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SUNDAY December29,2013
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COMMUNITY LIFE• C1
bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
DESCHUTES
Light SWitCh —Production of incandescent bulbs will end on Jan.1. A3
Cou
• r •
hastop
• Rick Root, who has shaped Bend's transportation for 20 years, is retiring By Hillary Borrude The Bulletin Bey SCOutS —As the group prepares to accept gayyouth Jan. 1, leaders hopefor a smooth transition. A4
Bend Transportation Planner Rick Root has seen a lot of changes since he moved to the city and started his job in October 1993.
jo
open
By Elon Glucklich The Bulletin
"I moved into a house, it was basically on the west edge of town," Root said. "Now it's VA denefits — veterans fight a new battle at homewith bureaucracy. A6
Deschutes County leaders will grapple with budget concerns, demand for new services and a host of
NorthWest Crossing."
other issues in 2014.
But filling vacant positions at the top of three
Modile danking — Even as its popularity rises, many still want the personal touch.E1
major county departments
and special districts could be among the biggest challenges they'll face. County administrators are searching to replace
Get rid of that tree — A variety of recycling options are available for that aging holiday decoration. B1
Health Services Director
Scott Johnson, who is set to retire next summer after
working for the county for 20 years, five of them as
And a Wedexclusive
— Disney's latest hit isn't a movie, but its theme parks' million-selling turkey legs. bendbulletin.cem/extras
health director. A search is also under-
way for a new county legal
If i-
counsel. Mark Pilliod is retiring in early 2014 after
U
I Isl
servingaslegalcounselfor 10 years. And next month, county leaders will start
EDITOR'5CHOICE
therecruitment processfor
Benghazi's deadly mix: false allies, crude video By David D. Kirkpatrick
a new Deschutes County 911 service director. For-
mer director Robert Poirier stepped down in June, and two department managers have been running the 911 District on an interim basis
since. Those vacancies come Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
One of the most recent projects that Bend Transportation Planner Rick Root worked on was a plan to improve the infrastructure along Galveston Avenue, to make the area more appealing to patrons of restaurants, pubs and stores.
The city hired Root to work on its first transportation system plan, which Bend needed to
New York Times News Service
BENGHAZI, Libya — A
adopt in order to meet state land use requirements. But Root was quickly drawn into other
boyish-looking U.S. diplomat was meeting for the
projects to accommodate new development and increased traffic. "We were just starting in
first time with the Islamist leadersof eastern Libya's
a growth spurt," Root said.
most formidable militias. It was Sept. 9, 2012.
Gathered on folding chairs in a banquet hall by the Mediterranean, the Libyans warned of rising threats against Americans from extremists in Benghazi. One militia leader, with a long beard and mismatched military
"He worked quite a bit on neighhelped shape the streets, sidewalks, earlier this year as a Silver Bicycle borhood traffic calming, trying to bike lanes and trail system in Bend, Friendly Community by the League create built-in features such as curb as well as plans for how the city will of American Bicyclists. "He's been extensions, or traffic circles," Lewcontinue to develop these assets instrumental in all these transporta- is said. Both features force traffic in the future. Root is retiring this tion projects, making Bend a better to slow down. For example, Root
fatigues, mentioned time
which works to reduce commuters'
in exile in Afghanistan. A U.S. guard discreetly touched his gun. "Since Benghazi isn't
reliance on cars. Monson said Root helped to make several of Bend's key for 13 years, said he crafted many features a reality, including round- policies to make the city streets safer abouts, the first master plan for a city for everyone.
In the 20 years since then, Root
trail system and Bend's designation
Jeff Monson is executive director of the nonprofit Commute Options,
Planning a city
cles — circular medians in the center of intersections, which encourage
By Josh Lederman
traffic to turn as it would in a round-
The Associated Press
about — that ended up in a few areas of northeast Bend and the west side
HONOLULU — Not far from these wind-swept
of the city.
shores, Barack Obama was born and raised, soaking
Bend Transportation E ngineer Robin Lewis, who worked with Root
See Root/A4
in an island sensibility that
Brainlike computers learn from mistakes
snacked on Twinkie-style cakes with their American
By John Markoff
ming — for example, moving
guests, they also gushed about their gratitude for
New York Times News Service
a robot's arm smoothly and
President Barack Obama's
Computers have entered the age when they are able to learn from their own mis-
efficiently — but it can also sidestep and even tolerate errors, potentially making the term "computer crash"
takes, a development that is
obsolete.
that they wanted to build a
about to turn the digital world
partnership with the Unit-
on its head. The first commercial ver-
The new computing approach, already in use by some large technology companies, is based on the biological nervous system, specif-
ed States, especially in the
form of more investment. The diplomat, David McFarland, a former con-
gressional aide who had never before met with a
Fight for a presidential
library
gade, recalled telling the Americans. "I specifically
support in their uprising against Moammar Gadhafi. They emphasized
nance director and personnel manager. See County /A4
pushed for some of the traffic cir-
Rafallah al-Sehati Bri-
Yet as the militiamen
development director, fi-
place to live," Monson said.
al-Gharabi, leader of the
would leave Benghazi as soon as possible."
2013 — Deschutes County administrator, community
month.
safe, it is better for you to leave now," Mohamed
told the Americans myself that we hoped that they
on top of four new hires in
PALO ALTO, Calif.
-
sion of the new kind of com-
puter chip is scheduled to be released in 2014. Not only can it automate tasks that now re-
ically on how neurons react to stimuli and connect with
quire painstaking program-
other neurons to interpret
and speech recognition, navigation and planning, which while carrying out a task, and are still in elementary stages adjust what they do based on and rely heavily on human the changing signals. programming. In coming years, the apDesigners say the computproach will make possible a ing style can clear the way new generation of artificial for robots that can safely intelligence systems that walk and drive in the physiwill perform some functions cal world, although a thinkthat humans do with ease: ing or conscious computer, see, speak, listen, navigate, a staple of science fiction, manipulate and control. That is still far off on the digital can hold enormous consehorizon. quences for tasks like facial See Computers/A5 information. It allows computers to absorb new information
his family says he's carried with him throughout his journey as president. Yet in the search for a home for his future presidential library, Hawaii is playing the underdog, overshadowed by Chicago and the commanding role it plays in Obama's story. It's not for lack of trying. A high-level campaign has been underway here since Obama won the Iowa cau-
cusesin 2008— beforeit was even clear he'd win his party's nomination, much
less the presidency. From the governor to the state's congressional dele-
gation and local university leaders, Hawaii has spared no effort in laying the groundwork for a potential library. See Library/A5
Libyan militia leader, left
feeling agitated, according to colleagues. But the meeting did not shake his faith in the prospects for deeper involvement in
Libya. See Benghazi /A7
TODAY'S WEATHER Partly cloudy High 48, Low31 Page B6
The Bulletin
INDEX Business Calendar Classified
E1-6 Community Life C1-8 Milestones C2 Pu zzles B2 Crosswords C6, G2 Obituaries B4 Sp o rts G1-6 Local/State B 1-6 Opinion/Books F1-6 N'/Movies
C6 D1-6 C7
AnIndependent Newspaper
vol. 111, No. 363, 46 pages, 7 sections
Q I/I/e use recyclnewspri ed nt
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7
A2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, DEC 29, 2013
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SOUTH SUDAN
India train fire —A fire engulfed a coachof an express train in southern India onSaturday, killing at least 26 passengers, many of whom becametrapped and suffocated after the doors failed to open, officials said. As the inferno andthick black smoke raced through the car at about 3:45 a.m., panicked passengers broke thewindows and many savedthemselves by jumping from the train. Sixty-seven passengers were in thecarriage whenthe fire broke out about1 mile from the small town of Puttaparthi in Andhra Pradeshstate, said railway spokesmanC.S.Gupta.
eein avi ians cau een 0 Sl eS •
•
•
Indian refOrmer —Standing before a crowd estimated in the tens of thousands, Delhi's unlikely new leader, swept into office on an anti-corruption campaign, wassworn in Saturday, and hevowed to arrest anyone in his government who demanded a bribe. "Within two days, I will announce a phone number, and if anybody asks for a bribe, please complain by that phonenumber andthat person will be arrested red-handed," Delhi's youngest chief minister ever, Arvind Kejriwal, 45, said shortly after taking the oath of office. Kejriwal traveled to Saturday's ceremony bysubway, eschewing the vast motorcades of his predecessors.
By Nicholas Kulish New York Times News Service
MALAKAL, South Sudan — When the shooting started
last week, Othom Bol quickly fled with his wife and their three young children to what he thought would be the safety of the U.N. peacekeeping base
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to the government of South Sudan and rebels seeking to overthrow it thundered outside
Wednesday, bullets came whistling into the makeshift camp for the internally displaced at
the base, striking civilians in- pound whichhas become home to thousands ofpeople displaced cluding Bol's daughter Nyauny, by the recent fighting, in Juba, South Sudan. 6. The bullet hit her in the stom-
Lidyan detainment —Thedetention of four U.S.military per-
ach, passing through her torso and exiting her back. drove the rebels out of Mal- feet strippedbare. "It's politics between two The girl lay in a hospital bed akal, the scene of some of the on the basehere Saturday,met- fiercest fighting in recent days, people making thousands of al suturesfrom an operation burned-out huts s moldered. people die," said Simon Monyto stop the internal bleeding The battle for South Sudan luk,21, who losthis fatherto the studding her abdomen and an has raged since Dec. 15, a day prolonged civil war that resultintravenous tube protruding before President Salva Kiir ac- ed in the creation of South Sufrom the gauze wrapping her cusedhis former vice president, dan,only to see violence flare left hand. The base hospital, Riek Machar, of plotting a coup. up again two years after its overstretched, is out of inject- Machar denies the accusation hard-won independence from able antibiotics and analgesics, but has in turn demanded Kiir's Sudan. a doctor said. resignation. While diplomats from across "We're just civilians and we In the mostly empty town, East Africa and around the really don't know who start- six men with kerchiefs cov- world scramble for a political ed this," said Bol, 27, a slender ering their noses and mouths settlement between the two man visibly exhausted by his hefted the body of a soldier in a sides, tens of thousands of daughter's ordeal, keeping vigil blanket, carrying it a few paces South Sudanesehave fl ed to by herbedside each nightin a before setting it down again, U.N. facilities like the one near gray plastic chair. He had not turning their faces away. Other Malakal. Their numbers have even noti ced thathe had been bodies lay in ditches at the loot- overwhelmed peacekeepers shot in the thumb until after he ed market, by the university, and humanitarian aid workers brought his daughter to the hos- and in one case in the middle of at a time when many had alpital. "We are victims." a main road, under the beating ready left this landlocked AfOn Saturday, a day after hot sun. He was still wearing rican country for their winter the South Sudanese military his camouflage uniform, his vacations.
sonnel in Libya onFriday was preceded by aconfrontation at a checkpoint in which gunshots were fired and avehicle was damaged, a witness in Libya and anObamaadministration official said Saturday. Details about the confrontation, about an hour's drive west of Tripoli, remained unclear Saturday. Anadministration official, who declined to be identified, acknowledged that Libyan forces had fired their weapons. Thefour military personnel, assigned to the U.S. Embassy in Tripoli, were held for several hours andthen released.
ea
As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites
Vending maChine CalOrieS — Office workers in searchof snacks will be counting calories along with their change undernewlabeling regulations for vending machines included in President Barack Obama's health care overhaul law. Requiring calorie information to be displayed on roughly 5 million vending machines nationwide will help consumers makehealthier choices, says theFoodand DrugAdministration, which is expected to release final rules early next year. WOrld'S OldeSt bank —Shareholders in Monte deiPaschi di Siena, the world's oldest bank, in Italy derailed aplan by management Saturday to raise urgently needednew cash, leaving thebank's future in limbo and illustrating the conflict in crisis-ridden Italy betweenchange and tradition. At ashareholders meeting, the Monte dei Paschi Foundation, which ownsabout one-third of the bank's equity, along with many smaller shareholders, blocked aplan to issue newshares in January to raise $4.1 billion Thefoundation has controlled the bankfor years and distributed its profits to local charities andcivic organizations.
o mar et
By Anne Barnard
a Skype interview that 22
New York Times News Service
people had been killed in the
BEIRUT — Syrian govern-
ASyiUm-S88keIS —Jittery families cram into his tiny office in La Ruana, Mexico, daily. Hundreds morehaveappeared at the San Diego border1,500 miles away, clutching an official-looking letter bearing his name, gambling that its description of the violence in the blistering stretch of central Mexico will help themgain asylum in the United States. The writer, an obscure local official named C.Ramon Contreras Orozco, has created anunusual bureaucratic tangle that is testing U.S. asylum policy. Asylum requests along the border with Mexico are soaring: Claims more thandoubled to 36,000 in fiscal 2013, from 13,800 in 2012.
r i an om stri es
crow e e
— From wire reports
stood in the rubble, saying no fighters had been killed.
Food, Home & Garden
AT HOME
killed were from the people who raised their
• • Th eBulletm
w e apons
against him," he said, referring to Assad. "All the dead are poor civilians trying to make a living in the vegetable market. We are not fight-
ers, and fighting is not our business; we want to make a living."
lESSCNNM
In
"I would not mind if those
market attack, which also col-
ment forces continued their lapsed a residential building, bombing campaign in t he and that 10 others had died northern city of Aleppo on in nearby airstrikes. Videos Saturday, with a single strike showed men, apparently in in a crowded vegetable mar- shock, squatting atop piles ket killing at least 21 people, of stone. Streets were strewn activists and residents said. with rubble, and entire blocks Activists in A leppo say of buildings damaged. that more than 400 people In another video, a young had been killed in nearly two boy spoke through tears as he
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weeks of airstrikes and bar-
rages of improvised "barrel bombs" packed with explosives that are dropped from
low altitudes by helicopters. Peace talks brokered by Russia and the United States
r.
•
•
,' I
are scheduled to begin Jan. 22 in an attempt to end the Syr-
ian civil war, which began as a protest movement against President Bashar Assad. Af-
ter a government crackdown, it morphed into a conflict that has killed more than 120,000
people.
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Many activists contend that
the government is increasing the useof force to demoralize the opposition and gain
WARNER — RE
ground before the conference. Others believe the attacks are
A I. T
Y-
meant as revenge for recent insurgent assaults in the town
of Adra, north of Damascus, in which many civilians were reported to have been killed.
Oregon Lottery results
Ben Curtis 1 The Associated Press
A displaced woman makes tea Friday inside a United Nations com-
Thai viOiellCS —Gunmenkilled an anti-government activist and wounded two others in Thailand's capital on Saturday, while protesters elsewhere blocked candidates from registering for upcoming elections, deepening apolitical crisis that threatens to derail democracy in the Southeast Asian nation. The registration for the Feb. 2 polls was suspended in four of the country's 76 provinces. All four were southern provinces where thedemonstrators, who are seeking to oust Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra, enjoy support. The events followed comments Friday by thepowerful army chief in which he declined to rule out the possibility of a coup in the country.
Videos posted by activists in the Tareek al-Bab and Al
Myassar neighborhoods of Aleppo showed buildings and market stalls reduced to rubble andresidents expressing bitter shock and despair.
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was hit by a barrel bomb, one man gestured into a car.
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PANORAMIC YIEWS
SUNDAY, DEC 29, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
A3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Sunday, Dec.29, the 363rd day of 2013. Thereare two days left in the year.
NEED TO KNOW
STUDY
Strep can live on for bours after cleaning
HAPPENINGS Nigeria —Provisional results are expected in the country's national election.
HISTORY Highlight:In1913, the first true "cliffhanger" movie serial, "The Adventures of Kathlyn," starring Kathlyn Williams, premiered. In1170, ThomasBecket, the Archbishop of Canterbury, was slain in Canterbury Cathedral by knights loyal to KingHenry II. In1808,the17th president of the United States,Andrew Johnson, was born inRaleigh, N.C. In1812, during the Warof 1812, the American frigate USS Constitution engagedand severely damagedthe British frigate HMSJava off Brazil. In1845, Texaswas admitted as the 28th state. In1890,the WoundedKnee massacre took place inSouth Dakota as an estimated 300 Sioux Indianswerekilled by U.S. troops sent to disarm them. In1916,Grigory Rasputin, the so-cal led"Mad Monk" who'd wielded great influence with Czar Nicholas II, was killed by a group of Russian noblemen in St. Petersburg. In1984, Japan formally renouncedtheWashingtonNaval Treaty of 1922. In1940, during World WarII, Germany droppedincendiary bombs on London,setting off whatcame to beknown as"The Second GreatFire of London." In1957, singers SteveLawrence andEydieGormewere married in LasVegas. In1972, Eastern Air Lines Flight 401, a LockheedL-1011 Tristar, crashed into the Florida Everglades near Miami International Airport, killing 101 of the176 people aboard. In1975, a bombexploded in the main terminal of New York's LaGuardia Airport, killing 11 people. In1986, former British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan died at his home south of London at age 92. Ten yearsage: Monsignor Michael Courtney, PopeJohn Paul II's ambassador in Burundi, was shot and killed by unidentified gunmen.Actor Earl Hindman, who'd playedthe mostly unseen neighbor Wilson on "Home Improvement," died in Stamford, Conn., atage61. Five years age:llinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich's lawyer responded to impeachment charges, saying avaguearray of charges andevidence did not merit removing his client from office. Somali President Abdullahi Yusuf resigned, saying he had lost control of the country to Islamic insurgents. The African Union suspended Guinea after a coup in theWest African nation. Grammy-winning jazz musician Freddie Hubbard died in Sherman Oaks, Calif., at age70. French fashion designer TedLapidus died in Cannes atage79. Oneyearage:Maine'ssamesex marriage lawwent into effect. Shocked Indians mourned thedeathofawomanwho'd been gang-raped andbeaten on a bus in NewDelhi nearly two weeks earlier; six suspects were charged with murder. (Four were later sentenced to death; one died in prison; the sixth, a juvenile at the time of the attack, was sentenced to a maximum of three years in a reform home.)
BIRTHDAYS Actress Mary Tyler Moore is 77. Actress Barbara Steele is 76. Actor Jon Voight is 75.
Actor Ted Danson is 66. Actor Jon Polito is 63. Actress Patricia Clarkson is 54. Comedian Paula Poundstone is 54. Rock singer Dexter Holland (The Offspring) is 48. Actor-comedian Mystro Clark is 47.Actor Jason Gould is 47.CNNanchor Ashleigh Banfield is 46. Movie director Andy Wachowski is 46. Actor Jude Law is 41. Actor Mekhi Phifer is 39. Actor Shawn Hatosy is 38. Actor Diego Luna is 34. — From wire reports
Starting Jan. 1, the last of the federal government's new lighting standards take effect. That means the sort of general-service light bulb we've used for more than a century can no longer be made in or imported into the United States. What does that mean for you?
By Geoffrey Mohan Los Angeles Times
That crib toy you got your son? It might be just the thing to give him strep throat, according to a new study. The bacteria that cause
strep throat may linger far longer on inanimate objects than previous lab tests sug-
gested, according to University of Buffalo researchers. Streptococcus pneumo-
niae, the leading cause of ear and respiratory tract infection in children, and
Streptococcus pyogenes, the bacterial culprit behind strep throat and skin infec-
SlXIIANJA
tions, lingered on surfaces in cribs, toys and books many hours after they had been cleaned, according to a study in the journal Infection and Immunity.
Conventional w i sdom held that both bacteria died PRNewsFoto/The Associated Press
While most Americans still use incandescent bulbs, many are switching to halogen bulbs (left), which most resemble the traditional light
bulb; compact fluorescent bulbs, or CFLs (middle); or light-emitting diodes, or LEDs (right).
Choosingahulh How do you choose abulb that's right for you? Here's some guidance: • Real the "Lighting Facts" label:It appears on every package of light bulbs and looks much like theNutrition Facts label on food. It provides basic information, including how bright the bulb is, how muchpower it uses, how muchyou can expect to payfor that electricity and howwarm or cool the light appears. That information makes it easier to compare bulbs. • Knew the llnge:Understanding the label is easier if you know acouple of terms, noted Celia Lehrman, deputy content editor for home andappliances with Consumer Reports, which recently released its latest light bulb ratings. One of those terms is lumens, whichmeasure a bulb's brightness. You should buy a bulb of about 450 lumens to replace an old-style 40-watt bulb, 800 lumens to replace a60watt bulb, 1,100 lumens to
replace a 75-watt bulb and 1,600 lumens to replace a 100-watt bulb.
The other isKelvin,the scale used to measurecolor temperature — in other words, how warm or cool the light appears. If you like the warm light from an oldstyle incandescent bulb, look for a color temperature of 2,700 Kelvin, Lehrman said. The higher the Kelvin number, the cooler and whiter the light.
• Leek for theEnergyStar logo:For CFLsand LEDs, the label indicates more than just energy savings. It also indicates the bulb meets certain quality standards, such ascoming on instantly or nearly so, staying bright over its lifetime and producing anexcellent color of light. What's more, all Energy Star bulbs must be backed bywarranties. • Leek elsewhere enthe package:Light bulb packages can tell you a lot about how a bulb is best used. While halogen bulbs can be used in the sameways as old-style incandescent bulbs, LEDsandCFLs behave differently in some applications. • Check rehates:Sometimes governments or utilities offer rebates on energy-efficient lighting. You can check for rebates at www.dsireusa.org or www.energystar.gov
By Mary Beth Breckenridge
(LED) and halogen bulbs. Alzron (Ohio) Beacon Journal CFLs are long-lasting and Say goodbye to the old-style stingy on energy use and rellight bulb. On the plus side, atively inexpensive. But they
useevenlessenergythan CFLs,
that means more choices and
or last as long as the others,
have features somepeople don't
but they're still expensive.
Halogen bulbs don't save nearly as much electricity
smaller electric bills. On the like, indudingthe indusion of a but they're probably the best minus side, it means an end tiny amount of mercury. choice for people who really to dirt-cheap light bulbs and LEDs last for decades and don't want to change. grab-and-go bulb shopping. Now you need to read labels. The new lighting standards, part of the Energy Independence and Security Act of
quickly outside a human host, and that the prevailing means of infection came t hrough i m m ediate h u -
man contact or via expelled droplets from coughing or sneezing. "These findings should make us
m or e c autious
about bacteria in the environment," said A n ders Hakansson, a microbiolo-
gist and the study's author.
2007, take effect Wednesday.
They were intended to make light bulbs more efficient and reduce the amount of energy neededtopowerthem. They've done that, but they've also left some consumers confusedin
the face of all the choices in the lighting aisle. "You're used to buying that
60-watt bulb and knowing what it looks like and every-
thing else," said Cordell Blackmon, manager of the Batteries + Bulbs in Ohio. Now, he said, customers who buy bulbs in
haste often bring them back when they find the bulbs don't meet their expectations.
Buying the right bulb requires more attention than it used to, Blackmon said. But
with a little education and guidance, he said, his customers
end up with what theyneed. The Jan. I phaseout of oldstyle 40- and 60-watt bulbs is
the third step in the change to more efficient forms of lighting. The first step, in 2012, tar-
geted 100-watt bulbs and was followed last year by the elimination of traditional 75-watt
bulbs. Although the lighting law has commonly been called a ban on incandescent light bulbs, lighting experts say t hat's inaccurate. The
law
doesn't ban i n candescent bulbs, but only requires them to be more energy-efficient. What's more, the law doesn't
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affect all i ncandescent light
•
bulbs, just g eneral-service bulbs — pear-shaped bulbs
•
e
with a medium base, the kind
that for years were used most commonly in the home. A
s
•
s •
whole lot of bulbs are exempt,
• s•
includingthree-waybulbs, 150watt bulbs and bulbs with nar-
•
rower candelabra bases that
are often used in chandeliers. The law may be frustrating some consumers, but many
lighting specialists and sustainability advocates cheer the
Visit our website for rnore information: selco.org/thankyou • 800-445-4483 Several locations in Bend and Redmond
innovations it has spurred. The
lighting standards "have led to more lighting innovation over
SELCO
the past five years than we saw
duringthe 100-plus years since Edison invented the light bulb,"
gtW
Noah Horowitz, director of the
NationalResources Defense Council's Center for Energy Efficiency, wrote in his blog. Now consumers have essentially three choices: compact fluorescent light bulbs (CFL), light-emitting diode b ulbs
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A4 T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, DEC 29, 2013
UPDATE IMPLEMENTING A POLICY CHANGE
County
As BoySmutsopenranksto gayyouth Jan.'I, ea ers ope or usinessasusua By David Crary and Nomaan Merchant The Associated Press
The Boy Scouts of America
will accept openly gay youths starting on New Year's Day,
ter-day Saints — commendh' ll
ed the BSA for a "thoughtful,
*' Cl •
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
good-faith effort" to address a challenging issue, and said it would stay engaged in Scouting. John Gailey of the Utah
•
• a I e'
a historic change that h as
prompted the BSA to ponder a host of potential complications — ranging from policies on tentmates and showers to whether Scouts can march in gay pride parades. Yet despite their be-prepared approach, BSA leaders are rooting for the change to be a non-event, comparable to another New Year's Day in 2000 when widespread fears
of digital-clock chaos to start the new millennium proved unfounded.
"My hope is there will be
the same effect this Jan. 1 as the Y2K scare," said Brad
Haddock, a BSA national executive board member who
chairs the policy implementa-
tion committee. "It's business
as usual, nothing happens and we move forward." Some churches are dropping their sponsorship of Scout units because of the new policy and some families are switching to a new conservative alternative called Trail
Life USA. But massive defections haven't materialized and
most major sponsors, including the Roman Catholic and Mormon churches, are main-
taining ties. "There hasn't been a whole lot of fallout," said Haddock, a lawyer from Wichita, Kan. "If
a church said they wouldn't work with us, we'd have a
church right down the street say, 'We'll take the troop.'" The new policy was approved in May, with support from 60 percent of the 1,400 voting members of the BSA's
National Council. The vote followed bitter nationwide debate, and was accompanied
by an announcement that the BSA would continue to ex-
clude openly gay adults from leadership positions. Under the new membership
policy, youths can no longer be barred from the Cub Scouts, Boy Scouts or coed Venturers
program solely on the basis of sexual orientation. Howev-
er, gay Scouts will face some limitations.
county administrator Tom
nation's largest council, said its youth membership had in-
interim administrator, fol-
Like the Mormons, the Roman Catholic Church has generally accepted the new policy. Many parishes will continue to sponsor Scout units, though prepare to march in the 2013 Gay Pride Parade in downtown Seattle.
"Any sexual co n d uct, let facilities, the BSA says it is whether heterosexual or hoencouraging units to provide
that the 911 district, which
lowing the decision of com- coordinates e m e rgency missioners Tammy Baney response calls, has b een a nd Tony DeBone to f i r e plagued by employee burnformer administrator Dave out and mounting overtime Kanner in August 2011. costs. S ignificant staf f i n g R eplacing Johnson i n changes began last spring. the health services depart-
creased from 74,148 in December 2012 to 75,863 this month.
Boy Scouts from the Chief Seattle Council carry U.S. flags as they
17th 911 director in 20 years.
Anderson, who stepped into During a d e partment r ehis position in April. view with the county's citiFor nearly two years, com- zen budget committee this missioners worked with an m onth, A n d erson n o t ed
National Parks Council, the
Elaine Thompson I The AssociatedPress file photo
look in general at the people working for the county, Continued from A1 we have people who have By next summer, rough- been here five, 10, 15, 20, 25 ly one-third of D eschutes years." County's department heads A majority of county dewill have been in their posi- partment heads have been tionsforayearorless. in their positions five years County leaders say the or longer, to be sure. number of high-level vacanBut some positions, like cies is likely above average. 911 director, have been a "But I personally don't constantsource of frustrabelieve you can really read tion for the county. anything into that other Before stepping down, than c oincidence," said Poirier was the county's
a few have considered cutting ties.
In May, a month after Anderson moved into the administrator position, Nick
The National Catholic Com-
Lelack was named head of
mittee on Scouting posted a q uestion-and-answer d o c -
the county's community development department, re-
ument on its w ebsite, delv-
placing Anderson. In July, the county hired
ing into the intersection of mosexual, by youth of Scout- greater individual privacy, in- Scouting policy and Catholic ing age is contrary to the vir- cluding moving away from the teaching. " The Catechism of t h e tues of Scouting," says one tradition of group showers. "The adult leaders have the Catholic Church teaches that BSA document. "No member may use Scouting to promote discretion to arrange private individuals who disclose a or advance any social or polit- showering times and loca- same-sexattraction are to be ical position or agenda, includ- tions," the BSA says. treated with the same dignity ing on the matter of sexual Sleeping arrangements also due all human beings ... and orientation." are addressed,with specific also teaches that engaging in Trying to anticipate po- decisions left to unit leaders. sexual activity outside of mar"If a Scout or parent of a riage is always immoral," says tential friction, the BSA has distributed extensive expla- Scout makes a request to not the Q-and-A, concluding that nations and question-and-an- tent with another Scout, their the new BSA policy does not swer documents related to the wishes should be honored," contradict Catholic teaching. policy. says the BSA. The ultimate decision on Some examples: Haddock says "isolated whether parishes would main• Could a Scout march in pockets" of problems are like- tain or cut ties with the BSA uniform in a gay-pride pa- ly to surface, but overall he was left to individual bishops. rade? No, says the BSA. "Each expects adult leaders will have Several expressed cautious youth member is free as an in- the skills to defuse potential support for continuing in dividual to express his or her conflicts. Scouting. "As the new policy currentthoughts or take action on poThere are about 1 million litical or social issues but must adult leaders and 2.6 million ly stands, I see no reason to not use Scouting's official youth members in Scouting prohibit our parishes from uniforms and insignia when in the U.S. Of the roughly sponsoring Boy Scout troops," domg so. 110,000 Scout units, 70 percent said Rev. Kevin Rhoades, bish• How publicly active could are sponsored by religious or- op of Indiana's Fort Waynea gay Scout be, in terms of gay- ganizations, including several South Bend diocese. "At the rights advocacy? The BSA's conservative denominations same time, it is critical that reply: "While a youth member that had long supported the we be vigilant on how this may acknowledge his or her BSA's exclusion of gay youth new policy is interpreted and implemented." sexual preference, that ac- and gay adults. knowledgment may not reach Among the major sponsors, One likely target of such the level of distraction, which the Southern Baptist Con- scrutiny will be former Demay includeadvocacy,promo- vention made clear its disap- fense Secretary Robert Gates, tion, or the distribution of in- pointment with the new youth scheduled to take over in the formation of a sexual nature." policy, but left the decision on spring as the BSA's next presA f r equently-asked-ques- whether to cut ties up to local ident. As leader of the Pentations document anticipates churches. An SB C s pokes- gon, Gates helped change the that some objections might man, Sing Oldham, said it was military's "Don't Ask, Don't surfacefrom parents — or not known how many church- Tell" policy banning openly Scouts themselves — in cases es have done so. gay soldiers, and gay-rights where a unit includes an openThe biggest sponsor of groups hope he will try to end lygayboy Scout units — the Utah-based the BSA's ban on gay adult Regarding shower and toi- Church of Jesus Christ of Lat- leaders.
a ne w
ment also figures to be a
challenge, commissioner DeBone said on Friday. National health care changes,
part of the Affordable Care Act, figure to shake up how the county provides services for Medicaid patients
f i n a nce d i r ector, and other community mem-
Wayne Lowry, to replace bers without adequate acMarty Wynn. And about a cess to care. month later, Danielle Fegley DeBone said each of the was hired as the county's county's new directors have human resources manager. hit the ground running. He Commissioners said they isn't concerned about the felt the revolving chairs turnover. "I'm proud of how the at the top o f t h e c ounty government wasn't a r e- county is led," he said. "Afflection of a poor working terthe recession, a few peoenvironment. ple have chosen to retire. It's " I don't l oo k a t t h e se a phase." changes as happening beThe county has already cause people are unhappy posted the health services or dissatisfied," Commis- director opening on its websioner Alan Unger said, site. Pay starts at $7,887 per adding that recent statewide month for the position, acchanges to public worker re- cording to the posting. tirement plans may be leadAnderson said the couning older workers to consid- ty would post an opening er retirement.
"They're (Ieaving) f or their own, personal reasons," Unger said. "If you
for the 911 director position next month. — Reporter: 541-617-7820, eglucitlich®bendbulletin.com
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Root
was real low ... They could "And he came back 100 per- be faster to install, cheaper to cent," Monson said. "He put so install." much effort into working for The city was about to install plan when Root had a stroke.
Continued from A1 Root also advocated for narrower residential streets, the city of Bend." to slow traffic. The Deschutes Lewis said Root's passion for County Bicycle and Pedestri- the trail system often resulted an Committee cited Root's role in him visiting the potential in creating the city's "skinny site of a trail, to better visualize streets" policy, among other how it would work. "On those accomplishments, when it gave trails, he's been really handsRoot a lifetime achievement on, walking and biking them," award in June. Lewis said. The park district "He worked with the fire de- has since taken over the trail partment a lot on how narrow master plan. could we go," Lewis said. "So Monson said although much you could still have parking, of the trail system has not been but not have these streets that built, the plan Root helped to were 40 and 50 feet wide that complete is important because just end up being raceways, it "makes us eligible for federthat were constructed in the al and state funding. So he's '70s and early'80s." helped bring in funds to build Narrow streets can also cre- these projects." ate environmental b enefits, Root said despite existing because there is less paved plans for b e tter s idewalks surfacetogenerate stormwater around the city, much of the runoff, "and it's a little less ex- city has not improved signifipensive to build and maintain," cantly for pedestrians, outside Lewis said. of the trail system that the park Bend Mncipal Planner Brian Rankin said Root's work on the transportation system plan continues to affect the
city because the city still uses the same plan Root helped to
develop. "I think the proof of a good planner is really in the implementation of their work and
since 1998, Bend has really become one of the premier Western cities," Rankin said.
Root made the transportation system safer for all people in Bend, whether they were
walking, riding bicydes or driving cars, Monson said. This often meant taking on
the less glamorous, but no less important, parts of the job. Monson said Root went to a
district continues to develop.
Roundaboutconversion
Monson said one incident in
City Councilor Sally Russell, who owns property along Gal-
Pe 'Qa
group that wants to improve infrastructure along the corridor
veston Avenue, participated in
the task force until she took office in 2013. "There's a group of property "I was immediately put on owners, business owners and point in terms of trying to sell then people involved in city the idea," Root said. The round- visioning for a long time, who about design ran into strong really had this idea for Galvesopposition. "There were sim- ton," Russell said. "But it was ply a lot of people that were the commitment of people like real skeptical about the safety Rick Root and Robin Lewis, plannersdecided to indude a
of roundabouts and the oper-
looking at them how simple particular demonstrated Root's they were to operate traffic," dedication to his work. In the Root said. "They didn't require 1990s, Root and other city em- any electricity. When the powployees were working to finish er would go out, they'd operate the city's transportation system fine. The maintenance (cost)
Scan to download FREEapp
with the resources and sort of
ations of a roundabout," Root technical background that's said. The memory of one Jan- critical to taking a vision and uary 1997 meeting in particu- giving it really practical legs." lar stuck with Root, who said — Reporter: 541-617-7829, the responses of the audience hborrud@bendbulletin.com made him feel like a snake-oil salesman. "There was a whole
gg
oo
lot of skepticism and sarcastic comments coming from the au-
dience," Root said. There was not enough support for a roundabout at the
intersection, and the city ultimately installed traffic signals
YEAR-END
instead. But within a couple of
years,property development abouts on public and private firm Brooks Resources paid property across the city, Root for the construction of the city's said. There were none when first roundabout at Century he began working for the city. Drive and Colorado Avenue to The idea came up in the 1990s, handle traffic from the office when the city was working on park the firm was building. "The waywas paved because its transportation plan. Root presented a map of locations wehadtriedveryearlyontoget where the city would likely a roundabout atNeff and 27th install new traffic signals to (Street)," Lewis said. Root's a citizen committee that was previous work, combined with advising the city on transpor- the stature of Brooks Resourctation. Two members of the es CEO Mike Hollern, helped committee challenged Root to to ease the way for this new consider whether roundabouts roundabout and now, residents might work better and after often ask the city to build more some research, Root believed roundabouts, Lewis said. "It became obvious to me just
Qa
roundabout as an option for the intersection.
Today, there are 34 round-
lot of public meetings and par- roundabouts would work well ticipated in many committees in Bend. on local transportation issues.
a signal at the intersection of 27th Street and Neff Road, so
to make it a more vibrant area.
downloaded, we plant a tree in the Amazon
Avision for Galveston Most recently, Root worked with other city employees and localbusiness and property owners on a plan to improve Galveston Avenue. Root was a
member of the Galveston Avenue revitalization task force, a
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SUNDAY, DEC 29, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
Library Continued from A1
'. ';»
Kwabena
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/»
•
•
h a s ge n t ly
pressed Obama's sister and close friends, and set aside
a biological-
prime oceanfront real estate
ly inspired attached to a robotic arm, with student
just in case Hawaii's favorite son chooses Oahu to host the monument to his legacy. But as the gears start to turn inthe Obama machinery
Samir Menon
that will eventually develop
in a Stanford University
the library, the focus has increasingly turned to Chicago,
laboratory
where Obama was first elect-
in Palo Alto, Calif.
ed and came into his own as a national political figure. It is a place many of his advisers and staunchest supporters call home.
processor
k»
T he s t ate
Boahen, right, holds
Erin Lubin / New York Times News Service
Obama's former chief of
Computers
human thoughts and actions. that encompassed roughly 10 "Instead of bringing data to billion neurons — more than Continued from A1 computation as we do today, 10 percent of a human brain. "We're moving from engi- we can now bring computa- It ran about 1,500 times more neering computing systems to tion to data," said Dr. Dhar- slowly than a brain. Further, something that has many of mendra Modha, an IBM com- it required several megawatts the characteristics of biolog- puter scientist who leads the of power, compared with just ical computing," said Larry company's cognitive comput- 20 watts of power used by the Smarr, an astrophysicist who ing research effort. "Sensors biological brain. directs the California Insti- become the computer,and Running th e p r o gram, tute for Telecommunications it opens up a new way to use known as Compass, which and Information Technology, computer chips that can be attempts to simulate a brain, one of many research cen- everywhere." at the speed of a human brain ters devoted to developing The new computers, which would require a flow of electhese new kinds of computer are still based on silicon tricity in a conventional comcircuits. chips, will not replace today's puter that is equivalent to Conventional c omputers computers but will augment what is needed to power both are limited by what they have them, at least for now. San Francisco and New York, b een programmed to d o . Many computer designers Modha said. Computer vision systems, for see them a s c o processors, IBM and Qualcomm, as example, only " recognize" meaning that they can work well as the Stanford research objects that can be identified in tandem with other circuits team, have already designed by the statistics-oriented al- that can be embedded in neuromorphic p r o cessors, gorithms programmed into smartphones and in the giant and Qualcomm has said that them. An algorithm is like a centralized computers that it is coming out in 2014 with recipe, a set of step-by-step make up thecloud. Modern a commercial version, which i nstructions t o p e r f or m a computersalready consist of is expected to be used largecalculation. a varietyof coprocessors that ly for further development. perform specialized tasks, M oreover, many universiti es Neural networks like producing graphics on are now focused on this new But last year, Google re- cellphones and converting vi- style of computing. This fall, searchers were able to get a sual, audio and other data for the National Science Foundamachine-learning algorithm, laptops. tion financed the Center for known as a neural network, One great advantage of the Brains, Minds and Machines, to perform an identification new approach is its ability to a new research center based task without supervision. The tolerate glitches. Traditional at the Massachusetts Institute network scanned a database computers are precise, but of Technology, with Harvard of 10 million images, and in they cannot work around the and Cornell. doing so trained itself to rec- failure of even a single tranThe largest class on camognize cats. sistor. With t h e b i o logical pus this fall at Stanford was a In June, the company said designs, the algorithms are graduate level machine-learnit had used those neural net- ever changing, allowing the ing course covering both work techniques to develop system to continuously adapt statistical an d b i o logical a new search service to help and work around failures to approaches, taught by the customers find specific pho- complete tasks. computer scientist Andrew tos more accurately. Traditional computers are Ng. Morethan 760 students The new approach, used also remarkably energy in- enrolled. "That reflects the zeitgeist," in hardware and software, is efficient, especially when being driven by the explosion compared with actual brains, said Terry Sejnowski, a comof scientific knowledge about which the new neurons are putational neuroscientist at the brain. Kwabena Boahen, a built to mimic. the Salk Institute, who piocomputer scientist who leads neered early biologically inStanford's Brains in Silicon A brain simulation spiredalgorithms. "Everyone research program, said that IBM announced i n 2 0 12 knows there is something big was also its limitation, as that it had built a supercom- happening, and they're trying scientists are far from fully puter simulation of the brain to find out what it is." understanding how brains function.
staff, Rahm Emanuel, is now Chicago's mayor. Obama's w ife, M ichelle, wa s
born
there, and her former chief of staff, Susan Sher, is leading a behind-thescenes effort to lure the library to University of Chicago from her post in the university president's of-
fice. It's the same university where Obama once taught
law and where his longtime senior adviser, David Axelrod, recently established a political institute.
