend so they could add some sparkle and greenery to the lives of dozens of Central Oregon families this holiday season. Last year, the Christmas Tree
O
See video of the project in action at benribulletin.com/treeproject
Project delivered fresh or artificial Christmas trees and decorations to 35 families who might not have otherwise had one. The project hopes to double that figureduring itssecond season,said Greco, who started the effort because she let too many tree-less Christmas seasons pass by and wants to make sure nobody misses out. "Sometimes things like this project come from personalexperience,"Greco said. Though the project didn't deliver its first tree until November 2013,its story startedfour years ago, when Greco's
husband, Domenic, was diagnosed with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or Lou Gehrig's disease. His condition deteriorated so quickly after this diagnosis that Greco and her
family members decided to forgo their traditional Christmas rituals — finding the perfect tree, decorating it and decorating the house — so they could focus their
time andenergy on what seemed to be more pressing duties. SeeTrees/D4
102, Bend.
Thinkstock
• La Pine Community Health Center, 51600 Huntington Road. • Partners in Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Court,
Bend • Ray's Food Place, 635 N. Arrowleaf Trail, Sisters. • Redmond Senior Center, 325 NWDogwood Ave. • Soroptimist Senior Center, 180 NE Belknap St., Prineville. Items purchased from a senior's wish list should be returned, unwrapped, to the place it was picked upand given to an employee. Santa for a Senior volunteers will then collect the gifts and wrap them during a wrapping party from 4 to 7 p.m. Dec.18 at St. Charles hospital in Bend. To learn more about the projectand howyou can volunteer to wrap or deliver gifts, email Home Instead co-owner Todd Sensenbachat todd.sensenbach@homeinstead.com or call 541-330-6400. — Mac McLean
eniorso ensee ac ive rave ans By Mac McLean The Bulletin
Local travel consultant
Linda Lewis hates to use the word "senior" when she
talks about her older clients because she thinks that word
"Probably half our clients are a little bit older and the whole world is a destination for them."
are her most popular type
A recent survey conducted by AARPResearch found 97 percent of people who are 50 or older are planning to travel within the United States next year and 45 percent are planning a trip abroad. But the reasons for travel and types of trips that are being planned vary greatly when domestic travelers are compared with international travelers.
of international getaway,
Reason for travel
— Linda Lewis, travel consultant at Peak Travel Group in northeast Bend
implies that they're old or
frail, while the adventures they plan are anything but. "Probably half our clients are a little bit older and the
in this age group have already booked next year's trip. Lewis said Europe is one of her clients' top destinations
whole world is a destination
as well. Her older clients are
for them," said Lewis, one of
particularly drawn to river cruises because it gives them
four travel consultants who works at Peak Travel Group's office in northeast Bend.
A recent survey conducted by AARP Research found that 45 percent of Americans
age 50 or older are planning to take at least one trip abroad in 2015, with their top
a way to see smaller towns and communities that tradi-
tional tours of Europe typically skip. "They're really relaxing and fun," said Lewis, who didn't think she'd like the riv-
er cruise experience at first destinations being Europe (36 but has now done several of percent), the Caribbean and them and enjoyed each trip. "There's a slower pace to the South America (27 percent), and Asia and the Middle East travel and you see things you (12 percent). The study found wouldn't normally see." that 12 percent of the people But while river cruises
Travel plans
Lewis said she has helped older clients plan all sorts of other journeys, including trips to Africa, Costa Rica, Russia and Tahiti. She has also helped seniors plan a trip to Peru to hike the Inca Trail with their family, and she
helped an 82-year-old woman plan a trip through India that she could do by herself. "These are the type of people that we deal with," Lewis said, explaining that her older clients tend to be interested in
more adventurous vacations because they lead an active
and healthy lifestyle. SeeTravel/D2
Mark something off a personal "Bucket List" Celebrate a special ocassion (non-holiday) Celebrate a holiday Have a romantic getaway
FOREIGN D O MESTIC TRAVELERS TRAVELERS 32%
11%
18% 12%
22%
13%
15%
22%
32%
24%
8%
30% 26%
15%
13%
Type of travel Multi-generational (with children/grandchildren) Summer vacation Weekend getaway Solo vacation Source: AARP
Greg Cross/The Bulletin
D2
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014
-PLUS
Email information for the Activities Calendar at least 10days before publication to communitylife@bendbulletin.com, or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
or a r
ACTIVITIES CALENDAR
v e eran onore
By Scott Maben
TODAY
The (Spokane) Spokesman-Review
THE GOLDENAGE CLUB: Pinochle; 11:30 a.m.-4 p.m.; Golden AgeClub, 40 SE Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752. BINGO:6 p.m.; American Legion Post No. 44, 704 SWEighth St., Redmond; 541-548-5688.
SUMDAY THE GOLDENAGE CLUB: Pinochle; noon-4 p.m.; Golden AgeClub, 40 SE Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752. BINGO:12:30 p.m.; American Legion Post No. 44, 704 SWEighth St., Redmond; 541-548-5688.
TUESDAY BEND GENEALOGICALSOCIETY: Meet with your mentor and learn
about genealogy; free;10 a.m.-noon; Williamson Hall (behind Jake's Diner), Rock Arbor Villa, 2200 NE U.S. Highway 20; 541-317-9553 or www.orgenweb.org/deschutes/
bend-gs.
erbert "Bud" Kirchhoff makes a little joke about his feet getting old, saying a
he never expected that to happen. It's impressive, not only because he's 95, gets around just fine and keeps a holster full of wisecracks ready to fire. But those two feet also carried his 6-foot-3 frame along one of the most infamous treks of modern times. As a young Army tank commander in World War II, Kirchhoff survived the Bataan Death March in the Philippines and spent the rest of the war — a grueling 3/2 years — as a prisoner of the Japanese.
BINGO:6 p.m.; Eagles Lodge 8 Club, 235 NEFourth St., Prineville; 541-447-7659.
WEDMESDAY THE GOLDENAGE CLUB: Pinochle; 11:30 a.m.-4 p.m.; Golden AgeClub, 40 SE Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752. KIWANISCLUB OF REDMOND: noon-1 p.m.; Juniper Golf Course, 1938 SW Elkhorn Ave.; 541-5485935 or www.redmondkiwanis.org. BINGO:6 p.m.; American Legion Post No. 44, 704 SWEighth St., Redmond; 541-548-5688.
THURSDAY THE GOLDENAGE CLUB: Pinochle; 11:30 a.m.-4 p.m.; Golden AgeClub, 40 SE Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752.
When the w a r
e n ded ally tapped them to go to the
and he was looking for a way home, he found himself on a train rolling through Nagasaki, flat-
Philippines.
tened a month earlier by
were going when we left this country."
a powerful weapon unknown to the freed POWs. Seven decades later, the
Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, resident is being honored as Hayden's Distinguished Veteran of the Year. He's
Continued from 01 The AARP survey found
made. "We're losing our background, our heritage," he said. "We just don't seem to have any left anymore.
that 32 percent of older inter-
That makes me sad."
national travelers expect their
Kirchhoff belongs to a fast-disappearing gener-
upcoming trips will be busy or active — as opposed to the 59 percent who are look-
"We had no clue where we
The Japanese invaded the
ation that fought in World War II. In 2000 there were
found himself in battle and
eventually commanding his son for that was we were so own tank. One night, around debilitated, our health was
more than 5.5 million sur-
23 percent want their trips to
check something off their bucket list, and 18 percent are planning to make the trip because they want to celebrate
ans from the war. Today, around 1 million remain. About 550 die every day, In one surreal episode, he according to the federal and members of his unit were Department of Veterans waiting for the Japanese to Affairs. arrive and take them prisoner Kirchhoff has watched when they decided to search the n umber d i m inish a maintenance shop for food across the Inland Northand supplies. They found a west. He used to be active nearly new, blue Buick sitwith a group called Amer- ting there, loaded it with their
a special occasion such as a
ican Ex-Prisoners of War.
birthday or an anniversary. Finally, the survey found
Their gatherings would
road with Kirchhoff behind
draw 100 or more, includ-
the wheel.
that 93 percent of these international travelers are also
ing spouses. "The last meeting I
planning to make at least one
called, we had three show
They didn't get far before they encountered a Japanese general and figured they'd be shot for pilfering supplies.
be adventurous and in some way involve the outdoors. It also found that 32 percent of
the people who are planning an international trip are doing it because they want to
A m e rican v e ter-
domestic trip next year. Their top destinations include Flor-
up," he said. Of the thousands of
ida (16 percent), California (9 percent), New York (5 percent) and Texas (5 percent), while their top reasons for traveling are to have a good weekend getaway (26 percent), they're taking a holiday trip (22 percent) or because they want to celebrate a particular occasion (17 percent).
American t r o ops
The survey also found that
people who are planning a domestic trip are more likely to bring their children or grandchildren along w i th them than those who are planning an i n ternational trip and that the summer and spring are the two most popular seasons for both types of travel. Peak Travel's Lewis said she doesn't know that much
about her older domestic travelers because their trips are easier to plan and have
a lot fewer logistics to work out than an international vacation. But, she said their top
destinations tend to be Hawaii, New Orleans, Disneyland, Walt Disney World and Chicago. — Reporter: 541-617-7816, mmclean@bendbulletin.com
bounty and took off down the
"Turned out that all t h at t a k en guy wanted was the car," he
prisoner on the peninsula sard. of Bataan and on the island of Corregidor in Ma- A story of survival nila Bay, only about 300 Next there was the march survive today, according to — a 65-mile walk through the American Defenders scorching Philippine j unof Bataan and Corregidor gles with little food or water Museum at the Brooke and no medicalcare. About County Public Library in 12,000 Americans and 58,000 Wellsburg, West Virginia. Filipino soldiers set out on the The American Defend- horrific journey, and thouers organization held its sands perished along the way. last Northwest reunion in Survivors later shared grisly Coeur d'Alene in 2008. details of how those who col"I didn't know it was go- lapsed were shot or bayoneting to be the last one, but it ed along the road. was," Kirchhoff said. "In the morning, if you didn't get in the group and Nowhere to go march out, you didn't get He joined the Illinois fed," Kirchhoff said. "And the National Guard's May- only thing you got when you wood Tank Company in did march out was a rice ball November 1940 and was about that big," he said, indisent to Fort K n ox, Kencating a portion smaller than tucky, when the company his fist. "That was your food was called into service. for the day." Kirchhoff trained as a As bad as the march had tank driver and motorcy-
down, our
r e sistance was
gone, and so anything that came along, whatever bug was there, you'd get it." Scores of prisoners died there daily from tropical diseases and other illness, he
been, it got worse when the
a lot," Kirchhoff said of the
Today, around 1 million remain. About 550 die
every day, according to the federal Department of Veterans Affairs.
they shot the other nine," he
knew we were there."
said, adding he was never sure the Japanese soldiers
That night he boarded a hospital train to Iowa and finally made his way home to Chicago, where his return was just as subdued.
carried out such punishment. "But the threat was there."
in a torturous posture with
poles under his shins and another wedged behind his knees.
The war ends Kirchhoff lost 110 pounds
during his imprisonment. He was working in a mine about 40 miles from Nagasaki when the city was devastated by the
has two sons and a daughter as well as grandchildren, great-grandchildren and great-great-grandchildren. These days he enjoys supporting Newby-ginnings of North Idaho, a charitable organization
t h a t ga t h ers
basic necessities and household items to give to veterans, active military and their
families. "I collect what I can and direct other people to do it,"
Kirchhoff said. Asked what he wants people to remember about World War II, he answered, "How
awful it was.... We're all losers in a war."
Next he was placed on "Dad said, 'Hi. Well, how an old Japanese freighter and shipped to Japan. There are things?' "Oh, OK." It was almost that were no Red Cross or POW markings on the ships, mak- simplistic," Kirchhoff said, ing them targets for Ameri- chuckling at the memory. can submarines and fighter After the war, he married planes. and started a family. For most Kirchhoff survived the per- of his career, Kirchhoff was ilous journey and spent an- the Chicago district manother two years in four labor ager for a New York-based camps, mining coal for much company that made abrasive of that time. Once he was grit for grinding wheels and caught stealing onions from sandpaper. the guards and was forced to He and his wife moved kneel through a wintry night to North Idaho in 1984, and she died in 2003. Kirchhoff
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second atomic blast over Ja-
E>% %~
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pan in August 1945. "I was in the mine evidently when the atomic bomb went off," he said. "We couldn't
come up out of the mine for a while.... It was a big boom, but we had no clue what it was."
cle messenger while there. prisoners reached the concenWithin days, Japan surrenRenamed Company B, tration camp. dered and the camp guards "We lost more people at 192nd Tank Battalion, they took off, leaving the prisoners Camp O'Donnell than by far to fend for themselves. then went to Camp Polk, "Two other fellas and myLouisiana, where Gen. we had in the march itself," George S. Patton person- Kirchhoff said. "And the rea- self wandered around Japan
Arts Sr Entertainment Every Friday AT HOME
October 1945.
guards. It w a sn't m u c h of a "One thing they did: You reception. "There wasn't anybody were in a 10-man group, and if one of those guys escaped, there," he said. "They hardly
Get a taste of Food. Home 8 Garden In
• • TheBulletin
Kirchhoff belongsto a fast-disappearing generation that fought in the World WarII. In 2000 there were more than 5.5 million surviving American veterans from the war.
said. Kirchhoff said he suffered through pneumonia, Another close shave came malaria, Dengue fever and when Japanese bombers diphtheria. "Somehow I lived for a whole month, from town blasted an airstrip and Kirch- through all of it." to town and prison camp to hoff jumped into a small hole After about a m onth, he prison camp," Kirchhoff said. for cover. A bomb fragment and others were packed Finally they met up with landed right next to where he into sweltering boxcars and American forces and were was curled up. "I tried to pick shipped by rail to Cabanat- put on a train, which rolled it up and it was hot," he said. uan, another prison camp, through Nagasaki. "That city Bataan was surrendered on where he would remain for was as flat as a floor," he said. April 9, 1942. more than a year. An estimatKirchhoff got on an English "If we hadn't, we'd have ed 3,000 Americans died in aircraft carrier to Okinawa, just been annihilated because the first nine months there. then flew on a B-25 to Manila, "If you got out and went to and finally made it aboard an there was nowhere to go," Kirchhoff said. "The ocean's work and behaved yourself, Indian freighter that took him lapping at your feet." they didn't really bother you to Seattle, where he landed in
ing for something that is laid back and relaxing — and that
viving
Kathy Plonka/The (Spokane) Spokesman-Review
nWar is horrible," said Army veteran Bud Kirchhoff as he talked about World War II from his home in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho. He was a tank commander, fought the Japanese in the Philippines, survived the Bataan Death March and spent most of the war as a POW. Now he offers support to other former
Philippines i n D e cember prisoners of war. 1941, and Staff Sgt. Kirchhoff
the grand marshal of the 3 a.m., all hell broke loose. city's Veterans Day parade "We thought we were being and a guest speaker. shelled," he said. Kirchhoff has always It turned out to be Amerifound it easy to talk about can artillery firing at a Japhis wartime experienc- anese convoy parked next es, and he wants young to his tank unit. "It sounded people to know about the like the end of the world," he sacrifi ces members of recalled. the armed services have
Travel
"He said, 'You guys are going to go,'" Kirchhoff said.
MAGAZIME TheBulletin
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Be the first to know!
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•
5 0-P L U S
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014• THE BULLETIN
D3
'4 .4
How canine companions can ivea
oost to your ea an appiness By Christina Cheakalos AARP Media
If your nest is empty — by circumstance or b y
c h o ice
— think about getting a dog. Known fo r
t h ei r d e votion
and happy dances, dogs can take a big bite out of isolation. Just hanging out with a furry friend, studies show, has a
revitalizing effect. Here are 10 benefits of later-life dog ownership:
Dogs keepyoufit
Fort Worth (Texas) Star-Telegram via Tribune News Service
Adopt a dog and ditch that
Holiday traditions are what you make of them, often holding
/II I
pricey personal trainer. A study in The Journal of Phys-
I
ical Activity and Health found
special meaning or being unique to youand your family.
//I 1
that dog owners walk approximately one hour longer
Tradition has its place: Let's shareholiday rituals
))'
per day than those without a
fetching friend in their lives.
They makeyouhealthier Studies
show
that
dog-owning seniors have lower blood pressure and lower cholesterol than their petless peers. Having a dog
By Joan Morris
and themayhem would begin. Wrapping paper would fly, The older I get, the more we would squeal our delight
San Jose Mercury News
I appreciate what fun we
also reducesthe risk of heart
attack — and boosts your chances of long-term survival if you have one.
Owning a dog can keep seniors healthier, more fit and increase their overall quality of life.
Dogs aresocial mediums
Dogs get you
real and imagined, of course!). Dogs make you
MRI s c a nners s h o w ed that the canine brain reacts
They canbe an old friend
to voices and sounds, such as crying or laughter, in the same way the human brain does. Dogs are also the only
No need for housebreaking and training when you adopt rocker not known as an SPCA an older pooch. Studies show poster child, once wrestled a you can teach an old dog new coyote to the ground to pull his
nonhuman animals who scan
tricks — or simply take it for
A natural-born icebreaker,
your dog will introduce you to everyone from next-door neighbors to perfect strangers. It's almost impossible to pass a dog without making a "pat stop," so head for the park — Bowser will take it from
there.
They organize your day A dog may keep you sane, showered andsolvent.Studies
For many older Americans,
They helpyouvolunteer
show that dog owners exhibit higher degrees of self-dis-
a dog means the difference When is a dog like a grandbetween a life lived and a life child? When you can play cipline than t hose without. merely endured. Dogs help with it during the day and Makes sense: Dogs, like hu- you stay safe and indepen- then head home! Shelters and mans, thrive o n s t r ucture; dent: They provide ears for rescue organizations are desthey need to be fed, walked
and nurtured a t intervals.
a better person Consider this: Ozzy Osbourne, the b at-chomping
pet Pomeranian, Pipi, from its
the left side of a face — the long, calm walks. For tips on jaws. As the "bumper snickprocess whereby people, too, bringing a "senior dog" into er" exhorts us, eBe the person "read" emotions. your home, check out susiess- your dog thinks you are." eniordogs.com.
They boostquality of life
the deaf, eyes for the blind and
perateforvolunteer help.And
r e gular an early-warning system at you'll get a boost from that the approach of dangers (both tail-wagging mood elevator.
The (Spohane) Spokesman-Review
Paulette Miller, of Kellogg, Idaho, has cared for people all her life — three children, a sick
husband and his dying friend. Now her new sweetheart has
cancer and heart problems. So she cares for him, too. But after completing a nurs-
ing assistant training program, Miller is getting paid for her caretaking.
With a large number of retirees in North Idaho and Eastern Washington anda big medical presence with hospitals and care facilities, having a nursing assistance certification almost guarantees jobs, which typically pay from $9 to $17 an hour. Often facilities are in such need for nursing assistants they will reimburse the tuition of an employee who
completes the certification process.
At 70, Miller didn't think she
could stuff new information into her aging brain. But after Pilgrimaddedthattherealso her Sept. 18 graduation, Mill- is a shortage of instructors for er knows she can accomplish nursing assistance programs. many things that didn't seem Nursing assistants can work possible just months ago. in nursing homes, hospitals, "I really thought I was too assisted living facilities, adult old to keep all these things in family homes and hospice, my head," Miller said. "But it's helping people with everyday amazing when you do it. I'm tasks such as bathing, toileting, just tickled." eating and dressing. Miller is one of nearly 400 Miller will continue taking s tudents this year who w i l l care of her friend Bill Lane, complete the eight-weekcourse 79, as she has done for several at North Idaho College's Work- years. The only change is she force Training Center. In a few will be paid by the state for her weeks, she will take her final caregiving. In-home care isanskills test to become a regis- other popular choice for certitered nursing assistant in Ida- fied nursing assistants. ho and be induded on the IdaMiller said Lane, a retired ho Nurse Aide Registry. miner, r e ceived r a d i ation With a large number of retir- burns that caused his canees in North Idaho and Eastern cer and heart problems while Washington and a big medical working in New Mexico. Until presence with hospitals and three years ago, he owned the care facilities, having a nursing Crystal Gold Mine where he assistance certification almost gave underground tours of one guarantees jobs, which typical- of the first hard rock mines in ly pay from $9 to $17 an hour. the Silver Valley. "I was married to a miner," Often facilities are in suchneed for nursing assistants they will said Miller, who has lived in r eimburse the tuition of a n the Silver Valley for 45 years. employee who completes the "I swore I'd never get mixed up certification process. There is
with another miner."
"It's something we need to
They let yoube ahero
The Humane Society estimates that 6 to 8 million dogs
and cats wind up in animal shelters everyyear. The majoritywouldmake loyal and loving companions, yet at least half of that number is euthanized
annually. Visit a local shelter; maybe some buddy needs you.
presents. Then he would open his while we compared our
back to that kitchen, where I
lured me into laziness — but I
herwork. At Christmas, we had the
traditional fight over the proper way to hang tinsel (my oldest sister insisted we hang it one strand at a time; my dad encouraging us to throw handfuls of it). On
homework, Millerand Lane are vacationing in Hawaii. But
Christmas Eve, I would anx-
as the life of a caregiver, it's She was looking forward to the break before she takes her final exam.
She's confident in her abilitiesand proud of her achievement. She would do it again.
"They all made fun of me," Miller said with a l a ugh. "That's OK. I showed them up.
It was a good class." Pilgrim described Miller as a hard-working woman who brought joy and experience to the class. "She was a determined stu-
dent," Miller said, adding that she easily kept up and got great grades."She had a mission." The 16 students learned everything f r o m pr o p er hand-washing and bed changing, to how to dress a patient,
TheBulletin
and had children, the tradi-
tionschanged and morphed to match those of new families. Christmas Eve spent with us,
Christmas Day spent with the spouse's family. My nephew, Dan, turned 48 this year and
I'm pleased to see he is continuing the traditions with his
Her son is also proud. At 48, he often tells his mother he
make of them, and I happen to
think they are important.
— places on the floor or in
wants to return to school but
chairs where we would sit,
feels too old. "I tell him 'Your mother is 70
waiting for the gift sorter to deliver the gifts to us.
Eventually, a n
and she did it. There's no rea-
a d u lt
would signal it was time
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always knew what stack was
congregating in the living room, picking our spots
oldest student in the dass, but
late 50s or mid 60s. She said 70 is unusual.
On Christmas morning, the gifts from Santa would appear, unwrapped and presorted into piles. We somehow
5 p.m., we kids would start
do." Miller was, by decades, the she said life experience and maturity helped her persevere. Pilgrim said the nursing assistant dasses usually have a mix of young students fresh from high school and middle age. There is often a student in their
treasures.
iously watch the door for my children, although Santa now dad to walk in. That was the stuffs actual Christmas stocksign that it was almost time ings, not dress socks, and the to open the presents. elves have started wrapping We always opened our the gifts. gifts on Christmas Eve. At T raditions are w hat y o u
a working vacation for Lane.
and now I know more what to
But several years ago, she for and cleanse catheters. They met Lane in a very modern alsolearned various range-ofway: on the Internet. He only motion exercises. They did sevlived five miles down the road. en dinicals in medical settings. "The first day, a guy passed Today the couple travel and "Oh there's such a strong enjoy each other's company. away," Miller said. "So we had need," said Tammy Pilgrim, a Miller said Lane is still healthy to do post mortem. You do it, registered nurse who taught enough to do most things, but and then you think about it. I Miller's class at the Workforce he encouraged and paid for didn't expect that." Training Center. "They can get Miller to take the course just as After the daily commute right to work because of our el- extrainsurance forwhen his over the mountains to Post derly population." health declines further. Falls and hours of classes and
• •
until we had opened all of our
my prime trick-or-treating life, I went as a gypsy. After we had our bags filled, we would come home and, much to my dismay, dump all the candy out into a big bowl where everyone got to pick out their favorites. I always grabbed all the Smarties I could find. At Thanksgiving, the
would dimb up on the cabi- make her coconut cream pies. net, out of the way, to watch As my siblings married
face," Miller said. "Something son you can't do it too.'" could happen to him out there
a big shortage of workers on both sides of the state line; just look at any job posting site including the newspaper and Craigslist.
•
into costumes. For most of
ours. The heap also would include a sock, usually one of my dad's black dress socks, meal was the tradition. We filled with ribbon candy and had turkey, of course, but topped with an orange. the highlight was my mom's When I graduated from cornbread dressing. She college and started out on would bake the bread for my own, I brought some of days leading up to Wednes- those traditions with me. I still day night, when she would hunt out the Smarties from combine the c ornbread the post-Halloween hauls with celery and sage and my co-workers bring into the dozens of other things. The office. I never mastered my smell of sage takes me right mother's stuffing — Stove Top
For long-term caregiver,ageprovides no barrier in pursuinggoals asnursing assistant By Erica Curless
— even socks and underwear
used to have at the holidays. were appreciated, but probAt Halloween, we would ably not as much as the toys. dig through the rag pile bar- My dad would sit on the end of rel in the hall closet, looking the couch, his pile of presents for clothes we could turn growing larger but untouched
Courtesy Fotolia via Tribune News Service
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D4
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014
PARENTS + KIDS
Email information for the Family Calendar at least 10days before publication to communitylifeibendbulletin.com, or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
FAMILY CALENDAR
TODAY SANTALANDATTHEOLDMILL DISTRICT:Take aphoto with Santa, children's activities, Tree of Joy and more; free admission, additional cost for take-home photos, $5 donation for children's activities; 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; SantaLand, 330 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. SCIENCEPARTY, WINGED WONDERS:Learn about the world of flight with an owl and falcon, test different types of wings and theories of drag, lift and thrust; $3 for members, $5 for non-members; 11:30 a.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.org/ science-party or 541-382-4754. SCIENCEPARTY, WINGED WONDERS:Learn about the world of flight with an owl and falcon, test different types of wings and theories of drag, lift and thrust; $3 for members, $5 for non-members;1:30 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www. highdesertmuseum.org/scienceparty or 541-382-4754. CARRIAGERIDES IN THE OLD MILL DISTRICT:Ride in the Cowboy Carriage, located between
541-549-0251.
The parade is on HoodAvenue from Pine to Spruce; 2-5 p.m.; Hood Ave., across from Les Schwab Tires; www.sisterscountry.
SATURDAY
requested; 10:45 a.m.; Cascade School ofM usic,200 NW Pacific Park Lane, Bend; www. ccschoolofmusic.org, info© cascadeschoolofmusic.org or 541-382-6866. TABLETENNIS EVENING PLAY: Eveningplay hosted by BendTable Tennis Club; drop in fees are $3 for adults and $2 for youths and seniors; 6-9 p.m.; Boys & Girls Club of Central Oregon (Bend), 500 NW Wall St Bend, OR97701; www. bendtabletennis.com.
com, jeri©sisterscountry.comor
STORYTIMES —FAMILY SATURDAYSTORIES:All ages; 9:30a.m.; East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road; www. deschuteslibrary.org/eastbend or 541-330-3760. STORYTIMES — MUSIC, MOVEMENT &STORIES:Ages3-5; 10:15 a.m.; Sisters Public Library, 110 N. Cedar St.; www.deschuteslibrary. org/sisters or 541-312-1070. TURKEYTROTFUNRUN/WALK: Fun run to benefit the SHSNordic Ski team; $10, registration required; 10:30a.m.-1 p.m.; Lodge Restaurant at Black Butte Ranch, 12930 Hawks Beard; www.blackbutteranch.com,
541-549-0251. PRINEVILLECHRISTMAS PARADE: This year's theme is "Holiday Traditions"; 5-6 p.m.; Downtown Prineville. ST. CHARLESREDMOND STARLIGHTHOLIDAY PARADE:The theme is "It's a Whoville Christmas," annual tree lighting by Santa Claus after parade in Centennial Park; free; 5 p.m.; downtown Redmond; 541-923-5191. PRINEVILLECHRISTMAS TREE LIGHTING:5:15 p.m.; Downtown Prineville. BEND CHRISTMASTREE LIGHTING: Sing carols, listen to local choirs, watch Santa light the Christmas tree and more; free; 6 p.m., tree lighting at 6:30 p.m.; Drake Park, 777 NW Riverside Blvd.; www.j.mp/ xmasbend or 541-788-3628.
recreation©blackbutteranch.comor
TUESDAY ANIMAL ADVENTURESWITH THE HIGH DESERTMUSEUM: Ages3 and older, live animals, stories and crafts with the High Desert Museum; 9:30 a.m.; East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road; www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar or 541-312-1055. STORYTIMES — TODDLIN'TALES: Ages 18-36 months; 10:15 a.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www.deschuteslibrary. org/bend or 541-617-7050. STORYTIMES — FAMILY FUN: Ages 0-5; 10:30 a.m.; Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Lane; www.deschuteslibrary.org/sunriver/ or 541-312-1080. STORYTIMES — TODDLIN'TALES: Ages 18-36 months; 11 a.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www.deschuteslibrary. org/bend or 541-617-7050. ANIMAL ADVENTURESWITH THE HIGH DESERTMUSEUM: Ages 3 and older, live animals, stories and crafts with the High Desert Museum; 11:30 a.m.; La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St.; www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar or 541-312-1055. STORYTIMES — ROCKIETALES PUPPET SHOW:Ages 3-5 years; free;1:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St.; www.deschuteslibrary.org/bend or 541-617-7050. STORYTIMES —PAJAMA PARTY:
541-595-1282. SANTALANDATTHEOLDMILL DISTRICT:Take aphoto with Santa, children's activities, Tree of Joy and more; free admission, additional cost for take-home photos, $5 donation for children's activities; SUMDAY 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; SantaLand, 330 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; SANTALAND ATTHEOLDMILL 541-312-0131. DISTRICT:Takea photo with Santa, SCIENCEPARTY,WINGED children'sactivities, Tree of Joyand WONDERS:Learn about the world more; free admission, additional Ben & Jerry's andFrancesca's; of flight with an owl and falcon, cost for take-home photos, $5 test different types of wings and proceeds benefit the KIDSCenter; donation for children's activities; weather dependent; donations theories of drag, lift and thrust; $3 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; SantaLand, 330 for members, $5 for non-members; accepted; 2-5 p.m.; Ben & Jerry's, SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 11:30a.m.; High Desert Museum, 541-312-0131. 541-312-0131. 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97,Bend; CARRIAGERIDES INTHE OLD www.highdesertmuseum.org/ GRAND ILLUMINATIONAND MILL DISTRICT:Ride in the science-party or 541-382-4754. HOLIDAYFESTIVITIES: Featuring Cowboy Carriage, located between a petting zoo, face painting, live SCIENCEPARTY,WINGED Ben & Jerry's and Francesca's; entertainment and more, with a WONDERS:Learn about the world proceeds benefit the KIDSCenter; holiday lighting ceremony at 7 p.m; of flight with an owl and falcon, weather dependent; donations 3-8 p.m.; Sunriver Resort, 17600 test different types of wings and accepted; 2-5 p.m.; Ben & Jerry's, Center Drive; www.sunriver-resort. theories of drag, lift and thrust; $3 for 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; com or 541-593-1000. members, $5 for non-members;1:30 541-312-0131. p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 2ND ANNIVERSARYPARTY: Featuring food, drinks and live music S. U.S. Highway 97,Bend; www. MONDAY highdesertmuseum.org/scienceby Possessed By Paul Jamesand party or 541-382-4754. ANIMALADVENTURESWITH THE more; 5 p.m.; Crow's Feet Commons, 875 NW Brooks St., Bend; www. CARRIAGERIDES IN THEOLD HIGH DESERTMUSEUM: Ages3and crowsfeetcommons.com or MILL DISTRICT:Ride in the older, live animals, stories and crafts 541-728-0066. Cowboy Carriage, located between with the High Desert Museum; free; Ben & Jerry's and Francesca's; 10a.m.; Redmond Public Library, SISTERS CHRISTMASTREE 827 SW Deschutes Ave.; www. proceeds benefit the KIDSCenter; LIGHTINGCEREMONY:Featuring weather dependent; donations deschuteslibrary.org/redmond or the lighting of the holiday tree, 541-312-1050. accepted; 2-5 p.m.; Ben & Jerry's, carols, a"cookie crawl" andmore; 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 5:30-6:30 p.m.; Village GreenPark, KINDERMUSIKCLASS:Ages1-2, 335 S. Elm St.; www.sisterscountry. 541-312-0131. learn songs,dances, instruments, com, jeri©sisterscountry.comor SISTERSCHRISTMASPARADE: stories and more; free, registration
Ages 3-5years, wearyour pjs; 6 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave.; www. deschuteslibrary.org/redmond or 541-312-1050. GREEN TEAM MOVIENIGHT:A
ChristmasTree Project ofBend
541-312-1080. TREE LIGHTINGCEREMONY: Lighting of the 65-foot Ponderosa pine, visits with Santa, a performance by the Summit High Choir and ladder truck tours with the BendFire Department; free, one non-perishable food item suggested donation; 5:45 p.m.; Northwest Crossing, Mt. Washington and NWCrossing drives, Bend; www.northwestcrossing.com.
WEDMESDAY
STORYTIMES —FAMILY FUN:Ages 0-5;; La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St.; www.deschuteslibrary.org/ lapine/or 541-312-1090. STORYTIMES — PRESCHOOL PARADE:Ages 3-5; free; 10:15 a.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave.; www. deschuteslibrary.org/redmond or 541-312-1050. STORYTIMES — FAMILY FUN: Ages 0-5; 10:30 a.m.; Sisters Public Library,110 N. Cedar St.; www. deschuteslibrary.org/sisters or 541-312-1070. STORYTIMES — LISTOS PARA ELKINDER(READY FOR KINDERGARTENIN SPANISH): Ages 0-5, interactive stories with songs, rhymes and crafts; free; 11 a.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave.; www. deschuteslibrary.org/redmond or 541-312-1050. STORYTIMES —BABYSTEPS: Ages 0-18 months;1:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www.deschuteslibrary. org/bend or 541-617-7050. LEARNING TOSPEAK MUSIC:
EMPOWERING FAMILIES BREAKFAST: A breakfast fundraiser for the Latino Community Association; free, donations accepted, registration requested; 7:15-8:30 a.m.; Boys 8 Girls Club of Bend, 500 NWWall St.; www. latinocommunityassociation. org, whitney@ latinocommunityassociation.org or 541-382-4366. STORYTIMES —TODDLIN'TALES: Ages 0-3; 9:30 a.m.; East Bend Public Library, 62080 DeanSwift Road; www.deschuteslibrary.org/ eastbend or 541-330-3760. STORYTIMES — MOTHER GOOSE & MORE:Ages 0-2; free;10:15 a.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave.; www. deschuteslibrary.org/redmond or 541-312-1050. STORYTIMES —TODDLIN'TALES: Ages 18-36 months; 10:15 a.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www.deschuteslibrary. org/bend or 541-617-7050. STORYTIMES —BABYSTEPS: Ages 0-18 months; 11:30 a.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www.deschuteslibrary. org/bend or 541-617-7050. ANIMAL ADVENTURESWITH THE HIGH DESERT MUSEUM: Agesthree and older, live animals, stories and crafts with the High Desert Museum; 1 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St.; www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar or 541-312-1055. STORYTIMES —TEEN TERRITORY: Ages12-17, strategy games, crafts, Wii and more; 1:30 p.m.; Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Lane; www. deschuteslibrary.org/sunriver/or
or call 541-699-8200.
• People who wantto donate Christmas decorations, garlands or Christmas tree stands to the project can drop them off at B&BAutoworks, 2163 South U.S.
Highway 97 inRedmond, from 8 a.m. to 5p.m. Monday through Friday.
stands to supply the 70 fam-
8200 if they want to become a
ilies she hopes to help with this year's project. But she'll
volunteer orfind out how they
also need a few extra things
in order to get her first batch of Christmas trees — which are being dong donated by an Oregon City tree farmready to go the week after Thanksgiving. "Weneed men, and we need
day season. "There's something so simple about a Christmas tree," Grecosaid. "It just gives some-
trucks," Greco said, explain-
thing themselves." — Reporter: 541-617-7816, mmclean@bendbulletin.com
ing that garlands and Christmas tree stands, which can cost about$20 apiece and are sheneeds,are alsoatthetop of her list.
local families, while the rest
Contlnued from D1
for this year's holidayseason. "We made a great dent (in
She said this pattern contin-
in Redmond. They can also
boxes of donated ornaments.
She said 75 to 80 percent of these ornaments came from
has already received requests
our workload) and arecertain- came from businesses such ly feeling prepared," Greco as Fred Meyer, Home Depot, said after a Nov. 15volunteer Wal-Mart and Lowe's. session where the project's Buoyed by this early mo-
from 20 families who need one
ued every holiday seasonun-
•
l
loss of her husband, that Gre-
co realized she had also lost Christmas, shesaid. "We just put the whole hol-
iday on the back burner and we shouldn't have," said Greco, who found a way to make
she met wh ile v olunteering
with the Feed the Hungry program at Bend's Communiscouredthe town and hung up signs looking for peoplewho
LS
roR
Dec s-t t
ty Center for support, Greco needed a Christmas tree last
year and people or businessesthat could help by donating Christmas or n aments, t re e ' •
•
She delivered almost three dozenChristmas trees — each
of which comes completewith
I
I
stands and pickup trucks to makedeliveries. •
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a box of donated ornaments
that the recipients can put up themselves — to families across theregion lastyearand
i
•
• •
• r
•
thing that sparkles over the
holiday season to people who may not be able to give any-
~ lelt+
s ~re kere! Step up
to Bosch! Stainless steel Supeior deaning
Quie)!!!
