Serving Central Oregon since1903 75g
TUESDAY October 29,2013
a nween ru ma eeas Caveceanup AT HOME• D1
LOCAL• B1
bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
MEDICAL POT IN CENTRAL OREGON
n ri
Defidrillator as aweapOn. — It seems far-fetched, but Dick Cheney disabled the wireless capability of the one inhis chest. Was heat risk?A3
By Lauren Dake The Bulletin
SnakeS —Turns out our fear may be hard-wired.A3
State-dound — AdeepSisters girls cross-country team
is ready to run. Plus moreto watch for from local teams.Ct
Cellphone etiquette — A
Mirror
SALEM — While a state committee works to establish guidelines to regulate newly legalized medical marijuana dispensaries, some Central Oregon cities are saying no matter what stance the state takes, pot
shops are illegal. Madras city officials were recently approached by a couple interested in opening a
dispensary. For Madras Mayor Melanie Widmer, the answer was easy: no. "Our business license says businesses have to abide by local, state and federal law," she said. And under federal law, marijuana is illegal. In Metolius, a town of about 700 southwestofMadras, Mayor Bill Reynolds said he was approached by the same individuals, who have yet to of-
ficially apply. But he's not a fan of the idea.
"I (am trying) to set aside
my personal views ... and look at it objectively. Would this benefit the city and do we really want to have it there?" he said. State lawmakers approved a m easure during thisyear's legislative session legalizing medical marijuana dispensaries. Prior to the Legislature's approval,
POnd
the dispensaries operated in a
"legal gray zone."
The state panel has until Dec. 1 to solidify plans on how to regulate the dispensaries. The state will likely run a website where would-be operators can
apply
dovvn By Hillary Borrud and Scott Hammers The Bulletin
Dispensaries that are currently operating will not be grandfathered and will need to
PacifiCorp pulled the drain plug on Mirror Pond early
appiy See Marijuana /A4
study delves into who uses phones at meetings, what's
Monday, opening up the sluice gates on the Newport Avenue Dam to allow for the inspection of a recently discovered leak. Bob Gravely, spokesman for PacifiCorp, said the utility plans to lower the pond on the Deschutes River at a rate of 2 inches per hour for two to three days until the water has dropped enough for inspectors to approach the dam
acceptable andwho's bothered by it.C6
Better frying —sure, maybe don't do it every day, but that's no reason to reject deep-frying done at home.DS
safely.
ln national news —The
"I was told it could be pretty low, even lower than anyone in town has ever seen it," he said. Gravely said the inspection itself is expected to take around eight hours. No repairs will be performed this week. Once the inspection is complete, PacifiCorp will close the sluice gates, and the pond wlll return to the roughly two feet-below-normal level it's been at since the leak was discovered early this month. "There's no fix planned; this is the assessment that will inform all of our deci-
Obama administration considers an end to spying on allied heads of state.A2
And a Wed exclusiveWashington, D.C.'s quirkier monuments offer windows into the ever-shifting spotlight.
bendbulletin.com/extras
EDITOR'5CHOICE
A trophy thief goes for the god
sions going forward, that's both the fix, and the long-term plans for the dam," Gravely said. See Pond/A4
By Joe Drape New York Times News Service
As far as heists go, the disguise was cartoonish — the thief was swaddled like a ninja from head to toe. His method was neither high-tech nor elegant — he kicked in doors and smashed glass cases. But his taste was impeccable, and sporting: His haul included the 1903 Belmont Stakes trophy, a silver Faberge soup tureen and ladle given by Czar Nicholas II of Russia to a U.S. harness horse impresario and the U.S. Amateur Championship trophy that completed golfer Bobby Jones' grand slam in 1930. In all, in less than 18 months trophies and memorabilia valued at nearly $1 million were stolen from three museums and a country club in New York and New Jersey by what the authorities say is probably the same male suspect. The thefts have caught the attention of the FBI and antiques dealers, have broken the hearts of horse racing and golf enthusiasts, and have prompted theories ranging from the common street crime variety to complex schemes worthy of "The Sopranos." Even as rewards for information have topped $35,000, the cases remain unsolved, which has become increasingly disheartening for officials at the victimized museums. SeeThief /A4
Ryan Brennecke i The Bulletin
And areaderphoto
Marijane Krohn walks past a small snowman on her way to breakfast at The Breakfast Club in Bend following a light dusting of snow Mon-
Students monitored online, too
day morning. At least in the short term, the forecast is
/(/'/'c
for a return to more sunshine and higher
i J) xI-y~X
temperatures. Still, it might be time to start thinking about
By Somini Sengupta New York Times News Service
studded tires, which become legal to drive with Courtesy Byron H. Dudley
Byron H. Dudley of Sisters discovered this ice pattern along the Metolius River at Camp Sherman.
Friday. Tire stores are already reporting some lines. See story, Page B1.
Submit your wintry photos tobendbulletin.com/signsofwinter, and we'll pick the best for publication in the Outdoors section.
Military's fat test questioned as troopsturn to lipo By Julie Watson The Associated Press
SAN DIEGO — Soldiers often call plastic surgeon Adam Tattelbaum in a panic. They need liposuction — fast. Some military personnel are turning to the surgical
TODAY'S WEATHER Sunny High 44, Low 26
Page B6
proceduretoremove excess fat from their waists in a desperate attempt to pass the Pentagon's body fat test, which relies on measurements of the neck and waist and can determine their future prospects in the military. "They come in panicked
about being kicked out or getting a demerit that will hurt their chances at a promotion," the Rockville, Md., surgeon sald. Servicemembers complain that the Defense Department's method of estimating body fat
weeds out not just flabby physiques but bulkier, muscular builds. Fitness experts agree and have joined the calls for the military's fitness standards to be revamped. See Fitness/A4
INDEX
The Bulletin
At Home D1 - 6 C lassified E1 - 6 D ear Abby D6 Obituaries B 5 C1-4 Busines s/Stocks C5-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Horoscope D6 Sports D6 Calendar B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State B1-6 TV/Movies
Vol. 110,No.302, 30 pages,
AnIndependent Newspaper
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SAN FRANCISCO — For years, a school principal's job was to make sure students were not creating a ruckus in the hallways or smoking in the bathroom. Vigilance ended at the schoolhouse gates. Now, as students complain, taunt and sometimes cry out for help on social media, educators have more opportunities to monitor students around the clock. And some schools are turning to technology to help them. SeeMonitoring/A5
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• . reviewin s in
under the president's health care overhaul law. The move had been
expectedsinceW hiteHousespokesman JayCarneypromisedquick By Kimberly Dozier
As a result of the spying allegations, German officials said and Julie Pace The Associated Press Monday that the U.S. could lose WASHINGTON The access to an important law enObama administration is conforcement tool used to tracktersidering ending spying on allied intelligence programs." rorist money flows. As possible heads of state, a senior adminisFeinstein, D-Calif., said in a leverage, German authorities tration official said, as the White statement that the White House cited last week's non-binding House grappled with the fallout had informed her that "collec- resolution by t h e E uropean from revelations that the U.S. tion on our allies will not con- Parliament to suspend a posthas eavesdropped on German tinue." The administration offi- 9/II agreement allowing the Chancellor Angela Merkel. cial said that statement was not A mericans access to b a nk The official said late Monday accurate, but added that some transfer data to track the flow that a final decision had not unspecified changes already of terrorist money. been made and an internal re- had been made and more were A top German official said view was still underway. being considered, including she believed the Americans The revelations about ¹ terminating the collection of were using the information obtional Security Agency moni- communications from friendly tained from Merkel to gather toring of Merkel were the lat- heads of state. economic intelligence apart est in a months-long spying Theofficialwasnotauthorized from terrorism and that the scandal that has strained long- to discussthe review by name agreement known as SWIFT standing alliances with some and insisted on anonymity. should be suspended. of America'sclosest partners. Earlier Monday, Sen. Dianne Feinstein, chairwoman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, called for a "total review of all
action last week to resolve a "disconnect" in the implementation of the law. Under the latest policy change, people who sign up by the
end of open enrollment season onMarch 31will not face a penalty. That means procrastinators get a graceperiod. Previously you hadto sign up by the middle of February, guaranteeing that your coverage would take effect March1, in order to avoid fines for being uninsured. Ponn Stoto SottlomontS —Penn State said Monday it is paying $59.7 million to 26 youngmenover claims of child sexual abuse at the hands of former assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky, a
man once revered as auniversity icon who is now serving what is effectively a life prison sentence. Nearly two years after the retired coach was first charged with child molestation, the school said 23 deals were fully signed and three were agreements in principle. It did
not disclose the names of the recipients. Theschool faces six other claims, and the university says it believes some of those do not have merit while others may produce settlements.
Slfrlo WoopnnS —International inspectors overseeing the destruction of Syria's chemical weapons stockpile havemissed an early deadline in a brutally tight schedule after security concerns prevented them from visiting two sites linked to Damascus' chemical program. Experts from the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemi-
cal Weapons were to havechecked all 23 of Syria's declared chemical
OUR ADDRESS Street
Health laW —With website woes ongoing, the Obamaadministration Monday granted asix-week extension until March 31 for Americans to sign up for coveragenext year andavoid newtax penalties
1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, OR97702 P.o. Box6020 Bend, OR97708
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sites by Sunday, but the organization said Monday that inspectors have visited only 21 because of security issues. While there are no
consequences for missing the deadline, the group's failure to meet it underscores the ambitious timeline as well as the risks its inspectors face in carrying out their mission in the middle of Syria's civil war.
MiChael JaCkSOn dOCtOr —Conrad Murray, the doctor convicted in the death of pop star Michael Jackson, was released from
smuoo Aw.
Men's Central Jail at12:01 a.m. Monday,authorities confirmed. Upon his release, Murray, who served two years behind bars for the 2011 involuntary-manslaughter conviction, eluded a waiting scrum of TV
DcsuuesRe
camerasanddie-hardJacksonfans.The60-year-oldwassentenced to the maximum four-year term for his role in Jackson's death on June 25, 2009, from an overdose of the anesthetic propofol, which
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the doctor had administered. Detrait dankruptoy —Gov. Rick Snyderof Michigan, in testimony Monday, forcefully defendedDetroit's bankruptcy filing as alastditch effort to stem the city's decades-long financial decline. "This is a crisis," the governor said in U.S. Bankruptcy Court. "It still is a crisis
DEPARTMENT HEADS
today." Thegovernor's highly anticipated testimony cameat a pivotal
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Slavery comment —A Nevadaassemblyman came under fire
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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org
MEGABUCKS The numbers drawn Monday night are:
01702103004104404s The estimated jackpot is now $3.9 million.
Sang Tan / rhe Associated Press
People watch waves batter into the sea wall Mon-
day at a marina in Brighton, south England.
northern part of the Continent.
Gusts of 99 mphwererecorded in the south of
One of the most powerful storms in Europe in years left at least13 people dead — most crushed by fall-
England as the storm brought parts of Britain to a standstill, uprooting trees, overturning a double-
ing trees — hundreds of thousandswithout power
decker bus andtoppling a crane near the London of-
and manystranded Monday when trains,planes and ferries were canceled after high winds battered the
fice of the deputy prime minister, Nick Clegg. — New York TimesNews Service
Monday after a YouTube video surfaced in which he told a Republican gathering he would vote to allow slavery if that is what his constituents wanted him to do. "If that's what they wanted, I'd have to hold m y nose ...they'd probably have to hold a gun to my head, butyeah," Assemblyman Jim Wheeler told members of the Storey County
Republican Party at a meeting in August. His comments wereswiftly denouncedbyRepublicansand Democratsalike. — From wire reports
THE major par HEALTH OF ofTexas YQUR abortion law BUSINESS By Erik Eckholm New York Times News Service
A federal judge in Texas on Monday blocked an important part of the state's restrictive new abortion law, which would have required doctors performing the procedure to have admitting privileges at a nearby hospital. The decision, one day before the provision was to take effect,was a victory for abortion rights groups and clinics that saidthe measure served no medical purpose and could force as many as one-third of the state's 36 abortion clinics to close. But the court did not strike down a second measure, requiring doctors to use a particular drug protocol in nonsurgical, medication-induced abortions. Doctors have called that protocol outdated and too restrictive. Judge Lee Yeakel of U.S. District Court in Austin declared that "the act's admitt ing-privileges provision i s without a rational basis and places a substantial obstacle in the path of a woman seeking an abortion of a nonviable fetus." Texas officials quickly said they would appeal the decision to the 5th U.S. Circuit C ourt of A p peals, in N e w Orleans, and Yeakel said that "at the end of the day, these issuesare going to be decided definitively not by this court, but by either the circuit or the Supreme Court of the United States." Courts in Alabama, Mississippi, North Dakota and Wisconsin have blocked similar admitting-privilege r e quirements as part of the continuing battles over how much states may restrict the right to abortion granted by Roe v. Wade in 1973.
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TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
MART TODAY
A3
TART • Discoveries, breakthroughs, trends, namesin the news— the things you needto knowto start out your day
It's Tuesday, Oct. 29, the 302nd day of 2013. There are 63 days left in the year.
RESEARCH HAPPENINGS
Primate brainsmayexplain
Tallball —The leaders of Afghanistan andPakistan meet in London to discuss the whereabouts of Mullah Abdul
humans'fear ofsnakes
Ghani Baradar, asenior Taliban leader.
By Geoff reyMohan
other words, getting out of the way of snakes. "The characteristics we have help us to see them better than other mammals can see them," Isbell said. "Mammals in general are
Los Angeles Times
Affordadle CareAct-
We're not born with a fear of snakes, but it sure seems to develop early. N ow scientists may b e closer to a explaining why ophidiophobia ranks among the top fears of h u mans, and seems to be shared with other primates. Researchers i nse r t ed probes into the brains of Japanese macacques and found that neurons in a part of their brain that controls visual attention were more
The HouseWaysand Means Committee holds a hearing on
the health care law.
Dick Cheney says that to prevent terrorists from sending a fatal shock to HISTORY Highlight:In1929, Wall Street
crashed on"Black Tuesday,"
movement. But snakes lie in wait. They don't move very much, so it's crucial to see them beforethey see us and to avoid them." Developing new additions to the brain would have given ancestor primates an advantage. Many scientists asstrongly and quickly ac- sumed the advantage had to tivated in response to imdo with catching insects for ages of snakes, versus other food. But Isbell shook that objects. view of p r imate evolution The results, published on- in 2006, eventually elaboline Monday in the journal rating on it in a book, "The Proceedings of the National Fruit, the Tree and the SerAcademy of Sciences, ap- pent: Why We See SoWell." "They w e r e act u a l ly pear to support a theorythat early pr imates developed prey," Isbell said. "And the advanced perception as an firstof the modern predae volutionary r e sponse t o tors of p r imates, and the being prey, not as an adap- most persistent, that contintation that may have made ued to this day — and that foraging or hunting easier. look the same as they did Though fear o f s n akes 100 million years ago — are may not be innate, noticing snakes." them more than other pheThe researchers used two nomena may be hard-wired monkeys raised in captivity by evolution, said Lynne Is- that had no opportunity to bell, an evolutionary biolo- encounter a snake. Probes gist from the University of m easured r e s ponses t o California, Davis, and one snakes, faces and h a nds of the authors of the paper. of monkeys, and geometThat heightened attention, ric shapes. More neurons research has shown, can responded to th e s nakes, lead to early and resilient and did s o w i t h g r e ater learned behavior, such as s trength an d s p eed, t h e fear-mediated avoidance. In data showed.
his defibrillator, he had his doctors disable the wireless capability. Could somebody really kill you that way?
heralding the beginning of
America's GreatDepression. In1618, Sir Walter Raleigh, the English courtier, military adventurer and poet, was executed in London. In1787, the opera "Don Giovan-
ni"byW olfgangAmadeus Mozart had its world premiere in Prague. In 1901, President William
McKinle y' sassassin,LeonCzolgosz, waselectrocuted. In 1923, the Republic of Turkey
was proclaimed. In 1940, Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson drew the first number — 158 — in America's first peacetime military draft. In 1956, during the Suez Canal
crisis, Israel invadedEgypt's Sinai Peninsula. "The Huntley-
Brinkley Report" premiered as NBC'snightlytelevision newscast. In1960,achartered planecarrying the California Polytechnic State University football team crashed on takeoff from Toledo, Ohio, killing 22 of the 48 people
on board. In 1966, the National Organiza-
tion for Womenwasformally organized during aconference in Washington, D.C. In1967, Expo 67 in Montreal,
Quebec,Canada,closed after six months. In 1979, on the 50th anniversary of the great stock market
crash, anti-nuclear protesters tried but failed to shut down the New York Stock Exchange. In1987, following the confirmation defeat of Robert Bork
to serve onthe U.S. Supreme Court, President Ronald Rea-
gan announcedhis choiceof Douglas Ginsburg, anomination that fell apart over revelations of
Ginsburg's previous marijuana use. Jazzgreat Woody Herman died in Los Angeles at age 74.
In1994,gunmanFrancisco Martin Duran fired more than
two dozenshots from asemiautomatic rifle at the White House.
(Duran waslater convicted of trying to assassinate President Bill Clinton andwassentenced to 40 years in prison.) In1998,Sen. John Glenn, at
age 77, roaredback into space aboard the shuttle Discovery, retracing the trail he'd blazed for
America's astronauts 36years earlier. In 2004, Osama bin Laden, in a
videotaped statement, directly admitted for the first time that he'd ordered the Sept.11 at-
tacks andtold America"the best way to avoid another Manhat-
tan" was to stop threatening Muslims' security. Ten yearsago: International
organizations continued their exodus from Iraq in the wake of
car bombings in thecapital and attacks against coalition troops.
Five yearsago:A 6.4-magnitude earthquake in southwestern Pakistan killed at least 215
people. One yearago:Superstorm Sandy cameashore in NewJersey and slowly marched inland. It
swamped lowerManhattan with a13-foot surge ofseawater, devastated New Jersey coastal communities andleft more than 8 million people without power.
BIRTHDAYS Actor Richard Dreyfuss is 66.
Actor Dan Castellaneta ("The Simpsons") is 56. Comic strip artistTom Wilson ( Ziggy ) is 56. Singer RandyJackson is 52. Actress Winona Ryder is 42. Actress lndia Eisley
(TV: "The Secret Life of the American Teenager") is 20. — From wire reports
By Gina Kolata New York Times News Service
In a c h i l ling episode of "Homeland" last year, a terrorist killed the vice president with a fiendishly clever weapon: a remote-control device that attacked the computerized defibrillator implanted in his chest. For former Vice President Dick Cheney, it was all too realistic. Cheney, who had heart disease for decades before receiving a transplant last year, had such an implant to regulate his heartrate and shock his heart back into life, i f n ecessary. The defibrillator could be reprogrammed wirelesslyfrom a shortdistance away. In 2007, he had the wireless feature disabled. About the "Homeland" scenario, Cheney said on the Oct. 20 episode of "60 Minutes": "I found it credible. It was an accurate portrayal of what was possible." But was it really? Medical experts say the answers are surprisingly complicated. Cheney's cardiologist, Dr. Jonathan Reiner of G eorge Washington University, said in the "60 Minutes" interview that he agreed with his patient. An assassin "on a rope line or in a hotel roomnext door" could have instructed the defibrillator to kill Cheney, he said, adding that a wireless programmable device "seemed to me a bad idea for the vice president of the United States." Other expertssay the scenario is highly unlikely, though they couch t h ei r a n swers carefully. The devices, used by millions of Americans, transmit data from a patient's home to a doctor's oNce, alerting the doctor of a malfunction. But the communication goes only one way; the devices being used today cannot be reprogrammed remotely. Instead, patients must go to a doctor's office. With some devices, they must be within inches ofthe reprogramming machine. Others can be reprogrammed from about 30 feet away, but a wand must be held close to patients' collarbones to identify them to the machine. "My opinion is it is probably unlikely that a remote attack of this nature could happen today," said Kevin Fu, a University of Michigan expert on computer security. But he emphasized the word " probably," adding t hat h e would never say something is impossible. "There can always be a flaw we are unaware of," he said. In fact, a precedent for the "Homeland" episode was a 2008 paper by Fu and others, who reported they had managed to change the settings on an implantable defibrillator so it would release deadly electric shocks. Of course, Fu noted, the experiment required almost a dozen people in a lab full of Ph.D.s. And investigators had to be as close as two inches from the defibrillator. Still, the experiment became known as a proof of principle. It originated a decade ago, when Fu noticed that the Food and Drug Administration had issued arecallforsoftware on an implanted heart device. He began to wonder about software updates and the security of medical devices. So he started calling cardiologists, trying to get more information. Many hung up on him, Fu said, adding, "They thought I was crazy to worry about the security of a device in the chest."
WNET via New York Times News Service
A chest X-ray shows an implantable defibrillator, which will shock a heart that is beating out of control. Some researchers are studying the unlikely but chilling threat that the life-saving medical device could be hacked into for nefarious purposes or crippled by malware. Finally, he got together with a colleague, Tadayoshi Kohno, a computer security researcher at the University of Washington. The two investigators and their colleagues set to work seeing if they could breach the security of a defibrillator that had been removed from a patient's chest. The defibrillator and the device used to program it communicated in their own language from a distance no greater than a few inches, Kohno said. The
really good at picking up
a hospital. Another time, malware got into a fetal monitor, making it slow down. In 2011 alone, the Department of Veterans Affairs reported nearly two dozen malware infections in its hospitals. "There are m a ny, m any computers in hospital environments," Kohno said. "We need to seriously consider their safety and privacy."
group figured out the language by turning various therapy commands on and off. After they learned the communication language, "we could generate the commands ourselves." At that time, "security was not on the radar yet" for medical devices, Fu said. "But there was a rapid trend toward wireless communication and Internet connectivity. We definitely raised awareness." He immediately heard from the device industry group, the Advanced Medical Technology Association, or AdvaMed, which invited Fu and Kohno to speak to its pacemaker working group, a small meeting where members discuss policy issues. Now, the device manufacturersare acutely aware of security issues, said Bernie Liebler, a director in the group's technology and regulatory affairs department. "Everyone runs a risk management program," Liebler said. "You look at what can go wrong, what are the risks, what are the harms, what is the probability, what is the severity. "You look at even the craziest risk. Could that happen by accident'? Could it happen on purpose? You try to design a system in a way to make it not happen or to nullify what someone can do." And that includes the risk Cheney worried about. "Clearly, hacking into a digital device is a new risk," Liebler said. "But it is a risk, and we are clearly concerned about it." Cardiologists have noticed a
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change. "Over the years, manufacturers have added featuresthat make it harder and harder to get into the software," said Dr. Spencer Rosero, of the University of Rochester Medical Center. The identifying wand is one such feature, said Dr. Arthur Moss, a cardiologist also at the University of Rochester. So far, though, there has never been a reported case of anyone maliciously reprogramming a patient's implanted defibrillator, Fu said. Today, he and others said, the real risk with electronic medical devices is much more mundane. It is the accidental introduction of the disruptive software called malware. For example, Fu said, malware got into a pharmaceutical compounder, which controls the mixing of medications, at
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Lenny Ignelzi/The Associated Press
A group of sailors and Marines who failed the so-called "tape test" are led by an instructor on a 3mile run as they work to improve their fitness and remain in the military at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot in San Diego. A number of fitness experts and doctors think the test penalizes some fit troops wrongly and are calling for the military's fitness standards to be revamped.
Fitness
diers booted forbeing overweight has jumped tenfold in Continued from A1 the past five years from 168 They say th e P entagon's in 2008 to 1,815. In the Maweight tables are outdated and rine Corps,the figure nearly do not reflect that Americans doubled from 102 in 2010 to are now bigger, though not 186 in 2011 but dropped to 132 necessarily less healthy. last year. D efense officials say t h e The Air Force and the Navy test ensures troops are ready said they do not t rack disfor therigors of combat. The charges tied to the tape test. military does not condone surStill, service members say gically altering one's body to they are under intense scrupass the test, but liposuction is tiny as the military trims its not banned. ranks because of budget cuts The Pentagon insists that and the winding down of the only a small fraction of service Afghanistan war. members who exceedbody fat Dr. Michael Pasquale of Alolimits perform well on fitness ha Plastic Surgery in Honolulu tests. said his military clientele has "We want everybody to suc- jumped by more than 30 perceed," said Bill Moore, director cent since 2011, with about a of the Navy's Physical Readi- half-dozen service members ness Program. "This isn't an coming in every month. "They have to worry about organization that trains them and says, 'Hey, get the heck theircareers,"the former solout.'" dier said. "With the military The Defense Department's downsizing, it's putting more "tape test" uses neck and waist pressure on these guys." measurementsrather than the Military insurance covers body mass index, a system liposuction only if it is deemed based on an individual's height medically necessary, not if it and weight that is widely used is considered cosmetic, which in the civilian world. would be the nature of any Those who fail are ordered procedure used to pass the to spend months in a vigorous test. The cost of liposuction exercise and nutrition pro- can exceed $6,000. Some service members go gram, which M arines have nicknamed the " pork c h op on crash diets or use weights to platoon" or "doughnut bri- beef uptheirnecks so they're gade." Even if they later pass, in proportion with a l a rger failing the test once can halt waist. Pasquale said liposucpromotions for years, service tion works for those with the members say. wrong genetics. "I've a ctually ha d c o m Failing three times can be grounds for g etting k i cked manders recommend it to their out. troops," Pasquale said."They'll The number of Army sol- deny that if you ask them. But
they know some people are in really good shape and unfortunately are just built wrong." Jeffrey Stout, a sports science professorat the University of Central Florida, said the tape test describes the body's shape, not it s c omposition, such as the percentage of body fat or the ratio of fat to muscle. "I wouldn't want my career decided on that," he said. A more accuratemethod, he said, would be to use calipers to measure the thickness of skin on three different parts of the body. "That way these guys are not hurt by a bad measurement," said Stout, who has researched the accuracy of different body c o mposition measurements. S trength-and-power a t h letes and those who do a lot of twisting that builds up the muscle tissue over the hips would likely fail the Defense Department test, he added. M ilitary officials say t h e tape test is still the best, most cost-effective tool available, w ith a marginof error of less than I percent. Air Force Gen. Mark Walsh noted only about 348 of 1.3 million airmen have f ailed the tape test bu t e x celled otherwise. Even so, his branch heeded the complaints and modified its fitness program in October. The Air Force obtained a waiver from the Pentagon so airmen who fail the tape test but pass physical fitness exams can be measured using the body mass index.
horseplayer to calculate that the odds are pretty good that the trophies have been melted for their metals and a big score. "I've never seen a significantsecondarymarketfortrophies," said Robert Wittman, a former senior investigator and founder of the FBI Art Crime Team, who now has his own protection and recovery firm. "At the same time, they are not the best thing to steal for the melt. There's a lot of garbage metal in there to get to what's valuable." Melting down the trophies could also b e c o mplicated because theitems have been listed with national and international art registries and, with the help of the FBI, according to Catone, word of them has been spread to art and antiques dealers. "We haveflooded the zone," Catone said. "There are a limited number ofprofessionals who can melt and extract the full value from them." It appears the thief started off modestly, then grew bolder and moreparticular. He first came to the attention of the authorities in New Jersey in May 2012 when the Somerset Hills Country Club reported trophies had been taken from its clubhouse. A week later and 15 m inutes away, in Bernards Township, he struck the U.S. Golf Association Museum, making off with the U.S. Amateur trophy and a replica of Ben Hogan's Hickok Belt, made of alligator skin and with a solid gold
Continued from A1 "These ar e o n e -of-ak ind t r ophies t hat a r e , well, priceless," said Brien Bouyea, a spokesman for the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame in Saratoga Springs, N.Y., where five trophies valued at a h a lf-million dollars were stolen. "They have a unique look. You just can't sell them on eBay." How the thief has eluded the state and local police as well as federal authorities is a product of intelligence, not dumb luck. Why he has homed in on cherished hardware from the sporting world is a m atter of debate. " Whoever it i s i s e x p erienced at w h a t t h ey do," said John Catone, an a ssistant chief w it h t h e Saratoga Springs Police Department. "The question is, is i t a b out having something of historic value or is it about melting down the gold'?" At the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame, as in the previous thefts, Catone said, video s urveillance shows t h at the thief w o rked quickl y an d c o n f idently. H e smashed two cases with about a h a l f-dozen trophies in each. But he took only five in t otal. Three of them ha d s ignificant amounts of gold: the 1903 Brighton Cup Trophy won by Hermis (35 ounces, 18karat gold); the 1905 Sara-
buckle and an encrusted fourcarat diamond, which Hogan received in 1953 as the nation's top professional athlete. "We don't discuss value, but we consider it significant," Joe Goode, a spokesman for the U.S. Golf Association, said of the belt. "And the U.S. Am Trophy is priceless as it dates back to 1926 and was the trophy that c ompleted Jones' grand slam in 1930." Last December, the thief broke into the Harness Raci ng Museum an d H a l l o f Fame in Goshen, N.Y., and made off with the Memphis
Gold Challenge Cup, the gold Weaver Loving Cup and a Tiffany basket-shaped bowl, as well as 10 other trophies dating from 1895 to 1946. "We were targeted because we looked like we were easy," said Janet Terhune, the museum's director. "The common thread of all these were that we were all easy hits." Museums might have been inviting targets because they would have allowed the thief to spend hours blending in with patrons as he took note of security protocols and selected his high-value targets.
All are in sleepy neighborhoods with security limited to alarms andsome surveillance cameras. All were hit quickly at night.
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both advocates and law enforcement officials, is working Continued from A1 to figure out how to regulate F ederal o f f i c ial s h a v e the dispensaries and test the made clear they don't plan to cannabis, to ensure it's milspend resources prosecuting dew- and mold-free. those who run and operate Rick Eslinger, a volunteer the dispensaries or pressure with Bend's Best Buds, a mediWashington an d C o l orado, cal m a r ijuana d i spensary, where marijuana was recently believes most people involved legalized. with dispensaries are looking But Gov. John K itzhaber forward to state regulations. noted when signing House People need a place where Bill 3460 that "nothing in this they canget good, "clean melaw protects the dispensaries, dicinal herbs," he said. Bend's Best Buds has been growers, caregivers, or patients from federal prosecution." testing its cannabis for the The Oregon Health Author- past two years. Having a clean ity does not believe it has the product is one element that authority to p r e-empt local separates what is sold on the decisions. streets from what's offered in The state panel, made up of dispensaries, he said.
Bend Mayor Jim C l inton has a differentstance from his counterparts to the north. So far, he said, nobody has complained about the dispensaries, some of which have been operating in the city for a couple of years. "I think there is potential if they expand a lot, it could cause friction and people will ask us to do something about it," Clinton said. That hasn't happened yet. "As long as it's legal and not causing any more trouble than any other kind of retail, wherever they are located, then it's hard for the city to single them out," he said.
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Continued from A1 Engineers from the Oregon Water ResourcesDepartment will also inspect the dam while water is low this week. Bend City Councilor Mark Capell said PacifiCorp and the state will separately produce reports on the viability of the dam. "We expect toknow something in six weeks," Capell said. Kyle Gorman, south central region manager with the Oregon Water Resources Department, said Monday that the state normally inspects this dam once every three years, with its last inspection in July 2012. "But, given the opportunity with the water level being very low and some other coordinated efforts, we thought it would be good to get out there and inspect," Gorman said. Gravely said the PacifiCorp inspection will be conducted on the downstream side of the dam, once the water is low enough that it is no longer flowing through the hole in the dam. Inspectors will examine all 13 wooden "bays" visible from the Newport Avenue Bridge, he said, as well as the concrete portion of the dam between the wooden dam and the powerhouse. Mirror Pond Project Man-
ager Jim Figurski said city and parks officials have not yet scheduled the next meeting of the M i r ror Pond ad hoc committee. The committee was formed by Bend City Council and the Bend Park & Recreation District to refine a final plan for the future of the landmark body of water in the heart of Bend. In the meantime, Figurski plans to take advantage of the lower water level to take more photographs of the pond. "I'll probably get more photos," Figurski said. "I'd like to get it as low as possible, because I think it helps people visualize." On Friday, a subcommittee that consists of Capell, park district E x ecutive D i r ector Don Horton and park district lawyer Neil Bryant met privately with the utility. "Basically, we w anted to know w ha t P a cific P ower wanted to do with the dam," Capell said. "We basically said we'd like to know what your plans are. At this point, they want to wait until they see the results of the studies and at that point, they'll be able to look at the economics of the dam and figure out the best
long-term approach." Capell said he did not know when he and Horton and Bryant will next meet with Pacifi-
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Corp executives. Gravely said t h e u t i l i ty will keep the public informed about the results of the dam inspection this week, though the utility may not share all of its findings. Over the last f ive years, t hree leaks have been r epaired in the wooden portion of the dam. While the newest leak appears to be similar, the more-than 100-year-old dam is nearing the end of its useful life as a power generation facility. In order to maintain water levels, the dam's hydroelectric turbines have been turned off since the discovery of the hole. This w e e k' s i n s pection should help determine whether PacifiCorp ca n f e asibly repair and continue operating the dam, Gravely said. If not, the utility would have the choice of transferring ownership to another entity that would continue running it, or dismantling the structure, effectively draining Mirror Pond permanently. "I think there's this impression you can just go down and nail up some plywood, and it's a little more involved than that," Gravely said. — Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrudCbendbulletin.com — Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammersCbendbulleti n.com
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TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN A S
Monitoring Continued from A1 Several companies offer services to filter and glean what students do on school networks; a few now offer automated tools to comb through
off-campus postings for signs of danger. For school officials, this raises new questions about whether they should — or legally can — discipline children for their online outbursts. The problem has taken on new urgency with the case of a 12-year-old Florida girl who committed suicide after classmates relentlessly bullied her online and offline. Two other girls — ages 12 and 14 — whom the authorities believe were her chieftormentors were arrested this month after one posted a Facebook comment abouther death. Educators find themselves needing to balance students' free speech rights against the dangers children can get into at school and sometimes with the law because of what they say in posts on Facebook, Twitter and Tumblr. Courts have started to weigh in. In September, a federal appeals court i n N e vada, for instance, sided with school officials who suspended a high school sophomore for threatening, through messages on Myspace, toshoot classmates. In 2011, an I n diana court ruled that school officials had violated the Constitution when they disciplined students for posting pictures on Facebook of themselves at a slumber party, posing with rainbowcolored lollipops shaped like phalluses. "It is a concern and in some cases, a major problem for school districts," said Daniel Domenech, executive director of the American Association of School Administrators, which represents public school superintendents. Surveillance o f s t u dents' online speech, he said, can be cumbersome and confusing. "Is this something that a student has the right to do, or is this something that flies against the rules and regulations of a district'?"
declined to say which other schools his company works with, except to predict that by the end of the year, his company would have signed up 3,000 schools. But when does protecting children from each other or f rom t hemselves turn i n t o chilling free speech'? John Palfrey Jr., head of P hillips Academy i n M a s sachusetts,said he favored a middle ground. He follows his students on Twitter if they follow him, for instance, but he is wary of automated analytical tools that try to conduct what he called National Security Agency-style surveillance.
courts. In the Nevada case, a 16-
sented "a real risk of significant disruption" to the school. Administrators were justified, the court ruled, for penalizing what was ostensibly off-cam-
year-old boy b ragged on Myspace about having guns at home, and threatened to slay fellow students on a particular date. He also cited the 2007 massacre at Virginia Tech, in which a troubled student killed 32 students.
"It's going to be more and more of l egal issues," said Gretchen Shipley, a l awyer who represents school districts. "The ability to monitor is
The boy ended up spending
growing so quickly."
31 days in a local jail and was suspended from school for 90 days. He then sued the district,
The Indiana case offers a contrast. In the summer of 2009, two incoming 10th-graders at Churubusco High School posted what the court called "raunchy" pictures of themselves. Once school officials found out, the girls were sus-
saying his free speech rights had been violated. The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals dismissed the claim. It called his threats "alarming" and so specific that they pre-
Courts puzzled That fine l in e seems to be equally confounding the
pended from extracurricular activities for the school year. The girls sued, saying their free speech rights had been violated. The school contended that its student handbook bars conduct that could "discredit" or "dishonor" it. The court found that prohibition way too broad. The students' pictures, "juvenile" t hough they were, did n o t cause "substantial disruption" at school, the court ruled, and even though it was just "crude humor," was protected speech. "No message of lofty social or political importance was conveyed, but none is required," the court said.
pus speech.