Two hometowns So Hawaii officials have resigned themselves to the like-
lihood that the library, which will house Obama's records
and artifacts, will go to Chicago. If that's the case, Hawaii is hoping for second-best: a presidential center, institute or think tank that can serve
as a secondary base of operations for a young, ambitious ex-president. "We really don't see it as
an either-or proposition," said Sen. Brian Schatz, D-Hawaii, who's assisted the effort for
and a group formed to raise Picturesque views aside, seed money and evaluate the plot sits in a gritty corner potential sites, said a person of Honolulu called Kakaako, involved in the discussions, where h omeless encampwho wasn't authorized to dis- ments have cropped up on cuss the library on the record. many sidewalks and methThe plan is to create a process ane exhaust pipes peek out where supporters advocating from a landfill-turned-park. for their sites understand the On arecentmorning, ayoung expectations and goals, the woman in traditional Hawaiperson said. ian garb was pushing two naSuch darity will be wel- ked children down the street come news to Hawaii Lt. Gov. in a grocery cart. Shan Tsutsui, who is coordinating efforts in Gov. Neil Obama'slegacy Abercrombie's office and said Wary of creating the imhe doesn't know what Obama pressionObama is already is looking for in a library site. looking beyond his presiden"I wish I did. It would prob- cy, White House officials are ably make our jobs a lot easi- reluctant to discuss the lier," Tsutsui said. brary, and insist that advisers With the governor's bless- are spending little time on it. ing, a University of Hawaii Still, Obama's deputy chief professor, Robert Perkinson, of staff, Alyssa Mastromois coordinating the statewide naco, has been tapped as the campaign with a small bud- point person for all things get granted by the university. related to the library. Valerie Perkinson has made the Jarrett, a senior adviser ofcase directly to Obama's sis- ten described as the guardter, Maya Soetoro-Ng, who ian of Obama's legacy, also is has served as a liaison be- involved. tween Hawaii an d W a shOutside the White House, ington, two people briefed Julianna Smoot, Obama's on those discussions said. re-election deputy campaign Perkinson's team has also manager and a former White pressed the case with Bobby House social secretary, has Titcomb, Obama's childhood been tasked with raising friend. Titcomb and Obama money; if previous presigolfed together four times last dential libraries are a guide, week during the president's the venture will run into the annual Hawaiian vacation. hundreds of millions of dolPerkinson dedined to dis- lars. Marty Nesbitt, a Chicacuss those conversations, and go businessman and Obama the peoplebriefed requested friend who served as treaanonymity due to the sensi- surer for his first presidential tivity of discussing the library run, is dosely involved, while this early. former White House comHawaii's de v elopmentmunications director Anita authority has set aside nu- Dunn is expected to handle merous parcelsthat could be the press component. given to the library or leased Tom Apple, the chancellor at nominal cost. The show- of the University of Hawaii at piece is an 8-acre plot of un- Manoa, said he understands developed land sandwiched Obama's reluctance to disbetween downtown Honolu- cuss his hopes for a future lu and the hopping Waikiki library this early. Apple re-
years as a former lieutenant governor and state lawmak- tourist zone. er. "We see no reason that
the presidenthastobeforced to choose between his two hometowns."
It's a model not without
precedent: Bill Clinton chose Arkansas for his library but
housed his foundation and humanitarian efforts in New York.
called a conversationyears
earlier when he was Univerbeachfront property, Obama sity of Delaware provost and could have panoramic views pitched Joe Biden on building From a future office on the
stretching f r o m D i a m ond a "Biden Center" at the vice Head, Honolulu's iconic vol- president's alma mater. "He was the vice president, canic crater, to the island's
lush, fog-tipped mountains. A so he said, 'I can't engage in break wall formed by volca- any of that while I'm sitting. nic rocks buttressing the site So go forward, try to do all from the Pacific Ocean might these great things, but we
For Obama, the process mitigate the site's tsunami will formally get underway risks. Students at the univer-
have to wait until I'm out of office until we can do any of
early in 2014, when a nonprof-
sity have already started de-
it foundation will be set up
veloping risk models.
these kinds of things formally,'" Apple said.
Where Buyers And Sellers Meet s ss • •
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"We have no clue," he said.
"I'm an engineer, and I build things. There are these highfalutin theories, but give me o ne that w il l l e t m e b u i l d
something." Until now, the design of
computers was dictated by ideas originated by the physicist John von Neumann about
65 years ago. Microprocessors perform operationsat lightning speed, following instructionsprogrammed using long strings of Is and Os. They generally store t ha t
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Neuromorphicprocessors The new processors consist of electronic components that
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neuromorphic processors, a term credited to the California Institute of Technology
physicist Carver Mead, who pioneered the concept in the late 1980s.
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T hey a r e no t "programmed." Ratherthe connections between the circuits
are "weighted"
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to change their values and to "spike." That generates a signal that travels to other
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, DEC 29, 2013
ra ve i n
ewa r i s a o m ewi r e
By Alexandra ZavIs
the survivors, he says, he sent his soldiers to bed while he
Los Angeles Times
da Flowers stood at the edge of a crowd of angry veterans at
San Francisco's War Memorial building. They had been waiting months, even years, to hear whether they would receive disability benefits, and they were tired of excuses.
Flowers, a 31-year-old Iraq a pair of Veterans Affairs officials because she wanted to be heard. But she was trying too
hard to fight back tears to take the microphone. The social worker who ac-
companied her couldn't let her be overlooked.
"Nobody brought up here that a lot of these young vets have children," said Marcy Orosco, who heads a Salvation Army transitional housing program in San Francisco. "Because of this wait, she was living in her car with her children.... What are you going to do about that?"
Flowers, a small, compact woman eager for adventure, thought the Army would be
her life. But when her marriage to a fellow soldier and her mental health collapsed under the strain of their tours to Iraq, she f ound h erself
alone with her children facing the prospect of another deployment. She left the Army in January 2010 and submitted a benefits claim the same month,
citing post-traumatic stress disorder and injuries from years of parachute jumps, among other ailments. S he didn't know it at t h e time, bu t h e r ap p l ication
would become a case study in the kinds of issues that can de-
lay a claim. Another Iraq veteran, Ari
Sonnenberg, said the agonizing wait and bureaucratic
bunglingadded to an already painful transition to civilian
life. He wonders how many people will want to serve in the future. "I never used to understand
why the Vietnam guys were
the only time she would have to talk him out of attempting
scrubbed the blood away. SUlclde. "I did it so my guys wouldn't It took a year to get an initial have to do it," he said. "So they rating of 80 percent disabled. wouldn't have to wake up to By the time of the town hall that." meeting, Sonnenberg had a
SAN FRANCISCO — Glen-
veteran and mother of two, had come to the meeting with
e
Long after he left the Army in 2009, his wife, Patty, would
100 percent rating and was receiving a little more than
find him scrubbing, convinced there was blood everywhere. He couldn't stand to be near his son, who reminded him of the children in Iraq. Crowds made him shaky and short of
$3,500 a month. With the money he now re-
ceives, he has rented a cottage in Mountain View, within bi-
cycling distance of two VA hospitals. He attends therapy breath. He barely slept, suf- sessions most days and says fered frequent memory lapses he's making progress — but and would burst into a rage too late, he fears, to save his at the slightest provocation. marriage. When his wife was recovering Late last year, Patty filed for from cancer, she had to work a legal separation. They are because he couldn't function trying to resolve their differin a job. ences, but Sonnenberg doesn't For a time, he sought solace allow himself much hope: Photos by Rick Loomis/ LosAngeles Times and purpose by working as a "The disappointment is too Veterans line the halls of the War Memorial building hoping to get their cases looked at durIng a town- priest at Hare Krishna tem- great." hall-style meeting in which they were able to publicly complain to VA officials In San Francisco in ples in India and Africa. But Every time Flowers called April. he said, "I was an angry monk, for an update about her claim, and apparently you can't be thereseemed to be a new issue. that." After waiting nearly a year, so bitter," he said. "We're very Although Sonnenberg is Flowers was rated 50 percent quick to send people to war, at pains to point out the ex- disabled in December 2010, but we're super slow taking cellentcare he has received which qualified her to receive care of those people that actufrom VA hospitals for PTSD $969 a month. But she says her ally make that sacrifice." and a traumatic brain injury, issues were more numerous he said dealing with the ben- and severe than the VA recApromise efits section was a constant ognized, so she went back for W illie C l ark , t h e w e s t runaround. more help. "You'd call up and you'd ask, ern-areadirector for the VA's By the spring of 2012, she 'What's the status?' Nobody was falling behind on rent. Veterans Benefits Administration, made a promise that knew," he said. "Then you'd Flowers pleaded with the VA April day in San Francisco: make an official inquiry, and to expedite her claim and was "We're going to start with they would say, 'OK, here's the provided with a partial deciour oldest cases, cases in exnumber.' And then when you sion that increased her comcess of two years, we're going ArI Sonnenberg, an Iraq war veteran who served three tours, pictured call up a week later, there's no pensation to $1,537. But she to complete every one of them In April, In MountaIn VIew, Calif., Is haunted by what he saw during record of that inquiry." was told that her mental health and we're going to do so with- the war and frustrated by gettIng the runaround from the benefits In an attempt to expedite issues and a brain injury rein the next 60 days. section of the VA. "I was losing my mind at one poInt," he saId. his claim, the VA office in quired further evaluation. "And once we fix those," Oakland sent the file to be proIn April, a sheriff's deputy he said, "we'll start with our cessed in another state. But showed up at her door with an 1-year-old cases.... We owe it remedied. the ways he tries to deal with documents were apparently eviction notice. Flowers borto you to get this done." searing memories from Iraq. misplaced in the transfer. Son- rowed acar from a friend and Searing memories In the months since the One dreadful day stands out, nenberg says he was asked to told the children, Demond, 7, meeting, the VA has made Sonnenberg, a pale, wiry the day that multiple bomb- resubmit paperwork, in some and Tatyana, 4, that they were progress, reducing the num- bundle of nerves who de- ers struck a village near the cases multiple times. going on a road trip. They lived "I was losing my mind at one out of the car for a week, until ber of claims pending more ployed three times to I r aq, combat outpost where he was than 125 days by 35 percent, didn't attend the San Francis- serving as a platoon sergeant. point," he said. "I just started a Marin County social worker from a p eak o f 6 11,000 in co meeting. He took part in a A mbulances p a cked w i t h to feel like it was hopeless.... found the family a room. March. similar forum last year and scores of wounded arrived at Nothing's going to change, no VA officials acknowledge that "the ball was dropped" Although a growing num- couldn't face another round. the gates. one gives a damn about us." ber of veterans are now receiv- He sent some of his artwork to Sonnenberg, 37, is haunted One day, he walked into the and there were problems with ing aid, they say the damage be displayed in his place. by all the blood, the screams woods near his former home in the way both cases were handone to their financial stabilThe sad "naive" figures, and the lives lost — many of Belgium, intent on killing him- dled. "That's why we're underity, family relationships and painted against dark, swirl- them children. When helicop- self. His wife found him with taking these steps to get these own self-worth is not so easily ing backgrounds, are one of ters had evacuated the last of a knife to his throat. It wasn't old cases done," Clark said.
Atage90,TexasRep.RalphHall says he'snot quite ready to retire "Our country faces enorup came a '33 Ford. There they mous challenges, and we need were. They had the papers all W ASHINGTON — Re p . new, energetic leadership to over their lap and said, 'Give us Ralph Hall of Texas isn't just tackle them," said former U.S. two Coca-Colas, one carton of the elder statesman of the Attorney John Ratcliffe, one of Old Gold and all the newspaCongress; at 90 he's the oldest Hall's five GOP opponents. He pers you have.'" "I knew exactly who they member everto serve in the and othersare careful to be reHouse. He began running for spectful of Hall, and Ratcliffe were," said Hall, who was, then local elective office in 1949 told McClatchy, "I'm not going and now, an avid newspaper and filed once again for his to make age an issue in the reader. He even remembers House seat on Dec. 9 — along campaign." that Barrow, who looked like "a little weasel," gave him $3 with five Republican primary It is, of course, the issue. challengers. In 2012, at 89, Hall became and said "keep the change" of But to the surprise of sup- the oldest member serving in 40 cents. porters, the seemingly eternal the House in history, though Hall knows the value of a Hall, who says he is stronger there have been older mem- dollar — or a penny — and is, than his much younger oppo- bers of the Senate, such as not surprisingly, old-fashioned nents — ranging in age Sen. Strom Thurmond, when it comes to campaignR-S.C., who was 100 in ing. His signature campaign from their 30s to one in his 60s — announced 2002 when he retired. trinket is a penny that has an Dec. 20 that this would r In the 2012 election, aluminum casing with Hall's be his last campaign. Hall was targeted by an name on it and that he disanti-incumbent political tributes by the thousands. For T he World Wa r I I Navy fighter pilot said Hall action committee, so the many years, when he was runin an i n t erview t h at Texan decided he had to ning for Texas state senate, it internal polling showed that do something unexpected. He said "All for Hall from Rockwhen people were asked about did a tandem parachute jump wall" on the casing. "When you're as plain as I someone runningat90,there out of an airplane before the was a sizable 20 percent who pnmary. am, you'vegotta have a gimwouldbe against himbased on This time, Hall dryly sug- mick," said Hall, "and that was age. gested he would swim the 21- my gimmick." Although Hall is confident mile English Channel — but He calculates that he is now into "my second million" of that he can win in 2014, as he added it would take too long has handily since first winning since he would have to swim pennies he's given away, paid the seat in 1980, he also sees one mile a day. "I may swim through campaign funds. One the political reality reflected in down to Cuba," he said. "I'd be million pennies is equivalent to the polls. swimming downhill." $10,000.
Let's
By MarIa Recio
McClatchy Washington Bureau
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"That helped me decide that
"People won't throw them Hall wa s a c o n servative this should probably be my last Democrat who switched par- away, and they have my name time," Hall told McClatchy. "It ties in 2004 after he felt a on it," he said. When he walks is my last campaign." His age mid-decade redistricting left around towns in his district, is the issue that he calls "the him with few options in his people in barber shops and spear I have to blunt." heavily Republican district. stores pull their Hall pennies "I am 90. I can work day or Not that Hall changed the way out of the cash register, he night," he said. "I'm the same hevoted. said.
guy, but the polls show the ef-
"I've always been conser-
fect of age. That's the issue."
vative," said Hall. "I was born Hall is lifting his game one that way."
last time for the March 4 priHall was just old enough to mary. "I've got to do something have an encounter with one other than be 90 years old," he of the most infamous celebrisaid. Hall runs two miles a day ties of the 1930s — gangsters on his North Texas property Bonnie and Clyde. Hall was in Rockwall, some 25 miles working at a drugstore in his east of Dallas, and is so tireless hometown of Rockwall when, a campaigner that longtime at 13 years old, he recognized aide Tom Hughes said the con- "Clyde and Bonnie," Clyde gressman wears him out. "He's Barrow and Bonnie Parker, a dynamo," said Hughes. bank robbers and murderers And yet opponents say the who shot to fame with their district is ready for someone exploits. "We had curb service and new.
S hift into z e r o .
Hall is popular among both Democrats and Republicans. "I have extraordinary respect for Ralph Hall," said Matt An-
gle, a partisan Democrat who leads the Lone Star Project, a Democratic political action committee. "He doesn't vote
any differently as a Republican than as a Democrat. Even
at his advanced age, he's just a s conservative and t w i c e as lucid as Louie Gohmert." Gohmert, an East Texas GOP
member, has riled Democrats with hi s
b arbed comments
from thefloor.
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SUNDAY, DEC 29, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
Benghazi
Japan ig ts a poitica atte using istorytext oo s
Continued from A1 Two days later, he summa-
rized the meeting in a cable to Washington, describing a mixed message from the militia leaders. Despite "growing problems with security," he wrote, the
By Martin Fackler
fighters wanted the United Statesto become more engaged "by 'pressuring' American businesses to invest in Benghazi."
New York Times News service
The cable, dated Sept. 11, 2012, was sent over the name
Bryan Denton /New YorkTimes News Service
of McFarland's boss, Ambas- J. Christopher Stevens, who became U.S. ambassador to Libya sador J. Christopher Stevens.
and was then killed when the U.S. consulate in Benghazi was
Later that day, Stevens was attacked by terrorists in 2012, talks with reporters when he wss an dead, killed with three other American special representative to the country in 2011. Americans in Benghazi in the most significant attack on U.S. property in 11 years, since ering up evidence of al-Qaida's ida-led event," Rep. Mike RogSept. 11, 2001. role to avoid undermining ers, R-Mich., the chairman of The cable was a last token the president's claim that the the House Intelligence Comof months of American mis- group has been decimated. mittee, said last month on Fox understandings and misperThe investigation by The News. ceptions about Libya and es- Times shows that the reality But the Republican arpecially Benghazi, many fos- in Benghazi was different, and guments appear to conflate tered by shadows of the earlier murkier, than either of those purely local extremist groups Sept. 11 attack. The United story lines suggests. Benghazi like Ansar al-Shariah with S tates waded d eeply i n t o was not infiltrated by al-Qa- al-Qaida's international terpost-Gadhafi Libya, hoping ida, but nonetheless contained rorist network. The only intelto build a beachhead against grave local threats to U.S. in- ligence connecting al-Qaida extremists, especially al-Qa- terests. The attack does not to the attack was an i nterida. It believed it could draw appear to have been metic- cepted phone call that night a bright line between friends ulously planned, but neither from a participant in the first and enemies in Libya. But it was it spontaneous or without wave of the attack to a friend ultimately lost its ambassador warning signs. in another African country in an attack that involved both Abu Khattalahad become who had ties to members of avowed opponents of the West well known in Benghazi for al-Qaida, according to severand fighters belonging to mi- his role in the killing of a rebel al officials briefed on the call. litias that the Americans had general, and then for declar- But when the friend heard the taken for allies.
No al-Qaida involvement Months of investigation by
ing that his fellow Islamists were insufficiently commit-
attacker's boasts, he sounded
astonished, the officials said, ted to theocracy. He made no suggesting he had no prior secretof his readiness to use
knowledge of the assault.
The New York Times, centered on extensive interviews with Libyans in Benghazi who
violence against Western interests. One of his allies, the leader of Benghazi's most
Al-Qaida was having its own problems penetrating the Libyan chaos. Three weeks af-
had direct knowledge of the
overtly anti-Western militia,
ter the attack, on Oct. 3, 2012,
attack there and its context,
Ansar al-Shariah, boasted a
turned up no evidence that
few months before the attack that his fighters could "flatten"
leaders of the group's regional affiliate, al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb, sent a letter
al-Qaida or other international
country's sense of self, erodTa k etomi, a township of ed over decades when chil e i g ht tiny islands appears TAKETOMI, J a pan dren weretaught what they to have become ground zero P rime M i n i ste r Sh i n z o call an overly negative view for the battle. Abe's conservative govern- of Japan's wartime behavior. The town's school superment has begun to pursue In October, Abe's educa- intendent, Anzo Kedamori, a more openly nationalist t ion minister ordered t h e says the conservative book agenda on an issue that crit- school board here in Take- fails to teach children the ics fear will push the coun- tomi to use a conservative hatred of war that his gentry farther from its postwar textbook it had rejected, the eration learned from bitter pacifism: adding a more pa- first time the national gov- experience. During the Battriotic tone to Japan's school ernment has issued such a tle of Okinawa, hundreds of textbooks. demand. InNovember, the people in Taketomi perished Although Abe's support- E ducation Ministry p r o - when J a p anese s o l diers ers argue that changes are posed new textbook screen- forced them to evacuate into needed to t e ach c h ildren ing standards that would malaria-ridden jungles. "We have an obligation more patriotism, liberals require the inclusion of nawarn that they could under- tionalist views of World War to teach the horrors of war cut an anti-war message that II-era history. to future generations," said they say has helped keep JaIn an interview, ministry Kedamori, 72, who remempan peaceful for decades. officials said that in practice bers watching playmates " Prime Minister Ab e i s textbooks would be required die while shivering with mafeeling the heat from his to include viewpoints of na- larial fever. "Why can't they political base, which feels t ionalist scholars o n t w o leave us alone," he said, "to betrayed that he has not pur- contested issues. One is the teach the value of peace to sued a more strongly right- death toll of the 1937 massa- our children?" wing agenda," said Nobuy- cre in Nanjing of Chinese ciThe moves come at a time oshi Takashima, a professor vilians by Japanese soldiers when China is asserting its emeritus at the University that the Chinese government growing strength, directly of the Ryukyus in Okinawa says stands at 300,000, a fig- challenging Japanese terriwho has studied the politics ure many Japanese scholars torial claims and its standing of textbooks. "Classrooms see as grossly exaggerated. as a regional power. The proare one place where he can Textbooks would also be posed educational changes appease ultraconservati ves required to state that there is are the latest that nationalby taking a more firmly na- still a dispute about whether ists in both countries have tionalist stance." the Japanese army played pushed and that some fear Abe and the nationalists a direct role in forcing so- will, over time, harden views have long argued that chang- called comfort women from and deepen tensions bees in the education system Korea and elsewhere to pro- tween Asia's two strongest are crucial to restoring the vide sex to its soldiers. countries.
end
terrorist groups had any role
the U.S. mission. to a lieutenant about efforts to The violence, though, also crack the new territory. The led, instead, by fighters who had spontaneous elements. leaders said they had sent four had benefited directly from Anger at the video motivat- teams to try to establish footin the assault. The attack was NATO's extensive air power
ed the initial attack. Dozens
holds in Libya. But of the four,
and logistics support during the uprising against Gadhafi. And contrary to claims by some members of Congress, it was fueled in large part by
of others joined in, some of them provoked by thevideo and others responding to fast-spreadingfalse rumors that guards inside the U.S. compound had shot Libyan protesters. Looters and arsonists, without any sign of a plan,
only two in the southern Saha-
anger at an American-made
video denigrating Islam. A fuller accounting of the attacks suggests lessons for the United States that go well
beyond Libya. It shows the risks of expecting U.S. aid in a time of desperation to buy durable loyalty, and the difficulty of discerning friends from allies of convenience in a culture shaped by decades of
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troops in Mali, was later ob-
tained and released by The the compound after the initial Associated Press. attack, according to more than In the days after the Bengwere the ones who ravaged
a dozen Libyan witnesses as
hazi attack, meanwhile, Abu
well as many U.S. officials Khattala was still at work on who have viewed the footage construction sites and moving from security cameras. at ease around the city, even The Benghazi-based CIA mocking the U.S. political de-
-
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team had briefed McFarland and Stevens as recently as the
bate about the ambassador's
as well as great food and good friends.
day before the attack. But the U.S. intelligence efforts in Libmilitants around the region ya concentrated on the agenhave multiplied, an intensive das of the biggest militia leadfocus on combating al-Qaida ers and the handful of Libyans may distract from safeguard- with suspected ties to al-QaingU.S.interests. ida, several officials who reIn this case, a central figure ceived the briefings said. Like in the attack was an eccen- virtually all briefings over that tric, malcontent militia leader, period, the one that day made
two teams, but all that changes is the ball," he said in an in-
Call 541-322-5761
Ahmed Ab u
it is good or bad," he said.
anti-Western sentiment.
The attack also suggests that, as the threats from local
K h a ttala, ac- no mention of Abu Khattala,
cording to numerous Libyans Ansar al-Shariah or the video present at the time. U.S. offi- ridiculing Islam, even though cials briefed on the criminal Egyptian satellite television investigation into the killings networks popular in Benghazi call him a prime suspect. Abu were spewingoutrage against Khattala declared openly and it. often that he placed the United Members of the local militia States not far behind Gadhafi groups the Americans called on his list of infidel enemies. on for help proved unreliable, But he had no known affili-
even hostile. The fixation on
ations with terrorist groups, al-Qaida may have distracted and he had escaped scruti-
experts from more imminent
ny from the 20-person CIA
threats. Those now look like intelligence failures.
station in Benghazi that was set up to monitor the local situation. Abu Khattala, who denies participating i n t h e a t tack,
More broadly, Stevens, like
his bosses in Washington, believed the United States could t urn a c r itical mass of t h e
was firmly embedded in the
fighters it helped oust Gadhafi
network of Benghazi militias before and afterward. Many
into reliable friends. He died
other Islamist leaders consider him an erratic extremist. But he was never more than
a step removed from the most influential commanders who dominatedBenghazi and who befriended the Americans. They were his neighbors, his fellow inmates and his comrades on the front lines in the
fight against Gadhafi. Fifteen months after Ste-
vens' death, the question of responsibility remains a searing issue in Washington, framed by two contradictory story lines. One has it that the video,
trying.
death. "It is always the same
terview. "They are just laughing at their own people." He suggested that the video insulting the Prophet Muhammad might well have justified the killing of four Americans. "From a religious point of
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Back in Washington After the a ttack, Obama vowed retribution. "We will not waver in our commitment
to see that justice is done for this terrible act," he said in a televisedaddress from Wash-
ington on the morning of Sept. 12. "And make no mistake, justice will be done." But much o f
t h e d ebate
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which was posted on YouTube, happened in Benghazi was in inspired spontaneous street protests that got out of hand.
A7
fact initially a spontaneous re-
action to what had just transpired hours before in Cairo,"
This version, based on early intelligence reports, was ini- she said on NBC's "Meet the tially offered publicly by Su- Press," "almost a copycat of san Rice, who is now Obama's the demonstrations against national security adviser. our facility in Cairo, prompted The other, favored by Re- by the video." publicans, holds that Stevens Republicans, pouncing on died in a carefully planned as- the misstatement, have argued sault by al-Qaida to mark the that the Obama administraanniversary of its strike on the tion was trying to cover up United States 11 years before. al-Qaida's role. "It was very Republicans have accused the clear to the individuals on the Obama administration of cov- ground that this was an al-Qa-
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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B4 Weather, B6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, DECEMBER 29, 2013
BRIEFING Couple suspected in mail theft Two La Pine residents are facing charges in connection with multiple reports of mail theft in the La Pinearea, according to the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office. Tuesday evening, deputies executed a search warrant at the home of RandyWise, 51, and AngelaWise, 34. Deputies reportedly located several pieces of stolen mail, including Christmas gifts, all of which have since been delivered to their intended recipients. Angela Wisewas arrested and lodgedat the Deschutes County Jail, while RandyWise, who was already in jail for a prior offense, faces additional charges. Both are suspected of mail theft, conspiracy to commit mail theft,
second-degree theft, third-degree theft, endangering the welfare of a minor and possession of a controlled substance.
www.bendbulletin.com/local
si ime o By Dylan J. Darling
ST. CHARLES
a ree? Patient
ic
Bend. Other troops are covering other neighborhoods in town, as well as La Pine, Red-
The Bulletin
Boy Scouts are out this
I
mond, Sisters and Sunriver. The Boy Scouts are just one
munity and it helps us earn a
pieces andput it into theiryard debris cart, according to the
5.94M in lawsuit
company's winter newsletter. Customers without ayard de-
By Shelby R. King
wayto dispose of a Christmas tree, though. Bend Garbage and Recyding customers with yard debris service may cut up their tree into three or four
little money," said John Mason, Christmas tree recyding coordinator for Boy Scout
Troop 25. Thetradition goes back
The Bulletin
bris cart may put their tree out by their garbage cart on their garbage daythe weekof Jan. 6
about 25 or 30 years in Central
Oregon, he said. His troop is gathering trees,fora suggest-
A Bend man has filed a
$5.94 million lawsuit against
and have the tree taken away
Joe Kline / The Bulletin
for a $5 charge. SeeTrees/B5
ed $5 donation, in northwest
alleging he was injured by
ward a trailer while picking uptrees in southeast Bend onSaturday.
hospital staff in 2011.
Tony Radmilovich claims that in November 2011, fol-
SUNRIVER
t ersraise n s t o a t t e oo cancersoneste atatime
lle 1
-1:
Well shot!
, g'!J yt,m Qj„,'
• We want to see your photos of snow for another special version of Well shot! that will run in the Outdoors section. Submit your best work atbendbulletln.com /snow2013and we'll pickthe best for publication. • Email other good photos of the great outdoors to renderpbotosO bendbulletin.com and tell us a bit about where and when you took them. We'll choose the best for publication.
wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.
PUBUCOFFICIALS U.S. SENATE • SEN. JEFF MERKLEY, D-ORE. 107 RUSSELL SENATE OFFICEBUILDING WASHINGTON, D.C. 20510 PHONE: 202-224-3753 WEB:http:iimerkley. senate.gov BENDOFFICE: 131 N.W.HAWTHORNE AVE., SUITE208 BEND, OR 97701 PHONE: 541-318-1298 • SEN. RON WYDEN, D-ORE. 223 DIRKSEN SENATE OFFICEBUILDING WASHINGTON, D.C. 20510 PHONE: 202-224-5244 WEB:http:iiwyden. senate.gov BENDOFFICE: 131 N.W.HAWTHORNE AVE., SUITE107 BEND,OR97701 PHONE: 541-330-9142
lowing a back operation, hospital staff attempted to move him from his hospital bed to perform X-rays. He says staff members failed to secure his mattress, causing him to fall to the floor.
Radmilovich claims in the lawsuit that the fall caused
him lower back pain, leg pain and sciatica, which he says required surgery. The lawsuit alleges the hospital and staff were negligent in failing to secure the mattress to the
bed, as well as in not having enough staff presentto prevent him from falling. He is suing the hospital for non-economic damages of $5.5 million, claiming the injuries he sustained have caused chronic pain and
:J fr
Readerphotos
high resolution (at least 6 inches
St. Charles Health System,
Troop 460 Boy Scout Dallen Schultz, 11, drags a Christmas tree to-
— From staff reports
Submission requirements: Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — aswell as your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must be
seeking
weekend, and will be again d uring the next, ~ n g away Christmastreesand collecting cash and checks to help cover the costs of being a camper. "It's a service for the com-
discomfort that "prevent
him from enjoying the usual and normal activities of life," and require he control his
pain with "high risk narcotic medications." Radmilovich is also seek-
»a
ing $447,789 from the hospital to cover medical and hospital expenses, according to court
documents. jff
"
;p
In late 2012, Radmilovich
7.
held an online fundraising campaigntohelp cover mounting medical bills. The website reportedly generated $15,420 of his $25,000 goal. Radmilovich used the on-
' c%~
line platform to explain to po-
tential donors what happened to him in the hospital in his own words. He said the X-ray Scott Hammers/The Bulletin
Firefighter/paramedicCasey Johns on with the Sunriver Fire Department trains on a stairclimber outside the Sunriver Country Store on Saturday. Johnsonand other firefighters were prep aring for the upcoming Scott Firefighter Stair Climb, e Seattle, Wash., fundraiser for the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society.
was scheduled to check on the success of the operation that fused vertebrae in his spine.
"As I rolled out ofbed to
get into the wheelchair, the mattress began to slide with
By Scott Hammers The Bulletin
UNRIVER — When the tallest set of stairs in
your community runs S to the top of a water slide, it's tough to find good opportunities to practice your stair climbing, according to Sunriver firefighter/paramedic Casey Johnson.
the Sunriver Country Store,
Johnson said while the local community has been very supportive, particularly the store and Sage Springs, donations from visitors are
taking turns on a stairclimb-
essential for the department
er machineborrowed from the Sage Springs athletic club
to hit its $7,000 fundraising target. "It's good; it kinda spreads the word a bit more beyond Central Oregon, having all
Lymphoma Society. Saturday afternoon, Johnson and his fellow firefighters camped out outside
and solicited donations for
to Seattle to climb Colum-
the cause. A steady stream of skiers coming down from Mt. Bachelor wandered past, stopping outside the store to puzzle at
bia Center, the tallest build-
firefighters on the stairclimb-
in Johnson's boot without
ing in the Northwest, for the 23rd annual Scott Fire-
er, and often, to drop a few dollars in the boots the fire-
breaking stride and called
fighter Stair Climb, a fund-
fighters used to collect their
raiser for the Leukemia and
donations.
as he walked away. "Get it done, 'cause I got it,
In March, seven Sunriver
firefighters will be heading
and I need the cure," he said. Climbing in full gear, including helmet, oxygen bottle and mask, the trip to the top of the Columbia Center covers 69 stories, 1,311 steps and
a touch over 750 feet in ele-
m e, and beforeIcould do anything, it had slipped off the side of the bed, pitching me to the floor," he wrote. "Unfortunately, the horizontal base leg of my tray table was between me and the floor, and I landed
vation gain. The fastest firefighters cover that distance in
on it right on the incision site
less than 11 minutes.
He wrote that X-rays after the fall didn't show any ob-
Last year's stair climb attracted more than 1,800
on my back."
An older man strolled by, stuffed a handful of bills
firefighters and raised nearly
vious damage, but said upon returning home, his pain
$1.5 million to combat vari-
increased to the point that he
ous forms of blood cancers. Johnson said this year's team is primarily made up of reservefirefighters.
was unable to bear weight on one of his legs. Radmilovich
SeeStairs /B2
See Suit/B2
the tourist traffic," he said.
back to him over his shoulder
said he underwent two more
surgeries.
In 1913, acafefire damagesneighboring businesses
U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES • REP.GREGWALDEN, R-HOODRIVER 2182 RAYBURN HOUSE OFFICEBUILDING WASHINGTON, D.G. 20515 PHONE: 202-225-6730 WEB:http://walden. house.gov BENDOFFICE: 1051 N.W.BONDST., SUITE400 BEND,OR97701 PHONE: 541-389-4408 FAX:541-389-4452 STATK •GOV.JOHN KITZHABER,0 160STATE CAPITOL, 900 COURTST. SALEM, OR 97301 PHONE: 503-378-4582 FAX:503-378-6872 WEB:http://governor. oregon.gov SeeOfficials /B2
Compiled by Don Hotness from archivedcopies of The Bulletin at the Des Chutes Historical Museum.
100 YEARSAGO
ered by insurance. There was a strong wind
YESTERDAY
ing. The brick wall withstood the fierce heat, although the
75 YEARS AGO For theweek ending
at the time and it seemed almost certain that the
er, about the middle of the building. The flames broke
coping caught and burned
buildings across Wall Street
out from the rear first, and
the front part of both buildings was filled with smoke.
downstairs and upstairs was broken. Four lines of city
Skyliners to open
would catch. As it was, they
hose poured water on the two
Dec. 28, 1938
new rink this evening
This made it impossible to
burning buildings but could
Buildings are endangered
and some damage done by
carry out goods there. Nothing whatever in the cafe was
water;the Bend Theatre front
saved, while all that was got-
not save them. Mr. Shuey will move next week into the new Smith
Fire starting in the Vienna Cafe about2 o'clock Mon-
was damaged, the glass in Patterson's drug store was
ten out of Shuey's store were the scales,cash registerand
building and the Vienna will
The Skyliners' artificially lighted skating rink, surface of which was glass-like and 10 inches thick this morning, will be placed in service tonight. This new rink, one of
reopen as soon as a suitable
the finest in the Northwest,
day morning destroyed that building and the one next
broken, as was also that in the old pool hall location, the Art Shop, Thornthwaite's
typewriter. In the one-story
location is secured.
was recently constructed near the Skyliners' lodge on upper Tumalo Creek. John W. Padden, Skyliner
For the week ending Dec. 28. 1913
to it in which Bert Shuey's
were all badly scorched. Mannheimer's plate glass
and the glass in the front
front was broken by the heat
annex to the building was stored a large amount of case and sacked groceries and practically all of these were
grocery store was located temporarily and scorched and damaged E.A. Sather's brick building and half a
harness shop, the post office and O'Donnell's. The flames at times leaped entirely
dozen structures on the op-
frame buildings burning with entire stock. a fierce heat. All that saved the business The fire caught in the Vipart of town from being enna, probably from the heat- wiped out was Sather's build-
posite side of the street. The loss will total approximately $6,000, almost entirely cov-
across the street, the flimsy
carried out and saved. This was about half of Mr. Shuey's
Meeting in Lara's Hall The meeting of settlers here Saturday night will be held in Lara's Hall at 8 o'clock, Manager Gould of the Commercial Club having arranged for its use. Everyone who is interested is invited to attend.
president, and Delbert Hale
chairman of the organization skating committee, announced today that the big
rink will be open daily, from noon until 2 a.m. SeeYesterday/B3
B2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, DEC 29, 2013
E VENT
ENDA R
TODAY
TUESDAY
SCIENCEPARTY: ELECTRICITY!: Learn entertaining information about electricity; $3 for members, $5 for nonmembers; 11:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-3824754 or www.highdesertmuseum.
SCIENCEPARTY:ELECTRICITY!: Learn entertaining information about electricity; $3 for members, $5 for nonmembers; 11:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97,Bend; 541-3824754 or www.highdesertmuseum.
Ol'g.
OI'g.
CARRIAGERIDES IN THE OLD MILL DISTRICT:Ride in the Cowboy Carriage, located between Ben &
LARRY ANDHIS FLASK:Local band's fourth annual NewYear's Eve show, with TomVandenAvond, Willy Tea and Cornshed; $15 plus fees in advance, $20 at the door; 8 p.m.; The Old Stone,157 N.W.Franklin Ave., Bend; 541-322-7273 or www. bendticket.com. NEW YEAR'SDANCEPARTY: Eugene's TheSugar Beets perform; $18 plus fees in advance, $23 at the door; 8p.m.; The Belfry,302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122. RED SOLOCUPNEWYEAR'S EVE PARTY:Featuring live broadcast of Times Square and prizes; $3 plus fees; 8 p.m.; Maverick's Country Bar 8 Grill, 20565 Brinson Blvd., Bend; 541-325-1886 or www. maverickscountrybar.com. MEDIUM TROY: The Eugene band performs a multimedia show with
Jerry's andFrancesca's; proceeds benefit the KIDSCenter; weather dependent; donationsaccepted; 2-5 p.m.; Ben & Jerry's, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131.
MONDAY SCIENCEPARTY: ELECTRICITY!: Learn entertaining information about electricity; $3 for members, $5 for nonmembers; 11:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-3824754 or www.highdesertmuseum.
or'g.
"THE CROODS":A screening of the 2013 animated comedy (PG); free; 1 p.m.; Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County Library, 134 S.E. ESt., Madras; 541-475-3351 or www. jcld.org. CARRIAGERIDES IN THE OLD MILL DISTRICT:Ride in the Cowboy Carriage, located between Ben & Jerry's and Francesca's; proceeds benefit the KIDSCenter; weather dependent; donationsaccepted; 2-5 p.m.; Ben & Jerry's, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. "PETER GABRIEL: NEW BLOOD LIVE IN LONDON 2011": A screening of a film combining animation and on-screen graphics with Gabriel's voice and a 46-piece
Bohemian DubEnsembl eandmore; $10; 9 p.m.-3 a.m.; Domino Room, 51 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541408-4329 or www.j.mp/TroyBend. NEW YEAR'SEVEATOLDST. FRANCIS SCHOOL: Jeff Crosby 8 The Refugees performs in the theater and Worth performs in Father Luke's Room; $5 for music; 9 p.m.-midnight; McMenamins Old St.FrancisSchool,700 N.W .Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.
mcmenamins.com.
PATRIMONY: The Portland blues band performs for NewYear's Eve, with other bands to beannounced;
$5; 9 p.m.,doors openat 8p.m.;
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communityli feibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at tvtvTv.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97,Bend; 541-3824754 or www.highdesertmuseum.
org.
Courtesy York Tillyer
"Peter Gabriel: New Blood Live in London" will show at the Tower Theatre 7 p.m. Monday. For more information, call 541-317-0700. 852 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 541-7069091 or www.dojobend.com. RUN INTOTHE NEWYEAR: Participate in a 2- to 3-mile run/walk in West Bend; bring lights or wear reflective gear; proceeds benefit the Bend Fire Department Community Assistance Program; free, donations accepted;11:30 p.m.; Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 N.W.Galveston Ave., Bend; 541-389-1601.
WEDNESDAY SCIENCEPARTY: ELECTRICITY!: Learn entertaining information about electricity; $3 for members, $5for nonmembers; 11:30 a.m. and1:30 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97,Bend; 541-3824754 or www.highdesertmuseum. OI'g.