•
O2014BegmmHome losmis a regideel trade Mmeof men Mon m e
I
Ski or Board Non-Thurs Dec t-4
•
EVERGREEN'
up for this losswhen she read about a Colorado family that ect in 2010. Shedecided to bring it to Bend. Drawing on her fr iends, neighbors and some people
•
Brad Haun N.~22154 6
All proceeds benefit Bend-La Pine Schools and Redmond School District Education Foundations
started a Christmas Treeproj-
•
541-280-2564 Mi3zt3-tp~
til Domenic died in February 2013. It was only then, a time
when she was mourning the
can get a Christmas tree delivered to their homes this holi-
the most expensive item that
teammembers sorted through
Trees
music vocabulary with Michael Gesme;free;6 p.m .;EastBend Public Library, 62080 DeanSwift Road; www.deschuteslibrary.org/ eastbend, lizg@deschuteslibrary.org or 541-312-1032. "HUMBUG" PREVIEWNIGHT: A modern-day twist on the Christmas classic "A Christmas Carol" about Wall Street executive Eleanor Scrooge; $10, available at the door only; 7:30 p.m., complimentary dessert reception 6:30 p.m.; Cascades Theatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803.
visit the pro)'ect's website at
these itemsto B&B Autoworks Volunteers help to sort through donated Christmas ornaments
Learnsome basicandcomplex
mentum, Greco is confident
She saidpeople can deliver Meg Roussos/The Bulletin
THURSDAY
she'll be ableto collect enough www.ChristmasTreeProj ecdecorations, trees and tree toSend.org or call 541-699-
• To learn more about the Christmas TreeProject of Bend, howyou canhelp with the effort or how you can get a Christmas tree this year, visit www.ChristmasTreeProjectofBend.org
h.
screening of "Salt of the Earth," a reenactment of a1951 strike at a zinc mine in New Mexico; free; 6:30-8:30 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 NE Ninth St., Bend; www.bendfp.org or 541-815-6504. STORYTIMES — FIESTADE PIJAMAS ENESPANOL (PAJAMA PARTY IN SPANISH):Ages 0-5; 6:45 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave.; www. deschuteslibrary.org/redmond or 541-312-1050.
Q~
HNsoN TV.APPLIANCE
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014• THE BULLETIN D5
PETS
Email information for the Pets Calendar at least 10days before publication to communityli fe@bendbulletin.com, or click on "Submit an Event"at www.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
e massa esseea oos in o uari By Terry Tang The Associated Press
PHOENIX — Spa treatments don't stop with people. You
won't see any aromatherapy candles around, but animals get massages, too, and it's become a regular service that manypet owners value as more than just glorified petting. "People callme because their dogs are having problems,"
category that includes grooming, training and services such as massage, according to the
PETS CALENDAR
The board says "I was doing more than just pampering dogs and that was breaking laws,"
o
American Pet Products Association, which tracks nation-
Granatelli said. The American Veterinary
al spending trends in the pet industry. That is a 6.1 percent jump from 2012.
Medical Association classifies animal massage as a form of veterinary care that should require a license. It is up to each
Massage sessions can last
30-40 minutes, and therapists travel to homes, hotels and
thatway. "We do consider them veter-
inary procedures, and we feel the same standards should be
Dec. 6
used because a lot of harm can
l i c ensing
board whether to categorize it
even an owner's workplace,
said Barr, who has been praccisco dog massage therapist. ticing in San Francisco since "The work I do is important 2006. "There are a couple of tech for animals so they have a high quality of life." companies I go to. They have Practitioners say massage a quiet office I can go into and can be a preventive measure work on the animal," said Barr, for younger animals and re- who typically sees about 15 habilitative for older ones by pets aweek. boosting flexibility, circulation The treatments don't necesand immunity. As its populari- sarily mean incense burning ty continues to grow, primarily aroundamassage table.Barris among dog and horse owners, guidedby what the dog desires, so does the debate about regu- which sometimes means the lation. Some veterinarians ar- pet chews on a bone the whole gue that pet massage is a form time. of veterinary medicine that G race Granatelli, an a n i -
COMMUNITY CAT WINTERIZATIONWORKSHOP: Workshop will teach participants how to build an inexpensive shelter to keep cats safe and warm during the cold months, registration required by Sunday; $10; 6 p.m.; Bend Spay & Neuter Project, 910 SEWilson Ave., B-1; 541-617-1010.
state's veterinary
C.
TUESDAY
said Shelah Barr, a San Fran-
ShelahBarrofHappyHounds Massage,center,givesa massage
come from them," association assistant director Adrian Hoch-
to Dewie, 2, at the home of Laurie Ubben, left, in San Francisco on
stadt said.
Nov.6. Practitioners say massage can be a preventive measure
Carol Forrest, a former client of Granatelli's, said her Dachshunds, Maxie and Lucy, got regularmassages for five
SANTA PAWSPETPHOTOS: Have your pet's photo taken with Santa; proceeds benefit Bend Spay 8 Neuter project; $10 print photo, $25 print and digital photos;1-4 p.m.; Eastside Bend Pet Express, 420 NEWindy Knolls Drive; 541-617-1010,
years. The two, who have since passed away, were able to relax
www.bendsnip.org.
Jeff Chiu/The Associated Press
for younger animals and rehabilitative for older ones by boosting flexibility, circulation and immunity.
massaging its neck. She would ation in their musdes."
meganw©bendsnip.org or
That was until Granatelli be- after a massage despite dealing cluding legs and hips. But it's came one of three animal mas- with issues such as arthritis. not crucial that the dog lie sage practitioners who received Forrest said she truly believes down or sit still. cease-and-desist letters from massage benefits dogs as much "There are times where the the Arizona State Veterinary as people. requires a license, but whether mal masseuse in the Phoenix "It's like if you go to one regtherapists need one varies by suburb of Scottsdale, said she dog is either very distracted Medical Examining Board earstate. The issue has sparked a would play new-age music or or anxious or isn't quite re- lier this year. The trio has sued ularly that you like, they get to lawsuit in Arizona, where three "spa sounds," which help relax ceptive," Granatelli said. "So I the board, arguingthat the stat- know you and you get a better practitioners are suingthe state dogs. just do the best I can doing the ute is overly broad in defining treatment out of it," she said. veterinarian licensingboard. In her sessions, Granatelli strokes while they're standing veterinarymedicine. They ar- "The same goes for the dogs ... Pet owners spent $4.4 billion wouldhave thedog liedow n on — whatever I can do to get the en't practicing while the lawsuit versus going to the vet — my lastyear on "other services,"a the floor or its bed and start by strokes in and get some relax- moves through the courts. dogs aren't relaxed at the vet." then move to other areas, in-
ADOPT ME
'"
1I
li
I
Submitted photo
A dudgie special Cheap is abeautiful budgerigar, aka abudgie, looking for anewhome,alongwithseveral other budgies.Cheapand friends don't comewith a cage, so you'll need tohaveone. Fourteen of thesehappy little birds have alreadyfound homes. If you're looking for afeathered friend, meetthemat the Humane Society of theOchocos. They're running aspecial this week; theyareCheap! If you think Cheapmight be a good fit for your home, visit him or any of the other animals available for adoption at the shelter or see themonline at www.humanesocietyochocos.
Treatingourpetslikechildren: Toomuch,or anact ot love? By Joan Morris
Then there were the cats, ah, another Siamese with an far too many to name. As we attitude problem. My mother, Let me tell you about my lived on a dairy farm, there who was living with me, decidboy. He's 6 years old, smart as was little chance of the cats ed to get a cat, too, so we also a "Jeopardy!" champion and hanging around the house, adopted Matt, a Maine coon. as cute as a baby bunny at not with field and barn mice They lived with us for 15 years. springtime. He's my very own and fresh milk luring them Matt was the sweetest cat I've ever known, but he didn't little bundle of joy, and I burst away. with pride every time I look at The first cat that was mine like children. My then-2-yearhim. and mine alone was Andy, a old nephew, Brycen, found Bailey, the bundle in ques- bruising Siamese tomcat who that out pretty quickly. Ask tion, also happens to be a dog, was given to me by a friend. Brycen what a cow says and and the fact that I call him Andy had been the pet of he'd say "moo." Ask him what my baby apparently irritates her friend, but when he kept the dog says, and he'd answer some people. spraying the furniture, the with "ruff ruff." Ask him what I get what they're saying, woman wanted him out of the cat says and he'd hiss. sometimes in strident, preach- there. My friend Sandy had Next came Bailey, a black ing tones. Dogs are dogs, cats Andy fixed and that stopped Chihuahua and, like Matt and are cats, and they shouldn't be that. Sarah, a rescue pet. He was3 treated like our children. A ndy did not l i k e m e when he came to live with me P et lovers know th e d i f much in the beginning, or so and cozied up inside myheart. ference; we're just asking it seemed. He would knock They were all my children. "What's wrong with it?" things — heavy things — off I spoiled them with toys and Bailey is a dog, but does a bookcase and onto my head treats and, for the cats, pricey that make him less a favorite while I slept. scratching posts, kitty condos son? We eventuallyreached an and the finest catnip money I've had a long line of pets accord and became devoted to could buy. starting, like most people, each other. Andy was a great Bailey is no stranger to my when I was a child. Tippy, Tip- cat, and I loved him deeply. largesse, either. His toy bin ripy Ttttro, Pandora, Fritz and Like a son. vals Brycen's, and I never tire Pancho. After Andy died, I got Sar- of talking about him and his San Jose Mercury News
antics, like the one about how I bought a set of stairs for him
relish sitting in Santa's lap,
but he does it for his mommy. to use to climb up on my bed That would be me. I'm not apologizing for lov(because he didn't seem to be able to on his own). I was try- ing animals and for calling ing to lure him up those steps them my children. I celebrate using his favorite treats when his birthday. I hang a Christhe suddenly jumped up on the mas stocking for him. I fill my bed beside me, proving that iPhone with pictures of him. he could do it all along; he just I am sorry if that offends needed the right incentive. people with, you know, actuI take him every year to al human children. Dogs may get a picture with Santa. Like be dogs and children may be most children, he does not children, but love is love.
com. Contact: 541-447-7178.
Sparrows crambirdhousefor warmth By Marc Morrone
feeder from any classroom window and thus bring the
Newsday
Q
• As an avid bird-watch• er, I spent time a few
natural world right before a
group of students who learn to observe and appreciate it. The reason you saw all found that the blue jay was in those sparrows crowd into decline. Can this still be true'? the birdhouse at this time I observed at my feeder the of the year is because many
years ago counting birds for the Audubon Society. They
other day 11 of them at one time. I also witnessed, this
November, sparrows feeding at my bird feeder, then going in and out of my birdhouse for reasons that escape me. What can they possibly be doing — surely not breeding in this weather?
A
• All wild animals have • changes in populations. There was a dip in jays and their relatives, the crows, due
to West Nile virus a few years back. Such a population dip is natural and can repair itself
over time. A decline due to human involvement usually does not repair itself natural-
ly, though. It is up to humans to fix what is broken in the animals' habitats.
The populations of most native birds is in decline everywhere. This data come from
readers like yourself: You feed the wild birds and then report what you see to scientists
so busy these days, and the crisperin our fridge rarely has more than a mealy apple and a couple of sprouted potatoes in it.
However, I truly believe that some kind of produce is
very important to pet birds on a daily basis, for nutrition birds that n est i n c a v ities and variety. Many birds get during the summer will also bored on a diet of just pellets, roost in them at night during and seed alone is not enough the winter. The m ore t h at to give them everything they can squeeze inside the cavi- require. ty means the warmer it is in A healthy, well-adjusted there for them. This behavior bird should look forward to has nothing to do with re- anything new offered to it. productive behavior. It is all What I do is get a bag of froabout keeping warm. zen mixed vegetables and
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INEIN„O
then thaw them out. Most of
Q
• My aunt passed away these combos contain li ma • recently and I i n h e r - beans, string beans, corn, ited her 25-year-old yellow peas and other such veggies, nape Amazon parrot. I prom- all cut up into small bits. I mix ised my aunt I would care for the thawed veggies with a "Roger," and I am doing the can of fruit cocktail packed in best I can. juice (I usually do three parts After I adopted him, I took of the veggies to one part of him to a vet as I knew nothing the fruit cocktail). Then, I just about parrots, and the vet told keep this combo in a Tupperme that Roger was too fat. My ware container in the fridge aunt fed him only sunflow- and put a few spoonfuls in er seeds and peanuts. The each bird cage every morning. vet advised me to give him The combo is very colorful a diet of pellets, fruits and with the green beans, yellow vegetables. corn and orange carrots, and It took a while to train Rog-
it attracts the bird's attention.
trained to interpret the data. er to eat the pellets, but now Anyone who feeds wild birds he does. I have little time to and wants to help in this man- go out and buy fruits and vegner can contact the Cornell etables, as I work two jobs
And though it may not be as
University Lab of
sprouted potato. Just be sure
O r n ithol- and rarely eat at home. I can
ogy and join Project Feeder Watch, (feederwatch.org). The project is especially great for children and a great classroom experience. The teacher can hang a bird
t
• 5 •
nutritious as perfectly fresh
produce, it is still much better than a mealy apple and
do apples and carrots, as they that you give the bird only keep well after they are cut, what it can eat in one day, as but do you have any other any uneaten food like this left suggestions for me? on the bottom of the bird's • I am in the same situa- cage can spoil very quickly • tion as you, as we are and attract fruit flies.
A
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L>NEINN
QIQANC
KBE Redmond
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2019 North Hwy. 97
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© 20t4 CNH Industrial America LLC.All rights reserved. New Holland is atrademark registered in the United States andmanyother countdies, owned by or licensed to CNHIndustrial N.V., its subsidiaries or affiliates. New Hollsnd is a trademark ih the United States snd manyother countries, owned byor licsnsed to CNHIndustrial N.V., its subsidiaries or affiliates.
ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014 •
•
•l•
• t
«,'9;
Ads starting as low as $10/week rivate art onl
Call for package rates
kfl
=2
Packages starting at $140for28da s
Call for prices
Prices starting at $17.08 erda
Run it until it sells for $99 oru to12months
:'hours:
contact us: Place an ad: 541-385-5809
Fax an ad: 541-322-7253
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Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the
Includeyour name, phone number and address
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businesshours of8 a.m. and 5 p.m.
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e
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B u I I e t i n :
1 7 7g
S
W .
C h a n d l e r
• B en
,
d
O r e g o n
210
210
212
242
246
253
Furniture 8 Appliances
Antiques & Collectibles
Exercise Equipment
Guns, Hunting & Fishing
TV, Stereo & Video
The Bulletin
The Bulletin reserves the right to publish all ads from The Bulletin newspaper onto The Bulletin Internet website.
Treadmill, Proform XP Crosswalk 580, $300. 541-382-9211
I caution when pur-I 264- Snow Removal Equipment products or • 265 - BuildingMaterials 245 I chasing services from out of I 266- Heating and Stoves Golf Equipment 8 the area. Sending 8 Beautiful Oval Table 267- Fuel and Wood • cash, checks, or • Solid walnut, handCHECK YOURAD 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers crafted by an Amish I credit i n f ormationI The Bulletin may be subjected to 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment Serving Centrel Oregon sincelgtg artisan for Schanz Furniture Co. Excellent I FRAUD. For moreI 270- Lost and Found condition w/lovely patina. information about an c GARAGESALES 27" H, top 30" L and 20" I advertiser, you may C 275 - Auction Sales wide. Graceful curved 8 call t he Ore g on8 280 - Estate Sales legs with 2-1/2 ' State Atto r ney ' on the first day it runs hand-turned center I General's O f f i ce I 281 - Fundraiser Sales to make sure it is corsupport. Orig. $649; Consumer Protec- • eSpellcheck" and 282- Sales NorlhwestBend sell $200. I t ion ho t l in e at I Three Chinese Men rect. human errors do oc284- Sales Southwest Bend 541-385-4790 i 1-877-877-9392. cur. If this happens to produced in solid 286- Sales Norlheast Bend your ad, please conDimensions: 288- Sales Southeast Bend G ENERATE S O M E> TheBulletin > teak. 2 9 tact us ASAP so that Serving Centref Oregon since lgo3 15 high x 6.5 wide. EXCITEMENT in your 290- Sales RedmondArea corrections and any Figures were neighborhood! Plan a 292 - Sales Other Areas adjustments can be produced in garage sale and don't 212 made to your ad. Thailand in 1978. FARM MARKET forget to advertise in 541 -385-5809 Antiques & $200 for 308- Farm Equipment andMachinery classified! The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809. all 3 statues,cash. Collectibles 316- Irrigation Equipment 1-231-360-5105 325- Hay, Grain and Feed (in Bend) Antiques wanted: Tools, 333- Poultry,RabbitsandSupplies furniture, pre-'80s John 341 - Horses andEquipment Deere toys, pre-'40s B/W 345-Livestockand Equipment photography, beer cans. 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 541-389-1578 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers Stocking 358- Farmer's Column Antique table Top: 375 - Meat andAnimal Processing CA King Henredon Stuffers! Mint condition, Sleigh Bed with Or383- Produce andFood Wash bowl & pitcher 205
206
• P ets & Supplies
ganic Mattress and Bedding. It's magnificient. $4500 Cash only.
advertisers may place an ad with our "QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week 3 lines 12 or' ~2 e e k s 2 2 ! Ad must include price of e l e te DiSSDD ~ or less, or multiple items whosetotal does not exceed $500.
541-390-7109
353/gn diameter, has
image of sailing ship on the top. Base is oak capstan. Very unique piece, could sell separately. $400
2 00+ Make i t wit h Donate deposit bottles/ Leather & other catalogs/ cans to local all vol., patterns,1940s to 2011, non-profit rescue, for FREE! 541-390-8972 feral cat spay/neuter.
240
Crafts & Hobbies
No w $19.99/mo. Free 3-Months of HBO, Starz, SHOWTIME 8 CINEMAX FREE GEN IE H D/DVR U p r ade! 2 0 1 4 NF L u nday Ticket i n cluded with S e lect Packages. New Customers Only. IV Support Holdings LLC- An authorized D i recTV Dealer. Call 1-800-259-5140.
(PNDC) DISH T V Ret a iler. Starting at $19.99/month (for 12 mos.) & High Speed Internet starting at $14.95/month (where available.) SAVE! Ask About SAME DAY Installation! CALL Now! 1-800-308-1563
(PNDC) REDUCE YOUR CABLE BILL!* Get a whole-home Satellite
Sinqle bed $75. 541-771-7118 246
Health & Beauty Items
system installed at NO COST and proramming starting at 1 9.99/mo. FRE E HD/DVR Upgrade to new callers, SO CALL NOW 'I -800-87'I -2983.
(PNDC)
Lowest P r ices on Health & Dental In255 surance. We have the 951-454-2561 Computers best rates from top (/n Redmond) companies! Call Nowl T HE B U LLETIN r e 877-649-6195. quires computer adWhere can you find a (PNDC) vertisers with multiple ad schedules or those helping hand? Look at: selling multiple sysFrom contractors to tems/ software, to disBendhomes.com yard care, it's all here close the name of the for Complete Listings of business or the term in The Bulletin's Area Real Estate for Sale "dealer" in their ads. "Call A Service Private party advertisProfessional" Directory ers are defined as 249 those who sell one Art, Jewelry computer. 246 & Furs Guns, Hunting 257 & Fishing Musical Instruments
$350.
AGATE HUNTERS
Poushers • Saws es
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T railer a t Jak e 's Repalr suSupplles D iner, Hwy 2 0 E ; Petco (near Wal-Mart) Pets & Supplies in Redmond; or do202 541-419-6408. nate M-F a t S mith Massage Chairs Want to Buy or Rent Paid over $4,000; The Bulletin recomSign, 1515 NE 2nd selling for extra caution Bend; or CRAFT in Mahogany 9GlassChina Quilting Wanted: $Cash paid for mends D $750 each. when purc h asTumalo. Can pick up Closet, 68 H x 39 W x Machinevintage costume jew- ing products or serCall Gary, large amts, 389-8420. nD, 16 3 d r awers, elry. Top dollar paid for I H u sqvarna/ 541-419-8860 www.craftcats.org glass f ront d o ors, Viking, 10-ft bed, Gold/Silver.l buy by the vices from out of the area. Sending cash, good shape. $425. Estate, Honest Artist German Shepherds computerized 54'I-382-6773 Elizabeth,541-633-7006 checks, or credit in- www.sherman-ranch.us NEED TO CANCEL SSSOO. f ormation may b e 541-281-6829 YOUR AD? 203 541-416-0538 subjected to fraud. The Bulletin For more informa- Norwich Terriers AKC, Q Holiday Bazaar Classifieds has an tion about an adver- rare! House raised, good "After Hours" Line 241 & Craft Shows : [ozt tiser, you may call family dogs. M a les, Call 541-383-2371 300 Weatherby Bicycles & the O r egon State $2000. 541-487-4511 or 24 hrs. to cancel magnum Mark V ... A BIG Deai ... Attorney General's email sharonm@peak.org Accessories your ad! German made, with • VENDORS WANTEDo Office C o n sumer POODLE or POMAPOO Milk bottle crate 20 Leupold 3x9x50 for Craft Fair Protection hotline at Childrens bikes, girls puppies, toy. Adorable! glass boff l es marked scope. Dec. 6, 9-5; Dec. 7, 10-3 1-877-877-9392. SOFA - dark brown Dahlia Dairy $125obo 541-475-3889 20", $60. Boys 16", $1600 obo. Booths: Crafts, $30; l eather, Hita c h i 541-419-6408 $40. 5 4 1-382-9211 QueenslandHeelers 541-480-9430 Commercial, $50. The Bulletin Standard brand, l i k e n ew, & Mini, $150 Accepting Donations $300; and matching for Rummage Sale thru & up. 541-280-1537 and ottoman Bird 8 Big Game huntDec. 5th (receipts avail.) www.rightwayranch.wor chair like n e w, $200. ing access in Condon, TACK & EQUIPMENT Adopt a rescued cat or dpress.com 541-280-0892 kitten! Altered, vacciOR. 54'I -384-5381 15% Consignment. Scotty AKC pups, ready nated, ID chip, tested, Let us sell your tack! more! CRAFT, 65480 now! Mom/Dad on site, For more information: Enhanced AlumiCASH!! Motorola radio, Men's 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, 1st shots. 541-771-0717 541-548-6088 or For Guns, Ammo & num Alloy-constructed 13signwx7 ndx83/~n Great 1-5. 5 4 1 - 389-8420 Siberian Husky/Wolf Reloading Supplies. ~kmberl . rffthset Sport 2012, cond. but non-working Crossroads www.craftcats.org 541-408-6900. sre Dnstete.es ~ pups, bundles of love! S/N ENI14764,has $80, 541-419-6408 $400. 541-977-7019 never been used or rid... A BIG Deal ... Cava Tz u p u ppies. den. Wheel & rear re(Benef/ttinq 4-H) Only three males left. flectors, removable front • Craft air Ready now. First shot basket, special order South Korean • Rummage Sale and worming. $300 comfort seat, Planet Bike Apothecary chest Must See! • Tack 8 Equig. Sale! Kelly at 541-604-0716 eco-rack, unisex bar, typical of what was Dec. 6, 9am- pm & or 541-489-3237 Shimano non-slip gear used decades ago to Dec. 7, 10am-3pm Dining Table system. Was $940;selland mediciDeschutes Co. Fairgrounde St. Bernard puppies, sell herbs (with 2 leaves) ing for$775 cash, firm. This piece is beKid friendlyactivities! Chihuahua teacup pup- 1st shots, deworming, nals. 8 chairs with bur1-231-360-5105 lieved to have been pies (2) 1st shots, dewclaws removed, Admission: $1.00 gundy upholstered produced9in 1940s or dewormed. $250. (or a non-perishable food $450. 541-771-0956 later. 35 W x 9.5 seats, hutch and 541-977-0035 item to be donated to Santa Cruz Solo T oy A u ssies. T w o deep x 42" high. buffet, built in local food banks). mtn. racing bike, ASDR registered red Asking$2500 cash 1927, a beautiful Proceedsbenefit med. full-suspenmerle males. F i r st 231-360-5105(Bend) set! Seats 10-12. Deschutes County4-H. sion, good cond, shot and w orming. Paid $4500; must sell, $2000. $600 Kell y at asking$1800 obo. 541-480-2652 Advertise your car! 541-604-0716 or Add APicture! 541-548-2797 541-489-3237 Reach thousands of readers! 0I~ s66 t)s Chihuahua-Yorkies (2) Takara bikes, mens & Call 541-385-5809 non-sheddinu, allmeds, womens, ridden once, R ESO R T SOLD! The Bulletin Classifieds A DESSINAttott RESORT $200 ea. 541-420-1068 $75/ea. 541-382-9211 13th Annual Traditions 242 Holiday Marketplace Check out the Fri., 11/28, Sat., 11/29, Exercise Equipment classifieds online 10:00 am - 4:00 pm www.bendbuffetigLcom Whoodle pups, 8 wks., Pump Organ, Homestead/Heritage Pilates XP297 w/riser 1st shots, dewormed, 1 Updated daily ¹1 1 948 built m 1870 in the Great Hall. like new, $175 obo. male left. Guaranteed. by New England 70+ Artisans 541-408-0846 SOLD! 541-410-1581 South Korean Organ Co. Free Admission Blanket Chest 210 IT yyORKS! Schwinn low-profile Old Fashioned typical of storing Beautiful carved recumbant exercise bike, Furniture & Appliances Christmas Fun at blankets for frigid cabinet. In 1878i it in great cond. Reduced! Pennick Farm! took 2nd place in nights. Dimensions Now $100. 541-548-6857 teg n U-Cut Noble Fir Trees, are 31n long x 14.5 Sydney, Australia. A1 Washers&Dryere Total Gym XLS kit, all $3.50/ft, baled & tied. Dachshund CKC mini feWas presented to a Full warranty. wide x 22" high. accessories including Open dail . male wire/smooth hair minister after his serFREE deliyeryr Also Asking$800 cash. Cyclo Trainer. $1348 Call 503-897-2052 for $500 available 12/5. email Wanted: used W/D's. vice in the Civil War. 1-231-360-5105 directions and info. highdesertdogs@live.com value selling $525. $300. 541 -385-4790 541-280-7355 (Bend) Gates, Oregon or 541-350-9506 541-633-5496 208
Call Classifieds at 541-385-5809 www.bendbu!!et!n.com
hit one time, Cobra Baffler Irons 3-5-HB with covers, 6-PW, senior graphite.
set, large, exc. cond. $125 541-419-6408
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ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202- Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free Items 208- Pets and Supplies 210 -Furniture & Appliances 211- Children's Items 212 -Antiques & Collectibles 215- Coins & Stamps 240- Crafts and Hobbies 241 -Bicycles and Accessories 242 - Exercise Equipment 243 - Ski Equipment 244 - Snowboards 245 - Golf Equipment 246-Guns,Huntingand Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- HealthandBeauty Items 249 - Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253 - TV, Stereo andVideo 255 - Computers 256 - Photography 257 - Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259 - Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - Medical Equipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools
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Above artwork, created in 1975 in Bangkok, Thailand, is fabricated from literally thousands upon thousands of wax particles, and can only be described as unimaginable art! Painting is 44" x 32". Asking $2,500 cash 231-360-5105 (Bend)
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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
E2 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014•THE BULLETIN
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri.