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Evolving risks, enforcement Interviews with educators suggest that surveillance of students off campus is still mostly done the old-fashioned way, by relying on students to report trouble or f ollowing students on social networks. Tracking students on social media comes with its own risks: One principal in Missouri resigned last year a fter accusations that s h e had snooped on students using a fake Facebook account. "It was our children she was monitoring," said one Twitter user who identified herself as Judy Rayford, after the news broke last year, without, she added, "authorization" from children or parents. But technology i s c atching on. In August, officials in Glendale, a suburb in Southern California, paid Geo Listening, a technology company, to comb through the social network posts of children in the district. The company said its service was not to pry, but to help the district, Glendale Unified, protect its students after suicides by teenagers in the area. Students mocked the effort on Twitter, saying officials at GUSD, the Glendale Unified S chool District, w ould n o t "even understand what I tweet most of the time, they should hire a high school slang analyst.shoutout2GUSD." "We should be monitoring gusd instead," one Twitter user wrote after an instructor was arrested on charges of sexual abuse; the instructor pleaded not guilty. ChrisFrydrych, the chiefexecutive of Geo Listening, based in Hermosa Beach, also in Southern California, declined to explain how his company's technology worked, except to say that it was "a sprinkling of technology and a whole lot of human capital." He said Geo Listening looked for keywords and sentiments on posts that could be viewed publicly. It cannot, for instance, read anyone's Facebook posts that are designated for "friends" or "friends of friends." But with F acebook's announcement this month that teenagers will be permitted to post public status updates and images, Geo Listening and similar services will potentially have access to more information on that social network. Glendale has paid Geo Listening $40,500 to monitor the social media posts. Frydrych IQ
He briefly contended with this question last year when studentscreated a blog where they could anonymously share "secrets." Many posts were on the fringe, Palfrey recalled, and some teachers and students were concerned that children's identities could be determined from their writing patterns. The blog's student founders were persuaded to add a note of caution, warning participants that t h eir identities could be potentially discovered.
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THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2013
Well shot! reader photos
Following up on Central Oregon's most interesting stories, evenif they've been out of the headlines for a while. Email ideas to newsCmbendbulletin.com. O» To follow the series, visit www.bendbulletin.com/updates.
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NOV. 5 ELECTION Ballots are in the mail. If you haven't received
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clerk's office: Deschutes...541-388-6546 Crook ..........541-447-6553 Jefferson ....541-475-4451
count. Hereare the issues on local ballots: City of Bend • Measure 9-94: In-
crease the temporary lodging rate from 9 to 10 percent, then to 10.4 percent.
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~~/ Pete Enckson iThe Bulletin file photo
J. Clairo Dean, an archaeological conservator, rubs chemicals into a small portion of the graffiti sprayed onto the walls of the Hidden Forest Cave in 2012. Q To see a video about the cleanup efforts, visit www.bendbulletin.com/cleanup. By Dylan J. Darling
said. Some brought with them a bag full of spray paint cans. The partIdng turned to vandalism as members of the group took to tagging the south cliffs of the cave entrance. In doing so, they covered over pictographs, old paintings on the cave walls. The damage to the pictographs increased the cleanup cost, and the restitution ordered from the vandals. SeeGraffiti /B5
Vandalism line
The Bulletin
The graffiti is gone from Hidden Forest Cave south of Bend, and volunteersand U.S. ForestService law enforcement officers are keeping watch to avoid a repeat of vandalism there two years ago. "It definitely looks a lot better," said Eddy Cartaya, the law enforcement officer with the Deschutes National
To report vandalism on the Deschutes National Forest call 541-383-5300. Forest who investigated the case. A group of seven or eight people met up at the cave, the sunken entrance of which holds tall timbers, to party around a fire in April 2011, he
Deschutes County • Measure 9-96: In-
WHAT'S HAPPENING WITH ...
crease the transient room tax outside incor-
porated areas by 1 percentage point,
CRIMINAL CASES
from 7to 8 percent.
Deschutes audCrook counties • Measure 9-95: Form Alfalfa Fire District and
Montana Marlatt faces charges of murder and firstm s-I SilkMarlatt degree manslaughter for allegedly killing Devon Moschetti, 19, with whom he was shooting targets in April.
create a permanent
Kevin
taxing district at a rate
O'Connell
of $1.75 per $1,000 assessed property value.
r
Luke @' Wirkkala
Deschutesaud Jefferson counties • Measure 16-69: Re-
new operations levy for Crooked River Ranch Rural Fire Protection District at a rate of 69
Joshua Jokinen
cents per $1,000 assessed property value. Jefferson County • Measure 16-70: Levy a
five-year jail operations tax of $1.24 per $1,000 assessed property value.
and improvements to schools in the Culver School District.
Read ourstories Coverage leading up to the election is at
bendbulletiu.com/
The former Bulletin employee was
Marlatt has pleaded not Marlatt is scheduled for a guilty to the charges and is pretrial conference onNov. 4 being held in the Jefferson No trial date is set. County jail. O'Connell pleaded not
arrested in August 2012 onsuspicion of guilty March 18. prostitution and second-degreesexabuse Wirkkala is charged with one count of murder after he allegedly shot and killed his houseguest, 31-year-old David Ryder, Feb. 4 in Bend.
.:O'Connell is expected to goto . :trial Nov. 19.
: :Wirkkala pleaded not ' guilty on June 7 and a bail : 'hearing scheduled for last
Wirkkala's trial is scheduled for Jan. 7.
.::week wascanceled.
Jokinen is charged with one count of Joki n en was arraigned on A motion to allow a bail hearing murder after he allegedly beat Carolyn : : S ept. 9 and is being held inis scheduled Nov. 18. Burdick to death with a shovel on Aug. 31. the Deschutes County jail.
OTHER STORIES Kevin Perry : Perry shot and killed Shane Munoz in June 2012 after : Perry allegedly returned
• Measure 16-71:
Approve $8 million in bonds for repairs
Vfe
ies a
ome Bulletin staff report A 10-year-old Redmond girl who underwent an experimental cancer treatment in Philadelphia earlier this year died Saturday. Family friend Camie Hewitt confirmedthe child passed us away at home. Avrey Walker h ad been batWal k e r tling acute lymphoblastic leukemia since she was 4, undergoing several rounds of chemotherapy. She had relapsed three times since first becoming ilL No services had yet been scheduled for Avrey, whose story touched many in the Redmond community, prompting fundraisers and prayer vigils there and in her parents' hometown of Coquille. At the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia in March, Avrey became the seventh child in the world to participate in a clinical trial that targeted blood cancers like chronic lymphocytic leukemia, nonHodgkin lymphoma, andthe cancer of the immune system's B-cells that Avrey suffered from. SeeWalker/B6 I•
Submission requirements: Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.
Ballots must be returned at a drop box or mailed to your clerk's office by 8 p.m. Nov. 5. Postmarks do not
www.bendbulletin.conn/local
home to find Munoz in his : home. Summit1031: Local company allegedly : misappropriated $44 million : in client funds; it filed for : :bankruptcy in 2008.
Desert Sun : Thirteen employeesand Management: 'associateswereaccused of
The Deschutes County District Attorney's Office asked the Bend Police Department in April to re-examine the events surrounding the case. According to an email, the DA's office
arrests made.
considers the case"open indefinitely." Threeexecutivesofthecompany,LaneLyons,MarkNeuman Sentencing is set and Timothy Larkin, went on trial in June, and a jury found all for Dec. 16.
three guilty of wire fraud andconspiracy charges. Theyhave since filed a motion requesting a new trial.
All charged in the case, including Desert Sun President Tyler The remaining
Fitzsimons, have pleaded guilty. Two have already been : multimillion-dollar loan fraud sentenced. , :in2009
electioo2013
No charges have been filed or
participants are to
be sentenced in December.
Sheepdog case ends with fines, probation • Judge also orders forfeiture of rifle Bulletin staff report Two hunters, one a retired Oregon State Police trooper, pleaded no contest Tuesday in Prineville to a single count each of misdemeanor animal abuse for the killings in August 2012 of three Great Pyrenees sheepdogs in the Ochoco National Forest. Brothers Paul Johnson, 67, of Roseburg, and Craig Johnson, 60, a retired OSP officer, of Bend, were sentenced to two years probation, 80 hours community service and $500 fines, said Crook County District Attorney Daina Vitolins. Presiding Circuit Court Judge Daniel Ahern also ordered a.223-caliber rifle the pair used to kill the dogs forfeited, Vitolins said. A hunting ban on the pair is fitting punishment, said Vitolins, who had asked for five years probation The two men while bowhunting elk near the Walton Lake Snow Park, shot the three dogs, which were property of Gordon Clark of Madras, according to the Crook County Sheriff's Office. See Dogs/B2
Correction "Transcriptionist works toward artful expres-
A glimpse of winter weather means it must be time to talk tires
sion," which appeared
By Tyler Leeds
A story headlined
Saturday, Oct. 26, on
Page B1, incorrectly reported the award given this year to Cameron Prow from the Literary Harvest Writing Contest. Prow was awarded first
place in the memoir category. The Bulletin regrets the error.
The Bulletin
As winterapproaches there'smore to remember than simply moving your clocks back an hour before going to bed Saturday night. On Monday, Bend woke up to its first real taste of snow. The good news is that forecasters at the National Weather Service in Pendleton do not foresee any immediate winter weather escalation. ln fact, they called Monday's snowy
weather "unusual." Nonetheless, on Friday it becomes legal for Oregon drivers to use studded tires. Even though we are a few weeks
away from the typical beginning of snowy weather, there's still good reason to have winter-worthy tires in place
early. "ln Central Oregon, it doesn't matter what tire store you're going to; when studs are legal and it's snowing, people are going to line up out the door," said
Bob Burks of the Nelsen Tire Factory on North U.S. Highway 97 in Bend. "On thatkind ofa day,w e'd be backed up for hours. Even today because of the weather, we're backed up for two hours." Drivers do not have to buy studded tires. Burks said chains are the most reasonably priced option, but that the labor required to put them on makes them less useful for unexpected ice. There are also nonstudded traction
tires, including all-season and winter tires, which can both help in the snow. Winter tires are best for rough conditions and typically offer more traction than studded tires. But Burks said a set of fourcan costover $1,000,depending on the tire size needed. Oregon Department of Transportation spokesman Peter Murphy said that there are good reasons to explore nonstudded tires. SeeWeather /B6
B2
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2013
E VENT T DAY PUMPKIN PATCH:Featuring a pumpkin patch, petting zoo and various activities daily; hay rides, pony rides, train ride andface painting Sat.-Sun.; Cafe openFri.-Sun; free admission, charge for activities; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; DDRanch, 3836 N.E. Smith Rock Way,Terrebonne; 541548-1432 or www.ddranch.net. PUMPKIN PATCHANDMARKET: Pick a pumpkin or visit the market; free admission; noon-6 p.m.; Central Oregon Pumpkin Co.,1250 N.E. Wilcox Ave., Terrebonne; 541-5041414 or www.pumpkinco.com. "A CLASSAPART:AMEXICAN AMERICANCIVILRIGHTS STORY": A screening of the 2009 film about an underdog band of Mexican American lawyers who took their case to the SupremeCourt; free; 4 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Hitchcock Auditorium, 2600 N.W. College Way,Bend; 541-318-3726. KNOW CULTURA:TRADITIONAL COOKINGWITH VERONICA CASTRO: A demonstration and tasting of traditional empanadas; bilingual; free, registration required; 6 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1032 or www.deschuteslibrary.org. THE RISE, FALLANDRISE OF SPORT HUNTINGIN AMERICA: Learn about the role of hunting in 19th century America; $3, free for members, reservation requested; 6-8 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. IJ.S. Highway 97,Bend;541-3824754 or www.highdesertmuseum. org. OREGON ENCYCLOPEDIAHISTORY NIGHT:"Notorious Crimes of Central Oregon" presented byOregon native and performer Alastair Jaques; free; 7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. BondSt., Bend; 541-3825174 or www.mcmenamins.com. THE MANHATTAN TRANSFER:The pop group performs; $45-$65 plus
AL E N D A R fees; 7:30 p.m., doors open at 6:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. INDUBIOUS: The Southern Oregon reggae band performs, with New Kingston andSolSeed;$8 inadvance plus fees, $10at the door; 8 p.m.; Liquid Lounge,70 N.W .NewportAve., Bend. RAYTARANTINO: The Nashville, Tenn.-based singer-songwriter performs; free; 8 p.m.; Blue Pine Kitchen and Bar, 25S.W.Century Dr., Bend; 541-389-2558 or www. bluepinebar.com.
WEDN DAY PUMPKIN PATCH:Featuring a pumpkin patch, petting zoo and various activities daily; hay rides, pony rides, train ride andfacepainting Sat.-Sun.; Cafeopen Fri.-Sun; free admission, charge for activities; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; DDRanch, 3836 N.E. Smith Rock Way,Terrebonne; 541548-1432 or www.ddranch.net. PUMPKIN PATCH AND MARKET: Pick a pumpkin or visit the market; free admission; noon-6 p.m.; Central Oregon Pumpkin Co.,1250 N.E. Wilcox Ave., Terrebonne; 541-5041414 or www.pumpkinco.com. KNOWCULTURA: SUGARSKULLS: Prepare anddecorate the traditional Day of the Deadtreat; grades 6-12; free; 2 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-3121034 or tinad©deschuteslibrary.org. KNOWCULTURA: DAYOFTHE DEAD 8TITLAKAWAN: Explorethe history and practice of Day of the Dead, build a typical alter and seea performance of Titlakawan; free; 6 p.m.; Downtown BendPublic Library, 601 N.W.Wall St.; 541-312-1034 or tinad@deschuteslibrary.org. 'THEMETROPOLITAN OPERA: THE NOSE"ENCORE:Starring Paulo Szot as abureaucrat who has satirical misadventures in search of
Dogs
A call to Paul Johnson was not returned Monday. A numContlnued from B1 ber for Craig Johnson was The dogs provided protec- di sconnected. tion against predators for the Contacted at th e ir hu n t thousands of Clark's sheep ing camp Aug. 27, 2012, by grazing on national forest al- sheriff's Deputy Br ian Botlotments at the time. toms, Craig Johnson said the In co u r t, th e bro t h e rs "dogs screwed up their hunt claimed they shot the dogs by chasing the elk out of the because they were chasing area," Bottoms wrote in hi s elk, were aggressive toward report. "'Quite frankly, we them, and that t hey ne ver were going to shoot every one saw the band of about 1,000 of them,' meaning what they sheep grazing nearby, Vito- believed to be the wild dogs lins said. "They then blamed that they saw." the victim, Go rdon Clark," The two, at first, allowed Vitolins said. Bottoms to leave the camp She said the brothers fault- without te lling th e de p uty ed Clark for failing to post the they knew a nything about proper signs that h is fl o ck the shootings, according to was grazing nearby and for the deputy. When Bottoms refailing to properly mark the turned later in the day, Craig dogs and keep them close to Johnson owned up t o t h e the flock. Clark and Vitolins shootings, the deputy wrote. said the sheep owner h a d "Craig also informed me i t posted signs. was not until I had mentioned
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communitylife@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at wtvw.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
his missing nose; opera performance transmitted live in high definition; $24, $22 seniors, $18 children; 6:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901.
THUR DAY
STREET: Participating business will be identified by a "Welcome Here" pumpkin and will be handing out candy; free admission; 4-6 p.m.; downtown Redmond; www. visitredmondoregon.com/. TRICK-OR-TRUNK: A trick-or-treat out of vehicles (golf carts, trucks, wagons), ghostly photos, cookie decorating contest and more; free; 5-8 p.m.; Crooked River Ranch Administration Building, 5195 S.W. Clubhouse Drive; 541-923-2679.
HALLOWEEN BASH: Featuring a haunted house, prizes, games, treats and giveaways; $5; 6-9:30 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. MainAve., Sisters; 541815-9122 or www.belfryevents.com. HALLOWEEN HALL: Trick-or-treat at the college's Juniper Hall; for ages12 and younger; free; 6-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 PUMPKINPATCH:Featuring a N.W.CollegeW ay,Bend;541-383pumpkin patch, petting zoo and 7593. various activities daily; hay rides, pony rides, train ride andface painting "SHAUN OF THE DEAD": A screening Sat.-Sun.; Cafe openFri.-Sun; free of the horror-comedy film (2004, admission, charge for activities; 9 rated R) about an aimless salesman a.m.-5 p.m.; DDRanch, 3836 N.E. dealing with his roommate and Smith Rock Way,Terrebonne; 541zombies; $9 plusfees;7 p.m .,doors 548-1432 or www.ddranch.net. open at 6 p.m.; TowerTheatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or PUMPKINPATCHANDMARKET: www.towertheatre.org. Picka pumpkin or visit the market; free admission; noon-6 p.m.; Central THE SCAREGROUNDS: A haunted Oregon Pumpkin Co.,1250 N.E. house; recommended onlyforages Wilcox Ave., Terrebonne; 541-50412 and older; $12 for one haunt, $20 1414 or www.pumpkinco.com. for two haunts, $25 for three haunts; 7 p.m.,gates openat6:30 p.m.;old OLD MILLDISTRICT HALLOWEEN Parr Lumber buildings, 443 S.W. PARTY:Featuring crafts and trickor-treating in stores and restaurants, Evergreen Ave., Redmond; 541-548wagon rides, activities and more; free; 4755 or www.scaremegood.com. 4-7 p.m.; Old Mill District, 661 S.W. HALLOWEENPARTY: Featuring Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312a movie-themed costume party 0131 or www.theoldmill.com. with prizes and live music by Moon REDMONDFIREANDRESCUE Mountain Ramblers with Grit and HALLOWEEN PARTY:Trick-or-treat Grizzle; $7; 8 p.m., doors open at 7 at the Redmond fire station, with p.m.; Volcanic TheatrePub,70 S.W . games and information about fire Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881. safety; free; 4-8:30 p.m.; Redmond Fire 8 Rescue,341 N.W.Dogwood HALLOWEEN PARTY: Music Ave.; 541-504-5000 or www. featuring Tony Smiley; free;10 p.m.; visitredmondoregon.com/. Dojo, 852 N.W.Brooks St., Bend; 541TRICK-OR-TREATON SIXTH 706-9091 or www.dojobend.com.
the sheepherders guard dogs pected the pair would receive were shot that his heart sank, heftier fines and more comand he knew at that time they munity service. "It's sad to hear a retired had screwed up," Bottoms' report states. state policeman tell one story Attorney Jo n S p r i n ger, to the arresting officer, anof Bend, said Monday he's other story to the grand jury known Craig Johnson "the and another story in court tobetter pa rt o f 30 yea r s ." day — none of which makes Springerrepresented the for- sense," Clark said. "And to mer trooper on the shooting hear his brother say he drove charges. "I find Craig John- all around the area and saw son to be one of the most hon- dog tr acks a nd mi s sed a est people I've ever met in my thousand sheep wa s a l s o life," Springer said. "When he troubli ng." came to me, telling me this is The two were indicted on the story, I believed him." three counts each of first-deBottom line, Springer said, gree criminal mischief, a fel"both Paul and Craig John- ony, and first-degree animal son had a reasonable belief abuse. these dogs were feral, they Paul Johnson's defense atwere c hasing wi l dlife a n d torney J. Brendon Alexander, they were threatening them." of Bend, said his client beClark, who br ought a 5 - lieves he did nothing wrong. month-old Great Pyrenees to The Johnsons' dispute porthe courthouse parking lo t tions of Bottoms' report and for Ahern to see, said he ex- Clark's knowledge of sheep
FRIDAY FIRSTFRIDAY GALLERY WALK: Event includes art exhibit openings, artist talks, live music, wine and food in downtown Bend and the Old Mill District; free; 5-9 p.m.; throughout Bend. COLUMBIARIVERCIRCUIT FINALSRODEO: Topcowboys in the Northwest compete in bareback, saddle back, roping, bull riding, barrel racing and more; tickets available at Big R in Redmond, Boot Barn in Bend and Prineville Men's Wear; $15, $10 for Saturday daytime; 5:30p.m.;DeschutesCounty Fair & Expo Center, Hooker CreekEvent Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 888-849-2723. SAINTS GALA: A Moulin Rouge themedeventemceed by Mosely Wotta and auctioneer, Fred Northup, Jr., with games, a gourmet dinner, live auction and post-dinner after party; proceeds benefit the St. Charles Foundation's programs; $150, $1350 for a table of ten; 5:30 p.m.; TheRiverhouseConvention Center, 2850 N.W. Rippling River Court, Bend; 541-706-6996 or www. stcharlesfoundation.org. AUTHORPRESENTATION:Rick Steber presents his new book"Red White Black: ATrue Story of Race and Rodeo"; $5; 6:30 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 422 S.W.Sixth St., Redmond; 541-526-1491. THE SCARE GROUNDS: Ahaunted house; recommended onlyforages 12 and older; $12 for one haunt, $20 for two haunts, $25 for three haunts; 7 p.m.,gates openat6:30 p.m.;old Parr Lumber buildings, 443 S.W. Evergreen Ave., Redmond; 541-5484755 or www.scaremegood.com. "RAISE THEREDLANTERN": A screening of the1991 Chinese film (PG); free; 7:30 p.m.; Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County Library, 134 S.E. ESt., Madras; 541-4753351 or www.jcld.org.
and dog behavior, he said. Alexander and Spring said that once their clients understood Bottoms was investigating a report of sheepdogs shot to death, they ac k n owledged shooting the animals. The two remained at the scene, camping,after shooting the do g s, evidence of their lack of co nsciousness of guilt, Anderson said Monday. According to Bo ttoms' report, Craig Jo hnson told him he shot one dog chasing an elk and his brother shot
LORD'S ACRE DAY:The 67th annual event features a craft sale, bakedgoods,live music,abarbecue dinner, an auction, 10K run, 5K walk and more; proceeds benefit Powell Butte Christian Church projects; free admission, $10 barbecue, $15 in advance or $20 day of event to race; 7:30 a.m. registration, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. events; Powell Butte Christian Church, 13720 S.W.State Highway 126; 541-548-3066 or www. powellbuttechurch.com. VFW BREAKFAST:A breakfast of pancakes, eggs, sausage or ham; $8.50; 8-10 a.m.; VFWHall, 1503 N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 541-3890775. EXCEPTIONALRODEO:A rodeo for participants with mental or physical disabilities; free; 9-10:30 a.m.; Deschutes County Fair& Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541-548-2711 or www. rascalrodeo.org. ART PARTY:View and purchase works from a variety of artists; a portion of proceeds benefits St. Charles Foundation's Sara's Project, a breast cancer prevention and awareness organization; free admission; 10 a.m.-6 p.m.; Harkness-Williams home, 1 Beech Lane, Sunriver; 541-788-2486 or sunriversister©yahoo.com. WILDFIREPOTTERY SHOWCASE: Featuring ceramic demonstrations, potter booths with pieces for sale, children's area, raffle and more, hosted by the ClayGuild of the Cascades; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Highland Magnet School, 701 N.W.Newport Ave., Bend; 541-279-0343 or www. clayguildofthecascades.com. THE BENDBURN: Live music by The Dirtball, Vokab Kompany, Mosley Wotta and others, with glass blowing, food carts and more; free; noon-9 p.m.; Industrial Site, 62870 Boyd Acres Road.
two more, one "barking and growling" at them and another standing in the road. "He's sick about it; he really is," Alexander said about Paul Johnson. "Neither of t h e se guys had any consciousness of guilt, never felt they did
anything wrong."
Q NQRTHWEsT CROSSING
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neighborhood on Bend's mestside.
mplements Hn.n s '3n,t e~in.~b 70 SW Century Dr., Ste. 145 Bend, OR 97702• 541-322-7337 complementshomeinteriors.com
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NEWS OF RECORD POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log whensuch arequest is received. Any new information, such asthe dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358.
PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 8:39 a.m. Oct. 26, in thearea of Southwest Second Street. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered with items stolen at10:24 p.m. Oct. 26, in the areaof Northeast Holly Street.
Theft —Atheft was reported at 9:19 p.m. Oct. 27, in the area ofNortheast Third Street.
Theft — A theft was reported at 9 a.m. Oct. 24, in the100 block of Northwest Depot Road inMadras.
JEFFERSON COUNTY O R EGON STATE SHERIFF'S OFFICE p O L ICE Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 5:15 a.m.Oct. 21, in the area of U.S.Highway 97near milepost 87 in Madras. Theft —Atheft was reported at 10:45 a.m. Oct. 21, in the 700 block of Northwest Glass Drive in Madras. Burglary — A burglary and atheft were reported at 2:30 p.m.Oct. 22, in the 8500 block of Southwest Culver Highway in Culver. Theft —A theft was reported at 3:21 p.m. Oct. 23, in the 5700 block of Southwest ElbeLane in Culver.
DUII — JoshuaJohn Harden, 22, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at12:17 a.m. Oct. 26, in thearea of Northeast Third Streetand Northeast Greeley Avenuein Bend.
DUH —Charles Allen Caison, 23, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at1:15 a.m. Oct. 26, in the area of U.S.Highway 97 near milepost127 in Bend. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 8:03 a.m. Oct. 26, in the area of U.S.Highway 20and Windigo Trail. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at12:18 p.m.Oct. 26, in the area of state Highway126 near milepost 3.5 in McKenzieBridge.
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TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON AROUND THE STATE
romSa -a- Ome ' rimm' r
Plane CraSheS intO hOme —Authorities say a pilot whose plane crashed into a house in Oregon has died, but a woman inside the dwell-
ing escapedwithout injuries. The McMinnville Police Department says the crash occurred Monday afternoon, southwest of Portland. The first law enforcement officers to arrive said the plane hit a garage and ended
up inside thehome. Thepilot has notyet been identified. The Federal Aviation Administration is investigating the crash. The Yamhill County News-Register said the woman escaped along with her pets.
Park ShOOting —A 25-year-old man accused of shooting a forBy Candy Fuqua
Armisen down the street. Gettings quit his regular role on "Grimm" when he moved to Corvallis last fall for his wife's job. Auditions always take place in Portland, he said, and they are hardly worth it, financially speaking. "I had to go up there for an audition last week — 700people for two roles," he said. Gettings will soon start work as a classified substitute for the Corvallis School District, and he has been keeping busy with his other passion. "I entertain the kids with my bad jokes and make sure they don't throw any plastic in the compost bin," he explained. Clad in a First Alternative Co-op T-shirt advertising "Eat local," Gettings on Friday spent hislunch hour like he doesevery weekday — at Hoover Elementary School making sure the 400-plus grade-schoolers properlyseparate trash from compostable material. He runsthe school's compost program every Monday through Friday, diverting 250 pounds of organic material from the landfill per week. Being in front — or to the side of — the camera hasn't lost its appeal, however, even since his move to Corvallis. An agent last year finally took a chance on Gettings, which ledto his six-line role as a referee in a 30-second Ford commercial. It was shot in August and is currently being aired in Portland.
Corvalfis Gazette-Times
CORVALLIS — When Sean Gettings was cast as an extra in the television series, "Grimm," a
couple of years ago, he showed up on the Portland set expecting to play a doctor in a one-time gig.
Those plans quickly changed, however, and helped send the stay-at-home dad with no acting experience on an unanticipated path of appearances on additional television shows, movies and, most recently, his first speaking role in a 30-second Fordcommercial.
Courtesy of Sean Gettings/The Associated Press
"They hired four (people to Sean Gettings,background, appears in a scene ofthe TV show play) Portland officers for the day and only three showed up, so they looked at me and said, 'OK, you're tall and you're breathing,'" he recalled. The"Grimm" television series, which is now in its third season, follows a P ortland detective who's a descendant of hunters who fightsupernatural forces.
Cops are always shuffling papers at the precinct or milling about crime scenes as the main characters are delivering lines to push the plot forward. Though a dozen or so officers were cast, Gettings became one of the recurring extras, or featured background characters, shown in 27 episodes in the first and second seasons. "Because I had been in so many episodes, I got 'promoted.' They put me in a polo shirt and made me a precinct captain," he said, laughing. "Nobody
"Grimm," which is filmed in Portland, with actor Daniel Baldwin.
knows. Nobody watches the background." At the time, Gettings lived in Portland and took care of his kids during the day while his wife worked. He was the bikeride and walk-to-school coordinator, as well as the recycle coordinator, at his son's elementary school, and he volunteered with other organizations. His schedule, however, was flexible enough to be on the "Grimm" set two to three days a week during the few weeks it took to shoot an
episode. T hough an extra has no speakinglines — thatwould lead to becoming a union member and far higher pay — he learned the art of movement, he said. "They picked four or five cops that they liked that knew how
to act and make the cuts and suicide squeezes," he said, explainingthe term: "The camera's moving, the main actor is coming into a scene and you have to cutbetween the camera and the main actor. You're just like ablur, but you're that blur that makes that scene go into the next scene. You have to do it right or they have to do it all over again." The experience opened the door to being cast in other shows and movies filmed in Portland. His gigs in the sketch comedy series, "Portlandia," were the most fun, he said. In one of the more bizarre sketches filmed in the summer of 2012, he and two othermeninsilverspandexbody suits were cast as concrete that eventually stood up and chased show co-creator and actor Fred
mer Bonneville Power Administration hydrologist has been arraigned
on a murder charge. Daniel Bruynell was being held without bail in Portland following his extradition from Northern California. A probable cause affidavit states Bruynell told detectives he shot Tiffany
Jenks after meeting her in abar. The35-year-old woman's body was found Oct. 8 at a park east of Portland. Two other people connected to the shooting were also in court Monday. Deputy District Attorney
Christopher Ramrassaid that 40-year-old Michelle Worden-Brosey and 38-year-old Joshua Robinett were indicted on charges of hindering prosecution and obliterating serial numbers on a firearm. — From wire reports
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had license taken in '09 The Associated Press PORTLAND — The new executive director of the Oregon Liquor Control Commission says his license was suspended in 2009 following a string of traffic tickets. Steve Marks said Monday the tickets were for speeding, failing to buckle up and driving with an obscured windshield. His license was later reinstated. The revelation follows last week's news that Marks was arrested in 2010 on suspicion of drinking and driving in Washington County. Though a state trooper considered Marks to be impaired,prosecutors decidednotto presscharges after he blew 0.05 on the breath test, which is below the legal limit. Marks, 52, said he's sorrythe focus has been on him instead of the agency since Thursday's appointment, and h e p l a ns to lead the commission with distinction. Marks s ai d h e co n s ide red withdrawing from t h e $ 140,000-per-year jo b a f t e r Willamette Week broke the news ofhis arreston suspicion of DUL "I knew my character would be impugned by it," he said. "It made me think, did I want to go through with it? But I'm standing with my principles." The Oregon Liquor Control Commission buys and sells spirits and enforces alcohol rules. It has a particular focus on the prevention of drinking and driving. In 2006, thenOLCC Executive Director Teresa Kaiser quickly resigned after she was arrested on suspicion of drunken driving and later convicted. The liquor commission had been without a p e r manent director since Gov. John Kitzhaber forced Steve Pharo into retirement last year. Marks has been a loyal aide to Kitzhaber foryears and was chiefofstaff at the end of Kitzhaber's first stint as governor. He takes over an agency that is attempting to modernize the way it buys and sells liquor. N o r thwest g r o cers, meanwhile, are looking at the possibility of a ballot initiative to privatize sales.
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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2013
The Bulletin
EDITORIALS
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8 Ie can wai ow might not be the best time for the city of Bend to change the way it charges residents for the wa-
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ter they use. With a major, multimillion-dollar water system upgrade in the works, officials have calculated the
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way they'll pay for the improvements and don't want to try anything that could throw thenumbers off. That's both understandable and acceptable. When you're in the process of shelling out somewhere between $40 million and $60 million in water system improvements, plus another big chunk of change on sewer system fixes, knowing where the money's coming from is critical. However, the idea of switchingto a billing system that charges more per gallon of water as a household uses more has a certain appeal. If, for example, you want people to use less, one quick way to get there might be to do just that. It's an idea the city has looked at before. Yet the change could have unintended consequences, says City Manager Eric King. In fact, a system that ramped up charges as use went up might well be a boon to large users and a problem for smaller ones. That's because the city now charges a flat rate for the first 400 cubicfeeta household uses, $33.04 for 30 days. After that, all users pay the same rate for each additional 100 cubic feet of consumption, one
that's higher per cubic foot than the fixed rate is. As a result, on a sliding scale system where a homeowner must pay for each cubic foot of water used, smaller water users might well see bills go up. At the top end of the scale, for the city's major users, King said the opposite might actually be true, and water bills could fall. The city does plan to look into the way it bills for both water and sewer, but not just yet, King said. Rather, he expects a review to begin sometime next year, perhaps in spring or summer. A look at both rates makes sense, he said, because equipmentisnowavailabletogauge not only how much water goes into a home but how much goes back into the city's sewer system. It does make sense to look at the issue, however. If officials can find a way to make rates reflect usage without hurting customers who use less, total consumption could go down. And,living on the edge of a desert, as we do, that's a good thing.
M Nickel's Worth Say no to partisan politics
Slowing Intel expansion isn't in state's interest here's no evidence of any health hazard from Intel's release of fluoride into the air at its Hillsboro campus outside Portland. And even critics said they don't want the chip-maker's expansion slowed orstopped, which could endanger the company's success in a highly competitive industry. But that's exactly what could result from the slow process of governmental regulation combined with environmental groups' threat to sue. Intel failedto disclose the fluoride release, which it says exceeds state but not federal standards, according to The Oregonian. After the company discovered last year that the disclosure was required, it reported to the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality and apologized to its neighbors. DEQ says it could take months to figure out if the fluoride issue means Intel needs a higher level of clearance for its multibillion-dollar research facility, which is now under construction. And if the answer is yes, the project might have to stop for at least a short period, especially
T
if activists file suit. Environmentalists said they're not seeking delay, according to The Oregonian,but theywant Intelto follow the law and engage in dialogue with its neighbors. Still, delay is an option they could seek if not satisfied with the company's response. Residents are entitled to expect their corporate neighbor to satisfy legal requirements and assure them of their health and safety. And they have every right to sue if they become convinced that's not happening and regulators aren't protecting them. Likewise, the DEQ must assure that the law is followed. But if there's no health hazard and the company is cooperati ve — as it appears to be — it would be counter-productive to force a damaging delay. The chip-making business is intensely competitive, and a slow-down could put Intel at a disadvantage and ultimately hurt its 17,000 Oregon employees and the region's economy. Critics, neighbors, regulators and the company need to work together to be sure a technicality with no concrete effects doesn't cause real damage to jobs and economicdevelopment.
When the Affordable Care Act was being debated in Congress, Republicans keep saying no to provisions that would have made the law a workableplan and would have helped everyone. What we have now is a bad compromise. Now the Republicans say that the ACA is a bad idea and we need to redo it. Well, of course, that was their plan. The ACA is not as good as it could have been because the Republicans would not allow anything else topass. This country is a representative democracy, not a democracy; we elect people to represent a faction of people.What we have now is a Republican Party that represents the Republican point of view. They vote as a block. This is not a representative democracy; it is partisan politics. This is not good for the nation. Let's not allow this partisan politics to continue. Tell your representatives not to play this game with their constituents. Vote only for people who place the nation above the party. Republicans said when President Barack Obama was elected that they would do all they could to make him a one-term president. That did not work, but they continue to pursue that objective. This is not what our country is built on. This is a great country because we work togetherfor the greater good of all the people, and not for the good of the party. Vernon Frost Bend
How is the horse? An amusing footnote to the recent article on President W.H. Taft's struggle with obesity: In 1901, Taft
was appointed governor general of
the Philippine Islands, which at the time was a newly acquired "territorial possession" of the United States. Taft was a workaholic with few hobbies or outside interests, adding to his health problems. His boss in Washington, Secretary of War Elihu Root, a tall, lean, very fit man, had often chided Taft over his lack of exercise and spiraling weight gain while at his new post. One day, a telegram to Root arrived from Taft in which he boasted, "Yesterday spent eight hours in the saddle on a grueling 8-hour horseback ride up to Baguio (a mountain town at an altitude of more than 5,000 feet above sea level). This morning feel fit as fiddle and invigorated." Root telegraphed back. "Forget about you. How is the horse doing?" Bob Fulton Bend
our state representative.) And now the time has come for us to share Conger with more Oregonians, who will also benefit from his service. Serving as a U.S. senator will enable Conger to continue to connect with Oregonians, and will allow him to more fully and positively impact our state as a whole. Our beloved Oregon can be a better, more hopeful place to live, work, play and visit. Yes, new hope is rising.