MATT BROWN (OF RUBY HILL): The Washougal W,ash.bluessingersongwriter performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-3825174 or www.mcmenamins.com. LARRYAND HISFLASK:An all-ages show by the popular local band, with Dirty Kid Discount, Slaughter Daughters and SodaGardocki; $15
plus fees in advance, $20 at the door, $7 with student I.D; 7:30 p.m.; Pakit Liquidators, 903 S.E.Armour Road, Bend; 541-389-7047 or www. bendticket.com.
SATURDAY VFW BREAKFAST: A breakfast of
SCIENCEPARTY: ELECTRICITY!: Learn entertaining information about electricity; $3 for members, $5 for nonmembers; 11:30 a.m. and1:30 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-3824754 or www.highdesertmuseum.
$8.50; 8-10 a.m.; VFWHall, 1503 N.E. Fourth St.,Bend;541-389-0775. BEND INDOORSWAP MEETAND SATURDAY MARKET:Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend
pancakes,eggs, sausageor ham;
or'g.
months, extensive physical therapy, occupational therapy
Lake Oswego-based attorney, lawsuit recently filed against
Continued from B1 "The nerve pain in my leg becameso extreme that I could not get myself out of bed and once again had to be taken to the hospital by ambulance,"
and acupuncture has helped
November filed a $1.69million lawsuit alleging negligence in
he wrote. "Over the past eight
Stairs
Alex McClaran, himself a reservist,
said firefighters are typically publicity-shy, in part due to the long-running tradition that those who appear in the
e
c ancer deserves my
— Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers@bendbulletin.com
Continued from B1 • SECRETARY OFSTATE KATE BROWN,D 136 STATE CAPITOL SALEM, OR 97301 PHONE:503-986-1616 FAX:503-986-1616 EMAIL:oregon.sos©state.or.us • TREASURERTED WHEELER, D 159OREGON STATE CAPITOL 900 COURT ST. N.E. SALEM, OR 97301 PHONE:503-378-4329 EMAIL:oregon.treasurer@state. ol;us WEB:www.ost.state.or.us • ATTORNEYGENERALELLEN ROSENBLUM,D 1162 COURT ST. N.E. SALEM, OR 97301 PHONE: 503-378-4400 FAX:503-378-4017 WEB:www.doj.state.or.us •LABOR COMMISSIONER BRAD AVAKIAN 800N.E.OREGON ST.,SUITE1045 PORTLAND, OR 97232 PHONE:971-673-0761 FAX:971-673-0762 EMAIL:boli.mail©state.or.us WEB:www.oregon.gov/boli SENATE • SEN. TEDFERRIOLI, R-DISTRICT 30 (JEFFERSON,PORTION OF DESCHUTES) 900 COURT ST. N.E., S-323 SALEM, OR 97301 PHONE:503-986-1950 EMAIL:sen.tedferrioli©state.or.us WEB:www.leg.state.or.us/ferrioli •SEN.TIMKNOPP, R-DISTRICT27 (PORTIONOF DESCHUTES) 900 COURT ST. N.E., S-423 SALEM, OR 97301 PHONE: 503-986-1727 EMAIL:sen.timknopp@state.or.us WEB:www.leg.state.or.us/knopp •SEN.DOUG WHITSETT, R-DISTRICT 28 (CROOK,PORTION OF DESCHUTES) 900 COURT ST. N.E., S-303 SALEM, OR 97301 PHONE: 503-986-1728 EMAIL:sen.dougwhitsett@state. ol;us WEB:www.leg.state.or.us/whitsett HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES •REP.JASON CONGER, R-DISTRICT 54 (PORTION OF DESCHUTES)
ol'.Us
WEB:www.leg.state.or.us/whisnant
DESCHOTES COU5ITY 1300 N.W.WALLST., BEND,OR97701 WEB:www.deschutes.org PHONE:54I-388-657 I FAX:541-382-1692 COUNTY COMMISSION • TAMMYBANEY,R-BEND PHONE: 541-388-6567 EMAIL:Tammy Baney© co.deschutes.or.us • ALAN UNGER,D-REDMOND PHONE: 541-388-6569 EMAIL:Alan Unger©co.deschutes. ol'.Us
• TONYDEBONE,R-LAPINE PHONE: 541-388-6568 EMAIL:Tony DeBone©o.deschutes. OI;us
66 S.E. DST., MADRAS,OR97741 PHONE: 541-475-2449 FAX:541-475-4454 WEB:www.co.jefferson.or.us COUNTY COMMISSION • MIKE AHERN • JOHNHATFIELD •WAYNE FORDING PHONE: 54 I-475-2449 EMAIL:commissioner©co.jefferson. ol;us
ClTY OF BEMD 710 N.W.WALLST. BEND, OR 97701 PHONE: 541-388-5505 WEB:www.ci.bend.or.us •CITYMANAGER ERIC KING PHONE: 541-388-5505 EMAIL:citymanager@ci.bend.or.us CITY COUNCIL • JODIEBARRAM PHONE: 541-388-5505 EMAIL:jbarram@ci.bend.or.us • MARKCAPELL PHONE: 541-388-5505 EMAIL:mcapell©ci.bend.or.us • JIM CLINTON PHONE: 54I-388-5505 EMAIL:jclinton@ci.bend.or.us •VICTOR CHUDOWSKY PHONE: 541-749-0085 EMAIL:vchudowsky©ci.bend.or.us •DOUG KNIGHT PHONE: 54I-388-5505 EMAIL:dknight©ci.bend.or.us • SCOTTRAMSAY PHONE: 541-388-5505 EMAIL:sramsay@ci.bend.or.us • SALLYRUSSELL PHONE: 541-480-8141 EMAIL:srussell©ci.bend.or.us
CROOK COU5PPZ
ClTY OF REDMOND
300N.E.THIRD ST.,PRINEVILLE,OR 97754 PHONE:541-447-6555 FAX:541-416-3891 EMAIL:administration©co.crook.or.us WEB:co.crook.or.us COUNTYCOURT •MIKEMCCABE, CROOKCOUNTY JUDGE PHONE: 541-447-6555 EMAIL:mike.mccabe@co.crook.
716 S.W. EVERGREEN AVE. REDMOND,OR97756 PHONE: 541-923-7710 FAX:541-548-0706 CITY COUNCIL •MAYOR GEORGE ENDICOTT PHONE: 541-948-3219 EMAIL:George.Endicott© ci.redmond.or.us • JAY PATRICK PHONE: 541-508-8408 EMAIL:Jay.Patrick@ci.redmond.
ol'.Us
• KEN FAHLGREN PHONE: 541-447-6555 EMAIL:ken.fahlgren©co.crook.or.us
OI'.Us
• TORYALLMAN PHONE: 541-923-7710
THE ARCHIVIST:Paul Merchant reflects on working with poet William Stafford; free; 2 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7050 or www. deschuteslibrary.org.
— Reporter: 541-383-0376 sking@bendbulletirt.com
one at the station. When it comes to the stair cl imb, "some little 12-year-
JEFFERSON COU5fPZ
jan. 5
elective surgery at St. Charles Bend.
expected to buy ice cream for every-
900 COURT ST. N.E., H-477 SALEM, OR97301 PHONE: 503-986-1454 EMAIL:rep.jasonconger@state.or.us WEB:www.leg.state.or.us/conger •REP.JOHN HUFFMAN, R-DISTRICT 59 (PORTIONOFJEFFERSON) 900 COURT ST. N.E., H-476 SALEM, OR 97301 PHONE: 503-986-1459 EMAIL:rep.johnhuffman©state.or.us WEB:www.leg.state.or.us/huffman •REP.MIKEMCLANE,R-DISTRICT55 (CROOK,PORTION OF DESCHUTES) 900 COURTST. N.E., H-385 SALEM, OR 97301 PHONE: 503-986-1455 EMAIL:rep.mikemclane©state.or.us WEB:www.leg.state.or.us/mclane •REP.GENE WHISNANT, R-DISTRICT 53 (PORTIONOF DESCHUTES) 900 COURT ST. N.E., H-471 SALEM, OR 97301 PHONE: 503-986-1453 EMAIL:rep.genewhisnant@state.
8 p.m.; Pakit Liquidators, 903 S.E. Armour Road, Bend; 541-389-7047 or www.riseupinternational.com.
the death of her mother after
ists who work part time for little pay in
Officials
singer-songwriter performs;$5;
St. Charles. A Bend woman in
the hope of eventually earning a fulltime firefighting job.
news or on television are teased and
Street Theater, 220 N.E.Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626 or www.j.mp/ComShow. TOM VANDENAVOND: Thealt-folk
SCIENCEPARTY: ELECTRICITY!: Learn entertaining information about electricity; $3 for members, $5 for nonmembers; 11:30 a.m. and1:30
old girl w it h suffering.
Woodmansee;$10;8-10 p.m.; 2nd
FRIDAY
"Whenever we have a chance to represent what we're capable of, what we do ... this can save people's lives all day long. This is worth it," he said.
Continued from B1 The department has just nine fulltime firefighters, along with 13 reserv-
bendcomedy.com.
STAND UPCOMEDY SHOWCASE: Featuring Brad Knowles andJake
www. I.mp/dayoffun.
Suit
me improve to the point where comment on pending litigation, I can once again shower, dress according to hospital spokesand cook for myself and walk woman Lisa Goodman. short distances with the aid of A pretrial hearing is scheda crutch." uled for April. A call made to Radmilovich's This is the second significant
LIVECOMEDY SHOW: LosAngeles comedians Sean Mc Brideand Tess Barker perform; $10; 7 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70S.W.Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www.
FAMILY FUNDAY:Central Oregon Disability Support Network and Oregon Family Support Network provide a day of fun; free admission and dinner; 6:30-8:30 p.m.; Bouncing Off The Wall, 1134 S.E.Centennial Court, Bend; 541-306-6587 or
doors open at 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-3170700 or www.towertheatre.org.
Mark Bocci, was not returned. It is St. Charles' policy not to
OI'g.
SUNDAY
THURSDAY
Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www.volcanictheatrepub.com. NEW YEAR'SEVE PARTY: with Mr. Wu, Matt Wax and DJElls; suit and tie or cocktail dress attire gets you free admission; $5; 10 p.m.; Dojo,
orchestra; $12general admission, $48clubpass,plusfees;7p.m.,
FIRSTFRIDAY GALLERY WALK: Event includes art exhibit openings, artist talks, live music, wine andfood in downtown Bendandthe Old Mill District; free; 5-9 p.m.; throughout Bend. OKAIDJA:The Portland band performs West African music; free; 6 p.m.; Crow's FeetCommons, 875 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 541-728-0066 or www.crowsfeetcommons.com. THE MENTORS: The California notorious shock-metal band performs; $5; 8 p.m.; Big T's,413 S.W. Glacier Ave., Redmond; 541504-3864 or www.reverbnation.com/ show/11910604. ACOUSTIC MINDS: The Portland pop-synth-rock band performs; free; 9 p.m.; Dojo, 852 N.W.Brooks St., Bend; 541-706-9091 or www. dojobend.com.
Indoor Swap Meet, 679S.E. Third St.; 541-317-4847. SCIENCEPARTY: ELECTRICITY!: Learn entertaining information about electricity; $3 for members, $5 for nonmembers; 11:30 a.m. and1:30 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97,Bend;541-3824754 or www.highdesertmuseum.
• JOE CENTANNI PHONE:541-923-7710 JOE.CENTANNIOCI.REDMOND. OR.US • CAMDEN KING PHONE: 541-604-5402 EMAIL:Camden.King©ci.redmond. or.us •GINNYMCPHERSON PHONE:541-923-7710 EMAIL:Ginny.McPherson© ci.redmond.or.us • EDONIMUS PHONE:541-604-5403 EMAIL:Ed.Onimus@ci.redmond. ol'.Us
Join us in Crossings Lounge! Featuring Jim Beam specialty drinks and giveaways. You could win a hotel stay in Portland or Portland Trail Blazer tickets!
5 Large HDTV Screens• Pocket Pool Tables ShujIIeboard Local Microbrews on Tap
~
•
•
•
• s
$•
•
Reservations: 541-389-8810 (dinner) • 541-389-3111 (1odging)
'verhouse HOTEL ttr CONVERBON CENTER
•
•
/ 1V
Have your independence and a carefree lifestyle, too!
99 Move-in Special You can start enjoying the independent senior lifestyle you deserve today by taking advantage of our community's limited-time $99 move-in special!* We take careof life's daily chores, allowing you to focus on what matters most. No buy-in fees or long-term leases rtNIuired. Visit today to learn more about this special offer, which expires December 31, 2013! Welcometo Holiday. Welcome home. 'Terms & conditions apply. See managersfor complete details. Offer valid through December 31, 2013!
541-595-3779 Stone Lodge Retirement Independent Retirement Living
1460 NE 27'" Bend, OR 97701 R KTI R K M K N T
stonelodgeretirement.com
SUNDAY, DEC 29, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
B3
RKGON
enewa es o
AROUND THE STATE
rtaxcre i
By George Plaven
farms in the region, if they shows no projects currently can achieve stable, long-term under construction in Oregon, P ENDLETON — No r t h - federal policy. Oregon has al- though 11 have been approved west wind developers are once ready investedmore than $9 and ninemore are in the peragain grappling with uncer- billion in renewable energy mitting process. tainty as the federal tax credit over the last decade, accordOne project being develfor renewable energy produc- ing to the organization. oped in Morrow and Umatilla tion is set to expire Dec. 31. Allowing the production counties is a 500-megawatt faIt's a familiar challenge for tax credit to expire only dis- cility proposed by Wheatridge theindustry. courages that positive growth, Wind Energy and Swaggart The credit, which pays 2.3 Baird said. Energy Transmission. It could "Having stable, long-term start generating electricity by cents per kilowatt-hour of electricity generated by wind, policycreatesa safe business the end of 2016 if approved by nearly expired a year ago until environment," she said. "We the Oregon Energy Facility it was extended by Congress hope (the tax credit) continues Siting Council. That's too late to qualify as part of a deal to avoid the to be part of our policy in the dreaded "fiscal cliff." state." for a tax credit as it stands Advocacy groups are now In years past, only finished now, said Sam Enfield, a Selobbying to keep the incen- projects could qualify for the attle-based manager working tives intact, but opponents credit. When lawmakers ex- with the group. argue federal wind subsidies tended the program in 2012, Enfield began his career in are inequitable and unfairly they allowed projects to qual- wind development in 1992burden taxpayers across the ify so long as developers had the same yearthe production The East Oregonian
POrtland OffiCerSWield SandWiCh—Portland police officers used a sandwich to stop anaked manfrom jumping off the ledge of a parking structure. According to the Portland Police Bureau,on Saturday morning, officers found anaked manwho appeared to be experiencing a behavioral health crisis andwascutting himself with a knife while threatening to jumpoff a ledge. After the maninformed officers he washungry, they obtained asandwich from a nearby hotel and used it to movethe manawayfrom the ledge. Officers were then able to take themaninto custody. He is currently being evaluated medically at an areahospital. Investigators said criminal charges related to vandalism to vehicles in the parking structure may be forthcoming.
basically flows through to the price," Enfield said. "I believe the technology has improved so much, and costs have come down so far, wind energy is really becoming mainstream. We've seen enough validation over the years to keep making this investment." Critics, however, believe it is time for the wind industry
Springfield city councilor facesnewcharge —six months after pleading not guilty to driving under the influence, Springfield a city councilor is facing newcharges. Fifty-eight-year-old DaveRalston is scheduled to appearJan. 13 in Deschutes County Circuit Court to enter a plea to a misdemeanor chargealleging he broke astate wildlife law. Lt. GreggHastings with the OregonState Police said Friday that Ralston was involved in anOct. 6traffic stop in which a state trooper found an illegally taken buckinside the vehicle. Nineyears ago, Ralston pleaded nocontest to shooting a black tail deer out of season and borrowing another hunter's tag to place on the carcass. Hewas fined nearly $600 in that caseand hadhis hunting license suspended. Ralston did not return a call for comment.
to start standing on its own. A recent study by the American
Energy Alliance, a free-market advocacy organization, calculated that 30 states and the District of Columbia all
lost money on the credit in 2012.
Spokesman Chris Warren said wind developers in Oregon actually saw a net gain,
Additional charges for Sciostandoff suspect —Aman
with more than $99 million
brought in. But with the inAmy Baird, spokeswoman invested 5 percent of its cost said there's still recognition of dustry no longer in its infanfor the Renewable Northwest before the end of the year. its importance not only for de- cy, it shouldn't continue to be Project in Portland, said there A database provided by the velopers, butalso consumers. propped up by the taxpayers, "The production tax credit he said. is plenty of potential for wind Renewable Northwest Project country.
either started construction or
Yesterday
for spectators it will be unnec- just returned from California essaryfor an earl y arrival of where he has lived since this Continued from B1 the members ofthe chorus or summer. The rink is 125 feet by 225 people in general. There will be R on Anderson is no w a feet, and rivals in size any of no parking restrictions on any health officer for Douglas the three big units now in use of the adjacent streets. Follow- County. He lives in Roseburg. at the world famous Sun Val- ing the performance, all chilKes Cannon, master of cereley winter recreation center in
dren taking part in the cast and
Idaho. the chorus are to be treated by Anticipating a large crowd, the Chamber of Commerce and Hale and members of his com- Elks. mittee are making arrangeTraffic and safety squads ments for a real "big time" af- from the local police, firemen fair tonight. Seats have been
and from the state police will
provided along the edge of the big outdoor rink, a huge bonfire will blaze nearby, and sandwiches and coffee will be served on the grounds during the evening. Skaters will be permitted to
be on hand to assist with the crowds. A large group from the high school "Bear Paws" will also assist the pageant directors.
In general charge of costuming for the cast is Mrs. John use the rinkuntil2 a.m. To meet Kruse and a large group of asexpenses in connection with sistants. Rev. George Redden is the operation of the new rink, director ofthecarolchorusand such as lighting and flooding, Ralph Coie assisting him. Miss the Skyliner committee will Bessie Howardis accompanist. make a nominalcharge — 15 centsfor adults and a dime for
children under 16 years of age. The rink was given its final flooding last night as the temperature dropped far below the freezing point. When Padden and Myron Symons left the rink near midnight, the surface was smooth as glass. Light for the rink is provided by a "Little Bonneville" plant, made bythe Bend High School manual training classes in col-
50 YEARSAGO For the week ending Dec. 28, 1963
12 Shrine players honored at dinner Over 140 parents, friends
and Bend High School football fans turned out at a special public dinner last night to pay tribute to the 12 Bend players who have donned togs in the laboration with The Shevlin- Portland Shrine game. Hixon Company. Old Bend grid glories were Tonight's "grand opening" brought alive again, as each program will get underway at one reminisced with the dining 8 o'dock. Skyliners are confi- crowd some big moments in dent that the rink can be used their days of gridiron combat.
monies, introduced the players.
Friday night
"The Christmas Story," a spectacular and impressi ve
a large commercial stove appeared suddenly, courtesy of Ken Cale Appliance. The business also contrib-
uted a number of appliances to families served by the organization, said Capt. Cliff Dickinson. "He loans us a truck, he gives
25 YEARSAGO
us appliances or sells them
For the week ending Dec. 28, 1988
"Whenever we n eed some-
ChriStmaS EVe ShOOting SuSpeCt — Authorities have arrested the brother of amanwho wasshot to death on Christmas Eve.Portland police said that 62-year-old MickeyOmegaRolin wasarrested Friday on suspicion of murder with a firearm. Officials havesaid 61-yearold Terry LeeRolin died of agunshot wound during adomestic disturbance. Authorities are still seeking information from witnesseswho may haveseenthe brothers in the hours leading up to theshooting.
to us at cost," Dickinson said.
thing, he bends over backward tohelp." Bend's'Mr. Appliance' Jerry Sherman, manager of mourned Ken Cale Appliance, said Cale Friends an d co - workers was one of the kindest people today mourned the pass- he had ever known. "He could be described as ing of Ken Cale, a longtime Bend businessman who died Santa Claus for as big as his Thursday. heart is," Sherman said. Cale had owned and operSherman said his death, ated Ken Cale Appliance since while not unexpected, was felt moving to Bend in 1938 and as a great loss by store employwas known throughout Central ees. "You couldn't ask for a betOregon as "Mr. Appliance." He ter employer." had played an active part in the Besides his involvement in store until claimed by cancer. VFW and The Salvation Army, Russell Chase, who was as- Cale was also active in the sociated with Cale as a fellow Bend Elks Lodge, where he has member of the local Veterans servedasexaltedruleranddisof Foreign Wars post, described trict deputy, and was a charter Cale as"wonderful." member of the Bend Jaycees. "There's nothing too high I
Two critically injured in crash — Ayoung driver andherteen passenger suffered critical injuries after the driver failed to negotiate a sweeping curve in the roadnear Sherwood. TheWashington County sheriff's office said Saturday that the driver, 25-year-old Morgan McFarland, is in the hospital in critical condition. Thecondition of a 17-year-old passenger is unknown.Thewomen are from the Seattle area and arecousins. Thecrash occurred Friday at about 6 p.m. when McFarland lost control of her1989 HondaCivic and collided with a Dodge Durango.Thedriver of the Durango was not injured in the crash. Investigators said McFarlandwas speeding when the crash occurred. — From wire reports
Weekly Arts & Entertainment Inside •
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can say about the man."
Chase, who had known Cale since 1942, praised especially his generosity toward veterans
who were confined to nursing homes.
He would give them a teevee, never charge me, and deliver it and everything else," Chase said. "He was a good man all the way around." Cale was similarly generous through the entire winter, even Nine of the 12 were pres- toward needy members of the if deep snow falls along the up- ent. They were: Bill Sheffold, community, according to Bill per stret ches of 'Ibmalo Creek. Wes Hogland, Dean Benson, Jarvis, who had known Cale Yesterday two men removed Bill Baer Jr., Miles Boardman, since 1964 and most recently seven inches of snow from the Chuck Austin, Ron Anderson, served with him on The Salvaicy surface without difficulty. Jim Dexter and Jim Leagjeld. tionArmy board ofdirectors. The Skyliner lodge also will Sheffold and Wes Hogland Jarvis said that when The be open tonight, for the comfort played in the first shrine game Salvation Army took over the of the skaters. There will be in 1948. Dean Benson played men's shelter several years ago, some dancing. in 1953. Baer, Boardman and Austin played in 1953. Ander-
Pageant will bepresented
arrested this weekafter a three-hour standoff at his mother's home in Scio is facing additional charges in connection with a fire started during the incident, according to authorities. OregonState Police said Friday that 54-year-old RaymonEugeneBeasley will face charges of arson, reckless burning andcriminal mischief. Beasley was arrested Thursday by the LinnCounty Sheriff's Office after reportedly he barricaded himself inside the residencearmedwith a rifle. After heavy smoke camefrom the house, members of aSWATteam said they pulled Beasley out of awindow. Investigators said Beasleystarted the fire in the master bedroom using an open flame object applied to combustible paper products. Thefire reportedly caused $50,000 damagetotheresidenceandaparkedvehicle.Beasleyhasbeenpreviously jailed on charges including menacing andburglary, according to documents.
tax credit was first created. He
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son played in 1956. Jim Dexter
played in 1962 and Leagjeld in 1963. Absent were Phil Gillis and
Doug Hogland, both of the large proportions, will be pre- 1949 game and Bill Pederson sented at 8 p.m. Friday evening in 1963. Christmas pageant of rather
on the portico of the Bend High
Bend's 12 shrine athletes
School building by a cast of about80 players assisted by a
have come over a 16-year span.
+~ffthgr g] ~back!
Each of three Bend coaches
have produced four. Tom Winsand school children. An out- bigler, current mentor, has condoor Christmas feature of this tributed Leagjeld, Dexter, Pednature is a new venture in the erson and Anderson. carolchorus of nearly a thou-
Northwest, and it is hoped that,
H ank N i elson, th e
f i r st
if successful, it may become a coach to send Bend gridders to traditional feature for the Bend the Shrine game, is credited for community. Sheffold, Gillis, and Wes and The pageant as planned this Doug Hogland. Bud Robertson year is a greatly deleted por- sent Benson, Baer, Boardman tion of an original production and Austin. written by the general director, What are they doing now? Rev. J.B. Coan. It will be largeSheffold, a career officer ly processional in type and in the Air Force is awaiting will portray the essential and
possible selection for a tour of
more popular scenes of the first duty in Vietnam. He is now staChristmas events. The pageant tioned at McChord AFB near has been in preparation for the past month with 14 committees
Tacoma.
Wes Hogland, who returned and many score of assistants at from Oregon State grid wars to work on various phases of the put in some coaching days at play. Bend, is now a track and cross O utstanding among t h e country coach at Mollala. features will be the beautiful Benson is now a track coach outdoor setting, colorful and at Medford. He played football elaborate costuming, spectac- and ran track at Willamette ular lighting effects, a loud- University. Austin, a f ormer speaker system with a series of University of Oregon gridder, microphones, the huge chorus is now a youth pastor at the that will accommodate several thousands of people.
First Baptist Church in Salem. Dexter, is now an Airborn private in the Army, stationed
Because of the ample space
at Fort Campbell, Ky. Leagjeld
and an audienceamphitheater
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, DEC 29, 2013
OREGON NEWS
Optimismdrives the expansion
BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES Judith "Judy" Carol Lagunas, of Bend
Gerald "Jerry" Joe
Jan. 16, 1944 - Dec. 26, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Celebration of Life will take place in Bend at a later date. Contributions may be made
Dec. 21, 1937 - Dec. 23, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: No services will be held at this time. Contributions may be made
to:
Chase Bank to the donation account in the name of Julie Mosher to help with funeral
expenses.
James S. Stinnette, of Bend Oct. 11, 1943 - Dec. 23, 2013 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel, (541)382-5592; www.deschutesmemorialchapel.com
Services: A Celebration of Life will be held with an Open House at a later date. Contributions may be made to:
Oregon Heart Association, 1200 NW Naito Parkway, Portland, OR 97209.
Revard, of Redmond
to:
National MS Society, PO Box 4527, New York, NY 10163, www.nationalmssociety.org
Michael J. Micke, of Bend Sept. 24, 1950 - Dec. 22, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend is honored to serve the family. 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A private service will be held at a later date.
Carol Boynton Feb. 13, 1943- Dec. 19, 2013 C arol Jea n (Hansen)
B oynton p as s e d aw ay December 19, 2013, at age 7 0, at her h om e i n B e n d . She was born February 13, May 6, 1937 - December18, 2013 1 943, i n L a Gr an de , O regon, to E l me r C . a n d Donald Robert Montgom- Helen G. Hansen. ery was born in Raymond, Carol graduated from Washington and graduated La Grande High School in from Portland's Grant High 1961, and from the UniverSchool in 1955. He served s ity o f O r e g o n i n 1 9 6 5 , his country as a soldier in w ith a b a c h e lo r o f ar t s the U .S . A r m y a n d hi s degree in English. commuS he ma r r ied A l f r e d G . nity as an Shirtcliff in February 1967, o fficer i n and later m a r r ied Fr edric t he P o r t - R . B o y n to n in Oct o b e r l and Po - 1980, i n S a n t a B a r b a r a, l ice B u- California. r eau. H i s She wa s m o s t r e c ently career in e mployed a t C e n t ra l O r real estate egon Community C o l l ege .';i",i spanned where she retired in 2009. n early 5 0 She enjoyed music, theDon years, Montgomery most re- atre, camping and computer solitaire games. c ently a s S he w a s p r e c e ded i n t he P r i n cipal B r o k e r a t death by both parents and Eagle Crest Resort. h usband. Su r vi v e d by Don was preceded in death brother an d s i s ter-in-law, by his parents, Donald and Howard and Sally Hansen L ucile Montgomery. H e i s of B e a verton, O R ; and survived by his wife, Annie; s tep-children, R o bi n N e l children, Ty , M i c hele an d son of Idaho, Terry BoynP aige; sisters, C a ro l a n d t on o f Col o r a do , K e v i n Janice; nieces, Sharon, Su- B oynton o f T ex a s , a n d san and Molly; and nephew, David Boynton. Holman. Niswonger-Reynolds is in Don's life and legacy will charge of t h e a r r angebe remembered on January ments. 541-382-2471. 3, 2014 at 10:00 a.m. at New Life Foursquare Church in
Don Montgomery
Canby, Oregon, followed by
a burial service at 12:30 p.m. at Wi l l a m ett e N at i o n al Cemetery. A Celebration of L ife wi~ll also b e h e l d a t Eagle Crest Resort on January 11, 2014 at 2:00 p.m. T o share a memory w i t h family and f r i ends, please visit Don's memorial website: https:I/www.facebook.com/ donmontgomerymemorial
Barbara Mabel Blacksten Mar. 29, 1920- Dec. 26, 2013 B arbara p assed o n D e c ember 26 , 2 0 1 3 a t h e r home in Springfield. T he oldest o f f o u r c h i l dren, she was born M arch 29, 1920 in Ketchum, I D to A r .~ri . tt n old E. McCoy and Mabel Obenchain. She . '
,
grew up in
Ketchum, a nd l a t e r attended
Barbara Blacksten high school in M ountain Home, ID, where she met Maurice Dean Blacksten. They were married i n K e t chum J u ne 11, 1938. He preceded her in death in 1993. She was a school cook for Springfield School District for many years.She retired in 1977 and they moved to Bend. S h e r e t u r ne d to Springfield in 2005. Barbara and Dean had two children, Sharon R. Wilson and David B. Blacksten (wife
Sonya); five grandchildren;
twelve great-grandchildren; and four great-great-grandchildren. H er family i s g r ateful t o the nurses of Sacred Heart Hospice. A service for Barbara will be held at St. John Episcop al C h u r ch , 2 5 3 7 G a m e Farm Rd. in Springfield at 1:30 p.m. Monday, December 30, 2013. Arrangements entrusted to S pringfield M e m orial F u neral Home. Please access Barbara's obituary, and you are invited to sign the guestbook at musgroves.com.
Gary Wayne Hackney, of Redmond July 9, 1943 - Dec. 14, 2013 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel 541-382-5592
www.deschutesmemorialchapel.com
Services: A family celebration of Gary's life will be held next summer. Contributions may bemade to:
Partners Hospice House at 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend, OR 97701 541-382-5882 or to OHSU Knight Cancer Institute at OHSU Foundation, Mail Stop 45, PO Box 4000, Portland, OR 97208-9852.
Carl H. Andersen, of Prinevilie Dec. 19, 1933 - Dec. 24, 2013 Services: Memorial will be held at the Eagles Lodge in Prineville on Tuesday, Dec. 31, 2013 at 10:00am.
Calvin Gale Walker Oct. 25, 1941 - Dec. 13, 2013 C alvin G a l e W a l k e r o f Terrebonne, OR, died December 13, 2013, at the age of 72. H e w a s born October 25, 1941, to Edgar and Arrie
(Sloan)
Walker in Baird, Texas. Calvin
gradu-
ated from Medford High S chool i n Calvin Walker 1961 married E lizabeth J o A n n G i l b e r t on November 16, 1973, in M edford, OR . T h e y l a t er moved to Prineville, where C alvin w o r ked a s a M i l l w right a t P r i n eville S t u d M ilI fo r y e a rs . In 19 8 3 , they relocated t o T e r r ebonne. Calvin enjoyed camping,
hiking and fishing.
He i s s u r v i ve d b y h i s wife, JoAnn Walker; and their four ch ildren; a son, E dward a nd Jean n e t te Walker of R e d mond, OR; daughters, Rebecca Bitner a nd h e r p a r t n e r D a w n C rowley o f A u r o r a , O R , Lorrie and Floyd Mergal of P rineville, OR, an d H e i d i Walker of Terrebonne, OR; two sisters, Marti Edinger of Medford, OR and Shirley Howard of Keizer, OR; July 6, 1923- December 9, 2013 numerous g r a n d children, great-grandchildren an d Patricia E. Moran peacegreat-great-grandchildren, f ully p assed away a t h e r n ieces an d n ep h e w s , home in Bend on D e cemcousins and friends. ber 9, 2013, at age 90. He was preceded in death She was bor n i n G a l es- by his parents, Edgar and b urg, I l l i Arrie (Sloan) Walker; a nois, to s on, W i l l i e J o e W a l k e r ; Harry and a nd a b r o ther, Robert A . Nelly Walker. (Bailey) Contribution s in his W hite o n name m a y b e ma d e t o July 6, Partners In Care, 2075 NE 1923. She Wyatt Ct. Bend, OR 97701. up pew There will b e a c e l ebrain W yo - tion of life held in April of ming, IlliPatrlcla Moran n ois a n d 2 014. Please sign our online guestbook w w w . r edraduated from Wyoming mondmemorial.com. ommunity H i g h S c h o ol. S he married P atrick M o ran on December 28, 1946, and together they had one child. Death Notices are free and In 1955, the family moved will be run for one day, but to M a r t i n ez , C a l i f o r nia. specific guidelines must be Patricia w o r k e d f o r th e followed. Local obituaries Painters U n i o n i n Mar are paid advertisements tinez, for 2 5 y e ars w h ere submitted by families or she was a n i n s t r umental funeral homes. They may be part of the Union Administration. submitted by phone, mail, She was a d evout mememail or fax. The Bulletin ber of St. Catherine of Sireserves the right to edit all e nna Catholic C h u rch i n submissions. Please include M artinez, a n d th en a contact information in all member of St . F r ancis of correspondence. Assisi once she moved to For information on any of B end, OR , i n 20 0 2 . P a t these services orabout the l oved reading an d t a k i n g obituary policy, contact care of her pets and, above 541-617-7825. all, spending time with her Deadlines:Death Notices friends and family. are accepted untilnoon Pat w a s p r e c e de d i n Monday through Friday d eath b y her hu s b a n d ; P atrick M o ran a s w el l a s for next-day publication t wo s i blings, R obert a n d and by 4:30 p.m. Friday N ellie A n ne . Sh e i s s u r for Sunday publication. vived by her son, Jim MoObituaries must be ran and spouse, Ellie Musreceived by 5 p.m. Monday g rove o f B e n d , O R ; h e r through Thursdayfor s ister, B e a C o l g a n a n d publication on the second husband, Mark of Westday after submission, field, IN. by1 p.m. Friday for Baird Funeral Home of Sunday publication, and by B end is i n c h a rg e o f a r 9 a.m. Monday for Tuesday rangements. 541-382-0903. publication. Deadlines for www.bairdmortuaries.com display ads vary; please call A me m o r ia l wi l l b e for details. s cheduled in California in Phone: 541-617-7825 the spring. In lieu of f l o w ers, donaEmail: obits©bendbulletincom tions may be made in Pat's Fax: 541-322-7254 name to the Humane SociMail:Obituaries e ty o f Cen t r a l Or e g o n P.O. Box 6020 6 1170 SE 2 7t h S t , B e n d , Bend, OR 97708 OR 97702.
Patricia Ellen Moran
Obituary policy
Bob Shell, of Bend Mar. 11, 1952 - Dec. 15, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend is honored to serve the family. 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Celebration of Life at 5:00 PM on Jan. 4, 2013 at Bear Creek Center, 2130 Bear Creek Rd., Bend, OR. Contributions may be made to:
P.O. Box 1449, Bend, OR 97701.
Robert G. Meade, Jr., of Bend April 29, 1957 - Dec. 21, 2013 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds is honored to serve the family. Please visit the online registry at www.niswonger-reynolds. com 541-382-2471. Services: A Memorial service will be held at a later date.
Roland 'Wally' Wallace April 1, 1930- liov. 27, 2013 A r e minder o f t h e s e r vice for Wally Wallace. A m e m o r ia l s e r v ic e i s s cheduled fo r J a n u ary 4 , 2014, at 2:00 p.m., at Trini ty Epi s c opal' s i nt e r i m place of worship (Historic S t. Fr an c i s Cath o l i c C hurch a t N W Fr a n k l i n A ve. an d L a v a Rd . , i n
Bend).
A Celebration of Life will f ollow a t A s p e n H a l l i n Shevlin Park. P lease s ig n t he g u e s t r egistry fo r t h e f a m il y a t www.niswonger-reynolds. com
of hazelnut groves The Associated Press SALEM — Oregon farm-
"What is the top? state'sgroves of hazel- Boy, this is the ers continue to add to the
nuts as optimism remains that there's room for more
expansion.
$6 million question — we don't know."
The state dominates U.S.
— Jim Cramer,
production, but is a small player worldwide. Oregon produces 99 per-
Department of Agriculture
cent of the U.S. crop, with
pulled in 34,700 tons of nuts.
about 650 growers operat-
The crop wa s
ing on about 30,000 acres.
$63.4 million, 16th among Oregon commodities.
Anecdotal evidence suggests a growth rate of about 3,000 acres a year, accord-
ing to reports. O nce t h reatened b y
v a lued at
About half the crop is ex-
ported, with China the biggest buyer.
B ut t h er e a r e que s eastern filbert blight th at t ions about w h ether t h e arrived in t h e 1970s, the market will soon become industry's been on the rise saturated.
since a breeding program at Oregon State University began producing fun-
"What is the top? Boy, this is the $6 million question — we don't know," said
gus-resistant varieties. Hazelnut trees take three
Jim Cramer,director of a state Department of Agrito four years to begin pro- culture program that helps ducing n ut s i n ea r n est, farmers market their prodbut Polly Owen, executive ucts around the world. director of the Oregon Hazelnut C ommission, said
a ready market will b e waiting. " Keep in m ind t hat w e
are 3 percent of the world (production)," Owen said. "I think we're fine."
The amount of land avail-
able might limit expansion, experts say, but growth in acreage could also displace other crops. Cramer said hazelnuts
are similar to other Oregon crops, such as wine and
Turkey produces 70 per- blueberries, in t h a t s t ate cent of the world's supply, producers aren't the bigand Italy is second, with 18 gest players. "Where we find success percent. Statistics from Oregon's is in the quality of the prod2 013 harvest a r en't y e t ucts we produce, and they available. In 2012, growers garner a premium," he said.
FEATURED OBITUARY
Grossman, apolitical activist, split time betweenwork, family By Bryan Marquard
NewBridge on the Charles reGrossman "was a five-star tirement community in Ded- general forthecause ofpeace," In his early 50s and by no ham, Mass. He was 96, and Markey said. "The other side measure a young radical, though his health had been had generals, and we needJerome Grossman forever failing, he lived for 18 months ed one as well, and that was established his progressive after physicians predicted he Jerry." He added that Grossman "was like an Old Testaliberal credentials by origi- had only days left. "He had an incredible role ment prophet, who warned us nating the idea for the Oct. 15, 1969, Vietnam Moratori- in the creation of the modern of the folly of man and helped um, which drew an estimated Democratic Party in Massa- create a pathway for the avoid100,000 antiwar protesters to chusetts and the country," said ance of catastrophe." The Boston Globe
Boston Common in the what
U.S. Senator Edward Markey,
was then biggest demonstration in city history. By then, however, his political roots as a peace activist and opponent of nuclear weapons ran deep, and he had never shied from quixotic crusades. In 1962, he managed the independent U.S.Senate campaign of H.
who spoke at Grossman's memorial service on Dec.22. "Jerry's political resume wasn't just a list of jobs and positions, it was a declaration of principle," Kerry, a former longtime senator who is now
Stuart Hughes, a Harvard professor who lost resound-
Born in 1917, more than a year before the end of World
War I, Grossman developed liberal intellectual leanings as a teenager. "I somehow began reading The Nation magazine when I was 14 years old," he said in a 1996 interview. "I've
always been an avid reader. They had to throw me out of service. the library." Recalling his own ambition A fter g r aduating f r o m to run against Philbin in 1970, Harvard College in 1938, he secretary of state, wrote in a letter that was read at the
ingly to Ted Kennedy, even Kerry wrote that "Jerry then while the Hughes candida- was the principled Pied Piper cy drew attention to Gross- of progressive politics — but he man's passion for nuclear was also the boiler-room strat-
became executive vice presi-
disarmament. Then came the 1970 cam-
egist and tactician for whom no detail was too small." Al-
who had been a port commissioner. But by 1956, the young-
paign for the state's Third Congressional District, when
though Grossman persuaded er Grossman wrote prophetihim to step aside in 1970, Kerry cally in an anniversary report
Grossman promoted the an-
wrote he was "determined that
tiwar candidacy of the Rev. Robert Drinan. The Boston
if ever I ran for office again, I wanted Jerry Grossman in my
College Law School dean defeated 14-term incumbent Philip Philbin in the Democraticprimary and went on to serve inthe U.S. House, victo-
dent of Massachusetts Envelope Co., the business run by his father, Maxwell Grossman,
of his Harvard class that he
had "developed a strong interest in politics, and have tried to further my point of view by
corner. And boy, was I lucky to have exactly that across the action whenever possible." decades ahead." For more than 35 years, unEven though Grossman's til he stepped down from the legacy reaches from state pol- presidency of his family's comries that helped usher into of- itics into Congress and the pany and sold his interest to fice a wave of liberal Massa- president's cabinet, he was his brother, Grossman juggled chusetts Democrats, among equally adamant about stop- politics with work, a family them Barney Frank and John ping war and reducing the and a host of community activKerry, who at Grossman's threat of nuclear arms. ities in Newton, Mass. urging stepped aside in the caucus that led to Drinan's
1970 insurgent run. "The Drinan victory over Philbin was a defining moment in the history of progressive politics in Massachusetts," said state Treasur-
New Year's Holiday Deadlines
er Steven Grossman, who is
PAID OBITUARIES
Jerome Grossman's nephew. "Jerry Grossman was such
Wednesday 1/1 .................. Thursday 1/2......................
an extraordinarily important political figure and had such a transformative effect of
Massachusetts politics," said Frank, who served in the U.S.