267
341
Fuel & Wood
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Can be found on these pages
WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD... To avoid fraud, The Bulletin recommends payment for Firewood only upon delivery and inspection. • A cord is 128 cu. ft. 4' x 4' x 8' • Receipts should include name, phone, price and kind of wood
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EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 5th wheel 3-horse 421 - Schools andTraining 454- Looking Ior Employment Silverado 2001 29'x8' trailer. Deluxe 470- Domestic & In-HomePositions showman/semi living 476 - EmploymentOpportunities quarters, lots of ex- 486 - IndependentPositions tras. Beautiful condition. $21,900. OBO 54 I -420-3277
FINANCEANDBUSINESS 507- Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 528- Loans andMortgages 543- Stocks andBonds 558- Business Investments 573 - BusinessOpportunities
476
476
476
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
One gently used single pony cart with 53" shafts, $450. 2 Head Automotive Looking for your next MastersLevel stalls and harness set ROBBERSON employee? Clinician/Site up for Shetland pony Place a Bulletin help ttqeatss Supervisor(Bend j but can be adjusted ~ ~ wanted ad today and for a mini horse. $100. reach over 60,000 Energetic, self-moPhone eve n ings, Service Technician -Robberson Ford The Bulletin 541-443-4301. tivated, M a s ters readers each week. Serving Central Cngnn sincetgte Your classified ad Robberson Ford, Level clinician/site will also appear on Central Oregon's ¹1 The Bulletin supervisor to proAfter rain, dry, split bendbulletin.com Place aphotoin yourprivate party ad Dealership is accept- vide PRIVATE PARTY RATES tre a tment, To Subscribe call delivered $160 cord which currently ing applications for an manage staffand foronly $15.00par week. Starting at 3 lines 541-385-5800 or go to (La Pine) receives over 1.5 experienced full time c ommunicate e f *UNDER '500in total merchandise www.bendbulletin.com million page views 541-876-7426 OVER '500 intotal merchandise Service Technician at fectively. Send reevery month at our Bend location. 7 days.................................................. $10.00 4 days.................................................. $18.50 AffYear Dependable sumes and quesno extra cost. Ford experience pre14 days................................................ $16.00 Firewood: Seasoned; t ions to K r i s a t 7 days.................................................. $24.00 Bulletin Classifieds ferred. Top pay and Lodgepole, split, del, kris© hhtreatmen*illiust state prices in ad c Get Results! 14 days .................................................$33.50 INI] g benefits are offered B end, 1 f o r $ 1 9 5 tidaho.com. Call 385-5809 28 days .................................................$61.50 Garage Sale Speclal from our growing or 2 cords for $365. or place 4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00 Icall for commercial line ad rates) quality organization Call fo r m u lti-cord your ad on-line at including: discounts! bendbulletin.com 541-420-3484. Medical 8 Dental insurance; Vacation & A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: 269 Holiday Pay; 401k; caution when purBend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. Profit sharing, etc. I chasing products orI Want to impress the Gardening Supplies * 421 • services from out of • relatives? Remodel BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN ( ) Email resume to & Equipment your home with the Schools & Training tweber@robberson.com I the area. Sending REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well c ash, checks, o r or apply in person at help of a professional BarkTurfSoil.com as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin Robberson Ford- ask I credit i n f ormation TITR Truck School from The Bulletin's • may be subjected to for Duane. bendbulletimcom REDMOND CAMPUS reserves the right to reject any ad at "Call A Service 2100 N.E. 3rd Street, I FRAUD. PROMPT DELIVERY Our Grads Get Jobs! any time. is located at: For more informa- I Professional" Directory Bend, OR 97701. 541-389-9663 1-888-438-2235 tion about an adver-• Robberson Ford is a 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. WWW.IITR.EDU drug free workplace. I tiser, you may call Bend, Oregon 97702 the Oregon State 466 For newspaper EOE. 470 www.robberson.com I Attorney General's Independent Positions delivery, call the Domestic 8 Office C o nsumer s Circulation Dept. at - Earn extra inPLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction Protection hotline at l Sales Help Wanted: In-Home Positions AVON 541-385-5800 come with a new cais needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right I 1-877-877-9392. To place an ad, call E nergetic kios k to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these reer! Sell from home, 541-385-5809 sales person needed w ork, online. $ 1 5 LThe Bulleting newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Therapeutic Foster or email immediately for the startup. For informaClassified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. P arents ar e ur claeeifiedttbendbulletin.com tion, call: Bend-Redmond gently needed for area. Secured locaThe Bulletin youth in your com- 877-751-0285 257 260 260 260 TRUCK DRIVERS gervrng Central Oregon sincetgte (PNDC) munity! Work from T op P a y . Ho m e tions, high commisMusical Instruments Misc. Items Iilisc. Items Misc. Items • home part-time and DID Y O U KNO W Weekends Available. sions paid weekly! Prompt Delivery get reimbursed up Newspaper-generClass A CDL. EOE. For more informaBUYING How to avoid scam SANTA SUIT Rock, Sand & Gravel to $1800 per month t ion, p lease c a l l a ted content is s o 866-435-8590 Lionel/American Flyer Complete XL and fraudattempts Multiple Colors, Sizes each youth in valuable it's taken and GordonCareers.com Howard at trains, accessories. VBe aware of internaexc. cond., wig, Instant Landscaping Co. for your care (max 2). repeated, condensed, 541-279-0982. You 541-408-2191. beard, topcoat, pants, 541-389-9663 For more info call tional fraud. Deal lobroadcast, tweeted, white gloves, hat, boot c an a l s o em a i l 1-888-MSOREGON cally whenever pos270 People Lookfor Information covers, belt. $150. discussed, p o sted, Find exactly what tcoles©yourneighwww.maplestaror.org sible. 541-598-6486 copied, edited, and you are looking for in the borhoodpublications. About Products and Lost & Found eg' Watch for buyers emailed co u ntless Wurlitzer Services EveryDaythrough com for more inforwho offer more than CLASSIFIEDS times throughout the Ultra Console mation. The Bvlletin Classlfieffa Get your 476 your asking price and day by others? DisModel ¹2636 who ask to have business Employment cover the Power of Serial ¹1222229. BuyfNG 8} SE LLING REIIIIEMBER:If you money wired or Newspaper Advertis- General Made in USA. Opportunities All gold jewelry, silver handed back to them. have lost an animal, ing in SIX STATES Genuine maple wood. and gold coins, bars, don't forget to check CROOK COUNTY Fake cashier checks a ROWI N G with just one phone Includes matching rounds, wedding sets, and EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES money orders The Humane Society bench.$900. CAUTION: call. For free Pacific class rings, sterling sil- are common. Bend Northwest N ewspa(541) 598-4674 days, Ads published in with an ad in ver, coin collect, vin- YNever give out perCROOK COUNTY SHERIFF'SOFFICE 541-382-3537 or (541) 923-0488 "Employment Op per Association Nettage watches, dental sonal financial inforThe Bulletin's Corrections Deputy Redmond evenings. work brochures call porfunities" include gold. Bill Fl e ming, mation. Salary: $3,280.78 - $4,719.43 541-923-0882 "Call A Service employee and inde916-288-6011 or 541-382-9419. Closing: December 31, 2014 at 5:00 pm Madras YTrust your instincts email pendent positions. Professional" 541-475-6889 (Must use Sheriff's Office Application) and be wary of 260 Ads fo r p o sitions cecelia©cnpa.com Good classified adstell Directory Prineville someone using an that require a fee or (PNDC) Misc. Items the essential facts in an Crook County Sheriff's Office is seeking a 541-447-7178 escrow service or upfront investment DRIVERS interesting Manner.Write Corrections deputy. SOCIAL S E C URITY or Craft Cats agent to pick up your must be stated. With 7' ft pre-lit (multi-color) from the readers view -not D ISABILITY B EN541-389-8420. merchandise. any independentjob Christmas tree & storage the seller's. Convert the E FITS. Unable t o Requirements: 21 YOA, US C itizen, HS opportunity, please bag. $1 50. 541-388-9270 facts into benefits. Show 266 Diploma/GED, ODL with good record, No The Bulletin work? Denied beni nvestigate tho r Serving Central Oregon since fgot efits? We Can Help! criminal record; Must pass POST test, the reader howthe item will Sales Northeast Bend oughly. Use extra Are you in BIG trouble ORPAT, backgroundand physiologicalexams. WIN or Pay Nothing! help them in some way. c aution when a p with the IRS? Stop Contact Bill Gordon & Successful candidate will have strong interperLawn Crypt for two at This Sysco is novv hiring plying for jobs onwage & bank levies, sonal skills, be able to analyze situations Deschutes Memorial Associates at ** FREE ** advertising tip • Delivery Drivers & line and never proliens & audits, unfiled Gardens near the Pond. 1-800-879-3312 to Garage Sale Kit quickly and objectively with respect of brought toyouby • Shuttle Associates vide personal infortax returns, payroll is$1500. 541-771-4800 ' individual rights. Position will include contact start your application Place an ad in The mation to any source based out of sues, & resolve tax today! (PNDC) with inmates in a jail and court, as well as The Bulletin Bulletin for your gayou may not have Bend, Oregon. Serving Central Oregen saceietg debt FAST. Seen on inmate transports. Palm tree plant, live rage sale and reresearched and Earn a $2000 CNN. A B BB . C a ll The Bulletin Offers t/a' pot roller. healthy 7 ceive a Garage Sale deemed to be repuSign-on Incentive. DID YOU KNOW 7 IN 1-800-989-1278. Free Private PartyAds Minorities, women veterans and b ilingual table. Use extreme Kit FREE! $18.90-$23.62 DOE. 10 Americans or 158 $75. 541-388-9270 • 3 lines - 3 days (PNDC) persons who meet the qualifications are c aution when r e • Private Party Only Route delivery driving million U.S. A d ults encouraged to apply. KIT INCLUDES: s ponding to A N Y (18-25 stops daily), read content f r om • Total of items adverBuying Diamonds • 4 Garage Sale Signs online employment tised must equal $200 unloading 800 — 1400 newspaper m e d ia Contact Human Resources or Crook County /Gofd for Cash • $2.00 Off Coupon To ad from out-of-state. cases per route at each week? Discover or Less Saxon's Fine Jewelers Treasurer's O ffice at 20 0 N E 2nd St., use Toward Your We suggest you call FOR DETAILS or to customer locations, while the Power of the Pa541-389-6655 Prineville, OR 97754; 541-447-6554 for an Next Ad the State of Oregon providing excellent cific Northwest NewsPLACE AN AD, • 10 Tips For "Garage application and full position announcement, or Consumer Hotline customer service. paper Advertising. For Call 541-385-5809 Sale Success!" visit our web site at www.co.crook.or.us to at 1-503-378-4320 To be considered a free brochure call Olhaunsen regulaFax 541-385-5802 download the application. EOE For Equal Opportu916-288-6011 or please go to our tion size pool table nity Laws c ontact website: email in very good shape Wanted- paying cash PICK UP YOUR Meet singles right now! cecelia©cnpa.com for Hi-fi audio 8 stuOregon Bureau of GARAGE SALE KIT at www.s sco orlland.com IS with cues, balls, dio equip. Mclntosh, Labor 8 I n d ustry, No paid operators, (PNDC) to download and misc. accessories. 1777 SW Chandler just real people like JBL, Marantz, DyCivil Rights Division, complete an application Ave., Bend, OR 97702 $1000. 971-6730764. you. Browse greet- Garage door openernaco, Heathkit, Sanor you can apply in 541-389-1272 or ings, exchange mes- Craftsman 3/4hp belt sui, Carver, NAD, etc. The Bulletin person at: 541-480-4695 Serving Central Oregon since1909 The Bulletin Call 541-261-1808 sages and connect drive DC motor with 26250 SW Parkway Sern'ng Central Oregonsince tggs live. Try it free. Call battery backup. Brand Center Drive, 541-385-5809 265 266 now: 877-955-5505. new still in box. $150. Reduce Your Past Tax Wilsonville, OR 97070 (PNDC) Mon-Fri 9am -4pm. 541-280-0966 Building Materials Sales Southeast Bend Bill by as much as 75 Add your web address Lead Network Engineer Western Washington Percent. Stop Levies, Heavy Equipment to your ad and readBlack Friday Indoor Sale! Guy seeks gal 50-66, GE indoor/outdoor xmas Liens and Wage Gar- • Cambria Quartz Mechanic 1 day only, 9-3. Everyers onThe Bulietin's nishments. Call The Responsible for engineering, configuration and slim/average build, to lites: 35 l ites/box $5 nBellingham,n needed for work on thing must go! Name web site, www.bendshare quiet t i mes; each. 541-388-9270 Tax DR Now to see if installation of the company's internal data Northern California 55 nx36", nearly your price - no reasonbulletin.com, will be communication systems. T h i s p o s ition trips, walks, nature, Holiday Classic super you Qualify 1-1/2n thick, never logging 8 sawmill able offers refused! Furable to click through moon-light, cuddling! spear 6" color lites, 3 1-800-791-2099. designs, evaluates and installs LANs, WANs, rolling stock, installed,$300 or niture, household items, automatically to your and other Internet, data communications Greg, PO Box 3013 O$20ea. 541-388-9270 (PNDC) Burney, California. best offer. art work & collectibles. website. Arlington, WA 98223. systems and voice systems. Candidate must Call 530-335-4924 Credit cards accepted. have extensive knowledge of LAN/WAN, data • Bronze & Cr~stal 20278 Badger Rd. (east c ommunications systems, i nternet a n d 2-tier, 6-arm c anof 3rd St.) No earlybirds! telecommunications protocols, remote access Health Technician delier, 22" across, systems, PC and LAN hardware systems, $300 or best offer. (Medical) routers, switches, and firewall. 541-923-7491 $28,269.00 to $41,122.00/ Per Year Thisannouncement closes on Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent Tuesday, December 2, 2014 Call54 I385580f to promoteyour service• Advertise for 28delt startingat'lf0 ptis Sttttfstctcttit nei qtgftbfteneerqtttttf La Pine Habitat customer service and over 400 stores in the western United States. We offer competitive RESTORE Indian Health Service is seeking 2 Health TechniBuilding Supply Resale pay, excellent benefits, retirement and cash cians (Medical) for the Warm Springs Indian bonus. Please goto www.lesschwab.com to Quality at Health Center and will assist registered nurses Handyman Adoption Landscaping/Yard Care LOW PRICES apply. No phone calls please. and/or physicians in general care to patients by 52684 Hwy 97 taking vital signs, obtaining history of chief comPREGNANT? CON 541-536-3234 LesSchwabis proud to be an 325 plaints of patients, administering yaccines, imSIDERING ADO P I DO THAT! Open to the public . equal opportunity employer. munizations and approved medications, perTION? Call us first. Home/Rental repairs Hay, Grain & Feed forming venipuncture procedures, setting-up Prineville Habitat Living exp e nses,Small jobs to remodels Serving Central patients for exams and/or procedures, perform- NEWSPAPER ReStore housing, medical, and Honest, guaranteed 1st Quality mixed grass Oregon Since 2003 Building Supply Resale hay, no rain, barn stored, ing a variety of supporting diagnostic tests, encontinued support af work. CCB¹151573 Residental/Commercial suring general cleanliness of the exam rooms by 1427 NW Murphy Ct. $250/ton. t erwards. Cho o se Dennis 541-317-9768 straightening up between patients, replenishing 541-447-6934 Call 541-549-3831 a doptive family o f Sprinkler Patterson Ranch, Sisters supplies, disposing of contaminated waste and Open to the public. your choice. Call 24/7. cleaning contaminated area utilizing universal BIOVV-Out 855-970-2106 The Bulletin is looking for a resourceful and enLandscaping/Yard Care Wheat Straw For Sale. precautions and performing administrative medi266 Sprinkler Repair (PNDC) thusiastic reporter with broad sports interests to cal off ice duties such as answering phones, and also weaner pigs. Heating & Stoves join a staff that covers the wide range of comreceiving patients. These positions report to the 541-546-6171 Maintenance petitive and recreational activities for which our Clinical Nurse Supervisor. Building/Contracting NOTICE: Oregon LandFall Clean up Natural ga s h e ater, region is famous. Follow Link to Announcement to apply: scape Contractors Law ••Weekly What are you Mowing Abalon, free standing, htt s://www.usa'obs. ov/GetJob/ViewDetails/387 NOTICE: Oregon state (ORS 671) requires all We are seeking a reporter who can cover ev38,000 BTU, w / celooking for? 455800 law requires anyone businesses that ad- & Edging ramic harth and stove erything from traditional sports to the offbeat who con t racts for vertise t o p e r form•Bi-Monthly 8 Monthly You'll find it in and extreme, with particular emphasis on compipe, like new, $700. construction work to Landscape Construc- Maintenance General Madras 541-325-6791 The Bulletin Classifieds munity (participation) sports and preps. Necesbe licensed with the tion which includes: The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Satursary skills include feature writing, event coverConstruction Contracl anting, deck s , ~Lendene in Call The Bulletln At day night shift and other shifts as needed. We age, and the ability to work well on deadline. A tors Board (CCB). An ences, arbors, •Landscape currently have openings all nights of the week. 541-385-5809 college degree is required. Reporting experiactive license water-features, and in- Construction 541-385-5809 Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts ence, polished writing skills and a track record means the contractor stallation, repair of ir- •Water Feature Place Your Ad Or E-Mail start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and of accuracy and reliability are a must. Many of is bonded & insured. rigation systems to be Installation/Maint. At: www.bendbulletin.com Looking for your end between 2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. All poVerify the contractor's licensed w i t h the duties of this position require evening and the •Pavers next employee? sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. CCB l i c ense at Landscape Contrac- •Renovations weekend availability. NOTICE TO Place a Bulletin Starting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we pay a www.hirealicensed• Irrigations Installation ADVERTISER tors Board. This 4-digit minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts contractor.com help wanted ad Also important is the ability to conceptualize the Since September 29, number is to be inSenior Discounts or call 503-378-4621. cluded in all adverare short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of today and multimedia components that might complement 1991, advertising for Bonded & Insured loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackThe Bulletin recom- tisements which indistories, including video, audio and slide show used woodstoves has reach over 541-615-4456 mends checking with cate the business has ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup been limited to modelements. Experience using social media sites, 60,000 readers LCB¹8759 the CCB prior to con- a bond,insurance and and other tasks. For qualifying employees we including Facebook and Twitter, is preferred. els which have been each week. tracting with anyone. workers compensaoffer benefits i ncluding l if e i n surance, certified by the Orclassified ad Some other t rades tion for their employ- Painting/Wall Covering egon Department of Yourwill short-term 8 long-term disability, 401(k), paid The Bulletin is an independent, family-owned also also req u ire addi- ees. For your protecvacation and sick time. Drug test is required Environmental Qualnewspaper in Bend, a vibrant city of 80,000 surappear on tional licenses and tion call 503-378-5909 prior to employment. rounded bysnow-capped mountains and home ity (DEQ) and the fed- bendbugetin.com ALL AMERICAN certifications. or use our website: eral E n v ironmental which currently to unlimited outdoor recreation. The Bulletin is a PAINTING www.lcb.state.or.us to Please submit a completed application attendrug-free workplace and an equal-opportunity Protection A g e ncy receives over Interior and Exterior check license status tion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available Debris Removal employer. Pre-employment drug screening is (EPA) as having met Family-owned 1.5 million page before contracting with Residential at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chanrequired prior to hiring. & Commercial smoke emission stanthe business. Persons views every dler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be cer t ified JUNK BE GONE 40 yrs exp.• Sr. Discounts dards. A doing lan d scape month at no obtained upon request by contacting Kevin To apply, please email cover letter, resume 5-vear warranties w oodstove may b e I Haul Away FREE maintenance do not extra cost. Eldred via email (keldred@bendbulletin.com). identified by its certifiand writing samples to: HOLIDAY SPECIAL! For Salvage. Also r equire an LC B l i No phone calls please. Only completed appliBulletin s ortsre orter©bendbulletin.com Call 541-337-6149 cation label, which is Cleanups & Cleanouts cense. cations will be considered for this position. No CCB ¹193960 Ciassifieds permanently attached Mel, 541-389-6107 resumes will be accepted. Drug test is reNo phone inquiries please. to the stove. The BulGet Results! quired prior to employment. EOE. letin will not know- Call 541-385-5809 Just bought a new boat? C & H Paintinit, LLCn TURN THE PAGE ingly accept advertis- or place your ad Sell your old one in the "For a Sweet PaintJob ing for the sale of classifieds! Ask about our Commercial/Residential The Bulletin For More Ads on-line at Serving Centrai Oregon since igge Lic'd, bonded, insured. Super Seller rates! uncertified bendbugetin.com The Bulletin CCBt 70367 541-977-4360 woodstoves. 541-385-5809
Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •
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purchased.
• Firewood ads MUST include species 8 cost per cord to better serve our customers.
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TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOV 28, 2014
DAILY B R I D G E
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD will sbprtz
C L U B F riday, Novem ber 28,2014
A SIGN OF ME TIMES
Who has the queen?
Aii the puzzles this week, from Monday to Saturday, have been created by one person, Patrick Blindauer. Keep your solutions handy, because the Saturday puzzle conceals a meta-challenge ilwoiving the solution grids of ali six.
By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency
My "Who Has the Queen?" is now in a third printing. The book has been reissued by T h e B r i dge W o rld magazine, which a lso p u blishes books. "Who Has the Queen?" is a quiz book on counting and inference as declarer or a defender: "seeing" an opponent's hand. Today's NorthSouth reach the second-best slam: 6NT would have more chances. South takes the ace of spades and cashes the A-Q of trumps. Alas, East shows out. South discards his hearts on the K-Q of spades and has options. He can rely on a 3-3 diamond break or a squeeze, or he can try a ruffi ng finesse in hearts for his 12th trick. Which play is correct?
right, opens one spade. You bid two clubs, and your partner raises to three clubs. What do you say? ANSWER: You will bid a game, and slam is possible. Partner might hold 8 7 6 5, A 5, A 6 4, J 9 5 2, and you would have a play for 13 tricks. To test the water, bid three diamonds, forcing. If partner jumps to five clubs next, bid six clubs. South dealer N-S vulnerable
ACROSS 1Timesfor
speaking one's mind? 10Coarse 15Spot for shooting stars 16Finish putting on pants, say 17Became a bachelor, maybe 18OnetimeColeco competitor 19Rom- (some films) 20 Up to the present time 21 Beyond blue 22 Trivial Pursuit board location 23Agreements
NORTH 45 K Q 5
9KQJ92 OA43
+Q9 WEST 45 J109 9 105 0 J976 A J 1052
TRUMP TRICK South should lead the king of hearts and pitch a diamond if East doesn't cover. If West had the ace plus a sure trump trick, he would have cashed his ace at Trick One. To subscribe to The Bridge World (a must for any aspiring player) and check o u t i ts b ook s , see Highly bridgeworld.com. recommended: "Big D eal," a n enjoyable bridge memoir by Augie Boehm.
EAST 4 5S764 3 2 QAS63 0 10S AS
of the rotary printing press) 26 Remotely monitored event, informally 28 Plum or pear 29 "Sharknado" channel 30Save 32 Sleep on it 34 "Ash Wednesday" poet 36Groupswith play dates? 40 "Brokeback Mountain" role 42 "Hurry up!," en espanol 43 Henchman first seen in "The Spy Who Loved Me"
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE
SOUTH 45A Q74
C H A RG E O UT E A T A LT I M A
C KQ52
A AK7 6 4 3 S outh 14 3 () 44
W est Pass Pass Pass
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S A S H I M lS EM P A N A D A M OR T I M E R
X K E E L M R U E ES A M I T O V E N M I T T S
East Pass Pass Pass All Pass
O R C S
HP L E A I T E M HE D A OD O I B AT I N T I M A D OE E O
DAILY QUESTION Opening lead — 4I J Youhold: 45A 9 7 4 0 K Q 5 2 4 A K 7 6 4 3. The dealer, at your (C) 2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
L IM
S E Y S
E R S A C T E E
V A N I S H
I T I N G
E SP R E S S O D ES E R T E D
Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO
25 Richard March (inventor
46 Stationery store stock 48 Pusillanimous 49 Adu b a of "Orange Is the New Black" 50 Stop obsessing 52Notjusta pop group, for short? 53 Tilting poles 55 Triton's domain, in myth 56Dart 57 Two-time N.B.A. All-Star Brand 58 Free 60 Flowering plant named for a Greek god 61 Saloons 62 Onetime sponsor of "I Love Lucy" 63"Boy,am I having fun!"
GA I I L S T A T I E
B N B A IS D E I M E
E V E L
D E E S
E D M I T R OP I A T 5 0 I L E
L I E D
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
No. 1024
9
10
15
16
17
18
20
19
22
12
13
14
38
9
21
23
26
11
25
24
27
30
32
31
34
36
35 40
43
44
33 37
41
45
42 47
49
48
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53
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51
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56
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57
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60
61
62
63
59
DOWN
1 Diagram showing company positions, briefly 2 Detours 3 Title carpenter of an 1859 novel 4 Watch things, for short 5 Condensed vapeur 6 Patientlooks? 7 Most fitting 8 People with signs at airports, e.g. 9 Part of E.S.T.: Abbr. 10 Bygone emperors 11"Lovely"one of song 12 It may elicit a shrug 13 Not doubting
PUZZLE BY PATRICK BLINDAUBR
14 se n se 21 Nissan offering 23Tookcourses at home
35 Formatting
24 "Faster than
they're special 39 Least excited 410uffit worn with goggles 43Thingsdowned at Churchill Downs 44 Rhododendron relative 45 Chinese appetizer
47 Rear ends palette choice 37 Site of an annual 50 Actress/singer encierro Lotte 38Theythink
shaving" brand 27Yugoslavian-born winner of nine Grand Slam tournaments 290ne with a short hajj 31$, E and E, 33Johnny Depp role of 2013
51 Pot 54 Bop
56Thwart 58
Fri d ay's
59 Start of an alleyOop
Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2 000 ast puzzles, nytimes.comtcrosswords t ($39.95 a yearj. 5 hare tips: nytimes.comiwordplay.
DENNIS THE MENACE
QIZIIIIOCOAICECONl Fazshook.40Isl Rigarrocosliag
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YESTERDAY'S
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LOS ANGELES TIMESCROSSWORD
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Edited by Rich Norrisand Joyce Nichols Lewis 4WAT "PEOPLE"7
SAFE HAVENS
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4 Veracruz neighbor 5 Some dams
10 Julja's "Ocean's
6 Rock's Jethro 7 Claim of
Twelve" role 14 Teeny bit 15 Repeat exactly 16 Bar 17 Wii alternative 18 Prefix with marine 19 Lawless role
20 WWII personnel © 2014 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. World rights reserved
E-ma1: bbolbrook1@gmail.com
hltp//www.Safehaven500mic.com
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jeez, come on... Who dld you hook Up with!? just say it, already... I promise I can keep a secret!
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39 Ohio-based consumer products giant,
9 Medium setting 10 Jed Clampett's
discovery, in a sitcom theme
song 11 Suit 12 Without 13 "He'll hae misfortunes
HERMAN Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words.
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48 Wave checker: abbr. 49 Stereotypical pirate
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By Mlke Peluso CZ014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
68
11/28/14
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
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RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605- RoommateWanted 616- Want ToRent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent 632 - Apt./MultiplexGeneral 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NW Bend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SE Bend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648- Houses for RentGeneral 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for RentSunriver 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663- Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RVParking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space
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THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28 2014 s
RIMjjtj!88
880
881
882
908
Boats & Accessories
Motorhomes
Travel Trailers
Fifth Wheels
Aircraft, Parts & Service
Laredo 30'2009
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682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REALESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 -Real Estate Trades 726- Timeshares for Sale 730 - NewListings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - MultiplexesforSale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744- Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746-Northwest Bend Homes 747 - Southwest BendHomes 748-Northeast Bend Homes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson County Homes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land
850
Snowmobiles
Apt JMultiplex General •
2007 Bennington Pontoon Boat 2275 GL, 150hp Honda VTEC, less than 110 hours, original owner, lots of extras; Tennessee tandem axle trailer. Excellent condition,$23,500 503-646-1804
HOLIDAY RAMBLER VACATIONER 2003 8.1L V8 Gas, 340 hp, workhorse, Allison 1000 5 speed trans., 39K, NEIII/ TIRES, 2 slides, Onan 5.5w gen., ABS brakes, steel cage cockpit, washer/dryer, firelace, mw/conv. oven, ree standing dinette, was $121,060 new; now, $35,900. 541-536-1008
4-place enclosed Interstate snowmobile trailer w/ RockyMountain pkg, $8500. 541-379-3530 2008 11'x2' Zodiak, like 860 new, ActiV hull, safe Motorcycles & Accessories lock canister, 15HP Yamaha w/ t r olling 1985 Harley Davidson plate, 6 gal Transom 1200C with S portster tank, less 30 hrs, 2 frame and '05 Harley chest seats, full Bimini crate motor. Rat Rod top, Transom wheels, look, Screaming Eagle cover, RV's special. tips, leather saddlebags, $5500. 541-923-6427 e xtras. S a crifice a t $4000. Call Bill Logsdon, Find It in 458-206-8446 (in Bend). The Bulletin Classifiedsl 541 e385-5809
Harley Davidson
® Dz@zcm
870
RV P a rking
2001 FXSTD, twin cam 88, fuel injected, Vance 8 Hines short shot exhaust, Stage I with Vance & Hines
Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. For all other types of watercraft, please go to Class 875. 541-385-5809
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 Li f t . $29,000 new; Asking $13,600
The Bulletin
QoP o
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. 0 0
•
'
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Tom, 541.788.5546
overall length is 35' has 2 slides, Arctic package, A/C,table 8 chairs, satellite, Arctic pkg., power awning, in excellent condition! More pix at bendbulletin.com
Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 1968 A e r o Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time, full panel. $21,000 obo. Contact Paul at
$220500
541-419-3301
541-447-5184.
Providence 2005 Fully loaded, 35,000 miles, 350 Cat, Very clean, non-smoker, 3 slides, side-by-side refrigerator with ice maker, Washer/Dryer, Flat screen TV's, In motion satellite. $95,000 541-480-2019
RV CONSIGNMENTS
WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!
, • eae--
The Bulletin
hanger in Prineville. Dry walled, insulated, and painted $23 500
541-447-4805
RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!
916
MONTANA 3585 2008,
exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, Irg LR, Arctic insulation, all options - reduced by $3500 to $31,500.
Trucks & Heavy Equipment
541-420-3250 dL.'
BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495
RV CONSIGNMENTS
Redmond: 541-548-5254
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
Peterbilt 359 p o table water t ruck, 1 9 90, 3200 gal. tank, 5hp 0
WANTED We Do the Work, You Keep the Cash! On-site credit
hoses, camiocks, $ 2 5,000. p ump, 4 - 3
541-820-3724
approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!
Full hookup RV s ite avail. through April fuel management 30th, $325 + e l ec. aererngCentral Oregon rinre t903 Central Oregon KOA system, custom parts, extra seat. Bayliner 185 2006 541-546-3046 BIG COUNTRY RV open bow. 2nd owner Bend: 541-330-2495 $10 500 OBO — low engine hrs. Call Today Redmond: on the first day it runs 541-516-8684 — fuel injected V6 541-548-5254 528 Bsnjj R@imiR to make sure it is cor— Radio & Tower. Loans & Mortgages rect. nSpellcheckn and Great family boat IRP ©xh human errors do ocPriced to sell. WARNING cur. If this happens to $11,590. The Bulletin recomyour ad, please con541-548-0345. mends you use cautact us ASAP so that 875 tion when you procorrections and any vide personal adjustments can be Harley Fat Boy 2002 Watercraft information to compaWinnebago 22' made to your ad. 14k orig. miles.. Exnies offering loans or 541-385-5809 cellent cond. Vance & 2002 - $28,500 ds published in nWa 882 • H o mes for Sale credit, especially Hines exhaust, 5 The Bulletin Classified tercraft" include: Kay Chevy 454, heavy Fifth Wheels those asking for adspoke HD rims, wind duty chassis, new aks, rafts and motor 0 Senior Apartmentvance loan fees or vest, 12 rise handle batteries & tires, cab NOTICE Ized personal Independent Living companies from out of bars, detachable lug8 roof A/C, tow hitch All real estate adverwatercrafts. Fo ALL-INCLUSIVE gage rack w/ back state. If you have w /brake, 21k m i ., tised here in is sub"boats" please se with 3 meals daily hwy pegs & many concerns or quesmore! 541-280-3251 ject to th e Federal rest, Class 870. chrome accents. Must tions, we suggest you Month-to-month lease, F air Housing A c t , 541-385-5809 check it out! see to appreciate! consult your attorney which makes it illegal $10,500. In CRRarea Call 541-233-9914 or call CONSUMER to advertise any prefcall 530-957-1865 HOTLINE, gervrng Central Oregon since tg03 • -'p sy Alpenlite 28 ft. erence, limitation or 634 1-877-877-9392. discrimination based 1987, New stove, r 880 AptJMultiplex NE Bend on race, color, relifridge. Good furBANK TURNED YOU Motorhomes nace, AC. Stereo, ion, sex, handicap, HOFat Bo 1996 DOWN? Private party Call for Speciais! DVD player. Queen amilial status or naReady to makememories! will loan on real es- Limited numbers avail. bed WITH bedding. tional origin, or intenTop-selling Winnebago tate equity. Credit, no 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. 20 ft. awning. to make any such 31J, original owners, nonproblem, good equity W/D hookups, patios tion smokers, garaged, only Good shape. $4500 preferences, l i mita'~ ~ nnen is all you need. Call or decks. 18,800 miles, auto-level541-977-5587 tions or discrimination. Oregon Land MortMOUNTAIN GLEN, ing jacks, (2) slides, upWe will not knowingly gage 541-388-4200. Completely 541-383-9313 graded queen bed, bunk accept any advertisCHECK YOUR AD Rebuilt/Customized Professionally beds, micro, (3) TVs, ing for real estate 2007 Winnebago 2012/2013 Award managed by Norris 8 sleeps 10! Lots of storwhich is in violation of O Need to get an ad Outlook Class C" Winner age, maintained, very Stevens, Inc. this law. All persons 31', solar panel, Showroom Condition in ASAP? cleanlOnly $67,995! Exare hereby informed catalytic heater, 648 Many Extras tended warranty and/or fithat all dwellings adexcellent condition, Low Miles. nancing avail to qualified Houses for vertised are available Fax it to 541-322-7253 more extras. buyers!541-388-7179 on the first day it runs on an equal opportu$75,000 Rent General Asking$55K. 541-548-4807 to make sure it is cornity basis. The Bullen The Bulletin Classifieds Ph. 541-447-9268 881 rect. Spellcheck" and tin Classified PUBLISHER'S human errors do ocTravel Trailers NOTICE cur. If this happens to LOCALMONEY:We buy All real estate adveryour ad, please consecured trust deeds & tising in this newspa- • Redmond Homes HD Softtail Deuce 2002, tact us ASAP so that note,some hard money per is subject to the broken back forces • .g corrections and any loans. Call Pat Kellev F air H ousing A c t Looking for your next sale, only 200 mi. on adjustments can be 541-382-3099 ext.13. which makes it illegal new motor from Haremp/oyee? made to your ad. to a d vertise "any Place a Bulletin help ley, new trans case Allegro 32' 2007, like 573 541-385-5809 preference, limitation wanted ad today and and p arts, s p o kenew, only 12,600 miles. 2007 Jayco Jay Flight Business Opportunities or disc r imination reach over 60,000 wheels, new brakes, Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 29 FBS with slide out & The Bulletin Classified based on race, color, readers each week. n early all o f b i k etransmission, dual ex- awning - Turn-key ready DID YOU KNOW that religion, sex, handiTake care of brand new. Has proof haust. Loaded! Auto-lev- to use, less than 50 toYour classified ad not only does news- cap, familial status, of all work done. Re- eling system, 5kw gen, tal days used by current will also appear on your investments paper media reach a marital status or namovable windshield, power mirrors w/defrost, owner. Never smoked in, bendbulletin.com HUGE Audience, they tional origin, or an inno indoor pets, excellent with the help from T-bags, black and all 2 slide-outs with awwhich currently rea lso reach an E N- tention to make any chromed out with a nings, rear c a mera,cond., very clean. Lots of The Bulletin's ceives over GAGED AUDIENCE. such pre f erence, 1.5 million page willy skeleton theme trailer hitch, driver door bonus features; many "Call A Service Discover the Power of limitation or discrimion all caps and cov- w/power window, cruise, have never been used. views every month Newspaper Advertis- nation." Familial staers. Lots o f w o rk, exhaust brake, central Asking $18,000. C a l l Professional" Directory at no extra cost. ing in six states - AK, tus includes children heart and love went vac, satellite sys. Asking Lisa, 541-420-0794 for Bulletin Classifieds ID, MT, OR, UT, WA. under the age of 18 into all aspects. All $67,500.503-781-8812 more info / more photos. Get Results! For a free rate bro- living with parents or done at professional Call 385-5809 or chure call legal cus t odians, place your ad on-line shops, call for info. Dutchman Denali 916-288-6011 or pregnant women, and Must sell quickly due 32' 2011 travel at email people securing custo m e d ical bi l l s, trailer. 2 slides Evbendbugetin.com cecelia@cnpa.com tody of children under $8250. Call Jack at erything goes, all (PNDC) 18. This newspaper 541-279-9538. kitchen ware, linens Freightliner custom will not knowingly acNeed to get an etc. Hitch, sway 5th wheel puller, cept any advertising KAWASAKI Beaver Marquis, bars, water & sewer sleeper cab, rebuilt ad in ASAP? for real estate which is KLX125, 2003, hoses. List price 1993 engine with 20k miles, You can place it in violation of the law. good condition. 40-ft, Brunswick $34,500 - asking 6.5 generator, 120 cu. O ur r e aders a r e online at: $1100. $26,800 Loaded. ft. storage boxes - one floor plan. Many hereby informed that www.bendbugetin.com 541-593-8748 Must see to appreci8' long. Gets 10.9 extras, well mainall dwellings adverate. Redmond, OR. mpg, many more tained, fire suptised in this newspa541-604-5993 features. All in good 541 -385-5809 Yamaha V-Star, 250cc pression behind per are available on shape. See to appre2011 motorcycle, new refrig, Stow Master an equal opportunity ciate (in Terrebonne basis. To complain of custom seat for rider, 5000 tow bar, area). $24,000. vinyl coating on tank, 627 d iscrimination ca l l $22,995. Four Winds 2008 Manufactured/ 503-949-4229 2 helmets included. HUD t o l l-free a t 541-383-3503 18' travel trailer Vacation Rentals Mobile Homes Gets 60mpg, and has 1-800-877-0246. The used very little 8 Exchanges toll free t e lephone 3,278 miles. Fall Clearance $8500. Asking $4700, firm. number for the hear3 Bdrm, 2 Bath, Call Dan 541-550-0171 541-719-1217 ing i m paired is :) Oceanfront house 1601 sq.ft., beach walk from town, 1-800-927-9275. RETAIL 870 2 bdrm/2 bath, TV, $85,609 Boats 8 Accessories fireplace, BBQ. $95 FIND ITr Keystone Everest 5th SALE SUY IT! Wlleel, 2004 per night, 3 night Min. Fleetwood D i scovery $77,599 Finished 17.5' Bayliner 175 Capri, Gift? 208-369-3144 Model 323P - 3 slides, SELL IT! 40' 2003, diesel, w/all On Your Site. like new, 135hp I/O, low rear island-kitchen, options - 3 slide outs, The Bulletin Classifieds J & M Homes time, Bimini top, many 630 fireplace, 2 TV's, satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, 541-548-5511 extras, Karavan trailer CD/DVRNCR/Tuner Rooms for Rent 652 etc., 32,000 m iles. Heartland P r owler with swing neck current w/surround sound, A/C, List Your Home Wintered in h eated 2012, 29PRKS, 33', custom Houses for Rent registrations. $7000. bed, ceiling fan, Jandiy/Homes.com Furn. room quiet home, shop. $79,995 obo. like new, 2 slides-liv541-350-2336 NW Bend W/D ready, many extras. We Have Buyers no drugs, alcohol or 541-447-8664 i ng area 8 la r g e New awning & tires. Get Top Dollar smoking. $450/mo. 1st & closet, 15' power awExcellent condition. House for rent/sale! 3 Financing Available. last . 541-408-0846 ning, power hitch & $18,900.More pics bdrm 2 bath, newly re541-548-5511 stabilizers, full s i ze available. 541-923-6408 Room for rent in Red- mod. thru-out, 134 NW queen bed, l a rge mond, $425, incl utilities. Colorado. $1200/mo. 1st/ New DreamSpecial 3 bdrm, 2 bath shower, porcelain sink No smokinq. Mature, re- last/sec. 541-389-2028 $50,900 finished & toilet. sponsible, & stable. Call 17.5' Seaswirl 2002 658 on your site. Jim, 541-419-4513 $25,000or make offer. Wakeboard Boat Freightliner 1994 J andM Homes 541-999-2571 Houses for Rent I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, Custom 541-548-5511 631 tons of extras, low hrs. Redmond Motorhome Condo/Townhomes Full wakeboard tower, The Bulletin's Keystone Raptor, 2007 USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! light bars, Polk audio Will haul small SUV "Call A Service for Rent Eagle Crest Custom 37 toy hauler,2 slides, or toys, and pull a speakers throughout, Home -3 bdrms/3 baths, Door-to-door selling with Professional" Directory generator, A/C, 2 TVs, trailer! Powered by completely wired for Eagle Crest Townhome upstairs family room, of- fast results! It's the easiest amps/subwoofers, unsatellite system w/auto 8.3 Cummins with 6 is all about meeting 2 bdrm/2 bath. Includes fice, large deck, 3-car gaseek, in/out sound sysspeed Allison auto derwater lights, fish your needs. sports ctr privileges. No rage. Includes sports ctr way in the world to sell. t em,sleeps 6,many extrans, 2nd owner. finder, 2 batteries cuspnvileges. $2400/mo + pets. $1200/mo + detras.$29,999. In Madras, Call on one of the Very nice! $53,000. tom black paint job. The Bulletin Classified posit. For inquires, email deposit. Inquire by email call 541-771-9607 or 54'I -350-4077 professionals today! $1 2,500541-815-2523 susan per@msn.com susan per©msn.com 541-475-6265 541 485-5809 CHECK YOUR AD
HANGAR FOR SALE. 30x40 end unit T
Keystone Laredo 31' RV 2006 w i th 1 2 '
E5
SEMI-DRY VAN
53' long x1020 wide,
good tires, no dings, $8500.
BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254
541-719-1217 925
Utility Trailers
Landscape trailer 6x10 l ike n e w $1100. 541-771-7118
Snowbird Special! Open Road 36' w/3 slides! King bed, hide-a-bed, glass shower, 10 gal. water heater, 10 cu.ft. fridge, central vac, satellite dish, 27" TV /stereo system, front power leveling jacks & scissor stabilizer jacks, 16' awning. 2005 model is like new! $25,995
929
Automotive Wanted DONATE YOUR CAR, TRUCK OR BOAT TO HERITAGE FOR THE BLIND. Free 3 Day V acation, Tax D e -
ductible, Free Towing, All Paperwork Taken Care O f . CAL L 1-800-401-4106
(PNDC)
541-419-0566
931
885
Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories
Canopies 8 Campers
(4) Les Schwab studded Skamper 1990 8-ft pop- snow tires, 265/70R16, up cabover camper, im- reat shape, 90% tread, maculate, many extras, 285 obo. 541-382-4144 3-burner stove, heater 4 studded P205/75R-14 w/thermostat, hot water tires on GM wheels, apheater, oversized pres- prox 500 miles on them sure water s ystem„$350. Bob, 541-548-4871 Fantastic Fan, lots of storage, sleeps 4, $3750. '65-'66 Mustang original 541-617-0211 bucket seats, completely rebuilt, better than new. Price lowered, must sell. 541-447-7272
0
00
Say ngoodbuyn
to that unused item by placing it in The Bulletin Classifieds
00
541-385-5809
908 Aircraft, Parts & Service
Engine hoist $150.
541-771-7119 932
Antique & Classic Autos
1/3interest in
Columbia 4f00,
Financing available.
$150,000
(located O Bend) 541-288-3333
Chevelle Melibu 1966 Complete restoration, $32,900.
1/3 interest in wellequipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. $65,000. 541-419-9510 www.N4972M.com
I
(509) 521-0713 (in Bend, OR)
CHEVELLE MALIBU 1969 350-4spd, 3" exhaust. $12,000. 541-788-0427 1/5th interest in 1973
Cessna 150 LLC 150hp conversion, low time on air frame and engine, hangared in Bend. Excellent performance& affordable flying! $6,000. 541-410-6007
1965 Mustang Hard top, 6-cylinder, auto trans, power brakes, power steering, garaged, well maintained, engine runs strong. 74K mi., great condition.$12,500. Must see! 541-598-7940
1974 Belfanca 1730A 2180 TT, 440 SMO, 180 mph, excellent condition, always hangared, 1 owner for 35 years. $60K.
Mercedes 380SL 1982 Roadster, black on black, soft 8 hard top, excellent condition, aiways garaged. 155 K m i les, $11,500. 541-549-6407
ln Madras, call 541-475-6302
I'
I'
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FRI. Ltk: SAT.
NOON - 4PM Saddle Ridge Ranch. Custom designed homes on large lots. Model home " features alder flooring,
"
granite, tile, hand troweled
drywall, reclaimed woods202 NW Saddle Ridge and more. City services Loo p , P r i neville Plus irr!8ation. TurnkeY. PfrecwonsiPrinevii!e, L8 miles "Keeping the Western Sptnt norl!go ff~ain aireet.
Hosted & Listed by:
541 4'19 7540
$2ve,eoo THE ASSOCIATES Real Estate, lnc.