Allison Sternberg Bend
It's a system that works
My hat goes off to Republican Sen. John McCain of Arizona for his remarks on NBC after Congress was able to avoid the debt crisis deadline. McCain explained that the Republicans only control the House but Conger candidacy not the Senate or White House, and that as long as that is the case, Reencouraging publicans cannot just get their way. How is my morale and overall out- I am a public school teacher who has look for Oregon's future? Generally taught government, but I sometimes more excited, encouraged and hope- feel that some of our elected officials ful since Oct. 15, when Rep. Jason must have skipped their high school Conger, R-Bend, announced his inten- government class. The bottom line in tion to run for U.S. Senate. New hope a democracy is that the majority confor fresh leadership is rising. Conger trols the agenda of the government. is truly a diamond in the rough. I only The minority can work with the mawish we had more public servants as jority to create laws that help reflect talented, resourceful and as qualified. their values. Only in a dictatorship/auHis years of experience working with thoritarian/oligarchycanthe minority all types of people in the private sec- control the agenda of a nation — not tor, as both employee and employer, in a democracy. We all get our shot at along with his depth of knowledge being in the majority at some point. It of the law, is quite impressive. I am wasn't long ago that Democrats/liberthankful to Conger for faithfully rep- als were in the minority and were upresenting his Bend constituents with set about the agenda of the majority wisdom and integrity. His energy and Republican Party. The pendulum will innovative ideas are making a differ- swing, so be patient. Our system is ence in Bend and all around Oregon, one that works but only when everytoo. (Visit w w w .congerfororegon. one respects the realities of it. com for specific information regardDave Flagan ing Conger's achievements serving as Bend
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Robust local press mntributes to an informed electorate By Jon and Marty Stewart he recent shutdown of our federal government and thecontinuing battle about our debt ceiling underlines the importance of having a well-informed and knowledgeable electorate. The world is changing fast and with it our ability to obtain relatively accurate balanced news in a timely fashion. For over two centuries since the founding of this nation, our local and national conversations have
rest of us) newspapers have helped speed the rate of industrialization and brought democracy to much of the literate world. Today, with rapid growth of electronic media, ranging from television to th e I n ternet, newspapers or other forms of print, outlets are fighting for their survival. The result is both positive and negative. It means that more forests are left standing (every Sunday edition of The New York Times used to conbeen framed by newspapers sup- sume over 7,000acres of pulp timported by a n i n c r easingly l i ter- ber), but newspaper's circulation and ate electorate. The f ourth e state advertising revenue is collapsing. or press, which since the French A recent road trip around the PaRevolution has helped balance the cific Northwest showcased the rapid power of the other three estates (at decline in the availability and qualifirst defined as the clergy, the nobil- ty of news sources available to many ity and the peasantry but in today's rural communities. It is now almost world perhaps better defined as the impossible to find regional newspac hurch, the corporation and t h e pers available for sale in stores and
T
ucated electorate. Unfortunately, this no longer is true in many of our rural (and some newsstands in many r ural t owns of our urban) communities where in Idaho, Oregon and Washington. our fellow citizens are getting their The Oregonian is only sold on news- news from fewer sources, increasstands on Mondays, Tuesdays and ingly controlled by large corporaThursdays and apparently even then tions (which dominate broadcast mainly in the Portland metro area. media) or narrow interest groups More surprising was the decline in focusing on their own self-serving the quality of a r t icles discussing agendas (which dominate the Inlocal, regional and national issues ternet). This results in an electorate available in The Seattle Times and who increasingly choose radical The Idaho Statesman. representatives representing speAfter reading these three regional cialized interests. papers and a number of other loAs proved by the recent shutdown cal papers,we returned home, im- of our federal government, this pressed with the quality and quanti- makes it almost impossible for our ty of news found in The (Bend) Bul- representatives in Congress to find letin. We are very lucky to have a middle ground an d c ompromise. localnewspaper whose staffworks Thus, this decline in our fourth eshard to bring us quality journalism tate seems to be yet another reason in an effort to help us remain an ed- for a more fractured,self-centered
IN MY VIEW
electorate, leaving our government more easily swayed by extremists present in the first two estates. As we strengthen our vibrant local communities by building new schools, expanding our infrastructure and creating a healthy business environment, we are lucky to have a newspaper that helps us maintain an informed citizenry. Being located in the center of the state and surrounded by rural communities under-served by a moribund regional press, the staff at the The Bulletin should be proud of their leadership role in h elping maintain quality journalism to the Pacific Northwest. Only by keeping us informed and connected can we take the next step by encouragingthe leaders we elect to work together for the good of our country. — Jon and Marty Stewart live in Bend.
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
Graffiti
BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES Oliver Paul Steele III, of Bend May 13, 1923 - Oct. 22, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Celebration of Life Saturday, November 16, 2013 2:00 P.M. First Presbyterian Church 230 N.E. 9th Street, Bend, Oregon 97701. Contributions may be made to:
Partners In Care, 2975 N.E. Wyatt Court, Bend, Oregon 97701.
Patricia Ann Vandehey, of Bend Sept. 6, 1935 - Oct. 25, 2013 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds is honored to serve the family. Please visit the online registry at www.niswonger-reynolds. com 541-382-2471 Services: Graveside Service at a later date.
Vera Mecham Cowing Dec. 17, 1920 - Oct. 24, 2013 V era E m m a M ec h a m C owing, 9 3 , o f N am p a , passed a w a y p e a c efully Thursday O ct o b e r 24, 2013, in a Nampa care facility. She w as b o r n D ec. 17 , 1920 to Marion and M abel Mecham i n U ta h , a nd l a t e r moved Vera Cowing w ith her family to Oreqon. She m a r r ie d T o m F. Cowing. T h ey m ade their h ome i n Re d m o nd , O r egon where they opened a business called R e dmond Heating and S heet M etal, operating it for 36 years. After 50years of marriage Tom p r e ceded V e r a m death. S h e w a s also preceded in death by her parents; brothers, E r shel and Leland Mecham; sisters, Ardella Jones an d H e l l en M ace; an d b y a g r ea t grandson, Zachary Peiffer. V era i s s u r v ived b y h e r d aughters, Mar i e (J i m ) Dahlen, S h i rl i L a u g h ton, and Fran (Dave) Rowe; 10 g randchildren; 4 5 g r e a t grandchildren; and 4 greatgreat-grandchildren. Two y e a r s a go V er a moved t o N a m p a t o b e close to he r f a m i ly . Her family would like to thank t he staff a t F a m i l y L i f e Memory Ca r e f or th e entle, loving attention they ave shown Vera. F uneral services wil l b e held 11 a.m. Tuesday, Oct. 29, in th e L D S C h apel at 2212 E. Amity Ave., Nampa. A viewing w il l b e h el d a t the church f r o m 1 0 - 10:45 a.m. prior t o t h e s e r vice. Burial w i l l b e a t I p .m. W ednesday a t Re d m o n d Memorial C emetery, R edmond, Oregon. A r r a n g ements are under the direct ion of Zey e r Fu n e r a l C hapel, Na m p a , Ida h o ; 208-467-7300
DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around the world: Arthur Danto, 89: He was a philosopher who became one of the most widely read art critics of th e p ostmodern era,championing avantgarde artists like Andy Warhol and proclaiming the end of art history. Died Friday in Manhattan. Brig. Gen. Robinson Risner, 88: One of the nation's most decorated pilots in the Korean and Vietnam Wars, who spent seven and a half years in the infamous "Hanoi Hilton" prison after being shot down. Died Tuesday in Bridgewater, Va. William Lowe, 72: Supervised the creation of IBM's first personal computer, a technological touchstone that he insisted — an d p r oved — could be conceived, engineered and manufactured in
a single year by a company not known for speeding products to market. After gradu-
ating from college, he joined the company in 1962. Died on Oct. 19 in Lake Forest, Ill. — From wire reports
FEATURED OBITUARY
Poland achieved free elections with Mazowiecki's help The re n e wed protests brought WARSAW, Poland — For the communists T adeusz M a z owiecki, h i s to the negotiatt ransformation from a p r o - i ng table w i t h democracy writer and an inSolidarity, to Maz owiecki tellectual to a moving force in discuss the Poland began in 1980, when terms o f de m o cratization. h e joined r a nks w i t h t h e Mazowiecki authored many striking workers at the Gdan- of theseterms. sk shipyard who founded the Elections Solidarity movement. Nine yearslater,he became The outcome was Eastern the nation's first post-commu- Europe's first partly free parnist prime minister. liamentary election on June In both cases, he played 4, 1989, that gave Solidaran important role in Eastern ity seats in parliament and Europe's historic shift toward — hard to believe at the time democracy. — paved the way for the first Mazowiecki died on Mon- democratic government in the day at a hospital in Warsaw, cracking communist bloc. where he had been taken sevIn September, Mazowiecki eral days earlier with a high became th e r e g ion's f i r st fever, his personal secretary, democratic prime m i n ister. His V-for-victory sign to the Michal Prochwicz, said. He was 86. chamber on appointment beFighting back tears, Presi- came the symbol of Poland's dent Bronislaw Komorowski triumph over c o mmunism. said Poles should think with The country's peaceful revogratitude about everything lution initiated changes in the that has happened in Poland region — climaxing in the fall since 1989, when Mazowiecki of the Berlin Wall in Novemtook office. ber 1989. National flags were flown On Monday, Poland's and at half-staff on government foreign public figures praised and administration buildings Mazowiecki's achievements. across Poland. Poland's last c o mmunist Lech Walesa, the former leader, Gen. Wojciech Jaruelectrician who led the Solizelski, wh o w a s p r esident darity movement, said it was when Mazowiecki was prime a "pity that such great people minister in 1989-90, said he "appreciated Premier Mazoware dying. We c ould have used his wisdom today, when iecki's wisdom, moderation democracy is not so perfect." and presence of mind in asPoland's Prime M i n i ster sessing difficult s i tuations, Donald Tusk said Mazowiecki and his stubborn insistence was "an outstanding figure of on things that he considered Poland's politics of the 20th to be key." "He was prime minister at a century" and that the Poles "remember his unusual calm, very difficult time," Jaruzelski inner strength, very kind face said. "It required a lot of wisand wise eyes. They gave us dom and tact to lead Poland all courage." through the great reforms." In its message of condoG erman Chancellor A n lences, the U.S. State Depart- gela Merkel, who grew up in ment said "the world has lost communist East G e rmany, a true statesman; his legacy said that Mazowiecki made t ransformed Poland into a "an unforgotten contribution vanguard of democratic and to overcoming authoritarian free-market values." injustice and to the unity of Europe." A role in change European Comm i ssion A lawyer b y t r a i ning, a PresidentJose Manuel Barrowriter and thinker by temper- so called him a "great Pole and ament, Mazowiecki was well European, one of the foundequipped for his role in oust- ing fathers of the new Poland ing communism from Poland and re-united Europe." and shaping a democracy. Mazowiecki started as a The crucial 1980 Gdansk journalist for Catholic magashipyard strike was held to zines in the late 1940s. A dedemand restitution of a job for clared believer, he tried to reca fired worker, Anna Walen- oncile ethics and religion with tynowicz, better pay and a politics under the anti-church monument to workers killed communist system, imposed during a 1970 protest. on Poland as a result of World The action r apidly g r ew War II. into a massive wave of strikes The 1970s marked Mazowthat gave birth to Solidarity, iecki's growing involvement Eastern Europe's first freein independent, often clandestrade union and a nationwide tine think tanks that propelled freedom movement, led by Poles toward democracy. Walesa, whose name quickly Usually serious and penbecame known around the sive, M a zowiecki s h owed globe. a flash of humor during his Walesa later said that "ev- policy speech in parliament, erybody was very glad" that when he felt faint. Returning Mazowiecki and other intel- to the floor, he drew applause lectuals joined workers, beby saying t hat t h e s t r ess cause it was a sign of united and hard work had brought resistance. h is condition down t o t h e As prime minister, he called level of Poland's dilapidated for drawing a "thick line" to economy. separate the communist past His government was hastfrom the new Poland, a variily composed of S olidarity ously interpreted and much- backers, who were experts criticized comment that conin their fields but had no govtributed to hi s ouster after ernment experience. They about a year in office. accomplished a mi l e stone Well into Poland's demo- task: within months they laid cracy in the 1990s, Mazow- foundations for a democratic iecki was a mong W alesa's state. "I had this very strong conclosest counselors, advising him in the tough yet success- viction that we will make itful negotiations with the com- that we will be able to build munists, who granted union the foundations of a new state and civic freedoms in 1980. on those ruins," Mazowiecki Like Walesa, and m a ny said in a 2004 interview. Solidarity activists, he was Tadeusz Mazowiecki was detained under martial law, born on April 18, 1927, in the imposed on Dec. 13, 1981, to city of Plock, in central Pocurb the freedom that had irland. His brother died in a ritated Moscow. Nazi concentration camp in After one year in confine- World War II. ment, Mazowiecki returned M azowiecki st udied l a w to Walesa's side and wrote at the University of Warsaw reports about social and eco- but did not graduate. In 1953 nomic stagnation under marhe began editing a Catholic tial law. weekly, but was eventually The hardships inspired a fired because of his opposition new wave of strikes in 1988. to the Communist governM azowiecki walked arm i n ment. He started an organizaarm with Walesa at the head tion of Catholic intellectuals of angry workers in Gdansk. and a new Catholic monthly. By MonikaScislowska The Associated Press
BS
forcement officers. They also passed out information about the caves. "We'll be doing it again next year," Cartaya said. The Archaeological Society of Central Oregon is also looking for a member to volunteer as asteward for Hidden Forest Cave, paying it a visit at least once a month, said Valarie Anderson, vice president for the
Continued from B1 Five people — three adult men, a boy and a girl — were convicted of misdemeanor criminal mischief in the case, Deputy District A t torney Stephen Gunnels wrote in an email. Along with probation and community service, Gunnels wrote, the group was ordered group. "It is constantly used and conto pay more than $20,400 in restitution to the Forest stantly vandalized," she said, "so we would want someone out Service.The money paid to clean up the graffiti, which there monthly." required input from an exCartaya said he expects to pert from Portland, special Pete Erickson /The Bulletin file photo have more volunteersprotectchemicals that targeted the One of the restored pictoing Hidden Forest Cave and spray paint but left the picto- graphs (the vertical black lines), other caves next summer. "Summer is when most of graphs and scrubbing by vol- is pictured in July. unteers. Many of the volunthis nonsense happens," Carteerswere either connected taya said. — Reporter: 541-617-7812, to the Oregon High Desert resulted in the vandals' arrests. Grotto, a caving club or the This summer the Forest Serddarling@bendbulletin.com Archaeological Society of vice, working with the cavers Central Oregon. and archaeology buffs, ran a S l QQ "It was a good month of volunteerprogram at the cave work," said Penni Borghi, and others around it, he said. heritage program manager The volunteerscarried radios 541-548-2066 for the Deschutes and Ocho- to report suspicious behavior co national forests. to Forest Service dispatchers, The paint now is mostly who could then send in law enMED- I F T gone, although some colors proved particularly difficult to remove, she said. That paint is less noticeable now. I I ' • I "It think that over time it M XTTR E S S will fade more, and lichen G allery-Be n d 686 NW York Drive, Ste.150 will grow over it," she said. Bend, OR i 541-306-3263 541-330-5084 The cleanup started in July 2012 and was complete by the end of August 2012. The s I cleanup crew varied from as few as two to as many as FUNERALs[ BURIALs i CREMATIQNt PRE-pIANNING i CEMETERY 10 people. They used toothMAUSOLEUM i COLUMBARIUM i MQNUMENTSi AIR HEARsE brushes and rags to painstakingly rub the paint off the cliffs. Borghi, an archaeologist for the forest, was not only involved withthe graffiti cleanVisit our website to view obituaries and leave condolence up, but also its discovery. messages on our guestbook She was with the group that checked on the pictographs in April 2011 and found the graffiti only days after it happened at the cave 11 miles southeast of Bend off China Hat Road. 105 NW IRYING AVENUE, BEND The Oregon High Desert www.N ISWONGER-REYNOLDS.COM Grotto took video of the vanS41.382.2471 dalism, posted it to YouTube and got it onto television, Cartaya said. The club also contributed to a $2,000 reward for information offered through the Crime Stoppers LOCALLY FAMILY OWNED & OPERATKD Tip Line. The video and the We honor alf pre-arranged plans including Neptune Society. 'rt! sj<' reward prompted a tip that
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IN THE BACI4: BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NE%S > Scoreboard, C2 Sports in brief, C2 Golf, C2
NHL, C3 Motor sports, C3
Prep sports, C4
NFL, C3
© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2013
PREP SPORTS
PREP SPORTS
MLB: WORLD SERIES
OSAAapproves classification
Red Sox take 3-2 lead over Cards
WILSONVILLE — The executive board
of the Oregon School Activities Association
on Monday unanimously approved the final recommendations of its classification and districting committee, which includes a five-team Class 5A
By Ben Walker The Associated Press
ST. LOUIS — Jon Lester pitched the Boston Red Sox within a whisker of yet another World Series championship. Lester bested Adam Wainwright once again, journeyman David Ross hit a tiebreaking double in the seventh inning and the Red Sox downed the St. Louis Cardinals 3-1 Monday night to take a 3-2 Series edge. David Ortiz delivered his latest big hit, too, sending this bearded band of Red Sox back to Fenway Park with a chance to clinch their third crown in a decade. Not since 1918 has Boston won the title at its own ballpark. John Lackey gets the first chance Wednesday night against St. Louis rookie sensation Michael Wacha. SeeSox/C4
Intermountain Conference made up ofthree Bend schools and two in Redmond.
The six-classification model for the next fouryear time block takes
effect next fall and eliminates "special districts," which were formed in
response to concerns about higher costs, in-
creased travel and loss of class time. In all team sports, Bend High, Mountain View and Summit will unite with Redmond High and Ridgeview to create the 5A IMC, whose five schools will make it the second-
smallest league in the 33-team classification. Only the four-team
Columbia River Conference (Hood RiverValley,
Jeff Roberson /The Associated Press
Boston Red Sox catcher David Ross talks to starting pitcher Jon Lester during the eighth inning of Game 5 of the World Series on Monday in St. Louis.
Nextup World Series, Game 6, St. Louis at Boston • When:Wednesday, 5 p.m. • TV:Fox• Radio: KICE-AM 940
The Dalles Wahtonka,
Hermiston and Pendleton) contains fewer schools after opting not
NBA
to merge with the IMC during the committee's final meeting earlier this
New looksandfamiliar favorite for 2013-14
month. At the 4A level,
Crook County joins Madras in the Tri-Valley Conference. And while Sisters remains in the
By Brian Mahoney
Sky-Em League, cur-
The Associated Press
rent Sky-Em member La Pine will drop to
3A to compete in the South Valley Confer-
ence. Class 2A Culver jumps from the TriRiver Conference to the
Rob Kerr /The Bulletin
Lane Community College will see a return of Outlaw cross-country runners for the State Championships Saturday. Pictured before practice Monday afternoon on trails near Sisters High School are: back row from left, Madison Boettner, Mary Stewart, Macadia Calavan, Aria Blumm, and front row from left, Zoe Falk, Betsy Ausman, Natalie Marshall and Megan Calarco.
Rolling Plains League, and at1A, Central Christian will leave the
Big Sky League to join the Mountain Valley League with current
Central Oregon MVL members Gilchrist and Trinity Lutheran. To see the commit-
tee's final recommendations or to view a summary of the executive
board's meeting, visit www.osaa.org. — Bulletin staff report
• With districts down, the girls cross-country team preparesfor state
BASKETBALL
Rules clinic set far Bend OnNOV.6 A National Federation of State High School Associations basketball rules interpretation clinic is scheduled for Wednesday, Nov. 6, in Bend. The clinic, presented by the Central Oregon Basketball Officials Association, will take place in the media center at Mountain View High School starting at 6:30
p.m. All boys and girls
basketballcoaches and assistant coaches from throughout Central
Oregon are encouraged to attend. Time will be
allowed for questions and discussion. For more information contact Bob Reichert, COBOA commissioner, at 541-382-3180 or 541593-6222. — Bulletin staff report
NFL
Goal-line stand lifts Seahawks A last-second pass by St. Louis falls
incomplete asSeattle survives for a14-9 victory, C3
GRANT
LUCAS
What towatchfor
Dwight Howard moved on and Derrick Rose came back, though Kobe Bryant won't quite yet. Nine firsttime coaches are coming in and David Stern will soon head out. With different looks all around the National Basketball Association in 2013-14, one familiar sight remains: LeBron James and the Miami Heat are entering another season as the team to beat. The two-time defending champions will collect their rings tonight, then open the new season against the
Chicago Bulls, who with a healthy Rose might be the team that can unseat the Heat. Or maybe it is San Antonio or Indiana, both a game away last year — actually, the Spurs were just seconds away — from finishing off Miami. Perhaps it is the Nets or Clippers, after both picked up pieces of the old Celtics that had the Heat's respect but not their number. If someone does dethrone King James, it will not be because he was satisfied with two titles and lost his
edge. SeeFavorite /C4
RUNNING FOREXTENDED TERMS Summit looks to continue its Class 5A dominance on Saturday. The Storm girls have won five straight state titles, and the boys
have taken thepast two. HannahGindlesperger and Olivia Brooks own the first- and second-fastest girls times this season in 5A, respectively, while Matthew Maton owns the fastest boys time not only in 5A but in the entire state.
After winning the Special District1 title on Saturday in Redmond, Maton conceded that this season's Summit boys team may not be as strong as last year's state-winning group. Still, the junior
expects the Storm, with four runners rankedamong thetop10 in isters coach Josh Nordell always wants to believe that his team has a shot at a state title. Heck, even if the Outlaws were the nation's worst cross-country program, Nordell's mindset would not change. But given the choice between which team to compete with at the state championships on Saturday, junior Aria Blumm would select this group of Outlaws over any other club — every single time. At Sisters High, there is a group of sisters — metaphori-
S
cally speaking. Last Thursday at Lane Community College in Eugene, the Outlaws sealed a third straight Sky-Em League girls district title, earning a bid to return to LCC this Saturday for a shot at the Class 4A state championship. Blumm will not say that this season was predicted to be so successful (despite Sisters returning six of the seven runners who competed at state in 2012). As simple as it sounds, Blumm says, "We kind of just ran to have fun, and it just sort of worked out in our favor." SeeSisters/C4
Inside • A roundup of Monday's Prep sports,C4
5A, to jockey for a third straight championship.
THE LONEWOLF With a second-place finish at the 5A Special District1
championships on Saturday, BendHigh's Caleb Hoffmann punched his ticket to state. It will be the sophomore's first trip, and he will be the lone Central Oregon 5A representative, male or
female, not wearing Summit green or Mountain View red. Summit's Matthew Maton is heavily favored to take top honors, but
for Hoffmann, having Matonnearby during arace sure bodeswell. "It's really nice at the beginning to havehim pull mealong," Hoffmann says. "I'm hoping during state hemight backtrack a little bit, maybe try something else. I found that out at (the Oxford Classic at Bend's Drake Park earlier this month), he pulled me the
first mile. It's really something else." Also competing as an individual will be La Pine's Tyress TurnsPlenty, who snuck into the final qualifying spot at the SkyEm League championships on Thursday with a fifth-place finish
in Eugene. BACK FORMORE Sisters, Ridgeview andCrook County roll into the Class 4Astate championships with plenty of confidence.
Alessandro Trovati /The Associated Press
Mikaela Shiffrin, of the United States, speeds down the course during the first run of an Alpine ski, women's World Cup giant slalom, in Soelden, Austria, on Saturday.
Strong start for U.S. bodes well for Socbi
For the third straight year Thursday, theOutlaws swept the boys and girls team titles at the Sky-Em League championships. Brandon Pollard, 13th at state in 2011, finished11th last season in
By Andrew Dampf
the boys race. ZoeFalk, Aria Blumm and Madison Boettner look to
SOELDEN, Austria — If
return to 2011 form, when the trio placed in the top10of the girls competition to guide Sisters to third as a team. After qualifying for state in their school's first year in 2012,
skiing's opening weekend
Ridgeview's girls are returning to Eugene onSaturday, this time as Greater Oregon League champs. Dakota Steen,10th at state
last year, comesoff a Saturday victory at the GOLchampionships, where the Ravensplacedfour runners in the top10. Crook County, meanwhile, saw its boys take second at the GOL
competition, paced byGrayson Munn's victory. Nathan Carmack (10th at GOL) and Liam Pickhart (16th) add to the Cowboys' strength as they look to improve on back-to-back12th-place finishes in 2011 and 2012.
SKIING
The Associated Press
was any indication, the United States is in for quite
an Olympic season. Ted Ligety, Mikaela Shiffrin, Bode Miller and Tim Jitloff underlined the squad's enormous potential on the Rettenbach glacier in Austria. "I'm really happy with how things are going," U.S. Alpine director Patrick Riml said. "The coaches
and staff did an unbelievable job getting the athletes ready." And with Lindsey Vonn planning to return in a month from surgery on her right knee and Julia Mancuso always a threat on a big stage, the Americans could surpass their eight medals from the 2010 Vancouver Olympics at the Sochi Games, which run Feb. 7-23. See U.S./C4
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
NHL ROUNDUP
MOTOR SPORTS
'Hawks
5 ~ e ~
Richmondmess behind Bowyer
e
take 5-1 vlctop
By Jenna Fryer The Associated Press
over Wild The Associated Press ST. PAUL, Minn. — The Chicago Blackhawks h a ve high standards. Two Stanley Cup championships in a fouryear span will create that. So their 7-2-3 start to the season is hardly a cause for satisfaction. T h i s p a y back victory over the M i nnesota Wild, at least, provided some reassurance. Patrick Sharp finally scored, Nick Leddy jump-started the stagnant special teams units
with a power-play goal and the Blackhawks beat the Wild 5-1 on Monday night. "We haven't been playing the way we want to play," said Leddy, a native of nearby Eden Prairie and former Wild firstround draft pick. "We know we can play that way all the time, and I think this gives us some confidence." After giving up 1 1 goals while losing their p r evious two games, the Blackhawks played tougher defense, were more disciplined and paid the Wild back for their 5-3 win on Saturday night in Chicago. "We may havehad the most consistent game we've had," coach Joel Quenneville said. Corey Crawford made 29 saves, and Sheldon Brookbank, Patrick Kane and Brandon Saad all scored to give the Blackhawks just their t hird game of more than three goals in 12 contests this season. "It was definitely hard to lose that way at home. They really took it to us, and we were looking to return the favor," Saad said. Also on Monday:
CanadIens 2, Rangers 0: NEW YORK — Peter Budaj made 27 saves for his 11th career NHL shutout, and Tomas Plekanec and Alex Galchenyuk provided all the offense Montrealneeded as the Canadiens spoiled the New York Rangers' long-awaited home opener. The 31-year-old Budaj was on the top of his
game despite playing in place of No. I goalie Carey Price for only the second time this season and first since Oct. 10 at Edmonton when he stopped 27 of 28 shots in a win. Stars4, Sabres 3: BUFFALO, N.Y. — Tyler Seguin capped a three-goal, first-period outburst, and Dallas hung on to deliver coach Lindy Ruff a win in his homecoming against Buffalo. Jamie Benn, A l ex Goligoski and V ernon Fiddleralso scored in a game the Starsnearly squandered after a 4-1 lead. PenguIns 3, Hurricanes 1: RALEIGH, N.C. — Rookie Jayson Megna had his first career goal and assist, and Pittsburgh
snapped a three-game losing streak by beating the Carolina. Chris Kunitz and Tanner Glassalso scored for the Metropolitan Division-leading Penguins. Brooks Orpik had three assists,Sidney Crosby added two and Marc-Andre Fleury stopped 20 shots. Canucks 3, Capitals 2: VANCOUVER, British ColumbiaDaniel Sedin scored the gamewinner in the third period and added an assist for Vancouver, which won its fourth straight. Zack Kassian and Ryan Kesler also scored for Vancouver, which played at Rogers Arena for the first time since Oct. 12 after a seven-game trip. Henrik Sedin added an assist to extend his point streak to nine games.
Y 7+g iI
C3
t I
Ann Heisenfelt/The Associated Press
Chicago Blackhawks center Jonathan Toews (19) and right wIng MarIan Hossa (81) congratulate center PatrIck Sharp after hIs goal durIng Monday night's game In St. Paul, MInn.
Michael Conroy/The Associated Press
Seattle Seahawks wIde receiver Golden Tate (81) runs to the end zone for a touchdown during the second half of Monday night's game In St. Louis. Seattle held on for a 14-9 victory.
eaaws an
OI1 OF OVBF ams
Vl By Dave Skretta
NFL
the Seahawks answered. Two plays later, Wilson went ST. LOUIS — The Seattle Se- defense. deep down the sideline to Tate, "The defensive line, they were who made an acrobaticleaping ahawks completed a lousy night making plays," Wilson said. "We catch over Janoris Jenkins. Tate for St. Louis sports fans. R ussell Wilson t h rew t w o have to find a way to slow them regained his balance and then mockingly waved at safety Rodtouchdown passes to Golden Tate, down. and the Seahawks made a draThe World Series no doubt ney McLeod as he ran to the end matic goal-line stand in the final contributed to the stale atmo- zone, earning an unsportsmanminute to preserve a 14-9 victory sphere inside the Edward Jones like conduct penalty. over the Rams on Monday night Dome, where the a nnounced Z uerlein c o n nected a g a in — less than an hour after the Car- crowd of 55,966 was inreality to get St. Louis to 14-9, but he dinals lost to the Red Sox in the much smaller. Many of the fans missed a 50-yard field goal in World Series just up the street. who did show up wore Cardinals the fourth quarter. That proved The Seahawks (7-1), riding the gear, and World Series highlights to be key because the Rams best start in franchise history, were shown on the big screen. would have needed just another were clinging to the lead when The Red Sox polished off their field goal from him on their final they were forced to punt with just 3-1 victory in Game 5 just before drive, rather than a touchdown, over 5 minutes left in the game. the Rams embarked on their to steal the win. They managed to pin St. Louis final drive — one that would The Rams stayed in the game at its own 3-yard line, but Kellen ultimately leave the hometown largely thanks to their defense, which took advantage of the SeClemens — starting at quarter- crowd even more depressed. back in place of the injured Sam C lemens finished wit h 1 5 8 ahawks missing starting offenBradford — c a l mly m a rched yards passing for the Rams, but sive tackles Russell Okung and the Rams (3-5) to the Seattle he also threw two interceptions, Breno Giacomini due to injuries. 1 as time wound down. Daryl one of them to Richard Sherman. Robert Quinn had three sacks in Richardson was stuffed on third Zac Stacy ran for a career-high the first half for St. Louis. 134 yards. down, andClemens threw a fade Seattle had minus-1 yard of "It's not always going to be pass incomplete in the corner of offense in the first quarter, and the end zone on fourth down as pretty," Sherman said. "You have 38 yards at the half, its fewest time expired. to be able to win ugly." since gaining 37 in the first half "The defense did a tremendous Greg Zuerlein staked St. Louis against Kansas City in 1998, acjob, coming up with a huge stop to an early lead with his first of cording to STATS LLC. there," Wilson said. three field goals, but Sherman's It didn't help that Seattle lost The Seahawks won despite pick put the Seahawks in busi- wide receiver Sidney Rice late in gaining just 135 yards of total of- ness. Seattle took advantage of the first half with what the team fense, 80 of it on Wilson's second h is fourth interception of t h e called a knee injury. It wasn't TD pass to Tate, the third-fewest season by scoring six plays later, clear which knee Rice hurtor yards in a victory in franchise when Wilson hit Tate from the 2- when the injury occurred, but he history. yard line. headed to the locker room withWilson was sacked a careerZuerlein got the Rams within out his helmet and didn't return high seven times by the Rams 7-6 late in the third quarter, but to the game. The Associated Press
Megatron leadsway for meganumbers By Barry Wilner
The Associated Press
For all the divas among NFL receivers,and there are plenty of them, there are just as many difference makers. They showed themselves in impressive and, in Calvin Johnson's case,incredible form on
Sunday.Megatron's meganumbers were so astounding that several Dallasdefensive backs could do little more than shrug at how he dominated them in a scintillating 31-30 Lions victory. Brandon Carr, a good cornerback who was left in single coverage on Johnson far too often in Dallas' game plan, admitted he was "licking my wounds" after being torched all day. "He had his way," Carr said a fter M e gatron m a uled t h e Cowboys for 14 catches for 329 yards, the second most in an NFL game. "He is an incredible player with all the ability in the world. He had the hot hand and his quarterback kept feeding him. And, we couldn't find a
on his angry gesticulations on the sideline when the Cowboys were inthe process of blowing a late lead. "I'm passionate about this game, and I'm passionate about
winning. My passion is always positive," Bryant said. "People who have a problem with me are the people that don't understand what is going on. The media and people who think I'm a problem — they don't know what they are seeing." What everyone was seeing around the league, aside from Bryant racing tothe end zone — and hi s s ubsequent rants — were breakouts by Pro Bowl receivers and newcomers. They d eserve some attention in a n era when quarterbacks hog the spotlight. • Green Bay's Jordy Nelson, the lone accomplished wideout still healthy for the Packers, had seven catches for 123 yards and two touchdowns in a 44-31 win over Minnesota. He played in the slot, rare for him, as well as outside. "It worked out well," Nelson said. "Got some good looks and
searching for a dual-threat passing game for years, since Chad Johnson and T.J. Houshmandzadeh were in t heir p r imes. T hey've built t h eir b i g A F C North lead on a brute-force defense and balanced offense. A
big-time passing game could lift them to an elite level they haven't reached since the days of Ken Anderson and Boomer Esiason. "I think people will see that now we have the players that can do it and help a superstar like A.J.," Jones said. What they saw from Jones: TD receptions of 9, 6, 14 and 6
yards.
What Jets coach Rex Ryan saw might have nauseated him. "We got beatin every coverage known to man," he said. "Five touchdown passes'? I don't know how many t imes that's happened in my l i fetime. Not very often." • At lanta's Harry D o uglas, who has stepped up in the absence of standouts Julio Jones way to keep him from rolling." and Roddy W h ite, added 12 R eceivers w e re r oll i n g catches for 121 yards in a loss t hroughout th e l e ague w i t h at Arizona to his seven catches some of the most i mpressive open plays." for a career-best 149 yards the • Cincinnati's Marvin Jones, previous week in a w i n o v er performances inmemory. Even Tampa Bay. Douglas is a peron the other side at Ford Field a second-year wideout f r o m was a dynamic (and definitely California who previously had fect example of a third receiver flourishing when made the top a diva, unlike Johnson) wideout 16 catches this year and all of 18 in 2012, and Bengals star A.J. target. In today's NFL, that hapin Dez Bryant, who had only three catches,but for 72 yards, Green. Jones made eightcatch- pens more often than you might with two TDs. His 24-yard aver- es for 122 yards and scored four think, whether it's for wideouts age was higher than Johnson's touchdowns in a 49-9 rout of or tight ends. • K enny Stills, a N ew O r 23.5. the Jets. The four TD catches Bryant scored twice, includ- are the most in a single game leans rookie who has come on ing a 50-yard TD on a short pass in Bengals history and the most in recent weeks and had three when he broke through two atin an NFL game since Nov. 18, catches for 129 yards, including tempted tackles. 2007, when Randy Moss and touchdowns of 69 and 42 yards, Unlike Johnson, whose vid- Terrell Owens each had four. in a 35-17 win over Buffalo. eos from Sunday displayed him G reen grabbed only t h r ee Stills, a fifth-round pick from leaving defenders in the dust throws from Andy Dalton, but Oklahoma, is just what Drew or making spectacular grabs, gained 115 yards on them. Brees and the Saints need: anBryant's h i g hlights c e ntered T he B e ngals h a v e b e e n othergame-breaker on offense.
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Clint Bowyer fielded fan questions for nearly 30 minutes Monday at the NASCAR Hall of Fame, where the topics covered everythingfrom his recent appearance on an episode of "Duck Dynasty" to his displeasure with people who text while driving. N ot a s i n gl e p e r son a s ked h i m a b o u t Richmond. Finally, nearly two months after Bowyer spun late in the race that set the field for the Sprint Cup-deciding Chase, the scandal is finally fading into his rearview mirror. His actions in the Sept. 7 race triggered a massive chain reaction that knocked the wind out of NASCAR as it headed into its championship portion of the season. Michael Waltrip Racing was crippled with the loss of a longtime sponsor, and Martin Truex Jr. and 15 percent of the MWR workforce were given pink slips. Bowyer, one of the most popular drivers inside the garage, suddenly found he was considered Public Enemy No. I among a fan base that only in the past few years had begun to appreciate his talent and humor. "I was in the middle of a storm, certain kind of storm. A four-lettered storm is what I'd call that," Bowyer said Monday. It took a toll on the freewheeling country boy from Kansas. He was second in the points heading into the Richmond race and thought he could challenge for a championship this year. Then came the fallout from Richmond, where NASCAR said MWR deliberately manipulated the finish of the race in an attempt to get Truex into the 12-driver Chase field. He said he quickly figured out the final laps at Richmond had created a firestorm that wasn't going away anytime soon. "I didn't that night. But then (figured out) 'this is not good,' " Bowyer said. "I was immediately crushed because of the sport and what I care and believe about this sport. It was tough." The Chase waseffectively over for Bowyer before it began. He opened with a ninth-place finish at Chicago, where points leader Matt Kenseth won, and was 17th the next week at New Hampshire, where Kenseth won again. Just like that, Bowyer was 10th in the standings and out of the title hunt. He acknowledged Monday theRichmond drama "definitely" contributed to the No. 15 team stumbling out of the gate. Bowyer wasn't the same off the track, either. Dale Earnhardt Jr. noted last month that it had been difficult to watch Bowyer suffer through the backlash from fans. "Clint is a good guy and obviously was just following orders," Earnhardt said. "He did some things that were out of character and regrettable, and he feels terrible to have any involvement in it. I know that for a fact. I know that to be genuine. It's been tough watching him go through that process, too, because he's not that kind of guy to go starting that kind of mess." Bowyer said he read things about himself over the past seven weeks, heard things on the radio, and learned to bite his tongue. "Out of respect and understanding the magnitude of the situation, I never would have dreamed in a million years that would have escalated into what it did, it was a bad deal," Bowyer said. "Hardest thing I've ever been through in this sport, but certainly not the hardest thing I've been through in my life. It was tough to listen to those things for a while. It's not like me to just keep my mouth shut. I wanted to bite back, but certainly, again, respected the situation. I understood the magnitude of it and knew I was part of it and didn't want to be." It's the third time since 2010 that Bowyer's title chances were yanked out from underneath him in the blink of an eye. He opened the 2010 Chase with a win at New Hampshire that vaulted him from 12th to second in th e standings. Then NASCAR r uled his car was illegal, docked him 150 points, and the lengthy appeal process wore down his race team. Richard Childress Racing never got the points back, but it didn't matter, anyway. Bowyer finished 25th and 15th in the two races after New Hampshire and spent the entire Chase trying not to finish last in the field. Last year, Bowyer used a win at Charlotte at the midpoint of the Chase to move to fourth, then close to third in the standings with the leaders in sight with two races remaining. But an angry Jeff Gordon chose the penultimate race to settle a vendetta and deliberately wrecked Bowyer late in the race at Phoenix. It ended his title chances with one race remaining, and this year he hardly got out of the gate. "Just been the story of my career in NASCAR. Two steps forward and one back," he said. "A lot of that except for this last time, I didn't have anything to do with it. I don't build the damn cars, I didn't crash myself at Phoenix. Some of those are out of your control. Certainly one of them I had something to do with it. It's tough, but hey, man, it's life. Life's tough. It ain't going to slow me down. I have a blast doing this." And Bowyer had a blast on Sunday at Martinsville, where it was clear he is finally out of the
fog. He led 60 laps — he had led only nine laps total since Richmond, where he led 72 — and finished third. It was his best finish of this Chase, only his third top-10 in seven races and first top-five. It moved him up two spots in the standings to sixth, and Bowyer can now see the top-five in the final standings. That's where he wants to end the season,and where he believes he belongs after 13 weeks ranked no lower than third. "It was fun to be at Martinsville and be back in action. I live for that. The excitement, intensity, emotion, energy, the fights, the hard racing," he said. "It wasn't meant to be this year. As far as the future, there's been a lot of plans and meetings to get that set in stone and make the best of it. We will. We've made mistakes and certainly learning from them. I've had enough. You're going to play the cards you're dealt the best you can."