House for 32 years. Grossman, who concisely summed up his extensive progressive politics resume in two words by calling his 1996 memoir "Relentless Liberal," died Dec. 18 in the
DEATH NOTICES Wednesday 1/1 ............... Thursday 1/2...................
DEADLINE .... Tuesday 12/31 10 a.m. .... Tuesday 12/31 10 a.m. DEADLINE ..... Tuesday 12/31 11:30 a.m. ..... Tuesday 12/31 11:30 a.m.
The Bulletin
Obituary Dept. 541-617-7825
SUNDAY, DEC 29, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
CALIFORNIA NEWS
Trees
Researchers daim 1.88 in ama es romRim ire
Continued from B1 Another option is hauling or any of the four transfer stations around Deschutes
County and tossing the tree for free. "We'll take them at all
By Matt Stevens Los Angeles Times
for Deschutes County De-
partment of Solid Waste. While the department
LOS ANGELES — A recent
study commissioned by the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission estimates that
fielded a couple calls about
damages from the Rim fire on
tree disposal late last week, the rush of trees has yet to
the natural environment and
start.
The landfill takes the trees until Jan. 31. Both the Boy Scouts and the folks at Knott Landfill ask people to turn over a clean tree, with no stand,
vironmental benefits," carbon storage and the asset value of propertynear where the fire burned. Researchers from E arth
The 410-square-mile Rim fire — larger than the moro recent Simi
Economics found that between
Valley fire pictured above — was reportedly sparked Aug. 17 by a
$100 million and $736 million
hunter's illegal campfire in the Stanislaus National Forest.
Dan Steinberg /The Associated Press file photo
was lost in environmental benefits, between $102 million and
$797 million was lost in carbon would probably last for destorage, and fire-related private cades, as massive trees were propertyvalue loss ranges from wiped out and habitats of rare $49.7 million to $265 million. specieswere severely altered. David Batker, executive di- Officials have since debated the rector of Earth Economics, said best way to handle the largest researcherscouldn't or didn't recovery effort the Sierra Nevaestimate some "values" from da has seen. the ecosystem such as a fire's President Barack O bama impact on the water supply or signed a disaster dedaration earlier this month for the state
quality damage. He added that of California, making federal the results arebased on satellite funds available for recovery only 84percent contained. As a result, he said the estimates were "very, very conservative." "The actual damage will be larger," he said. "No doubt
• NortheastBend —541-385-2672 • SoutheastBend—541-385-3942 • LaPine —541-385-3971 • Redmond —541-385-3989
mentum after New Years," Centola said.
lar amounts on losses in "en-
data taken when the fire was
• SouthwestBend —541-3853977 • Norlhwest Bend — 541-385-2692
"It definitely picks up mo-
to property value could total between $250 million and $1.8 billion. The preliminary assessment released last month places dol-
efforts related to the Rim fire.
The Earth Economics report
"By assessing the
Bend.
His troop alone expects
postable material is not very
around Central Oregon
productive," Centola said. Mason, with Boy Scout
should gather about 8,000 trees. At$5pertree thatmeans
troop, said Robert Gardemann, assistant Scoutmas-
ter for Troop 60. His troop
street," he said. "Just on your
is joining with two others to
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the Scouts may bring in about $40,000. The moneycollected by each troop supports that
Public Utilities Commission
I
i
camp, which can be up to $300 per person. "We need thousands (of dollars) to get to camp," he said.
— Alison Anja Kastama, spokeswoman, San Francisco
•0
•
Scouts to week-long summer
more than a dozen troops
9 a.m. the day of collection. "We don't want it in the
Jerry Brown's request for the disaster declaration. On Friday, Alison Anja Corps of Engineers and the Kastama, a spokeswoman for U.S. Forest Service must now about it." the San Francisco Public Utili- conduct cost-benefit analysis The 410-square-mile fire ties Commission, said its inclu- before embarking on projects. — the state's third l a rgest sion "supports the recognition Spending a few million dollars on record — was reportedly of natural capital values." on tree-thinning in the Stani"By assessing the impacts of slaus National Forest, he said, sparked Aug. 17by a hunter's illegal campfire in the Stanislaus the Rim fire, this report high- may appear more appetizing National Forest. It scorched lights the greater dollar value when the costs of fire damage swaths of forest, burning into we can assign to our natural to the environment are better the northwest portion of Yolands, which are a critical por- known. "There is a sea change right semite before it was fully con- tion of our water system," she tained in late October. sald. now for federal agencies," he Experts at the time said the Batker said that federal said. "This is just the tip of the ecological effects of the blaze agencies such as the Army iceberg."
A
Most of the money will go to covering the costs of sending
water system."
was included in California Gov.
•
as well at the four transfer stations in Deschutes County, will take trees brought in for no charge until Jan. 31. haul in trees from southeast
to collect about 1,500 trees in its section of town. In all,
critical portion of our
• Landfill: Knott Landfill,
it from the street."
lights, ornaments, tinsel or flocking. "We use them for compost, so all that noncom-
people putting trees out for Scouts to collect affix a plastic bag with cash or a check and put it near the closest road — not in an alley — by
highlights the greater dollar value we can assign to our natural lands, which are a
• Sunriver — 541-385-3935 • Yard tfebris cart:BendGarbageandRecyclingcustomers with curbside yarddebris service may cut the treeinto three or four piecesandput it into the cart. During Decemberand January they'll also need tocall 541-382-2263 for a pickup. • With thegarbage: Bend GarbageandRecyclingcustomers without curbside yarddebris service mayput their tree out with their garbage,next to the garbage cart, on their pick-up day during theweekof Jan.6. It will be hauledoff for a $5fee.
property, where we can see
Troop No. 25, also asked that
impacts of the Rim fire, this report
• Sisters — 541-385-2640
Time forthe Christmastree to go? There'sa variety ofoptions for Christmas-treedisposal in and aroundBend. • Boy Scouts: Scouts come by your homethis weekendor next and takethe tree for a suggested $5 donation. Troopswill be cruising neighborhoods in Bend, aswell as LaPine, Redmond, Sisters andSunriver. Call andleaveavoicemail at the number listedbelowfor pickup in your area:
the tree to Knott Landfill
of our facilities," said Chad Centola, operations manager
the loss of health because of air
Tossingthehee
B5
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, DEC 29, 2013
W EAT H E R Maps and national forecast provided byWeather Central, LP ©2013.
I
i
i
'
I
• I'
iI
I
• Today: 1 Partly cloudy
5
Tonight ydly I dy
LOW
48
31
FORECAST:5TATE •
-Astoria
,
49/3
Seasideo
—I
- mf37- I-
l.incoln Clty- 1
0 35/28
• Meacham
COTV~IIIS i
35/27
. Warmlprfngs•
-
3420
Florence• 5448
•
Coos Bay
48/31
o Br ers 46/ 4 •
C emult
Silv e r
-Grants-
•
• lieacli
ntario Mostly cloudy in the north and o partly cloudy in lNyssa the south.
Riley
Yesterday's stateextremes
Jordan Hey
43ll 7
Frenchglen
Lake
Porgorford
—
39/26
Rome
44/1 9
"
•
Medfdrd
Yesterday' sw eatherthrough 4 p.m .inBend Tomorrow Rise Mercur y....7:55a.m......4:31p.m. High /low... ...........45f25 24 ho ursending4p.m.*..0.00" Venus......836am......610pm. Remrdhigh........62in1967 Monthtodate.......... 202" Ma r s......1219 am.....1206 p m. Remrd low.......... 1 in1983 Average month to date... 201" Jupiter......459 pm......818a m. Average high..............39 Year todate............ 660" Satum......342 a m...... 1:41 pm. Average low...............23 Averageyeartodate.... 11.17" Uranus....11:47 a.m.....12:16a.m. BarometricPressureat4 P.m30.36 Remrd24hours .. 2.30 in1945
• Burns
Christ
'•
43/21 4 3/21
Sunrise today...... 7:40 a.m. MOOnphaSeS
the south.
46/33
Roseburg 6
-
Valeo
• 65'
4423
Paisley
Brookings
42/23
Chiloquin 46/22
•5
• Klamat
•
McDermitt
0
Baker City
39/16
INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS
-o a
triiiltcyfbvdf
azrs/39
• Calga
,
25/23
• 85'
• 2.49"
g
San Fr cisco 63/4
Mobile, Ala.
ag
-2/-8
2 05
It L k City 32/16
(
Kansas Citr 19/7
oma ity
42/23
I
Phoenix
Tijuana
/17 o
4os los
Chihuahua
20s
La Paz 73/60
rtland
6
atoa a~
40/27
~4 3 4 zfd
'f d Hi'+3 L
,
4f
• ' s dh.II-a ad+4dti 5
tfttfe Rock' 51/26
t
d
53/35 3 61/44 •
d
$4 A'
IBofri d a
65/40
80 2 2 ' Miami 82/72
Monterrey 66/43o
Mazatlan • 78 /63
Juneau
35/30
,
ustoli
62/32
60s
-os
+
d
olum us 34,4!d~=",~>
~
Sos
4
6 1
• 4a41/24
74/44
H AWA I I
Anchorage QS 24/20
33/1
"W ,m
68/4
8
ic'a'gri
St. Loui 34/8
2QS Ibuqu e r q
o
82/67
5/-5 '
,
e
4+++ +
"htro,.t 4 0 / 13 d
sy
TB/0
• w~
Honolulu ~
dr Moine
Denv 34/2
57/39
~ CO
Rapid Cft H 20/1 5
sy
"
21/1
12
Sd di
OS TOs
a
t. Paul
O~~h~
L osAngele I ~
73/51
-os
Che~enne
H
Vegas
Thunder Bay -4/-2
Bismarck -10S
Boise 35/21
Q ueb
Winnipe -1 8/-24
Billings 29/20
ra 43/34
Punta Gorda, Fla. • 1 30 Langdon, N.D.
Saskatoon
•Seattle 46/38
iin the 48 contiguous states):
vwwv
o~ o ~o
addfy yr dr
Yesterday's extremes
FRONTS
BC7A LA SKA
Sunsettoday.. " 4:35 Prn Sunrisetomorrow .. 7:40a.m. Sunsettomorrow... 4:36 pm Moonris etoday....4:268m
New First
F u ll Last
Jan.1 Jan. 7 hn 15 Jan g3
*Melted liquid equivalent
ULTRAVIOLET INDEX ~ SKI REPORT
OREGON CITIES
Yesterday Sunday M onday The higher the UV Index number, the greater Hi/Lo/Pcp H i /Lo/W H i /Lo/Wthe need for eyeandskin protection. Index is City Precipitationvaluesare 24-hourtotalsthrough4 pm for solar at noon. Astoria ........ 47/37/0.01 .....49/37/c..... AB/41Ic Baker City .37/5/0.00....32/1 8/pc......33f21/c Brookings 65/38/0.00..... 60/41/f.....54/39/pc Burns.......... .43/6/0.00.....40/16/s......40R2/c Eugene 39/35/0.00....40/33/pc......50/36/f Klamath Falls ...46/1 3/0.00....40/1 7/pc.....40/20/pc Lakeview....... 43/21/0.00.....41/18/s.....43/22/pc La Pine........ .48/9/0.00 .....46/18/s.....49/17/pc Medford 32/28/0.00 ....38/29/pc.....39/28/pc Newport 48/34/0.00....54/39/pc......51/42/c North Bend.....52/36/0.00....55/38/pc.....53/37/pc Ontario .30/6/0 00..... 25/16/f.....30/23/pc Pendleton 43f27/ 0.00....35725/pc......38729/c Portland 45/37/0.00..... 43/34/f..... A7/37/c Prineville 44f20/0.00.....47/28/s......50f30/c Redmond 46/19/0.00....47f25/pc......53f28/c Roseburg 39/35/0.00..... 46/36/f...... 47/35/f Salem 46/33/0.00..... 40/34/f...... 48/36/f Sisters......... 47/21/0.00.....45/2Ns......51/28/c The Dages 4432/0.00....3431/pc......35/31/c
Ski report from around the state, representing conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday: Snow accumulation in inches Ski area Last 24 hours Base Depth Anthony Lakes ....... . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . . . . 42 Hoodoo....... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Mt. Ashland.................0.0...no report
1 L
MED IUM HIGH 4
6
8
1(i
Snow levelandroadconditions rePresenting condi tions at 5 P.m.yesterday. Key:T.T. = Traction Tires.
ijmbe~rirne 00 2g warner canyon........ . . . . . .0.0... no report Pass Conditions W igamette Pass ....... . . . . . . 0.0... no report 1-5 at Siskiyou Summit........ Carry chains or T. Tires 1.84 at CabbageHig.......... Carry chains or T.Tires Aspen, Colorado....... . . . . . . 0.0.... ..28-32 Hwy. 20 at cantiam pass ...... Carry chains or T. Tires Mammoth Mtn., California.....0.0... . ..18-30 Hwy. 26 at Government Camp.. Carry chains or T. Tires Hmi 26at Och~o Dlvlde..... Carechains or T Tlres Squaw Valley, California.......0.0... . . .19-21 Hyd e 58atWigameuepass.... (arrychainsorriires SunValleY idaho....... . . . . . . 0 0 . . . . . .1519 Hwy. 138 at DiamondLake .... Carry chains or T.Tires Hwy.242 atMcKenzi e Pass........Ciosed forseason For links to the latest ski conditions visit: For up-to-minute conditions turn to: www.trip«he«k.com or call 511 www.skicentral.com/oregon.html Legend:W-weatherPcp-precipitation, s-sun, pc-pariial clouds,c-clouds, hhaze, shshowers, r rain,t thunderstorms,sf snowflurries,snsnow, i ice,rs rainsnowmix,w wind,f fog, dr drizzle,tr trace
JRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL
wv w o a a w f
53 31
SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE
25/I6
2 606
49/2 — Clescent • Lake h Crescent • Fon Rock ~19 48I2(l
56/38 •
•
45/23
Oakrfdgd i
JIe'
• Pa lina ellzt
47/25
Sunlylver
- ym/33
5438
IIedmnnd
48R8 •
Eugene•
HIGH LOW
51 30
Mostly cloudy in the north and partly cloudy in the south.
EAST
Unity
HIGH LOW
53 31
WEST
partly cloudy in
32/1 8
43R6
HIGH LOW
54 34
PLANET WATCH T E MPERATURE PRECIPITATION
in the north and
Baker C
Cam Sher n
HIGH LOW
BEND ALMANAC
Mostly cloudy
33/1 9
342s Union
•
Partly cloudy
CENTRAL
Josep
La Grande•
•
. Camp ~
Albany
• 34/1 7
39/23
47/31
3027
Enterpris
35/25
Ruggs
Maupin
Government.''
•
Saleri
NeWpnrt
•
42/30 •
Mcfuljnnvgle' ':
Biggs
Sa~nd
49/29
IJ WJ/32
3026
River The '•
38R9
Tflfamooko
Umatiga
Hood
48/41 ••Cannonryeachg
Partly sunny
2
Cold W arm Stationary
CONDITIONS y+++4 •
* * 66 yt d 8 y* * * * * d d 4 '** * * * 8 e *
Showers T-storms Rain F lurries S now I c e
Yesterday Sunday Monday
Yesterday Sunday Monday
Yesterday Sunday Monday
Yesterday Sunday Monday
City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hyi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene1X......54/37N 00.. 37/Jiypc.. 43/27/s Grand Rapids... A6/33N.00 ..32/11/sn.. 1N7/sn RapidCi(y.......47/10/0.00..2$15/pc.. 32/16/c Savannah.......63/40N.(N... 68/45/r. 62/41/pc Akron ..........52/35N.00 .. 44/22/rs.. 2413/c Green Bay.......3N14000. 21/10/sn...2/10/s Reno...........49/20N.00... 46/24s. 51/28/pc Seattle......... 49/41Itrace...4N3Nc ..45/41Ic Albany......... A6/26/0.00 .. 41/2Nrs.. 2N7/pc Greensboro......55/23N00... 46/35/r. 51/31/pc Nchmond.......62/27N.00... 5N3Nr. 4427/pc Sioux Falls...... A416/0.00..-2/-12/pc...8/-5/sn Albuquerque.... A6/22N.00 ..42/23/pc.. 45/24/s Hamsburg.......57/24000... 4N29/r. 3922/pc RolhesieNY... r, A432N.00.. 442iyrs. 20/15/sn Spokane.......2N22/trace...33/25/c .. 3425/c Anchorage......241 7N00..242Npc. 26/17/pc Hartbrd,CT.....5N22/000... 4N31/r. 3913/pc Sacramen to......70/30N.00... 63/3$s .. 63/35/s Spri ngfi eld,MO ..5427N.00...29/9/pc..29/2$s Atlanta ........ A6/36/0.61 ..52/39/sh.. 50/JNc Helena..........49/16/001...35/23/c. 4l/28/sn St. Louis.........61/36N00... 348/pc.21/15/pc Tampa..........79/640.00... 75/58/t. 72/56/sh AtlanticCity.....55/23N.iN... 53/38/r. 43/26/pc Honolulu........83/74000 82/67/pc .. .. 81/65/s Salt Lake City....29/1 7N00..32/16/pc. 32/20/pc Tucson..........66I39/0.00... 65/37/s .. 67/4$s Austin..........61/33N.iN..62/31/pc.. 49/2$s Houston........60/45/0.00..65/4$pc. 51/34/pc SanAntenio.....58/46/0 00..66/33/pc .. 5432/s Tulsa...........58/33N.IN..30/13/pc.. 35/22/s Baltimore.......58/2N0.00... 42/35/r. 39/26/pc Huntsville.......47/33/0.22... 51l32/r. 37/22/pc SanDiygo.......67/53N.00... 74/52/s.. 73/53/s Washington,DC.57/3M.00... 44/37/r. 40/26/pc Billings ........ A6/14/000... 29/2Nc. 35/22/sn Indianapolis.....53/31 N 00...42/1 4/c. 21/13/pc SanRancism....63/40/000... 61/43/s.. 62/44/s Wichila.........5427N.00..23/12/pc.36R2/pc Birmingham.... A6/41/088.. 53/35/pc. 45/26/pc Jackson, MS.....47/42N.83.. 59/37/pc. 46RNpc SanJose........6$35/0.00... 64/38/s.. 66/39/s Yakima.........4%17N.00... 30/23/c.. 3425/c Bismarck........ 36/2N 00....-7/41/5...5/14/c Jacksonvile......65M0.02... 74/49/t. 694Npc Santare....... A6/21/000..3415/pc.. 39/1Ns Yuma...........68ISBN00... 69/46/s.. 71/46/s Boise...........36/1 5N 00..35/21/pc. 37R7/pc Junmu..........35/30N.33... 35/30/c...34/29/r INTERNATIONAL Boston......... AB/27N.00... 41/33/r. 38/15/pc Kansas City......57/33N.00...19/7/pc. 28RNpc Bridgeport,CT... AB/29N.00... 43/34/r. 39/19/pc lansing.........44/30N.00... 33/7/sn.. 17/3/pc Amslerdam..... AB/37/0.01 ..40/33/sh. 42/41Ish Mecca.. ........93/75$.00...83/63/s.73/5Nsh Buffalo .........41/35N00..42/17/rs.18/14sn LasVy Nas .......6N44/0.00... 57/39/s .. 60/39/s Athens..........62/54N.07.. 59/44/pc.. 58/47/c MeximCity......68/46$00 ..69/48/pc.. 68/45/c Burlington, VT....35/24/0 00.. 36/25/rs.. 25esn Lexington.......5M1/000... 48R4/r. 31/16/pc Auckland........72/57/000..73/57/sh. 74/61Ish Montreaf........36Q3N00 ..30/21/sn.. 21INpc Caribou,ME......3N4/0 00...11/7/sn.19/-1Nsn Linmln..........6N27/000....12/5/s. 2913/pc Baghda d........63/35N00..6NSS/pc.57/50/sh Moscow........3428/ON... 30/29/c .. 32/27/c Charleston, SC...65/34000... 7N45/r. 61/42/pc Little Rock.......SN33N00..51/2$pc. 36I25/pc Bangkok........79/61N.00...87/63/s .. 85/63/s Nairobi .........77/57N(N..75/57/sh.7N5Qpc Charlotte........55/21N 00... 52/39/r. 55/30/pc LosAngeles......71/540.00... 73/51/s .. 75/51/s Beiling..........3$25N.00 ..31/18/pc.. 35/24/s Nassau.........79/75N.IN ..81/74/pc...7903/t Chattanooga.... AO/29N.l 2... 54/33/r. 40R4/pc Louisvile........52/3NO00... 4$23/c.29/17/pc Beirut ..........79/61N 00..59/5Nsh. 5N4Npc NewDdhi.......64/45/0(N... 68/48/s. 7552/pc Cheyenne.......47/23N00..30/19/pc.41R9/pc Madison, Wl.....42/25000. 21/-11/sn....3/-8/c Berlin.......... AN43N.00 .. 3934/r. 36/31/pc Osaka..........45/32/0.00 ..39/39/pc. 44/42/sh Chicago.........50/33N.00...33/1/sn .. 11/3/pc Memphis........49/34000..51/2$pc.36/?5/pc Bogota .........7N45N.00 .. 75/49/pc...67/52/t Oslo. ...........43/39N.27..35R4/pc.35/33/sh Cincinnaii.......53/27N.00... 47/22/r ..2N17/s Miami..........80/72/0.14... 82/72/t. 81/66/sh Budapest........5$32N.00...38/35/c.40/36/sh Otlana.........36R3N 00..37/1Nsn..21/6/sn Cleveland.......54/39N.00... 43/1 7/r. 24/16/pc Milwaukee......42/25N00.. 26/4/sn....8/-2/c BuenosAires.....95/68/0.0010204/pc.99/66/sh Paris............5443NA6...39/34/c. 42/41/sh Calorado Springs.62/240.00 .. 30/15/pc.. 45/25/s Mfnneapofis.....4N1 9N00..:2/16/s .. -1/15/c CaboSanLucas ..7$57/0.00... 76/57/s .. 79/59/s Rio deJaneiro....93/75N.iN... 89fl6/t. 9N76/sh ColumbiaMO , ...55/31N00... 25/4/pc. 21/17/pc Nashvile.......A6/26N04.53/25/pc. 38/19/pc Cairo...........6N54N.00... 62/48/s.66/4Npc Rome...........5%39N.00... 58/47/r .. 56/41/s ColumbiaSC....57/28N.00... , 63/41/r. 57/35/pc NewOrleans.....52/46/1.14 .. 61/44pc. 58/37/pc Calgae...........9/ON04..25R3/pc... 30/1/c Sanliago........93/59N.00... 92/65/s .. 89/62/s Columhys GA.. A6/40/1.06... 58/3Nc.. 55/33/c NewYork.......55/3(N.00... 47/36/r. 39/2Npc rancun.........82/70N.00... 81/73/t...82/73/t SaoFaulo.......BN72N.00... 84/69/t. 79/7iysh Columbus,OH....52/32/0.00... 45/22/r .. 27/1 7/c N~ri(Ni:;:;;:STRaO'.00'..".46/358. '4UINp Dublin..........43/36N.00..4N39/sh. 45/43/pc Sapporo........3N25N.11... 27/22/c.. 31RNc Conmrd, NH......43/9N.00.. 38/25/rs.. 31/4/pc Norfolk,VA......59/29N.00... 63/40/r. 48/32/pc Edinburgh.......43/39N 00..38/36/pc. 41/37/pc Seoul...........27/140 00..33/15/pc. 37/18/pc Corpus Christi....64/48/000.. 70/41/pc. 53/39/pc Oklahoma City...6532/0.00 ..3N17/pc. 3424/pc Geneva.........43/30N.35 .. 36/22/rs.35/33/pc Shanghai........41/27/000... 41/34/s .. 4N35/5 DallasFtWorth...60/35/0.00..41/24/pc.. 42/28/s Omaha.........SN27N00.....8/0/s. 20/1Npc Harare..........81/64/1.14 .. 79/61/sh. 71/6Nsh Singapore.......86/77N.00 .. 87/77/sh. 83/76/sh Daytlm .........53/35/000..43/19/pc. 26/15/pc Orlando.........77/66/0.01... 80/58/t. 74/5Qsh Hong Kong......57/4!/0 00... 5N53/s.. 61/52/s Stockholm.......43/39N.00 .. 39/33/rs. 35/34/pc Denver..........59/32/000 ..3421/pc. 51R7/pc PalmSprings.....72/51/0.00... 74/49/s.. 74/49/s Istanbul.........61/ai/0.00...ai/43/c ..49/45/c Sydney..........81/66/0.00 .. 72/7Npc. 77/66/pc Des Moines......51/30$00.... 5/5/s... 11/4/c Feoria..........53/31/0.00.. 29/-2/pc.. 154/pc Jerusalem.......61/50N00..53/41/sh .. 51/44/c Taipei...........61/48/0.00 ..55/54pc. 5$55/pc Detroit..........47/31N.00 .. 41/13/rs.. 20/9/pc Philadelphia.....SERN0.00...46/33lr.40/23/pc Johannes burg....77/61N 01.. 71/56/sh. 6$53/sh TelAviv.........75/59N.iN ..61/47/sh.. 6N50/c Duluth..........31/22/000...-3/22/s ..-3/27/s Phoenix.........67/46$.00... 6N44ls .. 7545/s Uma ...........77/66N.00...77/65/c.77/65/pc Tokyo.......... AB/36/0.00... 42I33/s .. 44/37/s El Paso..........57/22/0.00 .. 52/3Npc.. 52/30/s Pitisburgh.......51/3$000 ..41/21/sh.. 23/16/c lisbon..........55/aiN.00 ..5N44/pc.. 57/SNc Toronto.........37/36/0.00 .. 37/12/rs...1N9/sf Fairbanks........ 2/-22N.00 ..-7/-17/pc.. -9/-23/s portlanytME.....37/1$000 .. 40R7/rs.. 32/5/pc London........ AN34NOO...38/36/c.47/41/sh Vanceuver.......45/39/004..45/39/sh...43/41Ir Fargo........... 35/1N 01 ..-10/ 24/s. 4 25/pc Providence......5N23N.00... 4433/r. 40/1 7/pc Madrid .........52/43N.38 ..4432/pc .. 46/33/c Vienna......... A6/39N.02 ..41/35/sh.. 39/3Nc Flagstalf....... A6/18/0.00... 38/1 6/s.. 45/21/s Raleigh.........59/25/0.00... 55/37/r. 54/33/pc Manifa..........88ITTN.00 ..83/74pc. BN74pc Warsaw.........50/32N.00 ..41/35/sh.. 35/33/c
WASHINGTON NEWS
Socialist prepares for council
America Hears
ByKirkJohnsoit
HEARING AIDS.
New York Times News Service
SEATTLE —
P eople are
rroyploe ryyyop/eydd-or Better Establlshed 19FS
used to liberals running things around here. But nobody reckoned with Kshama Sawant.
Sawant, a 41-year-old economics teacher and immigrant from India, who took a left at
liberal and then kept on going — all the way to socialism. When she takes a seat on
Seattle's nine-member City Council on Jan. 1, representing the Socialist Alternative Party,
Grand Opening g >
ISVttGH t IAISII46THE
II AGEl NSEATTLE I S16/' O U H RIOEDIATE IMLO IIIGt|IEELEj"0 TH E ;IIVCO unelLSHO U LDjt
Join our Grand Opening celebration and get a pair of 32 channel Freedom SIE
she will become one of the few elected socialists in the nation,
Kshama Sawant, rlght, who supported raising the minimum wage
a political brand most politi-
to $15 an hour for all workers In Seattle durlng her campaign, is
cians run from.
poised to assume her post on Clty Council Jan. 1.
Hearing Aids with a 3 Year Warranty for only
Ted S. Warren /The Associated Press file photo 4
00PAIR
But Kshama Sawant hearti-
ly embraces the label. Ask her about almost any problem fac- Murray said. one way, sometimes another. ing America today, and her anSeattle Republicans, mostly Asked about Boeing, which swer will probably include the watching from the sidelines, is in a standoff with its biggest nSu word as the best and most also see a trend to the left. They union and is threatening to exreasonableresponse.Socialism sayasocialistonthe City Coun- pand outside its historic home is the path to real democracy, cil will probably fit right in. base in the Puget Sound region, "I don't think she differs that Sawant said the company was she says. Socialism protects the environment. Socialism is the much from other council mem- guilty of "economic terrorism" besthope foryotmgpeople who bers,u the chairwoman of the by "holding not only Boeing have seen their options crushed King County Republican Party, workers but the entire state's by the tide of low-wage, future- Lori Sotelo, said of Sawant. economy hostage to their endless jobs in the post-recession The spotlight on Sawant, as less desire for profits." economy. one of only a handful Of selfOn the idea of a $15 mini"The take-home message avowed socialists to be elect- mum wage, though, she was for the left in general is that ed to a city council in a major more subtle. people are looking for altema- American city in decades, exMurray recently announced tives,u she said in an interview, pertssay,could be intense.Her the creation of a committee of discussing her victory over a party has supported Ralph ¹ business executives, labor leadveteran Democrat by a margin der for president, but its website ers and politicians, including of 3,100 votes of about 184,000 also links to the writings of Bol- Sawant, that would develop cast in a citywide contest. shevik leader Leon Trotsky. It recommendations for increas"If you ask me, as a socialist, ptit up municipal candidates in ing the minimum wage and what workers deserve, they Boston and Minneapolis this report back to him early next deserve the value of what they year, though none won. year. "If she remains only an activproduce." Asked if she mightbe co-optMayor-elect Ed Murray, a ist, she'llbe aone-shot wonder," ed by sitting on a committee former state senator and a lead- said the Rev. Rich Lang, pastor alongside a representative of er of Washington state's drive of University Temple United the Chamber of Commerce, to allow same-sex marriage, Methodist Church in Seattle Sawant responded, "I think promised support for an idea and a Sawant supporter. But if that should always be a conthat was central to Sawant's she moves too far toward the cern. But if we're serious about campaign: a $15 minimum center, "she'll be shot down fighting for the interests of wage in the city, matching the from the left as a compromiser," workers, that means engaging highest in the nation. He said he said. "There's tremendous with people who don't agree u u in an interview that he saw
momentum in cities across the country in addressing income inequality. "The commonality is the expressionof a progressive impulse based on the s~ g middle, as more people slip into poverty and as more wealth is concentratedin fewer hands,"
pressure on her. Withme. So s h ould an ele c ted Sawant drifted away from 2 1st-centttry s o cialist h a r k computersoft ware engineer-
back to the old Marxist pas- ing and began studying ecosions of labor and capital or nomics, which she now teaches more toward the welfare-state at Seattle Central Community model of market regulation College. She lost her first run and high taxes on the rich? for public office two years ago Sawant, during the inter- when she challenged a Demoview, sometimes responded crat for a state legislative seat.
$799 due at at time of purchase, receive $400 rebate after completion of 30 day trial period. Offer valid thru 12/31/13 vSEEIV
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5 41-213-2 2 9 4 Monday through Friday 9:00 am to 6:00 pm Saturday by appointment only 547 NE Bellevue Drive Suite 4105 • Bend, Oregon
www.americahears.com
yo
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Milestones, C2 Travel, C4-5 Puzzles, C6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, DECEMBER 29, 2013
O www.bendbulletin.com/community
NICARAGUA
Corn Islands are truly magical
t'®'f
,' Ia
By Colleen Kinder
,
Special to The Washington Post
The lobster trawlers bob
like toys in a bathtub,tipping to and fro with every swell
of gray sea. I watch from a crowd of Nicaraguans about to board the day's last
panga, or public ferryboat, wondering whether the storm is as bad as it looks.
The word I keep overhearing is "angry." In Spanish, English and a Creole that sounds like English fhpped mside out and set to a beat, everyone's calling the sea — our only highway — angry. Such is the medley of languages 40-some miles off
e
the coast of Nicaragua, on the Corn Islands. For cen-
turies, these two landmass•
•
•
es — faint crumbs on the
•
-
•
Caribbean map — had little
•
to do with mainland Nic-
•
aragua. They were pirate territory, coconut-tree-lined
refuges for the likes of the ruthless privateer Captain
Morgan. It wasn't until 1894that
Nicaragua claimed these fringe islands, but with
no roadways linking the capital to the marshy east-
ern coastline, the Corns remained a world apart. To this day, islanders still bear
surnames such as Quinn and Campbell, playmore reggae than salsa, and every August, aroundthe 27th, the daythe slaves were emancipated, they crown
another localbeauty island queenla at a festival featuring crab soup. There's a Big Corn and a Little Corn, and the travel-
er's first quandary is to pick her Corn. I say quandary, because these islands are different in both style and
scale ("big" means 6,000
• Downtown Bend's iconicTowerTheatre celebrates a decade ofmusic,arts, comedy,celebrities and more
A
Ryan Brennecke i The Bulletin file photo
the employees, board members and volunteers ofthe Tower
about Little Corn, the writer sounded a little shocked
by how totally the place
10th anniversary of the downtown Bend theater's grand-reopening in 2004. Over the past decade, a wealth jttajtje scre e nings there. Literary events of performers, singers, actors and • Ray h ave b rought major authors to the comedians have entertained Bend soiiey's Tower stage, including Augusten audiences from its stage. ie P ou l A e topTower B~ough A Tower audiences have heard Theatre Lamott, Khaled Hosseini and Kathbands including country singer rnoments' ryn Stockett. Local theater groups Jo Dee Messina, South African a f;3 have staged productions of "Chicago," "1776" and "A Christmas Carcapella greats Ladysmith Black ol" there, among otherplays. Mambazo and folk legends including Peter Yarrow and Ramblin' Jack Aft e r his thrilling decathlon gold-medElliott. al victory in 2012, Olympian Ashton EaHollywood has also come to the Tower: t on, a graduate of Mountain View High
Actors who have appeared on its stage in- School in Bend, was honored with a clude Sam Waterston, Gregory Harrison, homecoming parade that concluded at
Submitted photo
Crowd Control," at the Tower Theatre in March 2010, and returned to present it in 2012.
John Waters, Ed Asner, Tom Dugan, Mi-
chael Learned and Molly Ringwald. BendFilm Festival has always held
t h e Tower, on whose stage he later met with fans.
See Tower /C2
TowerTheatreattendancesince2004 2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
1,136
20,440
40,586
55,385
49,373
38,628
41,848
42,537
45,052
51,530
Corn cast aparticular spell. But watchingpalm trees bend back in the rainy wind, I wonder: Do I reallyneed to sleep in Eden tonight'? Do I even believe in one? Aplace
so calmit could chill even me out? I'm good at motion; I get off on reachingthe map's outer edge. Hunkering down under a pretty tree once I get there, however, is
alot, lotharder. "Hurry!" Our captain cuts off my doubts and sends us
all running with fire-drill panic toward our thrashing panga boat. I'm seasickbefore it leaves the dock. My seat puts me between
ajumpy man and theopen sea. Tryingnot to look at the great girth and rolling height of each graywave, I clutch the flapping plastic brella, very ready to hear "land-ho." At last, the captain takes
aim at a skinnyband of beach, and we're told to leap off the back of the pan-
ga, toward the kelp-strewn sand. Someone points out
(Jen. 30 to June 30)
0® 43
calmed him. Clearly, Little
tarp that is our boat's um-
Since re-opening in 2004, theTowerTheater has hosted more than1,700 events with a total overall attendance of419,251. Sixty-three percent of those events werefull, and overall 73 percent were non-profit events. Numbers arereported by fiscal year, which endsJune 30.
events 93% nonprofit
often turbulent sea. My plan was to depart for Little
s we bid farewell to 2013 and prepare to usher in a new year,
Theatrehave theireyeson another impending date:Jan.30,the
ComedianCash Levy filmed his comedy special,"Cash Levy:
1,000) and what separates them is about 10 miles of Corn as soon as mypuddle jumper landed on the bigger island. The reason was simple: In every story I'd read
By David Jasper• The Bulletin Marty Stuart, center, and his bandmates perform for the crowd at the Tower Theatre in 2011.
people; "little" fewer than
the sunset, but heads are
112
events 70%
nonprofit
Source: Tower Theatre Foundation
204
events 79%
nonprofit
249
events 84% nonprofit
245
events 78%
nonprofit
185
events 76%
nonprofit
174
events 56% nonprofit
179
events 60% nonprofit
159
events 61% nonprofit
184
events 71%
nonprofit Andy Zeigert/The Bulletin
down, nausea pervasive. I take a quick look: The sun is a gold blotch, bleeding pink into the wooly wreath of clouds. It could hardly look more distant, well
on its wayto the west of Nicaragua. SeeNicaragua/C4
C2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, DEC 29, 2013
M II ESTON +
Formsforengagementw,eddinga,nniversary orbirtltday announcements areavailableat TheBulletint,777SW ChandlerAve v Bendo,r by emailingmilestones@bendbulletin com. Forms and photos must be submitted within on month of the celebration. Contact: 541-383 0358.
' L7
MARRIAGES vy
7
/ s
v
e . r(~ r
,,s;I
4jy
Chelsea Newby and Jordan Crump
KelseyHolmberg and Jason Adams
Annie Neikirk and Brent Clifford
Newby —Crump
Holmberg — Adams
Neikirk — CINord
Biomedical Sciences at Colorado State University. She
Chelsea Newby and Jordan works as a veterinarian. Crump, both of Seattle, were The groom is the son of married Dec. 4 in Chiang Mai, Eric and Karen Crump, of EdThailand. A reception is set for monds, Wash. He is a graduate March 1, 2014, in Seattle. of Meadowdale High School The bride is the daughter in Lynnwood, Wash., and of Dr. Norwyn and Barbara attended Whatcom CommuNewby, of Bend. She is a 1996 nity College in Bellingham, graduate of Mountain View Wash. He works as an operHigh School, a 2000 graduate ations manager for McCloud of Colorado College, where Construction. she studied biology, and a The couple honeymooned 2005 graduate of the College in Thailand. of Veterinary Medicine and They will settle in Seattle.
ANNIVERSARY 'e
W!
e
Master of Arts in Teaching.
Kelsey Holmberg and Ja- She works as a science teachson Adams, both of Bend, er for Redmond High School. were married Aug. 10 at AnThe groomis the son of Mschor Heart Ranch in Bend. A
reception followed. The bride is the daughter of Dave and Madeleine Holmberg, of Bend. She is a 2000
tain View and a 2001 graduate
son, N.C., where she studied
Builders.
biology, and a 2007 graduate The couple honeymooned in of Southern Oregon Univer- Hawaii TheywillsettleinBend.
movie theater, it hosted count-
That's not to mention the children's entertainment, film
less film screenings over the
screenings, singalongs and
also served as host to amateur hours, fashion shows and
decades that followed, and recitals on the small stage be-
neath its screen. But by the early 1990s, the theater had fallen into dis-
repair. Ownership changed hands, and at one point an office and retail space had
raise capital and refurbish, retaken in all those entertain- open and run the Wall Street ment offerings. In Septem- gem. (The City of Bend had ber, the Tower welcomed its purchased the theater prior to 400,000th customer, Tom its restoration, and the Tower Griffin, of Bend, on the dos- Theatre Foundation agreed ing night of the musical com- to repay the $445,000 puredy "Spamalot," produced chase price with no interest. by Stage Right Productions The foundation paid $145,000 of Bend. (As of 'Ihesday, the in 2001, and pays $6,000 per Tower counted attendance year on the remaining balof 420,000, according to Ray ance, which is now $240,000, Solley, Tower Theatre Foun- according to Solley) dation executive director)
Edsel and Lea Colvin
Back in the late 1990s, the
Colvin Edsel and Lea (Pennington) Colvin, of Madras, will celebrate their 65th wedding anniversary at their annual family
reunion in Madras during Memorial Day weekend.
ana) Colvin, of Happy Valley; seven grandchildren; and six great-grandchildren. Mr. Colvin served in the U.S. Army during World War II. After graduating from the University of Oregon, he was a teacher, principal and super-
The couple were married Dec. 23, 1948, in North Bend.
intendent of Gold Beach Union
They have three children, Penny Colvin (and Curtis Hayden), of Ashland, Catherine Colvin (and Terry) Luther, of Madras, and Paul (and Di-
his retirement in 1985. Mrs.