0
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
E6 FRIDAY NOVEMBER 28 2014 •THE BULLETIN I
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935
935
975
975
975
975
Sport Utility Vehicles
Sport Utility Vehicles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Nearly perfect! Must see! vin¹ 142671
Scion XB2013, (exp. 11/30/1 4) Vin ¹034131 Stock ¹83065
Toyota Corolla 2013, (exp. 11/30/1 4) Vin ¹053527 Stock ¹83072
I
Chevrolet Cruze 2013, 2700 actual miles, 4-cyl turbo, Cadilliac red, very clean, must see! $14,995 obo. 541-382-0194
Jeep Liberty 2012 •
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BOATS 8 RVs 805- Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 850 - Motorcycles And Accessories 855 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies and Campers 890- RVs for Rent
•
AUTOS8ETRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 915 - 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
932
933
935
Antique & Classic Autos
Pickups
Sport Utility Vehicles
Nissan Extra Cab 4X4 Pickup 1994 V-6 manual 2nd owner. Gem Top canopy, roof rack, bed liner, tow hitch. Extra: 4 tires, 2 wheels. Body good shape. High miles, runs great. Excellent maintenance records. Below Kelly Blue$2500.
Mercedes 450SL, 1975 97K Miles $8999. 541-504-8399
541-419-7866.
Oldsmobile CUSTOM CRUISER WAGON 1991 1 owner, 8 seatbelts, 118K mi, 350EFI V8, auto, $3000 541-385-6168 or Norm06@msn.com
Nissan Frontier 2013, Plymouth Duster, 1974, (exp. 11/30/1 4) sound body, 360 engine Vin ¹717729 (needs work). $2300. Stock ¹83155 Call 541-390-2454 $25,979 or $299/mo.,
$3900 down, 84 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title included in payment.
©
s u a a au
V W CONV. 1 9 78 $8999 -1600cc, fuel 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 injected, classic 1978 Dlr ¹0354 Volkswagen Convertible. Cobalt blue with Toyota Tundra 4x4, 2002 a black convertible top, cream colored SR5 access cab, with interior & black dash. canopy, $8500 o b o. This little beauty runs 541-280-1650
and looks great and turns heads wherever it goes. Mi: 131,902. Phone 541-504-8399
Chevrolet Trailblazer 2008 4x4 Automatic, 6-cylinder, tilt wheel, power windows, power brakes, air conditioning, keyless entry, 69K miles. Excellent condition; tires have 90% tread. $11,995. Call 541-598-5111 Chevy Silverado 2011 EX cab 4x4 LTZ leather, canopy, Z71 off road. ¹105059 Black Frida Blowout $23,495
541-598-3750
Ford Escape
2009 Hybrid Limited,
21.977 ROBBERSON LINCOLN ~
$23,977
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205.Price good thru 11/30/1 4
JEEP WRANGLER
2009 hard top 18,000 miles. automatic, AC, tilt 8 cruise, power windows, power steering, power locks, alloy wheels and running boards,
garaged. $22,500.
541-419-5980
Pickups
ik • 2005 Diesel 4x4 Chev Crewcab dually, Allison tranny, tow pkg., brake controller, cloth split front bench seat, only 66k miles. Very good condition, Original owner, $34,000 or best offer. 541-408-7826
wheels and new 20" tires. 2nd set MBZ wheels with snowflake tires. Full new car ext. warranty March 2017. 59,500 miles. Fully loaded incl. DVD and NAV. $34,500. 541-815-3049 Mercedes GLK350
TODAYA
541-420-6215.
541-480-5634
gythrp@gmail.com
Call a Pro Whether you need a fence fixed, hedges trimmed or a house built, you'll find professional help in The Bulletin's "Call a Service Professional' Directory 541 N385 N5809
Chevy Silverado 2012 4x4 Crew Cab 39K miles, White Diamond paint, Tonneau cover, leather heated seats, running boards, tow-ready, new tires (only 200 miles on them), like new inside and out! $29,900. 541-350-0775
Honda Ri d geline RTL 2006. 2nd owner 112,000 mi.. Records since owning car for 5 years. Truck crew cab w ith 3.5 V 6 , a u t o trans, very cleanNwith most options, 17 alloy wheels with Toyo Tires at 80%. Custom t onneau cover f o r bed, and tow hitch. Price to sell$13,997. dagreene75@hotmail. com or 610-909-1701
MAZDA 3S 2011
Certified preowned with warranty. ¹401047 Onl $16,947 ROBBERSON I I N CC LII ~
ChevyExpress Cargo
Need help fixing stuff? Call A Service Professional find the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com
mpg hwy, 80K miles, $22,979 or $279/mo., 32new tires + mounted
$3000 down, 84 mo., studded snow tires, 4 .49% APR o n a p $7250. 541-433-2026 proved credit. License and title i ncluded in DID YOU KNOW 144 payment.
©
IM RO R
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205 price good thru 11/30/14
PT Cruiser 2007, 5spd,
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Need tosell a Vehicle? Call The Bulletin and place an ad today! Ask about our 'Wheel Deal"! for private party advertisers
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LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE DodgeAvenger 2013, OF SALE File No. (exp. 11/30/1 4) 975 7023.100723 R e ferVin ¹535474 Automobiles ence is made to that Stock ¹83015 $13,979 or $195/mo., c ertain t rust d e e d m ade by D e r i L . $2000 down 72 mo. Buick LaCrosse 4 .49% APR o n a p - Frazee, Steven Sumproved credit. License merfield, Luc i nda and title included in Summerfield, as payment. grantor, to F i delity GMCyukon National Title Insur® s u a aau ance Company, as 2006 - Great runner, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. trustee, in favor of Wells Fargo Bank, 877-266-3821 must see. Dlr ¹0354 N.A., as beneficiary, VIN ¹159299 Mercedes MBZ BMW X3 35i 2010 dated 07/10/06, re$9977. ML500 2007 Exlnt cond., 65K miles corded 07/14/06, in 2006- 4x4, room silver, fully w/100K mile transferROBBERSON the mortgage records for everyone. equipped, 74,100 able warranty. Very LINCOLN ~ II IR K R of DESC H UTES VIN¹121999 miles, mounted clean; loaded - cold County, Oregon, as $16,977 snow tires on alloy weather pkg, premium 541-312-3986 2006-48272, covering rims. Original pkg & technology pkg. Dlr ¹0205. Price t he f o llowing d e ROBBERSON Keyless access, sunowner, all records Honda Accord SE 2006, good thru 11/30/14 scribed real property mama roof, nayigation, satel$17,500. 4-cyl, great mpg, non~ ~ situated in said county lite radio, extra snow 541-322-6281 smoker, well maint'd, state, to wit: Lot 8 541-312-3986 tires. (Car top carrier Buick LeSabres, 95K mi., clean. 1 owner. and i n Block 2 o f L o e Dlr ¹0205. pricing not included.) $22,500. 2002 132k $3999; Reduced $8250 firm. B rothers Town N ' 541-91 5-9170 good thru 11/30/14 480-266-7395 (Bend) 2005 179k $4999. Country Second AddiMercury Mariner 541-419-5060 tion, City of Sisters, Hyundai Elantra Deschutes C ounty, Jeep Commander Cadillac Escalade Oregon. PROPERTY ADDRESS: 222 West Black Crater Avenue CHECK YOUR AD Sisters, OR 9 7 759 on the first day of pub2009 - All wheel Both the beneficiary lication. If a n e rror and the trustee have drive, same vehicle may occur in your ad, elected to sell the real as the Escape, 2013,loaded, 2011 Has every2007 - Loaded, p lease contact u s in great shape! property to satisfy the sporty, nearly thing, seriously!! awesome. and we will be happy obligations secured by Vin¹J13074 perfect. VIN¹624801 Vin¹301832 Vin¹569977 to fix it as soon as we the trust deed and a Only $13,977 $17,977 $49,977 SOLD! can. Deadlines are: notice of default has Weekdays 12:00 noon ROBBERSON ROBBERSON ROBBERSON ROBBERSON y been recorded pursufor next d ay, S a t. ant to O regon Re~m aRR LR mama 11:00 a.m. for Sun~ ~ vlsed Statutes day; Sat. 12:00 for 541-312-3986 541-312-3986 541-312-3986 86.752(3); the default 541-312-3986 Monday. Dlr ¹0205. pricing Dlr ¹0205. Price for which foreclosure Dlr ¹0205. pricing Dlr ¹0205. pricing 541-385-5809 good thru 11/30/14 good thru 11/30/14 is made is grantors' good thru 11/30/14 good thru 11/30/14 The Bulletin Classified failure to pay when due t h e fo l lowing sums: monthly payments of $ 1 ,766.11 beginning 02/01/1 2, $1,759.13 beginning 3/1/12 and $1,757.91 beginning 3/1/13; plus prior accrued l a te charges of $211.08; p lus advances o f $6,409.00 that represent paid foreclosure fees and costs and . +; n I property inspections; O together with title expense, costs, trustee's fees and attorney's fees incurred herein It '/ by reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of the above described real property and i ts inte r est therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. By reason of said default the beneficiary has d eclared al l s u m s owing on the obligation secured by the trust deed immediAdd a PhOtOto yOur Bulletin ClaSSified ad fOr juSt $15 Per Week. ately due and payable, said sums being V isit w w w . b e n d b u l le t i n .c om , c l ic k o n " P L AC E A N A D " the following, to wit: a nd follow th e e a s y s t e p s . $196,219.92 with interest thereon at the rate of 7 percent per All ads appear in both print and online. Pleaseallow 24 hours for photo processing annum beg i nning 01/01/12; plus prior before your adappears in print and online. accrued late charges of $211.08; plus advances of $6,409.00 that represent paid foreclosure fees and costs and property inspections; t o gether with title e xpense, costs, trustee's fees www.bendbulletin.com and attorneys fees incurred herein by reaTo PlaCeyOur PhOtOad, ViSit USOnline at W WW.bend b u l l e t i n . C O m son of said default; any further sums ador Call With queStiOnS,5 41-385- 5 8 0 9 vanced by the beneficiary for the protection of t h e a b ove LNICOL N ~
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Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 Stock ¹82547 each week. $21,979 or $259/mo., readers Your classified ad $3600 down, 84 mo., will also appear on 4 .48% APR o n a p bendbulletin.com proved credit. License and title included in which currently repayment. ceives over 1.5 million page views Suf9APqu every month at NURCRUONRRUO.COU 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds 877-266-3821 Get Results! Call Dlr ¹0354 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at TURN THE PAGE bendbulletin.com For More Ads The Bulletin Just too many Toyota Camry LE 2007 collectibles? 73,200 miles, newer tires, includes keySell them in less start after factory, 4 studless snow tires The Bulletin Classifieds not on rims. $9300.
~ The Bulletin ~
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Classifieds
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Van 2011, (exp. 11/30/1 4) Vin ¹126159 Stock ¹44535A
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Have an item to sell quick? If it's under '500 you can place it in The Bulletin Classifieds for:
Find them in The Bulletin
541-385-5809
$2000 down, 84 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title included in payment.
Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE 877-266-3821 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 Dlr ¹0354
Garage Sales
4 49'I A P R o n a p proved credit. License and title i ncluded in payment.
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend.
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ChevyPickup 1978, long bed, 4x4, frame up restoration. 500 Cadillac eng i ne, fresh R4 transmission w/overdrive, low mi., no rust, custom interior and carpet, n ew wheels a n d tires, You must see it! $25,000 invested. $12,000 OBO. 541-536-3889 or
Garage Sales
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IVIERCEDES-BENZ GL450 2 0 10 Im maculate, c ustom
$2000 down, 84 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title included in payment.
IM RO R
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541-312-3986 Toyota Tundra Ltd. Ed. Dlr ¹0205. pricing CrewMax, 2011 - Only Ford Escape good thru 11/30/14 29,700 miles 8 loaded! Limited 2010, 381hp, TRD off road pkg, (exp. 11/30/1 4) N Bilstein shocks,18 alloys, nce R8~8cedrg Vin ¹B21115 sunroof, rear s l i ding Stock ¹83028A window, backup camera, or $199/mo., 12-spkr JBL sys, running $17,979 down, 84 mo., brds, hitch/trailer sway $3500 4 .49% APR o n a p pkg, 10-way adj leather proved credit. License htd seats, dual climate and title i ncluded in Mercedes MBZ ML500, control, sonar, 6-disc CD, pavment. 2003, loaded, 102K, facBluetooth, more! $34,900. tory rims w/snow tires incl. 541-390-6616 All records, exlnt cond., 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. $9,500. 541-322-6281 935 877-266-3821 Sport Utility Vehicles Dlr ¹0354 PRICE REDUCED!
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541-312-3986
PRICE REDUCED
4 .49% APR o n a p (exp. 11/30/1 4) proved credit. License VIN ¹292213 and title i ncluded in Stock ¹83014 payment. $13,979 or $195/mo., $ 2000 down 7 2 m o . S UBA RU OURRRUOCRUUO.OOR 4 49'I A P R o n a p 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. proved credit. License and title i ncluded in 877-266-3821 payment. Dlr¹0354
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$15,979 or $199/mo., $15,979 or $199 mo.,
ROBBERSON
$3500 down, 84 mo. at Chrysler 200 LX 2012,
940
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$11,977
54'I -647-0081.
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Vin ¹203053. Stock ¹82770
$17,979 or $199/mo.,
AWD, great tires. VIN¹ A17570
Subaru Legacy LL Bean 2006,
Limited Edition. PRAYING FOR SNOW! Vin¹149708
~
deed, and in addition described real prop- to paying said sums erty and its interest or tendering the pertherein; and prepay- formance necessary ment penalties/premi- to cure the default, by ums, if a p plicable. paying all costs and W HEREFORE, n o - expenses actually intice hereby is given curred in enforcing the that the undersigned obligation and t rust trustee will on Febru- deed, together with ary 11, 2015 at the trustee's and hour of 10:00 o'clock, attorney's fees n ot A.M. in accord with exceeding the the standard of time amounts provided by established by ORS said OR S 8 6 .778. 187.110, at the folRequests from perlowing place: inside sons named in ORS the main lobby of the 86.778 for reinstateDeschutes C o u nty ment quotes received Courthouse, 1164 NW less than six days Bond, in the City of prior to the date set Bend, County of DE- for the trustee's sale SCHUTES, State of will be honored only at Oregon, sell at public the discretion of the auction to the highest b eneficiary or if r e bidder for cash the quired by the terms of i nterest in t h e d e - the loan documents. scribed real property In construing this nowhich the grantor had tice, the singular inor had power to con- cludes the plural, the vey at the time of the word "grantor" inexecution by grantor cludes any successor of the trust deed, to- i n i nterest t o th e gether with any inter- grantor as well as any est which the grantor other person owing an or grantor's succes- obligation, the perforsors in interest ac- mance of which is sequired after the ex- cured by said trust ecution of the trust deed, and the words deed, to satisfy the "trustee" and Nbenefiforegoing obligations ciary" include their rethereby secured and spective successors t he costs an d e x - in interest, if any. The penses of sale in- trustee's rules of auccluding a reasonable tion may be accessed charge by the trustee. at w w w .northwestNotice is further given trustee.com and are that for reinstatement incorporated by this or payoff quotes re- reference. You may quested pursuant to also access sale staO RS 8 6 .786 a n d tus a t ww w .north86.789 must be timely westtrustee.com and c ommunicated in a www.USA-Foreclowritten request that sure.com. For further c omplies with t h a t information, p l ease statute addressed to contact: Kathy Tagthe trustee's "Urgent gart Northwest Request Desk" either Trustee Services, Inc. by personal delivery P.O. Box 997 Belleto the trustee's physi- vue, WA 98009-0997 cal offices (call for ad- 586-1900 F R AZEE, d ress) or b y f i r st DERI L. and SUMclass, certified mail, MERFIELD, STEVEN r eturn receipt r e - and LUCINDA (TS¹ quested, addressed to 7023.100723) the trustee's post of- 1002.215530-File No. fice box address set forth in this notice. LEGAL NOTICE Due to potential con- Foreclosure Notice flicts with federal law, Brosterhous Storpersons having no 61380 Brosterrecord legal or equi- age, hous Road, Bend table interest in the subject property will 9 7702. Notice o f sale on only receive informa- foreclosure tion concerning the Saturday D ecem6th at 9:00 AM lender's estimated or ber sa t isf y lie n actual bid. Lender bid t o against followi nformation is a l s o ing unit:the Jacob Beavailable a t the Unit ¹8; Tonya trustee's web s ite, rado Rogers Units www.northwest30/¹100; Ro g e r trustee.com. Notice is ¹Kelley Unit ¹165. further given that any person named in ORS 86.778 has the right, LEGAL NOTICE at any time prior to PURSUANT TO ORS five days before the CHAPTER 87 date last set for the Notice is hereby given s ale, to h a v e t h is that the following veforeclosure proceed- hicle will be sold, for ing dismissed and the cash to the highest trust deed reinstated bidder, on 12/3/2014. b y payment to t he The sale will be held beneficiary of the en- at 10:00am by PREtire amount then due CISION B OD Y & (other than such por- PAINT/BEND, 61530 tion of the principal as S HWY 9 7 B E N D, would not then be due OR. 2007 V W JETTA VIN had no default oc- 4DR curred) and by curing 3VWEG71KX7M1251 any o t her d e fault 65. Amount due on complained of herein lien $10238.00. Rethat is capable of be- puted owne r (s) ing cured by tender- ROBYN T H ERESE ing the performance S TOKES, WES T r equired under t h e LAKE FI N ANCIAL SERVICES. o bligation o r tr u st
YOU.R WEEK.LYGUl„ETO CENTRAL NTRAL- OREGO.N EVE NTS,ARTS AND E NTE RTAI NMENT NTRAL
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PAGE 2 • GO! MAGAZINE
C ONTAC T
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014
in ez
US
EDITOR
Coverdesign by Tim Gallivan/The Bulletin; submitted photo
Ben Salmon, 541-383-0377 bsalmonObendbulletin.com
REPORTERS David Jasper, 541-383-0349 djasper©bendbulletin.com Sophie Witkins, 541-383-0351 swilkinsObendbulletin.com Kathleen liilcCool, 541-383-0350 kmccool@bendbulletin.com
DRINKS • 10
RESTAURANTS • 20
• Retirement home brewers and Worthy team up on beer to fight Alzheimer's
• A review of Laughing Planet Cafe
OUT OF TOWN • 22
ARTS • 12
DESIGNER Tim Gallivan, 541-383-0331 tgallivanObendbulletin.com
• "A Christmas Carol" opens Dec. 5 in Eugene • A guide to out of town events
• Volcanic Theatre Pub revives "Pillowman,""Santaland Diaries" • Humm hosts metal artist Joseph Balsamo • COCC students sell ceramics • BEAT set to put on "The Hobbit" • Art Exhibits lists current exhibits
SUBMIT AN EVENT
MUSIC • 3
GO! is published each Friday in The Bulletin. Please submit information at least 10 days before the edition in which it is printed, including the event name, brief description, date, time, location, cost, contact number and a website, if
• COVER STORY:ZacharyLuckybringshis prairie songs to Bend • Hot Buttered Rum hits The Belfry • Crow's Feet hosts Possessed by Paul James • Curve party gathers flve DJs for fun HOLIDAY BAZAARS • 15 • Hip Hatchet visits Volcanic Theatre • Celebrate the season with stuff for sale!
appropriate. Email to: events@bendbulletin.com Fax to: 541-385-5804, Attn: Community Life U.S. Mail or hand delivery: Community Life, The Bulletin 1777 SW Chandler Ave. Bend, OR 97702
GOING OUT • 8
ADVERTISING
• Rose's Pawn Shop,PrayForSnow party • A listing of live music, DJs,karaoke, open mics and more
541 -382-1811
MUSIC REVIEWS • 9
Take advantage of the full line of Bulletin products. Call 541-385-5800. e
• Foo Fighters, Pink Floyd and more
CALENDAR • 16 • A week full of Central Oregon events
MOVIES • 25
• "Horrible Bosses 2," "The Theory of Everything," "Penguins of Madagascar" and "Listen Up Philip" open in Central Oregon • "The Expendables 3,""The Giver," "Tyler Perry's 'A MadeaChristmas'" and more are out on Blu-ray and DVD • Brief reviews of movies showing in Central Oregon
PLANNING AHEAD • 18 • A listing of upcoming events • Talks and classes listing
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SHEIlSN CATTLEIEN'R ARRSCIATISN PHERENTR 2OI14 NOILIDiAY SNOIW SatlirtIay,9Ct:. th II )O14
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GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 3
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014
musie
Submitted photo
Zachary Lucky will perform at Volcanic Theatre Pub on Monday.
• Country-folk singer-songwriter Zachary Lucky finds his inspiration logging miles onthe road
road. He's been criss-crossing North America as a touring art-
By Ben Salmon
Saskatoon,
The Bulletin
And they're among the closest
Smi l i n ' J ohnnie Lucky, d i d
hen he answers the phone for an interview with GO! Magazine, Canadian country-folk singer-songwriter Zachary Lucky is killing
first stops for this hard-touring musician.
for decades before he passed away in 2010.
w
time before his show that night at a venue in Cochrane, Alberta,
a small town just outside Calgary. According to an online mapping service, Calgary and Cochrane are about a seven-hour drive from Lucky's hometown,
ist for about five years, much
like his grandfather, renowned Canadian
Sas k atchewan.t roubadour
"The capital city of Saskatche-
"It's something I en-
wan is Regina, and it's only two, two-and-a-half hours a w ay," Lucky says. "Other than that, if we're going to Alberta, Edmonton is about six hours away. Winnipeg (in Manitoba) is about 10 hours."
joy, but you're catching me with t hree weeks left on a tour,"
Zachary Lucky said with a gentle
long drives ahead of us. I do love the open road, though. It's a big part of my life." It's hard to imagine Lucky listens to his own music while
driving, but if he did, he'd have a perfect companion. His 2013
album "The Ballad of Losing You" is a gorgeous collection of sparse, slow-moving country-folk tunes that s ound
as dusty and timeless as family and I think we've clocked about photo albums forgotten in the far 15,000 kilometers, (so) we've been corner of the attic. At once, they chuckle. "I looked the other day,
Fortunately, L u ck y do e sn't on the road for a hefty amount mind long stretches on the open of time, and we still have a lot of
are both restrained and rustic-
recorded live to tape, no comput-
Ifyou go What: ZacharyLucky,with Second Son When:8 p.m. Monday Cost:$5 Where:Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend Contact:www.volcanictheatrepub.com, 541-323-1881
ers involved — but also buoyed by Lucky's easy way with melody, plus the beautiful swoop of the
pedal-steel guitar. Continued Page 5
music
PAGE 4 • GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014
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San Francisco's Hot Buttered Rum will perform its mix of progressive bluegrass and folk-rock Thursday at The Belfry in Sisters.
• Hot Buttered Rum aimsto moveyour body, mind and heart at its upcomingBelfry show By David Jasper
time now, which will bring the The Bulletin five-piece group to Central Oreot Buttered Rum is having gon Thursday for a show at The a baby boom. Belfry in Sisters (see "If you go"). Guitarist Nat Keefe and Keefe, a skier, was stoked to his wife are expecting aboy in De- hear about our region's mid-Nocember, and drummer Lucas Carl- vember snowfall when GO! Magton and his significant other have azine spoke to him early last a baby of their own due just two week. He's never ridden at Mt. weeks later, according to Keefe. Bachelor, but he skied frequently In anticipation of impending di- at Mt. Hood when he was a stuaper duties, the rootsy San Fran- dent years ago at Lewis & Clark cisco band is logging some road College in Portland.
H
"If anyone wants to take us skiing, and has some passes, please let us know," he said. In Hot Buttered Rum, Keefe
shares songwriting duties with Aaron Redner (fiddle, mandolin) and Erik Yates (banjo, woodw inds. Bassist B r ya n H o r n e rounds out the band's lineup.
"We try to put together songs in
a lot of different ways. Sometimes two of us will collaborate on a
song," he said.
Ifyoulo What:Hot Buttered Rum,with The Pitchfork Revolution When:8 p.m. Thursday Where:The Belfry, 302 E Main Ave., Sisters Cost: $16 plusfeesinadvance at www.bendticket.com or $20 at the door Contact:www.belfryevents.com
Other times, "we will nurture
a song by ourselves, then bring it in to the group at a certain point," Keefe said. "And then one of the strengths of Hot Buttered Rum, I
think, is in the group production collaboration, where we take the
seed of a song and then flesh it out
with what is uniquely ours." Because they put such effort into
their songwriting and lyrics, Keefe said, "we hope that (the live show) is a
m u l t i-chakra experience,
where you're moving your booty, and then it's also warming your heart and it's also stimulating your mind. I thinkthe best Hot Buttered Rum shows do that, and we often fall short of that in various ways,
but that's what we're going for." Keefe said that all of the band's
music — a good-times fusion of progressive bluegrass and folkrock — is based in early American string-band music. Continued next page
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014
From Page 3 In other words, "The Ballad of Losing You n sounds exactly like
musie
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 5
n
My grandfather was a touring musician, but my family
itself never really left Saskatchewan all but once. I think what you might expect an album by there was just a part of me that, because that was the a heartbroken and cowboy-hatted
folk singer from an isolated Canadian prairie town to sound like. Lucky grew up in an unmusical household ("It skipped a genera-
case,I was gonna go figure out what was out there. I felt this need to get out and explore and see our continent." —Zachary Lucky
•
. •
•
tion,n he said) but gravitated to the
guitar around age 10. After playing in all kinds of bands throughout high school, he "slowly began to figure out that (he) felt at home with folk music," entered his grandfather's profession and hit the road not
loss is so much more than just losing a relationship," he said. "When you lose somebody inyour life who's been embedded there, yeah, you're losing the physical per-
long after that.
son, but there's also this voice that's
"My grandfather was a touring musician, but my family itself never really left Saskatchewan all but once," he said. nI think there was
just a part of me that, because that was the case, I was gonna go figure out what was out there. I felt this need to get out and explore and see our continent."
Lucky put out a couple records2010's "Come and Gone" and 2012's
left in your life and you're looking for ways to fill that," Lucky said.
make an album as sad as his last one, but he also is under no illusion
"And then there's all the peripher- that he'll be touring behind a pop real things. You lose the friends and cord next time he hits the road. "That's never gonna be me. I find family that went with that person." Some of the songs on "Ballad" are myself writing real songs about autobiographical and some are just real s-t and real people and things stories, he said. Regardless, writing that I've seen and felt and people I've met wherever I've been," Lucky and recording them was cathartic. "It was like an emotional exorcism. It was just s-t that was in me
think it's safe to say that. But I think
and let that s-t burn away."
From previous page "We love the post-war, first-generation guys like Ralph Stanley and Flatt & Scruggs. And then we're also really inspired by the second generation guys like Sam Bush, Bela Fleck and Edgar Mey-
"We hope that (the live show) is a multi-chakra experience, where you're moving your booty, and then it's also warming
"My dad took me to my first bluegrass festival when I was 9 years old. He took me to my first Grateful
Dead concert when I was 10 years old," he said. nI delved into his vi-
nyl record collection early on, and he's got just stacks and stacks of great oldrecords, old bluegrass and country music,nand great folk music from the '60s. Hot Buttered Rum released its most recent self-titled album, pro-
Ledger Art Custom Saddles, Gun Leather Russell Hill Bags Authentic Navajo Weaving Bob Goddard Western Furniture Home Decor• Jewelry • Western Art
Original Jim Gordon Oil P aintings
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bubwarre
(54+3$O 287ts
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your heart and it's also stimulating your mind.I think the best Hot Buttered Rum shows do that, and we often fall short of
MariachiSoldeMexico
thatin various ways, but that's what we're going for."
er,n he said. "And then we've absorbed all of that and then, I think,
together.
Native American Beading
said. "That's what I do. I'm a touring
musician. We've been out there for "Saskatchewan" — beforeentering that needed to leave," Lucky said. (a while) now and I've met a lot of the studio in April 2013 to record the "(Looking back), I totally remember different folks and seen a lot of difbatch of songs that would become thinking that that was a record that ferent things. It just makes sense to "Ballad." He was not in a great place. I needed to make. It needed to hap- write that stuff down." "It's rooted in a relationship. I pen. I needed to write those songs — Reporter: 541-383-0377,
put our own spin on what I hope is a uniquely West Coast version of this great tradition of bluegrass music." Keefe got into string music by way of his mandolin-playing, songwriting father, via his record collection and concerts they attended
Molly Kubista Trunk Show
A year and a half later, Lucky's feeling better. He's wrapping up touring behind "Ballad" and preparing for a winter and spring to be spent mostly in the studio working on a followup. He doesn't expect to
A Merri-Achi Christmas!
— Net Keefe, Hot Buttered Rum guitarist
BKNnSultcERv
'50s off recorded music, and then in the '60s, '70s and '80s, people definitely made huge livings off of bum,n Keefe said. "I think it's a recorded music. But maybe that's good representation of where we're only going to be a four-decade phen duced by Los Lobos' Steve Berlin, last July. "We're really proud of that alat.
nomenon, and now it's over."
Asked how it's performing, he replied with a joke: "It's hard to sell
To be sure, Keefe is OK with that. He noted that, in a decade togeth-
records, and I think everyone ex-
er, Hot Buttered Rum has made
ceptn Taylor Swift would agree with
four studio albums, versus playing
me.
thousands of shows.
mances than their records. nI think there was this brief peri-
it comes down to it, our live show is what it's all about. And that's what we're actually masters at." — Reporter: 541-383-0349, djasper@bendbulletin.corn
"I'm not completely attached to If anything, Keefe said, there's a longer tradition of musicians mak- the idea of having to make money ing their living off their live perfor- off of our albums," he said. "When
od where (through) recorded music, you could make a living," he said. "People sort of made a living in the
f r aIasitsgsg a•
DECEMBER 6-7 Cascade Chorale 9 Mariachi Sol de Mexico 11 Todd Haaby 13-14 Central Oregon Mastersingers 19 A Christmas Memory starring Bob Shaw 21-22 Holiday Cheer Thru the Years 24 Community Christmas Eve 27 Elvis: "Never Forgotten" 29 "Iron Maiden: Flight 666"
JANUARY 2 Guitar Open Mic Night n 17 nBig Lebowski
18 Peking Acrobats TWO SHOWS! 541-317-0700
Find It All Onlinebendbulletin.com
TheTowerTheatre 'q www.towertheatre.org f h eTowerTheatre ~ © t owertheatrebnd
musie
PAGE 6 + GO! MAGAZINE I
At Central Oregon's Premier Outdoor Rink
For more information about times, lessons 6. hockey leagues visit seventhmountain.com
sts
=-' -"
SEVENTH
MOUNTAI N RESORT
Booh your lesson now at 5414934114 All experience levels are welcome.
tlhrisfjnas Narijei h OpenBarn • •
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Dec. 6 —Lion I (hip-hop), Domino Room, Bend, 541-408-4329. Dec. 6 —BobbyMeader (folkpunk),Astro Lounge, Bend, www.astroloungebend.com. Dec. 6 —TangoAlpha Tango (blues-rock),Volcanic Theatre Pub, Bend, www. volcanictheatrepub.com. Dec. 7-8 —Keith Greeninger (folk),Music in the Glen, Bend, windance2011©gmail.com or 541-306-0048. Dec. 9 —Mariachi Sol De Mexico (feliz nevided!), Tower Theatre, Bend, www. towertheatre.org. Dec. 10 —Jive Coulis (funkrock),McMenamins Old St. Francis School, Bend, www. mcmenamins.com. Dec. 11 —Zepparelln (Zep tribute),The Belfry, Sisters, www.belfryevents.com. Dec. 12 —JohnCraigie (folk), The Belfry, Sisters, www. belfryevents.com. Dec. 17 —Morning Ritual (roots-pop),The Belfry, Sisters, www.belfryevents.com. Dec. 17 —Steven Roth (poprock),Volcanic Theatre Pub, Bend, www.volcanictheatrepub. com. Dec. 17 —MoodyLittle Sister (folk-pop),McMenamins Old St. Francis School, Bend, www. mcmenamins.com. Dec. 20 —Hillstomp (bluespunk),The Belfry, Sisters, www. belfryevents.com. Dec. 26-27 —Oregon Piano Summit II (jazz piano),The Oxford Hotel, Bend, www. jazzattheoxford.com. Dec. 28 —Mel Brown's B-3 Organ Group(jazz), The Oxford Hotel, Bend, www. jazzattheoxford.com. Dec. 31 —TonySmiley and World's Finest (party jams),McMenamins Old St. Francis School, Bend, www. mcmenamins.com. Dec. 31 —The Sugar Beets (dance music),The Belfry, Sisters, www.belfryevents.com. Jan.7 — M oonshineBandits
(country-rap),DominoRoom, Bend, 541-408-4329. Jan. 11 —David Lindley
Snow Diamond Alpacas 65520 GerkingMarket Road, Bend
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THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014
(cosmo-rock),TheBelfry, Sisters, www.belfryevents.com. Jan. 11 —Brothers Keeper with John Popper (rock),Volcanic Theatre Pub, Bend, www. volcanictheatrepub.com.
.,4
a
Crow's Feet shindig with Possessed ByPaul James
where the "Possessed" part of his stage name started.
Wert is a skilled singer-songwriter and a renowned one-man band who has been rising through the Americana ranks since before Americana cles as Possessed by Paul Jameswas the hottest new thing and oneplaying a song called "There Will Be man bands were so technologicalNights When I Am Lonely" live in the ly convenient. His sound revolves studio of Austin, Texas radio station around a cadre of acoustic stringed There is a video on Yotflbbe that shows a man named Konrad Wert — better known in roots-music cir-
KUTX.
instruments — guitar, fiddle and ban-
It is a relatively simple arrangement: Wert and his voice, a fiddle that he both plucks like a guitar and plays with a bow, and his feet, which stomp out a ragged rhythm. It's a beautiful song, at times an elegant arc and others a wild-eyed plinkpunk tune. Vocally, Wert alternates between his sturdy singing voice and an occasional, seemingly out-ofbody bark.
jo, in particular — and incorporates bits of blues, folk, country and punk.
closed, lost in the song and unable to
Brooks St., Bend; www.crowsfeet-
He has released four studiore-
cords, plus a couple of tributes and a live album, and has shared the stage with tons of u p-and-comers, plus
living legends like Wanda Jackson, Ralph Stanley and Bob Log III. And tonight, he'll play Crow's Feet Commons' second anniversary shindig, where there'll also be beer, cocktails, And then, at 2:52, as he rounds grub, discounted ski and cycling gear the song home into a repeated cho- and more. See the website below for rus, he shouts out sDo it again!" as more info. if he's calling out an order to his surPossessed By PaulJames, with rounding band. Except there is no Blackflowers Blacksun; 5 tonight; surroundingband. It's just Wert: eyes free; Crow's Feet Commons, 875 NW rein in his feelings. This is, perhaps, commons.com or 541-728-0066.
musie
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014
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RED CHAIR GALLERY 103 NW OREGON AVE.• 541-306-3176
www.redchairgallerybend.com MO C K I N G B IRD GALLERY 869 NW WALL ST.• 541-388-2107
www.mockingbird-gallery.com KAREN BANDY DESIGN JEWELER 25 NW MINNESOTA AVE. ¹5 • 541-388-0155
www.karenbandy.com SAGE CUSTOM FRAMING & GALLERY 834 NW BROOKS ST. • 541-382-5884
www.sageframing-gallery.com PAUL SCOTT GALLERY 869 NW WALL ST. • 541-330-6000
Hip Hatchet bringshis
viting. If you remember the popular (and wonderful) downtown bar The Grove,which closed in 2007, then you have some idea of what Curve's
inner longings to Bend Artists often struggle to describe their art, but that's not the case with Philippe Bronchtein ... or, at least,
aesthetic will look like. If you never
whoever wrote the bio on his website. There, Bronchtein's Hip Hatchet
trust me: The Domino Room will not feel like the Domino Room once
project is described as "a one man band who crafts carefully orches-
you're inside.