C4
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2013
PREP ROUNDUP
Cougars, Outlaws play to 3-3 tie in nonleague game Bulletin staff report Zach Emerson and Jake McAllister stole the show M onday o n a co l d a n d windy afternoon for boys soccer at M ountain Vi ew High School. Emerson netted three goals for the Class 5A Cougars, including two within a minute of each other to account for the final score, and McAllister scored twice for the 4A Outlaws in a 3-3 nonconference draw. "It wasn't the best soccer ever,"Mountain View coach Chris Rogers s aid. "But on display were probably two of the best goal-scoring forwards in the state of Oregon, in my opinion. It was pretty much the Zach Emerson and Jake McAllister show ... two very fine players really taking over a
game."
E merson scored in t h e 17th minute to give the Cou-
players that are very highcaliber, some of th e b est players in the state. So their quickness and athleticism is reallygood for us to see." T orres f i n i shed wi t h three assists for Mountain View, which entered Monday's contest No. 18 in the Oregon School A c t ivities Association 5A rankings. If that standing is maintained when the final rankings are set on Wednesday night, the
Cougars will go on the road for a play-in contest on or before this Saturday.
"We scheduled (a game
against Sisters) last year, and it really did us a lot,"
Rogers said, referencing Mountain View's run to the 2012 5A state championship final. "It was a really good tuneup to see what we really needed to fix before go-
ing on the road (for the playin matchup)."
In other Monday action: gars (4-5-6) a 1-0 lead, but GIRLS SOCCER Summit 2, Sheldon 1: EUtwo McAllister goals sandwiched a Billy Biggers score GENE — I n p r e p aration to build a 3 - 1 a dvantage for the postseason, Summit for Sisters (13-1-1). Connor traveled to Sheldon High Schaab was credited with School fo r a non l eague two assists for the Outlaws. contest and picked up a 2-1 In the contest's 53rd min- victory. Freshman Megan ute and again in the 54th, Cornett got the Storm on Mario T o r re s c o n nected the board with a goal in the with Emerson on Mountain 24th minute off a pass from View counterattacks to put senior Shannon Patterson. the score at 3-3. Summit scored again before "Playing against a couple halftime when sophomore of those players is really Christina Edwards knocked good," said Sisters coach it in off a pass from senior Rob Jensen, whose team, Hadie Plummer. Sheldon put as champion of the Sky-Em a goal on the board halfway League, will host a f i r st- through the second half, but round state playoff game solid defense from senior next Tuesday. "We haven't goalkeeper Rachel Estopare seen any players like that. helped Summit (13-0-2) hang T hey have tw o o r t h r e e on for the victory.
GAME OF THEWEEK Behind Noah Cox's six goals and four by his brother Nate, Mountain View defeated crosstown rival Summit12-10 in overtime to claim the 5A Northern Oregon boys water polo championship at Juniper Swim & Fitness Center on Saturday. Tommy Brewer and Jack Butler each netted three goals for Summit, but it was not enough, as the Cougars walked away with the division's No. 1 seed heading into the state playoffs in
Sox Continued from C1 A Cardinals win would set up a most spooky proposition for both teams Game 7 on Halloween night. Ortiz enjoyed even more success in Game 5 after moving from the cleanup spot to the third slot. He is 11 for 15 (.733) in this Series with two homers, six RBIs and four walks. Lester enhanced his reputation as an October ace with every pitch. He allowed one run and four hits in 7'/3 innings, striking out seven without a walk. Nearly the same line he had in beating Wainwright in the opener. "I think the biggest thing is me and Rossy have had a good rhythm," Lester said. "Early on, we just went back to our
game plan from Game I and just fell back on that and really just tried to make them swing the bats early, and we were able to do that." The lefty who has won all three of his career World Series starts had just one scary inning, when Matt Holliday homered in the fourth, Carlos Beltran flied out to the wall and Yadier Molina hit a liner. Other than that, Lester was sharp as a knife. "He's just a stud," said Ross, the backup catcher who gets paired with Lester. "We rely on him. That's why he's the ace of our staff, because he goes out and pitches like that." Lester's biggest brush with major trouble came well before his first pitch. He
Favorite Continued from C1 "When the hunger is gone, I'm going to give it up," James said. "I've got a talent and I'm going to take full advantage of it. So I'm hungry. "I love the game. There's nothing I would do more than play this game of basketball. So the championships are all great, but I'm playing for more than that. I've got a bigger calling than that." If hemeans becoming the best ever,he might be on his way. James has four MVP trophies and no noticeable weaknesses. The gap with his peers is getting larger and the one with the greats before him is
shrinking.
"He's the best on the planet right now. I don't know what you can do, but just hope thathe misses," said Nets coach Jason Kidd, one of the nine coaches getting his first opportunity. In total, 13 teams changed coaches since last season. James did miss in the closing seconds of Game 6 of the NBA Finals, but the Heat got the rebound to set up Ray Allen's tying 3-pointer, pulled it out in overtime and won Game 7 to deny the Spurs a fifth title. San Antoniomay get another chance to finish the job, or may not even be the best team in Texas after Howard joined James Harden in Houston. Howard bolted after one unfulfilling season with the Lakers in Los Angeles, where he and Bryant never found a work-
Charlie Riedel /The Associated Press
Boston Red Sox's Jacoby Ellsbury, of Madras, hits an RBI single during the seventh inning of Game 5 of the World Series on Monday night in St. Louis.
was getting loose near the warning track when a team of eight Clydesdales pulling a beer wagon came trotting by — it's a Busch Stadium tradition and Lester stood aside to watch the horses. Koji Ueharaclosed forhis second save. No crazy endings this time, either, following one night with an obstruction call and the next with Uehara's game-finish-
ing pickoff.
Ortiz put the Red Sox ahead with an
ing partnership. The center already seems happier and healthier in Houston, where he and Harden can build a potent insideoutside tandem. As for Bryant, he will watch the Lakers' opener, and who knows how much more, while he continues to rehab from a torn Achilles tendon. Questions over how well he canplay at age 35 after such a serious injury, along with Howard's departure, created unusually low expectations for the Lakers. Instead, the buzz in Los Angeles is about the Clippers, who hired Doc Rivers to coach while Paul Pierce and Kevin Garnett went to Brooklyn after Boston's breakup. That also could make both longtime losers not only the current kings of their cities, but also contenders to reach the NBA Finals — which are returning to the 2-2-1-1-1 format this season after 29 years of 2-3-2. Here are five other things to watch around the NBA this season: Sitting speedsters: While R ose r e turns after sitting out last season with a torn ACL, Russell Westbrook and Rajon Rondo remain out recovering from knee surgeries. A healthy Westbrook makes Oklahoma City a title contender, while Rondo could help the Celtics exceed expectations— or perhaps become the next player they trade. Up and comers: They are not ready to contend for a title, but keep an eye on New Orleans, Washington and Cleveland, all with dynamite young players who may
RBI double in the first, hitting the first pitch after Dustin Pedroia doubled on an 0-2 curve. Ross, a graybeard on a team led by scraggly veterans, broke a I-all tie when he hooked a drive just inside the left-field line, and the ball bounced into the seats for a go-ahead double. "How about that? It's nice to drive in runs," Ross said. "I've got to credit the guys in front of me." Jacoby Ellsbury later hit an RBI single, and Ross was thrown out at the plate trying to score on the play. A day after Ortiz delivered a stirring, in-game pep talk to rev up the Red Sox, the Cardinals could have used some inspiration from Big Papi. That, or at least a visit from the good-luck Rally Squirrel from their 2011 title run. The St. Louis hitters went quietly, a couple slinging their bats after routine popups and fly balls and others questioning the solid calls by plate umpire Bill Miller. Holliday shook St . L o uis' slumber and broke Lester's string with his second home run of the Series. Lester had pitched 16'/~ scoreless innings in his first three World Series starts before Holliday
tagged him. That was all St. Louis got. Not even a revamped lineup that included the hobbled Allen Craig helped the Cards. Ortiz hit an early double and single while swinging at first pitches, and tied the Seriesrecord by reaching base in nine straight plate appearances.
be good enough to carry their franchises back to the postseason.
Changing commissioners:Adam Silver replaces the retiring Stern as NBA commissioner on Feb. I, exactly 30 years after Stern took office. Silver has done much of the heavy lifting for years, but he will be replacing one of the greatest executives sports has seen. "I'm excited for the league and for the future, and for the fact that having been at the league now for 36 years,we've reached this point and there's a really extraordinary executive in Adam ready to take it to the next level," Stern said. Summer stories: Business will really pick up after the next NBA champion is crowned. Kansas freshman Andrew Wiggins, should he decide to enter the draft, couldbecome the most sought-after prospect in years. Free agency will then open on July I with James and Carmelo Anthony perhaps set to top the class. Who wins?The Heat are the choice of everyone from oddsmakers to the executives who voted in the NBA.com GM survey. But they were enormous favorites last season aftera 27-game winning streak during a 66-win regular season and almost fell. This time, even more teams are capable of finally knocking them off. "They are the favorites, but I don't think they're the heavy favorites," Hall of Famer and TNT analyst Charles Barkley said. "Everybody's picking the Heat right now, but there's some teams, they're going to have some stiff competition."
Beaverton on Thursday. PLAYER OFTHEWEEK In leading Sisters to 13-0 and 6-1 home boys soccer wins
over La Pine andSweet Home, respectively, senior Jake McAllister posted two hat tricks. With three goals against the Hawks last Monday and three more in a win over the Huskies two days later, McAllister pushed the Outlaws to 10-0 in Sky-Em League play, the conference title, and a first-round home game in the Class 4A state playoffs this
Saturday. STATS OFTHE WEEK 76, 70, 15: In its final football game of theseason onFriday night, Gilchrist racked up season highs in points and margin of victory by putting away visiting Butte Falls 76-6 in Class
1A Special District 2 play. The victory was the last for retiring Grizzlies coach Steve Hall, who in two tenures has spent a total15 seasons at the Gilchrist helm.
Sisters Continued from C1 In Eugene on Saturday, Blumm will be among a familiar crowd that includes senior Zoe Falk, juniors Madison Boettner and Natalie Marshall, and sophomores Macadia Calavan and Mary Stewart — five teammates who helped the Outlaws to a seventh-place state finish last season, and two (Falk, Boettner) who helped Sisters earn a third-place trophy at state in 2011. Add to the mix sophomore Megan Calarco and alternate Betsy Ausman, also a sophomore. "I think they're an amaz-
ingly strong group of girls,"
runners are swinging back and forth between three different girls. It's a luxury to be deep. It's like a washing machine. The order is just going to be washed up every week. So it's awesome as a coach to have that deep of a team." Also a luxury: the exceptional team chemistry. Last Thursday, Blumm took third at t h e Sky-Em
League championships and was immediately followed by Falk, Boettner, Calavan, Stewart and M arshall for a 3-4-5-6-7-8 finish. That, Blumm says, was not really a coincidence. "It really factors in when y ou're r u nning a n d y o u
know you've got girls ahead of you and behind you be-
says Blumm, who took 84th at state last season after finishing ninth in 2011. "I feel so blessed to be on a team with all of them because not only are they physically strong but they're mentally strong." The Sisters Seven (eight with an alternate) may not be the fastest team in Class 4A, Nordell says. But the Outlaws are surely the deepest. Sisters' top five runners all rank in the top 60 (of well more than 400) in 4A. "It's just crazy," says Nordell, the f i r st-year Sisters coach. "We haven't had the
lieving in you, pushing you
same (finishing) order all year. Our (Nos.) 4 through 7
— Reporter:541-383-0307; glucasCbendbulletin.com.
and motivating you further," Blumm says. "For me, the team chemistry is really, really important." The pressure is off, Nordell notes. Th e O u t laws are not expected to win the state championship. So, the Sisters Seven (or Eight) will finish the season the way it started: just running to have fun. "I feel like those girls esp ecially ar e s i sters, a n d they act like sisters," Nordell adds. "I feel really close to all of them."
U.S.
mer junior w orld d ownhill an issue." included podium finishes not champion Adam Cole on the If Miller already has his just for Vonn and Mancuso, form back in giant slalom, he but also for Stacey Cook, AlContinued from C1 coaching staff this season. "Everything is going on "We grew u p t o g ether," could really excel in the speed ice McKennis, Leanne Smith track," Riml said. "I'm feel- Ligety said. "He's also young events of downhill and super- and, from Central Oregon's ing confident with our whole and athletic so he can do dry- G, where he has had nearly all Mt. Bachelor Sports Education setup." land with us and we can go of his wins in recent years. Foundation, 25-year-old Lau"GS was the one event where renne Ross. Ligety won the opening gi- play other sports and push ant slalom for the third con- each other." we hadn't been able to put the The bar of expectations has Bend's Tommy Ford, a 2010 most volume in because it was been raised for Cook & Co. secutive year. The 18-year-old Shiffrin matched her career- Olympian who is on the U.S. causing some more knee ir- this season. best World Cup result in the Alpine B Team, is still recov- ritation," Rearick said. "So if "You definitely want to back he's been able to do what he's up those results," women's discipline with a sixth-place ering from a fractured right finish. Miller marked his re- femur he suffered when he done this week, it's beyond my head coach Alex Hoedlmoser turn from 20 months off by crashed into trees and rocks expectations." said. "You want to be contendplacing 19th a f ter s t arting while freeskiing in France in Miller's fitness should also ers with all of those girls on a outside the top 30. Jitloff was January. It is unknown when get a boost from the speed regular basis." 20th with one big error that the 24-year-old might return team's newly hired conditionThe speedteams do not race probably cost him about 10 to racing, and hi s chances ing coach, Tony Beretzki, an until events in Lake Louise, positions. of competing in hi s second Austrian who once worked Alberta, and Beaver Creek, Perhaps the only negative Olympics are unlikely. w ith H ermann M a ier a n d Colo., on Thanksgiving weeknote was Mancuso finishing Shiffrin dominated in sla- S tephan E b e rharter an d end. Next up are slaloms in 27th. But M a ncuso always lom last season with four wins spent the past four years with Levi, Finland, Nov. 16-17. seems to save her best for plus the world title and now the Spartak Moscow soccer major championships, as evi- looks like a two-event threat team. with her giant slalom vastly With Miller out last season, denced by her gold medal in E HIGH DESERT BANK giant slalom at the 2006 Tu- improved. After the Olympics, downhillers Marco Sullivan, rin Games and two silvers in Shiffrin could expand into the Steven Nyman and Travis GaVancouver. speed events. nong each had solid starts, but "Julia is always showing she Shiffrin has improved so their conditioning dropped off II I I I does well at the big events," much in GS that she was beat- after the first of the year. s former U.S. men's head coach ing male teammates in train"He (Beretzki) has brought Phil McNichol said. "Lind- ing the past couple of weeks. a great, great program and is sey is Lindsey. Ted is coming Which guys was she beat- doing an awesome job," RearlES SCHNIB off three (gold) medals at the ing? That is still a secret. ick said. " Shiffrin w a s skiing unworld championships. Bode's The women's speed team, back in the mix. Mikaela is believably fast," men's head meanwhile, is coming off a going to be a force to be reck- coach Sasha Rearick said. "I'm record-breaking season that oned with. So it's going to be not going to tell you." a very i nteresting Olympic As for the 36-year-old Miller Mountain Medical — yes, he is twice Shiffrin's cycle." Immediate Care Ligety dominated giant sla- age — his new, slimmer frame lom last season, winning six appears to be paying off. The 541-388-7799 of eight races on the World two-time overall World Cup •) g• 1302 NE 3rd St. Bend Cup plus the world champion- winner lost nearly 30 pounds ' ~ I www.mtmedgr.com I I I ship race in Schladming, Aus- during his season off to retria, where he was also a sur- coverfrom surgery on his left prise winner in super-G and knee. super-combined. Miller skied to Dt h p lace "Last year we had an awe- with the No. 32 bib in the opensome prep herebut this year ing run and was able to hang "Quality painting Inside and Out" was less so, so I wasn't 100 on in the second leg. 4 "I wasn't tired at all," Miller percent confident of how I was Painting in Central Oregon for over 18 years skiing," Ligety said. "But then said. "I think my f i tness is we had good training here in higher now for a World Cup Soelden and the last couple of than it's ever been. I'm snapweeks I started to feel a little py and springy and I can go better. It's nice to have some as long as the courses are.... Insured Bonded and Licensed <156!52 Phone: 541-383-2927 confirmation." There's obviously some lack 18633 Riverwoods Drive Email; heartlanJllc@msn.com Ligety is enjoying having of inertia, some weight, but I Bend, OR 97702 his childhood friend and for- don't think that's going to be Inquire about trading goods for services. I .
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C5 © To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbulletin.com/business. Alsoseearecapin Sunday's Businesssection.
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2013
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NASDAD
DOW ~ 15,568.93
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1,8oo
Tuesday, October 29, 2013
$30.74
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15,300 ':
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StocksRecap Vol. (In mil.) 3,169 1,759 Pvs. Volume 3,099 2,123 Advanced 1392 1255 Declined 1655 1295 New Highs 1 90 182 New Lows 11 19
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70.56 29.26 15.03 77.59 131.43 7.18 26.01 69.97 1 20.2 0 1870 33 82 27.78 16.03 25.98 12.73 43.44 5.71 22.55 30.46 23.77 36.43 76 49 63.34 46.93 15.32 60,00 2.36 54.62 270.00 36,90 32.99
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+62.7 +8 4 .3 +16.1 +16 .4 +22. 6 +5 4 .7 + 97.7 +1 5 6.3 +72.3 +8 6 .0 -9.7 +9 . 9 +44.8 +48.2 L + 24. 4 +3 0 .8 L +18 . 9 +2 9 .0 L +171.0 + 120.5
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w +2 6 . 2 + 47.0 9 8 6 1 8 0. 3 6 L +67. 4 +7 3 .0 11995 dd 0 . 5 8 L +24. 5 +47 .7 11 3 9 1 0. 24a L +18.1 +15 .9 44960 13 0 . 9 0 L +51.3 +51 .2 8 5 82 1 4 0. 2 2 L +65. 9 +7 3 .6 4 3 67 14 0 . 66f L +25.1 +3 7 .9 1 6 07 7 1 L -7.6 +16.7 1251 11 L +42.7 +43 .4 5 2 1 cc 0.6 9 V + 31. 4 +4 5 .1 51 2 2 3 0. 1 8 L +33.2 +31 .5 37388 13 1 .12f L + 46,3 +6 7 ,6 3 020 2 6 0, 8 4 L + 12.4 +9.7 14 9 4 1 6 1. 2 0 L +0.3 -4.1 19 1 2 1 1 .84f L +74. 5 +1 31.6 7 4 7 3 0 0 . 8a L + 28. 8 +4 0 .6 1 783 20 0 .80a +36.4 +48.9 12 dd L + 11. 9 e1 7 .3 9 5 7 3 4 1. 7 6 L +33. 9 e5 2 .5 5 4 9 2 3 0. 1 2 L +98 2 + 1 25 0 4519 20 0 8 0 +0.1 + 5.9 3 3 7 c c 0. 7 5 L +25. 4 +4 0 .7 7 8 8 2 6 2. 0 0 +61.2 +7 3.5 27 0 1 3 0 . 9 3f L + 46. 8 +7 4 .7 5 497 3 8 0. 8 4 w + 5 2.0 +6 4.0 5 240 d d +42.3 +41.0 1896 18 0.60a L +18. 2 + 15 .5 6 834 1 3 0. 9 2 L + 37. 8 +3 8 .1 4 5 0 1 6 0. 4 0f + 25.3 t 2 9.0 12539 1 1 1 . 2 0 L +12. 7 +1 7 .8 3 909 2 7 0. 8 8
' "'"" Sizzlingprofits
6-Mo n ths:15%
Annual dividend:$0.24 Div. yield: 1.2%
1-Y R : 41% D i v . payout ratio: 47.7%
Pri c e-earnings ratio (trailing 12 months):47
Ma r ket value: $7.3 billion
Total returns through Oct. 28
Source: FactSet
Source: FactSet
FundFocus AP
PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1Y R 3 Y R 5YR 1 3 5 American Funds BalA m 23.68 .. . +1 7.6 +19.8 +13.1+13.5 A A 8 CaplncBuA m 58.44 +.06 + 13.7 +15.6 +9.8+12.2 8 A C CpWldGrlA m 44.20 -.01 +21.1 +26.2 +10.7+15.0 C C C EurPacGrA m 48.01 -.02 +16.5 +23.1 +7.1+14.7 C C 8 FttlovAm 50 .65 -.04 +25.2 +29.3 +15.2+16.7 8 C B GrthAmA m 43 .76 -.11+ 27.4 +32.0 +15.6+16.6 8 C C Artisan SmcapVal ARTVX IucAmerA m 20.39 +.03+ 15.8 +17.7 +11.9+13.9 8 A A IttvCoAmA m 37.45 +.04+25.7 +28.2 +14.4+14.5 C D D VALUE BL EN D GR OWTH NewPerspA m 38.05 +.01 + 21.7 +27.3 +12.4+16.7 C 8 8 WAMuthtvA m38.62 -.02 +25.6 +27.1 +16.8+14.8 C A C ccC $$ Dodge 3 Cox Income 1 3.64 +.01 +0.6 + 0.9 +4.3 +8.6 A 8 8 to IntlStk 42.41 -.01 + 22.4 +31.7 +8.7+16.9 A 8 A tc Stock 158.13 -.31 e31.3 +35.4 e17.8e17.1 A A A Fidelity Contra 98.20 -.17 +27.8 +30.3 +16.0+17.4 C B C GrowCo 122. 71 - .23+31.6 +34.4 +19.1+21.5 A A A LowPriStk d 48.56 -.02+29.1 +34.9 +17.8+22.4 8 B A Fidelity Spartan 500 l dxAdvtg62.51 +.09+25.6 +27.6 +16.6+15.9 C 8 8 FrankTemp-Fraukliu Income C m 2. 42 ... + 11.7 +13.3 +9.9+14.5 A A A «C $$ IocomeA m 2.4 0 ... + 12.3 +14.0 +10.6+15.1 A A A FraukTemp-Templetuu GIBondAdv 13.18 ...+2.0 +5.0 +5.6+10.7 A A A «C Oakmark Itttl I 26.90 -.03 +28.5 +43.7 +14.4 +21.7 A A A $o RisDivA m 20. 96 +.03+21.4 +23.8 +14.2+12.8 E D E Mornirtgsiar OwnershipZone™ Oppeuheimer RisDivB m 18. 96 +.02+ 20.4 +22.6 +13.1+11.8 E E E e Fund target represents weighted O RisDivC m 18 . 87 +.03 +20.6 +22.9 +13.3+12.0 E D E average of stock holdings SmMidValA m42.84 -.02 +32.2 +38.0 +13.6+18.7 A E D • Represents 75% of Iuttd's stock holdings SmMidValB m35.92 -.02+31.2 +36.8 +12.6+17.7 B E D CATEGORY Small Blend PIMCO TotRetA m 1 0 . 91 .. . -1.2 -0.3 +3.4 +8.0 C C 8 MORNINGSTAR T Ruwe Price Eqtylnc 32.63 +.09 +25.0 +28.0 +16.3 +15.3 C 8 8 RATING™ * * * A A GrowStk 49.49 -.24 e 31.0 +34.7 e17.8 e20.3 A A A ASSETS $2,312 million Healthsci 58.84 -.14 +42.7 +46.0 +31.0 +27.5 8 A A EXP RATIO 1.23% Vanguard 500Adml 162.62 +.22 +25.6 +27.5 +16.6+15.9 C B B 5001ttv 162.61 +.22 +25.5 +27.4 + 16.5+15.8 C 8 B MANAGER George Sertl, Jr. CapDp 45.83 +.06 +36.3 +44.8 + 17.6+19.7 A A A SINCE 2006-05-15 Eqloc 29.48 +.03 e24.5 +25.7 + 18.4+15.3 D A B RETURNS3-MD +5.1 StratgcEq 28.67 . . . +33.7 +40.3 + 20.6+21.1 A A 8 YTD +22.5 TgtRe2020 27.05 -.01 +13.5 +16.0 + 10.1+12.8 8 A 8 1-YR +31.8 Tgtet2025 15.68 . . . +15.4 +18.1 + 109+135 C 8 C 3-YR ANNL +11.3 TotBdAdml 10.72 -.01 -1.2 -1.0 + 3.0 +6.0 D D D 5-YR-ANNL +17.3 Totlntl 16.75 -.02 +14.0 +21.1 + 60+135 D D C TotStlAdm 44.64 +.03 +27.0 +29.7 e 17.1 e17.2 8 A A TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT TotStldx 44.62 +.03 +26.9 +29.5 + 17.0+17.0 8 A A EMCDR Group, Ioc. 3.04 USGro 27.04 -.01 +27.2 +31.6 + 17.0+16.8 8 A C Ryder System Inc 2.98 Welltn 38.52 +.01 +16.0 +17.2 + 12.0+13.9 C A B Adtran, Inc. 2.69 Fund Footnotes. b - ree covering market costs is paid from fund assets. d - Deferred sales charge, cr redemption H.B. Fuller Company 2.48 fca f - front load (sales charges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually a marketing feeand either asales or World Fuel Services Corporation 2.38 redemption fee. Source: Morningstac
One of this top-rated fund's longtime co-managers, Scott SatMarketsummary terwhite, will retire in September Most Active 2016, but Morningstar says the NAME VOL (Ogs) LAST CHG team inspires confidence. Dell Ittc
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851033 735492 701800 655360 599484 592350 499470 449597 448183 419839
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Fusion-io AriadP
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LAST 15.50 11.09 4.11 4.56 8.32 2.49 14.49 3.83 6.05 2.81
CHG %CHG +2.74 +1.55 +.55 +.56 +1.01 +.29 +1.59 +.41 +.61 +.28
+ 2 1 .5 + 1 6 .2 + 1 5 .4 + 1 4 .0 + 1 3 .8 + 1 3.2 + 1 2.3 + 1 2 .0 + 1 1 .2 + 1 1 .1
Losers NAME SyutaPhm
Changyou DigitalAlly
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LAST 5.10 28.50 9.15 7.96 8.80
CHG %CHG -1.30 -20.3 -7.21 -20.2 -2.14 -19.0 -1.80 -18.4 -1.83 -17.2
Foreign Markets LAST CHG %CHG -20.70 -.48 4,251.61 London 6,725.82 + 4.48 + . 0 7 Frankfurt -7.09 —.08 8,978.65 Hong Kong 22,806.58 + 108.24 + . 4 8 Mexico 41,125.02 t453.41 + 1.11 —.24 Milan 18,829.42 -45.33 Tokyo 14,396.04 +307.85 +2.19 Stockholm 1,287.91 -2.72 -.21 Sydney + 51.60 + . 9 6 5,437.30 Zurich 8,291.10 + 41.79 + . 5 1 NAME Paris
SelectedMutualFunds FAMILY
+
EURO 1.3807
' 83
StoryStocks Stocks indexes were listless Monday, flipping between modest gains and losses throughout the day. The Standard & Poor's 500 eked out a gain of 0.1 percent, enough to send the benchmark index to a second consecutive record close. Companies reported a mixed set of earnings, helping to keep the market's ups and downs in check. Burger King Worldwide reported stronger results than analysts expected on higher sales overseas, for example, while Merck cut its forecast for full-year earnings. Companies that sell staples to consumers had some of the day's biggest gains, offsetting declines for raw material producers and utilities companies. B MY
Close:$52.02L3.25 or 6.7% The pharmaceutical company reported encouraging results from an early-stage study of its cancer drug nivolumab. $55 50
CF Industries CF Close:$218.36L8.74 or 4.2% The company agreed to sell its phosphate mining and manufacturing business to rival fertilizer company Mosaic for $1.4 billion. $220 200
45
A S 52-week range
$30.64
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A S 52-week range
$52.36
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VolJ27.9m (4.0x avg.) PE: 64.2 Volz1.2m (1.4x avg.) P E: 7.6 Mkt. Cap:$85.65 b Yiel d : 2 .7% Mkt. Cap:$12.51 b Yiel d : 1. 8% FIO
Close:$11.09 %1.55 or 16.2%
The flash storage drive maker's CEO bought more than 105,000 shares of the stock after a sharp drop-off last week. $20 15
Ruby Tuesday RT Close:$5.60 Y-0.37 or -6.2% Matthew Drapkin resigned from the board of directors of the restaurant chain following its disappointing quarterly report . $8
10
A S 52-week range $$.4$ ~
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Vol.:13.8m(2.9x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$1.13 b
A S 52-week range
0
$5.40 ~
$9.90
P E: . . . Vol.:3.2m (5.1x avg.) Yield:...
Mkt. Cap:$343.75 m
Synta Pharmaceuticals SNTA Sohu.com Close:$5.10 V-1.30 or -20.3% The drugmaker says data on ganetespib "increases confidence" in the lung cancer treatment, but investors saw it differently.
$8
SOHU Close:$68.11 W-13.31 or -16.3% The operator of a Chinese Web portal said its quarterly profit fell 20 percent due to new expenses for staff and marketing. $100 80 60
A S 52-week range $$.7$~
0 $11.$$
Vol.:8.2m (6.3x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$352.2 m
PE: .. Yield: ..
Roper Industries
ROP Close:$124.26 T-8.78 or -6.6% The company's third-quarter results fell short of Wall Street expectations, and it lowered its full-year profit forecast. $140
A S 52-week range
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scheduled to release quarterly results on Wednesday. $60 50
130
40
A S 52-week range
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SOURCE: Sungard
InterestRates
The full corporate name of the home of the Whopper new restaurants. Burger King also reported growth in is Burger King Worldwide, and it's living up to its Germany, Brazil and other areas. That helped offset a name. The fast-food chain on Monday reported 0.3 percent decline in revenue from L.S. and stronger third-quarter earnings than Canadian restaurants open more than a analysts expected, driven in part by rising year. sales at restaurants outside the L.S. Burger King has been opening more The strongest growth came from Asia, restaurants overseas as well: It opened where revenue at restaurants open at 146 company-owned and franchise least a year rose 3.7 percent. It's a key restaurants during the quarter outside figure because it removes the revenue boost that companies get from opening
AP
CRUDEOIL $98.68
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$102.$$~
Total return YTD:28% A
+
$22.50
Fusion-io
Dividend Footnotes:a - Extra dividends were paid, but are nct included. b - Annual rate plus stock c - Liquidating dividend. e - Amount declared or paid in last12 months. f - Current annual rate, which was mcreased bymost recent dividend announcement. I - Sum ot dividends paid after stock split, no regular rate. l - Sum cf dividends paid this year. Most recent dwuend was omitted or deferred k - Declared cr pad tas year, a cumulative issue with dividends marrears. m - Current annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend announcement. p - Imtial dividend, annual rate nct known, y>eld nct shown. r - Declared or paid in precedmg t2 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, apprcxroate cash value cn ex-distribution date.PE Footnotes:q - Stock is a closed-end fund - nc P/E ratio shown. cc - P/E exceeds 99. dd - Loss in last I2 months
Burger King Worldwlde(BKW) 52-WEEK RANGE Monday's close:$20.90 $14 ~ ~ ~ ~ 22
140
SILVER
Bristol-Myers Squibb
NorthwestStocks
The Standard 8 Poor's SB P/Case-Shiller index of home prices has been climbing steadily, sustained by growing demand for homes and a thin inventory of available homes for sale in many markets.The July index showed that L.S. home prices increased 12.4 percent from the same month last year, the most since February 2006.
J
Change: -1.35 (flat)
52-WK RANGE oCLOSE Y TD 1Y R VO L TICKER LO Hl C LOSE CHG%CHG WK MO OTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV
't1
J
Close: 1 5,568.93
.
HIGH
ALK 37.25 — A VA 22.78 ~ BAC 8 . 92 Eye on the Fed BBSI 28.74 The Fed's policymakers are BA 6 9 .30 expected to consider how the CascadeBancorp CACB 4.65 16-day partial L.S. government Columbia Bukg CDLB 16.18 shutdown affected the economy. Columbia Sporlswear COLM 47.72 A recent survey conducted by CostcoWholesale COST 93.51 ~ the central bank in advance of Craft Brew Alliance BREW 5 62 — the two-day committee meeting FLIR Systems FLIR 18 58 ~ Hewlett Packard HPQ 11.35 ~ that starts today indicated that the economy continuedto expand Home Federal BucpID HOME 10.33 ~ INTC 19.23 ~ at a modest to moderate pace in Intel Corp KEY 7. 81 — October. Economists believe the Keycorp Kroger Co KR 24 19 — Fed will maintain its $85-billion-aLSCC 3.55 month in bond purchases to offset Lattice Semi LA Pacific LPX 14.51 the impact of the shutdown that MDU Resources MDU 19.59 — began Oct. 1. Mentor Graphics MENT 13.21 Microsoft Corp MSFT 26.26 — Nike Iuc 8 NKE 44 83 — NordstromIuc JWN 50.94 ~ Nwst NatGas N WN 39.96 ~ OfficeMax Iuc DMX 6. 3 8 — PaccarIuc PCAR 41,17 — 11 II Planar Systms PLNR 1.12 Plum Creek PCL 40.60 Prec Castparts PCP 168.03 Safeway Iuc SWY 16.00 — Schuitzer Steel SCHN 23.07 Sherwin Wms SHW 140.12 — Staucorp Fucl SFG 32.14 — StarbucksCp SBUX 45,00 — Higher home prices? Triquiut Semi TQNT 4.31 ~ UmpquaHoldings U MPQ 11.17 Economists anticipate that a key USB 30.96 ~ measure of L.S. home prices will US Baucorp WashingtonFedl WAFD 15,64 — show home valuesincreased in Wells Fargo &Co WFC 31.25 ~ August. Weyerhaeuser WY 2 4.75 ~
M
40
15599.09 15533.48 15568.93 -1.35 DDW Tratts. 7060.87 7006.16 7036.04 +26.99 DDW Util. 508.05 503.17 504.86 -1.71 NYSE Comp. 10072.06 10034.09 10058.53 + 4 . 67 NASDAQ 3947.58 3927.09 3940.13 -3.23 S&P 500 1764.99 1757.67 1762.11 + 2 . 34 -1.00 S&P 400 1296.20 1289.47 1294.10 Wilshire 5000 18827.11 18752.81 18802.92 + 8 . 46 -0.37 Russell 2000 1119.56 1113.02 1117.97
Alaska Air Group AvistaCorp Bank of America Barrett Business Boeing Cu
A
.
DDW
10
Source: Factset
M
+
14,700
Dividend: $0.96 Div. yield: 3.1%
155
GOLD $1,352.00
. 14400' " M ' ' " ' j S. ....O. .
based on trailing 12 month results
162.5
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15,900
NYSE NASD
'13
+
1 5 380 .
1,800 "
$25'61
25
2.52%
Dow jones industrials
Close: 1,762.11
Pfizer will tout a surge of drug approvals when it reports thirdquarter results today. Executives for the world's second-largest drugmaker will discuss recent approvals, efforts to boost sales of key medicines and recent research data. Those are all factors that could help Pfizer rebound after being hit hard by com petition from generic drugs the past two years.