High School from 1948 until Colvin worked as a homemaker, worked for the Gold Beach pharmacy and volunteered as a 4-H leader.
BIRTHS Delivered at St. Charles Redmond David Zobrist and Jamie Turner, a girl, CadenceMarie Zobrist, 7 pounds, 2 ounces, Dec.15. Benjamin Gehring snd Jennifer Conrady, a boy, LoganParker Gehring, 10 pounds, Dec.17. Joseph and Crystal Scott, a boy, Jovani Bronc Rider Scott, 7 pounds, 3 ounces, Dec.16. Orion Tickel and Marisss White, a boy, HunterJamesTickel,6pounds,
14 ounces, Dec.17. Csmeron snd Ashley Swanson, a boy, Cashton JamesDeanSwanson, 6 pounds, 9 ounces, Dec.21. Alan and Ivs Riley, a boy,Connor James Riley, 8 pounds, 3.9 ounces, Dec.19. David snd Kelly Teller, a boy,Titus Nathanael Telfer, 7 pounds, 8 ounces, Dec. 20. JorgeGomez and DanielleKeys, a boy,XavienDanielKeysGomez, 5 pounds,15 ounces, Dec.21.
By Lynn O'Rourke Hayes The Dallas Morning News
"The Food Book" (Lonely Planet, $24.99) offers a colorful journey through the cultures and cuisines of 42 deli-
cerned citizens with a vision.
According to architect John
cious destinations. Inspired by
"restoration." The right word is renovation. Back when it
was a 998-seat, single-screen & Design, which handled the movie theater, moviegoers Tower's redesign early last encountered travertine mardecade, the Tower's rebirth ble at its entrance, and neon "came tobe through the co- lighting that led down its operation of a dream list of 40-foot "Tower" sign into the people who represented the front entrance of the building. local government, state govKvapil calls that look"sparernment, federalgovernment, tan" by comparison to today's COCC, the Downtowners, the Tower, which he designed. downtown business commuEarlier this month, Kvapil nity, the larger business com- took a seat at a computer at munity, individuals, individu- D KA A r chitecture & D e al donors, interested citizens," sign's office i n N o rthwest he said. "All of those people Crossing. He said he creatwere active at a critical (time) ed a PowerPoint slideshow ... it was not one single group chronicling the r enovation that made it happen." in part because "people were The theater had been built saying, 'Nice restoration job,'" in 1940 in the late art deco off- he said. "And we said, 'No, Kvapil of DKA Architecture
n 3 cr a
con3
Wedding-Event Showcase ' Saturday, January 11, 2014 1pm-7pm Redmond Comfort Suites Hwy. 97/Yew Ave
Italy. Carb-loving kids
2 • will feel right at home
amid 200 types of pasta, not to
History and renovation
If you're talking about the proud theater may never have seen one more patron were Tower Theatre in f ront of it not for the efforts of con- Kvapil, don't use the word
A global diningcompanion
Hosted by In The Garden 8 Comfort Suites Inn
V
mention the pizza and crusty
bread that abounds. While each region has its own blend
• Tour theFabulous Honeymoon Suite & Guest Suites at Comfort Suite Facilities
of flavor and style, food is at
the nearly900-page volume, the core of this country's culLonely Planet's editor-at-large, ture. And, says Wolman, alEmily Wolman, offered these ways save room for gelato. tips for planning culinary adventures with kids. A sample: Mexico. Tacos are familiar
• Visit with our Redmond vendors, enter the
drawings for amazing prizes • Mini Makeovers
3 • to many Americans, but
China. From snappy stir- the cuisine found in the heart• fry to spicy soups, food is land of Mexico is likely to be central to religious and social a surprising fiesta of the senslife inthis vast country. Afami- es. Fresh produce and vibrant ly favorite, the iconic dumpling, combinations are the norm. is a staple in most regions. Wolman recommends seeking out The book also includes tips the xiaolongbao in Shanghai. on each country's must-sample
• Sample delicious gourmet foods and cakes
1
Wolman a ls o
way. In 1997, the Tower Theatre Foundation formed to
• Photographers on-site to take your photo and chat about your next event
AN
l i o>Iedina. (ovefy &i n 7 imu$e seIIiny
r e commends specialties and those to avoid,
getting comfortable with chop- as well as information on local sticks before leaving home. dining customs and etiquette.
•
•
•
u ate o f
W e s t view H i g h
School and is currently attending the University of
The bride is the daughter of Craig Neikirk, of North H awaii-Maui, where he i s Bend, and Sandra Croyle, studying sustainable science of Coos Bay. She is a 2003 management. g raduate of N o r t h B e n d The couple honeymooned High School and is currently in Bali, Indonesia. attending the University of They will settle in Maui.
Continued from C1
entertainment, discourse, art and music. Thousands of patrons have
e
lowed at A n dara Resort's Silk Restaurant in Phuket.
shoot known as streamlined we didn't restore it. We gutted moderne. A shoebox-shaped it and completely re-created it
er has been, for the past 10 been in the plan, until efforts years, a community center of to save the theater got under-
r
Hawaii-Maui, where she is studying sustainable science Annie Neikirk and Brent management. She is also an Clifford, both of Maui, Ha- entrepreneur. waii, were married Aug. 18 The groom is the son of at Wat Kamala in Phuket, Mat and Gloria Clifford, Thailand. A reception fol- of Bend. He is a 1997 grad-
Tower
tures, fundraisers and more. In other words, the Tow-
>p
Heis a 1997graduate of Moun-
of Oregon State University, High School,a 2004 graduate where he studied business. He of Davidson College in David- isthe owner/operator ofArbor
presented here. The space is also rented out for meetings by nonprofits and other organizations and has been used for weddings, parties, lec-
ees
cilla Martin, of Bend, Steve Martin, of Bend, and Howard and CarolAdams, of Newport.
graduate of Mountain View
other events that have been
eb
sity, where she received her
aisles on either side that are small and low overhead ... and
then you walk 10 or 15 feet and then you walk in and boom! It "'Really? You're kidding,'" he opens up," he said. "They took said. Kvapil shows his slide- out the ceiling and exposed showto Tower volunteers, new beams, and all of a sudden board members and others "to there's this big cathedral-like familiarize them with how the place with this big prosceniTower came to be originally, um arch and box seats in the how it met its demise and how balcony and it has a sense of it came back miraculously," he 'Boy, this is like nothing else in said, noting that sometimes, Bend.'" undocumented history gets The renovated theater also rewritten after those who had includeda largerbasement and been there move on. orchestra pit with a motorized Kirby Nagelhout Construc- lift and an expanded lobby tion Co. began working in area. Large glass panes in the November 2002, jackham- front windows were replaced mering constantly in the ear- with smaller individual panes, ly months as work was done more in line with the art deco on the basement and giving a look. steeper slope to the floor than To Solley's thinking, the a movie theater required. 0th- changes put the Tower more er changes included a stage on par with classic theaters in anew." Often, the next words were
door that wa s i n stalled in the back of the theater along
other cities.
"The idea of a movie theater Brooks Street so crews could in the 1940s ... in bigger cities, unload equipment and access was you walk in and you've the stage area. gone away from the world. Despite months of jackham- You'veexited theworld. You've mering and construction, not gone into a f antasy land. once did neighboring busi- You've gone into a an art deco nesses complain, said Kvapil. showcase. You've gone into an Prior to the project, the Tower's Aztec temple. You've gone into square footage was 10,432. To- an Egyptian tomb," Solley said. day, the theater, which seats "All those things were really 466, clocks in at 13,630 square big theaters back in the 1940s. feet, So when they built this one, it "The Tower sign is the one was partially that. But when thing on the exterior that is ex- they renovated it, it really beactly the way that it's always came that. It became a special been," Kvapil said, yet even place off of Wall Street." that was restored with new Continued next page neon lights. The renovation also saw the installment of new box seats
and a raised ceilingthat, Solley said, adds to the dramatic ef-
HIGH DESERT BANK
fect upon entering the theater. "You walk down these little
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SUNDAY, DEC 29, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
Ny Top Tower Noments(sofar!j
From previous page
who wants to play guitar for a few minutes. (Visit www.
Uses andusers "It's
t owertheatre.org f o r
ing the entertainment options at the Tower.
do in an intimate, classy set-
ED ASNER'S PARTING WORDS Ed Asner launched my first season at the helmof the Tower in October 2009 with a sold-out, one-man performance asFDR.As he was leaving the venue, Ed pulled measide, put his hand on myshoulder, leaned into my faceand, in Lou Grant style, softly growled: "You takecareof my theater for me,OK?" I've tried to keepthat promise every day since.
'OUR'OSCAR WINNER Sure, Octavia Spencer richly deserved the 2012 Academy Award asBest Supporting Actress in "The Help." But during her acceptance speechall I could think of was theevening nearly two years earlier when she lit up theTower stage, reading excerpts with her friend andauthor Kathryn Stockett at the Deschutes Public Library's 2010 "A Novel Idea."
ting," Solley said. "It is always going to be — because it was designed this way — special." Back when the Tower reopened, then-foundation di-
"I would love to see us move
t oward s om e
like to have more dance, both
contemporary and ballet. I would like to have a couple of good dramas ... maybe ones that are touring," he said.
rector Patricia Iron told a Bul-
letin reporter, "It can be used for lectures, plays, music concerts, business meetings,
" Down the line, I think w e need to move toward provid-
wedding receptions. The use is only limited by the renters' imagination." Since it reopened, though,
ing the kind of performing arts that aren't being done locally, or are being done in some shape and form in oth-
the Tower has transitioned
from its early vision of being a rental facility used by outsidegroups "into a presenter and provider of top-quality performingartsfrom across the region (and) the world," according to Solley. Audience members find their seats for the 2011 "Winnie the Pooh" children's show. Matthew Bowler served on
er cities, and we just have to make sure they come here,"
he said. He'd also like the Tower to Submitted photo
"The guy is a national treasure," Solley said. "He was channeling FDR." With an improving economy, Solley is hopeful that additional underwriting, sponsors and donations will allow the Tower to bring bigger
board shortly before the theater's reopening. At the time, "You had a foundation and a
board that was in fundraising mode, the purpose of which
names at reasonable prices.
The Tower is a s pecial room, Solley said. When
was to renovate an historic
building. They weren't structured ... to operate the theater.
Manhattan Transfer played
Their focus had been on reno-
in October, "The place was
vating the building." The board had anticipated,
Iammed to the rafters. It was
a big New York-style show, w ith projections and t h e whole thing. That couldn't be done anywhere else in town."
"that would allow us to improve the theater and its ex-
Granted, "this venue is such that if you don't fill the place
perience once we became op-
up, it feels awkward," he said. " But there's a vibe i n t h at
erational ... because until we
WORLD'S BEST ATHLETE It's hard to top Ashton Eaton, Central Oregon's Olympic gold medalwinner, addressing thousands in front of the Tower,andthen signing autographsand posing for pictures onour stage for hours afterward.
HOME TOACTORS, SINGERS,DANCERS
I've got a montageof memories: Actors from Cat Call, 2nd Street, CTC,BEAT, Shore Thing Productions. Singers from countless choirs, schools, chorales and clubs. Dancers taught by Mrs. Marcelle's, Academie de Ballet Classiqueand Gotta Dance.All sharing post-show hugs, flower bouquets andfamily photos in the lobby. Thememory of being part of theTower now belongs to them. SURPRISE CELEBRITY LastApril, the firstskit of our first major fundraiser — "TheBendFollies" — was a parodytitled "What's the Little Caesar Lady really listening to on herheadphones?"When dancing-and-waving Mary Barackmanmadea surprise appearance atthe end of the sketch, the audience exploded with a spontaneous, boisterous standing ovation. Mary's contagious smile beamed through a Ia!t' fewtears Of Ioy. Submitted photos
Mary Barackman does her trademark dance for the audience at "The Bend Follies" in April.
become operational, we don't genuinely know what our
room, and when it is full, the vibe is there."
needs will be," Bowler said.
L I SP
S
P A V E
S A M S D P A B A S W U M A G S L E T S M E A N G O S P U R C I T E A N T D OE S T R A S T I GH E R A T R A Z O I NA N
N E A D E E F A C C O B E T T O N S S I T U D A S N R A S P U P A I N E T T A T I S S N S T S P O O E L R L I E L O
That fund helped update the
"It's important to note that the Tower's success really is a re-
theater's sound system when the need arose.
"The other thing we did is
we said, 'When we first open
Submitted photo
Audiences line up for the Best of BendFilm in October. BendFilm is one of the Tower's long-term users, and is scheduled to use the Tower for its 11th year in 2014.
our doors, we're going to focus exclusively on rentals. We're not going to be a nonprofit that produces its own events.'" There are risks to contracting with performers when there's money involved, Bowler said, and additional theater
ther gone out of business, or and usher at events. The num- tered the above sentence, was it would have had to raise its ber of annual volunteer hours more than a little enthused. "Can I buy my ticket now?" prices." shot from a total of 2,584 hours "As the theater evolved into in 2008 up to 4,047 in 2012. she said. an entity that produced its own Solley marvels at how well In the much nearer future, shows and started fundraising the Tower has held up over the as part of t h e a nniversary staff would have to be hired again, it was able to offset the last 10 years. celebration, which will con"It's getting old!" he said. tinue throughout the year, the as well, folks with expertise gap ... (and) maintain finanin booking acts and tech- cial viability," he said. During "The carpet is still the original Tower has scheduled "Bend nical skills such a s s ound his time on the board, Bowler carpet. The paint's the orig- Guitar Blast," an eight-day engineering. found that "the community inal paint. The seats are the celebration of the six-stringed Those were risks the board was delighted to have this as- original new seats. It's incred- instrument that includes conwas reluctant to take in the set. I think, broadly speaking, ibly well done. We've put in certs, clinics, classes and first two years. the users of the facility were new audio.We've put in new more. It begins during First "So it was a conscious de- really happy," he said. video. We've put in new sound Friday Gallery Walk (Jan. cision that said, 'Let's get our Nonprofits have always monitors and speakers. We've 3), when the DIY guitar fest feet wet by being a rental fa- used the facility, from Sunriv- put in new lights. Most of the will welcome anyone onstage cility only,'" Bowler said. That er Music Festival to BendFilm things I'm listing have been allowed the Tower Theatre and the Education Foundation done in the last three years." Foundation to debug opera- for Bend-La Pine S chools, SOLUTION TO The future tions before going into event Solley said. "Basically TODAY'S SUDOKU production. three-quarters of our users are Tower v o l unteer S u s an Over 2004 and '05, the con- nonprofits. That includes usPope became downright ex3 57 6 9 2 1 8 4 I stitution of the board shifted we're a nonprofit, so we're in cited recently when she heard 2 16 4 5 8 3 9 7 from members who had been that mix, but that's one of the Solley had already scheduled 8 49 3 1 7 6 5 2 focused on fundraising and purposes of the building." the return of political satirists creating infrastructure into Capitol Steps, a group that has 1 83 9 2 4 7 6 5 I Frequent flyers one that was ready to take sold out the room in the past. 6 94 1 7 5 2 3 8 ) "I've got them booked for on theater operations and Deschutes Public Library 7 25 8 3 6 4 1 9 production. has been one of the Tower's the week beforethe presiden4 32 5 6 9 8 7 1 "You had people who had longest running users, along tial election in 2016," he said, 9 71 2 8 3 5 4 6 I been on the board a long time with BendFilm Festival, which laughing. who had reached the point where they felt it was better for
them to step down. They had been working away for five to 10 years and they'd reached a point where they wanted to go and do different things. And they brought a different skill set ... because it was becoming an operating company instead of a fundraising company," Bowler said. In keeping rental rates affordable in order for non-
holds screenings at the Tow-
using the Tower. Solley and
Protect Your Face From Winter's Dryness!
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tions as "frequent flyers." Chantal Strobel, community relations manager for Deschutes Public Library system,
7ry & 41-<rnaeuy
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the operating cost, he said.
SBld.
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Over the years, the Tower's
relied on hundreds of volunone of two things would have teers who work on fundraising happened: It would have ei-
O L D I R I S H
SUDOKU IS ON C6
Tower for their events next year, which will be their 11th
profits to use the facility, "The rental rate is below "So if the theater had continued to run on rental alone,
5 68 7 4 1 9 2 3 :
Pope, who said "Yes!" ex-
er. Both organizations are actly five times as Solley utalready contracted to use the
ater and 'A Novel Idea' is our community read — a perfect pairing we hope continues for at least another decade," she
C H T A B G I R T E E T A L E C S E X T E D P G N E O T E R C L R O T A A U L S S P L A T T T E R H I T E M O U R A N R E S T R E A M
Former chair Bowler thinks
M~ R hhr
SOLUTION To TODAY'SLAT CROSSWORD A D H O C E V I L T E E T E R T IM E
host more one-man shows, a la Ed Asner's performance in "FDR."
the board from 2003, was the chairfrom 2007 to 2009 and saw that transition firsthand. He was invited to join the
al, needs might shift, and had even created a reserve fund
Submitted photo
t h i ng s t h a t
would enhance the performing arts community. I would
however, that once operation-
Decathlete Ashton Eaton speaks in front of the Tower in 2012.
mo r e
information.) Solley envisions diversify-
t he c enterpiece of
Bend's performing arts. It's for anything that you want to
By RaySaBey Executivedilector, Tovver Ttleatle Foundation
C3
I
0
flection of the commitment of the community to supporting its art and culture," he said.
"It's not just one person or a small group of people that have allowed the Tower to
succeed. It really is, I think, a reflection of the community
as a whole. It's something we should all be very proud of." — Reporter: 541-383-0349, djasper@bendbulletin.com
SOLUTION TO TODAY'S JUMBLE
Z951KX Answer: PELLET R E VOLT NU T MEG FATHOM A P IECE P E R M IT
Charging $50 for each prediction allowed the fortuneteller to make
a-
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C4 T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, DEC 29, 2013
s ir up . P'
Ifyou go
WHERE TOEAT • Lobster Inn
GETTING THERE From Managua, LaCostena (www.lacostena.com.nil flies to Big Corn Island, stopping briefly in Bluefields. Reserve well in advance. Theonly transportation to Little Corn, about 30 minutes away, is via public panga boat, weather permitting. About $4.50 one way.
011-505-8927-0710
A seafood restaurant run by a charming local family, right off Little Corn's main footpath. Place your lobster order early in the day. $8 to $15. • GSG (Hntel) Brig Bay South, Big Corn Island 011-505-575-5262
The best place to sample rondon, the Corn Island specialty. $12 to $15.
WHERE TOSTAY • Casa Iguana 011-505-8361-3762
WHAT TODO
www.casaiguana.net Simple but charming cabanas, plus a dining room andlounge, all facing the beach onLittle Corn Island. Rooms from $35. •Yemnyn IslandHideaway 1-303-800-1943 www.littlecornhotel.com The first upscale hotel on Little Corn Island, described as "eco-chic," offering 16 cabanas on the waterfront. Rooms from $300. Photos by Colleen Kinder for The Washington Post
The port of Big Corn Island is bustling, with fishing boats, lobster trawlers and launches ferrying the islanders who work on the boats.
Nicaragua
• Dive Little Cern 011-505-8856-5888 www.divelittlecorn.net A dive shop directly on Little Corn's main footpath, offenng the full range of rental gear for snorkelers and divers alike. Trips arranged daily, and night dives are also possible, conditions permitting. Snorkeling $15-20 per person; diving $35; fishing $100.
INFORMATION ANDDETAILS www.bigcornisland.com
pincers, no shell whatsoever in s
Continued from C1
tt ~
my coconut broth. That's my first praise for how Corn Is-
,f
z'~ 5 c,~„' <
The wonder of the waves There are no cars on Little
Corn. No buzz of motorcydes, no throttle or honk of any sort
landers cook lobster. They un-
derstandthat the cracking and peeling, all the labor of flavoring, should be done behind the scenes. Nobody wears a bib
disturbs the air. You hear just
here, or finishes with a moist
two things as you wind around the cement footpath that is this island's only t horoughfare: the crash and withdrawal of
towelette. I just slice each lobster morsel into four more, to savor as slowly as possible this expertly slow-cooked stew. I patter back to my ho-
waves. W aves awoke me early, in a
cerulean blue shack perched above the southern shore of Little Corn. Such is lodging at Casa Iguana, which borrows well from the palette of Corn Island homes — creamypurple, cool turquoise, the deep yellow of ripened mango. It's tucked back in a carefully manicured jungle, where hibiscus vines dome over damp dirtpathways.
tel room, lobster-hued, lobster-full. Without bothering to
Flip-flops serve as signposts on the footpath wrapping around
Harris Downs, a resident of Little Corn Island, prepares a freshly
Little Corn island.
caught fish for cooking.
ing American rap, Latino pop and Bob Marley like a radio on
around, but I do find men drinking 11 a.m. beer in the
scan.
shade. One of them is Harris,
There's something familiar about my dynamic with My shack-for-one, rustic and these two, and I put my finger yet so ready for me (flashlight, on it only after we've wedged mosquito net, three novels in a through barbed wire fences, pile), invited the delusion that crossed a cattlepasture, and I could just stay here and live, lobbed bruised mangoes up at overlooking an empty beach. a tree until it gave us the fresh So did the mood at the com- ones, and we're standing bemunal dinner. A r i ngleted low a lighthouse that Ronald blonde onthe staffhanded me and Richard gently dare me
from the other side of the island, which felt like a great coincidence, until I
your way, right when you're tempted to call a place perfect?
The love of lobster I'm encasedin red heat by
third-largest export is lobster,
and the bulk of it, according to
the island" was what we'd call, anywhere else, "next door." Little Corn is little more than one
freckles are menacingly dark. Quick movements hurt. I give up all ambitions of meeting the island beauty queen and finding the descendants of
square mile. I beam at my old friend (Har- pirates, and let the end of my ris!) and he responds in kind, journey be about one thing: offering to take me snorkeling. lobster.
a basil mojito, then plantain
to climb. Childhood: It all re-
What makes hospitality in the
chips (on the house!). The catch of the day was cooking somewhere, as guests pattered in, barefoot. A Californian named Blake struggled to tell me when he'd arrived — "Ittesday?" How soon I could feel the complete
minds me an awful lot of life
dissolve of home's priorities.
no innocent dare, though. You
Corns so disarming is how un- that brings the flesh of fresh called for, in context, it feels. In lobster together with the milk a place this idyllic, no one has of local coconuts, simmers the to be nice. And Harris certain- pairing in garlic and herbs, ly doesn't need (nor will he ac- adding a full medley of Cencept) my $20 bill. He owns both tral American starches and a hotel and the lobster trawler sometimes, another whole on the horizon. Is it possible? fish. It sounds to me like a
at age 11. Maybe that's the sort
of paradise I'm in the mood for, more than the Eden of escape, the one that loops you back to a
simpler, playful time. The Little Corn lighthouse is
Was it ludicrous to ask about dimb it the way you would a a wireless signal here, where ladder — straight up. And if you fireflies beaded the darkness happen to have just peeled a and pirates once strung up sticky mango, it feels more like hammocks? three grip-resistant ladders, I did, only to wish that I
hadn't. The last thing one should gaze into from Little Corn Island is a full inbox. I
shut the hotel laptop and drifted back toward the dinner table, where everyone was talking scuba. Corn Island travelers chat about diving conditions the way bankers discuss stocks
— everything here hinges on the clarity of the sea. A non-diver, I couldn't get into it, so I wan-
dered off into the inky dark
dinner that I'll one day tell my
snorkel'?
grandchildren about.
The men in the shade set down their beers, rise to their
I pick a hotel on the basis of the owner's culinary reputa-
palette — but right now, bare-
the muscles of a sailor, Harris is scraping the scales off a yellowtail snapper, as the waves curl toward the sand just behind him. Anative of the island,
stock: no hotel pools, no tennis
the morning. It's early — profanely early — when I step outside. With
neither a watch nor a phone, I read the only available time
clues: bare feet dangling from hammocks, and a few toes peeking out from shored boats. It's the crack of dawn on Little
Corn Island. H arrisis the first alert person I meet. An older man with
synchronicity of b allerinas, and my hands shvtch right out.
"Children can run around with-
Apparently, I want to pet them.
Yemaya is under construction,
out the scare of cars." The foot traffic is gentle
I'm told, but the plans sound small-scale, unlikely to upset
Richard.
the marbled waters that dis-
Harris spots a barracuda, and that's enough to get me as I step back onto the path, the island's treetop-to-rooftop wriggling back into the Sea and without meaning or try- ratio. Prince. Besides, my time is ing, I merge with Ronald and My gaze drifts offshore, to short — I'm catching the afBoth 21, both wearingbaggy tinguish Corn Island beaches jeans to their shins, and both in photographs. It's a curious members of an Afro-Caribbe- patchwork of navy and aqua, an group called Garifuna, Ron- like two different oceans, about aldand Richard could passfor to mix hues. But the contrast twins. Their native language, a only intensifies as the sun does; mix of Arawak, Carib, English, bymiddayit's a stunningpatchFrench and Spanish, speaks work, some mirage of the sea, to how many cultures fused or in my case, a summons to alongthe Atlantic coast of Cen- slip underwater. keep up with these polylingual Corn Island snorkeling
young men. Ronald and Rich-
www.AgateBeachMotel.eom
continental shelf spreading around the Corns. The kitchen door swings open, and my rondon floats toward me. I see no pink legs, no
hivate, vintage,ocean~front getaway pf' e w port,tRO 1- o~o~-7s5-s674
1;„ateBetl(hmOtel
Qes"'Qa
I
onto the barstool of the hotel restaurant after noon, I'm told to wait. I remember the warn-
ing I read on a local tourism Web site: "Order before you're hungry." Someone r eally should clarify: Order a full day before you're hungry. Two bar stools down sits
C liff, a l umberjack of a n American, here to study the practices of lobster divers on Big Corn. Who better to prime me for my feast? We talk about the life span of the lobster: the
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turns past me with the clean
Harris assures me that I've courts, nothing taller than two come to the better Corn. Why? stories. A boutique hotel called
tral America. It's dizzying to
Cliff, comes from the shallow
feet, and push Harris and me tion, overlooking its position back to back. off the beach in a motorboat beside a fish-processing plant. "Take your time, take your calledthe Sea Prince. The plant's constant thrumtime," coos Ronald, ahead of The water glints with so ming reminds me that I'm me. Moving slowly is an ex- much light that I have to visor now on the "working island," pectedtheme on any Caribbe- my eyes with one hand, and it's as people call Big Corn when an island, but I have to wonder, clear enough to count the mus- differentiating between the the sixth time Ronald repeats tard-coloredpatches of corals, two isles. I'm willing to forgo his mantra, whether slowness to see every ripple in the white both scenery and serenity for is more like a virtue on the sand below. Hours from now, I a taste of the best lobster stew. Corns. will feel like a cooked lobsterRondon cooks so slowly I'm doing okay until the the skin on my back the most that I have to put in my order brightness strikes. A wash of alarming shade of pink in the at breakfast. Still, when I slide light means that we've cleared
— Colleen Kinder is the author of "Delaying the Real World"and teaches travel and essay writing at Yale.
There's a dish called rondon
Could Harris just care that I
the tree line. We are higher foot and bikinied and leaning than the tallest coconut trees on forward on the tipped-up bow Little Corn Island. of a speeding boat, I feel like Take your time, take your the Sea Queen. I don't tell Harris about my time. My breathing gets loud, my phobia of ocean swimmingpauses long. At last, my sticky a fear of fish (and worse) nibhand finds the platform. It's bling at my feet. I don't have round and towering, like a to, it turns out, because snorcrow's nest. keling in water this dear is the Inhaling, I taste salt — the perfect cure. Head submerged, ocean is that dose. Land hogs I can see it all, the swerving so little of this panorama, the is- and darting and breezy waftland's outline hugging us tight- ing of every size of fish. How ly. Little Corn is a single com- silly: to think that my plain ma on an otherwiseblue sheet. white toes could garner any Many other things keep this attention down here. A school Corn feelinglittle, and the light- of jet-black fish with long whishouse is a prime place to take kers and shimmeryblue stripes
toward my abode, intent on exploring Little Corn first thing in
20 years that it might spend clicking across the ocean floor before venturing into a Corn Islander's trap. Nicaragua's
r e mem- the time I reach Big Corn. New
bered that the "other side of
hit the lights, I fall right into the local pose, napping with my bare feet dangling off the bed, finally under some kind of spell.
ternoon panga boat back to
Big Corn. This bothers Harris. "You'll haveto come back,"he says, shaking his head at my haste. But as I scamper down the beach and grab a loaf of coconut bread from the little pink house that everyone agrees is the place for the baked variety
of "coco food," I feel secretly as if I got it right. Perhaps the
perfect time to leave is just be-
W alk downthe beach; look fore the sunburn shows, before ard salute passersby in Creole for a boat; find the guy who the waves dull into white noise, ("Yow bigs!"), echo back a few takes out snorkelers; bring $20. before I run into Harris a third holas, and flip between singThe snorkeling guy isn't time. Maybe it's best to get on
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SUNDAY, DEC 29, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
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By Lance Tapley Special to The Washington Post
We spotted the cow moose
j
through the trees not more
than 40 feet away. Maury Eldridge, our semiofficial expediiion photographer, threw off his pack and skis and churned through the deep snow to get
Brian J. Cantwell / Seattle Times / MCT
Bartender Leah Mark serves up tasting flights on the frosted counter at Maui Brewing's brewpub in Hawaii.
Maui breweryadds tropical touchesto beer
closer.
In his eagerness, Maury lost his balance and fell backward. T he enormous animal
ad-
vanced on him, thrusting her outsize muzzle down to within a few feet of his camera, as
Maury bravely dicked away. Then the moose ambled to his
By Brian J. Cantwell The Seattle Times
backpack, stomped on it twice and trotted off down the trail.
If your tastes tend more
toward hops and malt, Maui doesn't disappoint.
She had made her point. This exciting, if risky, encounter occurred on the final day of a five-day, 40-mile
On a hot day, find some-
tour through the remote Chic Chocs Mountains of Quebec's Gaspesie National Park. For me, though, the most im-
powder through the trees. In the f i nal m i l e b efore
portant encounter on this trip
reaching a tiny cabin where we
thing really cool at Maui Brewing Co.'s K ahana brew pub: Take a perch at the bar and look along its back edge for the frostrimed, refrigerated strip just wide enough to set your beer glass and keep
was with myself. I'd had misgivings about going on the trip even after I'd
expected the others to stop for
it pleasantly cold no matter
lunch, I decided to see whether I could steam ahead. I was tired of always being last. Despite my age, I had a teenager's competitiveness.
how long you stay. It's an invention nicely suited to
cross-country hut-to-hut skung
;
Photos by Lance Tapley for The Washington Post
The view in Gaspesie National Park, Canada.
accepted the invitation frommy Montreal friend Mike Evans. It wasn't that we were neophytes. Mike and Clement Chayer,
W hen Maury paused to take
also of Montreal, had done the trek before.Maury and my college classmate Chuck Benson, both from Massachusetts,
a photo, I accelerated. By the time I arrived at the shelter,
tropical Hawaii.
Ifyouoo Maui Brewing hosts brewerytoursat2,3and4p.m. every Thursday andFriday, and at10:30 a.m.,11:30 a.m. and 12:30 p.m.Saturdays. $10. Reservations: 808-661-6205. Tasting room openTuesday-Saturday. The brewery and tasting room are at910 Honoapiilani Highway, Lahaina. The brewpub is at Kahana Gateway Center, 4405 Honoapiilani Highway. Mere information: www .mauibrewingco.com
My wife and I shared tasting flights (eight little sipping-size beers) along with Happy Hour pizza slices ($1.50, 3-6 p.m. daily). Black Rock Dip sandwich,
and I were also athletic and
LanceTapley'sformer collegeclassmate Chuck Benson heads
the sweat was pouring into my eyes. To my perverse pleasure, the rest of the group seemed
had experience in the winter
down a trail in front of La Nyctale hut in Canada's wilderness.
surprised to see me arrive first.
which made me want to
and Adult Mac 'n '
Maury appeared 15 minutes
lick my chin.
later.
• Coconut Porter, wi th a definite toasty coconut flavor.
with andouille sausage, mushrooms, provolone and Parmesan cheeses, garlic and truffle oil, $19. You can also tour the brewery, which includes a small t asting room, just off t h e highway in Lahaina. The $10
mountains.
But we were getting — I'm reluctant to sayit — old. Mike, then 71, had had a heart attack a few years earlier and had stents in his ar-
Le Huard (The Loon), I lost my hill around. Its summit was just But I was wiped out, almost balanceon an icy patch and in two miles away and a modest shaking. The crew, including the tumble cut my forehead on
a metal ski edge. I was still surteries. Maury, 63, had so little prised by my reduced sense of cartilage left in his knees that balance. while skiing, he wore polio-vicThe roomy cabin — on a tim-style braces on his legs. Not small lake, peaks all around long before our trip, Chuck, 68, — was brown dapboard and had passed out after a collision insulated. Spring water poured with another downhill skier. from a pipe sticking out of the I didn't know Clement, but he snow. Our packs had arrived, was 65. and a fire smoldered in the I wondered most about my-
self. I was 68 and had recently had knee-cart ilage surgery. I still limped from time to time. I
was afraid of not being able to keep up. But I suspect that we all felt we were in a race against
time to squeeze in as many outdoor adventures as possible.
The gathering O n a Sunday night i n mid-February, we gathered in a tidy new chalet near the northern edge of the 198,000-
acre provincial park that encompasses many of the small but bare-topped mountains of
the Gaspe Peninsula. The chalet was part of the Relais ChicChocs, a resort 12 miles inland
from Cap-Chat, a town on the St. Lawrence River's south shore.
Clement, a stocky man with an instantly disarming manner, handed beers to Chuck
and me as we came through the door after our day-long drive from my home in Maine. Trout and homemade fruitcake followed. In the morning, we deposited our big backpacks on a sled hauled by the park outfitter's snowmobile, which each morning took them to the next
3,773 feet in elevation.
Faced with poor visibility, though,Chuck, Clement and I eventually decided to turn back. "Everything looks alike," Chuck said in his quiet way. Maury and Mike pushed on, making it to the summit and
cided to descend by himself to
roasty American ale.
guided tour includes tastes of
• Aloha Bak'Tun, a Belgian-style stout made with
all the production beers, plus a token good for a beer at the brewpub. Useful tip for the tourist: In
ahead. When I di d l eave three-quarters of an hour lat-
• Lahainatown Brown, a
local chocolate and chili (yee-ha!). • Bikini Blonde, a light Hawaiian, "Okole Maluna" German-style lager. means "bottoms up!" • Big Swell IPA (for your own personal hoppy hour). • Lemongrass Saison, a Belgian-style brew made with Maui lemon grass ("Oh, that's odd," said my bendbulletin.com spouse). The brewpub's hanging light fixtures are made from old beer kegs. Menu
Find It All
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s pecialties
Approaching the first hut,
Carouge.
tracks that our friends had left
climb Mont Logan, the tallest
as they'd swept down in the
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and we skied together to Le
CROSSING
Later, Clement wrote me in an e-mail:'Yes, I am slower.
Aaeard-urinning neighborhood on Bend's
Yes, I get tired faster. But, yes, now I know how to appreciate this wilderness."
Maybe this was something that I, too, was finally beginning to learn.
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At the new hut, we were more tired than we'd been the
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a change in the weather.
C heese,
beforedark. I needed to restby the stove, so I told them to go on
But I was touched to see them,
to catch up with the rest of our eveningbefore.After supper, team. hut. All we had to carry were however, as we massaged and First, though, in solitude, I daypacks. For me, used to tot- stretched our sore musdes, we gazed out upon the white and ing heavy packs in the Maine found the energy to talk about blue of the river and mounwilds, this was unaccustomed politics — the Canadians found tains beyond. I was amazed to luxury. American politics appallingsee a small helicopter thudding The sun was bright, the and tell stories of our travels. over the hills toward me. It temperature mild. We headed Maury and I were the only landed nearby in its own small south on a snowmobile high- ones who weren't retired. Mike snowstorm. way toward an impressive and Clement seemed to use A man in a b lue parka mountain wall six miles away. their retirement to travel the jumped out, ran up and said in As we passed groves of world. I cherished this sociable French, "I'm a biologist with the spruce, fir and birch, I soon cabin-in-the-woods storytell- province of Quebec. Have you found myself overheating. ing, accompanied by a shot of seen any caribou'?" "Take off your parka!" Mau- brandy in my cup. No, I hadn't. He wanted toput ry commanded. We spoke a madcap mixture radio collars on them. It seemed "Thanks," I said after cool- of French and English. Mike unlikely that they would hang ing down. "I don't know why I and Clement spoke French to around while a giant, noisy didn't think of that." each other, Clement's English mechanical insect descended "It's your security blanket," was halting, and Maury didn't upon them. He took off in anresponded Maury. Dr. Eldridge, know French. Chuck and I other cloud of snow. a psychologist, dispensed unso- enjoyed practicing our rusty We takecare ofthe other' licited but free counseling. French. He and I had become ' When we reached the es- friends on a Dartmouth forHaving found no caribou, carpment, the climb steepened eign-study term in France 49 Maury caught up with me even sharply. The others put "skins" years earlier. before I made itbackto La Nyc— sticky fabric strips — on We went to bed by 9 p.m. tale. We soon started down a their ski bottoms. I tried to rely though being men of a certain trail nicely broken in by our on my backcountry skis' fish- age who have to get up at least comrades. scale bottoms, but near the top a couple of times to go outside My increasingly weak knee I had to take the skis off and meant that we would see each made me ever slower going walkup the packed trail. other throughout the night. downhill. But Maury stopped On the high plateau, we often to take pictures of the looked back over the faraway Into thewilderness magnificent windswept lakes, great river. A rainbow encirThe next day, despite the the jagged rock outcroppings ded the sun, a halo portending continuing snowfall, we decid- on the hills, and the graceful
onions and horseradish cream p i n eapple, sauce on a beer-grain roll, $14;
Maui G ol d
rouge (The Blackbird), to arrive
ing my well-developed sense of a wooded tableland to contincompetitiveness. ue looking for caribou. I told him that I'd start back, slowly,
with beef brisket, provolone, ith
• Barrel-Aged Chinwig, which spent a lazy year in a bourbon barrel.
Maury, wanted to press on to the next and last hut, Le Ca-
seeing nothing but the cloud er, I felt hugely relieved to ski theywere in. They arrived back at my own pace. I realized that at the hut at dusk. there was something weird woodstove. After an antipasBy dawn, big gray clouds about the effort I'd just made. to of hummus, crackers and were blowing off the moun- I reflected on the tension I'd canned oysters, Maury served tain, exposing its expansive often felt between the convivup a hearty tortellini. bare top. Maury was bent on iality of such a trip and my climbing Logan again to try to worries about keeping up with A lovely stillness find and photograph caribou the others. In the morning, it was snow- in their only population south I stopped to watch a puff of ing lightly but steadily. We left of the St. Lawrence. The others wind blow powder off the trees early. It was eight miles to the wanted to get in a good dose of in the golden winter afternoon next cabin, La Nyctale(The Bo- glade skiing on the way to the light. My physical competitivereal Owl), where we would stay nexthut. ness also got in the way of my two nights. We skied across the I, too, had summit fever, and enjoyment of the moment, I lake, then on a faintly snowmo- I wanted to compensate for realized. Maybe it was time to biled trail up and down forested my caution the day before. But give it up. At my age, it was a hills. The trees were small and could I keep up with Maury? losing proposition. draped with moss. There was He was a tall, strong, strike-offI made up a metaphysical no wind, and the snow swathed on-his-own guy. mantra that I chanted, in tune "Are we a team?" I asked with Quebec, in French: "Le us in a lovely stillness. him — in case something hap- paradis? C'est ici." ("Paradise? We met only one groupeight friendly, middle-age Mon- pened. He responded with sar- It's here.") This rhyme fit the trealers coming from La Nyc- castlc assurances. gentle cadence of cross-countale, which we reached after a Dazzling in th e sun, two try skiing. days' snow cloaked the dwarf stiff mile-long climb. My reveries were interrupted Favoring my knee, I'd used spruce so heavily that they when I saw Chuck and Clemskins to slow myself on the bowed like hooded monks. ent, my old and my new friend, steep downhills, of which there The dimb was trouble-free. We skiing toward me. They'd come were many. With his fancy Al- made it up in an hour. to escort me to the hut. Logan's summit was hardly "We are an equipe," Clement pine touring skis, Mike zipped said — a team. "We take care of down them. The others all had wilderness. There was a ramore downhill-skiing experi- dio tower encased in rime and the other." ence, so I was usually bringing snow. True to form, Maury deI thanked them and said up the rear. This trip was test-
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C6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, DEC 29, 2013
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
SU D O K U
by Oavid L Heyt snd Jen Knussdr
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that every row, column and3x3 box contains every digit from1 to 9 inclusively.