Burner ethos? If you live in Cen-
trated, rustic folk songs about the in-
tral Oregon and you've gotten this far into this brief, you probably know what that is. If you're still con-
That's perfect. Almost as perfect
as Hip Hatchet's 2012 album"Joy and Better Days," a 12-track collection of hushed, graceful folk that draws you in — primarily with Bronchtein's Hip Hatchet, with Christopher Paul deep, reassuring voice — and then Stelling;8 p.m. Sunday; $5; Volcanic tal arrangements. Each song is like a little world of its own, warm and fragrant and somehow both lush and
simple at the same time. You can hear "Joy and Better
Days" at w w w .hiphatchet.bandcamp.com. And you should.
fused, Google the Burning Man art/ community/camping festival and
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CHRISTMAS TREE LANE
R, BOUTIQUE (A Great Selection of Noble Firs tk Hand Crafted Items)
December 1st — 23rd Country Store fjf, Boutique open daily 10AM-5PM Visit Santa from llam - 3pm on Dec. 6, 13, 14, & 20 only.
educate yourself. Wicked acoustics starts with the
Deo. 6, 13, 14 IIk 20 ONLY
five DJs — Jefe (from Jackson Hole, Wyoming), Paranome (from Bend)
Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, and Portlanders Barisone, Mr. Wu Bend; w ww . volcanictheatrepub. and Manoj — and gets to your ears com or 541-323-1881. with help from powerful, top-shelf
Dance party at theDomino Room
equipment from Meyer Sound. This stuff will make the highs higher and the lows lower; expect a globally flavored blend of beats, bass and melody. Plus more beats and more
Elegant production. Nurturing hospitality. Burner ethos. Wicked bass. Explore the DJs' Soundcloud of Portland, and he'll play Bend's acoustics. profiles at the website below. Volcanic Theatre Pub Sunday night These are the promises of the Not yet mentioned: Live visual as part of a two-week West Coast Curve electronic dance music par- arts. Full bar. Good times. Curve tour with Christopher Paul Stelling, ty happening Saturday night at the has been happening for a couple a singer-songwriter from Brooklyn, Domino Room in Bend. years at various venues around New York, who also plays folk muElegant production and nurtur- Portland, and this is its second edisic, but in much more urgent and ex- ing hospitality go hand in hand. tion in Bend. troverted style: quickly strummed The Domino Room has its drawCurve, with DJs Jefe, Manoj, acoustic guitars, jauntier rhythms, backs — it's a cold, black box, and Barisone, Mr. Wu and Paranome; 10 veins-bulging v o cal in t ensity. that's being kind — but you can p.m. Saturday; $12; DominoRoom, Stelling's albums are streaming at bet that the folks behind Curve will 51 NW G reenwood Ave., Bend; www.christopherpaulstelling.band- work to transform it into something www j.mp/curveinbend. — Ben Salmon camp.com. warmer, more organic and more inBronchtein is currently based out
IOILH5II '
went to The Grove, you'll have to
ner longing for companionship and steadiness."
envelops you in intimate instrumen-
www.paojscottfineait.com
Noble Firs, GrassFinished Beef, Natural Pork, RawHoney, Wreaths, & Hand-MadeCrafts by local Artisans.
• Hay Rides (Min. 10 Riders) • DD Dirt Express(Min. 5) • Petting Zoo • Kids Corral filled with slides, rope swings, and lots of room for kids to run • Snacks St Drinks available in the Country Store Bring your camera and take pictures with Santa
DD
Rarach Raising Healthy Stock To Feed Healthy FamiTies
www.ddranch.net S41-S48-1422
3836 NE Smith Rock Way Terrebonne, Oregon
PAGE 8 + GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014
going out Looking for something to do? Check out our listing of live music, DJs, karaoke, open mics and more happening at local nightspots. Find lots more at H bendbulletin.comlevents.
" IIIQiKZ
O. O 0 13 ID
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• ROSE'SPAWN SHOP'S ARENA-ROOTS-POP The Los AngelesAmericana band Rose's Pawn Shop has anewalbum out called "Gravity Well," and the first song on it is anabsolute blast. It's called "What WereYouWaiting For?" and it's the kind of tune youcould imagine soundtracking the trailer for the next madcapJasonBatemanfilm in a post-Mumford/Lumineers world. It has all the necessarycomponents:knee-slappingenergy,abanjo part that rolls endlessly downhill and ahuge hook delivered via all-together-now vocals that reach for the rafters and beyond. This is arena-roots-pop at its finest: ridiculously catchy but also bathed in the
authenticity implied by string-band instruments. Rose's PawnShop, in other words, sounds like it's destined for big things. Before they get there, catch 'em onWednesday atthecozyVolcanicTheatrePub. See the listing for more details. • 10 BARREL'S PRAYFORSNOWPARTY It snowed already, didn't it? I'm pretty sure it did, and so are myshovel and myback. Still, 10 Barrel is throwing a PrayFor Snow party tonight with a sweet lineup of live music, including SanDiegofunk-rockersBrothersGow and popularone-man bandTony Smiley. More details? See the listing! — Sen Salmon
CO
Redmond; 541-548-5663. FAMILIAR SOULS:Reggae; 8:30 p.m.; Northside Bar 8 Grill, POSSESSED BYPAULJAMES:The GREG BOTSFORD ANDTHE 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; Texas folk-blues artist performs, with JOURNEYMAN:Jam-pop and www.northsidebarfun.com or Blackflowers Blacksun; free admission; rock; 6-9 p.m.; Crux Fermenation 541-383-0889. Project, 50 SW Division St., Bend; 5 p.m.; Crow's FeetCommons, www.cruxfermentation.com or 875 NW Brooks St., Bend; www. DJ DMP:Electronic dance music; 9 541-385-3333. crowsfeetcommons.com or 541-728p.m.; Dogwood Cocktail Cabin,147 NW 0066. (Page6) Minnesota, Bend; www.facebook.com/ HILST5 COFFEY: Chamber-folk;6:30 PRAY FOR SNOWPARTY: Featuring p.m.; Bend Brewing Company,1019 NW farmtoshaker or 541-706-9949. live music by Brothers Gow, Tony Brooks St.; www.bendbrewingco.com or FIVE PINT MARY: Celtic folk-rock; 541-383-1599. Smiley and The Runand the Sea; free 9 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing, 24 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; admission; 5-9 p.m.; 10 Barrel Brewing MARK MOBLEYAND RON LANGE: Co., 1135 NWGalveston Ave., Bend; www.silvermoonbrewing.com or Country and rock; 6:30 p.m.; Dawg www.10barrel.com or 541-678-5228. House II, 507 SW Eighth St., Redmond; 541-388-8331. SEASON OFSUFFERING: Heavymetal, HILST& COFFEY: Chamber-folk;6 p.m .; 541-526-5989 with Existential Depression, Death Jackson's Corner, 845 NW Delaware ALLAN BYER:Folk and Americana; Agenda andThorns of Creation; 9 p.m.; Ave., Bend; www.jacksonscornerbend. 7-10p.m.;The Life LineTaphouse, Third Street Pub,314 SEThird St., Bend; com or 541-647-2198. 249 NWSixth St.,Redmond; 541-306-3017. www.thelifelinetaphouse.com or TARA HENDERSON:Blues and jazz; CURVE:A night of dance music, with 541-526-1401. 6-8 p.m.; The Blacksmith Restaurant, DJs Jefe, Manoj, Barisone, Mr. Wu 211 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www. JEREMY STORTON:Folkand pop; and Paranome; $12;10 p.m.;Domino bendblacksmith.com or 541-318-0588. 7-9 p.m.; Portello Winecafe, 2754 Room, 51 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; NWCrossing Drive, Bend; www. LINDY GRAVELLE: Country and www.j.mp/curveinbend or 541-408portellowinecafe.com or 541-385-1777. 4329. (Page7) pop; 7-10 p.m.; Brassie's Bar at Eagle Crest Resort,1522 Cline Falls Road, LINDY GRAVELLE: Country and MC MYSTIC'SOS ANTHEMS PARTY: 10 Redmond; www.niblickandgreenes.com pop; 7-10 p.m.; Brassie's Bar at Eagle p.m.; The Astro Lounge, 939 NWBond or 541-548-4220. Crest Resort, 1522 Cline Falls Road, St., Bend; www.astroloungebend.com Redmond; www.niblickandgreenes.com or 541-388-0116. PATTHOMAS:Country; 7-10 p.m.; or 541-548-4220. Tumalo Feed Co., 64619 U.S. Highway 20, Bend; www.tumalofeedcompany. PAT THOMAS:Country; 7-10 p.m.; SUNDAY com or 541-382-2202. Tumalo Feed Co., 64619 U.S. Highway NOTABLESSWING BAND:Theclassic 20, Bend; www.tumalofeedcompany. BOBBY LINDSTROM:Rockand blues; big band performs swing music com or 541-382-2202. 7:30p.m.;Checkers Pub,329 SW Sixth including blues, Latin, rock'nroll and St., Redmond; 541-548-3731. BOBBY LINDSTROM:Rockand blues; waltzes; $5; 2-4 p.m.; Bend Senior 7:30 p. m.; Check er s Pu b, 329 SW Si x t h HONEY DON'T: Bluegrassand roots Center, 1600 SEReedMarket Road; St., Redmond; 541-548-3731. music; 8 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing, www.notablesswingband.org or 24 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; TUMBLEWEED PEEPSHOW:Soul 541-728-8743. www.silvermoonbrewing.com or and bluegrass, with Redwood Son; BLACKSTRAP:Bluegrass; 7 p.m.; 541-388-8331. 8 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Broken Top Bottle Shop 8 Ale Cafe,1740 Sisters; www.belfryevents.com or FAMILIARSOULS: Reggae;8:30 p.m .; NW Pence Lane, Suite1, Bend; www. 541-815-9122. Northside Bar 8 Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres btbsbend.com or 541-728-0703. Road, Bend; www.northsidebarfun.com BROKENDOWNGUITARS: Folk, rock'n' HIP HATCHET: The Portland folk-blues or 541-383-0889. soul; 8 p.m.;Cabin 22,25 SW Century artist performs, with Christopher Paul Drive, Bend; www.cabin22bend.com or Stelling; $5; 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre DJ RRLTIME:House music; 9 p.m.; 541-306-3322. Dogwood Cocktail Cabin, 147 NW Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www. Minnesota, Bend; www.facebook.com/ SMOKIN'GUNS: Rock;8 p.m.;Bottoms volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323farmtoshaker or 541-706-9949. Up Saloon, 1421 N. U.S. Highway 97, 1881. (Page 7)
TODAY
SATURDAY
DJ DMP:Soulful house music; 9 p.m.; Dogwood Cocktail Cabin, 147 NW Minnesota, Bend; www.facebook.com/ farmtoshaker or 541-706-9949.
MOMDAY
541-383-8182. TUMBLEWEED PEEPSHOW:Soul andbluegrass;7 p.m.;McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond
St., Bend;www.mcmenamins.comor
541-382-5174. ROSE'S PAWNSHOP: The Los Angeles PARLOUR:Folk-pop and roots; 6 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Americana band performs, with Avery James and The Hillandales; Wall St.; www.deschuteslibrary.org/ $8 plus fees in advance, $10 at bend, tinad©deschuteslibrary.org or the door; 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre 541-312-1034. Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; TOM ANDHEATHER: Pop; 7-9 p.m.; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or The Open Door, 303 W. Hood Avenue, 541-323-1881. Sisters; 541-549-4994. ZACHARYLUCKY:The Canadian THURSDAY country-folk artist performs, with Second Son;$5; 8p.m.; Volcanic RENO HOLLER: Pop;$5;5-8 p.m.;Faith, Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Hopeand CharityVineyards,70450 NW Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or Lower Bridge Way,Terrebonne; www. 541-323-1881. (Page 3) faithhopeandcharityevents.com or 541-526-5075. TUESDAY RYAN PICKARD:Acoustic rock 'n' soul; 6 p.m.;TheLot,745 NW ColumbiaSt., LISA DAEANDROBERTLEEDUO: Bend; www.facebook.com/thelotbend or Jazz; 6-9 p.m.; Northside Bar & Grill, 541-610-4969. 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; www. northsidebarfun.com or 541-383-0889. MIGUEL DEALONSO: Flamenco guitar; 6:30 p.m.; Rat Hole Brew Pub, 384 TRIVIANIGHT: 6 p.m.;The Lot,745 NW SW Upper Terrace Drive, Bend; www. Columbia St., Bend; www.facebook. ratholebrewpub.com or 541-389-2739. com/thelotbend or 541-610-4969. TIM CRUISE:Classic rock; 7:30 STRONGHOLD:Blues-rock;6:30 p.m.; Northside Bar 8 Grill, p.m.; RatHole Brew Pub,384 SW 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; Upper Terrace Drive, Bend; www. www.northsidebarfun.com or ratholebrewpub.com or 541-389-2739. 541-383-0889. WEDNESDAY HOT BUTTEREDRUM: The California progressive bluegrass band performs, OPEN MIC:Hosted by Mosley Wotta; with The Pitchfork Revolution; $16 plus 6-8p.m.;TheLot,745 NW Columbia St., fees in advance, $20 at the door; 8 p.m.; Bend; www.facebook.com/thelotbend or The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-610-4969. www.belfryevents.com or 541-8159122.(Page4) OPEN MIC:With Derek Michael Marc; 6 p.m.; Northside Bar 8 Grill, M C MYSTIC LADIES NIGHT: 9 p.m .; 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; The Astro Lounge, 939 NWBond St., www.northsidebarfun.com or Bend; www.astroloungebend.com or 541-383-0889. 541-388-0116. BOBBY LINDSTROM:Rockand blues; • SUBMITAN EVENT by em ail ingevents© 7 p.m.; The Stihl Whiskey Bar, 550 bendbulletin.com. Deadline is 10 days before NW Franklin Ave, Suite118, Bend; publication. Include date, venue, time and cost.
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 9
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014
musie reviews Spotlight:Foo Fighters
Various Artists "THE ART OF MCCARTNEY" Kobalt Music Group
Sure, Paul McCartney has written a lot of great songs, but it's still hard to figure out why this tribute album needs to ex-
ist. Here's the concept: Producer Ralph Saul takes the cute Beat-
le's own road band into Abbey Road studios and lets the bigname likes of Billy Joel, Steve
searing, inventive guitarist, and Ross knows how to complement it, as on the staggering, clangorDo" show off cool passion with ous "Coke Like the 80's," or on grace and guts. And on the al- the weepy "Family Ties," which bum's lone vocal outing, "Loud- showcases Ross' aptitude for er Than Words," Gilmour sums narrative, one of his skills that's up the universality of in-band sometimes overshadowed by his fighting and relationship squab- gift forboast. bles ("With world-weary grace/ But not all the songs here are We've taken our places") with so well matched. Ross is trying penetrating calm. If this is Pink hard to find new ways to present Floyd's swan song, it's a good- himself, making this an ambitracks such as "It's What We
Miller, Corinne Bailey Rae (who does a nice job with "Blackbird"), Def Leppard, Kiss, and Chrissie Hynde take Macca's place on arrangements that rarely stray far from the originals. Pulling from both the solo years and Beatles songs that are mostly McCart- bye that's both eerie and tender. ney's, it succeeds when the sing— A.D. Amorosi, ers have such indubitable presThe Philadelphia Inquirer ence that everything they sing becomes their own. Dr. John
puts his gris-gris on "Let 'Em In," and Smokey Robinson eases into "So Bad." The tribute is also
Barry Brecheisen / Invisicn /AP
Foo Fighters released their album "Sonic Highways" along with an HBO series documenting the album's creation.
Foo Fighters "SONIC HIGHWAYS" RosM/ell Records/RCA Records
the Foos.
The
r e spectability-by-proxy
pattern is not a new one for Grohl. His 2013 doc "Sound City" fo-
Aligning yourself with respected and beloved artists is one way cused on a Southern California to draw attention to your other- recording studio where landmark wise unremarkable new record. albums were made. Guess who Documenting how it was made appears on the soundtrack with on a premium cable channel is Stevie Nicks, Paul M cCartney another. and Rick Springfield? "Sonic Highways" is Dump the show and the Foo Fighters' eighth the gimmick, and "Sonalbum and the title of an ic Highways" is just the eight-part HBO series l atest installment i n that follows the band the Foos' friendly rock across the country as it repertoire. M e lodic, records in eight cities. It then explosive, musiwas created by chumcal dynamics, Grohl's sing-to-scream vocal my bandleader Dave Grohl and features interviews patternand pop song structures with notable artists in Chicago, so reliable they'd be promoted to Nashville and other cities that are manager if they worked at Burger strategically spliced alongside the King. band's song recorded in that city. If the Foos' cross-country scavOn HBO, it's Dolly Parton and enger hunt for longevity is any the Foos, Steve Earle and the indication, it's not easy upholding Foos,Ian MacKaye ofFugaziand the rock mantle in an era ruled by the Foos. On record, it's Joe Walsh Taylor and Miley, cruising down and the Foos, Preservation Hall the sonic highway, fueled by the Jazz Band and the Foos, anyone
who can help boost their cred and
greatness of others. — Lorraine Ali, Los Angeles Times
Rick Ross
"HOOD BILLIONAIRE" Maybach M u sic G r oup/
Slip N' Slide Records/Def Jam on fine footing when self-con- Recordings fident senior citizens like Bob Rick Ross may never again Dylan ("Things We Said Today") reach the h eights of " Teflon or Willie Nelson ("Yesterday") Don," the 2010 album that anfollow their own artistic impera- nounced his arrival as one of tives and transform the songs as hip-hop's essential characters: a they see fit. Otherwise it comes mountainous man with a mounacross as unnecessary McCart- tainous ego with the mountainney karaoke. ous songs to match. Maximalism — Dan DeLuca, was his mode, and it served him The PhiladelphiaInquirer well.
Pink Floyd "THE ENDLESS RIVER" Columbia Records Based on outtakes from Pink
Floyd's post-Roger Waters al-
tious album, but not always one with the right ambition. — Jon Caramanica, New York Times
Calvin Harris MOTION Columbia Records
In his eight years in the limelight, Calvin Harris has gone from underground DJ and bedroom-recording electro-music
maven to steely, theatrical composer and producer for drama queens likeRihanna. He named
his debut album "I Created Disco," so there's a history of hubris to Harris. Forbes reported he
was the highest-earning DJ of 2013 at $46 million. He's big and Yet for some reason, he's nev- getting bigger. er been quite so large since. He's The interesting thing, then, tried introspection. He's tried a a bout "Motion" is t hat i t r e turns to the subtleties of Harris' earlier work. Yes, "Faith" and lionaire," his seventh album, he's "Blame" are laden with overturned into a curator of eclectic compressed drums and meloreturn toscraped-up street narrative. And now, on "Hood Bil-
bum "The Division Bell," this new album, al l i n s trumental sounds. except for one sung tune, startMaybe that was Ross' true ed life as an elegiac tribute to weapon: an ear for the unex-
dies geared toward EDM-fest aficionados looking for Winter
founding keyboardist Richard Wright, who died in 2008. His brooding ambient washes and rolling pipe organ were crucial layers in an epic sound legend-
he staked out a sound few others
tent. But "Motion" is character-
were prepared to use. But not all inspiring sounds are the right ones, and "Hood Billionaire" is a collection of beats that don't al-
ized by smoother tracks with
ary for its mix of mournful and
Music C o nference a n thems.
pected. When he worked with "Summer" does the same for Lex Luger all those years ago, fans of Austin's SXSW dance
euphoric. David Gilmour and Nick Mason (with coproducers ways suit Ross' skill set. Phil Manzanera and Youth) reMostly on this album, Ross live elements of Pink's past, with turns slow and syrupy. The title the gentle piano of "Anisina" and track is a turned-down version the drum-thunder of "Sum," plus of his old megahits. (No wonincendiary guitar solos reminis- der; Luger is one of that song's cent of Floyd at its tense, morose producers.) "Trap Luv" is velvety finest. and calm underneath paranoid A frail fragment like "Skins" lyrics. On "Elvis Presley Blvd.," even recalls the band's earliest Ross is shouting atop a flamavant-psychedelic experiments. boyantly slow soul beat. "QuintThe Endless River is more than essential" creeps along at snail's justechoes of Floyd's aggres- pace. sive haunting. Gilmour is a When the beat has attitude,
less obvious but s t il l
c a tchy
choruses and supple production touches. "Ecstasy" is filled with beautiful E Z -listening t ouches that could b e M a ntovani.
"Pray to God" (with Haim) is a delicious noir workout session.
"Outside" and "Together," featuring Ellie Goulding and Gwen Stefani respectively, are warm,
soulful showcases for the vocalists. By moving toward the less obvious, Harris has moved
far forward in an already heady career. — A.D. Amorosi,
The Philadelphia Inquirer
PAGE 10 + GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014
rinks
+I
Andy Tullie/The Bulletin
Joe Reeves, left, head brewer for the Aspen Ridge Brew Crew, and Tim Koester, vice president of the Central Oregon Homebrewers Organization, look into a special batch of award-winning Machine Gun Maggie IPA at Worthy Brewing in Bend.
• A retirement community, Worthy Brewing and a homebrewers' group team upfor event By Mac McLean The Bulletin
staff and parent company, Frontier
Management, saw the collaboraEarlier this fall, Aspen Ridge, tion as the perfect wayto thank the Worthy and t h e
C entral Ore- Alzheimer's Association for all of
hree weeks ago, Joe Reeves gon Homebrewers Organization peered into the small-batch teamed up to make 300 gallons of kettle at Worthy Brewing Machine Gun Maggie, a potent, Company's eastBend production hoppy beer (11 percent ABV, 100+ facility and watched 155 gallons of IBUs) that won "Best in Show" at the Aspen Ridge Retirement Com- the Deschutes County Fair and munity's Machine Gun Maggie several other awards this summer. They'll be selling the beer in Imperial IPA boil at a steady clip. "The whole turnaround on this pints and bottles at Worthy and
T
system is really fast," said Reeves,
four other Bend establishments-
who was blown away by the speed and efficiency of Worthy's system, especially when compared to the system Aspen Ridge's brew crew uses to make a 10-gal-
Brother Jon's Ale House, Brother Jon's Public House, Playtpus Pub and Rat Hole Brewing — on Tuesday to raise money for the Alzheimer's Association (See "If you go".)
lon batch of beer.
ey in Bend?" asked Aspen Ridge spokeswoman Shelbie Deuser, who said the facility's brew crew,
"What better way to raise mon-
its help.
Thebeer In search of an activity that didn't fit th e t r aditional retire-
ment-community vibe, A spen Ridge's managers reached out to the Central Oregon Homebrewers Organization two years ago about setting up a homebrewing demon-
Ifyou go What:"Machine GunMaggie TakesAim at Alzheimer's," a collaboration between AspenRidge Retirement Community, the Central OregonHomebrewers Organization andWorthy Brewing to raise moneyfor the Alzheimer's Association When:5 p.m. Tuesday Where:(All in Bend.) Brother Jon's Ale House, 1051NWBond Street; Brother Jon's Public House, 1227 NW Galveston Ave.; Playtpus Pub, 1203 NE Third Street; Rat HoleBrewing, 384 SWUpper Terrace Drive; Worthy Brewing, 495 NEBellevue Drive. Cost:Each location will sell pints of Aspen Ridge's award-winning Machine GunMaggie Imperial IPA to raise moneyfor the Alzheimer's Association until supplies run out. Prices for each pint depend onthe location.
stration at their Purcell Drive fa-
cility. The idea took off and, led by Reeves and a handful of other resi-
The program has been copied awards from the Oregon State by at least one other retirement
Fair — to fill a wall in a room that
dents, the Aspen Ridge Brew Crew community since then. It has also serves as the retirement communow makes enough beer to fill 18 won enough ribbons — including nity's unofficial brewpub. six packs every couple of months. the fair's "Best in Show" and two Continued next page
drinks
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014
From previous page
The cause
P r esident T i m
Hodge said this project marks
Koester, who h elped Aspen Ridge start brewing and teach-
the third time Worthy has part-
C OHO Vice
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 1 1
doo Dog India Session Red — for groups like Kids in the Game, the Wildland Firefighters Association
nered with a nonprofit organiza- and the Deschutes County Search tion to raise money by making and Rescue Association College's homebrewing courses, beer. Over the pasttwoyears,the Silver M oo n o w ne r J a m es said the Worthy collaboration brewery made a Witbier called Watts said these groups can then came about b e cause "Aspen Gary's No Quit Wit to raise mon- turn around and sell the cusRidge wanted to give back to the ey for cancer survivor Gary tom-labeled beers for $10 to $20 Alzheimer's Association" and Bonacker, the Tour Des Chutes apiece — two or three times their thought selling its beer would be cycling event and its support pro- normal retail price — at fundraisa good way to do it. grams for cancer survivors and ers and special events that his But that proved to be easier their families. It also made an brewpub is more than willing to said than done, Koester said, American amber/red lager called host. "This is Bend's version of a because OregonLiquor Control Local 36Red Lager to celebrate Commission regulations bar the 100th anniversary of the In- bake sale," Watts said Friday homebrewers from selling their ternational Association of Heat morning. "It's about embracing beer. So a pro-am collaboration and Frost Insulators and Allied the cause (and) the charity and — professional brewers using Workers Local 36 in Portland giving them a novel platform to their equipment to make an am- and to helpunion members who raise some funds." ateur brewer's recipe — seemed have mesothelioma because they Watts said he also plans to buy like the best way to get it done, he worked with asbestos. a small-batch setup like Worthy's said. Worthy isn't th e o nl y l o cal as part of an upcoming expansion Worthy j u mped a t t he brewery that has teamed up with of his brewpub and production opportunity. a nonprofit organization for this facility. That would give more "When we met with (Aspen type of a collaborative project. In groups like Aspen Ridge's brew Ridgeand COHO) and found out the past, Silver Moon Brewing has crew a chance to raise money for what they wanted to do," Worthy made custom labels for bottles of charity by making beer. — Reporter: 541-617-7816, CEO Chris Hodge said, "we were its most popular beers — Get Sum excited to be a part of it." Pale Ale, Hob Nob IPA and Voommclean@bendbulletin.com es Central Oregon Community
what's happening? TODAY WINE TASTING: 2-5 p.m.; Trader Joe's, 63455 N. U.S. Highway 97, Suite 4, Bend; www.traderjoes.com. R R
M VERTICALWINE TASTING SOIREE: Taste a barrel-aged blend of Merlotand Cabernet Sauvignon; $30;5-8 p.m.;MaragasWinery, 15523 SW U.S. Highway 97, Culver; www.maragaswinery.com. SATURDAY THANKSGIVINGWINE SALE AND BARREL TASTING: Sample fouryear barrel-aged Petite Sirah, with live music; $15-$25 admission; 11 a.m.-6 p.m.; Maragas Winery, 15523 SW U.S. Highway 97, Culver; www.
maragaswinery.com. THANKSGIVINGWINE WEEKEND: Featuring the Amateur Beer 8 Wine Competition; noon; Faith, Hope and Charity Vineyards, 70450 NW Lower Bridge Way, Terrebonne; www. faithhopeandcharityevents.com.
W INE TASTING: 2-5 p.m.;Bend Wine Cellar,1444 College Way, Suite 8; www.bendwinecellar.com. AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Jon Abernathy will speakabout his book "Bend Beer: A History of Brewing in Central Oregon"; 7 p.m.; Rat Hole Brew Pub, 384 SW UpperTerrace Drive, Bend; 541-389-2739. THURSDAY BEER TASTING: Sample Monkless Belgian Ales, with live music; 4-6 p.m.; humm kombucha, 1125 NE Second St., Bend; www. hummkombucha.com. AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Jon Abernathy will speakabout his book "Bend Beer: A History of Brewing in Central Oregon"; free; 6-9 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www. mcmenamins.comor541-382-5174. • SUBMIT AN EVENT: drinks© bendbulletin. com. Deadline is 10 days before publication.
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PAGE 12 • GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014
v
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Submitted photos
ABOVE: Derek Sitter, left, and Don Tompos star in an encore presentation of "The Pillowman" Saturday at Volcanic Theatre Pub in Bend. BELOW: Sitter will revive his role as Crumpet the Elf in "The Santaland Diaries," opening Dec.5. Catch a pay-as-you-can preview Thursday at Volcanic Theatre Pub.
• Derek Sitter will star in 2 performances during aweek whenmost entertainerstake a break By David Jasper The Bulletin
t
n the e ntertainment world, the weekend after Thanksgiv-
ing can be slim pickings. It's almost as though the sluggishness people feel after gorging themselves silly — thankfully, of course! — combined with the shopping onslaught that is Black Friday leaves no one with enough energy to do much beyond belch,
over at Volcanic Theatre Pub in Bend, where owner Derek Sitter
is working hard to continue staging quality theater between music
concerts at the Century Center venue, which has become a go-to destination for touring bands.
This GO! week — which is today through Thursday, in case you haven't noticed — Sitter can
be seen in two separate productions: Martin McDonagh's very
Ifyoulo What:"The Pillowman" encore and "The Santaland Diaries" preview When: • "The Pillowman," 7:30 p.m. Saturday; $10, plus fees inadvance at www.bendticket.com; • "The Santaland Diaries" preview, 7:30 p.m. Thursday; admissionispayasyoucan Where:Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend Contact:www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881
black comedy "The Pillowman," don their collective bulky sweat- an ensemble play returning Saters. Soon enough, heartwarming urday for one night only, and a holiday movies, plays and light preview performance of "The show (see "If you go"). It's a rejazz concerts will set the mood for Santaland Diaries," a one-man vival of last year's "Santaland" Christmas. show interpreted as perhaps only production; Sitter describes it as a Drowsiness is not a problem Sitter might, replete with slide "TED talk in a psych ward." unsnap their trouser buttons and
First up, though, is the encore Psychopaths," you may not be prepared for the twists and turns which had a well-received run in this play. during the latter half of October. During its October run, patrons It's back by popular demand, and of the theater told Sitter, "'I wasn't Sitter is unsure when he might be prepared for that.' It was the same able to schedule another perfor- thing with 'Zoo Story' ... it was performance of "The Pillowman,"
mance. So you'll want to get down
even the same way with 'Santa-
there Saturday if you want to see land' and 'Dumbwaiter,'" he said, it.
referring to some of VTP's past
"The Pillowman" is th e t ale of a writer, Katurian K. Katuri-
productions, all of which he performed in.
an, played by Sitter, who's been
The other phrase he's heard
from patrons: "Mind-blowing." "I've finally come to the con(Don Tompos) for interrogation by detectives Tupolski (Wayne New- clusion that great plays are come) and Ariel (Gavin Douglas). rare," said Sitter. "So we have to Terrible things happen to chil- give a lot of credit to Martin Mcdetained along with his brother
dren in Katurian's short stories, and now s o meone has b e en committing crimes imitative of those occurring in his art. Even
Donagh, credit to Edward Albee, David Mamet and these Pulitzer
Prize-winning playwrights. Albee has won three. There's a very
if you've seen McDonagh films short list of great playwrights." such as "In Bruges" and "Seven Continued next page
arts
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014
Music andmetal art at hummkombucha Humm Kombucha in Bend will host a reception for metal artist Joseph Bal-
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 13
original gift or two, you can rest easy knowing proceeds from sales will go to students who created the pieces.
B ecome Par t o f a H o l i d a y T r a d i t i o n
Contact: 541-383-7510.
samo from 4-6 p.m. Thursday. According to the Facebook page for
BEAT takes on'The Hobbit'
the event, the evening will also include an introduction to new Bend brewing
The folks at Bend Experimental Art Theatre, better known as BEAT, will
outfit Monkless Belgian Ales and the music of singer-songwriter John Forrest. Food purveyors Soul Bowl and The Jerk Kings will provide the eats.
soon present their production of "The
31st Annual
Hobbit," a dramatization by Patricia
Gray based on the classic tale by J.R.R. Tolkien. Follow the adventures of a Humm Kombucha's brewery and hobbit named Bilbo Baggins, who'd tasting room is located at 1125 NE Sec- rather stay in his cozy home than help ond St., Bend. recoveran important treasure. Contact:
ww w . h ummkombucha.
com or 541-306-6329
Ceramicssale at COCC
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 6" Deschutes County Fair Grounds 8 Expo
Performances are at 7 p.m. Dec. 5-6
and 12-13; 2 p.m. Dec. 6 and 13; and 3 p.m. Dec. 7 and 14.
r
The show, directed by Emile Lath-
rop, will be staged at 2nd Street The-
Llve Entertalnme
Central Oregon Community College ater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend. ceramics students are offering their Tickets are $15, $10 for students handcrafted, unique ceramics up for younger than 18, and are available in sale from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Thurs- advance at www.tickettails.com. day and Dec. 5 in Pence Hall, 2600
NW College Way, on COCC's Bend Campus. Along with the chance to buy an
mily Fun: 10am — 2pm i ts wit h Santa
Gala Event 8 Auction: 5pm Featuring Nuslc by ClnderBlue Hors d'Oeuvres by Tate 8 Tate
C ontact: w w w .beatonline.org o r 541-419-5558. — Reporter: 541-383-0349, djasper@bendbulletin.com
Gala Tickets: $45 per person
For Gala tickets, call 541.548.748 3 or visit From prevlous page and run through Dec. 20. Once a well-written play has been Based on the famous holiday eschosen and actors cast, determining say by humorist David Sedaris about objecti ves ofthosecharactersbecomes his time being degraded and used as a Macy's elf, it was adapted for the paramount, he said. "The basis of storytelling, period ... stage by Joe Mantello. "Here's a guy who moves to New is character, what he wants, the conflict and what is in his way and how York ... and he's working as a f-king is he going to get it. And when it's elf in Macy's Herald Square. And he is worth dramatizing, there are some- meeting some of the worst people on times extraordinary circumstances,
sometimesvery dark circumstances," Sitter said. "You have to thrust yourself into
land Diaries," which will open Dec. 5
Benefltlng Hospice of Redmond, servlng all of Central Oregon for 33 years
H OLI D A Y
the planet. That is not a cute little sto-
ry," Sitter said.