10-YR T-NOTE
S&P 500
Rebound prescription?
$35
2 34
1,762.11
NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO OTR AGO 3-month T-bill 6-month T-bill 52-wk T-bill
The yield on the 10-year Treasury note rose to 2.52 percent Monday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.
. 03 . 07 .09
.03 .07 .09
...
-
The price of crude oil rose for a third straight day, recovering a portion of the sharp losses it incurred earlier in the month. Natural gas fell for the first time in four days.
L
.15
L
T
.17
2-year T-note . 31 .30 +0 . 0 1 W W 5-year T-note 1 .29 1 .28 + 0.01 W W 10-year T-ttote 2.52 2 .51 + 0 .01 W T
T .30 T .76 W 1.75
3 0-year T-bond 3.62 3.60 +0.02 w
w 2.9 1
BONDS
w
NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MO OTR AGO
Barclays LottgT-Bdldx 3.38 3.37 +0.01 W Bond Buyer Muni Idx 5.10 5.10 . . . W Barcl ays USAggregate 2.24 2.26 -0.02 W PRIME FED B arclays US High Yield 5.71 5.69 +0.02 w w RATE FUNDS Moodys AAACorp Idx 4.44 4.43 e0.01 W YEST 3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.50 1.50 .. . w 6 MO AGO 3.25 .13 B arclays US Corp 3.13 3.14 -0.01 w w 1 YR AGO3.25 .13
Commodities
L
W W 2. 6 1 L L 4.14 W W 1 .78 w 6.3 9 W L 3 5. 4
w w
1.03 2. 7 4
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD Crude Dil (bbl) 98.68 97.85 + 0.85 + 7 . 5 Ethanol (gal) 1.83 1.86 -0.27 -16.6 Heating Dil (gal) 2.96 2.91 +1.88 -2.7 e 6 .5 Natural Gas (mm btu) 3.57 3.71 - 3.72 Unleaded Gas(gal) 2.63 2.59 +1.69 -6.4 FUELS
METALS
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz)
CLOSE PVS. 1352.00 1352.40 22.50 22.60 1470.10 1452.50 3.26 3.27 749.45 746.90
%CH. %YTD -0.03 -19.3 -0.46 -25.4 +1.21 -4.5 -0.14 -10.4 + 0.34 + 6 . 7
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.33 1.33 + 0.44 + 2 . 5 1.08 1.09 -1.42 -25.2 4.31 4.40 -2.10 -38.3 Corn (bu) Cotton (Ib) 0.79 0.79 - 0.54 + 4 . 7 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 359.10 361.40 -0.64 -4.0 + 2 .2 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.19 1.21 - 1.82 Soybeans (bu) 12.71 13.00 -2.21 -10.4 Wheat(bu) 6.81 6.91 -1.41 -12.5 AGRICULTURE
Cattle (Ib) Coffee (Ib)
Foreign Exchange The dollar was little changed against other major currencies on a listless day for stocks around the world. It was nearly flat against the euro and British pound.
h5N4 QG
1YR. MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.6161 —.0013 —.08% 1.6099 C anadian Dollar 1.0 4 4 1 —.0010 —.10% .9988 USD per Euro 1.3807 —.0000 —.00% 1.2932 Japanese Yen 9 7.66 +. 3 1 + . 32 % 79 . 6 6 Mexican Peso 12.8 909 + .0146 +.11% 13.0069 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3. 521 5 —. 0056 —. 16% 3.8708 Norwegian Krone 5.8940 +.0035 +.06% 5.7703 South African Rand 9.8276 +.0182 +.19% 8.6481 6.3359 +.0181 +.29% 6.7090 Swedish Krona Swiss Franc .8943 +.0015 +.17% .9352 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.0437 + .0002 +.02% .9 6 50 Chinese Yuan 6.0857 +.0015 +.02% 6 .2603 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7533 -.0005 -.01% 7.7503 Indian Rupee 61.510 +.070 +.11% 5 3.755 Singapore Dollar 1.2373 +.0014 +.11% 1 .2204 South Korean Won 1061.73 -1.48 -.14% 1096.62 -.01 -.03% 2 9 .26 Taiwan Dollar 29.43
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2013
BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • Build a Professional Website for Your Business 2:Learn changesto improve the look and feel of your website; registration required; $129; Tuesdays through Nov.19, 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W.CollegeW ay,Bend; 541-383-7270. WEDNESDAY •StepstoEconomicand Personal Success: Fourpart series on employment readiness andempowering change; registration suggested; $88 for series; 5:30-8:30 p.m.; Eastlake Village Apartments, Community Room, 675 N.E. Bellevue Drive, Bend; 54I-923-10 I8. • Howto Start a Business: Registration required; $29; 6-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W.CollegeW ay,Bend; 541-383-7290. NOV. 6 • iOSApp Development3Game Development: Last class in the series; build games, learn animation, graphic elements and troubleshooting; advanced knowledge of Xcodeand Objective-C or iOSApp II; registration required; $179; Wednesdaysthrough Nov. 20, 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W.College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270. • Launch Your Business: COCC'sSmallBusiness Development Center offers this course for local startup companies; helps business owners get started and develop a working plan; four one-hour coaching sessions with Wednesday evening classes from Nov. 6 to Oec. 4; pre-registration required; $119; 6-9 p.m.; COCCChandler Building, 1027 N.W.Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7290. NOV. 7 • Oregon Alcohol Server Permit training: Meets Oregon Liquor Control Commission minimum requirements to obtain an alcohol server permit; registration required; $35; 9 a.m.; RoundTable Pizza, 1552 N.E. Third St., Bend; 541-447-6384 or www. happyhourtraining.com. • Oregon Geothermal Working Group: Discussion of geothermal projects, power plant development, state and federal regulatory agencies and a roundtable session; open to the public; 9 a.m.; The Environmental Center, 16 N.W. KansasAve., Bend; 54I-385-6908. • General Certificate in Brewing information session: Learn about this new exam preparation course to earn the Institute of Brewing and Distilling General Certificate in Brewing (GCB);registration required; free; 6-7:30 p.m.; COCCChandler Building, 1027 N.W.Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270. NOV. 12 Twitter for Business: Learn how small-tomediumsizedbusinesses use the social media site Twitter to market and advertise; registration required; $49;1-4 p.m.; COCC,2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270.
For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday's Bulletin or visitbendbulletin.coin/bizcal
Corrections In a story headlined
"Insurance uncer-
Studying the do's, don'ts of celluse
EXECUTIVE FILE What:Gopher Kegs What it does:Sells kegs throughout the country and internationally
I
Pictured:Scott Jennrich,
j
left, and Helmut Mees,
co-owners
Where:149S.E. Ninth St., Bend
Employees:Three Phone:541-508-5218 Website:www.
gopherkegs.com
I
ese
SharedCare will continue to provide benefits in 2014. Also in the story, the name of Johnson
Benefit Planning, owned by Tom Spear,was incorrect. In the Business Cal-
endar listings, which appeared Sunday,Oct. 27, on PageE2, anincorrect price was listed for the Launch Your
Business class at Central Oregon Community College. The correct
price is $119. The Bulletin regrets the errors.
(ForMees) Q ..What is your
S
favorite partabout owning and operating Gopher Kegs? • Our custom-
A . ersarethe greatest people. In
0
most cases they
are living the dream
— making beer for a living. (They are) fun, honest, hard-working
By Racllael Rees• The Bulletin
people — the type of people you love
While there's no shortage oflocalbreweries in Central
doing business with And also the type of
Oregon, Scott Jennrich and Helmut Mees learnedthat
people you want to
supplies for those breweries, such as kegs, aren't as plentiful "We knew a bunch of (people who worked at) the breweries in town and kept hearing from them how hard it was to get stuff," Jennrich wrote in an email. "Kegs were something we could wrap our heads around." The duo tested the market, purchasing a cargo-ship container of kegs. Within three weeks, they were sold out. That's when pair decided to start a keg-selling business, Gopher Kegs, in June 2012. "In 18 months, we have gone from slinging kegs out of a shipping container to having two warehouses," Jennrich wrote. In January, they started leasing 4,000square feet ofwarehouse space on S.E. Ninth Street, and in August they opened a warehouse in Salisbury, N.C., to reduce shipping costs and time for East Coast customers. The kegs are manufactured in Asia and sold throughout the U.S., Canada, Puerto Rico and Panama. During the first year, Gopher Kegs sold about 40,000 kegs, and Jennrich said
he expects to sell even more next year. Sizes range from one-sixth to one-half of a barrel and cost between $74 and $114, he said. A barrel equals 31 gallons. This year, the company has soldkegs to more than 300 breweries, including some in CentralOregon. Jennrich said about 98 percent of Gopher Kegs' customers are breweries, but the company also sells to wineries, homebrewers anda handful of individuals who use the kegs for other purposes. "They are beer kegs, but I guess because they are made out of stainless steel, you can put anything you want in them," he said. "People find ingenious uses for them." Overall, he said, Gopher Kegs has exceeded his expectations. "I think the craft beer industry is in growth mode right now," he said. "We are kind of in the right spot at the right time. It won't last forever, but right now we enjoy it."
have a beer with.
Q
(For . Jennrich)
What has been the
biggestchallenge with your company?
(Conducting) • international business, shipping, customs, duties
— were all new to us. The kegsare manufactured in Asia.
But parts come from Asia, Denmark (and) sometimes eventhe LI.S. Doing business with the (Danish) is different then doing business with the Chinese. Watching
the (Danish) and Chinese do business together can be amusing. Thecommon denominator between us andour Danish andChinese partners is quality and service.
— Reporter: 541-617-7818, rrees@bendbulletin.com
Recyclingcenter has foundahome The cooperativesetting up a Bendredemption centerfor returnable
bottles andcanshas completedthe purchase of a building at 755 N.E. Second St. that will house the center, according to a
news releasefrom Compass CommercialReal Estate Services.
The Washington Post
Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin
The OregonBeverage RecyclingCooperative
We all sneak a peak at text messages or emails to pass the time in boring meetings. And yet, we'd also probably all admit that we find it irritating when others do the same. But a new study from researchers at Howard University and the University of Southern California finds big differencesinwho's bothered by it — and how much. The study, published in the journal Business Communication Quarterly, asked 204 employees of an East Coast beveragedistri butor and 350 U.S. business professionals in a random-sample survey to weigh in on whether it bothered them if people checked their cellphones. What they found: People are particularly bothered by managers who take calls during meetings, men arenearly twice as likely as women to think it's OK to check text messages at a business lunch and even leaving your phone out on the table can be offensive to some
paid $540000to buy The
Salvation Army'sformer administrative center
on Second Street north of N.E. Franklin Avenue,
according tothe news releasefrom Compass, which representedboth
the buyerandthe seller. The cooperative is
planning amajor remodeling ofthe building, according to the release after the state approved
the redemptioncenterlast month. The release also stated that the cooperative
plansto openits Bend center before the endof
theyear.
Recallexpands on Reser'sfoods BEAVERTON—Re-
ser's FineFoodsInc. has voluntarily expanded a
recall of packagedsalads from its factory inTopeka, Kan.
The company,based in Beaverton,said it took the step recently because
people. In the first sample, the researchers asked open-ended questions and evaluated the intensity of the responses and the number of times certain behaviors were mentioned. They note that people were particularly upset when their managers took calls in front of them. The second sample asked participants to say how appropriate or inappropriate differentbehaviors were in both formal professional meetings and off-site business lunches. Three quarters or more of the respondents said even checking for text messages
the products distributed
nationwideandin Canada could be contaminated with listeria, which can
cause seriousillness. Symptoms of listeria include fever, headache,
abdominal painanddiarrhea. People with weak
immunesystems,such asyoung children,elderly peopleand otherscandie from the illness. Pregnant
woman cansuffer miscarriage or stillbirth. The recall was first an-
nouncedFriday. The companysaid ina statement onits website
was rarely or never appropri-
that therehavebeenno
ate. And more than half said checking the time on a phone, looking to see whose call was coming in, bringing a phone to the meeting or excusing oneself to make a call was inappropriate in a formal meeting.
confirmed illnesses linked to the products. Con-
sumers, however,were advised they could throw
away recalledproducts or take theitemsbackwhere they bought them for a refund.
The products being recalled include potato,
Children increasinglyengagedwith mobile devices By Cecilia Kang The Washington Post
The vast majority of young children in the United States are using mobile devices and for much longer periods of time and an even greater number of babies are being exposed to the smartphones and tablets, according to a survey. Seven out of 10 children younger than 8 have used a mobile device, a figure that has doubled in two years, accordingto a reportreleased Monday by Common Sense Media.
Those children are spending triple the time on mobile devices — about 15 minutes daily — said the San Francisco-based child advocacy
group. Four out of 10 children younger than 2 are also using mobile devices, a jump from one in 10 two years ago. The findings come amid increasedconcern over the time children spend online as fami-
lies snap up gadgets, game consoles and computers. The American Academy of Pediatrics has advised parents to limit children's time in front of
tainty," which appeared Sunday, Oct. 27, on Page E1, the status of St. Charles Health
System's SharedCare program was incorrect.
By Jena McGregor
k
BRIEFING
screens, which it says might lead to attention problems, exposure to inappropriate content and obesity. A big business has emerged out of selling apps and devices for children as young as newborns, promising educational and entertainment benefits that some public Internet advocates said are misleading. The federal government created privacy rules for children 12 and younger, but some critics say regulators and tech companies need to do more to protect young users from predators and
mature content. The AAP suggests children younger than 2 avoid any media use, and authors of its media policy say there is not enough research to support companies' claims that smartphones and tablets can educate babies. Even with this type of change, six out of 10 children watch TV every day, compared with 17 percent of children who use a mobile device daily. The number of children using mobile devices daily doubled from 8 percent two years ago, according to the national survey.
pasta, tunaandeggsalads and otherssoldunderthe Reser's name. The companysaidthe packagesaremarked with a plant-identifier code of 20 next to the best-by date. About 450 products are listed on the
Resers.comwebsite and were sold undernames
that include Safeway Deli Counter, Walmart and
SYSCO, aswell asmany others. The expiration dates range from Oct.11 to Feb. 6, 2014.
Reser's wouldnot respond to questions about
how thecontamination was discovered orhow extensive it was. — Fromstaffandwirereports
DEEDS Deschutes County • Pahlisch Homes lnc. to Robert V. TruongandHongT.Pham, McCall Landing, Phase1, Lot 94, $222,350 • Hayden HomesLLCto Wendy M. McCulloch, South Point, Lot15, $239,861 • 0and R LLC to Gerald B. and Barbara J. Mills, Shevlin Crest, Lot 33, $489,000 • Tim L. and Joyce F.Kirk to Paul H. and Allison L. Campbell, Rivers Edge Village, Phase 3,Lot10, $342,000 • Daniel T. Horton to EugeneE.and Patricia A. George, Skyliner Summit at Broken Top,Phase11, Lot 286, $725,000 • Erin M. and Christopher M. Wolfe to William A. andLinda M. Watson, Terrebonne Estates, Phase1A, Lot 57, $167,900 • Gordon Friedman to Scott A. and Kristin A. Hill, Sun Meadow,No. 3, Lot 93, $215,000 • Federal National Mortgage
Association to J. MichaelandAnneC. Van Horn, Lot 7, Block 8, $367,000 • Donald W. andFreddie L. Kelleher to Phillip B. Kelleher, Township18, Range12, Section15, $180,000 • David R. Vial to Scott P. andAndrea N. Sutton, Oemaris Acres, Lot 8, $487,500 • Mary E. Farris, trustee for the Charles E.Farris Exempt Trust, to Elizabeth T.Abatie, Northridge, Lot1, $175,250 • Structure Development N.W.LLC to Michael K.andSarah R. Hegarty, Skyliner Summit at BrokenTop, Phase11, Lot 298, $719,500 • David L. and Denise M. Saylors to Charles Fl.andCaryn M. Greef, Pinebrook, Phase 3,Lot 3, Block10, $262,000 • Construction Connection Limited to Richard B. andDiana B. Pond, trustees for the Richard andDiana PondRevocableTrust,Oakview, Phase 10, Lot 41, $226,240.91
• Diana S. Shandto Jock G. and Karen L. Elliott, Odin Crest Estates, Lot 3, Block 3, $399,900 • Jeffery O. and Leslie O. Oudato Jason T.andKrista J. Gault, Second Addition to Whispering Pines Estates, Lot 23, Block 29, $478,200 • Elizabeth Shinoharato Oan E.Neal, Bluffs at River Bend, Phases 3and4, Lot 24, $450,000 • Krista J. and Jason T.Gault to CascadeView Estates, Phase1, Lot 235, $272,400 • Plaza Bend LLCto Kenneth H. and Shirley R. Plam, Plaza Condominiums, Lot 201, Unit 201, Parking SpaceP-80, Storage Unit S2, $259,430 • Joesphine Zazueta-Sargent to Pinnacle Capital Mortgage Corporation and Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems lnc., Awbrey Park, Phase 3, Lot113, $316,000 • VRE Crescent LLC to Daniel Horton, Tetherow, Phase1, Lot 263, $199,700
• Alan and Anne Heath to Loriel O. Hogan, Partition Plat No.1996-45, Parcel 1, $525,000 • Paul N. andEllen Mandel to Edward C. and Lori A. McPheeters, Awbrey Butte Homesites, Phase16, Lot23, Block14, $167,500 • Kimberly A. Maclnnis to Robin Smith and NancyFloyd, RiverTerrace, Lot 4, Block 4, $366,000 • Maureen M. Swaneyto Kimberly A. Maclnnis, Cottages at NorthWest Crossing, Lot 5, $320,000 • Patricia A. Nugaris to John Soliday, Tillicum Village, Lots 4and 5, Block 2, $245,000 • Douglas L. and Barbara A. Burke to James O.Cline Jr. and Jennifer O. Cline, Partition Plat1993-50, Parcel 2, $307,500 • Harold Riggan to Curtis A. and Virginia L. Seymour, Ridge atEagle Crest 5, Lot 58, $329,000 • Gabriel and OaynaLanning to Phillip C. and Carrie K.Wallace, Awbrey
Park, Phase 3,Lot105, $635,000 • Barbara J. Oavey,trustee for the Pederson-OaveyJointTrust, to Eric G. and Susan B.Stenman, OregonWater Wonderland, Unit 2, Lots 38 and39, Block 31, $610,000 • JKC LLC to Ruth V. Airth, Scotts Landing, Lot11, $225,000 •TonyMassieandAthenaMassie, now known asAthena Marie Prindle, to Curt and MeleahRichards, Crossroads, SecondAddition, Lot 104, $168,500 • John A. Holpuch andDianaHolpuch, who acquired title as DianaL. Holpuch, to Robert W.and Margaret L. Lowry, Woodside Ranch, Phase6, Lot1, Block16, $412,500 • Michael A. and LeanneA. Hockman to Melanie Rosen,Oakview, Phase3, Lot 5, $245,000 • Alta F. Reid, trustee for the Ronald and Alta Reid Trust, to Ronald A.and Tamara L. Reid, Tillicum Village, Lot 2, Block 5, $200,000
IN THE BACI4: ADVICE 4 ENTERTAINMENT > Food, Recipes, D2-3 Home, Garden, D4-5 Martha Stewart, D5 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2013
O» www.bendbulletin.com/athome
FOOD
4
e
r
"7
l
I
Andy Tullis / The Bulletin
From left: Severed Fingers, Bat-wiches and Jack-o-Lantern Peppers. Recipes on Page D2.
he point of Halloween is not to induce a sugar coma in every kid
By Linda Turner Griepentrog For The Bulletin
in sight — so if you're looking to hand out just a little nutrition to counteract the sweetness, make some tasty foods that still evoke a haunting spirit of fun. These treats are perfect for a pre-trick-ortreat outing or for a goblin get together after the haul. If you're short on time, trade the "from scratch" versions and let some prepared foods get your little ghosts on their way (and you out of the kitchen) quicker. SeeHalloween /D2
lllustration by Mugs Scherer/The Bulletin
HOME
For a fine mea,serve onafancy, DYtray
TODAY'S RECIPES
•e
GARDEN
For carrot happiness, grow them yourself By Liz Douville
By Linda Turner Griepentrog For The Bulletin
There's nothing quite as elegant as being served food on a tray — whether you're
lounging in bed during a leisurely weekend, watching your favorite soap on TV or dining on the patio far from the kitchen. Serving trays abound at your favorite home stores, but it's more fun to make a tray and personalize it. Start with a good size photo frame. The frame itself can be wood or plastic, but look forone with a glass surface as opposed to plastic, which can melt and distort if a warm dish is placed on it. Plastic may also not support as much
weight as the rigid glass covering. Thrift stores are a great place to look for old frames with character. Those with worn personae can be easily spray painted or hand painted for a quick update. Choose a frame that has somewhat of a flat area for mounting handles. You'll also need two handles — look in the cabinet hardware section of a home improvement store. Choose handles in proportion to the framesizeand theme. Handles come in wood, metal, plastic and glass, so choose something to go with the character of the frame and your planned embellishment. SeeTray/D4
Scarysnacks:Boo-nana Pops,AppleSmiles,Bat-wiches,Jacko-Lantern Peppers, SeveredFingers, D2 GreenGoddess RoastedChicken:Zippydressingworksnicely with mild chicken,D3
Fresh andWild MushroomStew: And arecipe for a broth of dried porcinis to give it even more flavor,D3 Mark Bittman's fried favorites:Falafel, Fried Zucchini (picturedj,
Vegetable Tempura,D5
Recipe Finder:Noodle kugel like grandma usedto make, D3
For The Bulletin
Once upon a time in the land of 9-to-5, I took a container of freshly picked carrots from the garden to share with fellow workmates. The reaction of one friend was, "I hate carrots; they are so bitter." After much coercing and to save face,she tried one and the reaction was the classic, "Wow! I didn't know they could taste that good." I was reminded of that day while making a pot of soup and needed a carrot. I had a store-bought carrot in the refrigeratorand wanted touse it before harvesting my own. You know, the old waste-notwant-not mentality. As I cut into it, there was no
sweet smell, no moisture content to keep it crisp. I decided to give it my blessings for a new life in the compost bin and headed out to the garden. The question of why the big difference in taste sent me to my carrot file for answers. I learned that flavor characteristics are affected more by weather conditions and the variety than by soil conditions. Carrots are a hardy lot and can push their growth even in the poorest of soils. Warm days and cool nights are the best conditions for developing great taste. Age is also important. If pulled too early, the carrot won't have developed its full flavor and sugar content. See Carrots/D4
D2
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2013
Fooo
Next week: Hazelnuts ready to spread
Pa' Qa
• Do you makegreat cookies?The
The winners will be determined
Bulletin wants to know. The At Home section is hosting a cookie contest to determine the best cookies in Central Oregon. The grand prize winner will receive a two-night stay at the Oregon Coast. Other winners will receive $25 in Downtown Dollars,
bya panel of judges onNov.15.
which canbeusedatbusinessesin
• Traditional (This category will include cookiessuch assnicker-
downtown Bend.
Those interested in entering the
competition must register bynoon, Nov. 12. Cookies will be divided into sev-
eral categories: • Chocolate chip • Bar
doodle, peanutbutter, oatmeal
can enter up tothreetypes of cook-
raisin and other cookies that people are familiar with.)
ies. Registration can also be mailed to: The Bulletin, Cookie Contest, P.O. Box 6020, Bend, OR97708. Those entering the competition
• Nontraditional/wacky (This category is for cookieswith unusual ingredients or preparations.) • Youth (age16 andyounger.) To register, email the following information to athome@bend
must bring adozencookies, covered, on adisposableplate to TheBulletin for judging.Cookiesubmissions will be accepted the evening of Nov.14
bulletin.com: Name,type of cookie
(until 7:30 p.m.) orthe morning of and contact information. Individuals Nov.15 (between 8 and10a.m).
Pa
All of the winning recipeswill be published, alongside photos of the winning cookies, in the At Home
section Dec.3. Questions? Contact Alaudra Johnson at 541-617-7860 or ajehnson©deuddulletiu.cem. H Want to see somecookies in action?Visit deudbulletin.com/ ceokiecoutest
(
t%-"..M
Halloween Continued from D1
On-the-go grub For ghouls and goblins on the go, consider these haunting things to tuck into their lunchboxes around Halloween. 1. Purchase fruit cups with mandarin oranges, peaches or even orange gelatin cups. Use a permanent black marker to draw a jack-o-lantern face on the lid. 2. Peel a small orange, tangerine or tangelo, leaving the segments intact. Insert a small piece of celery in the top center so it looks like a miniature pumpkin with a stem. 3. To make witches' broomsticks, purchase long stick p retzels, slice some w h i te cheese into "fringe" and roll it around the end of the pretzel stick. Tie it in place with a slice of green onion.
<.s
j • • 1I t
Jack-o-what? This time of y ear, many foods are simple to alter with a Halloween touch. Think about cutting a face into a slice of toast and layering it over another slice covered with red jam or jelly to ooze out the openings when the slices are pressed together. A n o r dinary b u rger b e comes much more fun with a cheese topper that's been "carved" into a jack-o-lantern face. A simple quesadilla takes on an element of Halloween surprise when a cheese-topped tortilla is topped yet again with another tortilla with a cut-out pumpkin face. The contrasting cheesepeeking through the facial features adds a bit of fun. Don't forget about ghost pancakes — simply dribble the batter into a ghostly shape and add blueberriesor chocolate chipsfor eyes. Serve them on a base of red raspberry syrup w ith sausage "fingers." — Reporter: gwizdesignsiaol. com
Andy Tullie/The Bulletin
Boo-nana Pops, Apple Smiles and tangerines dressed up to resemble pumpkins all provide Halloween flair to a snack table at a party or a lunchbox at school.
Boo-nana Pops
Apple Smiles Makes 4 servings.
Makes 4 servings.
The teeth can be either mini-marshmallows for a bit of sweetness or blanched almond slices for a more rustic look.
To make this a little healthier, substitute raisins for the chocolate chips.
1 red apple Lemon juice
1 med banana 1/2oz white chocolate 12 miniature chocolate chips
Peanut butter Miniature marshmallows
Red fruit leather (optional)
Te ready the apples:Carefully wash and core the apple, but do not peel. Slice the apple into eighths. Squeeze lemon juice over the white portion to prevent browning.
Te make thesmiles: Spread peanut butter on one side of each apple slice. Place marshmallows on oneapple slice — the number used will depend on the original size of the apple. Lay a second apple slice over the marshmallows with the peanut butter side down.
Te add atongue: Narrowly slice the fruit leather to shape andtuck it under the lower marshmallow edge, leaving it hang over the lower "lip." Curl if desired. — Adapted from allthecooks.com
4 sm sticks or skewers
Shredded coconut (optional)
To makethepops:Cut the banana in half lengthwise, and then cut each half in half width-wise. This creates 4 "ghosts," each with a flat side. Insert a stick into the flat end of each banana chunk and place on a
wax-paper lined cookie sheet. Freezefor about 3 hours. Melt the white chocolate in a mug. Microwave it for 30 seconds at a time, stirring between, until the chocolate is thoroughly melted. Dip the frozen banana into the chocolate, scraping off extra from the
underside. Or, use a knife and "frost" the banana with the melted chocolate. Place the banana flat onto the wax paper lined cookie sheet and immediately add the chocolate chips for the eyes and mouth before the
Bat-wiches
cc McKenzie S HOES & A P P A R E L
Makes 1 sandwich.
white chocolate hardens. Forextra crunch, dip the ghost in coconut if de-
Depending on the size of your bread and the cookie cutter, you may get
sired. Return the bananas to the freezer until ready to serve. — Adapted from skinnytaste.com
more than one sandwich from each piece of bread. Vary the sandwiches by using peanut butter, hummus, meat, cheese or other ingredients. To make a dessert sandwich, use pumpkin breadand creamcheese filling. 2 slices dense, dark bread (rye or pumpernickel)
1 b a t cookie cutter, 3 to 4 inches across
Sandwich filling (see above)
Ket c hup (optional)
Jack-o-Lantern Peppers Make as manyasyouneedforyourwickedbunch.Thepepperscanbe filled with any number of things — Spanish rice, spaghetti, chili, etc.
To make thesaudwich:Layer the filling between the two slices of bread. FOR THE PEPPERS: Cut out the bat shape using the cookie cutter. For hot sandwiches, arrange 1 green, red or orange bell the sandwiches on a microwavable plate andwarm before serving. pepper per person, with the For bloodybats: Add a little ketchup so it's visible on the sides. stem intact
FOR THE FILLING: Choos e your favorite filling, either made from scratch or prepared (suggestions above)
To prepare the peppers:Boil enough water to cover the number of peppers needed. Rinse the peppers and slice off the upper portion keeping the stem at-
tached.Scoopouttheseedsandmembranes and discard.Usingasharp knife, carefully carve eyesand a mouth on one side of the pepper surface. Either microwave the pepper(s) for 3 minutes, or steam the pepper(s) for 10 minutes, submerging in the boiling water. Remove the pepper(s) from the water and drain. For the filling:Scoop heated prepared filling into the carved portion of
the pepper, allowing some tocomeout of the opening areas. Placethetop over the filling. Reheat pepper(s) if neededbefore serving. For a dit of gross:Havethe pepper "coughing" up a meatball or two.
Severed Fingers
PRIME RIB NIGHT EVERY WEDNESDAY 5:00-8:00 PM Our delectable Roast Prime Rib of Beef is hand-seasoned, slow roasted to perfection and then chef cut to order.
— Each Dinner Includes-
$21.95 for a 10osCut or $27.98 for a 14ox Cut Seating is limited so RSVP by pkone or online today! •
Cocktail sausages White onion
Ketchup, cocktail or barbecue
sauce
To prepare the sausages:Bring a pot of water to a boil. Make three shallow horizontal cuts about halfway along the sausage length for the "knuck-
les." Drop thesausagesinto the boiling water for 2 to 3 minutes to cook. The
Twice-Baked Potato Se asonal Vegetables Au Jus ' Creamed Horseradish tit Yorkshire Pudding R Fresh Baked Bread
•
Make as many asneeded to feed your trick-or-treaters. Three per person is a good serving size.
sausages will curve slightly as they cook, emphasizing the knuckles. Remove the sausages from the water and drain. Using a sharp knife, cut
away a small flat section at thetip of eachsausagefor the "fingernail." Thinly slice the white onion and cut fingernail-shaped pieces. Apply a bit of ketchup or sauce to attach the fingernail to the carved sau-
sage end.
Join us in ou r L o u nge or Award Win n i ng Restaurant!
Te serve:Fill a small, shallow cup with ketchup or sauce. Place the fingers in the cup, burying the lower ends. Microwave briefly to reheat if needed.
62000 BrokenTop Dr. 5 4 1 - 383-8200
water and use thin green pepper slices for the fingernails. — Adapted from divinedinnerpartlrcom
For a dit ef monster-ness:Addsomegreen food coloring to the boiling •oe
ww w .brokentop.com
FOO D
RECIPE FINDER Looking for a hardto-find recipe or can
answer a request? Write to Julie Rothman, Recipe Finder, The Baltimore Sun, 501 N. Calvert St., Baltimore, MD 21278, or email
baltsunrecipefinder© gmail.com. Namesmust accompany recipesfor them to be published.
Noodle kugel like grandma used to make By Julie Rothman The Baltimore Sun
Claire Green from Parkton, Md., was looking for a recipe for a noodle kugel like the one she remembers her g r andmother making for the Jewish holidays when she was grow-
ingup. Kugel is a staple at most Jewish holiday meals — with the exception of Passover, during which time egg noodles are not permitted. There are endless variations on the kugel theme;they can be made savory or sweet, topped or not, and can include dried fruit or nuts or seasonings. Quite a few readers sent in their family's favorite kugel recipe. Most had been passed down through the generations and are still hap-
c ic en 0 erin 0 e r een 0 By Melissa Clark New York Times News Service
My mother learned how to marinate chicken in spiced yogurt from Madhur Jaffrey's famous tandoori recipe. At first, my mother strictly followed the d irections, grinding the garam masala and coloring the yogurt a torrid vermilion. But after a while, she start-
(grandmother) made frequently. She said that the recipe is "tried and true" and that she often serves it as a side dish even when it's not a holiday. Her recipe makes a moist and creamy, rather sweet kugel. You can feel free to adapt it to suit your taste; kugel is very forgiving. This one is made with full fat dairy products and a fair amount of sugar, but if you're watching your calories or prefer something less sweet, you can certainly cut back the sugar and substitute low-fat dairy. It will still taste great. Kugel freezes well, reheats b eautifully an d i s e asy t o transport, so it makes an excellent choice for potlucks or family get-togethers. It can be served for breakfast,lunch, dinner and some would even say as dessert. Best of all, it is absolutely delicious.
Requests Barbara Katz R osenberg from Baltimore, who kindly sharedthe kugel recipe below, would love to have the recipe for the sticky buns that were sold in some Baltimore City schools, in particular at Garrison and Forest Park. She said the recipe was in The Baltimore Sun many years ago, but she has misplaced it. Kevin Pearl from Catonsville, Md., would like to know how to make chili at home similar to the "Authentica" that is served at Nacho Mama's in Baltimore's Canton neighborhood. He says that it has bourbon in it, but not beans.
Makes 10-12 servings.
Stayman Winesap) 1 TBS vanilla extract /2 tsp almond extract, optional 1 Ib medium egg noodles, slightly undercooked and drained Cinnamon and sugar for dusting
Grease a 13-by-9-inch glass baking dish with butter. Preheat
In a blender, puree buttermilk, basil, chives, garlic, scallion, lime zest and juice, salt and pepper until smooth. Put chicken halves in a bowl or large heavy-duty resealable plastic bag Heat oven to 500 degrees. Remove chicken from the marinade, shaksheet. Pat chicken tops dry with paper towels and drizzle with oil. Roast until cooked through, about 30 to 45 minutes. Let rest for 10 minutes be-
fore serving, with some of the reserved marinade assauce if you like. yogurt will turn its flesh from soft and supple to m u shy. Don't let it go for longer than 24 hours. To get th e m ost i ntense Green Goddess experience, I use the mixture as a marinade and as a sauce, rubbing some on the chicken and saving some to serve, in all its verdant glory, in a small bowl on the side. The intensity of its hue reminds me of my mother's earliest and most colorful tandoori iterations. But the Green Goddess flavor is its own spe-
cial thing.
w
By David Tanis New York Times News Service
Suppose you are craving wild mushrooms. In a perfect world, if you actually did trek into a forest, and knew where to go and knew what to look for, you might happen upon a n e n c lave of golden chanterelles just waiting to be picked. The yellow beauties would jump into your basket at the touch of a pocketknife blade. Around a bend, in a grove of pines, you'd stumble over f ine, fir m p o r cini — t h e
h $
regal, highly prized boletus edulis. You have wisely planned ahead and brought along an iron sk illet, and some olive oil, garlic and
parsley.
lri
Oh, yes, and salt, a crusty loaf of bread and a bottle of red wine. Over a fire of twigs, the mushrooms sizzle and, ina moment, an exquisite al fresco meal is ready to share with y our f ellow
,'9"'j
4(,
foragers. Well, a fellow can dream. Here in the city, my mushroom-hunting plan is quite a bit different, even if the objective is the same. I want wild mushrooms for dinner, but I don't want to spend a fortune on them at the store.
Fred R. Conrad/New York Times News Service
Combining cultivated mushrooms with wild ones can evoke the comfort of home and the primal call of the forest in each bite. M y c o m promise i s t o But I give them a boost of make a stew using mostly wild flavor in a couple of cultivated mu sh r o o m s. ways.
Resh and Wild Mushroom Stew Makes 4 to 6 servings. Time: 1 hour. 1'/s Ib cultivated brown mushrooms, like shiitake, cremini or portobello /2 Ib pale wild mushrooms, like chanterelle (or King trumpet Extra-virgin olive oil 1 Ig onion, diced
Salt and pepper 1 tsp chopped thyme 1 tsp chopped sage or rosemary Pinch of red pepper flakes or cayenne 1 TBS tomato paste
The f i r s t is to make an inte n se, flavorful broth with a handful of dried porcini. The other is to actually buy some wild mushrooms. A s c ant h a l f -pound o f chanterelles, even if pricey, won't break the bank. The rest of the rustic stew (call it
of shiitake, cremini and oyster mushrooms. As it simmers, this saucy, herbaceous mushroom stew gains depth and character. Spooned over pasta or nestled up to a soft mound of polenta, it evokes the comfort of home and the primal in each a ragout if you wish) is made bite.
3 sm ripe tomatoes, peeled,
seeded and chopped 1 TBS all-purpose flour Porcini broth (see recipe), heated, or use chicken broth 1 TBS butter 3 garlic cloves, minced
e
HunterDouglas
3 TBS chopped parsley
Clean mushrooms, keeping colors separate, and trim tough stems. (Save stems for stock.) Slice In a wide skillet, warm 2 tablespoons olive oil over medium-high heat. Add onion, season with salt and pepper and cook, stirring, until onion has softened and browned, about 10 minutes. Remove from pan
and set aside. Add 1 more tablespoon oil and turn heat to high. Add brown mushrooms, season lightly and stir-fry until nicely colored, about 3 minutes. Lower heat to medium. Add thyme, sage, red pepper and tomato paste. Add tomatoes, stir well, and cook for 1 minute. Season again with salt and pepper. Sprinkle with 1
t'Sthe
season< S
C
tablespoon flour, stir to incorporate and cook for 1 minute more. Return the onions to the pan. Add1 cup mushroom broth; stir until thickened, about1 minute. Gradually add1 more cup broth; cook 2 minutes.