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DIFFICULTYRATING:*** *
Travel appsthat'll make your trips easier
ynsuss us enelneene
d50 FOR EACH I3REPICTION ~ THE FORTUNETELLER TO iviAid:E A-
Now arrange the cinded letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
PRINT YOUR ANSWERIN THE CIRCLES SELOW
By Lori Aratani
of the location. We found it you to book tickets and check worked on garages in Wash- schedules and train status. The Need to book a hotel at the ingtonand around the region, welcome screen has a lovely l ast minute? Want t o f i n d in such towns as Rockville, shot of a train against a scenic cheap gas? Md. and Ballston, Va. background. (A second app ofJust in time for the holiday fers Amtrak's glossy on-train travel season, we thought Flying magazine, Arrive). It gets pretwe'd recommend some apps According to AAA, about ty good reviews from users, that could make your trip 5.5 million holiday travelers though one said he wished serwhether it's byplane, train, car will be flying to their destina- vice alerts were available dior bike — a little less stressful. tion. Frequent fliers recom- rectly from the app, noting that We've tried to focus on free mend downloading theapp for it's not always convenient to go apps, organized by mode of the airline that you're using. to the website. travel. (Note: Unless otherThere are lots of a pps wise noted, all apps listed are that will help you track your Weather available for iOS and Android flights, but here are two recPart of traveling is knowing devices.) ommended by our frequent what the weather will be at The Washington Post
fliers:
Driving
* JUMBLE SOLUTION IS ON C3
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ther, think about downloading the INRIX app, which offers
LOS ANGELESTIMES SUNDAY CROSSWORD Ied by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis
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weather for, say, a barbecue or
a trip to the beach. The health tab ranks the risk for particular medical conditions, such
as the flu or migraines. The app also has a video and news feed. Another favorite among
just about everything a commuter or road warrior might want. There's traffic news and
selection is the "high roller" category.
weather watchers is Weather-
Bug. There's a lot to like here,
Train
with all of the weather data plus the chance to share your weather photos with others.
Amtrak's mobile app offers all the basics: It will allow
a traffic map. With one dick, you can text or email your ar-
Parking If you're big-city bound, you may need to find a place to park once you arrive. SpotHero is a parking app that allows you to find, reserve and pay for available spaces at
fdf
i.ttoltlol' lS eVet'V Sllttite ilt
date you need parking and the interface will show you a map of available garages and lots, complete with the cost for the time period selected. It will give you a description of the garage or lot complete with photo and directions for
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you how far the garage is from your destination. (In some cases you'll need to print your reservation and hand it to the valet.) SpotHero is available
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you to get more detaiL You can easily add cities by name or by Zip code. A fun feature takes the forecast and offers advice on whether it's good
uhip.n The gold bed next to your
If your travels take you far-
where to enter. It also will tell
Opening lead — 4 K
"INTERJECTION' By GAIL
The newest AccuWeather app versionoffers some fresh features, including forecasts that refresh every five min-
trip a little easier (and save find the FlightAware website you some money). RoadNinja indispensable. tracks your location and lets If you get stuck or perhaps you know the price of gas at you're looking for an escape stations at upcoming exits. It from all that family togethalso lets you know what's at erness, Hotel Tonight offers exits in the opposite direction same-night reservations of just in case gas is cheaper go- hotels close to where you are. ing that way. The app also will We love the ranking system, tell you which restaurants, which includes categories such shops and other attractions as uluxe,u "solid," "basic" and
nearby lots. Enter the time and
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RoadNinja could make that
with their phone, but many want a bit more.
rivaltime to family and friends.
WEST
19
are perfectly happy with the weather app that's packaged
are just down the road. Ct5
your destination. Some folks
The FlightAware app will Travelers will fil l th e n a- allow you to track your flight tion's highways this holiday (or that of your loved one). season. According to AAA, You can check individual air86 million people are expect- ports for delays. A map will ed to drive to their holiday show you the flights arriving destination. and departing into the airport Headed to see relatives? of your choice. As a reporter
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•
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Boston, Chicago, Milwaukee, Newark and New York City.
Along those same lines, ParkWhizhelps you find available spaces — in some cases
with a discount — and reserve and pay for them online. It offers you a description of the lot and a handy Google map
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SUNDAY, DEC 29, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
C7
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
An rews returns to Vienna or New Year's TV SPOTLIGHT By Jay Bobbin
say you want zombies to help you end one year and start the next? Obviously, you need look
Rockin' Eve 2014 With Ryan Seacrest" (Tuesday, ABC):Inits second year since the passing
Zap2it
no further. All four seasons to
of its founder, this staple of New
The sound of m u sic still warms Dame Julie Andrews' h eart, particularly o n N e w
date will be shown in their entirety, continuing through New Year's Day. "The Twilight Zone" marathon (Tuesday, Syfy):A festival of episodes of Rod Serling's classicfantasy-suspense anthology has been a TV indi-
Year'sEve viewing continues with Seacrest still carrying
cator of the new year for quite some time, and it remains in
those resume in late-night.
-~
Sh ;» , I
Year's Day. The Oscar, Emmy, Grammy and Kennedy Center Honors
recipient has been the host of the Vienna Philharmonic's traditional h o l iday
c o ncert
of Strauss selections on PBS' "GreatPerformances" for four of the past five years. She returns to the Musikverein to pre-
The Associated Press file photo
side over the program for the Julie Andrews hosts the Vienna Philharmonic's traditional holiday fifth time Wednesday (check concert Wednesday onPBS. local listings), as Daniel Barenboim conducts the orchestra. The Vienna State Opera also I was standing by the Danube And since I'm there, I give mywill perform again. (river). Those kinds of things self the luxury of going to our "I'm a huge fan," Andrews are lovely, as are the castles and home in Switzerland, which says of Barenboim, who also the homes and the museums we've had now for close to 45 was the conductor the first time that we visit." years. That is my joy and my she succeeded Walter Cronkite in hostingthe special in 2009."I
Since she prepares for the
what a kudo for PBS that he's
drews allows "it's a logistics
concert while celebrating the couldn't be more thrilled, and holidays with her family, Andoingit. It'llbe agood one." thing. Just before Christmas, Andrews gets to tour Vienna I'm in Los Angeles. For the secsites in the course of the show, ond year in a row, I helped the but she knows its overall effect Walt Disney Concert Hall and is very dependent on the music the L.A. Philharmonic — of chosen. "Of course, it's mostly which I'm a very proud board dedicated to the Strauss fam- member — with their children's ily," she confirms, "but some- concert. The kids are bused times, it's also to do with Haydn and the fact that he lived there, or that Mozart went there to
in from areas that are in need,
visit somebody. "They always finish with
and they sing Christmas songs and just have aball. "Then I fly back to Long Island (New York) and join my
the Blue Danube Waltz, so last year, we did a moment where
family there, and the day after Christmas, I fly out to Austria.
the mantle ... and Jenny Mc-
Carthy and Fergiereturning as co-hosts. Artists induding Robin Thicke, Jennifer Hudson
and JasonDerulo startthefestivities in prime time; as usual, "NBC's New Year's Eve With Carson Daly" (Tuesday, NBC):
place. "New Year's Rockin' Eve Presents the 50 Greatest Women in Music" (Tuesday, ABC):
Just as th e
S eacrest-hosted
event does, Daly begins the celebration in prime time and
Thanks to Dick Clark Productions' extensive archive of performances from "American Bandstand" and past New
carries it past stations'late local
clips of the ladies on the list.
network's coverage as mid-
news. "New Year's Eve Live" (Tuesday, Fox): As in past years, Year's Eve specials, it'llbe easy Times Square and Las Vegas for this show's staff to gather will be the focal points for the
"Live From Lincoln Center: night approaches. "New Year's Eve Live With treat to myself." New York Philharmonic Gala After C a rrie U n derwood With Yo-Yo Ma" (Tuesday, PBS; Anderson Cooper and Kathy starred in NBC's live, much- check local listings):The cello Griffin" (Tuesday, CNN): How watched production of "The master joins the orchestra for a will Griffin mortify Cooper? Sound of Music" last month, celebration recorded in Septem- You know she'll find a way as ABC gave Andrews' classic ber and featuring Ravel's "Bole- they share hosting duties in movie version its annual holi- ro"; Audra McDonald hosts. New York's Times Square for "That's Ent e rtainment!" the seventh consecutive year. day season telecast. That film "125th Tournament of Rosmarks its 50th anniversary in (Tuesday, Turner Classic Mov2015, but the same milestone ies): It's become a tradition es Parade" (Wednesday, ABC, is being reached in 2014 by for the channel to mark New CBS, NBC, Hallmark Channel, the Disney favorite for which Year's Eve with the hugely en- HGTV):One of sportscasting's Andrews won her Academy joyable 1974 compilation of true legends, Los Angeles Award, "Mary Poppins." scenes from MGM musicals, Dodgers announcer Vin SculHere are additional high- and it does so again. Principal ly, is the latest grand marshal lights of New Year's Eve and TCM host Robert Osborne also for the ever-floral procession New Year's Dayprogramming: introduces the two sequels and of floats and marching bands "The Walking Dead" mar- "That's Dancing!" through the streets of Pasade"Dick Clark's New Year's na, Calif. athon (Tuesday, AMC): You
Woman's airis erown usiness
MOVIE TIMESTOOAY
Dear Abby:For 17 years I have leaving Marietta; it was a disaster been using the same hairstylist, — and you plan on using her until "Marietta, "because she does great the day you curl up and dye.
both of you to offer an apology. If she caused it, then put your white flag away and enjoy the respite
Dear Abby: I am t he m o ther
because sooner orlater she'll be
Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 &IMAX, 680S.W. Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • 47 RONIN (PG-13)4:20 • 47RONIN3-D(PG-l3) 1, 7:20, 10:20 • AMERICANHUSTLE(R) 12: l0, 3:30, 635 940 • ANCHORMAN 2: THE LEGEND CONTINUES (PG-13) 11:25 a.m., 12:25, 2:15, 3:20, 5:05, 6:45, 8:05, 9:35 • THE BOOKTHIEF (PG-13) 12:15, 3:25, 6:30 • FROZEN(PG) 12:35, 3:40, 6:20, 9:05 • GRUDGEMATCH(PG-13) 11:15a.m., 2:05, 4:50, 7:40, 10:25 • THE HOBBIT:THEDESOLATIONOFSMAUG(PG-13) 11 a.m., 2:30, 6:15, 9:50 • THE HOBBIT:THEDESOLATION OF SMAUG IMAX 3-D (PG-13) 11:05 a.m., 2:40, 6:30, 10 • THE HUNGER GAMES: CATCHINGFIRE (PG-13) 11:20 a.m., 3:30, 6:45, 9:55 • JUSTIN BIEBER'8BELIEVE(PG) 11:50 a.m., 2:10, 4:30, 6:55,9: I5 • NEBRASKA (R) 11a.m., 5:35 • PHILOMENA(PG-13) 9:30 • SAVING MR.BANKS(PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 2:50, 6:05, 9 • THE SECRET LIFE OFWALTER MITTY (PG) 11:10 a.m., 2, 4:45, 7:30, I 0: I5 • TYLERPERRY'8 A MADEA CHRISTMAS (PG-13)9:25 • WALKINGWITH DINOSAURS(PG) 1:55, 7:15 • WALKINGWITH DINOSAURS3-0 (PG)11:35 a.m., 5 • THEWOLF OF WALL STREET (R)Noon,1:45,4:10,8,9 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies.
• There may be an additional fee for 3-0and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. t
cuts and color.She's married to
my cousin "Gil," but not for long. of three grown children. I have a They're divorcing. good marriage, a successful caGil's mother suggested I should reer and a close relationship with find a different stylmy tw o y o unger ist, but when I did, I children. had horrible results. I My problem inDFP,R returned to Marietta, volves my o l dest and it took her sevdaughter. She has eral appointments to been e m otionally correct my color. unstable and verbalSome family members are now ly abusive to me since her 20s. I furious with me for getting my have reached my limit of patience hair done by someone who is soon with her. We had a terrible fight to be a relative's ex. I look at it as three weeks ago, and she hasn't
Ag gy
back. (Probably when she needs something.) Only she can fix what's wrong with her, but you
can reduce your level of stress if you keep your distance. Dear Abby: I was involved in a fatal car accident in 2012. Two
of my best friends died. There is a void in my heart. They were 15 and 18. I feel so much pain over the loss of my friends, and it is never going to end or hurt less. Their families hate me, which is to
be expected. a business. I like what Marietta spoken to me since. I am in prison and feel so dedoes for me. We never discuss the Abby, these have been the most pressed. Time here seems to baredivorce. Family is now demanding peaceful weeks I have had in a ly move. How do I deal with this an apology, and I don't think I owe long time. Am I a terrible mother? pain and my sentence? one. I haven't been close to any of Is there such a thing as separating — In Jail and Hurting these people in years. from a child? I am tired of always Dear Hurting: If possible, use Must I say I'm sorry to distant being the peacemaker with no your time in prison to complete family and discontinue Marietta's effort on her part. What do you your education. If there are classservices? Or should I say noth- suggest? es, take them. If there is a library, ing and continue my professional — Peacemaker in Kentucky use it. You can make the walls relationship with her? My roots Dear Peacemaker: Refusing to around you disappear if you lose are beginning to show again, so be abused by an adult child does yourself in the pages of a book. please answer quickly. not make you a terrible parent. I Try it, and you will see that I'm — Snipped In California don't know what caused the fight right. Dear Snipped:Tell Gil's mother between you and your daughter. — Write to Dear Abbyat dearabbycom to stay out of your hair. You tried
If you caused it, then you owe it to
or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069
I
I I
r
I
McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 541-330-8562 • CLOUDYWITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 2 (PG)11:30 a.m., 2:30 • ENDER'8 GAME (PG-13) 6 • JACKASSPRESENTS:BADGRANDPA(R) 9 • After 7p.m.,showsare21andolderonly.Youngerthan 21 mayattend screenings before 7 p.m.ifaccompanied by a legal guardian. t
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORSUNDAY,
YOURHOROSCOPE
DEG. 29, 2013:This yearyoucould keep a lot to yourself. Your friends and family will sense this secrecy, and they will try to draw it out of you. You like your free time alone, more so than in the past. If you are single, you could find yourself in a relationship with someone emotionally unavailable or even married. Be careful. If you are Starsshowthe kind attached, the two of dayyou'llhave of you benefit from ** * * * D ynamic p it i v e ta kni g of f toget her for weekends ** * Average away. In these ** So-so situations, ro* Difficult
mance will bloom.
SAGITTARIUS understands you perhaps better than you can imagine.
ARIES (March21-April19) ** * * You have been holding back on planning a day trip or taking off for a few days. Now would be a good time to split. You might hit a few obstacles along the way, but your instinctively quick nature will see a way around this problem. Tonight: Out and about.
TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * You don't always agree with a partner, and today is no different. You will decide to follow this person on an adventure, even though you might not see the purpose right now. Know that you will see it later, though. You enjoy being with this person. Tonight: Be a follower.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) ** * * You might want to revise a situation to make it more amenable to you. Understand your limits if you do not want to irritate a good friend. Someone you look up to might decide to put in his or her
By Jacqueline Bigar
two cents. Tonight:Be spontaneous.Do whatyou need to do for you.
CANCER (June21-July 22) ** * Take a hard look at the possibilities right now as you head into the next few days. Many of you will need to squeeze in a week's worth of work in a few days. Others will have a lot to do post-Christmas. Tonight: Make a to-do list for tomorrow.
LEO (July23-Aug.22)
avoid the harsh reality about the holidays before, but now you might be looking at the damages to your checkbook. Redo your budget accordingly. Decide how long you want to feel the squeezeand how tightly. Tonight: Pay bills first.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) ** * * * You might feel as though you havebeen onvacation.Some ofyou
actually havegoneaway, or still are away. Do not spoil that relaxed feeling, even if a loved one's unpredictability demands a certain responsiveness. Tonight: Create the mood and setting you want.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.19)
** * * * T he past few weeks have been rather regimented with a firm schedule. Take today as a free day, and do what you want. Whether you're playing Scrabble or flirting with a friend, you finally will feel liberated. Tonight: Start thinking about your New Year's resolution.
** * * Emphasis is on the long term and whatis happening behindthescenes. W hetheryou acknowledge it,you need some downtime just for you. Discomfort with being alone or some of the thoughts that might pass through your mind need to be faced. Tonight: Get some zzz's.
VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22)
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18)
** * Understand that you can't dictate what others do. Instead of fighting city hall, why not choose to enjoy the unpredictability that surrounds you? Make sure to squeeze in a nap at some point. Tonight: Choose something relaxing.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ** * * * Y our phone will ring, and your inbox will be swamped with emails. Don't be surprised if someone is knocking at your door, too. You might as well join a friend or take the family out for pizza. You won't be able to concentrate with all the chaos around you. Tonight: Return calls.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21) ** * *
You might have been able to
** * * * L i sten to news more openly. You like to think of yourself as flexible, but be honest — you can be quite rigid.
A friend or lovedonecould appear unexpectedly. Give up your tenaciousness about maintaining your schedule. Tonight: Go with the flow.
PISCES (Fed.19-March20) ** * * V isit with an older relative you careabout.Do nothem and haw ormake excuses. Youcould be delightedand surprised at what a good time the two of you will have. Know how much your caring means to this person. Tonight: Till the wee hours. © King Features Syndicate
I
Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • THEARMSTRONG LIE(R)5 • BLUEIS THEWARMEST COLOR (NC-17)7:30 • THE SECRET OFKELLS(noMPAArating) 3 I
I
I
Redmond Cinemas,1535S.W.OdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • 47 RONIN(PG-13) 11:15 a.m.,1:45, 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 • ANCHORMAN 2: THE LEGEND CONTINUES (PG-13)11 a.m., 1:30, 4, 6:30, 9 • THEHOBBIT:THEDESOLATION OF SMAUG (PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 3, 6:1 5, 9:30 • WALKINGWITH DINOSAURS(PG)11:15 a.m.,1:15, 3:15, 5:15, 7:15, 9:15
TV TOOAY 7:30 p.m. on 7, "Call the Midwife Holiday Special"As Jenny's (Jessica Raine) relationship with Alec (Leo Staar) blossoms, and Shelagh's (Laura Main) wedding to Dr.
Turner (StephenMcGann) gets
under way, discovery of a large unexploded bomb forces an evacuation of the district. As the women of Nonnatus House try
to ensureeveryonestays safe and warm, Chummy (Miranda Hart) decides to proceed with the Cubs Christmas party. Just as one crisis is averted, another surfaces — a polio outbreak. Jenny Agutter also stars. 8 p.m. en 29, Movie: "Harry Potter andthe Sorcerer's Stone" — Director Chris Columbus' blockbuster 2001 version of the internationally popular J.K. Rowling story features Daniel Radcliffe as Harry, the young wizard in training. He finds himself the targetofan unknown enemy while being schooled in the use of magic at Hogwarts. Rupert Grint and Emma Watsonplay Harry'syoung comrades. Theexpert supporting cast includes Robbie Coltrane, Alan Rickman andMaggie Smith. 8 p.m. on10, "The Simpsons" — Homer made a to-do list when he was only10 years old. Now Marge wants him to start doing some of those things. Reminding him that"you only
liveonce,"sheencourageshim to invite an old pen pal for a visit. A new honor code is in place at Springfield Elementary, thanks to Lisa, in "YDLO." Jon Lovitz
provides a guest voice. 9 p.m. en 6, "The36th Annual KennedyCenter Honors"Actress Shirley MacLaine, opera singer Martina Arroyo, and musicians Herbie Hancock, Billy Joel and Carlos Santana arethis year's recipients of the prestigious awards for achievement in the performing arts. President and Mrs. Obama areon hand,along with friends, colleaguesand admirers of each honoree. Glenn Close hosts the event. 9 p.m. on TLC,"Sister Wives"
— As newepisodesreturn,
Kody Brown and his four wives have finally moved into their new digs on the cul-de-sac and are planning a big event to honor their commitment and celebrate being back together. There are still some rough patches to overcome, however, including tension within some of the marriages and among the wives. Tonight, the family deals with the arrival of nine— count'em ,nine— moms for Mother's Day in "Mother-inLaw Invasion." © Zap2it
EVERGREEN
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Care for loved ones. Comfort forall. 541-389-0006 »N»Nw.evergreeainhome.com
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Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • ANCHORMAN 2: THE LEGEND CONTINUES (PG-13) 2:30, 5, 7:45 • FROZEN(PG) Noon, 1:30 • THEHOBBIT:THEDESOLATION OF SMAUG (PG-13)4, 7:15 • SAVINGMR. BANKS (PG-13)2,4:45,7:30 • THEWOLF OF WALL STREET (R)Noon,3:30,7 Madras Cinema5,1101 S.W.U.S.Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • 47RONIN(PG-13) 2:05, 4:40, 7:20, 9:50 • ANCHORMAN 2: THE LEGEND CONTINUES (PG-13)2, 4:30, 7:10, 9:40 • GRUDGEMATCH (PG-13)1:50,4:25,7,9:30 • THE HOBBIT:THEDESOLATION OF SMAUG (PG-13) Noon, 6:30 • THEHOBBIT:THEDESOLATION OF SMAUG 3-0(PG-13) 3:10, 9:45 • WALKINGWITH DINOSAURS(PG)12:35, 2:40, 4:45, 6:50,9 •
•
Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • ANCHORMAN 2: THE LEGEND CONTINUES (UpstairsPG-13)1,4,7:30 • THEHOBBIT:THEDESOLATION OF SMAUG (PG-13) Noon,3:20,7 • The upstairs screening room (VP) haslimited accessibility.
Lic'jc'jq Meet Liddy. She is n svper sweet little Chihuohvo/Dochshund mix who came to us nfter her ownsrs could sadly not keep her becauss she just loves to talk. uddV loves nttention and would love to go to a horw where she canspend lots of time with her new ond forever romilV, especialIV on their laps! IF Vouthink Liddy is the perfect little gal For Vou, stop on bV and meet her! HUMRNC SOCIGY OF C(NTRRL OAEGON/SPCR 61170 S r. rrth»t. sND ~»t (541) 38R-3537
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CS TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, DEC 29, 2013
ASK A CENTRAL OREGON HEALTH PROFESSIONAL
0
s
R
QUEsTIQN: I have spider veins on my face and all over my legs. I don't want injections and I d on't want t o wear support hose. What can I do to get rid of these ugly veins and the redness in my complexion? Dr. Elizabeth
ANSWER: Many m e n
a n d W Omen
«Euig«.ND
experience this very common problem. At The Enhancement Center Medical Spa we use High Technology Vascular specific Lasers that "erase" the spider veins in the face and legs. This treatment most often takes just one treatment. The use
of compression stockings or support hose for spider veins in the legs is unnecessary with this procedure. Telangiesctasia, or spider veins in the facial area can be treated and removed within minutes, and results are almost immediate. Rarely, are repeated treatments necessary. Rosacea, and ruddy, red completions can be cleared with a small series of treatments.
371 SW Upper Terrance Dr. Ste ¹2, Bend, OR 97702 541-317-4894 a www.enhancementcenterspa.com
TIPS FOR SENIORS ON DENTAL CARE
ANswER: Each stage of life presents its special challenges for dental care. The senior years are no exception. Some seniors think that as they age, trips to the dentist become less Dr. Carlo necessary. However, it's just as important for a senior as it is for a thirty-something to visit DDS the dentist at least twice a year. One reason is that the roots of the teeth become more exposed as we age, and consequently more vulnerable to cavities. Exposed roots are also more sensitive to hot and cold. In addition to being an uncomfortable sensation, this sensitivity can begin to affect a person's diet, with certain foods being avoided. Anti-sensitivity toothpaste can help, but if you're feeling temperature sensitivity you should see a dentist. The cause of the discomfort may be a cracked tooth. Also, as we age, fillings can chip or weaken, Opening the door for decay. In your senior years you also are more likely to be taking a variety of medications, which can affect your oral health. Keeping your dentist informed of your medication regimen is another reason for consistent visits. If you wear dentures, you know they need periodic adjustment to reflect the changes in your mouth. The list goes on. As you grow older, keep up your routines of brushing, flossing and visiting your dentist regularly.
D r. Dondo D e n t a l E x c e l l e n c e D r. Carlo A r r e d o n d o , D D S 660 NE 3rd Street, Suite 3, Bend, OR 97701 oDoNDO' 541-241-1 299 www.DrDondoBend.com
DENTAL EXCELLENCE
I
QUEsT(oN: I had a hysterectomy a few years ago, and just haven't felt the same since. I had my estrogen level checked and it was okay. Could my hormones still be out of balance? A NswER: A r ecent st udy f r o m t h e p restigious hospital o f B r i g h a m 's MaryHuntsman, and Women's in Boston tested the use of testosterone with women who had undergone hysterectomy with or without the removal of the ovaries, and later had low testosterone levels. All the women received estrogen replacement, but it was the women who also received testosterone replacement who saw a boost in sexual function, lean body mass, and muscle strength. These changes can translate into a boost in the bedroom, and during workouts. So if a women has had a hysterectomy, and now is experiencing physical and sexual changes, she may be experiencing the effects of low hormones. Easily obtained blood tests can be done to check hormone levels and identify those women whose levels are low, and this informationused to create a personalized regimen forher.
Lifestyle Medicine of Central Oregon PC M ary H u n t s m a n M . D . H olistic W o m e n s H e a l t h c a r e
497 SW Century Dr., Suite 120, Bend, OR 97702 541-516-8440 LifestyleMedc e nt ralOR.com
QUEsTioN: The older I get the smaller my mouth seems t o b e ( a l t h o ugh m y husband would disagree!) I a m considering have fillers injected to enhance my lips. I understand it is not a long term solution. I s permanent makeup a good alternative? ~gdp
A NswER : Pe r m a n en t m a k eu p i s an
cosmeticPra~fessional
excellent alternate to enhance your lips and also make them look fuller. Lip liner or full lip color can reshape your lips. Lip line alone, coupled with your lipstick or gloss will keep your color from bleeding into the surrounding skin. It can even diminish the appearance of age lines around your lips. Full lip color eliminates the chore of always applying lipstick especially after eating or kissing! Just like cosmetic stores, multiple colors are available from subtle to dramatic. The results will far outweigh fillers. Call today for a FREE consultation... You will wonder why you waited so long!
QUEsTIQN: Stress can significantly influence your perception of pain and your ability to Allison Suran heal. We live in a world where chronic states PT GcPP of stress are the norm and that "one more thing" of an injury, can be the final straw. Prolonged stress can also impair your immune system, interrupt your sleep, and interfere with healing. Here are some simple things you can do:
1. BREATHE. Take 5 full breaths 5 times a day. 2. Memorize and recite to yourself a quote, poem or scripture that provides to the busy, worrying mind. 3. Distract yourself with What is good in this "NOW" moment. Let the pain remind you to shift your focus to what you are grateful for: your children, friends, living in Bend, hot water, food on the table, memories of favorite places. 4. Finda good PT who can teach you how bestto m anage and heal your back injury. There are countless ways to manage stress but it needs to be a priority. Classes to manage pain and stress are offered at Healing Bridge Physical Therapy.
<+~
Allison Suran, PT, GCFP
~ g r y g « 4 04 NE Penn Ave, Bend, OR
PHYSICALG THERAPYG
ANswER: The gallbladder sits below the rib cage to the right of the abdomen on the underside of the liver. The gallbladder collects and concentrates digestive liquid called bile and releases the bile through Jana VanAmburg, bile tubes into the small intestine to aid in digestion.
A "gallbladder attack" can be caused by a stone making its way down the biliary duct or bile tube toward the small intestine. An attack can also be caused by a backup or bile in the gallbladder causing the gallbladder to swelk An attack may also be caused by an infection of the gallbladder known as cholecystitis. Symptoms of a " g allbladder attack" include upper abdominal pain that radiates between the middle of the shoulder blades or on the right shoulder blade. This pain can be constant or may come and go like colic. The pain can be dull, sharp or excruciating in severity and may cause nausea and vomiting. The pain may take your breath away and you may not be able to walk in an upright position. Gallbladder attacks typically occur at night and can last from I hour to several days. It can be very difficult or impossible to make these symptoms go away. See your primary doctor or the ER for care and administration of pain meds to get the pain under control.
QUESTloN: Holiday time and stress in our culture does not lend itself to good eating and digestion habits. Many ads on TV Physician aCtually enCOurage uS tO "eat On the gO". From a Naturopathic perspective, heartburn may be due to not enough hydrochloric acid (HC1) in the stomach, as opposed to too much, which leaves food undigested in the stomach, leading to heartburn or GERD (reflux). A simple trial of HC1 can help evaluate this. Meanwhile, here are some simple rules for eating: Sit down and focus on eating without distractions. Chew your food well. Don't drink water while eating, especially ice water (this dilutes the gastric acid). Don't exercise or lay down after eating. Don't eat late in the evening. For the month of December we at Hawthorn are focused on digestion. Come on in for more hints and recipes for the holiday season. Our clinic offers comprehensive testing and evaluation of all Gastro-Intestinal disorders. Please contact us for a consultation.
HAWTHORN
J ana M . V a n A m b u r g , M D , F A C S
D r. Kerle R a y m o n d
V anAm b ur g S u r g e r y C a r e
•
Hawthorn Healing Arts Center
2275 NE Doctors Dr., Bend OR97701 s u r g e ry c"ara ce
541-318-7041 www. Healing Bridge.com
QUEsTIQN: I've had chronic problems with indigestion and heartburn, that just seems to be getting worse lately. I've tried heartburn medications which help sometimes, but what can I do to prevent this problem?
QUEsTIQN: How do I know if I'm having a gallbladder attack?
541-323-2790 Offices in Bend 8 Redmond
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drangeles©bendprs.com
Scoreboard, D2 Sports in brief, D2 NBA, D3 NHL, D3
Prep sports, D4 NFL, D4
College basketball, D5 College football, D5
© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, DECEMBER 29, 2013
MIXED MARTIAL ARTS
Weidman retains title over Silva LAS VEGAS— Chris Weidman defended his UFCmiddleweight title when Anderson Silva broke his left leg on a kick in the second round, ending UFC168 with a horrific injury Saturday night. Weidman (11-0) quietly celebrated his victory while medical personnel tended to Silva (33-6), whose left shin bent grotesquely while landing a kick on Weidman's left leg 1:16 into the round. "There's no real excitement in a fight finishing like that, because you neverwant to see anyoneget hurt like that," Weidmansaid after his second straight win over the long-reigning champion. Weidman, who earned his belt with an upset victory in July, also dominated the first round of the rematch. In thesecond,W eidman used his knee to block Silva's kick with perfect technique, neveranticipating the result. "I did work on checking kicks," Weidman said. "I figured if I (caught) him on my knee, it could really hurt him. Crazy howthis happened." Ronda Rousey also retained her ban-
MountainView e eatsBen Hi , 2-5 Bulletin staff report Intermountain Conference play does not begin for another few weeks. The
scored Bend (3-4) 40-31 after the break "They're a very good ballclub," Cou- to advance to the tournament's champigars coach Craig Reid said of the rival onship game today at 4:45 p.m. against first Civil War is not until Jan. 24. basketball tournament at Summit High, Lava Bears. "We knew coming in we Evergreen (Wash.). But on Saturday night, Mountain the Cougars and the Lava Bears gave would have to play well. The first half, Ments Haugen and Garrett Roth View and Bend High got an earl y players, coaches and fans a taste of how they just out-executed us. We were stag- paced Mountain View with 14 points glimpse of what awaits for them in the competitive the Class 5A IMC might be nant and didn't move the ball very well. apiece. Haugen also dished out four asnext two months. this season. And with a smaller lineup Second half, we played a lot better." sists, and Grant Lannin contributed 13 Meeting in the semifinals of the Les and addeddefensive pressure, it w as Mountain View (4-2) trailed by five points and 12 rebounds. Schwab Oregon Holiday Hoopfest boys M ountain View coming out on t op points at the half, but the Cougars outSeeMountain View/D5
PREP BOYS BASKETBALL
62-58.
PREP GIRLSBASKETBALL
NFL
Playoff ramifications, divisionalgames loom on finalSunday -' <.e,
That is how the NFL wanted it, so top teams probably
mP
would have something to play for and not be in a posi-
have a shot at a first-round
tion to rest players. The only
San Diego and Pittsburgh are in the hunt for the last playoff spot. In the NFC,
bye; and Miami, Baltimore,
team in playoff position that might be resting players is
UFC's year-endevent, submitting MieshaTate with a third-round arm bar. Rousey thenwalked away from her bitter rival's offer of a post-fight handshake, earning ferocious boos from the MGMGrandGarden
Kansas City, because the
Seattle, Carolina and San
others have something to gain by winning Sunday. Of the 16 games, only three have no possible playoff ramification. In the AFC, Denver, New England, Cincinnati, Indianapolis and Kansas City have clinched playoff berths. Denver and New England have a shot
Francisco have clinched playoff spots. Seattle, San Francisco and Carolina have a shot at home-field advan-
at home-field advantage
still in the hunt for playoff
throughout; New England, Cincinnati and Indianapolis
spots.
tage throughout; Seattle,
San Francisco, Carolina and New Orleans have a shot at
a first-round bye; and Philadelphia, Dallas, Chicago, Green Bay and Arizona are SeePlayoff/D6
Black Monday part of the ritual of today's NFL
CI'owd.
But Rousey's sportsmanship was dwarfed by the abrupt finish of the main event. Silva's injury cast a pall over arguably the UFC's biggest fightcard of the year, reminding every fan of the rapidly growing sport about the brutality at its core.
By Ken Belson
and fans around the country,
New York Times News Service
Black Monday has its own
The National Football League loves to trumpet its
news media ecosystem, complete with weeks of specula-
calendar, from Draft Day to Kickoff Weekend to Super Bowl Sunday.
tion, denials and news releases, followed by confessionals, goodbyes and promises to
Then there is Black
— TheAssociated Pess
start anew. Last year, seven coaches
Monday, the day after the regular season ends, when a dozen teams prepare for the playoffs and some of the JoeKlinel The Bulletin
LeBron Jamessits, but Chris Bosh hits a game-winning three for Miami,D3
• A complete listing of today's playoff scenarios,D2 • Seahawks preview,D4
All 16 games this week are between division foes.
tamweight title in the
NBA Blazers can't deat Heat
Inside
By Tom Silverstein Milwaukee Journat Sentinel
Bend High's Marissa Hayes looks for a shot against Willamette's Lexi Bando during the second half of a semifinal game in the Les Schwab Oregon Holiday Hoopfest on Saturday at Summit High School.
and fiv egeneralmanagers were replaced, one of the busier Black Mondays on record. Because many assistants are also shown the door when
rest announce that they have
firedtheircoaches orgeneral managers or both. The league does not in-
theirbossesarefired,Black Monday2012 was averitable
funeralprocession in the coaching industry. SeeMonday/D6
clude the red-letter date on its
schedule, and its origins are murky. But to NFL insiders
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
4
Saturday's games Miami 5 Notre Dame Rutgers
(
,.
f
e
9 16
By Emily Oller
nal round of the Les Schwab Oregon Holiday
The Bulletin
Hoopfest at Summit High School.
Kansas State Michigan
1trrnovers ended up being the Achilles' heel for Bend High on Saturday afternoon
"The first half we were definitely strong as a team," said Jessica McClay, Bend's leading
in the Lava Bears' 61-28 loss against defend-
scorer with nine points. "We came in looking
Cincinnati • Roundup,DS
ing Class 5A girls basketball state champions to improve, and the tough games will make us Willamette. improve." The lopsided decision came in the semifiSee Bears/D6
17
PeterMorgan i TheAssociated Press
The New YorkJets'Re x Ryan could be one of the coaches that
doesn't survive this year's "Black Monday."
Monday'sgames Armed Forces Bowl At Fort Worth, Texas Middle Tennessee(8-4) vs. Navy (8-4), 8:45 a.m. (ESPN) Music City Bowl At Nashville, Tenn. Mississippi (7-5) vs. Georgia Tech(7-5), 12:15 p.m. (ESPN)
COLLEGEFOOTBALL:OREGON NOTEBOOK
:i Tt
,
/t
-
4 . .
,
i
-,
Duck cornerbackEkpre-Olomu undecidedabout entering draft I
By Ryan Thorburn andSteve Mims The iEugene) Register-Guard
SAN ANTONIO — Ifo Ekpre-Olomu has not decided whether he will leave the
Alamo Bowl At San Antonio Oregon (10-2) vs. Texas (8-4), 3:45 p.m. (ESPN) Holiday Bowl At San Diego Arizona State (10-3) vs. Texas Tech(7-5), 7:15 p.m.(ESPN)
University of Oregon football program alongside outgoing defensive coordinator Nick Aliotti.
BretHartman/The Associated Pressfile
Oregon cornerback Ifo Ekpre-Olomu (14) intercepts a passagainst Southern California in 2012. The star defender is projected to be taken in the first round of the NFL draft, if he declares himself eligible.
The Ducks' standout cornerback will meet with his family after Monday's Alamo Bowl game against Texas before m aking an announcement on whether to return to Oregon for his senior season or enter the National Football League draft.
"At this time, I still haven't made a deci-
sion of what I'm going to do," Ekpre-Olomu said during a press conference Friday. "I'm really worried about the Alamo Bowl right now, and that's really it. I haven't
been worried about that (making a decision) too much." Ekpre-Olomu, a Walter Camp seco nd-team all-American, started all 1 2 games for the Ducks this season and was
Oregon's second-leading tackler (78 tackles) and also had three interceptions. See Ducks/D6
D2 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, DEC 29, 2013
ON THE AIR
CORKBOARD
TODAY FOOTBALL
NFL, Baltimore at Cincinnati NFL, Carolina at Atlanta NFL, Denver atOakland NFL, St. Louis at Seattle
NFL, Philadelphia at Dallas
Time 10a.m. 10 a.m. 1:25 p.m. 1:25 p.m. 5:20 p.m.
TV/Radio CBS Fox CBS Fox NBC
OLYMPICS
U.S. Olympic Trials, ski jumping, nordic combined U.S. Olympic Trials, speedskating
10:30a.m. noon
NBC NBC
BASKETBALL
Men's college, Texas Southern atTexasChristian Women's college, Southern Methodist at Louisville Men's college, Morgan State atOregon
11 a.m. noon noon
Root ESPNU
Women's college, Boston College at Providence noon Fox Sports1 Women's college, Cincinnati at Connecticut2 p.m. ESPN Men's college, Canisius at Notre Dame 2 p.m. ESPNU Women's college, Pac-12 Notre Dame atOregon State 2 p.m. Men's college, ChicagoState at Creighton 2 p.m. Fox Sports1 Men's college, Tulsa atMaryland 4 p.m. ESPNU Men's college, Cal Poly-San Luis Obispo at Stanford 4 p .m. Pac-12 Men's college, GeorgiaTechat Charlotte 4 p.m. Fox Sports1 Men's college, Hartford at Washington 6 p.m. Pac-12 Men's college, Quinnipiac at OregonState 8 p.m. Pac-12, 940-AM
MONDAY College, ArmedForces Bowl, Middle TennesseeStatevs.Navy College, Music City Bowl, Georgia Techvs. Mississippi College, AlamoBowl, Oregon vs. Texas College, Holiday Bowl, Arizona State vs.TexasTech
Time
TV/Radio
8:45 a.m. ESPN, 940-AM
12:15 p.m.
ESPN 3:45 p.m. ESPN, 1110-AM 7:15 p.m. ESPN, 940-AM
BASKETBALL
Men's college, Virginia at Tennessee Men's college, Robert Morris at OklahomaState Men's college, Charleston Southern at Florida State Women's college, Syracuse atArizona St. NBA, Portland at NewOrleans Men's college, St. Louis at Vanderbilt Men's college,SanFranciscoatGonzaga Women's college,USC atUCLA Men's college, St. Mary's at Pacific
4 p.m.