"The first 55 minutes, I've just prov-
en it," he said. "The point is, he's not a those circumstances truthfully, and very good person, and he makes fun your body will respond accordingly." of people." he said. "It's not about lines because Last year, Sitter enhanced his perstorytelling, particularly in theater, is formance with a slide show of imagtold by behavior, not by lines." ery that dovetailed with the story, and In "The Pillowman," with its li fe he plans to bring it back in different and death circumstances, "you can form. "There's a bunch of new slides benot pretend your way through it," he sard. causeit' s a differentyear,and there's The play runs for 2~/~ hours, and a bunch more people to make fun of," Sitter's character doesn't catch many he said, laughing. "My version is a breaks. manic little elf who's not very happy "I don't stop in this play. For 2~/2 being there, and he is making fun of a hours I'm being beaten — I mean, the lot of people, but he grew." worst things you can come up with Because of that story arc, Crumpet'sstory becomes one of hope. are happening to me," he said. "By these events that are happenToward the play's conclusion, one particular scene of grave consequence ing, in meeting these different Santas, leaves him emotionally drained. and these different elves, and these "It takes me two minutes to recover families, and these celebrities and beforeI can even speak because I'm these parents, this Crumpet is abso overwhelmed with emotion I can't sorbing all of this and learning from speak," he said. "That's why acting is it," Sitter said. "And that's the point hard. It's very hard." for any play. It's not a stand-up comic Life isn't much easier for his char- routine. Why else do a play?" acter Crumpet the Elf in "The Santa-
wt/trw.hospiceofredmond.org/Festlval Of Trees.html
— Reporter: 541-383-0349, djasper@bendbulletin.com
PRESENTED BY BUILDING SO LUTIONS ~w'~
~~ Joinus fora ~
*
:"
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'Premier 2kkday Vour'Event foVantalize tlie 'Xaste'Buds SUNDAY DECEMBER 7, 2014 3:30 PM TO 7:00 PM Tickets $35 Only 400 Available Locations: NWX & Hidden Hills •
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BENEFITING U.S. MARINE CORPS RESERVE TOYS FOR TOTS
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Purchase tickets from COBA by calling 541.389.1058 or email Sherit©coba.org
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PAGE 14 • GO! MAGAZINE
ART E KH I B I T S
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ARTADVENTUREGALLERY: "The Journey," featuring mixed media collages by Jeanie Smith; through Sunday; 185 SEFifth St., Madras: 541-475-7701. ARTISTS' GALLERYSUNRIVER: Featuring the works of 30 local artists; 57100 Beaver Drive, Building 19; www. artistsgallerysunriver.com or 541-593-4382. THE ART OFALFRED DOLEZAL: Featuring oil paintings by the Austrian artist; Eagle Crest Resort, 7525 Falcon Crest Drive, Redmond; 434-989-3510 or www.alfreddolezal.com. ATELIER 6000:"Vintage West," featuring prints and artist books inspired by the Old West; through Sunday; 389 SW Scalehouse Court, Suite120, Bend; www. atelier6000.org or 541-330-8759. BEND BREWINGCO.: Featuring landscape photography by Cory J. O'Neill with silent auction to benefit Sparrow Clubs; through Dec. 31; 1019 NWBrooks St., Bend; 541-383-1599 or www. coryjoneillphotography.com. CAFE SINTRA:Featuring "3 Points of View," a continually changing exhibit of photographs by Diane Reed, Ric Ergenbright and John Vito; 1024 NWBond St., Bend; 541-382-8004. CANYONCREEKPOTTERY: Featuring pottery by Kenneth Merrill; 310 N. Cedar St., Sisters; www.canyoncreekpotteryllc.com or 541-549-0366. DOWNTOWN BEND PUBLIC LIBRARY:"Light and Shadow," featuring works by various artists, through Monday; "Pets 'r' Us," featuring works by various artists, Wednesday through March 2; 601 NW Wall St.; 541-389-9846. EASTLAKEFRAMING: "Artist Spotlight Series," featuring photographer Dorothy Freudenberg; through Thursday; 1335 NW Galveston Ave., Bend; 541-389-3770.
arts
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014
www.lubbesmeyerstudio.com or 541-330-0840. LUMIN ARTSTUDIOS: Featuring resident artists Alisha Vernon, McKenzie Mendel, Lisa Marie Sipe and Natalie Mason with guest artist illustrator Taylor Rose; by appointment; 19855 Fourth St., Suite103, Tumalo; www. luminartstudio.com. MOCKINGBIRDGALLERY: "Mockingbird A-Z," featuring work by multiple artists; through Sunday; 869 NWWall St., Bend;
www.mockingbird-gallery.comor 541-388-2107. THE MUSEUMATWARM SPRINGS:Featuring artwork by Warm Springs Tribal members; through Jan. 4; 2189 U.S. Highway 26, Warm Springs; www. museumatwarmsprings.org or 541-553-3331. THE OXFORD HOTEL: Featuring photography by Charles Cockburn; through today; 10 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-382-9398. PATAGONIA I BEND:Featuring photography by Mike Putnam; 1000 NW Wall St., Suite 140; 541-382-6694. PAUL SCOTTGALLERY: Featuring oillandscapesbyJohnMa xon; through Sunday; 869 NWWall St., Submitted photo Bend; www.paulscottfineart.com or 541-330-6000. "Deep Sunset" by Katherine Taylor will be on display at Hood Avenue Art in Sisters through January. PEAPODGLASS GALLERY: Featuring oil paintings and sculptures by Lori Salisbury; FRANKLIN CROSSING:Featuring by Jil lHaney-Neal;Tuesdaysand 164 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; oil paintings by Ann Ruttan; through Wednesdays only; 601 N. Larch St., 541-312-2828. today;550 NW FranklinAve.,Bend; Suite B, Sisters; www.jillnealgallery. PRONGHORN CLUBHOUSE: 541-382-9398. com or 541-617-6078. Featuring mixed media by Marjorie GHIGLIERI GALLERY: Featuring JOHNPAUL DESIGNS: Featuring Wood Hamlin; through January; original Western-themed and custom jewelry andsignature series 65600 Pronghorn Club Drive, Bend; African-inspired paintings and with unique pieces; 1006 NW Bond 541-693-5300. sculptures by Lorenzo Ghiglieri; 200 St., Bend;www.johnpauldesigns. OUILTWORKS:"November W. Cascade Ave., Sisters; www.art- com or 541-318-5645. Inspirations Small Quilt Show," lorenzo.com or 541-549-8683. JUDI'S ART GALLERY: Featuring featuring 50 quilts by different HIGH DESERTCHAMBER MUSIC: works by Judi Meusborn artists; through Wednesday; 926 Featuring photography by Stacie Williamson; 336 NEHemlock St., NE Greenwood Ave., Suite B, Bend; Muller and Michael Wheeler; Suite 13, Redmond; 360-325-6230. 541-728-0527. 961 NW Brooks St., Bend; info© JUNIPER BREWING CO.: "Images RED CHAIRGALLERY:"Of Earth highdesertchambermusic.com or of Central Oregon," featuring and Light," featuring works by Rita 541-306-3988. works by Carol Jacquet, Sarah Neely Dunlavy, Will Nash and Sue HIGH DESERT MUSEUM: "Painting Ferguson, Dianne Norwood and K.C. Lyon-Manley; through Sunday; Oregon's Harvest," featuring works Snider; through Dec. 19; 1950 SW 103 NW Oregon Ave., Bend; www. by Kathy Deggendorfer; through Badger Ave., Suite 103, Redmond; redchairgallerybend.com or Sunday; 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, 541-526-5073. 541-306-3176. Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.org KAREN BANDYDESIGNJEWELER: REDMOND PUBLICLIBRARY: or 541-382-4754. Featuring custom jewelry and "Winter Art Exhibition 2014," HOOD AVENUE ART: Featuring paintings by Karen Bandy; 25 featuring various works, glass sculptures by Jeff Thompson NW Minnesota Ave., Suite 5, through Jan. 2; "Changing Light, and Small Wonders; reception Bend; www.karenbandy.com or Western Landscapes," featuring 4-7 tonight; through January; 541-388-0155. photography by Kay Larkin in 357 W. Hood Ave., Sisters; LA MAGIEBAKERY 8[CAFE: the silent reading room, Monday www.hoodavenueart.comor Featuring landscape watercolors through Jan. 30; 827 SW Deschutes 541-719-1800. and pastels by Patricia W. Porter; Ave.; 541-312-1050. HOP N BEAN PIZZERIA: Featuring through December; 945 NW Bond ROTUNDAGALLERY:"Beneath landscape art by Larry Goodman; St., Bend; 541-241-7884. Layers," featuring work by members 523 E. U.S. Highway 20, Sisters; LUBBESMEYER FIBERSTUDIO: of Alt, a Central Oregon artists 541-719-1295. Featuring fiber art by Lori and group; through Dec. 5; Robert L. JILL'S WILD (TASTEFUL) WOMEN Lisa Lubbesmeyer; 450 SW Barber Library, Central Oregon WAREHOUSE:Featuring works Powerhouse Drive, Suite 423, Bend; Community College; 2600 NW
College Way, Bend; 541-383-7564. SAGE CUSTOM FRAMINGAND GALLERY:Featuring still life and portrait work by Pat Markle, through Monday; "Small Works," featuring 2x2- to 12x12-inch paintings, Tuesday through Jan. 31; 834 NW Brooks St., Bend; 541-382-5884. SISTERSAREACHAMBEROF COMMERCE:Featuring fiber art by Rosalyn Kliot; 291 E. Main Ave.; 541-549-0251. SISTERSGALLERY5 FRAME SHOP:"Wonders of Winter," by featured artists; reception 4-7 tonight; through December; 252 W. Hood Ave.; www.sistersgallery.com or 541-549-9552. SISTERS PUBLICLIBRARY: "Images of Central Oregon," featuring photographs by Curtiss Abbott in the community room and "Endangered Species," featuring photographs by Douglas Beall in the computer room, through Sunday;; "Impressions of Whychus Creek," featuring works by PamJersey Bird in the community room and original paintings from "Dream Again," a children's book by Dennis McGregor in the computer room; Tuesday through Jan. 9;110 N. Cedar St.; 541-312-1070 or www.sistersfol. com. ST. CHARLES REDMOND: "Artful Dotage: Two Old Broads and Their Art," featuring works by Shandel Gamer and Jill Tucker; through December;1253 NW Canal Blvd.; 541-548-8131. SUNRIVERRESORT LODGE BETTY GRAY GALLERY: "Photography of the High Desert Region," featuring works by Dave Kamperman and photographers from the Oregon Natural Desert Association; through Jan. 4; 17600 Center Drive; 541-382-9398. TOWNSHEND'SBENDTEAHOUSE: "Cinder Road," featuring works by Sarah Helen More, through Sunday; "Inroads in Ink," featuring prints by Adell Shetterly, Tuesday through Jan. 2; 835 NW Bond St., Bend; 541312-2001 or www.townshendstea.
com. TUMALOART CO.: "Portrait of a Place," featuring oil paintings on metal by Alisa Huntley; through Monday; 450 SW Powerhouse Drive, Suite 407, Bend; www. tumaloartco.com or 541-385-9144. VISTABONITA GLASS ART STUDIO AND GALLERY:Featuring glass art, photography, painting, metal sculptur eand more;222 W .Hood St., Sisters; 541-549-4527 or www. vistabonitaglass.com. WERNER HOME STUDIO& GALLERY:Featuring painting, sculpture and more by Jerry Werner and other regional artists; 65665 93rd St., Bend; call 541-815-9800 for directions.
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 1 5
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014
holi ay azaars TODAY
DEC. 6
SUNRIVERRESORTTRADITIONS HOLIDAYMARKETPLACE:Featuring a regional arts and crafts show with pottery, jewelry, textiles and more; free admission; 10a.m.-4 p.m.; Homestead Building, 57071 Great Hall Loop; 541-593-4405. THREE SISTERSLIONS CLUB HOLIDAY FAIRE:Featuring jewelry, wooden
HOLIDAYCRAFTFAIR: Featuring pottery, jewelry, baked goods and more; free admission; 8 a.m.-2 p.m.; VFW Hall,1503 NE Fourth St., Bend; 541-389-9775. A BIG DEAL: Three events in one with a craft fair and bazaar, tack and equipment sale and a rummage sale; North and South Sister buildings; $1 or one nonperishable food item; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond; 541-548-6088 or kimberly.griffithso oregonstate.edu. CHRISTMASFOODFAIR: Traditional Scandinavian breads and desserts, handcrafted items and a soup and bread lunch; free admission; 9 a.m.-2 p.m., 11 a.m. lunch until food gone; Our Savior's Lutheran Church, 695 NWThird St., Prineville; 541-416-8075. COUNTRY CHRISTMAS &MORE: A Western-theme bazaar featuring antiques, decor, homespun crafts, bakedgoods and more ;freeadm ission, nonperishable food donations welcome; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; First Baptist Church of Prineville, 450 SEFairview St.; 541-419-8637. CROOK COUNTYCHRISTIAN SCHOOL CHRISTMASBAZAAR:Visit the largest bazaar in Prinville for holiday gifts and more; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.;CrookCounty Christian School, 839 S. Main Street, Prineville; 541-416-0114. CULVER TOPSCOMMUNITY BAZAAR:Featuring handcrafted items, decorations, jewelry and more; free admission; 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; Culver City Hall, 200 First Ave.; 541-546-4502. GRANDMA'S HOUSEHOLIDAY BAZAAR ANDFUNDRAISER: Featuring handmade holiday decor, baked goods, antiques and more for sale to benefit Grandma's House of Central Oregon; 9a.m.-6 p.m.; Private Residence, 1600 NE Rumgay Lane, Bend; 541-383-3515. NORTHWEST CROSSINGHOLIDAY BAZAAR:Featuring handmade wreaths, knitwear, pottery, soaps, doll clothes, jewelry and more; free admission; 9 a.m.-2p.m.;Private Residence,2632 NW Ordway Ave., Bend. ZIONLUTHERAN CHURCH HOLIDAY BAZAAR:Homemade craft and gift items, baked goods, silent auctions, raffles and more; free admission; 9 a.m.-1 p.m.; Zion Lutheran Church, 1113 SW Black Butte Blvd., Redmond; 541-923-7466. CARRIAGEPLACE HOLIDAY BAZAAR: Featuring gifts and more; 10 a.m.-3 p.m.; Carriage Place, 150 S. Williamson, Prineville. CHRISTMAS BOUTIQUEBAZAAR: Featuring handmade items, baked
decorations, ornaments, blownglass
and more to benefit Sight & Hearing; free admission; 10 a.m.-6 p.m.; Former location of Don Terra Artworks, 103 W. Hood Ave.; 541-595-6967 or young© bendcable.com. HOLIDAYVILLAGE MARKET: Featuring crafters, artists and nonprofit organizations; free admission;11 a.m.-5 p.m.; Centennial Park, Seventh Street and Evergreen Avenue, Redmond; 541-923-5191.
SATURDAY NATIVEAMERICAN ART MARKET: Featuring Native American arts and crafts including beadwork, jewelry, weaving and miniatures; admission is one non-perishable food item; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; The Museum At Warm Springs, 2189 U.S. Highway 26; 541-553-3331. SUNRIVERRESORT TRADITIONS HOLIDAYMARKETPLACE:Featuring a regional arts and crafts show with pottery, jewelry, textiles and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Homestead Building, 57071 Great Hall Loop; 541-593-4405. THREE SISTERSLIONS CLUB HOLIDAY FAIRE:Featuring jewelry, wooden decorations, ornaments, blown glass and more to benefit Sight 8 Hearing; free admission; 10 a.m.-6 p.m.; Former location of Don Terra Artworks, 103 W. Hood Ave.; 541-595-6967 or young©
bendcable.com. HOLIDAYVILLAGE MARKET: Featuring crafters, artists and nonprofit
organizations; freeadmission;11 a.m.-5 p.m.; Centennial Park, Seventh Street and Evergreen Avenue, Redmond; 541-923-5191.
SUNDAY THREE SISTERSLIONS CLUB HOLIDAY FAIRE:Featuring jewelry, wooden decorations, ornaments, blown glass and more to benefit Sight 8 Hearing; free admission; 10 a.m.-6 p.m.; Former location of Don Terra Artworks, 103 W. Hood Ave.; 541-595-6967 or young© bendcable.com.
MONDAYTHURSDAY THREE SISTERSLIONS CLUB HOLIDAY
Thinkstock
FAIRE:Featuring jewelry, wooden decorations, ornaments, blown glass and more to benefit Sight & Hearing; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Former location of Don Terra Artworks, 103 W. Hood Ave.; 541-595-6967 or young©
bendcable.com.
DEC. 5 COUNTRY CHRISTMAS &MORE: A Western-theme bazaar featuring antiques, decor, homespun crafts, bakedgoods and more ;freeadm ission, nonperishable food donations welcome; 9 a.m.-7 p.m.; First Baptist Church of Prineville, 450 SEFairview St.; 541-419-8637. NORTHWEST CROSSINGHOLIDAY BAZAAR:Featuring handmade wreaths, knitwear, pottery, soaps, doll clothes, jewelry and more; free admission; 9 a.m.-2 p.m.; Private Residence, 2632 NW Ordway Ave., Bend. WESTSIDECHURCH CHRISTMAS
BOUTIQUE:Featuring antiques and holiday arts, food and crafts from local artisans; free admission; 9 a.m.-7 p.m.; Westside Church, 2051 Shevlin Park Road, Bend; 541-382-7504. CHRISTMAS VALLEYCHRISTMAS BAZAAR:Featuring handcrafted items, holiday gifts, door prizes, baked goods and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Christmas Valley Community Hall, Christmas Tree Road; 541-480-1261. THREE SISTERSLIONS CLUB HOLIDAY FAIRE:Featuring jewelry, wooden decorations, ornaments, blown glass and more to benefit Sight & Hearing; free admission; 10 a.m.-6 p.m.; Former location of Don Terra Artworks, 103 W. Hood Ave.; 541-595-6967 or young@ bendcable.com. LA PINE CHRISTMASBAZAAR: Featuring more than 50 vendors with quality crafts and gift items, music, caroling and more; free admission; 11 a.m.-6 p.m.; La Pine Community Center, 16405 First St.; 541-536-9771.
goods, ornaments and more to benefit the Capitol Campaign Fund; free admission; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; St. Patrick's Catholic Church, 341 SW JSt., Madras; 541-771-2416. CHRISTMAS VALLEYCHRISTMAS BAZAAR:Featuring handcrafted items, holiday gifts, door prizes, baked goods and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Christmas Valley Community Hall, Christmas Tree Road; 541-480-1261. HOLIDAYARTBAZAAR EXTRAVAGANZA:Featuring art, food, music and more; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122. ST. JOSEPHCHRISTMAS BAZAAR: Featuring handmade baked goods, gifts and more, lunch available for
purchase; free, $5 to purchaselunch; 10 a.m.-3 p.m.; St. Joseph Catholic Church, 150 SE First St., Prineville; 541-447-4675. THREE SISTERSLIONS CLUB HOLIDAY FAIRE:Featuring jewelry, wooden decorations, ornaments, blown glass and more to benefit Sight & Hearing; free admission; 10 a.m.-6 p.m.; Former location of Don Terra Artworks, 103 W. Hood Ave.; 541-595-6967 or young© bendcable.com. HOLIDAYVILLAGE MARKET: Featuring crafters, artists and nonprofit organizations; free admission; 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; Centennial Park, Seventh Street and Evergreen Avenue, Redmond; 541-923-5191. LA PINE CHRISTMASBAZAAR: Featuring more than 50 vendors with quality crafts and gift items, music, caroling and more; free admission; 11 a.m.-8 p.m.; La Pine Community Center, 16405 First St.; 541-536-9771. GIFT BOUTIQUE:Featuring vintage, up-cycled and industrial gifts; free admission; noon-6 p.m.; Ariel Glen Community Center, 1700 SETempest Drive, Bend; 541-306-8724 or tsgottfriedogmail.com.
DEC. 7 CHANUKAH, SHABBATANDJUDAICA GIFTSHOP:Featuring candles, menorahs, jewelry, tallism, mezzuzahs and more imported from Israel; free admission; 9 a.m.-1:30 p.m.; Shalom Bayit, 21555 Modoc Road, Bend; 541-815-2590. A BIG DEAL: Three events in one with a craft fair and bazaar, tack and equipment sale and a rummage sale; North and South Sister buildings; $1 or one nonperishable food item; 10 a.m.-3 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond; 541-548-6088 or kimberly.griffithso oregonstate.edu.
PAGE 16 + GO! MAGAZINE
TODAY BEND INDOORSWAP MEET:Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 SEThird St.; 541-317-4847. RAKU POTTERYSHOWAND SALE: Featuring works by local potters, plus jewelry and scarves; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; The Environmental Center, 16 NWKansas Ave., Bend; www. envirocenter.org or 541-410-5943. WONDERLAND EXPRESSAUCTION: Asilent auction of unique creations; proceeds benefit Wonderland Express; free admission; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Sunriver Resort Great Hall, 17600 Center Drive; www.wonderlandexpress.com. SANTALANDATTHEOLD MILL DISTRICT:Take aphoto with Santa, children's activities, Tree of Joy and more; free admission, additional cost for takehome photos, $5 donation for children's activities; 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; SantaLand, 330 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. CARRIAGERIDES IN THEOLD MILL DISTRICT:Ride in the Cowboy Carriage, located between Ben 8 Jerry's and Francesca's; proceeds benefit the KIDS Center; weather dependent; donations accepted; 2-5 p.m.; Ben 8 Jerry's, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. GRAND ILLUMINATIONAND HOLIDAY FESTIVITIES:Featuring a petting zoo, face painting, live entertainment and more, with a holiday lighting ceremony at 7 p.m; 3-8 p.m.; Sunriver Resort,17600 Center Drive; www.sunriver-resort.com or 541-593-1000. POSSESSED BYPAULJAMES: The Texas folk-blues artist performs, with Blackflowers Blacksun; free admission; 5 p.m.; Crow's Feet Commons, 875 NW Brooks St., Bend; www. crowsfeetcommons.com or 541-728-
0066.(Page6) PRAY FOR SNOWPARTY: Featuring live music by Brothers Gow, Tony Smiley and The Rum and the Sea; free entry; 5-9 p.m.; 10 Barrel Brewing Co., 1135 NW Galveston Ave., Bend; www.10barrel.com or 541-678-5228. SISTERSCHRISTMAS TREE LIGHTING CEREMONY:Featuring the lighting of the holiday tree, carols, a "cookie crawl" and more; 5:30-6:30 p.m.; Fir Street Park, Fir Streetand Main Avenue, Sisters; www. sisterscountry.com, jeri©sisterscountry. com or 541-549-0251. "NATIONALLAMPOON'S CHRISTMAS VACATION":A showing of the classic holiday film, with a pre-show ugly sweater
THE BULLETIN• FRIDA
contest; $12 plus fees; 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www. towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. (Page
29)
SATURDAY BEND INDOOR SWAPMEET: Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 SEThird St.; 541-317-4847. RAKU POTTERYSHOWAND SALE: Featuring works by local potters, plus jewelry and scarves; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; The Environmental Center, 16 NWKansas Ave., Bend; www. envirocenter.org or 541-410-5943. WONDERLAND EXPRESSAUCTION: A silentauction of unique creations; proceeds benefit Wonderland Express; free admission; 10 a.m.-2 p.m.; Sunriver Resort Great Hall, 17600 Center Drive;
www.wonderlandexpress.com.
TURKEYTROTFUNRUN/WALK: Fun run to benefit the Sisters High School Nordic Ski team; $10, registration required; 10:30 a.m.-1 p.m.; Lodge Restaurant at Black Butte Ranch, 12930 Hawks Beard; www.blackbutteranch.com, recreation@ blackbutteranch.com or 541-595-1282. SANTALANDATTHE OLDMILL DISTRICT:Take aphoto with Santa, children's activities, Tree of Joy and more; free admission, additional cost for takehome photos, $5 donation for children's activities; 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; SantaLand, 330 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. CARRIAGERIDES IN THE OLD MILL DISTRICT:Ride in the Cowboy Carriage, located between Ben 8 Jerry's and Francesca's; proceeds benefit the KIDS Center; weather dependent; donations accepted; 2-5 p.m.; Ben 8 Jerry's, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. SISTERSCHRISTMAS PARADE: 2 p.m.; Hood Avenue between Pine and Spruce streets, Sisters; www.sisterscountry.
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com, jeri©sisterscountry.com or 541-549-0251. PRINEVILLECHRISTMAS PARADE:This year's theme is "Holiday Traditions"; 5-6 p.m.; downtown Prineville. STARLIGHTHOLIDAY PARADE: The theme is "It's a Whoville Christmas," annual tree lighting by Santa Claus after parade in Centennial Park; free; 5 p.m.; downtown Redmond; 541-923-5191. PRINEVILLECHRISTMAS TREE LIGHTING:5:15 p.m.; downtown Prineville. BEND CHRISTMASTREELIGHTING: Sing carols, listen to local choirs, watch Santa
light the Christmas tree and more; free; 6 p.m., tree lighting at 6:30 p.m.; Drake Park, 777 NW Riverside Blvd.; www.j.mp/ xmasbend or 541-788-3628. "THE PILLOWMAN":Encore performance of the play about a writer who is questioned about his stories and a possible connection to recent murders; $10plusfees in advance;7:30 p.m .; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub. com or 541-323-1881. (Page 12) CURVE:A night of dance music, with DJs Jefe, Manoj, Barisone, Mr. Wu and
Paranome;$12;10 p.m .;Domino Room, 51 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.j.mp/ curveinbend or 541-408-4329. (Page 7)
SUMDAY BEND INDOOR SWAP MEET: Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 SEThird St.; 541-317-4847. SANTALANDATTHE OLDMILL DISTRICT:Take a photo with Santa,
children's activities, Tree of Joy and more; free admission, additional cost for takehome photos, $5 donation for children's activities; 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; SantaLand, 330 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. CARRIAGERIDES IN TH E OLD MILL DISTRICT:Ride in the Cowboy Carriage, located between Ben 8 Jerry's and Francesca's; proceeds benefit the KIDS Center; weather dependent; donations accepted; 2-5 p.m.; Ben & Jerry's, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131.
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 1 7
Y, NOVEMBER 28, 2014
ROSE'S PAWN SHOP:The Los Angeles Americana band performs; $8 plus fees in advance, $10 at the door; 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
I• FRIDAY Pray ForSnowParty: We've already had some. Now gowish for more!
I '
I
THURSDAY CERAMICSSALE:A sale of works by COCC students; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Pence Hall, 2600 NWCollegeWay, Bend;541-3837510. (Page13) SWAP 'TIL YOU DROPSALE: Featuring gently used clothing, furniture and household items for sale to benefit the Spirit of Christmas meal and gift program for families in need; 4-6 p.m.; Sisters Fire Hall, 301 S. Elm St.; 541-549-1340. WINTER BALL:Featuring live music by Laura Leighton, Kimberly Lakehomer and Better Berger 8 Her Band; free, registration requested by Sunday; 5-7 p.m.; Whispering Winds, 2920 Conners Ave., Bend; www whisperingwinds.info or 541-312-9690. CXMAS PARTYFUNDRAISER: Featuring a silent auction to benefit the CXmas Junior Fund; $5 suggested donation; 6:30 p.m.; Bowen Sports Performance, 225 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend; www. poweredbybowen.com or 541-977-1321. "HUMBUG" PREVIEWNIGHT:A modernday twist on the Christmas classic "A Christmas Carol" about Wall Street
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SATURDAY Turkey TrotFunRun/Wnlk: Work off the extra bird at Black Butte Ranch!
THURSDAY Winter Ball:You're so fancy, we already know.
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Bt
executive EleanorScrooge; $10, available at the door only; 7:30 p.m., complimentary dessert reception 6:30 p.m.; Cascades Theatre, 148 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. "THE SANTALANDDIARIES": Preview performance of the one-man, one-act
play based ona David Sedaris essay;
THURSDAY "Humbug"Preview Night: Seethis modern twist on the classic tale.
HIP HATCHET:The Portland folk singer performs, with Christopher Paul Stelling; $5; 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www. volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
ZACHARYLUCKY:The Canadian country-folk artist performs, with Second Son;$5;8 p.m .;VolcanicTheatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www. volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
(Page 7)
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MONDAY
TUESDAY
"POSITIVE YOUTH":Screening of a film that follows four young adults affected by HIV/AIDS in America; free; 5-8 p.m.; Bend Masonic Center,1036 NE Eighth St.; 541-389-7407.
GREENTEAMMOVIE NIGHT:A screening of "Salt of the Earth," a reenactment of a 1951 strikeatazinc mine in New Mexico; free; 6:30-8:30 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 NE Ninth St., Bend; www.
bendfp.org or 541-815-6504.
WEDNESDAY EMPOWERING FAMILIESBREAKFAST: A breakfast fundraiser for the Latino Community Association; free, donations accepted, registration requested; 7:15-8:30 a.m.; Boys & Girls Club of Bend, 500 NWWall St.; www. latinocommunityassociation.org, whitney©latinocommunityassociation. org or 541-382-4366. TREE LIGHTINGCEREMONY:Lighting
of a 65-foot Ponderosa pine, visits with Santa, a performance by the Summit High School choir and ladder truck tours with the Bend Fire Department; free,
one nonperishablefood itemsuggested donation; 5:45 p.m.; Northwest Crossing, Mt. Washington and NWCrossing drives,
Bend; www.northwestcrossing.com. "FINAL POSE":A screening of the awardwinning documentary on the end-of-life journey of yoga instructor Myra Fisher; $5 plus fees in advance, $10 at the door; 7 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; www.belfryevents.com or 541-815-9122.
donations accepted;7:30 p.m.;Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-3231881. (Page 12) "RIFFTRAX LIVE:SANTACLAUS": Featuring a showing of the1985 holiday film with humorous commentary added; $12.50; 8 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 8 IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend;541-312-2901.(Page 29) HOT BUTTEREDRUM: The California
progressive bluegrassbandperforms, with The Pitchfork Revolution; $16 plus fees in advance, $20 at the door; 8 p.m.; The Belfry,302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; www.belfryevents.com or 541-815-9122.
(Story, Page4) • SUBMITAN EVENT at www bendbulletin.com/ submitinfo or email events©bendbulletin.com. Deadline is 10 days before publication. Questions? Contact 541-383-0351.
PAGE 18 e GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014
planning ahea DEC. 5-11 DEC.5-6— "ALMOST, MAINE": Play about a small town and the citizens' tales of love, presented by the Redmond Proficiency Academy; $8, $5 for students with ID; 7 p.m. Dec. 5-6, 2 p.m. Dec. 6; The Printing Post,639 SW ForestAve.,Redmond; www.rpacademy.org, tori miller@ rpacademy.org or 541-526-0882. DEC. 5-7 — SANTALANDATTHE OLD MILL DISTRICT:Take a photo with Santa, children's activities, Tree of Joy and more; free admission, additional cost for take-home photos, $5 donation for children's activities;11 a.m.-5 p.m.; SantaLand, 330 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. DEC. 5-7 — "THE HOBBIT":A production of the classic J.R.R. Tolkien book by Bend Experimental Art Theatre; $15, $10 for students 18 and younger; 7 p.m. Dec. 5-6, 2 p.m. Dec. 6, 3 p.m. Dec. 7; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626. DEC. 5-7, 11 — "HUMBUG":A modern-day twist on the Christmas classic "A Christmas Carol" about Wall Street executive Eleanor Scrooge; $20, $16 for seniors, $13 for students; 7:30 p.m. Dec. 5-7and11,2 p.m. on Dec. 7; Cascades Theatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical. org or 541-389-0803. DEC. 5-6, 11 — "THE SANTALAND DIARIES":A one-man one-act play based on the David Sedaris essay; $10; 7:30 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. DEC.6-7— CARRIAGE RIDES IN THE OLD MILL DISTRICT:Ride in the Cowboy Carriage, located between
Ben 8 Jerry's andFrancesca's; proceeds benefit the KIDS Center; weather dependent; donations accepted; 2-5 p.m.; Ben 8 Jerry's, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. DEC.6-7— "HOLIDAY MAGIC": Central Oregon Community College's Cascade Chorale and Orchestra performs with the Bend Children's Choir to benefit Education for Chinese
Orphans (EChO);$16; 7p.m. Dec.6, 3 p.m. Dec. 7; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. DEC.6-7 — "THE NUTCRACKER": The Central Oregon School of Ballet performs the classic holiday ballet;
$18 ($8 for children 12andyounger) in advance, $22 ($10 for children 12 and younger) at the door; 3 p.m. Dec. 6-7,7 p.m. Dec.6, Bend High School, 230 NE Sixth St.; www.
Talks 8 classes For a full list, visit bendbulletin. com/events.
Joe Kline 1The Bulletin file photo
Participants run along Wall Street during the 2012 Jingle Bell Run in downtown Bend. This year's event will take place on Dec.6 at10 a.m. centraloregonschoolofballet.com or 541-213-6896. DEC. 10-11 — LIVING NATIVITY: Live tableau representing the birth of Jesus, with indoor and outdoor scenes; free; 6-8 p.m.; Highland Baptist Church, 3100 SW Highland Ave., Redmond; www.hbcredmond.org or 541-548-4161. DEC. 5 — AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL WRITE-A-THON:Join other letter writers for Human Rights Day; coffee, cocoa and cookies will be provided; free; 11:30 a.m.-6 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www.deschuteslibrary.org/bend, phil© tiedyed.us or 541-388-1793. DEC. 5 — FIRST FRIDAYGALLERY WALK:Event includes art exhibit openings, artist talks, live music, wine andfood in downtown Bend andthe Old Mill District; free; 5-9 p.m.; throughout Bend. DEC. 5 — A NOVELIDEAUNVEILED: Witness the unveiling of the book selection for this year's A Novel Idea ... Read Together program; free; 7-9 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library,601 NW Wall St.; www.deschuteslibrary. org/calendar, lizg©deschuteslibrary. org or 541-312-1032. DEC.6 — FESTIVAL OFTREES: Featuring decorated Christmas trees, with live local music, raffles and visits with Santa; evening gala features a live auction of the trees, silent auction, raffles and more; proceeds benefit the Hospice of Redmond; free daytime family festivities, $40 evening event; 10 a.m.-2 p.m. family festivities, 5 p.m. gala; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond; www.hospiceofredmond. org/events or 541-548-7483. DEC.6 — JINGLE BELL RUN/WALK
FOR ARTHRITIS:Runners and walkers don holiday costumes for a 5K run and walk, a one-mile walk and a kid's fun run; proceeds benefit the Arthritis Foundation; $25 in advance, $15 children in advance; registration requested; 10 a.m.-1 p.m.; downtown Bend; www.bendjinglebellrun.org, klowry©arthritis.org or 503-245-5695. DEC.6 — CHRISTMAS TREELANE: Visit Santa and shop for a Christmas tree, with complimentary face painting, hay rides, pony rides and more; free admission;11 a.m.-3 p.m.; DD Ranch, 3836 NE Smith Rock Way, Terrebonne; www.ddranch.net, info©ddranch.net or 541-548-1432. DEC.6 — BENDCHRISTMAS PARADE:Theme is "Look What's Under the Christmas Tree!"; free; noon; downtown Bend; 541-388-3879. DEC.6 — AUTHORPRESENTATION: Molly Gloss will present "Falling From Horses"; free, reservations requested; 5-6:30 p.m.; Sunriver Books 8 Music, 57100 Beaver Drive; www. sunriverbooks.com, sunriverbooks@ sunriverbooks.com or 541-593-2525. DEC.6 — LA PINE HOLIDAY LIGHTS PARADE:The parade takes place on Huntington Road and ends at the La Pine Community Center with an awards
ceremony; free;6p.m.;downtown La Pine; 541-536-9771. DEC.6 —A FESTIVAL OF LESSONS 6 CAROLS:Featuring the Nativity Lutheran Church Choir, carols, readings and more; free, donations accepted; 7 p.m.; Nativity Lutheran Church, 60850 SE Brosterhous Road, Bend; www.nativityinbend. com, office©nativityinbend.com or 541-388-0765. DEC.6 — CHRISTMAS IN HARMONY: An a cappella Christmas show featuring
DROP-INSTUDIO CLASS: Open studio with David Kinker, Mondays through Dec. 29; $30 for three-hour session; 9:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. and 6-9 p.m. Monday; SageBrushers Gallery, 117 SWRoosevelt Ave., Bend; www.sagebrushersart.net or 541-383-2069. KINDERMUSIKCLASS:Ages1-2, learn songs, dances, instruments, stories and more; free, registration requested; 10:45 a.m. Monday; Cascade School of Music, 200 NW Pacific Park Lane, Bend; www. ccschoolofmusic.org, info©
cascadeschoolofmusic.org or 541-382-6866. WATERCOLOR WEDNESDAYS: Learn to paint with watercolors with Jennifer Ware-Kempcke, through Dec.17; free to members,
$5 for non-members; 10a.m.-noon Wednesday; SageBrushers Gallery, 117 SW Roosevelt Ave., Bend; www. sagebrushersart.net, jenniferware© rocketmail.com or 541-617-0900. TURNING NO-FUNFUNGI INTO SUPER FUNGI:Jeff Gautschi talks about natural product research and barbershop choruses, Sweet Adelines chorus, the High Desert Harmoneers and Finnazz Quartet; $15; 7 p.m.; Community Presbyterian Church, 529 NW19th Street, Redmond; www. showcasechorus.org or 541-447-4756. DEC. 6 — BOBBY MEADER: The Las Vegas singer-songwriter performs, with Harley Bourbon and Tuck and Roll; $5; 9 p.m.; The Astro Lounge, 939 NW Bond St., Bend; www.astroloungebend. com or 541-388-0116. DEC. — 6 TANGO ALPHA TANGO: The Portland blues-rock band performs, with Patrimony; $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. DEC.7 — CASCADEHORIZON BAND WINTER CONCERT: The band plays marches, show tunes, holiday melodies and an Irish piece; free, donations accepted; 2 p.m.; Mountain View HighSchool,2755 NE 27th St.,Bend; www.cascadehorizonband.org or 541-815-3767. DEC.7 — FROM BIG BAND TO THE BIG BANG:Learn about the roots of rock'n' roll with KPOV DJ Mike Fischer; 2 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www. deschuteslibrary.org/bend, lizgO deschuteslibrary.org or 541-312-1032.
a genetically modified, diseasecausing fungus, in room114-115; free, registration requested; noon-1 p.m. Wednesday; OSUCascades Campus, Cascades Hall, 2600 NW CollegeWay, Bend;
www.osucascades.edu,info© osucascades.edu or 541-322-3100. FINANCIALSKILLS WORKSHOP: Learn how to improve personal financial fitness; free, registration required; 5:30-7:30 p.m. W ednesday; Neighborlmpact,2303 SW First St., Redmond; www. neighborimpact.org/financialskills, homesource©neighborimpact.org or 541-323-6567. INTUITIVE PAINTINGCLASS:Learn to paint without the fear of judgment with Vicki Johnson; $37 per class; 6-8 p.m. Wednesday; SageBrushers Gallery, 117 SWRoosevelt Ave., Bend; www.sagebrushersart.net, coachvickijohnson©gmail.com or 541-390-3174. LEARNING TO SPEAKMUSIC: Learn
somebasi candcomplexmusic vocabulary with Michael Gesme; free; 6 p.m. Thursday; East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road; www.deschuteslibrary.org/ eastbend, lizg©deschuteslibrary.org or 541-312-1032. DEC. 9 — "A CHRISTMASSTORY": Screening of the classic1985 film; free; 6 p.m.;Tin PanTheater,869 NWTin Pan Alley, Bend; www.tinpantheater. com or 541-241-2271. DEC. 9— FROM BIG BAND TO THE BIG BANG:Learn about the roots of rock'n' roll with KPOV DJ Mike Fischer; 6 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave.; www. deschuteslibrary.org/redmond, lizgO deschuteslibrary.org or 541-312-1032. DEC. 9 — A MERRI-ACHI CHRISTMAS:Featuring Mariachi Sol de Mexicode JoseHernandez playing traditional Mexican holiday songs,
dances andclassics; $30-$40 plus fees;7:30 p.m.;Tower Theatre,835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. DEC. 10 — EAT, DRINK 8(ALL THAT JAZZ:Featuring a silent auction, live music and more to benefit the Summit High School Boosters; free; 5-9 p.m.; Cafe Sintra, 1024 NW Bond St., Bend; www.cafesintra.com or 541-382-8004. DEC. 11 —CASCADEHORIZON BAND HOLIDAYCONCERT:The band plays holiday melodies; free, donations accepted; 1:30 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 SE ReedMarket Road;
www.cascadehorizonband.org or 541-815-3767.