Sauce should have gravy-like consistency; thin with broth if needed. Adjust seasoning. (May be prepared to this point hours ahead and reheated.) Just before serving, put butter and 1 tablespoon olive oil in wide skillet over medium-high heat. When
butter begins to brown, add chanterelles, season with salt and pepper, and saute about 2 minutes, until cooked through and beginning to brown. Add garlic and parsley, stir to coat and cook1 minute more. Add chanterelles to brown mushroom mixture; transfer to a warm serving bowl. Serve with polenta or
pasta if you wish.
*
Save 3 I OO or more with rebates on qualifying purchases of Hunter Douglas window fashions.
Porcini Broth Makes about 3 cups. Time: 35 minutes.
gredients (10 if not using almond extract). Add cooked noodles and
1 sm onion, sliced
(about 4 g)
5 scallions, roughly chopped 1 celery stalk, roughly chopped
1 carrot, roughly chopped 1 bay leaf
Put all ingredients into a saucepan. Cover with 4 cups water and bring to a boil. Reduce heat and simmer
for 30 minutes. Strain. Broth may bemadein advance and will keep for a week, refrigerated.
with sugar and lots of cinnamon.
Bake for 1 hour. Let cool a bit can be served warm or cold.
2 tsp coarse kosher salt 1 tsp black pepper 1 (4- to 5-Ib) chicken, halved through the breast and back bones, patted dry with paper towels 1 to 2 TBS extra-virgin olive oil, for drizzling
us room s ew c annes i s wi si e
'/4 C crumbled dry porcini
before cutting into squares. Kugel
1/2 C buttermilk or plain yogurt 1 C packed basil leaves '/4 C packed chives 2 garlic cloves, peeled 1 scallion, white and green parts Finely grated zest and juice of 1 lime
times as a dip. Its zippy flavor works nicely with the mildAndrew Scrivani/New York Times News Service ness of chicken, too. Fresh herbs and buttermilk help make a salad dressing for a I like to use buttermilk as (She also stopped coloring marinade and a sauce for roast chicken. the base formy Green Godthe yogurt red, because, as dess dressings because it's she likes to say, it tastes just thinner than yogurt, which as good when it's brown.) in the fridge. good blank slate on which to m akes the dressingeasier to Her "tandoori" chicken is Like my mother, I tend to project your cravings. pour. But yogurt works just as wonderful, if not exactly the throw in whatever fragrant In this recipe, it's Green well here. And you can substiway Jaffrey intended. herbs or spices (or both) that Goddess salad dressing that tute other herbs for the basil. When I started roasting I have on hand, mixing and satisfies the y en . P a cked Chervil and tarragon are more my ow n c h i ckens, using matching to fi t m y m o o d. with piquant fresh herbs in a traditional. plain yogurt as a marinade The only constants, besides tangy base, it's probably one The thing t o b e c a r eful ingredient seemed natural, the yogurt, are salt and gar- of my favorite media in which a bout in t hi s r ecipe is t h e and convenient because I lic. Everything else is nego- to smother fresh vegetables, m arinating t i me . L e t t h e always seem to have some tiable, which makes this a eitheras a dressing or somechicken sit too long and the
In a large mixing bowl, thoroughly combine the first 11 in-
up the noodles. Pour mixture into prepared pan and sprinkle the top
Time: 1/4 hours plus at least 6 hours marinating.
ing off as much liquid as possible, and lay the halves on arimmed baking
oven to 350 degrees
gently mix, taking care not to break
Makes 4 servings.
and cover with three-quarters of the marinade. (Savethe rest to serve as a sauce.) Refrigerate for at least 6 hours or up to overnight.
mushrooms about /s-inch thick. '/4 Ib (1 stick) butter or margarine, melted 1 Ib creamy cottage cheese '/s pint sour cream 4 eggs, beaten with a fork 2 tsp cinnamon '/s tsp salt 1 Csugar 1 C golden raisins 2 apples, peeled and diced (prefer Granny Smith or
D3
Green Goddess Roasted Chicken
she didn't have time to grind her own, and tossing a mix of whatever pungent aromatics she had on hand into the blender with the yogurt.
or oyster)
Bubby's Kugel
s
ing playing fast and loose, adding preground spices if
pily being made today. I decided to try the sweet kugel recipe t hat B a rbara Katz Rosenberg from Baltimore shared. She said that it is a v ery basic, old-fashioned recipe that her "Bubby"
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
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D4 TH E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2013
H OME 4
A R DEN
Next week: Historic stone home
Tray Continued from 01 Take the depth measurement of the frame with you when purchasing handles, and note how that compares with the supplied screw length. If the supplied screws are too long, purchase shorter ones so that the handles fit snugly against the frame and there is no extra screw length on the tray underside. Since the glass surface is see-through, the area underneath is pr ime for p ersonalization. Choose a favorite fabric, heirloom linens, beautiful paper (perhaps wallpaper or stationery); a collage
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shorten the screws or p u rchase new ones, so screws don't extend below the frame surface. Glue small felt circles over any underside screw extension to protect tabletops and laps when using the tray.
+~ flIIa< y ~ gV
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Decorating Place your chosen item(s) on the backing cardboard i nsert. Glue t h e m t o t h e cardboard, and if the entire surface isn't c overed, use a backing paper under the items so that the cardboard d oesn't show t h r ough t h e
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collage.
of photos, old jewelry (flat) or foreign coins left from a trip;
newspaper clippings, colorful magazine pages or comics. Whatever you p lace under glass can't be too thick, unless you select a shadow-box frame that has more space between the glass and the backing. Most picture frames are assembled so that it's easy to change out the contents, so don't overlook seasonal items. For tools, a small drill and appropriate size bit are needed to penetrate the f r ame. Cabinet handles often come with information about the hole sizeneeded for mounting. Underneath the mounting screws, you may n eed some felt to protect the table from any p r o trusions and
f Sj+Wa >+~ T +y+p
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eas or ourmaster at By Angie Hicks
style shower head. • Create a fresh, clean look Open the door and say, "ah." with a frameless glass shower Your master bath can be more dooI; than just functional; it could • Upgrade with granite or be a spa. solid-surface materials. Bathroom remodeling con• Focus less on the latest detinues to be one of the most sign trend or fad, and more on popular home improvement elements, fixtures and colors projects. It ranks consistently that will stand the test of time. among the top 10 most re• Incorporate universal deviewed categorieson Angie's sign — which is intended to List, which has more than 700 ensure that a project is useful home and health categories. for people of all ages, abilities If you're moving beyond the and sizes. Among the ideas: imagining stage and are ready Replace lower toilets or sinks to get serious about renovating with taller options that require a bathroom, here are trends less stooping or bending. a nd tips to k eep i n m i n d , Plan to do your homework compiled by our consumer re- before starting the project. Be search team. realistic about your budget. What you can do w ith a The average cost of bath rebathroom depends on its size modeling in 2013 was $18,538, and who's using it. down slightly from 2012, acHall bathrooms are comcording to the National Kitchmonly used by kids and guests, en k. Bath Association. and an update may be focused Before you start talking to more on making the most of contractors: a high-traffic, cramped room. • Check websites and magIdeas include replacing a mir- azinesfor designs and ideas. ror with a m e d icine chest Research materials and prodfaced with a mirror, or replac- ucts at showrooms and retail ing a pedestal sink with a van- stores. This will help contracity that has cabinet space. tors more accurately estimate A master bathroom, howthe time and cost for your ever, is usually larger and project. more private. It's a likely can• Talk to neighbors, friends didate for a sp a m akeover. and family about their projSome ideas from highly rated ects. Check contractors' reremodelers: views on a trusted online re• R eplace the tub with a view site. luxury shower featuring mul• G et m ultiple b i ds a n d tiple showerheads and hand- ask for and check references. held sprayers, or a large rain- Questions to ask include: Did www.angieslist.com
Thinkstock
With carrots, brighter color usually means better flavor.
od of planting groups of plants together to help each other. Onions, leeks and herbs such as rosemary and sage act as repellents to the carrot fly whose maggot or larva often attacks the rootlets of young plants. Companion plants for carrots include peas, lettuce, chives, radishes,tomatoes, leeks and onions. Carrot growth is hindered by dill growing nearby.
F riends h av e w i n t er storedcarrots in theground mulched with deep layers of straw. The layer of straw should be deep enough to keep the soil from freezing. This system allows you to dig from the garden as needed all winter. I have always used the cold-storage method. I dig carrots using a tined fork rather than a shovel to help avoid cutting into the flesh. The tops are cut to about I inch and excess soil is rubbed off, not washed off. Do not try to store any carrots that are cut or broken, as they are susceptible to bacterial soft rot. I s tore them in a 5 gallon covered containerbetween layers of damp sand. The container is stored in an u nheated
Not just one day, but a Season
A TIME FOR THANKS GIVING
<, iows Antiques 4 Vintage 8'c Gif ts
By Alan J. Heavens The Philadelphia inquirer
• We have just installed • oak hardwood flooring in our family room, and purchased the unfinished kind because we will be matching the color to some existing hardwood flooring. Although we brought it home and installed it immediately, it will not be stained and finished for another three weeks. The flooring has an acrid, sour smell, irritating to the nose
If you haven't grown carrots previously, put them on your list for next season. They are easy and oh-so
good. — Reporter: douville@ bendbroadband.com.
O REC K $QOQFF 5-YEAR +
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the contractor meet expectations? Were there delays or miscommunications? How did the contractor handle requested changes? • Get at least three written estimates that clearly define the project and what materials will be used. • Make sure you can reach a contractor when you need to. • Be sure the contractor you hire is appropriately licensed, insured and bonded. Bathroom remodeling work often requires electrical and plumbing work — two of the most often regulated trades. • For most bathroom remodeling projects, expect to pay about 10 percent or more of the total project amount as a deposit. Never pay more than a third of the total cost as a down payment, and never pay in cash. Be aware that especially in bathroom remodeling, contractors will frequently find hidden problems that need to be addressed. Adding an additional 10 to 20 percent to the project budget can help reduce the strain o f t h ese types of problems. • Plan for stress. How will
the project change your routine, especially with the bathroom? Where will materials be stored'? What are the working hours for the crew? — Angie Hicks is the founder of Angie's List, a resource for local consumer reviews on everything from home repair to health care.
Volatile compounds can be irritants
garage.
Laura Parks, owner 541-576-2199
board or paper.
When the insert is dry, assemble the frame by placing the glass into the frame first. Double checkfor fingerprints and cleanthe glass ifneeded. Insert the cardboard face Andy Tullis/The Bulletin down onto the glass. On the What could be better than breakfast in bed? What about breakfast in bed served on a tray you made yourself? frame underside, use the brackets, pins or clamps to hold the center in place. some glue to keep it in place. you plan to reuse it. Set aside posite sides of the frame. De- holes straight down into the To care for the tray, simthe glass and the cardboard termine the handle locations frame at the desired location. ply wipe it clean with a damp Getting started backing panel. and mark on the frame, noting Handles can b e s crewed cloth. Do not immerse it in Take apart t h e p i c t ure the spacing recommended for in from either the top or the water. Attach handles frame and get rid of any mat the mounting holes and the underside, depending on the — Reporter: gwizdesigns@aol. board that came with it, unless Center the handles along op- suggested hole size. Drill the style. It may be necessary to com
Carrots Continued from 01 Usually the brighter the color, the better the flavor. If you harvest too late, the carrots may become woody or bland. I think I really found the answer in a chart listing carrot types and the importance of choosing the right variety. Just as with tomatoes, carrots have been developed for the commercial market. Imperator is the variety normally found in t h e supermarkets. They are sturdy enough to withstand machine harvesting and cleaning, plus the rigors of shipping. The variety has been developed with a higher percentage of woody solids. Nantes carrots are sweet and tender; their high water content tends to make them brittle. Usually 6 to 7 inches long, they have a cylindrical shape narrowing slightly to a blunt tip. Danvers are considered to be one of the original home garden varieties dating back to the 1870s. Chantenay carrots are considered to be good longterm storage carrots. Carrots manufacture sugars like crazy during the warm days. Then a cool night settles in and the carrot "rests" instead of burning up that sugar. When nighttime temperatures stay in the 60s or warmer, the plants respire more at night and use up the accumulated sugars. Harvesting late in the day rather than early morning is recommended to capture the maximum sweetness. Carrots can benefitfrom companion planting, the meth-
If you're working with fabric, you can cut it to the size of the cardboard insert, or cut it I inch larger on all sides and wrap it. If you opt for the latter, stretch the fabric tautly over the board and glue it to the underside. Cover the back with an additional layer of card-
•
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and throat, causingme to cough and have a runny nose while in the room. We have opened all the windows, but after being down for two weeks, it still smells. I realize the staining/finishing process will cause more smell, but we'll deal with that. . Building products con. tain what are known as "volatile organic compounds," or VOCs. They are emitted as gases — a process known as off-gassing — and include a variety of chemicals, some of which have short- or long-term effects on health, says the Environmental Protection Agency. C oncentrations o f ma n y VOCs are consistently higher indoors — up to 10 times higher — than outdoors, which is the reason you are experiencing such reactions. It takes a while for VOCs to off-gas — as long as two years for some products — and, of course,in a closed room, the can be severe.
Some people react more than others to VOCs — usually those with existing health problems, such a s a sthma. "Adversehealth effectsin some sensitive populations," as the EPA puts it. There are, however, a lot of products in the marketplace that were once heavy on VOCs that are now billed as having low levels or none. Themostimportant, of course, are stains and paints. When you are selecting stains for the floor and choosing polyurethane to seal it, check the labels. Low and no-VOC products are t y p ically w a t er-based. When they were introduced to the market, those of us who had been painting for years thought them inferior to the older products — adhesion was an issue, and flow was another. The products have improved, yet they remain expensive because of the cost of replacement ingredients. — Questions? Email aheavens@ phiIIynews.com.
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
THE FLEXITARIAN
DS
ASK MARTHA
MARK BITTMAN This monthly feature explores healthy and delicious food ideas from the New Yorlz Times' food columnist.
Tony Cenicola/ New York Times News Service
By Mark Bittman
p,
New York Times News Service
Fried food is probably not on anyone's lists of healthy eats, but you have to start with this: Fat is good for you. The long-lived people of Crete might not drink a glass of olive oil a day, but they consume three times as much as we do, and that's probablymore desirable than our misguided notion that the less fat you eat, the better. There aredifferences among fats, of course, but with transfats in full retreat and lard and butter making comebacks, the whole fat-eating thing is starting to make some sense. Of course, the key word is moderation. You can eat fat as long as it's high quality and you don't eat it to the exclusion of plants. That's o ne r eason y o u shouldn't reject d eep-frying at home. The second reason is that you know you love it. (I do, and probably average a session twice a month.) The third is that it can be fast and easy. The fourth is that you can deep-fry plants. And anything else. Fryingisthought of as messy, but this can be mitigated by the simplest of measures: using a pot that is heavy, broad and deep, like a well-made stockpot. Choose this, add a fair amount of oil, and the process is simplified and neat. Which oil'? How much'? Since most deep-frying is done at around 350degrees, this notion that olive oil is inappropriate for frying is nonsense; it smokes at 375 (and smoking isn't the end of the story, either). So olive oil — especially "pure," which is a step below extra virgin and in theory less expensive — is a fine option, especially for something in which you'd like its flavor, which could include any of the recipes here. Unless, that is, you're seasoning tempura with soy sauce, in which case you might choose peanut oil, which is as flavorful as olive oil, but obviously different. The third excellent option is grapeseed oil, which is as close to neutral as you can find. None of these is as inexpensive as vegetable oil, or soy, or corn or Wesson. And if you don't have problems with chemical extraction, you might choose one of them; they are, after all, what is used for nearly all commercial deep-frying. If, however,you can afford itand you want the best possible frying experience,use on e ofthose three mentioned above, or at least a cold-pressed neutral oil like safflower or sunflower. Money is anissue, since on the face of it, frying isn't cheap. When it comes to the "how much" question, I'd say two quarts. That's not a fixed number, and 48 ounces (IA quarts,
To discourage a dog from jumping on the furniture, make sure it has its own comfortable bed.
,~ It
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jsvb
keeping the whole package from absorbing more than a bit of oiL Most of this happens
magically, as long as you follow the rules, which I'll get to in a second. There are three or four levels of protection you can give the interior, and all of them become satisfying crusts
— again, as long as everything goes right. The first layer of protection is the stuff itself: You allow the outside of the food you're cooking to become the crisp
. MARTHA
Evan Sung / New York Times News Service
Add your food — in this case, falafel — in batches, don't crowd and turn as necessary.
Falafel Makes 6 servings. Time:1 hour, plus 24 hours to soak thebeans. 1/~ C dried chickpeas or 1 C dried chickpeas, pius /4 C dried split fava beans 2 cloves garlic, lightly crushed /2 onion, quartered 1 tsp ground coriander 1 TBS ground cumin
Scant tsp cayenne, or to taste; or mild chili powder to taste /2 C chopped fresh parsley or cilantro leaves 1 tsp salt /2 tsp freshly ground black pepper, or to taste
/2 tsp baking soda 1 TBS freshly squeezed lemon juice, or more to taste Neutral oii, like grapeseed or canoia, for deep-frying
Put beans into a large bowl and cover with water by 3 to 4 inches — they will triple in volume as they soak. Soak
for 24 hours, checking once ortwice to see if youneedto addwater to keepthe beanscovered. Drain beans well and transfer to a food processor with ail the remaining ingredients except the oii; pulse until minced but not pureed; add water tablespoon by tablespoon if necessary to allow the machine to do its work, but
keep themixture asdry aspossible. (Too muchwater andyour falafel will fall apart. If that happens, addmore ground beans.) Tasteandadjust seasoning, adding moresalt, pepper, cayenneor alittle more lemonjuice asneeded. Put at least 2 to 3 inches of oil (more is better) into a largedeepsaucepan (the narrower the pan, the less oil you need; but the moreoil you use,the moreyou can cook at onetime). Turn heat to medium-high andheat oii to about
Vegetable Tempura Makes 4 servings.
grapeseed, for deep-frying /2 C flour, pius more for dredging
2 egg yoiks 24 or more vegetable pieces: slices of sweet potato or
squash, strips of bell pepper,
Makes 4 servings. Time: 30 minutes.
slices of onion, broccoli fiorets, as you like Salt and black pepper 1 lemon, quartered, optional Soy sauce, optional
Heat 2 or 3 inches (more is better) of oii in a deep fryer or deep saucepan. The oil is ready when it reaches 350 degrees, or when a pinch of flour sizzles immediately.
4 med zucchini, about 2 Ibs
3 eggs Saif
Black pepper 1 C aii-purpose flour 3 C bread crumbs, preferably fresh
Neutral oii, like canoia or grapeseed, for deep-frying /4 C chopped fresh parsley leaves for garnish 2 lemons, quartered, for serving
Combine 1 cup water and 1 cup ice; let sit for a minute, then measure 1 cup water from this. Beat lightly with the flour and egg yolks;
the batter should be lumpy. Dredge the vegetables very lightly in the flour, tapping to re-
moveexcess.Thendipthem inthe Trim stem ends from zucchini and cut either crosswise into slices about batter and immediately put in the /2 inch thick or into french-fry-like sticks. Heat the oven to 200. Beat eggs oil. You can cook 6 to 8 pieces at a
with salt and pepper in ashallow bowl or pie plate. Set up anassembly line
A
time, depending on thesize of your
of a plate of flour, the plate of eggs and a plate of bread crumbs. Have a bak- pan. Cook1 to 2 minutes, no more. ing sheet ready, arjd several rectangles of wax or parchment paper. Sprinkle with salt and pepper and
Coatazucchini piece inthe flour, dip inthe eggand coat in the breadcrumbs.
is over, trythis: Say a word specific to this behavior - "off" or "floor," for example — and toss a treat on the floor. Once the dog learns this pattern, toss the treat only after the command is obeyed (and no double treats for the sneaky pooch that
jumps back up). Phase out the treat over time. If you decide to invest in a furniture cover, choose one that will hide dirt and is easy to remove, water-resistant, machine-washable and as close to the color of your pet's fur as possible.
Making cards to learn how to Q .make .I'd lovea beautiful card. Do
anything). When your dog you have any tips?
(Use baby gates to close off a room.)
hot or at room temperature.
Fried Zucchini
• How can I train my • p et to s tay off t h e furniture? • Some pets learn new • rules more q u ickly than others, but teaching your dog or cat to stay off the furniture is a relatively simple task, as long as everyone in your household is consistent. To train a dog, attach a lightweight leash to its collar (you can cut off the loop so it doesn't get caught on
Neutral oii, like canoia or
crowding, until nicely browned,turning asnecessary; total cooking time per batchwill be less than 5minutes. Serve
Keep your fried zucchini warm in a 200 degree oven while you finish frying in batches.
i STEWART
Time: 20 minutes.
350. (A pinch of batter will sizzle immediately; a piece of falafel will sink halfway to the bottom, then rise.) Scoop out heaping tablespoons of the mixture and shape it into balls or small patties. Fry in batches, without
'EFa n
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is about to jump up, clap and say no. Praise and reward it for obeying the command; otherwise immediately use the leash to gently pull it off the couch. Expect to repeat this for days or even weeks; the pup will eventually realize that the up-and-down isn't worth the effort. You should, however, anticipate that the dog will try to sneak a seat when you're not looking. So until it's trained, don't let it in the room alone.
serve immediately, with lemon or 6 cups) is probably enough in You want a thin, even layer of each coating; shake off any excess. Put coated wedgesandsoysauceifyoulike. most cases. Sometimes you can get away with a quart or even less. But more is generally better, and you can reuse the oil quite a few times for deep-frying, stir-frying or sauteing, as long as you strain out most solids — and you need not be fanatic about this; a quick run through a strainer is fine — and keep it in the refrigerator. (You might consider keeping oil you're not using in the near future in the refrigerator anyway; rancidity comes from heat and light, and it's nasty. If you have an old bottle of oil sitting around in your kitchen, smell it; you'll probably throw it away.) The goal of frying is to crisp the outside perfectly and cook the inside just enough, while
Training pets to stay off furniture
Nimble catsare harder to control, but tinfoil or an upside-down carpet runner on your furniture should deter them. You can also purchase motion-activated devices that deliver a harm-
less puff of air or spray of citronella to deter pets. Most cats won't stand for a leash, so simply pick your kitty up off the furniture when it's breaking the rule. Offer a comfortable alternative to your sofa, such as a fluffy dog bed or a cat tree or perch in the same room. Teach your pet to enjoy time on its own furniture: Keep the dog bed near a couch leg, and give the dog a treat to chew while you're relaxing there, too; do the same with a cat and its perch. Eventually you can grant the animal more freedomlose the gates and tinfoil, let up on the dog's leash — and give fewer treats. If you allow your dog on the sofa sometimes but want it to stay off when company
. You will need some basic . materialsto get started. Many projects require cardweight paper in a variety of shades,double-sided tape, craft glue,colored pencils or pens, sharp scissors, and a craft knife. Before deciding on a design, think about how many cards you would like to make. For a
very special card (say, one for your valentine), you might try an intricate method, such as quilling, embroidering, or folding for a 3-D effect. All three of these techniques will get a single card to stand out. If you plan to produce several cards at once, block-printed, clip-art an d p r i ntable-photo cards are easy projects to do in bulk. You can find instructions for the cards mentioned here — and the tools and materials needed for each one — at marthastewart.com. Another simple wayto create personalized cards for a group is the Martha Stewart CraftStudio app (download it from the App Store) for the iPad. The app allows you to design a virtual card on-screen and print it out at home. If you're printing a number of cards, you can do so
via Snapfish (snapfish.com). — Questions of general interest can be emailed to mslletters@ marthastewart.com. For more information on this column, visit wwwmarthastewart.com.
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zucchini onbaking sheet in a single layer, top with wax or parchment paper and
repeat with remainingslices.Chill for at least10 minutes or upto 3 hours. Put a largeheavy skillet or a deepbroadsaucepan over mediumheat and
burning immediately; that's not pour in enough oil to come up the sides at least /2 inch. While the oil heats, super-accurate, but if you then line a plate with paper towels. Theoil is ready when apinch of flour sizzles add a single piece of food and it immediately. first sinks a bit and then immePut a few zucchini pieces in the oil without crowding. When the bottoms diately rises to the top, the oil is brown, after 2 to 3minutes, turn and cookthe other sidefor 2 to 3 minutes, perfect. If it sits on the bottom adjusting heat to keep oil sputtering without smoking or burning zucchini. like a flounder, the oil isn't hot As each piece is done, put it on the paper towels to drain, turning to blot it enough; if it doesn't sink at all, on both sides if needed.Transfer to anovenproof platter and keepwarm in the oil is too hot. The oil is also oven while you finish cooking. Addandheat up oil as necessary. too hot if it's smoking. Garnish with parsley and serve with lemon wedges. Add your food in batches and don't crowd; you do not want the temperature to plumpart. (That's like a french fry, inches of oil in a heavy and, met, nor do you want the pieces or falafel or " n aked" f r ied as I said, deep pot. Less than of food nestling against one c hicken.) Then t h ere's t h e 2 inches and you may not be another. (Although it's fine if second layer: a light dusting deep-frying; it'll work, but you they bump.) You may or may of cornmeal, flour or the like. might have to turn the food not have to turn the pieces, but (I like this with fried squid or more often, it might stick to the that's easy, because they'll be fried chicken, especially when bottom a bit and it might cook floating and they won't stick. seasoned heavily with black less evenly. Remove them with a slotted Turn the heat to medium or spoon, tongs or spider; you'll pepper.) Then a fluffy coating, like tempura or a doughy, medium-high and go about know when they're done, bepancake-like batter (the latter, your business. Part of that busi- cause the color will be evenly it seems to me, is often — per- ness might be finding a ther- gorgeous. haps usually — overkill). And mometer, because you want Take it slow and either eat finally, the old flour, egg and that oil to be between 350 and the food as it comes out of the bread crumb treatment, which 365 degreesin almost every in- fat (you can drain on paper is, well, yum. stance. The heavy pot will help towels or, if you want to be They're all pretty much ap- keep that temperature stable. fancy, a cloth napkin) or keep propriate for anything. You You don't have to have a it warm for as little time as poschoose the food you want to fry, thermometer, though, because sible in a low oven. Myself, I like you choose the coating, you fol- there are a couple of other to fry when people are standing low these general instructions ways to know when the oil is around eating the food as fast and it'll work. ready. It's just about right when as I can produce it; that is really Start by putting at least 2 a pinch of flour sizzles without fun. And good for you.
GARDENING.Get good at it. Are you passionate about gardening in Central Oregon? Willing to share your
time R knowledge locally? Consider becoming an OSU Master Gardener. Classes on Saturday at the OSU Cascades Hall in Bend from January 18th - April 5th, 2014, 9am - 4pm Cost is $275, and application deadline is January 8th, 2014. (scholarships available) For more information go to our website at:
http://extension.oregonstate.edu/deschutes/ or by calling OSU Extension at 541-548-6088 gensloo po op
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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2013
ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT
an e, ran ameo ' orror o TV SPOTLIGHT
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Falchuk. "She is one of those people. She has an incredible intensity and incredible f ragility. She, on t h e o n e hand, scares the hell out of you, and on the other hand, has you falling in love with her. It's hard not to be com-
— age working against you,
films that made your career not being made anymore. Los Angeles Times But also, I really needed a LOS ANGELES — Jessica distraction in my life; I was Lange sees an end in sight. still getting used to the idea Shrinking into her all-black of my kids leaving the nest. I ensemble in a cold Beverly thought it was a good time to Hills hotel room, the 64-yearpelled by her." go out on a limb because horLange's risky foray came old actress fidgets with her ror is not my thing." sleeves asshe talks about her about thanks to considerable But madness, heartbreak version of a five-year plan. prodding, primarily from the and despair seem to be. Many "I am coming to the end of show's co-creator Ryan Murof Lange's most memorable acting," she says with sureperformances are rooted in phy, who had reached out to ness. "I have a list: another her by telephone in 2011. d arkness — whether for a "The power of seduction stage production, maybe one big-screen portrayal of Franor two more movies, one more got me here," she says. "He ces Farmer, an actress who season of "American Horror j ust charmed me . I d o n ' t went into a physical and emoStory" ... and then that is it watch TV — I had never seen tional tailspin in the '40s, or 'Glee' or 'Nip/Tuck.' I knew of for me. Because I think that's a stage and TV depiction of enough. I want to go out with him by reputation. And the Blanche DuBois in "A Streeta bang ... or should I say, a truth of the matter is, I just car Named Desire." scare?" Michele K. Short l FX tna Mcclatchy-Tnbune thought, »Wow, nobody has Sarah Paulson, a n other "Horror Story" vet, admires If her r e m aining f u t ure Jessica Lange, left, stars in "American Horror Story: Coven" on FX done that song and dance for roles are anything like her with, from left, Emma Roberts, Jamie Brewer, Taissa Farmiga and me in a long time.' I liked be- her ability to drop into mens tarring role i n F X ' s d a rk Gabourey Sidibe. ing wanted." tal illness. Paulson recalls a Lange's road to terror was a nthology "A merican H o r scene from "American Horror ror Story," the audience will paved two years earlier by Story: Asylum," in which Sisbe the one to go out with a Lange, who took home an it up in the show's second sea- HBO's "Grey Gardens," a ter Jude becomes unraveled whimper. A very frightened Emmy, a Golden Globe and a son with her tormented por- telefilm about th e l i ves of as Paulson's character Lana whimper and lots of it. Lange, SAG award in 2012 with her trayal of Sister Jude Martin, s ocialite w a n nabes E d i t h is released from the mental whose f our-decade c areer first-seasonportrayal ofmedthe stern head nun with a tor- Bouvier Beale / "Little Edie" institution. "I remember just staring at includes such cinematic hall- dling n e ighbor C o n stance tured past running a mental (Drew Barrymore) and her marks as "Tootsie" and "Blue Langdon. "There's no shame institution. Now, in the third mother, Edith Ewing Bouvier her and thinking, 'I was just Sky," has become an unex- in recognizing that. It's exseason, her s c ene-stealing / "Big Edie" (Lange). Lange's talking to her on the way to pected starof horror on the posed me to a w h ole new performance as the all-pow- unflinching take on the unthe set and now she's mutnetwork's hit series, which generation, which is a l ittle erful witch Fiona Goode has kempt, gray-haired woman tering to herself.' And it was racked up 17Emmy nominastrange. I'm not used to young earned her the unofficial title w ho makes a h om e a m i d so simple, not overwrought. tions this year and drew 5.5 people thinking I'm cool." of the grand dame of "Ameri- piles of rotting garbage and But it was so damn powerful. million viewers in the thirdOh, how they do. L ange can Horror Story." cat feces had critics buzzing Nobody plays more things "There are certain people and people talking. season premiere ofits latest spooked audiences with her at once than that lady. There "It brought back the thrill installment, "Coven," earlier first-season character,a poi- who just pull focus no matis more going on in one line this month. sonous cupcake maker and ter who t h ey're o n-screen of acting," she says. "It was with Jessica than another ac"It reenergized me; it r em aster manipulator with a with," says "American Horthe perfectstorm. It' s all the tor can get across in an entire energized my career," says Southern drawl. She followed ror Story" co-creator Brad tired stuff everybody says season." By Yvonne Villarreal
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Retaiers ivea viceonunru i s Dear Abby: I managed a retail store for 10 years, and I can relate to the shop owner who signed herself "Had It With Overindulged Kids" (June 28). She could turn things around by creating a designated play area and market to the children by taking any opened items DEAR and placing t h em ABBY therefor a children's testing ground. I had a "play table" with toys to keep them busy while their moms shopped. I put a gated area around it and a dads' bench in front of it so they could watch the children. They are your customers. So cater to them and be thankful the parents shop in your store. Learn the children's names and suggest new age-appropriate products. If you don't have the time, hire someone who loves children and has the patience to play with them in a controlled environment. — Joyce from Michigan Dear Joyce: Thank you for the helpful advice. Customers and retailers alike shared their experiences. Many of them questioned whether the children always misbehaved this badly in public and
blamed their behavior on today's parenting skills — or lack thereof. Here's a sampling: Dear Abby: I shopped at a local store for years, but gave up when the place seemed overrun by unruly children and distracted parents. Out of desperation, I took a job there and vowed to find a way to make the parents rein in their youngsters. One: I posted a sign that read, "IF YOU BREAK IT, YOU BOUGHT IT." If they refused, I didn't push the issue, but I did gesture upward. They would always look up, and when they did, I'd thank them for smiling at our cameras. Two: Any child found unaccompanied would be escorted to our customer servicearea and the parents paged repeatedly until they showed up. Since I instituted these policies, the condition of the store has improved, the morale of the employees has improved, sales have risen, and old customers who left due to the old circumstances are returning. — Survivor of Retail Hell Dear Abby:I was in a shop where a sign behind the counter read: "Un-
HAPPYBIRTHDAYFORTUESDAY, OCT. 29, 2013:This yearyou often come
** * * You have a desire not to be the town crier. You might be up for playing the role of recluse for a fewdays. Excuse
believing they're spending quality time with them. But I see parents ignore their children and spend their time on electronic gadgets, leaving the unsupervised youngsters to run amok. Too bad for the children. — Gloria in Lafayette, Calif. Dear Abby:I like the sign a friend of mine put up in her store: "Unattended children will b e g i ven espresso and a puppy and returned to their parents." — Marjory in BlowingRock, N C. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com orP0. Box 69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069
SCORPIO (Oct.23-Nov.21)
YOURHOROSCOPE
up with unusual ideas that seemcreative By Jacqueline Bigar and workable to others. Realize thatyou are more solemn thanyou might thinkyou are. Be awarethat this attitude could be why yourself from commitments, and know others often react where you are heading. Besmart, and Stars showthe kind strangely to you. refrain from speaking until you are sure of of day you'll have If you are single, yourself. Tonight: All smiles. ** * * * D ynamic there is no question 21-Joly22) ** * * P ositive th a tyou will attract CANCER (June ** * * M a ke the first move. You will get ** * A verage many people. Look far more done thanyou thought was even ** S o-so to the person who is possible ,onceyoufeelunburdened and * Difficult interested in getting free from a personal issue. Acall could to know the real make all the difference in the outcome of you. If you areattached, your sweetie will your day. Tonight: Accept an invitation to try his or her best to help youget through join someone for munchies. life's bumps andkeepyou smiling. You LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) sometimes act like newlyweds, which delights those around you.VIRGOverbalizes ** * Be aware of the problems around you, andbe direct in howyou approach a lotof whatyou are thinking. a situation, especially if it involves your ARIES (March 21-April 19) finances. Youcan't be too careful in how ** * * You will want to meld with others you approach this matter. Recognize that in order to accomplish a particular task. someone could beangry. Work this through Sometimes this type of interpersonal with him or her. Tonight: Your treat. cooperation canbe difficult, asyou are a VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) very independent sign. Youstill manageto project a leadership profile, evenwhen being ** * * A s sess whether it is a good idea toproceedasyouhave been.Listento docile. Tonight: Work off sometension. someone's opinion, but knowthat you TAURUS (April20-May20) might need somemore time to reflect on ** * * * O p en uptoa more dynamic the main issue. Postpone signing off on approach to a situation in your life. You agreements, at least for today. Tonight: Act might like the idea of this change, but to as if you do not have acare in your world. manifest it will prove to bemore difficult. LIBRA (Sept.23-Oct.22) Thinking is important, butyou will get ** * Your words make more of an nowhere unless you act. Youhavelittle to impression than you might realize. At the lose. Tonight: So what if it is only Tuesday? same time, withholding your thoughts
GEMINI (May21-June20)
attended Children Will Be Sold!" It was enough to get most parents' (and kids') attention while eliciting smiles at the same time. — Nonna of Five Dear Abby: You mentioned posting a sign at the cash register. No, Abby, it should be at the entrance, so parents see it at the time they walkin. Or how about a different sign: "Well-Behaved Children Will Win a Prize," then rewarding such children with a small gift? It would be worth the expense of small tokens of appreciation compared to the costofbroken merchandise. I sympathize with "Had It." Parents often take kids on outings,
will have a similar effect. Others question themselves, especiallywhenyoubecome quiet. Use caution with any money arrangements. Tonight: Not to be found.
** * * Meetings take high priority, whether you like it or not. They also might help you initiate a new ordifferent plan of action. Recognizewheresomeone else's anger is coming from, even if he or she can't. Say very little about your perceptions for now. Tonight: Where your friends are.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21)
** * You respond positivelyto pressure, especially if you feel as if you will be acknowledged for your efforts. An intense conflict exists within you between work and a domestic matter. You will need to channel your high energy and use it more positively. Tonight: Happy athome.
MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may beanadditional fee for3-0 and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to changeafter press time. I
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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX,680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • CAPTAIN PHILLIPS(PG-13) 1, 2:55, 4:05, 6:25, 7:30, 9:35 • CARRIE(R) 1:30, 4, 6:35, 9:05 • CLOUDYWITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 2(PG)1:10,6 • CLOUDYWITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 23-D (PG) 3:35, 8:50 • THE COUNSELOR (R) 1:05, 3:40, 3:55, 6:40, 7:10, 9:30 • ENOUGH SAID (PG-13) 1:05, 3:25, 6:05, 8:55 • ESCAPE PLAN(R) 2:45, 6:20, 9:10 • THE FIFTHESTATE(R) 2:40, 6:15 • GRAVITY(PG-13) 1:25, 6:10 • GRAVITY3-D(PG-I3)3:45,4:25,6:50,9,9:55 • GRAVITY IMAX3-D(PG-13) 1:25, 4, 7, 9:25 • INSIDIOUS:CHAPTER2(PG-13) I • INSTRUCTIONS NOTINCLUDED (PG-13) 1:50, 4:45, 8 • JACKASSPRESENTS: BADGRANDPA(R) 1:35,1:45, 4:10, 4:15, 7:15, 7:35, 9:40, 10 • MACHETE KILLS (R) 9: l5 • RUSH (R)1:40, 4:35, 7:50 • WE'RETHE MILLERS (R) 1:15 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies. I
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McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 541-330-8562 • RED 2(PG-13) 6 • THE WORLD'SEND(R) 9 • After7 p.m., showsare2/ and older only. Youngerthan 21 may at tendscreeningsbefore 7p.m.ifaccompaniedby a legal guardian.
AQUARIUS (Jan.20-Feb. 18) ** * * Deal with a specific family member directly. You could feel pushed to your limit by a loved onewhom you care a lot about. How you view situations could change radicallyas a result of an experience surrounding today's events. Tonight: Chat and visit with a close friend.
©20t3 by King Features Syndicate
9p.m. onH, "War ofthe Worlds: American Experience" — On the eve ofHalloween in 1938, radio listeners across the U.S. got a real scare from Orson Welles' rendering of H.G.Wells' tale of a Martian invasion. Structured as a fakenewscast, it fooled quite a few people who missed the disclaimer and took it for the real thing. The event is revisited via interviews with Welles' daughter Chris Welles Feder, filmmaker Peter Bogdanovich and others. 9p.m. onASE, "Storage Wars Texas" —Surprises await the buyers when they return to the Dallas suburb of Carrollton in this new episode. Ricky andBubbaare shaken up whenthey follow a lead to a den of deviance.Kennyhas returned and is feeling confident, but he soon realizesgetting back in the auction gameisn't as easy as he thought. Mary shows adifferent side of herself, and the crowd goes wild for it in "Yo! Mary Raps." 9:01 p.m.onHEl, "The Goldbergs" —Beverly (Wendi McLendon-Covey) is disappointed when the kids makeplans for Halloween that don't include her. Barry and Erica (TroyGentile, Hayley Orrantia) are attending a party, and Adam (SeanGiambrone) has been looking forward to hanging out with some eighth-graders, but he's not sure hewants to go along with what they haveplanned. George SegalandJeff Garlin also star in the newepisode "Who Are You Going to Telephone?" 10 p.m. on SYFY,"Naked Vegas" —This new six-part series follows a team of body painters — and we're talking human bodies, not auto bodies — at work in a city not known for restraint. In the premiere, the teamworks with a couple planning a zombiethemed wedding at Eli Roth's Goretorium at Planet Hollywood. The bride and groom want the entire wedding party painted like zombies from head to toe. At least the bridesmaids won't complain about buying dresses they won't wear again. ©Zap2rt
4n a na. Range ' -
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Large oven Spltlsaver cooktop ¹A CR31 30BAter
HNsoN TV.APPLIANCE vPure &oA6 Co.
• BLUE CAPRICE (R) 3:30 • THE SUMMIT(R) 6 • TOUCHYFEELY(R) 8:15 I
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Redmond Cinemas,1535 S.W.OdemMedo Road, 54 I-548-8777 • CARRIE (R)4:30, 6:45 • THE COUNSELOR (R)4:15, 6:45 • ESCAPE PLAN(R) 4:30, 7 • JACKASSPRESENTS: BADGRANDPA(R) 5:30, 7:30
Sisters Movie House,720 Desperado Court, 541-549-8800 • CAPTAINPHILLIPS(PG-13) 6 • THE COUNSELOR (R) 6:15 • ENOUGH SAID (PG-13) 6:30 • GRAVITY(PG-13)6:30 Madras Cinema5,1101 S.W. U.S. Highway97, 541-475-3505 • CARRIE(R) 5:10, 7:30 • CLOUDYWITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 2(PG)4:45 • THE COUNSELOR (R)5, 7:20 • GRAVITY(PG-13) 4:50, 7 • JACKASSPRESENTS: BADGRANDPA(R) 5:30, 7:40 • THE WIZARD OFOZ3-D (PG) 7:10 Pine Theater, 214 N. Main St., 541-416-1014
• THE COUNSELOR (R) 6:15 • GRAVITY(Upstairs — PG-13)6:15 • Theupstairs screening roomhaslimited accessibility.
PISCES (Feh.19-March20) ** * You could be inspired by oneother person to tackle a newgoal or to move to a new level of accomplishment. You sometimes get confused by this person, yet at other times his or her influence gives you more confidence. Tonight: Whatever you do, just don't be alone.
8 p.m. on (CW), "The Originals" — Recent events that jeopardized his unborn baby's safety have Klaus (Joseph Morgan) grilling Sophie (Danielle Pineda) for answers. Sophie reveals a secret from her past to Klausand Rebekah (Claire Holt). Marcel (Charles Michael Davis) asks Klaus to accompany him to the bayou after some grisly remains turn up. Davina (Danielle Campbell) confides some surprising information about the witches to an unlikely ally in the newepisode "Sinners and Saints."
Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin Pan Alley, 541-241-2271
CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan.19) ** * * A l low greater give-and-take between you andothers. Afriend could have difficulty opening up. Knowthat his or her attitude could have little to do with you. Your willingness to adapt to various situations points you to the winners' circle. Tonight: Tap into your imagination.
TV TODAY
• Find a week's worth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's
0 G O! Magazine • Watch movie trailers or buy tickets online at benddulletin.com/movies
a~ B~ dU r Bend Redmond John Day Burns Lakeview La Pine 541.382.6447 bendurology.com
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ON PAGES 3&4.COMICS & PUZZLES ~ The Bulletin
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Adopt a buddy! Adult c ats/kittens over 6 mos., 2 for just $40! Thru 11/3 only. Fixed, shots, ID chip, tested, more! Nonprofit group
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Yorkie puppy, 8 week cute, playful male. Shots, tail docked, ready now! $700. 541-536-3108 Yorkie pups AKC, sweet, adorable, potty training boys 2 girls $450 & up Health guar.54$ -777 7743
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HANCOCK & MOORE SOFA 8 up. 541-280-1537 in salmon/coral chewww.rightwayranch.wor nille fabric with diadpress.com mond pattern. Traditional styling w ith Rodent issues? Free adult barn/shop cats, loose pillow back, fixed, shots, s o me down-wrapped seat friendly, some n ot. cushions, roll arms, skirt, two matching Will deliver. 389-8420 pillows a n d ar m Siberian Husky 7 yrs, covers. L i k e new $150 inc. bed, leash, condition. $1500. etc. 541-280-6172. 541-526-1332 St. Bernard Puppies, 1st shots, wormed. The Bulletin $400. 541-977-4686 recommends extra
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Pets & Supplies
BEND VET needs big gun equipment,cement A1 Washersa Dryers mixer, 8 l o g s p litter. $150 ea. Full war530-598-6004 Adopt a rescued kitten ranty. Free Del. Also or cat! Fixed, shots, wanted used W/D's CASH for dressers, ID chip, tested, more! 541-280-7355 dead washers/dryers Nonprofit sanctuary at 541-420-5640 whose total does 65480 78th St., Bend, not exceed $500. open Sat/Sun 1 - 5; kitten foster home by Call Classifieds at appt., call 815-7278. 541-385-5809 www.craftcats.org. 541-389-8420, or like www.bendbulletin.com '(i/l '** 38th Annual *** us on Facebook. Antique Snowflake Boutique • Fri. Nov. 1, 1-8 pm Aussies, Mini AKC, 2 litDining Set • Sat. Nov. 2, 9-4 pm ters, parents on site, 1st 18th century legs, Deschutes County shots / wormin . mahogany topFairgrounds Redmond 541-598-5314 7788-7799 95"x46"x29"; Admission: $3. 6 Chippendale style German Shorthair pups Proceeds go to Family BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS AKC, parents on site chairs, $2770. Access Network. 541-639-3211 541-330-0277 www.snowflakeboutique.org Search the area's most comprehensive listing of classified advertising... real estate to automotive, Items for Free merchandise to sporting goods. Bulletin Classifieds 52" Mitsubishi TV, works appear every day in the well, new bulb; stand, print or on line. HAVANESE PUPPY DVD player incl. Free, Commercial Call 541-385-5809 (F) AKC, Dewclaws, you haul! 541-480-7024 upright Delfield www.bendbulletin.com UTD shots/wormer, 6000 Series non-shed, hypoallerTo give away to senior freezer, 20 cubic genic,$850 citizen home 7-yr-old (erv((g C(n(((l Or«gon(m(( (903 feet, stainless, 541-460-1277 loving male Pomera$1200. KI More Pix at Bei(db(illetin.c nian. 541-382-4464 Chihuahua„maleteacup 541-325-2691 10 wks old, lessthan1 Ib Jack Terrier Russell, Treehouse/Playhouse, $200. 541-815-3459 female, 5 mo., shots, you disassemble8 haul GENERATE SOME $150. 541-350-3621 FREE! 541-647-0295 EXCITEMENT in your Kittens, 8 weeks old, free neighborhood! Plan a to good homes. 2 gold, 1 garage sale and don't tiger stripe. 541-815-3459 forget to advertise in Pets&Supp lies classified! Labrador Pups, AKC 541-385-5809. Chocolate 8 Yellow. The Bulletin recom- Chihuahua puppies, tea Hips OFA guaranteed. Hidebed, full-sized, like mends extra caution cup, shots & dewormed $300- $400. new, rust brown color, when purc h as- $250. 541-420-4403 1-541-954-1727 $500 obo. 541-408-0846 ing products or services from out of the Chihuahua/Yorkie mix area. Sending cash, 2 males, $150. checks, or credit in541-771-2606 (( f ormation may b e t subjected to fraud. Donate deposit bottles/ ( For more i nforma- cans to local all volLynx male tion about an adverunteer, non-profit res- Manx/Desert GREAT SOFA kittens. Only two left. tiser, you may call cue, for feral cat spay/ First 9'x28"h x 37"d. sh o t s and the O r egon State neuter. Cans for Cats inc l uded. Tan, down feather Attorney General's t railer at B end P e t worming with foam for supOffice C o n sumer Express E, a c ross $125-$200. Kelly at port. 3back8 3 541-604-0716 or Protection hotline at from Costco; or doseat loose cush541-489-3237 1-877-877-9392. nate Mon-Fri at Smith ions. Very comfy! Sign, 1515 NE 2nd; or POODLE puppies, AKC. $400. at CRAFT in Tumalo. ALSO-7mo. M, $200; 541-504-5224 www.craftcats.org F, $250. 541-475-3889
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Yorkie pup, AKC - 12 wk
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Northwest Spa Hot Tub, seats 8 people, has cover, $400 or best offer. You haul! 541-385-0454
Since September 29, 1991, advertising for used woodstoves has been limited to models which have been c ertified by the O r egon Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) and the federal E n v ironmental Protection A g e n cy (EPA) as having met smoke emission standards. A cer t ified w oodstove may b e identified by its certification label, which is permanently attached to the stove. The Bulletin will not k n owingly accept advertisi ng for the s ale o f uncertified woodstoves.
(Similar to illustration) Pride Go-Go 541-480-9005 3-wheel scooter • Misc. Items Fuel & Wood with upgrades, l credit i n f ormation B eretta 12 g a. , 0 / U , may be subjected to mod./full, S685. Good BOXES - Great for mov- absolutely like brand new, hardly used l FRAUD. For more cond. $500.541-419-9961 ing/storage, $25 cash. WHEN BUYING $495. 541-548-5667 information about an ~ Browning Citori 12 ga Call 541-318-4577. FIREWOOD... advertiser, you may I engraved w/ pheasants & call t h e Or e gon /ducks, new unfired in Buying Diamonds To avoid fraud, Find exactly what l State Atto r ney 'case, $ 2450. J e rry, /Gold for Cash The Bulletin l General's O f f i ce 541-480-9005 recommends paySaxon's Fine Jewelers you are looking for in the Consumer P r otec- • 541-389-6655 ment for Firewood CLASSIFIEDS CASH!! t ion ho t l in e at I only upon delivery For Guns, Ammo & BUYING l 1-877-877-9392. and inspection. Reloading Supplies. Lionel/American Flyer • A cord is 128 cu. ft. 541-408-6900. (: Bull(:((pg trains, accessones Tools 4' x 4' x 8' 541-408-2191. • Receipts should Double Tap Firearms Miller portable welder, include name, 2075 NE Hwy. 20 BUYING & SEL L ING diesel power, $850 541-977-0202 phone, price and USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! All gold jewelry, silver 541-389-9684 Buy/Sell/Trade/Consign and gold coins, bars, kind of wood purchased. Dccr-to-dcorselling with rounds, wedding sets, Shindaiwa G1000 Gen• Firewood ads DQN'IMISSTHIS fast results! It's the easiest class rings, sterling sil- erator, less than 25 hrs MUST include ver, coin collect, vin- usage, asking $350. way in the world to sell. species & cost per tage watches, dental 541-318-0292 cord to better serve DO YOU HAVE gold. Bill Fl e ming, The Bulletin Classified our customers. SOMETHING TO 541-382-9419. 541-385-5809 SELL Building Materialsg Cemetery plot at FOR $500 OR Serving Central Oregon ance (903 212 Tumalo cemetery. LESS? Bend Habitat A bargain at $450. Non-commercial Antiques & RESTORE 541-848-7436 advertisers may Collectibles Building Supply Resale Aii Year Dependable place an ad Quality at LOW Firewood: Seasoned with our 1881P $5 Gold Piece, PRICES Lodgepole, Split, Del. "QUICK CASH almost u ncirculated, 740 NE 1st Bend: 1 for $195 or 2 SPECIAL" $400. 541-410-2225 541-312-6709 for $365. Cash, Check 1 week3lines 1 2 Open to the public. or Credit Card OK. OI' Antiques wanted: tools, 541-420-3484. 20! furniture, marbles, beer ~( e e k s Sisters Habitat ReStore cans, early B/W phoAd must Building Supply Resale Classic Stallion Juniper or Lodgepole or tography, Western include price of Quality items. Boots items. 541-389-1578 Pine (some Hemlock)o f ( 5 00 (~il e ( e LOW PRICES! Ladies size 7 (/2, Cut, split & delivered, or less, or multiple 150 N. Fir. seldom worn, $200/cord (delivery initems whose total 541-549-1621 Paid $1100; cluded). 541-604-1925 does not exceed Open to the public. selling for $290. $500. D((vtfz(t 541-480-1199 Visit our HUGE Call Classifieds at home decor 541-385-5809 COWGIRL CASH consignment store. www.bendbulletin.com We buy Jewelry, Boots, New items Vintage Dresses & arrive daily! Gamo Hunter 220, .177 More. 924 Brooks St. 930 SE Textron, 541-678-5162 caliber pellet rifle, Bend 541-318-1501
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The Bulletin
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The Bulletin reserves the right to publish all ads from The Bulletin newspaper onto The Bulletin Internet website.
The Bulletin
(er(ng Cent(al Oreqon s(nre (903
scope. $150.
541-647-7479
GUN SHOW
www.getcowgirlcash.com
SELL YOUR SOFA AD RUNS UNTIL THESOFA SELLS!
People Look for Information About Products and Services Every Daythrough TheBulletin Classifieds
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Nov. 9th & 10th Deschutes Fairgrounds Buy! Sell! Trade! SAT. 9-5 • SUN. 10-3 $8 Admission, Dave Ramsey Money 12 & under free! Mgmt Sys, incl CDs. OREGON TRAIL GUN $50 cash. 541-318-4577 SHOWS, 541-347-2120
or 541-404-1890 Home Security H&R 243 single shot, System 2GIG Bicycles & synthetic stock with Brand new installed Accessories rings, $200. by AbbaJay in541-749-0636 cludes 2 hour installation and one Marlin 1895 SS Guide year basic security 45/7 0, ported, sling, service. $375. night sights, ammo, (Valued at $850) as new $700. Spring541-382-3479 f ield X D 4 5 , n e w , 13+1, Pro Tech light, 2005 Maverick ML7 M ountain Bike, 1 5 " 2 high cap. mags, all Wanted- paying cash frame (small). F ull access., in box, plus for Hi-fi audio & stususpension, Maverick Galco leather holster, dio equip. Mclntosh, s hock, S RA M X O and ammo. $700. Call J BL, Marantz, D y naco, Heathkit, Sandrivetrain 8 shifters, 9 541-815-8345. speed rear cassette, Ruger M77, 308 Win, sui, Carver, NAD, etc. 34-11, Avid Juicy disc 2x7 scope, like new, Call 541-261-1808 brakes. Well t a ken $595. 541-604-5115 WHEN YOU SEE THIS c are o f. $950 . Ruger Red Label o/u 541-788-6227. ~Oo 28 ga., $ 1000 obo.
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Exercise Equipment
Ammo. 541-749-0627
Thompson Center Arms muzzleloader, 50 cal Proform Crosswalk 380 New Englander, exclnt treadmill, like new, $325 shape, $295. obo. 541-408-0846 541-419-1604
M orePixatBendbuletin,com On a classified ad go to www.bendbulletin.com to view additional photos of the item.
D((k i(alian soft leather a( o ttom((( w couch set. Excellent cond((io(( no tears, sta(ns. Very comfortable Was $1 600 new,
ufe nng for only
s700
5(t1-000-0000
Item Priced af:
Yo ur Total Ad Cost onl:
• Underci500 • 4I500 to 4I999
• $1000 to $2499 • 4I2500 and over
$29 $39 $49 $59
Includes up to 40 words of text, 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold headline • The Bulletin, • Central Oregon Marketplace
• The Cent ral OregonNickelAds ~ bendbulletin.com
541-385-5809 "Privateparty merchandiseonly - excludespetsIt livestock, autos, Rvs, moto(cycles,boats, airplanes,andgarage salecategories.
E2 TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
To PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletinscom
476
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AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES
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Monday • • . • • • • • • . • • • • • • • • . • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . Noon Mon. 476 Employment Wednesday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Opportunities your web address Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. Add to your ad and readers on The Bu//etin's Friday. • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. web site, www.bendbulletin.com, will be able to click through Saturday RealEstate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri. automatically to your website. Saturday • . • •. . . . . 3 : 0 0 pm Fri.Caregiver —All Shifts Apply in person. Sunday.. • • • • • . • • • 5:00 pm Fri • avail. Interviews this week. Placea photoin your private party ad for only$15.00 perweek.
PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines
*UNDER '500 in total merchandise
OVER '500in total merchandise
7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00
Garage Sale Special
4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days.................................................$33.50 28 days.................................................$61.50
4 lines for 4 days .................................
(caii for commercial line ad rates)
A Payment Drop Box is available at Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS B ELOW MARKED WITH A N (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin reserves the right to reject any ad at any time.
CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m.
*Must state prices in ad
C®X
Apply in person at 1099 NE Watt Way, Bend.
LOG TRUCK DRIVERS
54 1 -997-8212
Housekeeping We are looking for two part-time PLEASENOTE:Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction Housekeepers. The is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. Thepublisher reserves the right Housekeeping perto accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these son is responsible newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted o f r any reason. Private Party for daily c l eaning Classified ads running 7 or more days will publish in the Central Oregon Marketplace eachTuesday. and other h o usekeeping projects as 269 assigned, including floor a n d ca r p et Fuel & Wood Gardening Supplies • Lo s t & Found care, an d a s sists & Equipment with general kitchen Lost: DACHSHUND Pine & Juniper Split Blk/tan longhaired duties. (variable) SUPER TOP SOIL Qualifications www.hershe soilandbariccom female 20 Ibs on CRR • Ability to perform all PROMPT D E LIVERY Screened, soil & comHorney Hollow area. 541-389-9663 housekeeping claspost m i x ed , no PLEASE help her get rocks/clods. High huhome!!! Call her mom sification duties required. mus level, exc. f or at 541-316-8382. You cut wood available flower beds, lawns, •Knowledge and faLost on Reed Mkt., 2 toy for $35/cord. Bend lo- gardens, miliarity with comstraight both males, Hay, Grain & Feed5 cation. 541-382-3733 s creened to p s o i l .Schnauzers mercial cle a ning 1 curly silver, 1 copper Bark. Clean fill. De- silver; answer to Reqgie First quality Orchard/Tim- equipment helpful. • Works with a cusliver/you haul. & J ackson. REWARD! othy/Blue Grass mixed 541-548-3949. tomer service and 541-480-7594 Gardening Supplies hay, no rain, barn stored, s afe-oriented a t t i $230/ton. Patterson Ranch tude. 8 Equipment 270 Check out the Sisters, 541-549-3831 •Ability to stand, walk classifieds online Lost 8 Found and bend the majorwww.bendbufletin.com 341 BarkTurfSoil.com ity of the workday, Found emergency kit on Updated daily Horses & Equipment with some climbing Hwy 97 north of Bend. PROMPT D E LIVERY o f ladders i s r e Call to identify, Moving, must gi v e away 541-389-9663 541-389-2406 (Iv msg) quired. to qualified homes, 3 • Ability to deal with REMEMBER: If you FOUND: set of keys on quality Arab mares, not the needs of the dehave lost an animal, lanyard, key fob had roke. P l e ase ca l l partment on a daily don't forget to check b 541-447-1522 b een r un over . The basis. Humane Society 541-383-7603 •H igh sc hool d i Bend 345 ploma or equivalent 541-382-3537 Bridge Creek Pipeline Found Siamese Cat, DeLivestock & Equipment is desired but n ot Project - Construction schutes River Woods. Redmond required. Food 541-923-0882 Community Meeting" Call 541-318-3319. Quality breeding age H andlers card o r Pd e ille Tues. 29 Oct 6 p m. York gilt, $300. ability to acquire one 541-447-7178; Location - S k yliners F ound two r ugs, o n 541-548-0501 w ithin 30 d ays i s Lodge - 16125 Skylin- B aker Rd., c al l t o or Craft Cats necessary. identify. 541-480-5813 541-389-8420. ers Road. Need to get an Part-Time: part-time ad in ASAP? e mployees do n o t accrue benefits such You can place it as paid time off and online at: may not participate www.bendbulletin.com in the group health programs. Call54I-3855809 to promotelcur service'Advertise for 28daysstarting ct Ifotlbsrperrrrrnrirgeisnorrrreratrleeour wetrritet 541-385-5809 Send resumes to: mroosa@cotruck.net 375 Appliance Sales/Repair Handyman Landscaping/Yard Care Meat & Animal Processing •
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Johnson Brothers TV 8 Appliance. The Builder's Choice. 541-382-6223 www.ionnsonbrotnerstv.com
Building/Contracting
ERIC REEVE HANDY SERVICES. Home 8
Commercial Repairs, Carpentry-Painting, Pressure-washing, Honey Do's. On-time promise. Senior Discount. Work guar-
NOTICE: Oregon state anteed. 541-389-3361 law r equires anyone or 541-771-4463 who con t racts for Bonded & Insured construction work to CCB¹181595 be licensed with the Construction Contrac- Chester Elliot Constr. tors Board (CCB). An Home remodel/renovate Creative designs active license 541-420-2980 means the contractor is bonded & insured. CCB¹ 148659 Verify the contractor's Home Repairs, Remod CCB l i c ense at els, Tile, C arpentry www.hirealicensedFinish work, M a inte contractor.com nance. CCB¹168910 or call 503-378-4621. Phil, 541-279-0846. The Bulletin recommends checking with Heating/Cooling the CCB prior to contracting with anyone. Bend Heating 8 Some other t rades lnc. also req u ire addi- Sheetmetal, CCB¹08653 tional licenses and 541-382-1231 certifications. www.bendheating.com Just bought a new boat? I D e bris Removal Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our JUNK BE GONE Super Seller rates! I Haul Away FREE 541-385-5809 For Salvage. Also Cleanups & Cleanouts LandscapingNard Care Mel, 541-389-8107
Drywall JL' S
D R YWALL
Over 30 years of fast, reliable service. Commercial & Residential. 541-815-4928 CCB¹161513
Electrical Services
Managing Central Oregon Landscapes Since 2006
Fall Clean Up
Don't track it in all Winter
•Leaves •Cones • Needles • Debris Hauling
Winter Prep •Pruning •Aerating •Fertilizing
Mike Dillon Electric Electrical troubleshooting, Generator systems, new panel installations. 24 yrs exp/ Lic./ Bonded
Compost Applications $$$ SAVE $$$
¹192171 503-949-2336
Use Less Water
Flooring
Improve Plant Health
Prestige Hardwood Flooring, lnc. 541-383-1613
2014 Maintenance Package Available
CCB¹154136
Weekly, Monthly & One Time Service
www prestigehardwoodsite.com
Handyman I DO THAT! Home/Rental repairs Small jobs to remodels Honest, guaranteed work. CCB¹151573 Dennis 541-317-9768
EXPERIENCED Commercial & Residential Senior Discounts
541-390-1466
Same Day Response
Rimzce
® l3xflzcm
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Call 385-5809
or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
528
Loans & Mortgages
gage 541-388-4200.
HPRBBuild
Maintenance • Fall Clean up •Weekly Mowing 8 Edging • Bi-Monthly & Monthly Maintenance •Bark, Rock, Etc.
Senior Discounts Bonded & Insured 541-815-4458
Baptista Tile & Stone Gallery CCB¹19421 541-382-9130
www.baptistatile.com
HOTLINE, 1-877-877-9392.
Tick, Tock Tick, Tock... ...don't let time get away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today!
Millwrights - Bright Wood Corp. We are looking for experienced MOULDER OPERATORS & SET UP people, as well as entry level stacker positions.
Closes: November 14th, 2013 at Spm
REQUIREMENTS: Must have experience in road maintenance, construction. Shall have a current ODOT Flagger Certification and a valid Oregon Driver License. Able to lift 40 pounds, stoop, kneel bend and stand for long periods. Work environment will be exposure to heat, rain, snow, wind, and cold temperatures. Lifting and placing traffic control devices for work zones. Completion of daily Traffic Control Plan and use of two-way radio is mandatory. Overtime winter call out evenings and weekends. Application and full job description can be found at www.co.crook.or.us. Please apply at the Crook County Treasurer'slTaxOffice 200 NE 2 St. Prineville, OR 97754 541-447-6554 EOE
We offer a competitive salary and benefits package. For mor e de t a ils g o to Roseburga.iapplicants.com and if interested, please apply on line and attach a cover letter and resume. Human Resources Roseburg Forest Products Co. AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
Registered Nurses Community Counseling Solutions is recruiting for Registered Nurses to work at Juniper Ridge Acute Care Center locatedinJohn Day, OR. Juniper Ridge is a S e cure Residential Treatment Facility providing services to individuals with a severe mental illness. These positions provide mental health nursing care including medication oversight, medication r e lated t r e atment, f o l low physician's prescriptions and procedures, measure and record patient's general physical condition such as pulse, temperature and r e spiration t o p r ovide d aily information, educate and train staff on medication administration, and e n sure documentation is kept according to policies. This position works with the treatment team to promote recovery from mental illness. This position includes telephone consultation and crisis intervention in the facility.
Qualified applicants must have a v a lid Oregon Registered Professional Nurse's license at the time of hire, hold a valid Oregon driver's license and pass a criminal history background check. Wages dependent upon education and experience, but will be b e tween $48,000 t o $ 7 2,000. Excellent benefit package. Signing bonus of up to $10,000. Please visit t h e O r egon E mployment Department or the Community Counseling Solutions website for a n a pplication or contact Nina B isson a t 5 4 1-676-9161, nina.bisson@gobhi.net, or P.O. Box 469, Heppner, OR 97836.
The right person for this position will be the initial face and voice of The Bulletin for employees and customers coming into the building or calling by phone. This accounting department position includes various administrative duties as well as the posting and reporting of a c counts receivable, deposit preparation and management of the cash register. T hi s p o s ition r e quires experience in basic accounting, Excel and general office functions.
FORD F150 XL2005. This truck can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4x4, anda tough V8 engine will get GOLDENRETRIEVERPUPPIES, the Iob done on the ranchi rQUAINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES!r We are three adorable, loving rModern amenities andall thequiet r puppies looking for a caring Iyott will need. Room to grow in,' home. Please call right away. ,'your ownlittle paradise! Call now.,'
541-388-6910
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LOCAL MONEYrWe buy secured trustdeeds & note,some hard money loans. Call Pat Kelley 541-382-3099 ext.13.
mends you use caution when you provide personal information to companies offering loans or credit, especially those asking for advance loan fees or companies from out of state. If you have concerns or questions, we suggest you consult your attorney or call CONSUMER
In The Bulletin's print and online Classifieds.
We are looking for a team player with a professional attitude and strong Painting/Wall Covering positive, customer service skills. The right person will be detail oriented, great at multi-tasking, WESTERN P A INTING CO. Richard Hayman, and able t o a d apt t o u s in g m u ltiple computer software applications as well as a semi-retired paintthe web. Must be able to communicate well ing contractor of 45 years. S m all Jobs both verbally and in writing with customers and co-workers. This is a full-time position Welcome. Interior 8 Exterior. c c b ¹ 5184. with benefits. Mon.-Fri., 7:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Tile/Ceramic
WARNING The Bulletin recom-
Reception/Accounts Receivable Clerk
The Bulletin
LCB¹8759
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528
Loans & Mortgages
Accounting Position Available Reports to the Controller
Accounting
serving central oregon since 1903
~Landsca in •Landscape Construction •Water Feature Installation/Maint. •Pavers •Renovations •Irrigations Installation
528
Loans 8 Mortgages
Show Your Stuff. Sell Your Stuff.
Residental/Commercial
Sprinkler Blowouts Sprinkler Repair
FINANCEAND BUSINESS 507 - Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 52 8 - Loans and Mortgages 543-Stocksand Bonds 5 5 8 - Business Investments 573 - Business Opportunities
Entry level positions starting at $10.00 per Night Supervisor The Bulletin, located in beautiful Bend, Orhour. Moulder/Set Up pay rates up to$16.00 depending on experience. Medical, dental, egon, is seeking a night time press supervisor. We are part of Western Communications, vision, life insurance and vacation available after standard qualification requirements for Inc. which is a small, family owned group consisting of seven newspapers: five in Oregon each. Bright Wood is an equal opportunity emand two in California. Our ideal candidate will ployer and we p erform our own on-site manage a small crew of three and must be pre-employment drug screening. You must able to l e ar n o u r e q uipment/processes pass a p r e-employment drug screening. Please apply in person in the Personnel Dept. quickly. A hands-on style is a requirement for to complete an application. our st/a tower KBA press. Prior management/ leadership experience preferred. In addition to We are located in the Madras Industrial Park. our 7-day-a-week newspaper, we have numerous commercial print clients as well. BeBright Wood Corporation —Personnel Dept., sides a competitive wage and benefit pro335 NM/Hess St., Madras, OR 97741 gram, we also provide potential opportunity for advancement. Sawmill Supervisor If you provide dependability combined with a positive attitude, are able to manage people Roseburg Forest ProductsCompany, a and schedules and are a team player, we leaderin the wood productsindustry, is would like to hear from you. If you seek a seeking to fill a Supervisor position in our stable work environment that provides a great Dillard Complex. place to live and raise a family, let us hear from you. The Responsibilities are: Provide leadership in Contact Al Nelson, Pressroom Manager at safety and quality; Set clear expectations for anelson@wescompapers.com with your complete r e sume, r e ferences a n d sa l a ry crewmembers; Drive safety improvements; Support the company's vision and values; history/requirements. No phone calls please. Implement continuous improvement; Maintain Drug test is required prior to employment. focus on customer needs; Strive to increase EOE. quality and efficiency; Interpret/enforce company policies and procedures; and Coordinate production activities between departments. General CROOK COUNTY The Minimum Qualifications are: Prefer colEMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES lege degree or prior supervisory experience; Comprehensive knowledge of a l l S a wmill Crook County Road Department machine centers; Excellent problem solving Certified ODOT Flagger/Labor/Winter and communication skills; Good at multi-taskAnti Icing Application ing and organizational skills; Must be availNON - CDL Position able for shift work schedules; PC operation $20.09 per hour (Word, Excel, etc.); Ability to coach and lead a Full time w/benefits/union position diverse workforce; and desire to advance.
The Bulletin
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EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools andTraini ng 454- Looking for Employ ment 470 - Domestic & In-Hom e Posit ions 476 - EmploymentOpportunities 486 - IndependentPositions
NOTICE: Oregon Land- One-quarter grass fed Realtor scape Contractors Law beef available. $3/Ib, Seeking Principal aro(ORS 671) requires all cut 8 wrapped. Rolled ker. Oceanfronts, 10 Serving Central Oregon since 1903 businesses that adest a b lishment. added as supple- yr. vertise t o pe r form corn FractionaI — $3 million Advertising Account Executive Landscape Construc- ment. 541-382-3733 inventory, Sale, ComRewardingnew business development tion which includes: mission Bonus. Call FIND YOUR FUTURE p lanting, decks , Pres 541-921-8000 The Bulletin is looking for a professional and fences, arbors, HOME INTHE BULLETIN driven Sales and Marketing person to help our water-features, and incustomers grow their businesses with an Your future is just a page ROOFERS stallation, repair of irexpanding list of broad-reach and targeted with experience, rigation systems to be away. Whether you're looking products. This full-time position requires a for a hat or a pl a ce to hang it, needed. licensed w i t h the background in consultative sales, territory Call River Roofing, Landscape Contrac- The Bulletin Classified is management and aggressive prospecting skills. 541-316-7663 tors Board. This 4-digit your best source. Two years of m edia sales experience is number is to be inEvery daythousandsof preferable, but we will train the right candidate. SALES cluded in all adver- buyers andsellers of goods tisements which indi- and services do business in The p o s ition i n c ludes a comp etitive cate the business has compensation package including benefits, and these pages.They know a bond,insurance and ProBuild is c urrently rewards an aggressive, customer focused workers c o mpensa- you can't beat TheBulletin seeking a n e x p eri- salesperson with unlimited earning potential. Classified Section for tion for their employOutside Sales ees. For your protec- selection and convenience enced Representative for our Email your resume, cover letter tion call 503-378-5909 - every item isjust a phone Bend, OR location at call away. and salary history to: or use our website: 63153 Nels Anderson. Jay Brandt, Advertising Director www.lcb.state.or.us to The Classified Section is This position will be rebrandt@bendbulletin.com check license status easy to use. Every item sponsible for sales and OI' before contracting with i s categorized and every customer service at the drop off your resume in person at the business. Persons cartegory is indexed onthe c ustomer's site a n d 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; doing land s cape section's front page. generating new sales Or mail to PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708. maintenance do not with customers. This No phone inquiries please. r equire an L C B Whether youarelooking for position offers great cense. a home orneed aservice, compensation and exEOE / Drug Free Workplace your future is in the pagesof cellent benefits! If inNelson The Bulletin Classified. terested, please apply Landscaping & online at Maintenance robuild.com/ The Bulletin htt://www. Serving Central Menu/Careers Oregon Since 2003
Domestic Services A ssisting Seniors a t Home. Light house keeping 8 other ser v ices. L icensed & Bonded. BBB C e rti fied. 503-756-3544
Can be found on these pages:
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for logging company '10 - 3 lines, 7 days Call The Bulletin At in Florence, OR. Ex'16 - 3 lines, 14 days 541-385-5809 perience re q uired, CDL, current medical (Private Party ads only) Place Your Ad Or E-Mail At: www.bendbulletin.com c ard. Great pa y & benefits. Year-round, long-term em p loy- Pressroom ment. Great place to
Food Service - Bruno's Grocery/U-bake is taking apps for Cashier 8 Pizza Maker. Apply: 1709 NE 6th, Bend. No phone calls
is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702
fg,/F~>JIP) JI,J j Jlq tJjjJ~ Jg
Have an item to BANK TURNED YOU sell quick? DOWN? Private party Driver Needed. Night If it's under will loan on real ess hift, apply a t O w l '500 you can place it in tate equity. Credit, no Taxi, 1919 NE 2nd, problem, good equity The Bulletin Bend. After Spm. No is all you need. Call phone calls please. Classifieds for: Oregon Land Mort-
live!