ESPN2
4 p.m.
ESPNU
4 p.m. 5 p.m. 5 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 7 p.m. 8 p.m.
Root Pac-12 CSNNW ESPNU Root
5 p.m.
NBCSN
Pac-12 Root
HOCKEY
NHL, Los Angeles atChicago
Today Boys basketball: Bend vs. Lakeside(Wash.) at Les Schwab OregonHoliday HoopfestatSummit, 1:15 p.m.;Moun tain Viewvs. Evergreen(Wash.)t at Les Schwab OregonHoliday Hoopfest atSummit, 4:45 .m.; Summivs. t Milwaukieat LesSchwabOregon olidayHoopfest atSummit, 11:30a.m. Girls baskelbaff:MountainViewvs. Grants Passat Les Schwab Oregon Holiday Hoopfest at Summit, 1:15 p.m.;Bendvs. Forest Groveat LesSchwab OregonHolidayHoopfest at Summit,11:30 a.m.; Summivs. t WilametteatLesSchwabOregonHolidayHoopfestatSummit, 3 p.m. Monday Boys basketball: Ridgeview at MaxPreps Holiday Classic in PalmSprings, Calif., TBD;Culver at South WascoCounty,5:30p.m. Girls basketball: Culver at South Wasco County, 4 p.m.
Pac-12, 1110-AM, 100.1-FM
FOOTBALL
ON DECK
Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. TheBulletinis not responsible forlatechangesmadebyTV orradiostations.
Thursday
Boys basketball: Sistersvs. Scappooseat Sisters HolidayTournament, 7 p.m. Girls baskelbaff:Redmondvs. Philomathat Sisters HolidayTournament,1 p.m.;Sistersvs.Cresweffat SistersHolidayTournament, 5p.m.
Friday Boys baskelbaff:Sistersat SistersHolidayTournament,TBD;North Marion atLaPine,6p.m.; Culver at Western Mennonite, 6:30p.m.;Central Christian at NorthLake,TBD Girls basketball:Redm ond,Sisters atSisters Holiday Tourna ment,TBD;Ridgeview atCascade,7p.m.; Ontario atCrookCounty, 5 p.m.; North Marionat La Pine,4:30p.m.;CulveratWesternMennonite,5 p.m.; Gilchrist atTrinity Lutheran,2:30p.m.; Central Christian at North Lake,TBD Wrestling:CulveratJosephHiTournament,11 a.m.; Ridgeviewat West AlbanyDuals, TBD Swimming:Ridgeviewat Stayton Invite,12 a.m. Saturday Boys basketball: Sistersat SistersHolidayTournament,TBD;Central Christianat NorthClackamas Christian,2:30p.m. Girls basketball:Redm ond,SistersatSistersHoliday Tournament, TBD;CentralChristianatNorth ClackamasChristian, 1p.m. Wrestling: Redmondat Dallas Duals-Time,TBD; Madrasat RiddleTournament, 10a.m.; Culverat JosephHiTournament,11 a.m. Swimming:Bendat LebanonInvite, TBD;Summit, Mounta>n View,Ridgeview, Sisters, Madrasat Jay RowanInvitational at CascadeSwimCenter, 10 a.m. Nordic skiing:OHSN Oat Meissner SnoPark, Freestyle,TBD
FOOTBALL NFL NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE AR TimesPST AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA y-NewEngland 11 4 0 . 733410 318 Miami 8 7 0 . 533310 315 N.Y.Jets 7 8 0 . 4 67270 380 Buffalo 6 9 0 . 400319 354 South W L T Pct PF PA y-Indianapoli s 1 0 5 0 . 6 67 361 326 Tennessee 6 9 0 . 400346 371 Jacksonville 4 11 0 . 2 67 237 419 Houston 2 13 0 .133 266 412 Norlh W L T Pct PF PA y -Cincinnati 1 0 5 0 . 6 67 396 288 Baltimore 8 7 0 . 533303 318 Pittsburgh 7 8 0 . 4 67359 363 Cleveland 4 11 0 .267 301 386 West W L T Pct PF PA y-Denver 12 3 0 .800 572 385 x-Kansas Cit y 1 1 4 0 . 7 33 406 278 San Diego 8 7 0 . 533369 324 Oakland 4 11 0 .267 308 419 NATIONALCONFERENCE
P hiladelphia Dallas N .Y. Giants Washington
SPORTS IN BRIEF FOOTBALL PaCkerSWRCabb aCtivated — GreenBayPackers receiver Randall Cobbhasbeenactivated from injured reserve and hasbeen listed as questionable for today's crucial gameagainst the Chicago Bears. Cobbwas theteam's allotted player on injured reserve who was designated for return after getting hurt during a19-17 win Oct. 13 at Baltimore. Theplaymaking wideout was added to the injury report Saturday with a kneeinjury. Quarterback Aaron Rodgers (collarbone) is already returning today and isexpected to start against the Bears in the gameto decide the NFCNorth title. Coach Mike McCarthy said hegaveCobb more work in practice Friday to help determine whether heshould be activated. Cobb caught 29 passes for 378 yards and two touchdowns playing the first five gamesthis season for Green Bay(7-7-1). VikingS RB Petei'SOIIOUt —TheMinnesota Vikings have ruled out running backAdrian Peterson for their final game of the season. The Vikings announcedSaturday they downgraded Peterson from doubtful on the original injury report to out against Detroit Sunday, when the Vikings and Lions will play the last game atthe Metrodome. Peterson sprained his right foot Dec. 8 atBaltimore andsat out the following weekagainst Philadelphia. He played last Sunday at Cincinnati but was mostly ineffective. Peterson acknowledgedafterward the injury affected his performance. He has also been bothered this year by a soregroin. Peterson finished the seasonwith1,266 yards rushing, the second-lowest total of his sevenyears in the NFL.
East W L T Pct PF PA 9 6 0 .6 0 0418 360 8 7
0 . 533417 408
6 9 0 .40 0274 377 3 12 0 . 2 00 328 458 South W L T Pct PF PA x-Carolina 11 4 0 .733 345 221 N ew Orleans 1 0 5 0 . 6 67 372 287 Atlanta 4 11 0 .267 333 422 271 347 TampaBay 4 11 0 . 2 67 Norlh W L T Pct PF PA Chicago 8 7 0 . 533417 445 GreenBay 7 7 1 . 500384 400 Detroit 7 8 0 . 4 67382 362 Minnesota 4 10 1 .300 377 467 West W L T Pct PF PA x-Seattle 12 3 0 .800 390 222 San Francisco 1 1 4 0 . 7 33 383 252 Arizona 10 5 0 .667 359 301 St. Louis 7 8 0 . 4 67339 337 x-clinched playoffspot y-chnched division
Today's Games HoustonatTennessee,10a.m. Detroit atMinnesota,10a.m. CarolinaatAtlanta,10 a.m. Cleveland atPitsburgh,10a.m. Washington at N.Y.Giants,10 a.m Baltimore at Cincinnati,10 a.m. Jacksonville atIndianapolis,10a.m. N.Y.JetsatMiami,10a.m. Denver at Oakland,1;25 p.m Kansas CityatSanDiego,1:25 p.m St. LouisatSeattle, 1:25p.m SanFranciscoatArizona,1:25 p.m Green Bayat Chicago,1:25 p.m TampaBayatNewOrleans,1: 25p.m Buff aloatNewEngland,1:25p.m Philadelphiaat Dallas, 5:30p.m. End otregularseason Playoff Scenarios
WINTER SPORTS
AFC
LodWiCk earnS 6th OlympiCSpOt—ToddLodvvick earned a spot in his sixth Winter Olympics, winning the nordic combined competition Saturday in the U.S.trials at Park City, Utah. The37-yearold Lodwick, who appeared in his first Olympics in1994 at17, won both the ski jumping portion of the event andthe 10-kilometer cross country race. Heearned 125.0 points in the ski jump andfinished the race in 25 minutes, 27.6seconds. Bryan Fletcher wassecond overall, and Bill DeMong third.
Speedskater DQed from Olympic berth at trialsMitchell Whitmore claimed the top spot on themedal podium at the U.S. speedskating trials. The real dramawaswho finished fourth. Two-time Olympic gold medalist Shani Davis claimed the last berth in the 500 meters Saturday in Kearns, Utah, but only after Jonathan Garcia was disqualified for failing to wear timing transponders on his ankles while skating a personal-best time that would haveearned him a trip to Sochi. U.S.Speedskating officials granted Garcia areskate about a half-hour later, after everyone elsewas done. TheTexan skated alone, with Davis watching from the infield, but was nearly a half-second slower than his previous time of 34.85 seconds. On the women's side, Heather Richardson breezed to victory in the 500 ahead of friendly rival Brittany Bowe.Along with Davis, they areconsidered the leading medal hopefuls for the American team atSochi.
HarVey, Bjoergen Win PrOIOgue —AlexHarveyshruggedoff a broken ski and difficult conditions to win the 4.5-kilometer freestyle prologue for theTour de Ski on Saturday in Oberhof, Germany, beating Canadian teammateDevon Kershaw by4.1 seconds. In the women's prologue, overall cross-country World Cupleader Marit Bjoergen led a1-2 Norwegian finish in a 3-kilometer race. Mild and rainy weather forced organizers to shorten the course andchange the format of the competition, a decision that led to the withdrawal of four-time women'sTour winner Justyna Kowalczyk of Poland. The Olympic champion said it was unfair to havefive freestyle and only two classical races in the seven-stage event. — From wire reports
Clinched Denver —AFCWest andfirst-round bye New England—AFCEast Cincinnali —AFCNorth Indianapolis — AFCSouth KansasCity—playoff spot Denver (atOakland) Clincheshome-field advantagethroughout AFCplayoffs with: —Win ortie, OR — New Englandlossortie New England(vs. Buffalo) Clinches first-roundbyewith: — WinortierOR — Cincinnatilossortie andIndianapolis lossortie Clincheshome-field advantagethroughout AFCplayoffs with: —WinandDenver loss Cincinnati(vs.Baltimore) Clinches first-roundbyewith: — WinandNewEnglandloss Indianapolis (vs. Jacksonville) Clinches first-roundbyewith: — Win andNewEngland loss andCincinnati loss ortie Miami(vs. N.y. Jets) Clinches playoffspot with: —WinandBaltimore lossor tie, OR — WinandSanDiegowin,OR — TieandBaltimore lossandSan Diegoloss ortie, OR —TieandBaltimoretie andSanDiegotie Baltimore (at Cincinnati) Clinches playoffspot with: —WinandSanDiegoloss ortie, OR —WinandMiami lossortie, OR —TieandMiamiloss andSanDiegoloss ortie, OR —TieandMiamitie andSanDiego loss,OR — Miami lossandSanDiego loss andPittsburgh loss ortie San Diego(vs. KansasCity) Clinches playoffspot with: — WinandMiamilossortie andBaltimore loss or tie, OR —TieandMiamiloss andBaltimore loss Pitlsburgh (vs.Cleveland) Clinches playoffspotwith: — Win andMiami loss andBaltimore loss andSan Diegoloss NFC Clinched Seatge —playoffspot
Carolina —playoff spot San Francisco—playoffspot Seatlle (vs. St. Louis) Clinches NFCWest and home-field advantage throughoutNFCplayoffswith: —Win ortie, OR —SanFranciscoloss ortie Carolina (atAtlanta) ClinchesNFCSouthandafirst-round byewith: —Win ortie, OR —NewOrleansloss ortie Clincheshome-field advantagethroughout NFCplayoffs with: —WinandSeattle lossandSanFranciscowin Philadelphia (at Dallas) ClinchesNFCEastdivision with: — Winortie Chicago(vs. GreenBay) ClinchesNFCNorth with: — Winortie San Francisco (at Arizona) ClinchesNFCWest and first-round byewrth: —WinandSeattle loss Clinches NFCWest and home-field advantage throughoutNFCplayoffswith: —WinandSeattle lossandCarolina lossortie New Orleans(vs. TampaBay) ClinchesNFCSouthandfirst-round byewith: —WinandCarolina loss Clinchesplayoff spotwith: —Win,OR —TieandArizonatie, OR —Arizonaloss Arizona(vs. SanFrancisco) Clinchesplayoff spotwith: —WinandNewOrleanslossor tie, OR —TieandNewOrleansloss Dallas (vs. Philadelphia) ClinchesNFCEastwith: — Win GreenBay(at Chicago) ClinchesNFCNorth with: — Win NFL Team Statistics Week16
AveragePerGame
American Football Conference
Denver SanDiego NewEngland Cincinnati Houston Cleveland Pittsburgh Indianapolis Oakland Tennesse e KansasCity Buffalo N.Y.Jets Miami Baltimore Jacksonvile
Offense yards Rush Pass 457.3 116.6 340.7 392.5 384.7 366.8 351.2 342.0 340.5 339.3 339.0 338.6 337.6 334.5 314.4 314.1 313.1 290.1
118.6 273.9 119.9 264.8 109.6 257.2 111.9 239.3 86.9 255.1 84.2 256.3 110.9 228.4 129.1 209.9 116.2 222.4 127.5 210.1 142.5 191.9 133.6 180.8 89.9 224.2 85.4 227.7 81.2 208.9
Defense yards Rush Pass
Cincinnati 311.1 99.8 211.3 Houston 318.0 120.5 197.5 Buffalo 330.1 119.7 210.4 Baltimore 331.7 105.1 226.7 Cleveland 335.1 110.7 224.4 N.Y.Jets 337.5 88.0 249.5 Pittsburgh 340.1 118.0 222.1 Tennessee 341.3 115.3 225.9 Oakland 357.4 106.9 250.5 Indianapolis 357.5 130.7 226.9 Miami 358.4 122.9 235.5 Denver 362.7 104.1 258.6 KansasCity 365.3 115.8 249.5 SanDiego 368.8 105.5 263.3 NewEngland 371.7 131.7 240.0 Jacksonvile 379.4 135.2 244.2 National Football Conf erence Offense yards Rush Pass Philadelphia 420.7 161.9 258.7 Detroit 401.9 115.3 286.7 GreenBay 395.4 131.7 263.7 NewOrleans 394.9 91.7 303.2 Chicago 384.3 113.8 270.5 Washington 377.6 138.2 239.4 Atlanta 345.5 78.1 267.5 Minnesota 344.2 127.1 217.1 Seattle 343.7 138.5 205.2Arizona 337.3 97.1 240.2 Dallas 336.3 96.5 239.7 SanFrancisco 320.3 141.2 179.1 Carolina 319.1 126.1 192.9 St. Louis 314.6 115.9 198.7 N.Y.Giants 309.5 80.7 228.8 TampaBay 276.1 102.5 173.7 Defense yards Rush Pass Seattle 281.3 107.5 173.8 Carolina 300.9 87.7 213.2 SanFranc> sco 305.9 96.8 209.1 NewOrleans 306.7 114.1 192.7 Arizona 313.6 84.5 229.1 N.Y.Giants 337.7 110.1 227.5 TampaBay 340.0 110.9 229.1 Detroit 346.7 94.8 251.9 St. Louis 350.1 102.3 247.7 Washington 359.1 109.8 249.3 GreenBay 374.1 125.3 248.8 Atlanta 385.8 135.9 249.9 Chicago 389.3 161.5 227.8 Philadelphia 392.7 107.5 285.2 Minnesota 408.0 113.6 294.4 Dallas 418.6 127.9 290.7
College Bowl Glance AR TimesPST Saturday,Dec.28 Pinstripe Bowl At Newyork NotreDame29, Rutgers16 Belk Bowl At Charlotte, N.C. North Carolina39, Cincinnati17 Russell Athletic Bowl At Orlando, Fla. Louisville 36,Miami9 Buffalo Wild WingsBowl At Tempe,Ariz. KansasState31, Michigan14
Monday,Dec.30 Armed ForcesBowl At Fort Worth, Texas MiddleTennessee (8-4) vs. Navy(8-4), 8:45a.m. (ESPN) Music City Bowl At Nashville, Tenn. Mississippi(7-5)vs.Georgia Tech (7-5), 12:15p.m. (ESPN) Alamo Bowl At SanAntonio Oregon(10-2)vs.Texas(8-4), 3:45p.m. (ESPN) Holiday Bowl At San Diego ArizonaState(10-3) vs.TexasTech(7-5), 7:15p.m. (ESPN) Tuesday, Dec.31 AdvocareV100Bowl At Shreveporl, La. Arizona(7-5) vs. BostonCollege(7-5), 9;30a.m. (ESPN) Sun Bowl At EI Paso,Texas VirginiaTech(8-4)vs. UCLA(9-3), 11a.m.(CBS) Liberly Bowl At Memphis, Tenn. Rice(9-3) vs.Mississippi State(6-6),1 p.m.(ESPN) Chick-fil-A Bowl At Atlanta TexasA&M(8-4) vs.Duke(10-3), 5 p.m.(ESPN) Wednesday,Jan. 1 Hearl ot Dallas Bowl At Dallas UNLV(7-5)vs. NorthTexas(8-4), 9 a.m.(ESPNU) Gator Bowl At Jacksonville, Fla. Nebraska (8-4) vs.Georgia(8-4), 9a.m.(ESPN2) Capital OneBowl At Orlando, Fla. Wisconsin(9-3) vs. SouthCarolina (10-2), 10a.m.
(ABC)
Outback Bowl At Tampa, Fla. lowa(8-4)vs.LSU(9-3),10 a.m.(ESPN) Rose Bowl At Pasadena,Calif. Stanford(11-2)vs. MichiganState (12-1), 2 p.m. (ESPN) Fiesta Bowl At Glendale, Ariz. Baylor(11-1)vs.UCF(11-1),5:30 p.m.(ESPN)
Thursday, Jan. 2 Sugar Bowl At NewOrleans Alabama (11-1) vs. Oklahoma(10-2), 5:30 p.m. (ESPN ) Friday, Jan. 3 OrangeBowl At Miami OhioState(121)vs.Clemson(10 2),5p m.(ESPN) Cotton Bowl At Arlington, Texas Missouri(11-2)vs.OklahomaState(10-2), 4:30p.m.
Richmond 87, Davidson68 Rutgers66, SouthFlorida 53 SouthCarolina82, SavannahSt.40 Tennessee Tech72,Jacksonville St.67 Winthrop55,Presbyterian50 Midwest Creighton65, Viffanova58 E. Illinois80,TennesseeSt. 70 fl-Chicago80 Denver68 lowa88,NorthDakota62 Marquette61,Butler 59 Michigan76,AlcornSt. 31 Purdue109,Cent. Michigan97 (FOX) SIU-Edwardsville68,Belmont56 Southwesl Betting line Arkansas100,MVSU54 Baylor82,McNeeseSt.57 NFL HoustonBaptist 99,Huston-Tilotson48 (Hometeamsin CAPS) Favome Opening Currenl Underdog TCU76, PrairieView47 Texas87,Idaho58 Today Af (M 80,LouisianaTech52 Panthers 7 6.5 FAL CONSTexas BEARS 3 3 Packers UCF67, Houston59 UTSA 79, N.DakotaSt. 68 TITANS 6.5 7 Texans Far West STEELR ES 7 7 Browns GIANTS 3.5 3.5 Red skins BYU90,LoyolaMarymount72 86, UtahSt.81 BENGA LS 5.5 6.5 Rave ns Coll. of Idaho COLTS 11.5 11 Jagu ars GrandCanyon72, LIUBrooklyn63 Eagles 2.5 7 COW BOYSPortland73, Pacific 65 St. 84,UCDavis 78 DOLPHINS 6.5 6 Jets Sacramento VIKINGS 3 3 Lions SaintMary's(Cal)79,Gonzaga78, OT San Di e go 71, Pepperdine43 PATRIO TS 9 7.5 Bills SAINTS 12.5 12 Buc caneersSouthernCal89, LongBeachSt.72 Broncos 12 11 RAIDERS Stanford86, FresnoSt.54 Barbara78, Seattle 75 49ers 1.5 1 CARDINALS UC Santa CHARG ERS 9.5 10 Chiefs UCLA96,CalPoly89 SEAHA WKS 10 11 Rams UtahValley89, NewOrleans49 Tournament Cavalier Classic College First Round Monday, Dec.30 Princeton79,Alabama59 Armed ForcesBowl 6 6.5 Mid Tenn StVirginia70,CoppinSt.45 CycloneChallenge Music City Bowl First Round Mississippi 2.5 3 Geo r gia Tech lowaSt.72,HolyCross50 Alamo Bowl Oregon 13 14 Texas William 8Mary66, Saint Louis 56 FIU Sun AFunClassic Holiday Bowl First Round ArizonaSt 13.5 14 Tex as Tech FIU 79,Fairleigh Dickinson57 WakeForest79, FloridaA8M63 Tuesday, Dec.81 Miami HolidayTournament AdvocareV100Bowl First Round Arizona 7 7 Bos t on College Miami80,MorganSt.42 Sun Bowl Ucla 7 7 Vrrg mra TechNewMexico56, W.Carolina37 San DiegoSurf 'NSlam Liberly Bowl First Round Mississippi St 7 7 Rice NC State77,KansasSt. 60 Chick-til-A Bowl St. 58,UCRiverside57 T exas A&M 12.5 12 . 5 Duke San Diego Terrapin Classic First Round Wednesday,Jan. 1 Coll. ofCharleston79,Howard68 Gator Bowl Georgia 9 9 Nebraska Maryland110,Wofford53 Tulane/DoubleTreeClassic Heart of Dallas Bowl First Round N. Texas 6.5 6.5 Unlv IndianaSt.70,Northwestern 67 Capital OneBowl Wisconsin 2.5 1 S. Carolina Tulane85,Northeastern49 OutbackBowl Lsu 7.5 7.5 lowa HOCKEY Rose Bowl Stanford 15 5 MichiganSt NHL Fiesta Bowl Baylor 17.5 17 C. Florida NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE AR TimesPST Thursday,Jan. 2 Sugar Bowl EaslernConference Alabama 1 4. 5 15 . 5 Okl ahoma Atlantic Division GP W L OT PlsGF GA Friday, Jan. 3 Boston 3 9 26 11 2 5 4 114 81 Cotton Bowl Tampa Bay 3 8 23 11 4 50 107 89 Missouri 1 1 Oklahoma St Montreal 3 9 23 13 3 49 98 85 OrangeBowl Detroit 4 0 18 13 9 45 103 111 OhioSt 5 2.5 Clemson Toronto 4 0 19 16 5 43 110 116 Ottawa 4 1 16 18 7 39 115 134 Saturday, Jan. 4 Florida 3 9 14 20 5 3 3 91 127 CompassBowl Buffalo 3 8 10 24 4 2 4 69 109 Vanderbilt 3 2.5 Hous t on Metropolitan Division GP W L OT PlsGF GA Sunday,Jan. 6 P ittsburgh 40 28 11 1 5 7 125 91 Go DaddyBowl W ashington 38 20 14 4 4 4 120 114 Ball St 8.5 8.5 Ark ansas StP hiladelphia 38 18 16 4 4 0 97 107 N ewJersey 40 16 16 8 4 0 95 102 Monday, Jan. 6 C olumbus 38 17 17 4 3 8 103 107 BCSChampionship N .Y.Rangers 39 18 19 2 38 90 105 F lorida St. 8. 5 8.5 Aubu r n C arolina 3 8 1 4 1 5 9 3 7 89 109 N.Y.lslanders 39 11 21 7 29 97 131 WeslernConference BASKETBALL Central Division GP W L OT PlsGF GA Men's College Chicago 4 1 27 7 7 6 1 157 115 St. Louis 37 25 7 5 5 5 134 90 Saturday'sGames Colorado 3 7 23 11 3 49 108 95 East Minnesota 4 0 20 15 5 4 5 92 102 Binghamton 67,Bryant 62 Dallas 3 7 19 12 6 4 4 110 108 Fairlield73,Buckneg64 Winnipeg 4 0 17 18 5 39 109 120 George Washington69, Hofstra 58 Nashville 3 9 17 18 4 38 89 115 Georgetown 92, FIU57 Pacific Division Harvard94, Fordham86 GP W L OT PlsGF GA KansasSt.72,Tulane41 Anaheim 4 0 2 8 7 5 61 130 100 Southern Miss. 77,RhodeIsland64 SanJose 3 8 2 4 8 6 54 125 97 St. John's65,Columbi a59 L osAngeles 39 25 10 4 54 108 79 St. Peter's67,Cornell 59 V ancouver 39 22 11 6 50 106 93 Syracuse 78,Vrffanova62 P hoenix 3 8 1 9 1 0 9 4 7 116 117 Uconn82,E.Washington 65 C algary 38 1 4 1 8 6 3 4 95 120 UMass69, Providence67,OT E dmonton 4 1 1 3 24 4 3 0 106 139 VCU69,Boston College 50 NOTE: Two poi n ts for a win, onepoint for overtime South loss. Alabama St.78, Auburn-Montgomery51 Saturday'sGames CharlestonSouthern122, St. Andrews40 Montreal2, TampaBay1, SO Duke82, E.Michigan59 S t. Loui s 6, Chi c ago5, SO GeorgiaSouthern66, NCA&T63 Philadelphia4,Edm onton3, SO Kentucky 73, Louisville 66 Ottawa 4, Boston 3 LSU79,McNeeseSt. 52 Detroit 4,Florida3 Liberty92,Southeastern (Fla.)53 NewJersey2,N.Y.Islanders1 Memphis 75,JacksonSt.61 Nashville3,LosAngeles 2 Missouri68,NCState64 Anahei m 3,Phoenix2,OT Richmond 67, OldDominion 58 Today'sGames SouthCarolina78 Akron45 Washi ngton at Bufalo, 2p.m. Troy74,Belhaven62 Montrealat Florida,2p.m. UNCAshevile 75, UNCWilmington61 Pittsburghat Columbus,3p.m. UNCGreensboro55, VirginiaTech52 St. Louisat Dalas, 3p.m. W. Kentucky103, Brescia65 CarolinaatToronto, 4p.m. Midwesl N.Y.Rangersat Tampa Bay, 4p.m. Butler66,NJIT48 Vancouverat Calgary,4:30p.m. Cincinnati74,Nebraska59 N.Y.IslandersatMinnesota, 5p.m. Cleveland St.78, KentSt.70 Winnipeg at Colorado,5 p.m. E. Illinois70,TennesseeSt.69 Anahei m atSanJose,7:30p.m. Evansville96,Grambling St.61 Monday'sGames Green Bay91, St.Francis (RI.) 41 Washingtonat Ottawa,4:30 p.m. f lmois74,Ill.-chrcago60 L os An g e l e s a t C h icago,5p.m. IndianaSt. 85,Belmont 73 Detroit atNashvile, 5 p.m. Marquette 71,Samford48 PhiladelphiaatVancouver,7 p.m. Michigan88,Holy Cross66 MichiganSt.101,NewOrleans48 Minnesota65,TexasA&M-CC44 DEALS N. Iowa90,lona78 S. DakotaSt.65, UMKC60 SouthFlorida61rBradley 57 Transactions Toledo85,Coppin St.66 BASEBALL Wisconsin80,PrairieView43 AmericanLeague Xavier68,WakeForest 53 KANSAS CITY ROYALS— Agreedto termswith Southwest INF JasonDonaldand OFMelky Mesaon minor Arkansas 89, HighPoint 48 l e ague contracts. Denver 67,AlcornSt.49 National League Nebraska-om aha104,Cent. Arkansas88 SAN DIEGOPADRES — Signed RHP Joaquin SamHoustonSt.82, LIUBrooklyn 78 Benoit to atwo-yearcontract. DesignatedRHPAdys UTEP 67, W.Illinois 64 Portillo forassignment. Far West BASKETBALL ArizonaSt.74,UCIrvine 61 National Basketball Association CS Bakersfield61, IdahoSt. 57 CLEVEL ANDCAVALIERS—Suspended CAndrew California90,Furman60 Bynumindefinitely fromthe teamfor detrimental conColorado 84, Georgia70 duct and ba nnedhimfromall teamactivities. ColoradoSt. 86,Lamar71 FOOTBALL FresnoSt.104, UCMerced43 National Football League Gonzaga74,SantaClara60 CHICAGO B E AR S —SignedRBTonyFiammettato LongBeachSt.80, Nevada77, OT atwo-yearcontract extension. Loyol aMarymount87 BYU76 GREEN BA Y PACKERS— Activated WRRandaff Montana 72, Idaho71 Cobbfrominjured reserve. NewMex>coSt.82,SouthAlabama64 H OUSTO N TEXANS—PlacedTEsGarrettGraham Pepperdine75,SanDiego64 and Brad Smeffey oninjured reserve. SignedTEPhilSan Francisco87, Portland81,OT lip SupernawandRBChad Spann from the practice SanJoseSt.87, Pacifica 59 squad. UCLA75,Alabama67 NEW ENGLANDPATRIOTS — Signed S Kanorris UNLV83,CalSt.-Fugerton64 DavisandDBJustin Greenfromthepractice squad. UtahSt. 84,SanDiegoChristian 53 SAN FRANCI SCO 49ERS — Placed WR Mario UtahValley75,TennesseeTech66 Manningham on injured reserve. Washin gtonSt.85,MVSU48 HOCKEY Weber St.75,N.NewMexico49 National HockeyLeague BOSTONBRUINS— AssignedGNiklasSvedberg to Providence (AHL). Recaled DZachTrotmanfrom Women's College Providence. Saturday'sGames DALLASSTARS— AssignedFColtonSceviourto East Texas(AHL). Columbi a87,Lehigh80 DETROIR TEDWINGS— AssignedCRileySheahGeorgeWashington77, AmericanU.64 an toGrandRapids (AHL). St. John'72, s Seton Hall 63 MINNESOTA WILD— PlacedLW ZachPariseon Towson 67,Loyola(Md.) 46 injured reserve.Recalled GJohanGustafsson from VCU77, NJIT72 lowa(AHL). South NEWJERSEYDEVILS—Assigned FTim Sestito Charleston Southern 84, Radford64 to Albany(AHL).ActivatedDBryce Salvador from CoastalCarolina83, Longwood53 injuredreserve. ETSU87, GeorgeMason76 ST.LOUISBLUES— PlacedFAlexSteenoninFlorida67,Georgetown65, OT iuredreserve. FloridaSt. 76,UT-Martin 53 VANCO UVERCANUCKS— SignedCDane Fox Gardner-Webb 53, UNCAshevile 47 and assigned himto Erie (OHL). Georgi82, a lginois 60 COLLEGE Liberty75,Campbell 52 CLEMSON— Announced G Devin Coleman is Northwestern St.73, NewMexico St.63 leavingthemen'sbasketball teamandwil transfer.
D4
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, DEC 29, 2013
Cuverwrestin ta est ir inPen eton Bulletin staff report PENDLETON — Five Culver wrestlers placed third or better at the Freeberry
Tournament on Saturday, guiding the Class 2A/IA Bulldogs to 195 points and a third-place finish behind only 5A Pendleton (291 points) and 6A McMinnville (238). "For what we had, it was a pretty good deal," said Culver coach J.D. Alley, whose team was missing several wrestlers on Saturday. "We as coaches, we liked what we saw. We always have things we go home andtalk about when we get home on Monday.
PREP ROUNDUP
logged a game-high 20 points for Madras (6-4), and Janae Adams chipped in with 11 points.
the fourth round of the consolation bracket for Mountain View. GIRLSBASKETBALL
Trinity Lutheran 41, Crow 33: CROW — Behind 20 points, nine rebounds and three blocks by Katie Murphy, the Saints
Sandy 46, Redmond 30: REDMOND — The Panthers held a 10-5 lead after the
put away Crow to win the Crow Cougar Classic championship — Trinity Luther-
first quarter, but Redmond coach Angela
an's first tournament title in the program's
Capps said her team became a little too three-year history. Erin Cowan put up 12 comfortablein the second. Soft passes points and five boards for the Saints (4and a lack of rebounding turned the Pan- 4), and Megan Clift finished with 14 rethers' lead into a 20-12 halftime deficit en bounds to go along with six points. route to the Class 5A nonconference loss. Summit frosh 36, North Lake 31: Kend"The kids we put on the bus today bat- Sophia Hamilton led Redmond (0-4) with ra Murphy collected 18 points to go along tled really hard," he continued. "We'll take 12 points, four rebounds and three assists, with 22 rebounds and three blocks, but it." and Chantel Dannis finished with nine the Cowgirls were outscored 15-10 in the Kyle Easterly highlighted the Bulldogs' points. While Ciara Lennie totaled just one fourth quarter at the Holiday Hoopfest at day at Pendleton High, taking first in the point, Capps said it was the senior's de- Bend High to fall to 5-3. 160-pound bracket by defeating Dustin fense that helped spark Redmond when it BOYS BASKETBALL Kistenmacher of Weiser (Idaho) 3-1 in the needed a catalyst. Pendleton 72, Redmond 62: WILSONfinal. L iberty 57, Mountain View 54: A VILLE — The Panthers were up 44-34 Clay McClure was second at 152 fourth-quarter run by Mountain View at halftime but lost the entire lead in the pounds for Culver, while Marco Retano
came up short against the Falcons from
(113 pounds), Saxton Schaffner (126) and Brandon Hawes (138) each finished third in their respective weight classes. Ridgeview managed to finish sixth in
Hillsboro in consolation play at the Les eight-team Wilsonville Tournament. "We Schwab Oregon Holiday Hoopfest at looked probably better than we had all
the 15-team interstate field, landing eight
Summit High School. Emma Platner led
Also for the Ravens, Connor Sperling placed third at 220 pounds, and Tanner Boatman (106) and Calvin Rodman (138) were each fifth in their respective brackets. Ian Oppenlander (106) and Bryce Vincent (120) each took second to pace Madras, which placed 10th as a team with 90.5 points.
In other Saturday action:
Pass starting at I:15 p.m.
Corbett said poor foul shooting was cost-
ly for the Panthers, who made just one of nine free throws in the third period (seven of 17 for the game) and had several misses on the front end of bonus opportunities. Redmond (0-6) made 11 3-point baskets in the game, including five by Michael Belmontes, who scored all of his team-high 20 points in the first half. Cody Moss scored 15 points, Derek Brown added 12, and
Brandon Benson had nine points and five rebounds for the Panthers.
Summit 62, Forest Grove 36: After a
Evergreen (Wash.) 60, Summit 47:After
slow first quarter, the Storm were able to
trailing by just two points at the half, the
hold Forest Grove to single digits in the final three quarters, allowing a combined 18 points en route to the Les Schwab Oregon Holiday Hoopfest win at Summit High. "We did very well," Summit coach Ryan Cruz said. "I thought it was a great team effort. The second and third quar-
Storm were outscored 19-6 in the third quarter before dropping the Les Schwab Oregon Holiday Hoopfest contest to Evergreen at Summit High. Nick Moyer led Summit (3-4) with 11 points, and Chris Reeves added nine points. The Storm wrap up tourney action today at 11:30 a.m. at Summit High against Milwaukie of
ters, our defense held them and offen-
sively we took off." Sarah Reeves led the Bend's Pies shines at NW Duals: PORT- Storm (6-2) with 22 points followed by LAND — Tucker Pies was 4-0 to highlight Raja Char's seven points. Summit plays Bend High wrestlers on the second day of for the tournament championship today the Northwest Duals tournament at West- at 3 p.m. at Summit against reigning view High School. Pies, a junior wrestling Class 5A state champion Willamette. at 170 pounds in his first season as a varRidgeview 48, Stayton 30: STAYTON sity regular, posted a record of 7-1 during — Ridgeview blitzed the host Eagles early the two-day tourney. "It was a great tour- and never looked back, rolling to victory nament for Tucker," said Lava Bears coach for third place in the eight-team Stayton Luke Larwin. "One loss all weekend, Holiday Classic. "It mostly stemmed from WRESTLING
that's just an outstanding performance."
year in the first half, moved the ball great,"
the Cougars with 19 points; she had five saidRedmond coach Jon Corbett."Butwe 3-pointers, including two in the fourth pe- got a little stagnant in the third quarter."
wrestlers in top-eight places. riod as Mountain View rallied from a 43-35 "It was a good team effort," said Ravens third-quarter deficit. Hailey Goetz had 10 coach Dan Elliott, whose squad scored points, and Jessie Goetz added eightpoints 131 points. "We're kind of depleted and and six steals for the Cougars. "We're killbanged up a little bit. We only brought 12 ing ourselves right now," said Mountain kids and eight of them placed, so we have View coach Steve Riper, pointing to his team's 22 turnovers. "Not to take anything to be happy with that." Leading the way for Ridgeview was away from Liberty, but we really hurt ourBoomer Fleming, who placed first at 195 selves with thoseturnovers."The Cougars pounds with a 3-0 record, including a (1-5) conclude play in the Hoopfest today 3-minute, 16-second fall over McMinn- with a consolation game against Grants ville's Brian Barnes in the championship.
third quarter in a consolation game at the
our defensive pressure," Ravens coach
Portland.
Madras 58, Sweet Home 45: STAYTON — Jered Pichette,according to Madras coach Allen Hair, "was Jered" in the third-
place game of the Stayton Holiday Classic. Pichette hit 13 of 17 shots, including 4 of 6
from 3-point range, en route to 30 points to lead the White Buffaloes to the victory. Brent Sullivan hauled in 10 rebounds to go
along with nine points for Madras (6-4), and Devon Wolfe contributed six points, five assists and 11 boards.
Noah Haines (152 pounds) and Cade Randi Davis said of her team's 17-2 domRidgeview drops a p a ir: PALM Foisset (182) were 3-1 in Saturday's match- inance of the first quarter. "We tried to SPRINGS, Calif. — The Ravens trailed es, and both finished 6-2 for the tourna-
come out with some intensity. We wanted
by just six points after the third quarter,
ment. In pool matches Saturday, Bend to bounce back from yesterday (a 61-41 but Bell Jeff outscored Ridgeview 24-11 defeated Glencoe 38-29, then lost 51-25 to semifinal loss to Central)." The Ravens in the fourth to seal the 64-45 win at the Aloha to finish fourth in a pool of seven. In stretched their lead to 30-8 by halftime. MaxPreps Holiday Classic. George Menthe fourth-place bracket, the Bears, ham- Kendal Durre tallied a game-high 12 dazona paced the Ravens with 12 points, strung by forfeits at three weight classes, points to lead nine scorers for Ridgeview and Justin Alvarez added eight points. In lost to Canby, 44-30, and fell to Westview, (6-2). the nightcap, Ridgeview (4-4) fell 78-59 to 39-27. "I'm really pleased with where the Crook County 60, Warrenton 35: AS- La Salle (Calif.). The Ravens have the day team's going," said Larwin. "We have a TORIA — Despite an 8 a.m. tipoff, and off today before returning to tournament lot of improving to do before we get to that
without two players due to either injury
action on Monday.
regional and state tournament, but a lot of or illness, the Cowgirls persevered. Crook good things are happening." County poured in 40 first-half points to Redmond 22nd in Reno: RENO, Nev. grab a 29-point lead en route to the con— With Mitch Willett taking eighth at solation championship win at the Asto138 pounds, Redmond High racked up ria tournament. While using suffocating
Crook County 41, Warrenton 33: ASTORIA — A four-game slide came to an end
75 points to place 22nd as a team in the
defensive pressure to limit Warrenton to just 11 points in the first half, the Cow-
the season. Mazama JV 55, Gilchrist 47: BONAN-
girls (4-4) shot 51 percent from the field for
ZA — The Grizzlies dropped to 4-2 over-
82-team Sierra Nevada Classic.Jake Brauchler (285 pounds), Austin Rystedt (126) and Hunter Rychener (120) each advanced as far as the third round of the championship bracket before being de-
as the Cowboys put away Warrenton in a
consolation game of the Astoria Tournament. Crook County improves to 2-6 on
the game. Kimmer Severance led Crook
all with the loss at the Bonanza Classic County with 17 points and 16 rebounds, Tournament.
Jena Ovens posted 13 points, and Riley Mountain View frosh 61, North Lake 38: feated, helping the Panthers to the sixth- Sappington finished with 10. Matthew Henkel posted 17 points, Zachmost points for an Oregon team at the Madras 54, Scappoose 42: STAYTON ariah McElhatton had seven rebounds, tourney. Mountain View, which was 43rd — The White Buffaloes opened the game but the Cowboys (1-6) fell to the Mountain with 46.5 points, was paced by Kaleb with an 8-0 run and never looked back to View freshmen at the Holiday Hoopfest Winebarger's fifth-place showing at 138 claim the consolation championship at the tournament at Bend High. pounds. Uriahs Smith (195) went as far as Stayton Holiday Classic. Mariah Stacona
NFL
Seattle gets 3rd chance at NFC West title vs. Rams By Tim Booth
and broke Kevin Carter's fran-
The Associated Press
chise record last week against Tampa Bay when he dropped
SEATTLE — After fail-
ing twice already to wrap up the NFC West and home-field advantage in the playoffs, today's season finale means everything for Seattle. With a win over St. Lou-
Mike Glennon for a third time.