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014 take-home photos, $5 donation for DEC. 11 —TODDHAABY:The flamenco guitarist performs with his children's activities; 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; group Sola Via; $28-$34 plus fees; SantaLand, 330 SW Powerhouse 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or DEC. 12-13, 18 — "THE 541-317-0700. SANTALANDDIARIES": A oneDEC. 11 —ZEPPARELLA:The man,one-actplaybased onthe San Fransisco-basedLedZeppelin David Sedaris essay; $10; 7:30 tribute band performs; $20 plus p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 fees in advance, $25 at the door; 8 SW Century Drive, Bend; www. p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., volcanictheatrepub.com or Sisters; www.belfryevents.com or 541-323-1881. 541-815-9122. DEC. 12-14 — "THEHOBBIT": A production of the classic J.R.R. DEC. 12-18 Tolkien book by Bend Experimental Art Theatre; $15, $10 for students DEC.12-13— "ALMOST, MAINE": 18 and younger; 7 p.m. Dec. 12-13, Play about a small town and the 2 p.m. Dec.13,3 p.m. Dec.14; 2nd citizen's tales of love, presented by the Redmond Proficiency Academy; Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater. $8, $5 for students with ID; 7 p.m. com or 541-312-9626. Dec. 12-13, 2 p.m. Dec. 13; The Printing Post, 639 SW Forest Ave., DEC. 12-14, 18 — "HUMBUG":A Redmond; www.rpacademy.org, modern-day twist on the Christmas tori miHerorpacademy.orgor classic "A Christmas Carol" about 541-526-0882. Wall Street executive Eleanor Scrooge; $20,$16for seniors, $13 DEC. 12-15 — SANTALANDAT for students; 7:30 p.m. Dec. 12-13 THE OLDMILL DISTRICT:Take and18,2p.m. Dec.14; Cascades a photo with Santa, children's activities, Tree of Joy and more; Theatre, 148 NWGreenwood Ave., free admission, additional cost for Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org
I
planning ahead or 541-389-0803. DEC. 13-14 — CARRIAGERIDES IN THE OLDMILL DISTRICT: Ride in the Cowboy Carriage, located between Ben & Jerry's and Francesca's; proceeds benefit the KIDS Center; weather dependent; donations accepted;2-5 p.m .;Ben & Jerry's, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. DEC. 13-14 — CENTRAL OREGON MASTERSINGERS:The 46-voice choir performs "A Family Christmas," featuring holiday carols, with the Premiere Choir of the Youth Choir of Central Oregon;
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 19
$18 plus fees; 2 p.m. Dec. 13-14, 7:30 p.m. Dec.14; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www. towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. DEC. 13-15 — CHRISTMASTREE LANE:Visit Santa and shop for a Christmas tree, with complimentary face painting, hay rides, pony rides and more; free admission; 11 a.m.-3 p.m.; DD Ranch,3836 NE Smith Rock Way, Terrebonne; www. ddranch.net, infooddranch.net or 541-548-1432. DEC. 12 — DIRKSENDERBY KICKOFFPARTY:Featuring live music by StealHead, a silent
auction, a raffle and more to benefit Tyler Eklund; $5 suggested donation; 6-11 p.m.; Midtown Ballroom, 51 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; 541-408-4329. DEC. 13 — CHRISTMASOPEN HOUSE: Featuring potholders for sale, quilts from Quilts of Valor on display, signings by Bob Maxwell, the nation's oldest Medal of Honor recipient, to benefit Bend Heroes Foundation's "Honor Flight of
Eastern Oregon" program;$5,
3 Tst Rnnua
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esfiva
rees
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'Become Part o f a Aofiday 'Tradition Saturday, December 6th Deschutes County Fairgrounds 8 Expo Proceeds to Benefit
'33FREt SLOTPLAYCOllPON : LEAVE THEDRIVlllGTOUS! Call for reservations, location Ot times: 541.783.7529 ext.209 Valid forBend,LaPineand Redmond guestsonly;localzipcodesdonotapply. Limit one coupon per person per visit. Expires December 31, 2014.
v4 tata 34333HWY . 97RORTH I CHILO OOIR OR97624 I 541 783.7529IHLAMOYACASIRO.COM
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donations accepted;10a.m.-4 p.m.; Private Residence, 21131 Clairaway Ave., Bend; 541-480-5560.
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OSPICE o f Re d m o n d
Presenting Sponsors
"...;."."., FiecfMeyer. & Compounding Center
The Festival of Trees is free from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. For your evening Gala Event & Auction tickets ($45 per person), call
5 41-548 - 7 4 8 3
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PAGE 20 + GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014
restaurants 7
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Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Patrons eat dinner at Laughing Planet Cafe in Bend.
LaughingPlanet Cafe
• Laughing Planetraisesthe bar onthe family dining experience in Bend By John Gottberg Anderson t's the goal of the Laughing Planet Cafe to give you a
(it was founded in Bloomington, Indiana, five years earlier), Laughing Planet expanded to Bend with the opening of a Northeast Third
nationally influenced ingredients (Thai, Cuban, Korean, Indian and more) served upon brown rice or
healthy meaL But the Port-
Street store in late July. Thatbrings
sauteed kale. The dinosaurs enthrall the chil-
For The Bulletin
t
land-based restaurant g roup wants you to have fun eating it.
company holdings to 14 stores, including nine in Portland, two That's one reason why, in case in Eugene, one in Corvallis and a you were wondering, there seem new property in Reno, Nevada. to be plastic dinosaurs everyThe ambience varies from where you look. You can enjoy the place to place, but the menu is the paleo vibe without actually being same: soups, salads, burritos, queon a paleo diet. sadillas and "bowls." The latter Based in Portland since 2000
are my favorite, a variety of inter-
Location:913 NEThird St. (at Irving Avenue), Bend Hours:11a.m.-10 p.m. Mondayto Saturday, 11a.m.-9 p.m. Sunday Price range:Bowls are $5.95 to $9.50, other items $3.75 to $6.95 Credit carls:American Express, Discover, MasterCard, Visa Kids' menu:Numerous items priced $3.25 to $5.50 Vegetarianmenu:Everything on
the menu is available asvegetarian or vegan — or ascarnivore, for that matter Alcoholic beverages:Wine, beer and cider Outloor seating:No Reservati ons:Recommendedfor large parties Contact:www.laughingplanetcafe. com, 541-306-3995
quinoa or mashed potatoes or just dren. The restaurant is decidedly
family friendly, and during some early dinner hours, it's not unusual to find kids screaming and running, some of them apparently unsupervised, from one end of Laughing Planet to the other.
Continued next page
Scorecard Overall:AFood:A-. With rare exceptions, the soups, salads andbowls are all delicious. Service:A. Youngstaff is cheerful, efficient, individualistic and fun.
Atmosphere: B-.Spacious,lowkey and filled with toy dinosaurs that frenzied children love. Value:A. Big portions, low cost: Nothing on the menu is priced as high as $10.
restaurants
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 21
From previous page In quieter moments, they may
stage dinosaur fights at their tables. But it might be enough to drive some
•
%
I
diners to call ahead for t akeout
orders.
Soup and salad Bend's Laughing Planet occupies the building that once belonged to Taylor's Sausages and, before that, Cheerleaders Grill. A w holesale renovation has given it a far differ-
' .Coupon good for '.
. SS.OO off: „„„„.,„., „,„, .„.; Adult Registration,'
ent look than its predecessors. The
new cafe is spacious (seating about 80) and minimalist in decor, its most significant features being a long bank of windows and a six-stool bar beside the counter where orders are
Join us December 6th for the Bend Jingle Bell Run/Walk for Arthritis. Register online at www.BendJingleBellRun.org and enter code word BB%014 to save $5.00
i, x
taken.
The young service staff is cheerful, individualistic and highly eff icient. They have the ability t o
make ordering at the counter a fun experience, both with their banter
The Thai Bowl and a juice blend of apple, kale, cucumber, cilantro, lemon, and
and their knowledge of the menu.
celery from Laughing Planet Cafe in Bend.
They'll give you a number, suggest that you seat yourself, and deliver
Joe Kiine/The Bulletin
food to your table when it has been
NEXT WEEK:
prepared, which normally is quite fast. I have been delighted with the
POP'S PLACE
house-made soups, which vary on a daily basis. A roasted cauliflower and chickpea blend, both vegan and gluten-free, was delicious. So, too, was a hearty, zesty pork green
For readers' ratings of more than150 Central Oregon restaurants, visit H hnndhulletin.com/ restaurants.
verde with onions, it had a peppery flavor and lots of shredded meat.
green beans and grilled vegetables
My two salads were wonderful. "Grains and Greens" is vegan; it's
on a bed of sauteed kale. It comes with an A r gentinian chimichurri
a great blend of kale with sever-
sauce, a blend of parsley, garlic, ol-
al lettuces, quinoa and sprouted lentils, along with grilled broc-
ive oil and other ingredients.
and cherry tomatoes. The salad is sprinkled with toasted sunflower seeds and finished with basil-garlic vinaigrette. In the vegetarian "Highway to Kale" salad, long-leafed lacinato ('Ibscan) kale is chopped and tossed with shredded carrot and locally made Mexican-style cotija cheese.
My favorite bowl isn't on the everyday menu. It's called "L.A.M.B.," anything but vegetarian unless you opt for baked tempeh instead of lamb meatballs. That meat is par-
ticularly savory in this blend with a unique salad of roasted beets, mint
and pears, along with lentils, fresh spinach, maple-roasted Delicata squash and a chutney of yogurt and cilantro.
topped with dried cranberries and
less charmed by the burritos, hav-
Bowls andburritos When it comes to "bowls," my
dining companion's favorite is the Thai Bowl. This is a vegan dish of tofu on brown rice, mixed with gar-
lic green beans, steamed broccoli and cilantro-lime cabbage slaw. I
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Closures — Two downtown Bend restaurants haveclosed. Both the BondStreet Grill (1051 NW Bond St.) andChocolate Element(916 NWWall St.) have permanently shut their doors to business. — John Gortbe/g Andelson
some type of curry would have been ing perhapsmade the wrong menu more appropriate. An intriguing salchoices. In the Holy Mole, chicken sa of mango and pickled lime came and brown rice were combined with
on the side.
lacked the traditional semi-sweet
lassi, which it lists under its smooth-
chocolate flavor, but compensated ies menu. The yogurt drink also with the taste of pepitas, or pump- features banana, apple juice and a kin seeds. The mix was not even-
dash of turmeric. Both this and the
strawberry-banana smoothie are excellent. What's more, they're healthy and
I didn't love my East Indian burri- fun. And that's what Laughing Planto. Lentils, chickpeas and other veg- et is all about. etables were mixed with brown rice
and a Thai peanut sauce; I thought
SEASGN OF STYLE e ven t
Save 5100e or more with rebates on qualifying purchases of Hunter Douglas window fashions September 16 -December 16
pintobeans,jack cheese and pico de One Indian recipe that Laughing gallo. The Mexican-style mole sauce Planet does make right is its mango
ly distributed through the tortilla, the finishing touch of lemongrass however, making it more difficult to peanut sauce. At least once, she has appreciate. I like the grain-free Paleo Bowl, a blend of meat (beef or chicken, either one Oregon-raised) with garlic
JncknlopeGrillwill continue its series of winemaker dinners on Dec. 10 with a mealfeaturing pairings from the Chehalem Winery. WynnePeterson-Nedry, Chehalem's winemaker, will come to Bend to match recent vintages with a six-course menuprepared by Jackalope owner-chef Tim Garling. Reservations are being taken for the 6 p.m. dinner, priced at $95. 750 NWLava Road, Bend; www.jackalopegrill.com, 541318-8435.
My companionand I have been
think what wins the day for her is asked for extra.
~~. *~nat.
as in "Love All My Beets," but it is
Lemon-parsley vinaigrette adds a citrus flavor to the salad, which is pumpkin seeds.
:+ THE CENTER
Winemaker dinner —The
chile. Much like a M exican chili
coli, dried cranberries, radishes
Small dites
Offer goad on Adult Registration only. Only one discaunt per registrant. Can not combine with any other offer. Discount good for the Bend Jingle Bell Run/Walk only. Coupon Expires on 1B/6/16
— Reporter: janderson@ bendbulletirt.com
4e ctJtss/c
Huntsrnouglas
COVERINGS
1 465 SW Knoll Ave, Bend 541- 3 8 8 - 4 4 1 8 www.cjassic-coverings.com *Manufacturer' sma il-in rebate offervalid forqualifying purchases made 9/16-12/16/14 from participating dealers in the U.S. Only. Rebate will be issued in the form of a prepaid reward card and mailed within 6 weeks of rebate claimreceipt. Funds do not expire. Subject to applicableiaw, a 52.00 monthly fee willbe assessed against card balance 7 months aftercard issuance and each month thereafter. Additional limitations apply. Ask participating dealer for details and rebate form. @ Hunter Douglas,. Aii rights reserved. Aii trademarks used herein are the property of Hunter Douglas. CCB 157822
PAGE 22 • GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014
outo town The following is a list of other events "Out of Town."
COMCERTS
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By Kathleen McCool
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ed last season's production of "The Great
The Bulletin
Gatsby," designed costumes for "Avenue on't be a Scrooge! Get in the holi- Q" and starred in "Sex Habits of American day spirit with the Oregon Contem- Women," all for the OCT, according to a porary Theatre's production of "A press release. Christmas Carol" this December in Eugene. Helman's new adaptation of "A ChristWritten in 1843 by Charles Dickens, "A mas Carol" is a delight for the whole family, Christmas Carol" has become a holiday according to the theater company. "Comtradition to many all over the world. The bining a ghost story with the magic of thestory follows Ebenezer Scrooge on a haunt- ater and the joy of Christmas is a terrific ing journey of Christmases past, present recipe for holiday entertainment," said OCT and future; the lessons he learns should fill artistic director Craig Willis. even the grumpiest of Grinches with the The play opens Dec. 5 and runs through holiday spirit. Dec. 20, with preview performances Dec. For the OCT, director Elizabeth Helman has concocted a new stage adaptation of the
3-4. All performances will be held at the
Oregon Contemporary Theatre in Eugene. Christmas classic. Helman, a University of Ticket prices range from $15 to $30 with Oregon Theatre Arts grad, teaches courses discounts for students and seniors. To purin acting, directing and playwriting at Ore- chase tickets and for more information go gon State University and has worked as an to www.octheatre.org or call 541-465-1506. — Reporter: 541-383-0350, actor, director, playwright and costume designer for 15 years. Additionally, she direct- kmccool@bendbulletin.com Robert Hirsh (Scrooge), Hugh Brinkley (Tiny Tim) and DamonNoyes (Bob Cratchett) will perform Charles Dickens' holiday classic "A Christmas Carol" at the Oregon Contemporary Theatre in Eugene Dec. 5-20. Courtesy Oregon Contemporary Theatre I Submitted photo
Nov.28— London Grammar, Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* Nov. 28-29 —The StormLarge Holiday Ordeal,Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Nov. 29 —Horse Feathers, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; www.etix.com Nov. 29 —Lil Debbie, Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* Nov. 29 —Wild OnesandRadiation City,Star Theater, Portland; www.startheaterportland.com or 503-345-7892 Nov. 30 —"Stumptnwn Speakeasy," with Inspirational Beets,McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT* Dec. 1 —Asking Alexandria, McDonald Theatre, Eugene; TW* Dec. 1 —J. RnddyWalstnn and the Business,McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; www.etix.com. Dec. 1 —Watsky, Wonder Ballroom, * Portland; TF Dec. 3 —Lindsuy Stirling, Wonder * Ballroom, Portland; TF Dec.3— SteelHouse,Jimmy Mak's, Portland; www.pdxjazz.com or 503-228-5299. Dec. 3 —The War OnBrugs, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; www.etix.com. Dec. 4 —Rufus Wainwright, Aladdin * Theater, Portland; TF Dec. 4 — Knngns,M cMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; SOLDOUT;www. etix.com. Dec. 5-6 —Portland Cello Project Holiday Spectacular,Aladdin Theater, * Portland; TF Dec. 5 —Wild Cub, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; www.etix.
com
Dec. 6 —Erotic City, Wonder Ballroom, * Portland; TF Dec. 6 —Glass Animals, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; SOLDOUT; www.etix.com. Dec.7— 98.7The BullSanta Jam Featuring JoshTurner, Moda Center, Portland; TM* Dec. 9 —Billy Idol, Roseland Theater, Portland; SOLDOUT;TW* Dec. 9 —Kina Grannis, Star Theater, Portland; www.startheaterportland.com or503-345-7892 Dec. 9 —1964: The Tribute, Newmark Theatre, Portland; P5* Dec. 10 —AndyMcKue, Aladdin * Theater, Portland; TF Dec. 10 —JohnnyMarr, Wonder
Ballroom, Portland; TF* Dec. 10 —A Mari-achi Christmas! Mariachi Snl de Mexico,Hult Center, Eugene; www.hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. Dec. 10 —"A Swingin' Affair: Oex I 90,"Jimmy Mak's, Portland; www. pdxjazz.com or 503-228-5299. Dec. 10 —Weuzur, Roseland Theater, Portland; SOLDOUT;TW* Dec. 11 —Hannibal Buress, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* Dec.11 —Hnt Rize, Aladdin Theater, * Portland; TF Dec. 11 —JohnnyMarr, WOWHall, Eugene; www.ticketweb.com. Dec. 11, 14 —The Emerald City Jazz Kings: "Let YourHeart BnLight," The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www.theshedd. org or 541-434-7000. Dec. 11 —TV OnThe Radio, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; www.etix.com. Dec. 12 —HiHstnmp, Wonder Ballroom, * Portland; TF Dec. 12-14 —Holidays with the Trail Band,Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Dec. 12 —llrnu-yards, Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* Dec. 13 —Sagin Ford, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TW* Dec.15— BigData,Mc Menamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; www.etix.
com.
Dec. 15 —BiHnnFrancis, Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* Dec. 16 —Saves the OayandSay Anything,Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF*
Dec. 17 —TheGrouch 8 Eligh, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* Dec. 17 —Skinny Puppy, Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* Dec. 18 —Jason Webley 8 Friends, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* Dec. 19 —Warrant, Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* Dec. 20 —Brigz, Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* Dec. 20 —The DandyWarhnls Pagan Christmas,McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; www.etix.com Dec. 22 —AnAppalachian Christmas With Mark O'Connor 8 Friends,Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; P5*, TW* or 800-273-1530. Dec. 27 —Straight Hn Chaser, Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; P5* Dec. 31 —Flnydian Slips, McDonald * Theatre, Eugene; TW Dec. 31 —Fruition, Wonder Ballroom, * Portland, TF Dec. 31 —Paper Diamond, Roseland Theater, Portland; TW*
out of town
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014 Jan. 2 —Primus,Arlene Schnitzer Concert * Hall, Portland; P5 Jan.3— Dead Moon,McMenamins Crysal Ballroom, Portland; www.etix.com. Jan. 4 —David Lindley, Aladdin Theater, * Portland; TF Jan. 7 —The Jayhawks, Aladdin Theater, * Portland; TF Jan.10 —Floydian Slips, Aladdin Theater, * Portland; TF Jan. 10 —Stone in Love(Journey Tribute), Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* Jan. 16 —Yuval RonTrio, Unitarian Fellowship, Ashland; www.stclairevents.com. Jan.17 —Carpe Diem String Quartet, Winningstad Theatre, Portland; P5*, TW* or 800-273-1530 Jan. 17 —Shootto Thrill (AC/DC tribute) and Steelhorse (BonJovi tribute), Aladdin * Theater, Portland; TF Jan, 20 —Patti Smith, Crystal Ballroom, Portland; www.etix.com. Jan.21— The Wood Brothers,Mc Donald Theatre, Eugene; TW* Jan. 22 —Wale, Roseland Theater, Portland;
*Tickets TW:TicketsWest, www.ticketswest. com or 800-992-8499 TF:Ticketfly, www.ticketfly.com or 877-435-9849
CT:CascadeTickets, www.cascade tickets.com or 800-514-3849 P5:Portland'5 Centers for the Arts, www.portland5.com or 800-273-1530
Dec.9 — "PLD Christmas:JourneyOfLight": Pacific Lutheran University; Arlene Shnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; P5* Dec.12-14 —"Gospel Christmas":Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www. orsymphony.org or 503-228-1353. Dec. 19-20 - nC!rpue Musica,"Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www. orsymphony.org or 503-228-1353. Dec. 21 —"Comfort & Joy: A Classical Christmas,"Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.orsymphony.org or 503-228-1353. Dec. 26 —"Concert-At-Christmas": Portland TW* Youth Philharmonic; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Jan. 22 —The WoodBrothers, Wonder Hall, Portland; P5* Ballroom, Portland; TF* Dec. 30-31 —"Esperanza Spalding & the Jan. 24 —Portland Soundcheck III, Aladdin Ode to Joy: ANewYear's Celebration," * Theater, Portland; TF Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www. orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343. LECTURES 8K COMEDY Dec. 31, Jan. 4 —"Donizetti's The Elixir of Love,"Hult Center, Eugene; www.hultcenter. Dec. 6 —Carly Ariuilino, McDonald Theatre, org or 541-682-5000. * Eugene; TW Jan 10-11 —Ravel's "Bolero," Arlene Dec. 15 —The Moth Mainstage, Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www. Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; P5* orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343. Jan. 8 —Brian Regan,Hult Center, Eugene; Jan. 12 —Itzhak Perlman, Arlene Schnitzer www.hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. Concert Hall, Portland; www.orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343. Jan. 15 —Michael Chabon, Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.literary-arts.org Jan.17 —Carpe Diem String Quartet, or 503-227-2583. Winningstad Theatre, Portland; P5*, TW* Jan. 23 —Paula Poundstone, Hult Center, Jan. 17-18 —Clarinet Swing Kings, Arlene Eugene; www.hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www. orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343. Jan. 24 —Paula Poundstone, Craterian Theater at the Collier Center for the Performing Jan. 17 —RogueValley Symphony Arts, Medford; www.craterian.org. Masterworks III,Craterian Theater at the Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www.craterian.org. SYMPHONY 8c OPERA Nov.29-30 — "Taleas OldasTime:Disney In Concert":Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343. Nov. 30 —David Benoit Christmas Tribute to * Charlie Brown,Newmark Theatre, Portland; P5 Dec. 4 —"Mendelssohn & Elgar": Eugene Symphony; Hult Center, Eugene; www. hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. Dec. 6-8 —Andre Watts plays Copland's "Appalachian Spring,"Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.orsymphony.org or 503-228-1353. Dec. 7 —"40th Anniversary Holiday Extravaganza,"Eugene Concert Choir; Hult Center, Eugene; www.hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. Dec. 7 —Metropolitan Youth Symphony Concert1,Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; P5*
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 23
Jan.22 —Branford &Bernstein, Eugene Symphony; Hult Center, Eugene; www. hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. Jan. 24-26 —Concertmaster Sarah Kwak, Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www. orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343.
THEATERSKDANCE Through Dec. 7 —"You're a GoodMan, Charlie Brown":Stumptown Stages; Brunish Theatre, Portland; P5* Through Dec. 24 - nTwist Your Dickens": A send-up of the holiday classic; Portland Center Stage; Gerding Theater at the Armory, Portland; www.pcs.org or 503-445-3700. Through Dec. 28 —"Blithe Spirit": A comedy by Noel Coward; Artist Repertory Theatre; Morrison Stage, Portland; www.artistsrep.org or 503-241-1278.
Continued next page
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Join us for a very special presentation of Aspen Ridge Refirement s Award Winning "Machine Gun Maggie Imperial IPA" brewed by Worthy Brewing. Date: Tuesday, December 2nd Time: 5 PM to 9 PM Where: Worthy Brewing, 495 NE Bell evue Drive, Bend, OR On this night, l00% of sales will go to the Alzheimer's Association. "Maggie" is also available at the supporting locations above,where 50% of saleswill benefit this important organization until supplies are exhausted.
PAGE 24 • GO! MAGAZINE
Breakfast with Santa Sunday, December 14 10:30 — 12:30
At FivePine Lodge in Sisters Enjoy a full holiday spreadfor both adults and children Presaletickets: $12 for adults and $7 for kids ages 3-12 Day of tickets: $14 for adults and $9 for kids All proceedsgo toward the Family Access Network In lieu of purchasing a ticket, bring a toy or new winter item of clothing For more information, call 541-549-5900
A aron
M ey e r
T HU R S DAY - D E C E M B E R 1 1 T H
Bi l l S UNDA Y
K ea l e
D E CE M B E R 1 4 T H
DOORS OPEN AT 6:OOPM & CON C ERT IS 7:00-9:OOPM Ticket price $2 7 p e r c o n c ert Food and beverage wi ll b e a v a i l a b l e for pur chase.
FOR RESERVATIONS & TI C K ETS C ALL OR EMAIL . Make dinner reservations and enjoy the concert afteruards! Space «0 tickets are limited, get yours before it's too late.
541-383-8200 • reception@brokentop.com 62000 Broken Top Dr. • www.brokentop.com
out of town From previous page Through Dec. 28 —"The Santaland Diaries":Based on the true chronicles of David Sedaris' experience as Crumpet the Elf in Macy's Santaland display; Portland Center Stage; Gerding Theater at the Armory, Portland; www.pcs.org or 503-445-3700. Nov. 25-30 —"Mamma Mia!" Keller Auditorium,Portland; P5* Nov. 29-30 —"Nutcracker Remixed": The beloved fairy tale set to modern day music by Michael Jackson, Whitney Houston, Norah Jones and more; Hult Center, Eugene; www.hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. Dec. 4-13 —"FirewaN":A blend of dance and technology; presented by BodyVox; BodyVox Dance Center, Portland; www. bodyvox.com or 503-229-0627. Dec. 5-21 —"Babes In Arms": Rodgers & Hart's1937 musical, boasts one of the greatest scores ever written; The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www.theshedd.org or 541-434-7000. Dec. 5-20 —"A Christmas Carol," Oregon Contemporary Theatre, Eugene; www.octheatre.org or 541-465-1506. Dec. 5-7 —"A Holiday Celebration": Portland Gay Men's Chorus; Newmark Theater, Portland; P5* Dec. 5, 7 —"It's a Wonderful Life": Presented by Fred Crafts' Radio Redux; Hult Center, Eugene; www.radioreduxusa. com or 541-682-5000. Dec. 5-Jan. 10 —"The Mystery Of Irma Vep":A sendup of Victorian melodrama and '50s horror movies, "Wuthering Heights, "and Hitchcock's"Rebecca;" Winningstad Theatre, Portland; P5* Dec.11-28 —"It's a Wonderful Life": Stumptown Stages; Brunish Theatre, Portland; P5* Dec. 12-13, 18-20 —"A Christmas Carol — The Musical": Presented by Craterian Performances' Teen Musical Theater of Oregon; Craterian Theater at the Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www.craterian.org. Dec. 12-14 —"An American Christmas Carol":Ballet Fantastique presents Charles Dickens' beloved story set in post-WWII America; Hult Center, Eugene; www. hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. Dec.12-21 —"A TunaChristmas": A portrayal of all 22 citizens of Texas' third smallest town, where the Lion's Club is too liberal and Patsy Cline never dies; Newmark Theatre, Portland; P5* Dec. 13-14 —George Balanchine's "The Nutcracker,"Oregon Ballet Theatre, Portland; 503-222-5538 or 888-922-5538. Dec. 11-13 —Yossi Berg & OdedGraf: U.S. premiere; presented by White Bird; Portland State University, Portland; www. whitebird.org or 503-245-1600. Dec. 19-21 —"The Nutcracker": Presented byThe EugeneBalletCompany; Hult Center, Eugene; www.hultcenter.org or or 541-682-5000. Dec. 20 —"Elemental Collision": Dance Factory explores the life-giving elements
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014
of fire, earth, wind and water; Hult Center, Eugene; www.hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. Dec. 23 — Tomaseen Foley's"A Celtic Christmas,"Craterian Theater at the Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www.craterian.org. Jan. 9- 31 —"A Bright New Boise," Oregon Contemporary Theatre, Eugene; www.octheatre.org or 541-465-1506. Jan. 10-Feb. 8 —"Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike":Winner of the 2013 Tony Award for Best Play; Portland Center Stage; Gerding Theater at the Armory, Portland; www.pcs.org or 503-445-3700. Jan. 13-18 —"Dirty Dancing": U.S. Bank Broadway in Portland; Keller Auditorium, Portland; P5* Jan. 16 —"Disney Junior Live! Pirate & Princess Adventure,"Rose Quarter, Portland; www.ticketmaster.com. Jan. 17-Feb. 15 — Skippyjon Jones: Oregon Children's Theatre; Newmark Theatre, Portland; P5* Jan. 22-24 —Russell Maliphant Company:Oneof Great Britain's most prolific and celebrated contemporary choreographers; presented by White Bird; Portland State University, Portland; www. whitebird.org or 503-245-1600. Jan. 24-March 8 —"Threesome": Leila and Rashid attempt to solve their relationship issues by inviting a relative stranger into their bedroom; Portland Center Stage; Gerding Theater at the Armory, Portland; www.pcs.org or 503-445-3700.
White" (through Dec. 14), "Ten Symbols ofLongevityand Late Joseon Korean Culture," (through Dec. 28), "Ryo
EXHIBITS
www.oregonzoo.org.
Through-Dec. 21 —Christmas in the Garden:Featuring holiday lights, music and vendors; The Oregon Garden, Silverton; www.oregongarden.org or 877-674-2733. Nov. 28-30, Dec. 5-7, Dec.12-14Favorite 5 Country Farms1gth Annual Holiday Tour: Explore fields of Christmas
Through Jan. 18 —"The Wizard of Oz," Portland Children's Museum, Portland; www.portlandcm.org or 503-223-6500. Through Feb. 1 —"GoFigure!": Using popular children's books, the exhibit explores how math impacts our everyday lives; World Forestry Center Discovery Museum, Portland; www.worldforestry.org or 503-228-1367. Through Feb. 8 —Portland Art Museum: The following exhibits are currently on display: "Callahan to Warhol: New Photography Acquisitions" (through Nov. 30), "APEX: Wendy RedStar" (through Dec. 7), "This is War! Graphic Arts from the Great War, 1914-1918" (through Dec. 14), "Blue Sky: The Oregon Center for the Photographic Arts at 40" (through Jan. 11), "In Passionate Pursuit: The Arlene and Harold Schnitzer Collection and Legacy" (through Jan.11) and"Forbidden Fruit: Chris Antemann at Meissen" (through Feb. 8); Portland; www.portlandartmuseum.org or 503-226-2811. Through April19 —Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art:The following exhibits are currently on display: "Morris Graves: Visions of Metamorphosis" (through Dec. 7), "Geraldine Ondrizek: Shades of
jewelry, herbs & plants, local wine, original art, holiday gifts, and more; Favorite 5 Country Farms, Sherwood; www. Favorite5CountryFarms.blogspot.com or 503-625-6023. Dec. 3-7 —Holiday Ale Festival: Featuring more than 50 craft winter beers and ciders; Pioneer Courthouse Square, Portland; www.holidayale.com. Dec. 10-14 —Walking With Dinosaurs: Based on the award-winning BBC Television Series; Moda Center, Portland; www.rosequarter.com or 800-745-3000. Dec.20 —NutcrackerTea:The Eugene Ballet Company hosts a lunch in the enchantedLand ofthe Sweetsand Sugar Plum Fairies with your child and your holiday guests; Hult Center, Eugene; www. hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. Dec. 23-31 —Oregon Zoo:The following events are available at the OregonLoo: "Trek Across Asia" Winter Break DayCamp (Dec. 23), "Africa Safari" Winter Break Day Camp (Dec. 29), "Voyage through Oceans 8 Islands" Winter Break DayCamp(Dec. 30) and "Cruise South America" Winter Break Day Camp; Oregon Zoo, Portland; www.oregonzoo.org or 503-226-1561.
Through-Jan 4 —ZooLights: More than 1.5 million brightly colored lights will illuminate the Oregon Zoo during its 27th annual ZooLights; Oregon Zoo, Portland;
Toyonaga:Awakening" (throughJan. 4),
"The Art of Consumption" (through Jan. 18), "Art of the Athlete 3" (through Jan. 25), "David McCosh's Eugene" (through Jan. 25), "From the Ground Up: Gordon Gilkey's University of Oregon Library Construction Series" (through Jan. 25), "Karla Chambers: Farming, Food, and Fine Art" (through Jan 25), "McCosh In Europe"
(through Feb.1) andMasterworks on Loan (through April19); Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art,Eugene;jsma.uoregon.edu. ThroughMay 6— Oregon M useum of Science and Industry:The following exhibits are currently on display: "Roots of Wisdom: Native Knowledge. Shared Science." (through Dec. 8), "Mind to Hand: Art, Science, and Creative Collision!"
(through Jan.4), "Animation" (through Jan. 11), "Orion Spacecraft Launch Viewing" (Dec. 4), and "Mazes" (Feb. 7-May 6); Portland; www.omsi.edu or 800-955-6674. ThroughMay16 — Museum of Contemporary Craft:The following exhibits are currently on display: "Portland Collects: British Ceramics" (through Jan. 3), "ShowPDX: A Decade of Portland Furniture Design" (through Jan. 31) and "Living with Glass" (Feb. 20-May16); Museum of Contemporary Craft, Portland; www.museumofcontemporarycraft.org or 503-223-2654.
MISCELLANY
trees, shops, local organic foods,artisan
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 25
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014
movies
Warner Bros. Pictures / Submitted photo
Charlie Day, from left, Jason Sudeikis and Jason Bateman star in "Horrible Bosses 2."
• 'HorribleBosses2' is desperateandtasteless and it's not evenabout horrible bosses
O
fice late at night. Jason Bateman's movies I've seen this year, Nick is discovered there (the reafew are as poorly drawn sons why are not worth getting and as pathetic as the sex addict into), and he must masquerade dentist played by Jennifer Anis- as a fellow sex addict lest his real ton in "Horrible Bosses 2." missionbe discovered. The sad thing is, this is the secJulia is bored when Nick says ond time Aniston has played the he's addicted to women, so Nick role of Dr. Julia Harris, D.D.S., a concocts a story about a homosex-crazed woman who is so ob- sexualexperience he had at the viously deranged she wouldn't be age of 14 while wrestling with a allowed to visit a dentist, let alone boy his age — and that gets Juhave her own practice. lia really worked up. She quizzes I'm going to spoiler-alert the Nick in the most graphic terms bleep out of the scene I'm about to imaginable about the episode. It'samoment so sad,so desperdescribe because: A. You shouldn't see this movie ate and so tasteless, I was taken anyway. out of the movie (not that I was imB. You shouldn't see this movie mersed anyway) as I wondered: anyway. How did writer-director Sean AnC. SeeAandB. ders possibly think that was funBecause the plot requires it, ny, and why didn'tBateman and Julia and her sex addict support Aniston throw their r espective group are meeting in Julia's of- copiesof the screenplay across
RICHARD
ROEPER
f all the characters in all the
"Horrible Bosses2" 108 minutes R, for strong crude sexual content and language throughout
as entrepreneurs. that load of nonsense.) A major problem with both There was a fleeting moment when I thought THEY were going "Bosses" movies is Charlie Day and to turn out to be horrible bosses, Jason Sudeikis are basically playand maybethatmight have been ing variations on incredible dimfunny, but no. This is a slapstick wits, while Bateman is only slightly kidnapping yarn, with N i ck, smarter — at least smart enough to Kurt and Dale plotting revenge not want to spend five more minagainst Christoph Waltz's evil
utes of his life with these blithering
business kingpin, Bert Hanson, nincompoops. They're so stupid after he steals their stupid idea for they don't even realize how morala device called the Shower Buddy. ly corrupt they are, and there's not (An early scene, where the guys much of a comedic premise in that. Every once in a while there's the room the first time they read demonstrate their product on a the scene? local morning television show in an inspired montage, or a one-lin"Horrible Bosses" was a medi- Los Angeles, contains an extend- er that made me laugh out loud. ocre,uneven comedy, butitm ade ed visual sequence that would be But how can you have the great $117 million domestically, so now embarrassing for a junior college Christoph Waltz playing a villain we get "Horrible Bosses 2." in a comedy and you get almost comedy troupe.) I've liked Chris Pine in other nothing out of it? (Not to mention Ifthere'sa "Horrible Bosses 3," I might have to call in sick to my roles,but he flounders and tries Jamie Foxx's phone-it-in return as Wonderful Bosses (suck-up alert). way too hard here as Bert's son, Mother--- Jones.) As the credits roll on "Horrible The sequel is so lazy it's not Rex. (In fairness to Pine, he's even about horrible bosses. (In stuck playing a racist, vile, spoiled Bosses 2," we get a blooper reel. addition to Julia, the wretched jerk. He's so vicious to the guys Nine times out of 10, that's a sure employerplayed by Kevin Spacey and to his Asian maid, there's no sign the movie you just saw was, returns, but it's a wasted extend- room forhis character to become well, mostly horrible. — Richard Roeper is a film critic ed cameo.) In fact, Nick, Kurt and even the least bit sympathetic, Dale have struck out on their own though the movie tries to sell us for The Chicago Surt-Times.
movies
PAGE 26 e GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014
V • Redmayne delivers a brilliant performancein 'Theory of Everything'
t
f "A Beautiful Mind" met with
"My Left Foot" and produced a perfectly ordinary biopidro-
mance, that would be "The Theo-
ry of Everything." This is a well-made, well-acted but unexceptional film about one
of the most exceptional figures of the last half-century.