The Bulletin bendbulletin.com
Employment Opportunities
If you are interested in joining our accounting team, please e-mail your resume to hwest@bendbulletin.com prior to Oct. 31, 2013. No phone calls or resume drop-offs please. EOE/Drug Free workplace
Add a Border For an actditional '2.00 per day
'. as'si je s TO PlaCe yOur ad, ViSit WWW.bendbljlletin.com Or 541-385-5809
E4 TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
D AILY B R I D 't83E CLU B
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD WjllShortz
T uesday,octob er29,2013
ACROSS
28 Golf's Ernie 29 Dodge models of 1979 until 1990 5 Suffix meaning 30 Possible answer "city" in some to "How'd you European place hurt yourself?" names 33 Site of four sold9 Shih out 1972 Elvis (diminutive dogs) Presley concerts, for short 13 With 59-Across, where [circled 36 Swamp growth letters] came 37 Base runner's from attempt 15 Like a drive-thru 38 Wool lover order 39 Go astray 16 " For j o l l y 40 Not so outgoing good fellow" 17When repeated, 41 Painter Picasso consoling words 42". .. or gather" 18Charge for currency 43 Some Wisconsin exchange farms 19Once, old-style 45 What [circled letters] wanted 20 Child actress who to do appeared with [circled letters] 48 Bunch 23 Biol., e.g. 49 Means of escape for [circled 25 Creator of letters] [circled letters] 52 It's cast 26 Palm, as a playing card 53Timeto give up?
Harlow the Halo
1 Deposed leader
By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency
While bad luck flogs Unlucky Louie unmercifully, good luck rests on the player we call Harlow the Halo as gently as a feather pillow. Harlow's key finesses never lose, his suits always break well and, most infuriating, his errors cost nothing. "Look at this," Louie said to me. He had beenSouth in a team match, with Harlow as South at the other table. "We both played four spades," Louie said. "I ruffed the second diamond, drew trumps and led the king of clubs. When East took the ace, Iknew West held the ace of hearts for his opening bid. So I won the club return and led a heart to dummy's king. Making four."
The opponents pass. What do you say? ANSWER: One school of thought advocates bidding four spades after a single raise with almost any hand containing a six-card suit. That may be too dogmatic. Still, if partner has an average raise such as K 6 5 2, 7 6, 8 7 6 5, A 3 2, you can take 10 tricks. Your hand is certainly worth a try. Bid three spades or three clubs. West dealer Both sides vulnerable
NORTH 41 K 10 8 5 (vI KJ6
06543 1B974
OTHER TABLE
WEST EAST 462 44 "What happened at t h e o t her 9 A 3 2 6 Q 1097 5 table?" I asked. 0J72 0 AKQ1 08 "The Halo drew trumps and led a 4 10 6 2 4AJ93 heart to the king. He didn't bother to find out how the East-West cards lay. SOUTH With his luck, he didn't need to." 4 AQJ9 7 3 I sympathized with Louie. if the 984 position of the missing aces had been 09 swapped, as they might have been, he 4 KQ8 5 would have made four spades, and W est Nor t h E ast Sou t h Harlow would have failed. 1O
Pass
2Q 2 18 All Pass
DAILY QUESTION Youhold: 4 A Q J 9 7 3 Q 8 4 811K Q85.Youopenonespade, and your partner bids two spades. 09
1 v2
1 18
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ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE D U B
A S S E T
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I DE D A D I E L I C E A TC E T C O T S T 5 I I TS T I A GH D D GO O G O O E N S D I C OS V I C E V E E V A D E TY L E R
Opening lead — 0 K (C) 2013 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
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472013 Tnbune Content Agency,LLC All Rights Reserved.
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money being spent 57 Grand Ole 58 Beverage nut 59 Newton with laws 64 Squirrel away 66 Contagious dog
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By Davtd Steinberg (c)2013 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
62
10/29/1 3
THE BULLETIN• TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29 2013 E5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
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Motorcycles & Accessories
Triumph Daytona 2004, 15K mi l e s , perfect bike, needs nothing. Vin ¹201536.
Snowmobiles • 1994 Arctic Cat 580 EXT, $1000. • Yamaha 750 1999 Mountain Max, SOLD!
$4995 Dream Car Auto Sales 1801 Division, Bend
• Zieman 4-place trailer, SOLD! All in good condition. Located in La Pine. CalI 541-408-6149.
DreamCarsBend.com 541-678-0240 Dlr 3665
-
Watercraft Ads published in aWa-
tercraft" include: Kayaks, rafts and motorIzed personal watercrafts. For "boats" please see Class 870.
Rexair 28-ft motorhome, 1991Ideal for camping or hunting, it has 45K miles, a 460 gas engine, new tires, automatic levelers, Onan generator, king-size bed, awning. Nice condition Sell or trade'? $8700. 541-815-9939
Victory TC 2002, runs great, many accessories, new tires, under 40K miles, well kept. $5000. 541-771-0665 865
ATVs
Polaris Outlaw 450, 2008, MXR Sport quad, dirt & sand tires,runs great, low hrs, $3750 541-647-8931
TIFFIN PHAETON QSH 2007with 4 slides, CAT
350hp diesel engine $129 900. 30 900 miles great condition! Extended warranty, dishwasher, washer/ dryer, central vac, roof Coachman Freelander satellite, aluminum 2008 32' Class C, wheels, 2 full slide-thru M-3150 - pristine with basement trays & 3 TV's. just 23,390 miles! EffiFalcon-2 towbar and cient coach has Ford Even-Brake included. V10 w/Banks pwr pkg, Call 541-977-4150 14' slide, rear qn walkaround bed, sofa/hideTioga 24' Class C abed,cabover bunk, ducted furn/AC, flat Motorhome screen TV, skylight, Bought new in 2000, currently under 20K pantry, 16' awning. No miles, excellent pets/smkg - a must see! $57,900. 541-548-4969 shape, new tires, professionaly winterFIND IT1 ized every year, cutoff switch to battery, BUY IT! plus new RV batterSELL IT! ies. Oven, hot water The Bulletin Classifieds heater & air conditioning have never been used! $24,000 obo. Serious inquiries, please. Stored in Terrebonne.
The Bulletin To Subscribe call miles, reg. s ervice, well cared for. factory 541-385-5800 or go to Buell optional fairing www.bendbulletin.com 648 NOTICE Michelin 2cc tires, Houses for All real estate adver- kit, 870 will trade for ie: EnIr, I tised here in is subRent General duro DR 650, $5700 Boats & Accessories 541-548-5174 ject to t h e F e deral obo. 541-536-7924. F air H o using A c t , 4 Bdrm, 2s/g bath family Fleetwood Discovery home, AC large fenced which makes it illegal 2009 40X, Corian r Christmas at back-yard, mint cond. to advertise any prefcounters, convection/ the Coast in great neighborhood. erence, limitation or micro, 2-door fridge/ discrimination based WorldMark $1350. 541-617-7003 freezer, washer/dryer, on race, color, reliDepoe Bay, OR central vac, new tile & n Look at: 2 bedroom condo, gion, sex, handicap, 16'9 Larson All Ameri- carpet, roof sat., 3 TVs, Health Forces Sale! Bendhomes.com familial status or nasleeps 6 can, 1971, V-hull, 120hp window awnings, level- Winnebago Suncruiser34' tional origin, or inten- 2007 Harley Davidson I/O, 1 owner, always ga- ers, ext'd warranty, multi- 2004, 35K, loaded, too 12/22 - 12/29 or for Complete Listings of FLHX Street GlideGPS, 350 Cum- much to list, ext'd warr. 12/23 -12/30. Area Real Estate for Sale tion to make any such Too many extras to list! raged, w/trlr, exc cond, media thru 2014, $49,900 Denmins diesel, 7.5 gen. $1500 preferences, l i m ita$2000. 541-788-5456 6-spd, cruise control, stePUBLISHER'S 541-325-6566 tions or discrimination. Many extras! $129,900. nis, 541-589-3243 NOTICE We will not knowingly reo, batt. tender, cover. 541-604-4662 All real estate adver- accept any advertis- Set-up for long haul road 630 tising in this newspa- ing for r ea l e s tate trips. Dealership svc'd. • Tra v el Trailers Rooms for Rent Only 2,000 miles. per is subject to the which is in violation of PLUS H-D cold weather F air H o using A c t this law. All persons rain gear, packs, Eastside Room: large, which makes it illegal are hereby informed gear, 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, helmets, leathers separate e n trance/ to a d v ertise "any that all dwellings ad- & much more. $15,000. inboard motor, g reat bath. Furn. No smkpreference, limitation vertised are available 541-382-3135 after 5pm cond, well maintained, ers or pets. $365 mo or D i scovery disc r imination on an equal opportu$8995obo. 541-350-7755 Fleetwood + dep. 541-389-0034. 40' 2003, diesel mobased on race, color, nity basis. The Bulletorhome w/all Laundry and k i tchen religion, sex, handi- tin Classified options-3 slide outs, Cougar 33 ft. 2006, privileges, fully f ur- cap, familial status, 14 ft. slide, awning, satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, nished. $300 mo. marital status or na763 etc. 3 2 ,000 m i l es. easy lift, stability bar, 357 Sena Ct, Bend tional origin, or an in- Recreational Homes 541 -977-7479 Wintered i n h e ated bumper extends for tention to make any 8 Property such pre f erence, shop. $84,900 O.B.O. extra cargo, all ac631 cess. incl., like new limitation or discrimiSunchaser Pontoon 541-447-8664 Harley Davidson condition, stored in Condo/Townhomes PRICED REDUCED nation." Familial sta2011 Classic Lim- 20' boat - $19,895 RV barn, used less cabin on year-round 2006 Smokercraft tus includes children for Rent ited, LOADED, 9500 creek. 637 acres surthan 10 t imes locruise, S-8521. 2006 under the age of 18 miles, custom paint c ally, no p et s o r rounded federal land, "Broken Glass" by 75hp. Mercury. F u ll Furnished 1 bdrm condo living with parents or smoking. $20,000 camping e n c losure. legal cust o dians, Fremont Nat'I Forest. Inn of 7th Mtn, utils + Nicholas Del Drago, 541-480-7215 Pop u p cha n ging obo. 541-536-2709. cable & Wifi pd, deck, pregnant women, and new condition, room/porta-potty, BBQ, pools, $750 + dep. No people securing cusheated handgrips, swim ladder, all gear. G ulfstream S u n 775 smkg/pets. 541-979-8940 tody of children under auto cruise control. Trailer, 2006 E a sy- sport 30' Class A 18. This newspaper Manufactured/ $32,000 in bike, only loader gal v anized. 1988 ne w f r i dge, TURN THE PAGE will not knowingly ac$23,000 obo. Mobile Homes P urchased new, a l l TV, solar panel, new cept any advertising 541-318-6049 For More Ads records. 541-706-9977, refrigerator, wheelfor real estate which is FACTORY SPECIAL The Bulletin cell 503-807-1973. c hair l i ft . 4 0 0 0W in violation of the law. New Home, 3 bdrm, g enerator, Goo d Need help fixing stuffo O ur r e a ders ar e $46,500 finished 632 condition! $12,500 hereby informed that Call A Service Professional Jayco Eagle PRICERFWdf01 on your site. obo 541-447-5504 Apt./Multiplex General all dwellings adverfind the help you need. 26.6 ft long, 2000 J and M Homes 20.5' Seaswirl Spytised in this newspawww.bendbulletin.com 541-548-5511 der 1989 H.O. 302, CHECK YOUR AD per are available on Sleeps 6, 14-ft slide, 285 hrs., exc. cond., an equal opportunity awning, Eaz-Lift LOT MODEL stored indoors for basis. To complain of stabilizer bars, heat LIQUIDATION life $8900 OBO. discrimination cal l Prices Slashed Huge & air, queen 541-379-3530 HUD t o l l -free at walk-around bed, Savings! 10 Year 1-800-877-0246. The very good condition, conditional warranty. f ree t e lephone Finished on your site. $10,000 obo. on the first day it runs toll Harley Davidson Sport- 21' Crownline Cuddy KOUNTRY AIRE number for the hear541-595-2003 to make sure it isn cor- ing ONLY 2 LEFT! ster 2 0 0 1 , 12 0 0cc, Cabin, 1995, only 1994 37.5' motorim p aired is rect. nSpellcheck and Redmond, Oregon home, with awning, 9,257 miles, $4995. Call 325 hrs on the boat, 1-800-927-9275. 541-548-5511 human errors do ocAdvertise your car! Michael, 541-310-9057 5.7 Merc engine with and one slide-out, cur. If this happens to JandMHomes.com 687 Add A Picture! Only 47k miles outdrive. Bimini top Reach thousands of readers! your ad, please con& moorage cover, and good condition. Commercial for HDFatBo 19 96 tact us ASAP so that Rent /Own Call 541-385-5809 $7500 obo. $25,000. Rent/Lease The Bulletin Classifteds corrections and any 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes 541-382-2577 541-548-0318 adjustments can be $2500 down, $750 mo. (photo aboveis of a Fenced storage yard, made to your ad. OAC. J and M Homes similar model & not the Ads published in the building an d o f f ice 541-385-5809 541-548-5511 actual vehicle) "Boats" classification The Bulletin Classified trailer for rent. In coninclude: Speed, fishvenient Redmond lo205 SE Railing, drift, canoe, The Bulletin is your Completely Garage Sales cation, house and sail boats. road Blvd. $800/mo. Rebuilt/Customized Employment For all other types of Avail. 10/1. 2012/2013 Award Keystone Laredo 31' 541-923-7343. watercraft, please go Winner RV 2 0 06 w i th 1 2 ' Marketplace to Class 875. slide-out. Sleeps 6, Showroom Condition 541-385-5809 Many Extras queen walk-around Tick, Tock Call NATIONAL DOLPHIN bed w/storage underLow Miles. 37' 1997, loaded! 1 neath. Tub 8 shower. Tick, Tock... $77,000 Sernng Central Oregon s nce 1903 slide, Corian surfaces, 5 41 -385 - 5 8 0 9 2 swivel rockers. TV. 541-548-4807 wood floors (kitchen), Air cond. Gas stove & ...don't let time get Find them in 2-dr fridge, convection refrigerator/freezer. to advertise. away. Hire a microwave, Vizio TV 8 Microwave. Awning. The Bulletin Suzuki DRZ400 SM roof satellite, walk-in Outside professional out sho w e r. www.bendbulletin.com 2007, 14K mi., shower, new queen bed. Classifieds! Slide through storof The Bulletin's 4 gal. tank, racks, White leather hide-a- a ge, E a s y Lif t . recent tires, "Call A Service Beautiful h o u seboat,bed & chair, all records, $29,000 new; $4200 OBO. s moking. $85,000. 541-390-4693 no pets o r Aski ng$18,600 Professional" 541-383-2847. $28,450. Servmg Central Oregon srnce rgttt www.centraloregon 541-447-4805 Call 541-771-4800 Directory today! houseboat.com 627
Vacation Rentals & Exchanges
Professionally managed by Norris & Stevens, Inc.
745
Layton 27-ft, 2001
Keystone Challenger
Front 8 rear entry doors, bath, shower, queen bed, slide-out, oven, microwave, air conditioning, patio awning, twin propanetanks, very nice, great floor plan, $8895. 541-316-1388
fully S/C, w/d hookups, new 18' Dometic awning, 4 new tires, new Kubota 7000w marine diesel generator, 3 slides, exc. cond. ins ide 8 o u t . 2 7 " T V dvd/cd/am/fm entertain center. Call for more details Only used 4
2004 CH34TLB04 34'
Buell 1125R, 2008 15k
Homes for Sale
Orbit 21'2007, used only 8 times, A/C, oven, tub s hower, micro, load leveler hitch, awning, dual
batteries, sleeps 4-5, EXCELLENT CONDITION. All accessories are included. $14,511 OBO. 541-382-9441
bed, plus cash). 541-280-2547 or 541-815-4121
WEEKEND WARRIOR
L ittle Red Corvette"
o Dyna solid Featuresinclude rs,4-dr Surtace counte, Icro, f'deconvectionm' rlg, r,cebuilt-inwasher/dryer, ramictilefloor,TV,DUD, Iiitedish,airleveling, s „rog„ p tray,andakingsizebe -Agforonly $149,000 541-000-000
~~ g~ tAltN'
gppglAL
Monaco Lakota 2004 5th Wheel 34 ft.; 3 s l ides; immaculate c o ndition; l arge screen TV w / entertainment center; reclining chairs; center kitchen; air; queen bed; complete hitch and new fabric cover. $20,000 OBO. (541) 548-5886
541-420-3250
Fifth Wheels
•
Alpenlite 2002, 31' with 2 slides, rear kitchen, very good condition.
Non-smokers, no pets. $19,500 or best offer.
Nuyya297LK HifcHiker 2007, Out of consignment, 3 slides, 32' perfect for snow birds, left kitchen, rear lounge, extras. First $25,000 buys it. 541-447-5502 days 8 541-447-1641 eves.
541-382-2577
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 541-385-5809 CHECK YOUR AD
OPEN ROAD 36' 2005 - $28,000 King bed, hide-a-bed sofa, 3 slides, glass shower, 10 gal. water heater, 10 cu.ft. fridge, central vac, s atellite dish, 27 " TV/stereo syst n front
front power leveling jacks an d s c issor stabilizer jacks, 16' awning. Like new! 541-41 9-0566
g l.~is ~t
on the first day it runs to make sure it isn correct. nSpellcheck and human errors do oc27', 2007 5t h cur. If this happens to Pilgrim wheel, 1 s lide, AC, your ad, please conTV, full awning, exc. tact us ASAP so that shape, $19, 5 00. corrections and any 541-350-8629 adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified
(-,er '
u Fleetwood Prowler 32' - 2001 2 slides, ducted heat & air, great condition, snowbird ready, Many upgrade options, financing available! $14,500 obo. Call Dick, 541-480-1687.
Recreation by Design 2013 Monte Carlo, 38-ft. Top living room 5th wheel, has 3 slideouts, 2 A/Cs, entertainment center, fireplace, W/D, garden tub/shower in great condition. $42,500 or best offer. Call Peter, 307-221-2422,
( in La Pine )
WILL DELIVER
SANDPIPER 2002 27' with hitch too many extras to list, $13,000. 541-923-8322.
Includes up to 40 words of text, 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold headline and price. rr
004 - LQ
541-385-5809
(whichever comes first!)
00+ gu]P"~< fLLiE<
The Bulletin Classifiedsl
Your auto, RV, motorcycle, boat, or airplane ad runs until it sells or up to 12 months
FOR ONLY w
Keystone Raptor, 2007 37' toy hauler, 2 slides, generator, A/C, 2 TVs, satellite system w/auto seek, in/out sound system,sleeps 6,m any extras. $32,500. In Madras, call 541-771-9607 or 541-475-6265
Toy hauler/travel trailer. 24' with 21' interior. Sleeps 6. Self-contained. Systems/ appearancein good condition. Smoke-free. Tow with '/g-ton. Strong suspension; can haul MONTANA 3585 2008, ATVs snowmobiles, even a small car! Great exc. cond., 3 slides, price - $8900. king bed, Irg LR, Call 541-593-6266 Arctic insulation, all options $35,000 obo.
The Bulletin
541-385-5809
• 'uu
that fits 6 t/g' pickup
GarageSales
The Bulletin
see. 541-330-5527.
Find It in
Tango 29.6' 2007, Rear living, walkaround queen bed, central air, awning, 1 large slide, $15,000 obo (or trade for camper
• u~I
Garage Sales
times total in last 5'/g
years.. No pets, no smoking. High r etail $27,700. Will sell for $24,000 including slidi ng hitch that fits i n your truck. Call 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. for appt to
880
Motorcycles & Accessories
MOUNTAIN GLEN, 541-383-9313
875
Motorhomes
860
5m ©nlls
Sernng Central Oregon since t903
Fifth W heels
l~;=Mgk
The Bulletin
Call 541-390-1755
2013 Harley Davidson Dyna Wide Glide, black, only 200 miles, brand new, all stock, plus after-market exhaust. Has winter cover, helmet. Selling for what I owe on it: $15,500. Call anytime, 541-554-0384
The Bulletin
Travel Trailers •
541-385-5809
Yamaha 1980s, (2) with tilt trailer, 340cc's. run great. lots of extras. $1,200 takes all.
634
'.0 0
Motorhomes
rage sale and don't forget to advertise in classified! 385-5809.
Apt./Multiplex NE Bend Call for Specials! Limited numbers avail. 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. W/D hookups, patios or decks.
882
Boats & Accessories • GENERATE SOME excitement in your neigborhood. Plan a ga-
•
682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687 - Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726 - Timeshares for Sale 730- New Listings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744 - Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746- Northwest Bend Homes 747 -Southwest Bend Homes 748- Northeast Bend Homes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- Redmond Homes 753 - Sisters Homes 755- Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson CountyHomes 757- Crook County Homes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational Homes andProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780- Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land
RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605 - RoommateWanted 616- Want To Rent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomes for Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648 - Houses for RentGeneral 650 - Houses for Rent NEBend 652- Housesfor Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Housesfor Rent SWBend 658 - Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for RentSunriver 660 - Houses for Rent La Pine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663 - Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RV Parking 676 Mobile/Mfd.Space
870
--g'ttiua&'.;:~ 2004 Corvette Convertible Coupe, 350, auto with !32 miles, gets 26-24 mpg. Add lots more description and interesting facts fOi' $9. Look how much fun a girl could have in a sweet car like this!
$72,500 541-000-000
• Daily publication in The Bulletin, an audience of over 70,000. • Weekly publication in Central Oregon Marketplace —DELIVERED to over 30,000 households.
• Weekly publication in The Central Oregon Nickel Ads with an audience of over 30,000 in Central and Eastern Oregon • Continuous listing with photo on Bendbulletin.com * A $290 value based on an ad with the same extra features, publishing 28-ad days in the above publications. Private party ads only.
E6 TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2013 • THE BULLETIN • s •
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•
e
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DD
00 I
Aircraft, Parts & Service
975
Sport Utility Vehicles
Sport Utility Vehicles
Automobiles
•
AUTOS &TRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916- Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932- Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935- Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles
Trucks & Heavy Equipment GMC 2004 16'
refrigerated box van, gvw 20,000, 177,800 mi, diesel, 6 spd manual with on-spot automatic tire chains. Thermo-King reefer has 1,635 engine hours. $19,995. 541-41 9-41 72.
AUDI 1990 V8 Quattro. Perfect Ski Car. LOW MILES. $3,995 obo. 541-480-9200.
P>a ~~
•
916 D
935
Au t o mobiles
Automobiles •
Automo b iles
4
•
BOATS &RVs 805 -Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - MotorcyclesAndAccessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats &Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885 - Canopies andCampers 890 - RVs for Rent
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9 935
Price Reduced! 0 Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390
engine, power everything, new paint, 54K original m i les, runs great, excellent condition in/out. $7500 obo. 541-480-3179
Iyevev
1/3 interest in Columbia 400, $150,000 (located JCB 2006 214 E diesel GMC lveton 1971, Only O Bend.) Also: Sunriwi th Ham- $19,700! Original low ver hangar available for backhoe mer Master 360 rock sale at $155K, or lease, hammer mile, exceptional, 3rd 18U dig owner. 951-699-7171 O $400/mo. bucket, quick coupler, 541-948-2963 backhoe has 380 hrs, rock hammer has 80 hours. Like new, - ~ < a aa $32,500 obo. 541-350-3393
Mercedes Benz
E500 4-matic 2004 86,625 miles, sunroof with a shade loaded, silver, 2 sets of tires and a set of chains. $13,500. 541-362-5598
BMW 525 2002 2 0 07, 9 9 K Jeep Wr a ngler 4 . 0 Luxury Sport Edimiles, premium pack- Sport 2004, 5 s p d , tion, V-6, automatic, age, heated lumbar 4WD, tow pkg., ally U loaded, 18 new supported seats, pan- wheels, privacy glass, tires, 114k miles. oramic moo n roof, wide tires. $7,900 obo Bluetooth, ski bag, XeVin ¹749542. non headlights, tan & (541) 419-4152 $15,988 black leather interior, new front & r ear 4@ S U B A R U. PUBMIUQPBBHD OOM brakes O 76K miles, Pontiac G6 2007, low Buick CX Lucerne one owner, all records, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. miles, $8900. 2006, 82k mi., very clean, $16,900. 877-266-3821 541-548-1422 cream leather, Black 541-388-4360 Dlr ¹0354 Beauty - Stunning People Look for Information eye appeal, $6900. About Products and Chevrolet Tahoe No charge for Services Every Daythrough 2001 4x4, 4.8L V8. looking. Call Dark green w/gray The Bulletin Clessifieds 541-318-9999 leather interior. Good condition. Porsche 911 Nissan Pathfinder SE $3900. Cadillac El Dorado Carrera 993 cou e 1998, 150K mi, 5-spd 1994 Total Cream Puff! 541-390-3326 4x4, loaded, very good Body, paint, trunk as tires, very good cond, showroom, blue $4800. 503-334-7345 leather, $1700 wheels w/snow tires although Subaru Outback 2.5i car has not been wet in Premium 2011, 48k, 8 years. On trip to ¹392151 $21 , 995 Boise avg. 28.5 mpg., 1996, 73k miles, i~ Tiptronic auto. $4800. 541-593-4016.s transmission. Silver, lnfiniti FX35 2012, Oregon Just bought a new boat? blue leather interior, AotoSoorce Platinum silver, Sell your old one in the moon/sunroof, new 24,000 miles, with 541-598-3750 classifieds! Ask about our quality tires and factory war r anty, www.aaaoregonautoSuper Seller rates! battery, car and seat f ully l o aded, A l l source.com 541-385-5809 covers, many extras. Wheel Drive, GPS, Recently fully sersunroof, etc. viced, garaged, $35,500. looks and runs like 541-550-7189 new. Excellent condition $29,700
BMW X 3
541-322-9647
Toyota RA V4 2 007, rphoto lop illustration only) L imited, V 6 , 3. 5 L , Chevy M a l ibu L T Z auto, 4WD, l eather, 2010, V6, aut o Porsche 911 Turbo p rivacy glass, t o w w/overdrive, leather, pkg., alloy wheels. ELK HUNTERS! loaded, 21K m i les, VIN ¹015960 Jeep CJ5 1979, orig. Vin ¹103070 $19,788 owner, 87k only 3k on $18,888 GMC Sierra 1977 short 1 /3 interest i n w e llbed, e xlnt o r i ginal new 258 long block. S UB ARU. S UBA R U . BUBBRUOPBBHD OOM C lutch p kg , W a r n equipped IFR Beech Bocond., runs 8 drives hubs. Excellent run- 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2003 6 speed, X50 nanza A36, new 10-550/ great. V8, new paint added power pkg., 877-266-3821 prop, located KBDN. and tires. $4950 obo. ner, very dependable. 877-266-3821 530 HP! Under 10k Dlr ¹0354 Northman 6~va' plow, $65,000. 541-419-9510 Peterbilt 35 9 p o table 541-504-1050 Dlr ¹0354 miles, Arctic silver, water t r uck, 1 9 9 0, Warn 6000¹ w i nch. gray leather interior, 940 3200 gal. tank, 5hp $9500 or best reaU new quality t i res, p ump, 4 - 3 hoses, sonable offer. Vans and battery, Bose camlocks, $ 2 5,000. 541-549-6970 or 541-820-3724 premium sound ste541-815-8105. reo, moon/sunroof, 931 car and seat covers. Many extras. GaAutomotive Parts, MGA 1959 - $19,999 1/5th interest in 1973 CORVETTE COUPE I raged, perfect conCessna 150 LLC Service 8 Accessories Convertible. O r igiGlasstop 2010 dition $5 9 ,700. nal body/motor. No Grand Sport -4 LT 150hp conversion, low 541-322-9647 GMC 1995 Safari XT, tires, rust. 541-549-3838 time on air frame and 4 studded Wintercat loaded, clear bra U seats 8, 4.3L V6, mounted on 16 rims, hood 8 fenders. engine, hangared in studs on rims, $2300 Jeep Grand Chero225/70R-16, $300. Bend. Excellent perNew Michelin Super ~ OO Porsche Carrera 911 obo. 541-312-6960 541-390-7270 kee 1996 4x4, autoformance & affordSports, G.S. floor 2003 convertible with matic, 135,000 miles. orePixat Bendbulletin.com able flying! $6,500. Hancook DynaPro tires M mats, 17,000 miles, hardtop. 50K miles, 975 Great shape - very 541-410-6007 Crystal red. new factory Porsche s tudded o n rim s , nice interior, $3,900. Automobiles $42,000. motor 6 mos ago with 225/70R/16, like new 541-815-9939 503-358-1164. 18 mo factory war$400. 541-593-4398. M ranty remaining. My little red $37,500. Just too many
©
BUBBRUOPBRNO UOM
Corvette" Cou e
©
+4 +
Honda Civic LX Sedan 2010, 4 Cyl., a uto., F WD, 25/36 M P G . V in ¹ 0 86931. N o w $12,788.
PUBBRUOPBRNO UOM
©
Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds
S UB A R U . BUBIRUOPBRND OOM
877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
S UBA R U . BUBBRUOPBRHO UOM
2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 Dlr ¹0354
Subaru Legacy 3.6 LTD 2012 sedan, 26k miles. ¹004365
$2 6 , 995 Oregon
AoloSoorce
541-598-3750 aaaoregonautosource.com
Toyota Matrix S 2009, FWD, power window, p ower locks, A / C . Vin ¹023839 $13,488
S UBA R U . BUBBRUOPBRNO UQM
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
Subaru Outback 2.5i wagon 2005, AWD, WHEN YOU SEE THIS 2 .5 L , a u t o , a l o y wheels, roof r a c k, ~OO Vin ¹362964
MorePixatBendbuletin.com
$9,988
On a classified ad go to www.bendbulletin.com 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. to view additional 877-266-3821 photos of the item. Dlr ¹0354
+©' S UB A R U . BUBBBUOIBRND UOM
Looking for your next employee?
Subaru STi 2010, 16.5K, rack, mats, cust snow whls, stored, oneowner, $29K,
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 Toyota Avalon L M T every month at 2007, V6, 3.5 L, auto, no extra cost. BulleF WD, M oo n r o of, tin Classifieds leather, alloy wheels, Get Results! Call Vin ¹178907 385-5809 or place $19,488 your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com 541.410.6904
ig® S UBA R U . PUBBRUOIBRNO UOM
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. I The Bulletin recomH 877-266-3821 mends extra caution I Dlr ¹0354
I when
Toyota Celica Convertible 1993
from out of the area.
J S ending c
I formation may be I / subject to FRAUD. For more informa-
f tion about an adver-f
541-385-5809
G T 2200 4
cyl, 5
I the Oregon Statef
Attorney General's I speed a/c pw pdl C o nsumer I nicest c o n vertible Office around in this pnce f Protection hotline at 1-877-877-9392. range, ne w t i r es, wheels, clutch, timing belt, plugs, etc. SerVing Central Oregan OOIO 1903 111K mi., r emarkable cond. i n side and out. Fun car to Find exactly what d rive, M ust S E E ! $5995. R e dmond. you are looking for in the 541-504-1 993 CLASSIFIEDS
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The Bulletin
. 820 •
•
•
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with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
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1987 Freightliner COE 3axle truck, Cummins en- Ir-,,r ~
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gine, 10-spd, runs! $3900 obo. 541-419-2713 Ford 1965 6-yard dump truck, good paint, recent overhaul, everything works! $3995. 541-815-3636
Chevy Wagon 1957, 4-dr., complete, $7,000 OBO / trades. Please call 541-389-6998
rfMte5cN
International Fla t Bed Pickup 1963, 1
ton dually, 4 s pd. trans., great MPG, could be exc. wood hauler, runs great, new brakes, $1950. 541-419-5480.
541-598-3750
P Ford Model A 1930 Coupe, good condition, $16,000. 541-588-6084
o
mi. ¹267025 $17,995.
AutoSoorce
Ford F350 2006
280
Toyota Tacoma 2006 Access Cab, 34,409
www.aaaoregonautosource.com
Have an item to sell quick? If it's under '500 you can place it in The Bulletin Classifieds for:
T ruck ha s V - 1 0, 21,000 m i . , HD winch w / c ustom HD front bumper, air load bags w/12' dump bed, dually, Ford Ranchero 1965 '10 - 3 lines, 7 days Rhino bedliner cus4x4, new high protom wheels, 302V-8 '16 - 3 lines, 14 days file tires. $26,900 a uto. R un s go o d (Private Party ads only) 541-350-3393 $9,995. 541-389-0789
•
o
r thing NINg sale! Every ' GARAGE CLEA S ~8Wn mOWeTS, ' e a11 ttte. Bikes, ' lifying Our life, yOO Can irftag @ SPO55 5 equipfttettt. Si~P t
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84
a.s's'i ie s www.bendbulletin.com
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ash ,J
checks, or credit in-
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p u r chasing ~
f products or servicesJ
tiser, you may call
Garage Sales Garage Sales Garage Sales
2060 NE Hwy 20• Bend
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S UBA R U .
541-322-6928
collectibles?
Plymouth B a r racuda 1966, original car! 300 Sell them in 1974 Bellanca 360 V8, center- iphoto for illustration only) The Bulletin Classifieds hp, 1730A lines, 541-593-2597 Jeep Patriot 2010, 4 cyl., 2.4 L, auto, 4WD, Good classified ads tell 2180 TT, 440 SMO, R oof r a ck , al l o y 1996, 350 auto, 541-385-5809 the essential facts in an 180 mph, excellent wheels, privacy glass. 132,000 miles. interesting Manner. Write condition, always Vin ¹522540 Non-ethanol fuel & Les Schwab Mud 8 from the readers view - not hangared, 1 owner $14,488 synthetic oil only, Snow blackwall the seller's. Convert the premium Bose stefor 35 years. $60K. Murano S UBA R U . facts into benefits. Show reo, always garaged, P245/50/R-20 102T the reader how the item will 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. In Madras, $17,000. Observe G02, used help them in someway. 877-266-3821 call 541-475-6302 541-923-1781 1 winter. Pd $1200. This Dlr ¹0354 Will take reasonable advertising tip 2011 Fliqht Design CTLS offer. 541-306-4915 brought to youby Light Sport, 75 TTSN NDH, loaded, hanThe Bulletin PSCHH' > gared, Bend. $149K e firm. 541-389-7108 PROJECT CARS: Chev~ STUDDED Executive Hangar 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) at Bend Airport (KBDN) SNOW TIRES Chevy Coupe 1950 60' wide x 50' deep, size 225/70-R16 rolling chassis's $1750 w/55' wide x 17' high biand Hyundai Santa ea M Chevy 4-dr 1949, fold dr. Natural gas heat, Fe wheels, new! complete car, $ 1949; offc, bathroom. Adjacent $600. 541-388-4003 Cadillac Series 61 1950, to Frontage Rd; great 2 dr. hard top, complete visibility for aviation busiw /spare f r on t cl i p ., ness. Financing avail932 $3950, 541-382-7391 able. 541-948-2126 or Antique & email 1jetjockOq.com Classic Autos Piper A rcher 1 9 8 0, based in Madras, always hangared since new. New annual, auto pilot, IFR, one piece 1921 Model T VW Bug Sedan, 1969, windshield. Fastest Arfully restored, 2 owners, Delivery Truck with 73,000 total miles, cher around. 1750 toRestored 8 Runs tal t i me . $6 8 ,500. $10,000. 541-382-5127 $9000. 541-475-6947, ask for 541-389-8963 Rob Berg. Pickups Where can you find a Buick 1983 Regal, T-type 2003 Dodge Ram 1500 helping hand? Transmission rebuilt & 4x4 single cab, 4.7 L, From contractors to 3000 rpm stall converter; auto, new tires, new 750 Holley double yard care, it's all here front brakes, 95,500 mi, I pumper w/milled air horn exlnt cond, $7400 firm. in The Bulletin's (flows 850 cfms); turbo Call 541-475-6901 or "Call A Service rebuilt. Have receipts for 541-325-6147 all 3 items. Plus addiProfessional" Directory tional work done. $3300 Dodge 2007 Diesel 4WD obo. Call for addtional SLT quad cab, short box, info 541-480-5502 auto, AC, high mileage, Chevy 1955 PROJECT $12,900. 541-389-7857 Ne//Zl" car. 2 door wgn, 350 small block w/Weiand dual quad tunnel ram Save money. Learn with 450 Holleys. T-10 to fly or build hours 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, with your own airWeld Prostar wheels, c raft. 1 9 6 8 A e r o extra rolling chassis + FORD XLT 1992 Commander, 4 seat, extras. $6500 for all. 3/4 ton 4x4 150 HP, low time, 541-389-7669. matching canopy, full panel. $23,000 30k original miles, obo. Contact Paul at Get your possible trade for 541-447-5184. classic car, pickup, business motorcycle, RV $13,500. In La Pine, call a ROWI N G 928-581-9190
Scion XA H atchback Toyota C orolla LE 2005, 1 .5L, a uto , 2011, Air, w i n d ow, F WD, 2 7/35 M P G . locks, cruise, auto. V in¹ 089650. N o w Vin ¹630707 $8,888. $13,998
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FOOD 4 LESS — BEND I TUESDAY, OCT 29,2013 IPAGE 3
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63455 Hwy. 97 N., Bend • 541-388-2100
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