In the opening segment of "The Theoryof Everything," the young Stephen Hawking (Eddie Redmayne) and his best mate are bicycling recklessly through Cambridge, laughing the laugh of the unbridled. If the scene isn't cliched enough, the chip-chip-cheerio music hammers it home. You see? The
great Stephen Hawking wasn't always a bent figure in a wheelchair, communicating through a speech-generating device. It's the mid-1960s. Eddie Red-
mayne's Stephen is a brilliant physics student who infuriates his classmates by studying for only about an hour a day and yet easily outshining them. His head
Focus Features / Submitted photo
Eddie Redmayne stars as Stephen Hawking in "TheTheory of Everything."
almost always bowed, his over-
sized glasses slightly crooked, a One day Stephen collapses mop of hair covering his forehead, head first on the pavement. After Stephen looks like an academic a series of tests, a doctor delivBeatle or Rolling Stone — and at ers the news: Stephen will lose a party one night, all he has to do nearly all ability to control his is gaze across the room and he movements — everything from catches the fancy of the fetching the ability to walk to his speech Jane. to simply swallowing. He will be Directed by James Marsh and dead within two years. "What about my brain?" asks adapted by Anthony McCarten from Jane Hawking's memoir, Stephen. "The Theory of Everything" emYour mind w i l l c o ntinue to barks on a familiar path — well, function, replies the doctor. But two familiar paths. There's the story of Stephen's
eventually no one will know what
celebrity, an audience with the
RICHARD ROEPER
queen, bookstores showcasing his latest best-seller — but "The Theory of Everything" is primarily about the relationship between Stephen and Jane, which is irrefutably a love story, but like the mar-
"The Theory efEverything" 123 minutes PG-13, for somethematic elements and suggestive material
riage showcased in "A Beautiful Mind," hardly a neatly wrapped fairy tale. You'd think this might make for a more interesting film, but (perhaps in no small part because the movie was made with
literally crawling up the stairs and collapsing in frustration; Stephen's eyes welling up as his wife holds his face and tells him she still loves him. Every once in a while, "The Theory of Everything" takes a small stab at creating a visual to reflect Hawking's thought process, e.g., Stephen gets lost in the swirling pattern of cream in his coffee, or his head gets caught in a sweater and he looks through the fabric at the fireplace, and
you're thinking. romance with Jane: his awkward Redmayne is amazing. He capbut tender initial gestures of affec- tures Hawking's physical deteriotion, the moment their hands first ration one excruciating increment touch, a lovely dance under spec- at a time. As Stephen delivered tacular f ireworks, home m ovgroundbreaking work on singuie-style footage of their wedding. larity theorem concepts and quanBut even as Stephen was daz- tum mechanics, he went from zling his professors with his revo- crutches to a w heelchair, from lutionary ideas about black holes speaking in a slurred voice to usand the nature of time, he was ing alphabet boards and later combeginning to experience the first puter technology to communicate. symptoms of a motor neuron disWe get perfunctory scenes of ease related to ALS, or Lou Geh- Stephen struggling to eat a sin- apparently reaches some sort of rig's Disease: difficulties gripping gle bite of food while his vibrant epiphany. a pen, struggles maintaining his wife and his friends laugh it up We see evidence of Hawking's and down champagne; Stephen achievements — his worldwide balance.
the cooperation of Stephen and Jane) the most controversial aspects are glossed over or left out.
There's only the briefest mo-
ment when we see Jane's frustra-
tion. She's working on her own thesis at the kitchen table while Stephen and their children are
having a grand old time in the living room — and she looks up, looks around and realizes nobody really cares about her work or her burden. It's a fine bit of acting from Jones, but it only hints at Jane's world. When she married Stephen, everyone believed he had but a year or two to live. It turned into decades. It turned into
something far more enormous than she could have envisioned. "The Theory of Everything" does show us the demise of the Hawkings' marriage and their respective romances with other
partners. But everything is painted in such civilized, sweet colors. From all that has been written
(and numerous documentaries), we know the relationship between Stephen and Jane was, to say the
least, complicated, as was Stephen's second marriage to one of his nurses. Even though "Everything" stretches past two hours, there's only the briefest allusion to turbulence in Stephen's personal life, not to mention his often-controversial political stances. I wouldn't be surprised if Red-
mayne receivesan Oscar nomination. Hi s
t r ansformation i s
remarkable. By the end of the film he is communicating almost solely through his eyes, and the touches of a smile. It's a memorable performance in a rather ordinary film. — Richard Roeper is a film critic for The Chicago Surt-Times.
movies
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 27 P~
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Private, Skipper, Kowalski and Rico battle a supervillian octopus and compete with an interspecies commando team in
"The Penguins of Madagascar."
' en
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lame it on lowered expectations for the umpteenth car-
B
toon starring those comman-
ROGERMOORE
Or lay it at the feet of the Dreamworks Animation trademark style
— slapstick for the kids, and a boatload of wisecracks aimed at the parents who also sit through these farc-
es aimed at the under-8 crowd. But "Penguins of Madagascar" is as "cute and cuddly" as ever, and of-
ten downright hilarious. Kids will giggle at the plucky impertinence, the pratfalls and the
sheer breakneck speed of the gags, and the occasional gas-passing joke. And their parents'? The puns,
movie references and impersonations are for grownups. Hip ones will grin at the witty touch of hav-
ing iconoclastic German director and "Encounters at the End of the World" documentarian Werner Her-
zog play a comically callous documentary filmmaker in the opening scene. Here, on "Earth's frozen bot-
tom," he captures the beginnings of the penguin team. Even as chicks, Skipper is in charge, impulsive and riffing in that
T o m -McGrath-does-William
Shatner-as-Kirk voice, leading tiny Kowalski (Chris Miller), Rico (Conrad Vernon) and the newly hatched Private (Christopher Knights) into
McGrath's Skipper has always been what makes the penguins funny. Skipper refuses to be humbled, contradicted or corrected. His version
do penguins from "Madagascar," over-exposed little darlings who stole all those movies and went on to star in their own spin off TV series.
cL11OUS of profanity is a hoot. "Parker Posey! Flippin' Frozen
"Penguins nfMadagascar" 92 minutes PG, for mild action and some rude humor
Tundra!" And, since they chase Dave the octopus to Venice, "Venetian BLINDED again!" Every word out of that animated
penguin's 3-D beak (you can even see the fine penguin feathers now) "adventure and glory like no pen- is funny. They pop up in Shanghai, which Skipper mistakes for Dublin. guin has seen before." "All right boys, River Dance!" That flashback prologue sets up the dynamic that has played out for It doesn't matter that the plot and this cute and cuddly quartet ever characters seem like a mishmash of since. other recent animated offerings, as "Kowalski! Analysis! Rico! Status long as McGrath is cracking wise. And the team of writers spare no report!" "Penguins of Madagascar" is pun in giving the villain just as about dopey and adorable Private's many zingers, most of which will efforts to become "a meaningful zing over the heads of the younger and valuedmember oftheteam."He viewers. "Drew, Barry," Dave orders his will have his chance when an octopus supervillain named Dave (John minions, "More power!" "William! Hurt them!" Malkovich) sets out to rid the world "Nicolas! Cage them!" of penguin-kind. But the Madagas"Halle! Bury them!" car boys have competition in the Whatever this little nothing of heroics department. The well-financed, gadget-equipped North a cartoon comedy lacks — decent Wind inter-species commando team female characters, an original vilhas a seal (Ken Jeong), a polar bear lain — the bottom line from this (Peter Stormare), an exotic, sexy bottom-heavy brotherhood from the owl (Annet Mahendru) and is led by bottom of the world? They're still a confident, oh-so-competent wolf cute, still cuddly, still as funny as a ninja penguin could ever be. (Benedict Cumberbatch). "No one breaks The Wind!" — Roger Moore is a film critic Director-turned voice actor Tom
for Tribune News Service
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• 5'8.00 M I M O S A RE STAIJRANT OPEN Saturday EeSunday 8: 0 0 am — 8:00pm • Over Easy Break fast • Mid-Day Menu 4 Din ner Wednesday — Friday
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FOR RESERVATIONS CALL OR EMAIL 541-383-8200 • reception@brokentop.com 62000 Broken Top Dr. • www.brokentop.com
mvw.ben~roper c o m~ - 541.382'.4193 '~ 4S6$&l u g Drive Old3fill istrict
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THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014
movies
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 29
Lions of literature,
but failures at life A
11 those years when all those fans of J.D. Salin-
ger would make the pilgrimage to Cornish, New Hampshire, hoping to get a glimpse of the famously reclusive author
RICHARD
ROEPER
to tell him what "The Catcher in the Rye" meant to them, I always
"Listen UpPhilip" wondered: Why? 109 minutes Why would you want to bother a guy who almost certainly No MPAArating is going to tell you to take a hike (unlessyouhappened tobe avery Zimmerman, to the point where young, very pretty girl catching we're rooting for the women in him at the right moment)'? The their lives to pack up their dignibook meant to you what it meant
ty and run. Run!
Philip is one of the most unto you. Why spoil it by chancing a sour encounter withthe author? likable but also one of the most In "Listen Up Philip," Jason fascinating characters of the Schwartzman is the titular char- year. Schwartzman is an expert acter, who achieves some suc- at playing whip-smart, socially cess with his first two novels and awkward misfits who seem inthus is invited to meet the great capable of being in the moment. Ike Z i mmerman (Jonathan Even when he's saying, "That's Pryce), a literary lion who now great" to his girlfriend, he feels lives in an exodus of his own compelled to tell her she doesn't making, drinking his 25-year- u nderstand him and how h e old scotch and railing about all feels right then and there. Anthe sycophants and nobodies other time, when a student shyly who betrayed him. asks him fora letter of recom"The greatest achievement mendation for an internship, he of their lives is they knew ME," tells her why he won't do it while says Zimmerman, and he really he staples a blank piece of paper, believes that. and he concludes the conversaFrom the wonderfully mocked- tion by saying, "Here's a piece of up covers of Zimmerman's nov- paper with staples in it." OK. When Philip achieves his els, it's dear he's modeled not after Salinger but Philip Roth.
Submitted photo
Michael Keaton and Edward Norton star in "Birdman."
greatest success, he uses the op-
(We also have the young author, portunity to meet with a former Philip, and "Zimmerman" evokes college girlfriend to tell her she Roth's Nathan Zuckerman.) never believed in him, and with Zimmerman is a b i tter old man, refusing to take respon-
his former roommate to tell HIM
sibility for any of his human failings, constantly calling his daughter (Krysten Ritter) a"pain
things as well, and what the hell
he was supposed to do great
happened? Elisabeth Moss is heartbreakin the ass." But he takes an in- ingly effective as a commercial stant liking to Philip, mainly be- photographer who has been cause Philip is a young Zimmer- with Philip for three years. We man — arrogant, off-putting, don't know what she was like self-absorbed and capable of ca- before she met him, but she is sual cruelty to anyone who gets broken now, and she's reaching deep into the recesses ofher soul close to him. Written and directed by Alex to come back. Ritter and Pryce Ross Perry, "Listen Up Philip" have a devastating confrontation looks like the kind of movie film in which she finally gets to tell classes would study in the 1970s. him how the world sees him. BoPerry swings his hand-held gosian's matter-of-fact narration camera soclose to the faces of sometimes tells us more about the actors it feels like he might these characters' lives than they clip one of them in the nose. Nar- yet know themselves, and it all rator Eric Bogosian has a won- rings true, and sometimes it's alderful, offbeat and almost cheer- most unbearably sad. — Richard Roeperis a film critic ful delivery as he details the latest horrible behavior by Philip or for The Chicago Sun-Times.
"Big Hero 6" —Disney's animated story about a teenager befriending a health care robot is a big, gorgeousadventure with wonderful voice performances, somedark Here's what's showing onCentral Orundertones that give thestory more depth, an uplifting messageand morethan a egon movie screens. Forshowtimes, few laugh-out-loud moments. This film is see listings on Page31. available locally in 3-D. Rating: Threeanda half stars. 108 minutes.(PG) —Roeper "Birdman" —In the crowning performance of his career, the darkly Reviews byRichard Roeper or Roger funny, brooding Michael Keaton plays a Moore, unless otherwise noted. STILL SHOWIMG faded movie star attempting a comeback by directing and starring in a Broadway "Art andCraft" — "The Music Man" gave play. This is a strangeand beautiful and HEADS UP us the perfect prototype of acharlatan: unique film, one of the best movies of the charismatic, theatrical, sociable. Mark "National Lampoon'sChristmas year. Rating: Four stars.119 minutes. (R) Landis is none ofthosethings, which — Roeper Vacation" — After traveling across makes his rich history of duping peopleall America andEurope, Clark Griswold "The Boxtrolls" —There's something the more fascinating. Landis is tiny, bald (Chevy Chase)just wants an old-fashioned and slightly stooped with ahushed highabout stop motion 3-D animation — the Christmas at home.What hegets instead not-quite-real textures of skin andhair, pitched voice andemotionless delivery. is the gift that keeps on living — a surprise He's awkward andwears his eccentricities the quite real cloth andmetal, the subtle visit from his very odd family (Miriam on his sleeve,andyet none ofhis oddities gloomy lighting effects — that says Flynn, RandyQuaid, William Hickey). "spooky." All the best animated films with were red flags for the dozens ofmuseums "Christmas Vacation" will screen at 7 a hint of Halloweenhavebeenstop motion he hoodwinked. Landishasmadealotof tonightat the TowerTheatre in Bend. people very angry, andthe movie deals animation or digital efforts that duplicate Tickets are $12. with a serious issue —namely the way that hand-molded model look — "The Nightmare Before Christmas," "Coraline." — Synopsis from TowerTheatre obsessions takecontrol of us. Yetthe filmmakers keepthe tone light as they "The Boxtrolls" is from Laika, the studio "RiffTrax Live:Santa Claus" —Alive follow Landis onone of his"donation" that made "ParaNorman" and"Coraline." never-before-seen riffing on the colorful This adaptation of anAlanSnownovel holiday film "Santa Claus" from the historic visits and chat with him about his life. Ulrich's score, which is sometimes ("Here BeMonsters!") is inventive and Belcourt Theater in Nashville, Tennessee. Stephen noirish and sometimesjazzy, has ajaunty, fanciful and almost certainly the best Get your magic eyeready asMichael J. winking feel. Andthe directors have akeen animated film of the year. It's spooky Nelson, Kevin Murphy, andBill Corbett eye for humorous details, whether it's an and funny and alittle twisted, with a little (also known asthe stars of "Mystery impossibly long ash on the endof Landis's social commentary in the "ParaNorman" Science Theater 3000") present a jolly ol' cigarette or theway heinconspicuously style. Start to finish, it's a delight. Rating: riff that will keep youlaughing all holiday consumes alcohol before important Three and ahalf stars. 97 minutes. (PG) season long! The riff will screen at 8p.m. meetings by drinking it out of a blue — Moore Thursday at RegalOld Mill Stadium16 Phillips' Milk of Magnesiabottle. Landis & IMAX in Bend.General admission is "Dumb and DumberTo"— Maybe it's has a history of mental illness, having $12.50. 120 minutes. (no MPAArating) the "Jackass" world we live in, or maybe spent a yearhospitalized for "a nervous it's the aging of stars Jim CarreyandJeff the viewer — Synopsis from Fathom Events breakdown." That might make a bit uneasy, wondering if directors Sam Daniels, but the slapstick seemsmore Cullman, Jennifer Grausmanand Mark forced and sadder in this sequel. I cracked WHAT'S MEW Becker havetakenadvantageofasickman. up a good half-dozen times, but there were And yet the artist enjoys theattention. He long stretches whenthe movie wasjust "Listen Up Philip" — Philip, a novelist lives alone in his late mother's apartment, spinning its wheels. Rating: Twostars.111 played byJasonSchwartzman,isoneof but if his never-ending talking is any minutes.(PG-13) — Roeper the most unlikable but also one of themost indication, the solitude doesn't appearto "The Equalizer" —This ridiculous fascinating characters of the year. Philip suit him. Just when hestarts to seem like a and audacious thriller features some achieves somesuccess andthus is invited sympathetic character, you might begin to gruesomely creative violence, but it's to meet his idol (Jonathan Pryce), a bitter wonder whoexactly istaking advantageof old man. Both arearrogant, off-putting, whom. Rating: Threestars. 89 minutes. (no equally memorable for the small, gritty moments. And most of all, it's got Denzel self-absorbed andcapable of casual MPAA rating) Washington going for it. Rating: Threeand cruelty to anyonewhogets close to them. — StephanieMeny, a half stars. 128 minutes.(R) — Roeper It all rings true andsometimes it's almost unbearably sad. Rating: Threestars. 109 The Washington Post Continued next page
O N LO C A L SCREEMS
minutes. (No MPAA rating) — Roeper "The Theory of Everything" — Playing the young StephenHawking from reckless Cambridge student to brilliant physicist, EddieRedmayne undergoesa remarkable transformation. But it's a memorable performance in arather ordinary love story about his romancewith future wife, Jane (Felicity Jones). Rating: Twoand ahalf stars. 123 minutes. (PG-13) —Roeper
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"Force Majeure" —Chiling, cruel andfunny— inanicy,Swedishway — "Force Majeure" is adrama about a relationship challenged byanextreme "what would you doif" moment. Ebba and Tomas,played byLisa Loven Kongsliand JohannesKuhnke,and their two small children areenjoying a nice holiday in theFrench Alps. Writer-director RubenOstlund gives every ski lift ride anair of menacemostly silent skiers, hanging from a chair in awall of white. The steep mountainsides arepackedwith snow, and we andthe family learn what those lovely but deadly flashesandbooms rippling across theslopes at night are — avalancheprevention cannons. As Ostlund breaksthe days downwith inter-titles, "Ski Day2," and soon, we know something's coming. All that foreboding andforeshadowing cannot be for nothing. The "something" is a planned avalanchethat hurtles down the slopes, mesmerizing everybody dining on thechilly outdoor patio looking up atthe mountains. Thewall ofsnow bearsdownonthem andthey freeze. Andthen it becomesobvious there's been amiscalculation and the screamsandscrambling skiers are covered in acloud of white. It's not that anybodygets hurt, it's how everyone reacts that is thecrux of "Force Majeure." We seeEbbaturn a little cold to Tomas,who is either confused or sheepish.Tensionsboil over whenshecalls him out in front
of one andall for running for safety while shegathered uptheir kids to flee. Dinner datesturn sour. Drinks by the fireplacebecomeaccusatory. "Force Majeure" isthe Frenchphrase from the world of insuranceand investment means"greater force," as in no one isresponsible when anatural catastrophe or the like is involved in aloss.Isthatagoodenough excuse for Tomas, that all bets are off and it's every manfor himself when reflexes areinvolved? Like Tomas and Ebbaandevery other couple Ebba humiliates Tomasinfront of, we wonder how wecould react, not just to the fight-or-flight moment, but to a loved one's reactions. That lets "Force Majeure," in Swedish, French and English with subtitles, become one of the cinema'smore revealing portraits of manhoodandmarriage and the slippery slopethat a simple reflexive act cansendthem down. Rating: Threestars. 118 minutes. (R) — Moore "Gene Girl" —BenAffleck gives one of his best performances asthe prime suspect in his wife's disappearance. It's a thing of beauty watching the characters from Gillian Flynn's novel manipulate, stumble, recover and stumble again. This is anutty film, and for the most part, I meanthat in agood way.Rating: Threeand a half stars. 149 minutes.(R) — Roeper "Guardians of the Galaxy" — Chris Pratt plays the leader of amisfit band of anti-heroes, including a
cynical raccoon and awalking tree, in this refreshing confection of entertainment, a mostly lighthearted and self-referential comic-book movie with loads of whiz-bangaction, some laugh-out-loud moments and acouple of surprisingly beautiful and touching scenes aswell. Rating: Threeand a half stars. 122 minutes. (PG-13) — Roeper "Horrible Bosses 2" —Thesequel to the mediocre, uneven"Horrible Bosses" is so lazy it's not evenabout horrible bosses. It's a slapstick kidnapping yarn asthe three dimwits (Jason Bateman,Charlie Day,Jason Sudeikis) plot revengeagainst a thieving business kingpin. Also back is Jennifer Aniston asthe sexaddicted dentist, one of themost poorly drawn, pathetic characters of the year. Rating: Oneand ahalf stars. 106 minutes. (R) —Roeper "Interstellar" —What a beautiful and epic film is "Interstellar," filled with great performances, tingling our senses with masterful special effects, daring to beopenly sentimental, asking gigantic questions about the meaning of life and leaving usdrained and grateful for the experience. This film is available locally in IMAX. Rating: Four stars. 169 minutes. (PG13) —Roeper "TheHungerGames:MockingjeyPert1" —Thelatest Katniss Everdeen adventure is a rousing yet often bleak and downbeat film that focuses a lot more on tragediesandsetbacks
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than applause-generating heroics. Ultimately it serves as asolid if unspectacular first lap aroundthe track of a two-lap race.Rating: Threestars. 123 minutes. (PG-13) —Roeper "TheMazeRunner"— Thismonth's "young adults savethe future" film franchise is"The MazeRunner," an indifferent quest tale about boys trapped in agigantic maze with no idea how they got there. Ateen boy (Dylan O'Brien) wakesup, screaming, on a freight elevator soaring up to a field, where it promptly drops its"greenie," or newbie, into a clatch of rustic boys his own age. Hedoesn't know his name or anything elseother than the English language.But the other lads set him straight. This is "Glades," the glade. Someboysare "Builders," some are "Runners." They runthrough the vast walled mazethat surrounds their encampmenteachday, coming home just before thehugewalls creak shut on gigantic gears eachnight. The actors aren't bad, with "Nanny McPhee" vet ThomasBrodie-Sangster standing out by being asskinny as a teen stuck in thewoods, forced to fend for himself, andO'Brien, Aml Ameen, Will Poulter and KiHongLee having decent screenpresence. But all these literary underpinnings do not disguise ablase, emotion-starved script, dialogue that ineptly repeats what the imageshavealready shown us is happening,stageysceneswhere characters pokeeach other in the chest to keep themfrom storming out of the cameraframe.Andthe resolution to this puzzle is sobotchedit's insulting, as if they're daring us tolaugh atthe notion that this is merely "thebeginning." Rating: Oneandahalf stars.112 minutes. (PG-13) —Moote "Penguins efMadagascar"Blame it on loweredexpectations for the umpteenth cartoon starring thosecommando penguinsfrom "Madagascar," over-exposed little darlings who stole all those movies and went on to star in their own spinoff TV series. Orlay it at thefeet of the Dreamworks Animation trademark style — slapstickforthe kids, and a boatload of wisecracks aimed atthe parents who also sit through these farces aimed atthe under-8 crowd. But"Penguins of Madagascar" is as "cute and cuddly" as ever,andoften downright hilarious. Kids will giggle at the plucky impertinence, the pratfalls and the sheer breakneckspeedof the gags, andtheoccasionalgas-passing joke. And their parents? Thepuns, movie referencesandimpersonations are for grownups. Hiponeswill grin at the wittytouch ofhaving iconoclastic German director and "Encounters at the End of theWorld" documentarian Werner Herzog play a comically
callous documentaryfilmmaker in the opening scene.Director-turned voice actor TomMcGrath's Skipper has alwaysbeenwhatmakesthepenguins funny. Skipper refuses to behumbled, contradicted or corrected. Hisversion of profanity is a hoot. It doesn't matter that the plot andcharacters seemlike a mishmash of other recent animated offerings, as long asMcGrath is cracking wise. Andthe team of writers spare no pun ingiving the villain just as many zingers, most of which will zing over the heads ofthe younger viewers. Whatever this little nothing of a cartoon comedylacks —decent female characters, an original villain — the bottom line from this bottomheavy brotherhood from thebottom of the world? They're still cute, still cuddly, still as funny as a ninja penguin could ever be.This film is available locally in 3-D. Rating: three stars. 95 minutes. (PG) —Moore "SkeletonTwins" —As children, Maggie andMilo Deanseemed inseparable. But tragedy hit their family as teenagerswhentheir father died, sending them on different paths, and ultimately leading to adecade-long estrangement. Now intheir thirties, another set of near-tragedies brings them together. Melancholic Milo (Bill Hader), a frustrated actor with no prospects, decides toaccept his sister's offer to return to their hometown in bucolic upstate New York. However, he's unawarethat Maggie(Kristen Wiig) herself is barely holding it together, secretly unhappydespite her loving husbandLance(LukeWilson). With painful woundsthat only the other can understand, Milo andMaggie grow closer as theytryto guide eachother through this newestset ofsecrets. But as the hurt from thepast catches up tothe confusion in thepresent, their special bond is put to thetest once again. Theybring out not only the best in eachother, butalso theworst, and they areeachdesperate to avoid owning their own mistakes.Eventually Milo and Maggiegrowto understand that living truthfully and sharing their lives with eachother, pain andall, is the only waythey canmoveforward and reclaim thehappiness they once enjoyed together. 93minutes. (R) — Synopsis fiom RoadsideAttractions "St. Vincent" —This story of a chain-smoking gambler baby-sitting the neighbor kid is aprime showcase for Bill Murray andhis skill set. Nearly every scene iscontrived, but writerdirector TedMelfi has a niceway with dialogue, andthe cast — including Melissa McCarthyand youngJaeden Lieberher — is uniformly outstanding. Rating: Threeand ahalf stars. 102 minutes.(PG-13) — Roeper
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THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2014
MOVI E
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T I M E S • For the meekfoNov.28
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• There may bean additional fee for 3-Oand IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. I
Submitted photo
Sylvester Stallone stars in "The Expendables 3.w
NEW O M D V D 8 a BLU-RA Y The following movies were released the week ofNov.25.
"The Expendables 3" — Herewe havesome ofthemostbeloved action stars of the last half-century — from HanSolo to the Terminator to Rambo —andthey're mired in a live-action cartoon with witless dialogue, a nothing plot andendless action sequences. "TheExpendables 3" is proof a movie can beexceedingly loud and excruciatingly dull. Blu-ray Extras: Unrated extendededition, gag real, extendedscenesandthree featurettes. Rating: Onestar. 126 minutes.(PG-13) — Roeper "The Giver" — Thebelovedchildren's novelby LoisLowrybecomes amovie starring Jeff Bridges andMeryl Streep about a supposedly utopian society where everyone is comfortably numb to love and pain. For astory designed to touch our emotions and remind us of all the wonderful highs andall the devastating lows of a life undiluted, it's not nearly as involving as you might expect. (No DVD or Blu-Ray Extras were listed for this film.) Rating: Twostars. 94 minutes. (PG13) — Roeper Tyler Perry'snA MadeaChristmas" — Tyler Perry madehisfortune by pandering to a predominantly AfricanAmerican audience. So a tip of the Santa hatfor him trying to broaden his appeal by pandering to awhite one with aA MadeaChristmas," his most integrated movie ever. But from its unfunny Madea-in-customer-service opening to the abrupt thud of afinale, on into the seriously stiff outtakes that cover the closing credits, "Christmas" is his worst Madeamovie ever. DVD and Blu-RayExtras: Two featurettes and bloopers. Rating: Onestar. 101 minutes. (PG-13) —Moore
Also available:
"Beyond the Edge,"aA Merry Friggin' n Christmas,""The NovemberMan, "Stretch," "War Story," "What If.n
Next Week:
aAs Above, SoBelow," "Dawn ofthe n "The Hero ofColor Planet of the Apes, City," "The Hundred-Foot Journey."
2150NE StudioRd,Suitelg
• Accessibility devices are available for somemovies at Regal Old Mill Stadium t6 fd IMAX
NWX 2003 Norgrwost CrossingDr,suiteiio
541-389-9252
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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend,800-326-3264. • BIG HER06 (PG) Fri-Sun: 10:35 a.m., 1:20, 4:35, 7:10 Mon-Thu: 10:40 a.m., 1:15, 4, 6:55 e • BIG HER063D (PG) Fri-Thu: 9:50 • BIRDMAN (R) Fri-Sun: 10:50 a.m., 1:55, 6:20, 9:15 Mon-Wed: 1:05, 4:10, 7:05, 9:55 Thu: 1:05, 4:10, 7:05 • DUMB ANDDUMBER TO (PG-13) Fri-Sun: 11:10a.m., 2:25, 5:05, 7:50, 10:25 n Mon-Thu: 11:20a.m., 2, 4:40, 7:35, 10:10 • GONE GIRL (R) Fri-Sun: 10:05 a.m., 2:35, 6:15, 9:35 Mon-Thu: 11:30a.m., 2:50, 6:10, 9:30 • HORRIBLE BOSSES 2 (R) Fri-Sun: 11a.m., noon, 1:45, 3, 4:30, 6:35, 7:15, 9:05, 10 Mon-Thu: 11 a.m., 12:45, 1:45, 3:45, 4:30, 6:20, 7:15, 9, 10 • THE HUNGERGAMES: MOCKINGJAYPART1 (PG-13) Fri-Sun: 9:45 a.m., 10:15a.m., 10:45 a.m., Submitted photo 11:30 a.m., 1,1:30, 2, 2:45, 4:15, 4:45, 6, "The Boxtrollsw is showing at McMenamins Old St. Francis School Saturday, 6:30, 7:30, 8, 9, 9:30, 10:30 Sunday and Wednesday. Mon-Thu: 10:30 a.m., 11:05a.m., 11:45 a.m., 12:50, 1:25, 2:15, 2:45, 3:50, 4:20, 5:10, 6, 6:45, 7:25, 8, 9:05, 9:40, 10:15 • ART AND CRAFT (no MPAArating) Fri-Sat: 12:30, 3:45, 7 • INTERSTELLAR (PG-13) Fri-Sat: 1:30 Sun: 2,5:15 Fri-Sun: 10:55 a.m., 2:35, 6, 9:40 Sun:12:30 Mon-Thu: 5:30 Mon-Thu: 10:50 a.m., 2:30, 6:25, 10:05 • FORCE MAJEURE (R) • PENGUINSOF MADAGASCAR (PG) • INTERSTELLAR IMAX (PG-13) Fri-Sat: 8:30 Fri-Sat: 1, 3, 5, 7 Fri-Sun: 10:20 a.m., 2:05, 5:45, 9:25 Sun: 7:30 Sun: 1:30, 3:30, 5:30 Mon-Thu: 10:35 a.m., 2:10, 6:05, 9:45 Mon, Thu: 5:30 Mon-Thu: 4, 6 • PENGUINSOF MADAGASCAR (PG) • LISTEN UP PHILIP (no MPAA rating) Fri-Sun:10 a.m., 1:10, 4:20, 6:45, 9:10 Fri-Sat: 6 Mon-Thu: 11:15a.m., 1:40, 4:05, 6:35, Sun: 5 Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 9:lo Mon, Thu:8 97, Madras, 541-475-3505 • PENGUINSOF MADAGASCAR 3-D(PG) TWINS (R) Fri-Sun: 10:30 a.m., 2:15, 4:55, 7:20, 9:40 • THE SKELETON • BIG HER06 (PG) Fri-Sat: 3:45 Mon-Thu: 11:40 a.m., 2:25, 4:50, 7:10, Fri-Sat: 12:10, 2:40, 5, 7:20, 9:40 Sun: 2:45 9:35 Sun:12:10, 2:40,5, 7:20 • The "Spaghetti Westem" wi l l screen at • RIFFTRAX LIVE:SANTACLAUS(no Mon-Thu: 5, 7:20 6:30 p.m. Wednesday(doors open at6 MPAA rating) • DUMB ANDDUMBER TO (PG-13) p.m) andincludes an al l -you-can-eat Thu: 8 Fri-Sat: 1:50, 4:20, 6:50, 9:15 spaghetti dinner. • ST. VINCENT (PG-13) Sun: 1:50, 4:20, 6:50 Fri-Sun: 11:40a.m., 2:20, 5, 7:35, 10:10 I I I Mon-Thu: 4:20, 6:50 Mon-Wed: 1, 4:15, 6:50, 9:20 • HORRIBLE BOSSES 2 (R) Redmond Ci n emas,1535 SW Odem Medo Thu: 1, 4:15, 10 Fri-Sat: noon, 2:20, 4:45, 7:10, 9:30 Road, Redmond, 541-548-8777 • THE THEORYOF EVERYTHING (PG-13) Sun: noon, 2:20, 4:45, 7:10 Fri-Sun: 11:05a.m., 2:50, 6:55, 9:55 • BIG HERO(PG) 6 Mon-Thu: 4:45, 7:10 Mon-Thu: 11:35 a.m., 2:35, 5:30, 9:15 Fri-Sun:11:15 a.m.,1:45, 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 • THE HUNGERGAMES: MOCKINGJAYMon-Thu: 4:15, 6:45 r I PART1 (PG-13) • HORRIBLE BOSSES 2 (R) Fri-Sat: 1:20, 4:10, 7,9:35 McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 Fri-Sun: 11:30 a.m., 2, 4:30, 7,9:30 Sun: 1:20, 4:10, 7 NW Bond St., Bend,541-330-8562 Mon-Thu: 4:30, 7 Mon-Thu: 4:10, 7 • THE HUNGERGAMES: MOCKINGJAY• THE BOXTROLLS (PG) • PENGUINSOF MADAGASCAR (PG) PART1 (PG-13) Sat: 10:30 Fri-Sat: 12:20, 5, 7:15, 9:25 Fri-Sun: 12:45, 3:30, 6:15, 9 Sun:11 Sun: 12:20, 5, 7:15 Mon-Thu: 3:30, 6:15 Wed: 2:30 Mon-Thu: 5, 7:15 • PENGUINSOF MADAGASCAR (PG) • THE EQUALIZER (R) • PENGUINSOF MADAGASCAR 3-D (PG) Fri-Sun: 11:45 a.m., 2, 4:15, 6:30, 8:45 Fri, Sun-Thu: 9 Fri-Sun: 2:40 Mon-Thu: 4:15, 6:30 • GUARDIANSOF THE GALAXY (PG-13) Fri, Sun:2 Sat: 1:30 Pine Theater,214 N. MainSt., Prineville, Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, • THE MAZE RUNNER (PG-13) 541-416-1014 Sisters, 541-549-8800 Fri, Sun-Thu: 6 • THE HUNGER GAMES: MOCKINGJAY• The Oregon State Vniversity vs. Vniversity • HORRIBLE BOSSES 2 (R) PART1 (Upstairs — PG-13) Fri-Sat: 1, 3:15, 5:30, 7:45 ofOregonCivilWargame screensat5 Fri-Sun: 1, 4, 7 Sun: 1:45, 4, 6:15 p.m.Saturday (doorsopenat4p.m.). Mon-Thu: 6:15 Mon-Thu: 4,6:15 • Younger than 2t may attend all • PENGUINSOF MADAGASCAR (PG) • THE HUNGERGAMES: MOCKINGJAYscreeningsifaccompanied byalegal Fri-Sat: 12:30, 3:30, 6, 8:30 PART1 (PG-13) guardian. Fri-Sat: 2, 4:45, 7:30 Sun: 12:30, 3:30, 6 • s I Mon-Thu: 6:30 Sun:1,3:30,6 Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, Mon-Thu: 3:30, 6 • The upstairs screening room has limited Bend, 541-241-2271 • INTERSTELLAR (PG-13) accessibility
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DON KELLEHER,BROKER,THE KELLEHERGROUP, 541-480-1911
2469 sq.ft., 4 bedroom, 2.5 bath built by RD Building & Design. Wood floors, 8' doors, mud room, office.
Brand new Franklin Brothers built. 2020 sq.ft., 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath. Wood laminate floor, granite counters. $319,900 • MLS 201404950 DIRECTIONS: East on Butler Market, right on Nolan Ct., left on Evelyn Pl. 21376 Evelyn Place.
$399,900 • MLS 201409634 DIRECTIONS: NE 27th St., east on Rosemary Dr., right on Atherton Ct. 2318 NE Atherton Court.
OPEN SAT-TH1'RS 12 S
OPEN SA11'RDAY 12-3
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KIRK SANDBURG, BROKER 541 556 1804 1501 sq.ft. single level Franklin Brothers built. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, covered porch, great room. $279,900 • MLS 201406380 DIRECTIONS: NE Butler Market to Daniel Rd,right on Brooklyn Ct. 21318 Brooklyn Court.
DAWN ULRICKSON, BROKER, CRS, GRI, ABR 541-610-9427 Architecturally designed home on private 2.38 acres. 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath. Huge studio with separate entrance
$629,900 • MLS 201410190 DIRECTIONS: Knott Road to Pine Vista, 1st right on Woodside Loop. 60443 Woodside Loop.
OPEN SA'1'1IRDAY 3-5
OPEN SA1'-TH1IRS 12-S
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SUE CONRAD, BROKER, CRS 541-480-6621
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LISA MCCARTHY, BROKER 541-419-8639
Excellent Bend hangout! Close to Winter 8 Summer activities. OK to rent out. Fantastic amenities.
BRANDNEWFranklin Brothers home - 1851sq,ftr 3 bedroom, 2,5 bath, Dreamkit<henwith quartz <ounters, tons of cabinets 8 sunlight!
$114,900 • MLS 201408963
$309,900 • MLS 201400554
DIRECTIONS: Century Drive, left at Seventh Mountain Resort, follow signs. 18575 Century Drive ¹539.
DIRECTIONS: East on Butler Market to Nolan Court. 21367 NE Nolan Court.
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www. bendproperty.com 541-382-4123 • 486 SW Bluff Dr., Old Mill District, Bend, OR 97702
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