With two more sacks, he can become the 10th player to fin-
ish the regular season with 20 or more sacks. T he Seahawks ar e
well
aware of Quinn's ability to be is, the Seahawks (12-3) disruptive. Quinn had three of losing twice over the final
St. Louis' seven sacks in the
month of the season to San first meeting. "He's a rare athlete for this Francisco and Arizona will simply beremembered as position. This is the kind of blips. But a third loss in four guy, exactly what you're lookgames might send Seattle ing for in the Leo position," on the road to start the post- Carroll said. "He's got that season with mounting con- speed, he's got the athleticism. cerns about a late-season He can do whatever you need collapse. him to do." "We're not a team that's Running Rams:Rookie Zac going to go ahead and sit Stacy is coming off his second d own and t ak e a k n e e straight 100-yard game and and just hopefully just get needs 42 yards to reach the through the game. We don't 1,000-yard mark for the seado that," Seattle coach Pete
Carroll said. "So the fact
son. If he can get there, Stacy would continue the Rams' lin-
eage of 1,000-yard rushers afstake, legitimately, is good ter Steven Jackson had eight for us and we'll try to make in a row before leaving in free the most of it." agency to Atlanta. that there's something at
Last week's loss to the
Cardinals ended Seattle's 14-game home winning streak and chipped away at theSeahawks' home invincibility built during the nearly two-year long win streak. Now the Seahawks are in a precarious position with no more room to falter.
What makes Stacy's accom-
plishment more impressive is the fifth-round pick out of Vanderbilt didn't become the starter until Week 5. He ran for
a season-high 134 yards in the first meeting. "It's very difficult to run against the Seahawks, but
we're going to hand it off to A Seattle loss and a win by him, so we'll see what hapthe 49ers would give San pens," Fisher said. Don't pass go: Seattle's secFrancisco the division and No. 1 seed, drop the Sea- ondary is trying to finish the hawks to the No. 5 seed and season with a rare accomplishdrastically change playoff ment that could be a precursor expectations. for the Seahawks' postseason Seattle knows how much hopes. Seattle leads the NFL of a challenge St. Louis in yards passing allowed (173.8 (7-8) will be. The Rams per game) and interceptions have won two straight and
(26).
pushedthe Seahawks to the Why is that important? The final yard and final play in Seahawks would become the Seattle's 14-9 win in Week third team since the merger to 8. lead the league in those two " Just b e cause w e ' v e categoriesand the previous played them tough and two — the 2002 Buccaneers played them close doesn't and 1982 Dolphins — both mean that we're going to reached the Super Bowl. play them close, that's no .500 or bust: The Rams will guarantee here," Rams finish off a decade without a coach Jeff Fisher said. winning season but have a Here are five more things chance at reaching the .500 to watch as the Rams and Seahawks close out the reg-
mark with a victory today. It would be the first time for St.
ular season: Louis getting to 8-8 since 2006 Russell rebound: It's and while it wouldn't be conbeen rare this season to see sidered that significant over Russell Wilson confused a 7-8-1 in Fisher's first season and indecisive. That's what
Arizona was able to accomplish, disguising coverages and getting enough pass rush to disrupt timing. Wilson threw for a career-low 108 yards and his passer rating of 49.6 was a season low. Wilson also struggled
lastyear, the Rams have done it for most of this year with-
out starting quarterback Sam Bradford.
A win would also make the NFC West the only division to have all four teams with a.500
or better record.
in t h ird-down s ituations
against Arizona. The Seahawks were 2 of 13 overall and I of 8 on third downs of
5 yards or longer. "I just have to be better.
PREP SCOREBOARD
That's what it really comes
E„L,E VAT,„I O,N
down to. I'll take the blame Girls basketball
Davis 4, C.Little 3. Totals145-1535.
Three-pointgoals — Pendleton:Smith 2; Redmond: Belmontes5,Moss2,D.Brown2,Benson2.
CrookCounty(60) — Kimmer Severance17, Class 5A Ovens13,Sappington10,Malott 8, Martin 6,Wood Nonconlerence 4, Bannon 2.Totals 284-1060. LesSchwab OregonHolidayHoopfest Sandy46, Redmond30 Warrenton 4 7 17 7 — 35 At Summit HighSchool Sandy (46) —Raquel Pellecer19, Mutt8, L. CrookCounty 16 2 4 11 9 — 60 Mountai nView 62,Bend58 Barnett 6, K. Barnett 5, Richardson 2, Seipert 2, Three-pointgoals— Warrenton:C. Little; H. Little; Mountain View (62) — MentsHaugen14, McAllester 2, Remsburg2. Totals18 7-10 46. CrookCounty: none. GarrettRoth14,Lannin13, Holly11,Kurzynowski6, Redmond (30) —Sophia Hamilton12, Dannis Cattell 3,Hjelm1.Totals 1920-32 62. 9, Edwards 4, Joyce2, Bergum2, Lennie1. Totals Stayton HolidayClassic Bend(58) —ConnorScott17, Parsons15,Sp12 4-8 30. Ridgeview48, Stayton 30 itler12, Robinson10,Harmeson2, Beaumarchais 2. 5 15 16 10 — 46 Sandy Ridgeyiew (48) —KendalDurre12,Ross8, Totals 2011-16 58. Redmond 1 0 2 9 9 — 3 0 Rodes7,Hidalgo6, D.Wilder 5, Keny4, H.Wilder 2, MountaiVi new 9 13 15 25 — 62 Three-pointgoals—Sandy:L. Barnett 2, K.Bar- Martin 2,watt z Totals 196-19 48. Bend 15 12 11 20 — 58 nett; Redm ond: Hamilton 2. Stayton (30) —MadisonAnderson7, HenThree-pointgoals —Mountain View: Lannin2, dricks 6,Hollenbeck4, Ikea-Mario 3, Sam.Sheppard Roth,Holly; Bend:Spitler 3, Scott2, Robinson2. LesSchwab OregonHolidayHoopfest 2, Shryock2, Thomas2, Sar. Sheppard2, Cozart1, At Summit HighSchool Lindemann1.Totals12 6-15 30. LesSchwab OregonHolidayHoopfest Willamette 61, Bend28 Ridgeview 17 13 12 6 — 48 At Summit HighSchool Bend (28) —Jessica McClay9, Kramer 6, Burn- Stayton 2 6 1012 — 30 Evergreen(Wash.) 60, Summit47 ham6,Wheeler5,Hayes2.Totals104-628. Three-pointgoals —Ridgeview:Durre2, Hidalgo, Evergreen (60) — Franks21, Henderson 11, willamese (61) —Lexi Bando25, Osborne11, Rodes;Stayton:none. Johnson9, Finnerton6, Ballard6, Martin 4, Eaton 3. Kast 8,Herring7,Munkers4, Baumgartner4, Gam Totals 2213-16 60. bill 2. Totals 23 10-1461. StaytonHolidayClassic Summit (47) —NickMoyer11, Reeves9, MaBend 1 1 12 2 3 — 2 8 Madras54, Scappoose42 chowski 7,Mullen6, Cherry5, McCormick4, Derwillamese 12 19 18 12 — 61 Scappoose (42) —LaceyUpdike15, Kessi11, mon 3,Menefee1. Totals 1514-20 47. Three-pointgoals -Bend:McClay3; Wilamette: Raya5, Sykes4,Wight 2, Catlow 2, Bailey 2, Tinning Evergreen 16 10 19 15 — 60 Bando 2, Osborne, Baumgartner. 1.Totals 1314-17 42. Summit 11 13 6 17 — 47 Madras i54) —MariahStacona20, J. Adams Three-pointgoals— Evergreen; Eaton; Summit: LesSchwab OregonHolidayHoopfest 11, Wolfe6, Frank6, Whipple 4, Esquivel 3, S.Scot Cherry,Machowski, Reeves. At SummitHighSchool 2, Suppah 2.Totals 235-1354. Liberty57, MountainView54 Scappoose 6 10 16 10 — 42 StaylonHolidayClassic MountainView(54) — EmmaPlatner19, H. Madras 21 16 11 6 — 54 Madras58, SweetHome45 Goetz10,J. Goetza, McClain 6, Serbus3, Warren3, Three -pointgoals— Scappoose;Updike2;Madras; Sweet Homei45) — GrantKauffman19, Rose VanderZwiep3,Tsourmas2.Totals1519-3054. Stacona2, Esquivel. 11, Galster9, Funk4, Adams2.Totals17 6-8 45. Liberty (57) — McKenzieOster27, Driscoll 12, Madras (58) —JeredPichette 30, Sullivan9, Gallegos10,Smotherman4, Wiliams 3, Romeo1. Crow CougarClassic Wolfe 6, Rauschenburg 5, Rehwinkel 3, Bryant 3, Totals1719-32 57. Trinity Lutheran41, Crow33 Leriche2.Totals 253-7 58. MountainView 1 2 1 76 1 9 — 54 Crow(33) —ChesneyWickwire8, Drullinger 7, SweetHome 14 1 0 8 1 3 — 45 Liberty 17 15 11 14 — 57 A. Mattox 7,Ma.Knettle 4, Me.Knetle 4, B. Mattox Madras 22 7 17 12 — 58 Three-pointgoals —MountainView: Platner 5; 2, Nickle1.Totals1111-20 33. Three-pointgoals— Sweet Home: Kaufman 2, Liberty:Oster3, Smotherman. Trinity Lutheran (41) — Katie Murphy20, Galster 2,Rose;Madras:Pichette4, Rauschenburg. Cowan12, Clitt 6, Spencer2, Sample1. Totals19 LesSchwab OregonHolidayHoopfest 3-8 41. MaxPrepsHolidayClassic At Summit HighSchool Crow 8 7 12 6 — 33 Bell Jeff (Calit J 64, Ridgeview45 Summit 62, ForestGrove36 TrinityLutheran 1 1 8 1 0 12 — 41 Ridgeview (45) — GeorgeMendazona 12, Forest Grove (36)— MadiAndreson8,Long Three-poingoal t s— none. Alvarez8, Stiles6, Manselle 5, Stanton4, Hovey3, 7,Hutchins7,Jamieson6,Turner3,Swanson1.ToO'Neal3,Bowman2,Albrecht 2.Totals159-1645. tals156-936. Bell Jeff (64) — Abid Oses16, MalcolmRegisSummit (62) — SarahReeves 22, Heinly11, Boys basketball ford 16,Escribano9, Thomas8, Wiliams 6, Verano Char 7,Naegele6, Hasenoehrl 5, Manley4, Gordon 6, Guillen 2,Hopkins1. Totals 2318-25 64. Wilsonville Tournament 2, Cornett 2. Totals 2215-20 62. Ridgeview 12 7 15 11 — 45 Pendleton 72,Redmond62 F orest Grove 18 4 8 6 — 3 6 12 15 13 24 — 64 Pendleton (72) —DonteRobinson25, Boozer Bell Jeft Summit 15 20 21 6 — 62 18, Anderson13,Smith11, Quinn2, Bradt2, Pers- Three-pointgoals— Ridgeview:Alvarez2, MendaThree-point goals — Forest Grove: Long, inger1.Totals2912-21 72. zona2,Hovey,O'Neal;BellJeff :none. Hutchins;Summit: Heinly 2, Reeves. Redmond (62) — MichaelBelmontes20,Moss 15, D. Brown12,Benson9, Winters2, T.Brown2, Astoria Tournament Wrestling Burroughs 2. Totals 22 7-1762. Crook County60, Warrenton35 22 12 16 22 — 72 FreeberryTournament Warrenton (35) —HannaLittle18, Jensen10, Pendleton Redmond 22 22 5 13 — 62 At PendletonHighSchool
for it," Wilson said. Team scores — Pendleton291, McMinnvile 238, Culver195,Weiser(Idahoj 191,WallaWalla (Wash.)152.5,Ridgeview131,Burns126,Wilamina 105, Milton-Freew ater 98, Madras90.5, Riverside 75.5, TheDales Wahtonka 75,Baker 51.5, Columbia (Wash.)50.5,Heppner 39.5. Top eightfinishers 106 —1, Aristotle Rockwell, R.2, lan Oppenlander,Mad.3, RileyChester, MF.4, Dallon Higgins, Bur. 5,TannerBoatman, RV.6, JamesAhHee, Bak. 7, JoshCamacho,Ww.8,KyleHamann,Bak.113— 1, TristanHolcomb,P.2, AspenNelson, M. 3, Marco Retano,C.4, Alvaro Flores, M.5, JoshuaPettyjohn, WW.6, Samuel Tyler, TDW .7, Fletcher Andrews,Col. 8, IsaiahBell, P.120— 1, MorganHolcomb, P.2, BryceVincent,Mad.3, BrianOcampo,WW.4, Christian oyervides,W.6, JordanCombs, Wil. 6, Kristian Claudi o,W.7,JesusDiaz,MF.8,JaceOppenlander, Mad.126 — 1,HansRockwell,R.2,NoeGonzalez, WW. 3, SaxtonSchaffner,C.4,Raymond Huston, W. 5, KoreyGrende,Bak.6, Corbin Carpenter,RV. 7, BaileyYoung,M.8, Garison Alger, P.132— 1, DaltonDonaldson,M.2, MichaelReyes,Wil. 3, Jared Lemmon,H.4, UbaldoArana, W.5, Elijah Conlon, R. 6, ThomasCain,Bur.7,JarredDupont,Mad.8, KeanuBiagi, WW.138 — 1, CotyBrown,Wil. 2, Manny Humlie,M.3,Brandon Hawes,C.4,Cole Skramstad,MF.5, Calvin Rodm an, RV.6, Barrera Martin,WW . 7, IzaacTapia, TDW.8, Preston Tarpley, MF.145 —1, BobbyCrowston, M.2, RyanSkeen, P. 3,ErikSanchez,Weiser. 4,JohnnyEspeland,C.5, Hilario Mandujuano,W.6, Peter Cain,Bur.7, Clay Hansen, RV.8,GabeMcAlester,MF.152— 1,J.T. Barnes, M.2, ClayMcClure, C.3, TJ. Hancock, P. 4, AlexFerder,P.5, Levi Vincent, C.6, Mitchell Waters, TDW.7,BlakeYensen,MF.8,AmmonJuhasz, WW.160 —1, KyleEasterly, C.2, Dustin Kistenmacher,W.3, NathanBel, Col. 4, JoshBlanchard, M. 5, AustinHoward,Wil. 6, TrestonMaben, H. 7, Alex Kiess, M. 8,SamBliss, P.171— 1, PypeI McCallum,P.2, JadenSimpson, Bur.3, Terrel Platt, P. 4, AndrewGranchukoff, WW . 5, ElyKimball, WW . 6, JaidenJones, C.7,Esteban Gutierrez,C.8, Cord Flynn, H.182 — 1, Seth Nonnen macher, Bur. 2, Austin Walker,Col. 3, Eric Morales,TDW . 4, Tyler Heidt,Wil. 5,TannerYeager, P.6, Kyle Aldrich, H.7, Andrew Wiliamson, W.8, Austin Hill, RV.195—1, BoomerFleming, RV.2, Brian Barnes,M. 3,Anthony Baker,W.4, Mitchell Adams,C.5,JosephLinebarger, TDW.6,DonovanRomero,WW.7,MarcusTaylor,P. 8, Anthony Kernal, R.220—1,AustinRyder, Bur.2, JoeyBliss, P.3, ConnorSperli Ig, RV.4,JakePotter, M. 5, TreiWalker, W.6,Jeff Priester,P.t, TJ.Simpson, MF. 8,AndresMoll-Pallmo, Mad.275—1,PJ. Schubert,P.2, HaydenHerrick, W.3, QuintonAdams, P. 4, KurtBlackman, WW . 5, Miguel Sevila, Mad.6, Brian Chavez,RV.7, EthanChappell, M. 8, Gregory Moreno,MF.
Quinn's quest: St. Louis' Robert Quinn is having a spectacular season. The third-year defensive end leads the NFL with 18 sacks
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SUNDAY, DEC 29, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
D5
MEN'SCOLLEGEBASKETBALL ROUNDUP
COLLEGEFOOTBALL:BOWLROUNDUP
No. 2 Syracusetops No.8 Villanova
Bridgewater's fourTDs lead Louisville pastMiami
ByThe Associated Press SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Jim Boeheim lf
stared up in frustration at the Carrier
Dome scoreboard, his No. 2 Orange in big trouble against eighth-ranked
Q)
Villanova.
i ' - lelI
The Wildcats had started Saturday's game by hitting four straight 3-pointers — three swishes by James Bell and
v
another by Darrun Hilliard — and led 25-7 midway through the first half after
I
The Associated Press ORLANDO, Fla. — Leading up to the Russell Athletic Bowl, Louisville quarterback Teddy Bridgewater batted back questions about whether the game would be his last in college. If it was, he left plenty for the Cardinals to remember.
an NCAA investigation.
A big second quarter by the Cardinals, punctuated by Bridgewater's two touchdown
passes, helped Louisville take a 22-2 lead. Also on Saturday: No. 25 Notre Dame 29, Rutgers 16: NEW YORK — Tom-
B ridgewater t hrew t h r e e my Rees passed for 319 yards touchdown passes and ran for in his final college game, Kyle another score to help No. 18 Brindza kicked five field goals
a dunk by Josh Hart.
Syracuse struggled to create open looks and went nearly 4 minutes without a basket as the Wildcats looked exactly
like the team that had already beaten two ranked teams. "There was no indication we were go-
largest deficit of the season, it never
showed. They responded with a 20-0 run over the next 5 minutes to take their first lead and never trailed again, win-
ning 78-62 in a game between two of l
"They came out on fire. They kind of caught us off guard," said C.J. Fair, who had 17 points for the Orange despite
and Notre D ame
Saturday night. The Cardinals (12-1) spotted Miami (9-4) an early 2-0 lead, then dominated the rest of the w ay, racking up 554totalyards
through victory over Rutgers
m u ddled
this summer, set a school sea-
quarter and Rutgers star Bran-
in the Pinstripe Bowl. The
Fighting Irish (9-4) finished their follow-up season to last year's run to the national to the Hurricanes' 174. championship game a long With Cardinals' fans chant- way from the BCS against a ing "Teddy! Teddy!" at times two-touchdown underdog trythroughout the game, Bridge- ing to avoid a losing record. water, projected to be a top Notre Dame's TJ Jones scored NFL draft pick if he comes out on an 8-yard run in the first
ing to get going," Boeheim said. If the Orange were frazzled by their
nine unbeaten teams left in Division I.
Louisville rout Miami 36-9 on
' '"@':
son record with 31 touchdown don Coleman answered with a passes. The Miami native also 14-yard touchdown catch soon
constant double-teams. "We knew the
tied the school record with his
.'Sr-,
kind of team they are. It's hard to have a defense for the type of offense they have
after. Tarean Folston's 3-yard
27th victory as Louisville's touchdown run with 3:38 in the
for the first 5 or 10 minutes."
starter. "It meant a lot because not
Syracuse (12-0) tightened its defense and the Wildcats (11-1) missed seven
only because I and so many other guys going against our
ly gave the Irish a comfortable lead. North Carolina 39, Cincin-
hometown school, but we were
nati 17: CHARLOTTE, N.C.
shots, committed three fouls and were
called for a travel before losing the ball out of bounds as the game began to slip away.
Nick Lisi/The Associated Press
Syracuse's Jerami Grant, right, hits Villanova's James Bell, left, with his elbow andis called for a flagrant foul during the second half of Saturday's game in Syracuse, N.Y.
Villanova trailed 34-30 at the half,
not bad considering leading scorer JayVaughn Pinkston had only three points on 1-of-3 shooting, his only make coming on a desperation 3 at the shot-clock buzzer in the final minute.
Beavers'Brandtlikely to returnvs.Quinnipiac
Bell finished with a career-high six 3-pointers and matched his career high
Oregon State center Angus Brandt is expected to play todayagainst Quinnipiac after missing the previous two games with a hyperextended right knee and bonebruises suffered against Akron last Sunday in Hawaii. Brandt practiced Friday wearing a new braceafter he was held out of Wednesday' sgame versusHawaiiby coach Craig Robinson as a precautionary measure. "I thinkAngus is OK. It was abig scare," Robinson said before Friday's practice at Gill. "It scared him. It scared
with 25 points to lead Villanova before
all of us and I think it took a little bIt of
fouling out with 1:42 left.
wind out of our sails." Today's 8 p.m. tipoff at Gill Coliseum is the Beavers' fInal warmup for the Pac-12 men's basketball schedule, which for Oregon State (7-4) begins Jan. 2 at Colorado.
"They weathered the storm," Villano-
va coach Jay Wright said. "We hit shots.
When you hit shots like that, everything looks great, but you know you're not going to shoot that percentage for the en-
tire game. They weathered it and kept coming back at us. We had the lead and then we got sloppy." Trevor Cooney led Syracuse with 21 points, Tyler Ennis had 20, and Jerami Grant 11.
Also on Saturday:
No. 4 Wisconsin 80, Prairie View A&M 43:MADISON, Wis. — Sam Dekker had 16 points and 11 rebounds for his third
career double-double as Wisconsin improved to 13-0 for its best start since the 1913-14 squad went 15-0.
No. 5 Michigan State 101, New Orleans 48:EAST LANSING, Mich. — Keith Ap-
pling scored 16 of his career-high tying 27 points in the first half to help Michigan State (11-1) rout New Orleans. No.18 Kentucky 73, No. 6 Louisville 66: LEXINGTON, Ky. — Kentucky guards Andrew and Aaron Harrison combined for 28 points, including 11 during a crit-
ical second-half stretch with star Julius Randle sidelined by cramps, helping the Wildcats (10-3) beat Louisville (11-2). No. 9Duke 82,Eastern Michigan 59: DURHAM, N.C. — Jabari Parker scored
23 points and Duke (10-2) cruised past Eastern M i chigan. A n dr e
D a w k ins
— Corvallis Gazette-Times
scored 12 of his 19 points in the second half for Colorado (11-2). No. 23 UMass 69, Providence 67: AMHERST, Mass. — Derrick Gordon's put-back with 1.1 seconds left in over-
time lifted Massachusetts (11-1) past Providence. No. 24 Gonzaga 74, Santa Clara 60: SPOKANE, Wash. — David Stockton
scored a season-high 21 points as injury-plagued Gonzaga (11-2) beat Santa Clara in the teams' West Coast Conference opener. No. 25 Missouri 68, N.C. State 64: RALEIGH, N.C.— Jabari Brown hit the go-
ahead 3-pointer with 55.1 seconds left to help Missouri (11-1) edge North Carolina State.
Arizona State 74, UC Irvine 61: TEM-
LIENZ, Austria — Amer-
ican teenager Mikaela Shiffrin has a chance to end her
magnificent year by setting yet anotherrecord in today's final race of 2013.
At 18 years, 291 days, Shiffrin can become the youngest female skier to win five World
Cup slaloms in one calendar year. The record is held by retired Croatian standout Jani-
ca Kostelic, who was 67 days olderwhen she captured five slaloms in 2000. "I didn't even know that,
I guess now I am thinking about that," Shiffrin told The
reer wins in total. After her m a iden victo-
ters threw for 271 yards and connected with Tyler Lockett
15 of his 18 points in the second half as Arizona State (11-2) held off UC Irvine.
"As of now it's not about me, it's about this team," Bridgewater said. "We want to celebrate
on three touchdowns, leading
tonight's victory and each of
falo Wild Wings Bowl. Kansas State (8-5) scored on its first
Utah 124, Saint Katherine 51: SALT LAKE CITY — Jordan Loveridge scored
17 points and Dakarai Tucker added 14 to help Utah (ll-l) overwhelm St. Kath-
to 13 games. added 20 points with a season-high six California 90, Furman 60: BERKE3-pointers as a late replacement for an ill LEY, Calif. — Justin Cobbs and Tyrone Rodney Hood in the starting lineup. Wallace each scored 18 points in helpNo. 15 Connecticut 82, E. Washington ing California (9-4) remain unbeaten at 65: BRIDGEPORT, Conn. — Shabazz home. Napier had 15 points and nine assists UCLA 75, Alabama 67: LOS ANGEto lead UConn (ll-l) in a home game LES — Tony Parker scored 16 points, played 80 miles from campus. including two free tie-breaking free No. 17 Memphis 75, Jackson State throws with 56.8 seconds remaining, 61: MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Michael Dixon leading UCLA (11-2) to the win. scored 14 points, Shaq Goodwin had 13 Washington State 85, Mississippi Valpoints and seven rebounds, and Mem- ley State 48: PULLMAN, Wash. — Que Johnson scored 19 points and Royce phis (9-2) never trailed. No. 21 Colorado 84, Georgia 70: Woolridge added 16 as Washington State BOULDER, Colo. — Askia Booker (7-5) routed Mississippi Valley State.
AustrianwinsWorld Cupgiant slalom LIENZ, Austria — AnnaFenninger of Austria Used aflawless second run to win awomen's World Cupgiant slalom Saturday for her fifth career victory. Cheered on by ahomecrowd of 8,500, Fenninger was second after the first run but overtook leader JessIca LIndell-VIkarby of Sweden in the final leg to win in acombined time of 2 minutes, 17.00seconds.Lindell-Vikarbywas0.50secondsbehind. "My preparation was goodbut I didn't belIeve I could win today," said Fenninger, who hasmade19 World Cuppodiums over the past three seasons, trailing only Tina Maze(37) and Lindsey Vonn (23). American teenager MikaelaShiffrin came 0.51back in third for her second podium finish in GSafter finishing runner-Up in Beaver Creek onDec. 1,andAustrIa's KathrIn Zettel was the only other racer to finish within a second off the lead, 0.96 behind. Vonn skipped the race to rest her injured right kneeahead of the Sochi Olympics.
ry last year, Shiffrin won in
Finland, last month.
By winning today, Shiffrin would join a group of
Spitler finished with 12 Mountain View J.J. points, and Jaylin Robinson
Continued from D1 For Bend (3-4), Connor
North Carolina beat Cincinna-
ed in all three phases, offense, ti for its first Belk Bowl victodefense and kicking game." ry in four attempts. Marquise He was 35 for 45 for ca- Williams threw for 171 yards reer-high 447 yards. and a touchdown for the Tar Louisville won its second Heels (7-6) in their first bowl straight bowl game for its sec- victory since 2010. Cincinnati ond 12-win season. (9-4) was looking to become On the stage during the the bowl's first back-to-back postgame trophy presenta- champion since Virginia did tion Bridgewater, the game's it 10 years ago, but last year's MVP, was showered again by MVP Brandon Kay was limLouisville fans who beckoned ited to 181 yards passing and him with "One more year!" no touchdowns. The Tar Heels overtures. had five sacks, including one He reiterated though, that he fora safety. hadn't set any decision-making Kansas State 31, Michigan timelines on deciding wheth- 14: TEMPE, Ariz. — Jake WaNFL's early entry deadline.
erine to extend its home winning streak
Associated Press, adding that setting records "is definitely part of my goals." Shiffrin, who has been Zagreb, Croatia; Flachau, dominating the slalom circuit Austria; and Lenzerheide, this year by winning both the Switzerland in early 2013 beworld title and the World Cup fore winning the first slalom discipline title, has five ca- of the current season in Levi,
game, to compete. We compet-
er to submit his name for the
— The Associated Press
Cup podium finish after placing third here in 2011. "Last time I was in Lienz, I didn't have a great GS race
but I had a pretty good slalom race," she said. "I am just really taking it day by day ... I feel like I always leave something on the hill and I don't
overs, and turnovers turned into points for them."
chipped in with 12. "It was a well-played game Bend continues tournament S cott led the way w it h 17 on both sides. It was a good play today at 1:15 p.m. at Sumpoints to go along with four battle," Bend c oach S cott mit against Lakeside (Wash.). "I think it's a great indicaboards. Jacob Parsons went Baker said. "They put a little 6 of 6 shooting for 15 points, pressure on us in the fourth tion that it's going to be an
Kansas State to its first bowl victory in ll years in the Buf-
derclassmen — we all have de- three possessions, all touchcisions to make. But for tonight down passes from Waters to we wanted to focus on this Lockett, and its defense domgame and get this game out of inated Michigan (7-6) to end a the way. Celebrate it and enjoy five-game bowl losing streak. this moment."
Louisville coach Charlie Strong said throughout the
Little ad
week that he was banking on his defense to help spark the
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Cardinals' offense. It respond-
ed with one of its best efforts of the season. Miami, playing in its first bowl game since 2010, hasn't had a bowl victory since 2006, losing four straight. The Hurricanes were returning to the postseason following a twoyear, self-imposed ban during
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want to do that anymore."
Coming off a third-place finish in Saturday's giant slalom for her second podium this month, Shiffrin admitted
p I p
pI
she finds it increasingly difficult to focus on two different
disciplines. "It's a little bit harder to be able to focus on both and, at the same time, one after the
other," she said. "I am just trying to put my best out (in GS) but still save some six women who have won at energy. "Especially today, I have a least five slaloms in one year. Marlies Schild has achieved podium and I am really exthe feat four times — and the cited but I am trying to stay Austrian is chasing a record calm because I have a race 35th career slalom win. tomorrow, too. I am just tryShiffrin is returning to the ing to figure that out a little courseofherfirsteverWorl d bit."
quarter. We had a few turn-
us, whether it's seniors or un-
Aaana Range
U.S. teenShiffrin eyesyet another slalom record The Associated Press
going against a quality oppo- — T.J. Logan returned a kicknent," he said. "That's what off 78 yards for a touchdown, we've been waiting for all and Ryan Switzer scored on year...That's why you play the an 86-yardpunt return to help
PE, Ariz. — Shaquielle McKissic scored
ALPINE SKIING
By Eric Willemsen
fourth made it 26-16 and final-
outright battle for the IMC title," Reid said. "I honestly think you could see both of us
compete in Eugene (site of the Class 5A state tournament) in the final eight. I think both
teams have the potential to do that."
CangratulatiOSnTOQllr WinnerS Wendi LuskandMelodeeRidclime Theyhothwon
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D6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, DEC 29, 2013
Bears Continued from D1 The Lava Bears (5-3 overall) committed 15 turnovers and scored only five points in the second half. They struggled to match the fast-paced and physical defense of the Wolverines from Eugene (4-1 overall).
Bend High's Lisa Sylvester drives against Willamette's Autumn
points with two 3-pointers
Baumgartner durlng Saturday's gameat
forthree ofBend'sfivepoints in the second half. Both Kendall Kramer and B rydie Burnham had six points each
Summit High School.
for the Lava Bears, who will play Forest Grove for third
Continued from D1
could becoach Leslie Frazier's
The longest shot to get into the postseason is Pittsburgh. It
ers, one of which accounted
final year. Finishing with a fifth victory isn't going to tip
must beat Cleveland at home the scales in his favor. and have Miami lose to the
ly buckled down," Haas said. "We were a little slow switching out on screens. But in the
formed, in that third quarter especially. But that first half
quarterback Robert G r i f fin III in 2012. Right now, Hous-
second half we attacked it and it ended up a lot better for
there was some improvement, and that's why we play those preseason games."
ton has dibs on the No. 1 pick,
place at 11:30 a.m. today at Summit.
Joe Kline/ The Bulletin
McClay said Bend's goal was to work as a team and try t o
they came at us in the second
(half) like a really great defending state champion."
tremely talented, play well tos ai d h e ex p e ct- gether, play hard, and I don't
ed a tough matchup with
think they were too happy
Willamette. "We wanted to try to give
with where they were at the end of the first half."
could," Ervin said. "Turned
McClay hit three 3-point-
— a goal she said the Bears achieved in the first half. "We aren't happy with the second half, obviously," McClay said. "We were outper-
"I think we played about as
them a game for as long as we
Metrodome, so the building should be charged in what
New York Jets, Baltimore lose Game of the week at Cincinnati and San Diego Philadelphia Eagles (9-6) lose to Kansas City in order to at Dallas Cowboys (8-7) qualify as a wild card. When: 5:30 p.m. t oday (NBC). On deck Key injuries: Eagles - S Colt The St. Louis Rams have Anderson (knee) and G Julian a vested interest in a pair of Vandervelde (back) are out; S games that have absolutely Earl Wolff (knee) is questionno bearing on the playoffs. able. Cowboys - LB Sean Lee The Rams own Washington's (neck) and QB Tony Romo first-round pick next year as a (back) are out; LB Ernie Sims result of the trade Washington (groin) is doubtful; DE Demade to get in position to draft Marcus Ware (back, elbow) is
well as we could in that first half, and it took all the energy we had," Bend coach Todd Ervin said. "We didn't have any extra fuel in the tank and
Ervin
Playoff
and was five for six from the free-throw line.
Willamette coach Lance Haas said the Lava Bears were no match for the Wol-
out to be a half. They're really, really good. They're ex- verines' pace.
"In the second half we real-
us.
Leading Willamette was Lexi Bando, who scored 25
c o ntain W i l lamette
but just as it has almost every
game this year, it could blow it. If the Texans (2-13) win at
— Reporter: 541-383-0375, eolleribendbulletin.com.
Tennessee and Washington
(3-12) loses at the New York Giants, the two teams will be tied at 3-13. In that scenario,
Monday
The New York Post and The Houston
to clearthe decks and move on."
Rex Ryan of the New York Jets and Greg
This year, more than half a dozen Chronicle also used Black Monday in teams may clear the decks. In Washing- their headlines that day. ton, Redskins coach Mike Shanahan, It is unclear whether the news media whose team has three victories going created the phrase or whether reporters into today's game just one year after parroted a term used liberally by football making the playoffs, has feuded publicly insiders. But two years later, The Assowith team owner Daniel Snyder over the ciated Press ran an article that said that decisionto bench quarterback Robert the day after the regular season ends Griffin III. Mike Munchak of the Ten- "traditionally is called 'Black Monday' in nessee Titans, Dennis Allen in Oakland the coaching profession," although when
Schiano ofthe Tampa Bay Buccaneers are just a few of the leaders with their
and Jim Schwartz in Detroit are also in the hot seat. The Houston Texans, an-
Continued from D1 This year will quite likely be no different. As teams that started the season
with high hopes have slid out of contention, rumors have swirled about the future of coaches from New York to De-
troit and from Washington to Oakland. Minnesota Vikings coach Leslie Frazier,
fates in the balance as the regular season
comes to a close today. As with everything in the NFL, there is a science behind the decision to waste
no time in firing coaches. For one, no team wants the news media to spend yet more t im e speculating about a
coach after a deflating season. 'Ibrning the page as quickly as possible allows teams to change the conversation to the
future and the potential for wins and championships. But there is another practical merit to
moving fast: Teams have to start search-
this so-called tradition started was not
defined. other team unable to return to the playThere are few examples of NFL and offs, fired Gary Kubiak this month, just team personnel using the phrase, alweeks after he collapsed on the field though in a Jan. 6, 2000, article in The during a game and was hospitalized. Times-Picayune, Greg Bensel, a spokesInnovations like 24-hour sports chan- man for the New Orleans Saints, was nels, Twitter and blogs have fueled the quoted sayingthathe had discussed with coaching merry-go-round and given Tom Benson, the team owner, "what the Black Monday an almost historical or state of the league was on Black Monhysterical feel, depending on your point day" and "who was around and who of view. But the use of the phrase Black wasn't." That offseason, the Saints fired Monday todenote the coaching day of Mike Ditka and hired Jim Haslett. reckoning appears to date back only Bensel said he did not recall where about 10 or 15 years. he had first heard the phrase. But with-
questionable.
Player to watch: Cowboys backup quarterback Kyle Orton hasn't started a game since Week 17 of the 2011 season,
when he finished his season in Kansas City and beat the Denver Broncos, the team that had
let him go earlier in the year. Orton has thrown 15 passes
Washington would qualify for in three games the past two the top pick based on a weak- seasons. er schedule and then hand Recent history: The Cowover the top pick to the Rams. boys have won the past three Houston needs a quarterback games, including a 17-3 decia lot more than the Rams do,
sion in Philadelphia on Oct. 20.
so it might be able to get LouKey statistic: In games the isville quarterback Teddy Eagles have won, running Bridgewater even if it picks back LeSean McCoy averages second. Either way, the Rams 22 carri es.In games they have are in a great position with lost, he averages 15. Washington's pick plus their Bottom line: The l oss of own, which should be some- Romo takes the shine off this where in the middle of the first winner-take all matchup for round. the NFC East title, but it might
Northern exposure Not much to talk about here
be a mistake to write off Orton
justbecause he hasn't played in two years. He's an Alex
beyond the Green Bay Packers Smith type who will find open and Chicago Bears squaring receivers and not turn the ball off for the division title today at Soldier Field. It's winner
take all. The loser will finish with eight losses and should wind up picking between 12 and 20 in the first round of
over. The problem for the Cow-
boys is McCoy, who leads the NFL in yards from scrimmage and can wear out a defense.
Dallas is so bad defending the run that it's questionable why the Eagles would even consider passing it. But with a quar-
Even with an extensive search of news databases, it is difficult to determine who
in a few years, others in the NFL start-
the draft. Detroit and Minne-
ed saying Black Monday, including Bill
fired their coaches will be bidding for a coinedthe phrase Black Monday, which limited pool of top replacements. Once a the NFL does not endorse. Some of the head coach is hired, other coaching spots earliest references were in the late 1990s, must be filled. Then all of them must pre- including a story in The Chicago Tribune pare for the combine and the draft. about several college coaches' being
Cowher, then the coach of the Pittsburgh
sota each may be playing for its coach's future. That's less terback who has thrown 25
ing for a new coach, and other teams that
"Everyone's in such a competitive en-
fired at one time. In 1998, The Associat-
vironment; there's a race to get things ed Press ran an article with the headline done,because there is the same group "Black Monday for NFL coaches." The of candidates out there," said Mike Tan- story began: "The next time a group of nenbaum, the former general manager NFL coaches gets together and someone of the Jets who now represents coaches says 'Black Monday,' nobody should ask for Priority Sports & Entertainment. "It's him what he's talking about."
Ducks
State story. I was at Boise State and we won 10 games ... Continued from D1 people couldn't find Boise on "Ifo is ready to do whatever a map. Those kind of things he wants to do," said Aliotti, are unique with the current who announced on Friday that
system."
he is retiring as Oregon's deTeams not selected for the fensive coordinator. "I respect four-team playoff will still the young man enough that have an opportunity to have a whatever he chooses to do,I'm postseason experience at bowl 100 percent behind it. Wheth- games. er I stayed here or not, I would
" Nobody knows how t h e
still be behind Ifo because the young man has to do what's best for him and his family." Oregon's other starting cor-
next thing is going to (affect the bowls)," Helfrich said. "Obviously, (teams) five, six, seven and eight will argue about being in the four-team playoff.
nerback, Terrance Mitchell,
and star running back De'An- That I can predict." thony Thomas are also contemplating whether or not to turn pro.
Tweet drama
Josh Huff made it clear that Ekpre-Olomu, a ju n ior, he has extra motivation to play is projected as a first-round Texas in the Alamo Bowl be-
Steelers. He said that coaches always feared being fired and were motivated
likely with the Lions, where
touchdownpasses and just two
it would be a surprise if Jim
interceptions, they'd be cra-
"to not be a part of Black Monday." While the term's roots are uncertain,
Schwartz werenot fired after failing to win the North with
zy not to use him. Nick Foles leads the NFL in passer rating
it is clear that a number of coaches, as-
as much or more talent than at 118.8 and can punish a team anyone else in the division. for paying too much attention The Lions finish at Minnesota to McCoy. The Cowboys can and it would be a fitting end run the ball some, too, but they
sistants and front office personnel will
receive pink slips Monday, regardless of whether their teams win their season finales. As Cowher said in 2006, "We all understand that getting into this business."
is still blessed with plenty of physical ability. "Their sheer talent, we can't match up with that in terms of just man-for-man talent," the
Oregon coach said. Texas defensive end Jackson Jeffcoat, the Ted Hen-
dricks Award recipient and the Big 12 defensive player of the year, will present a chal-
lenge for the Oregon offensive line. The Ducks' two freshman tight ends, Evan Baylis and Johnny Mundt, will also have to deal with the 6-foot-2, 238-pound senior.
"Don't play like freshmen," Oregon tight ends coach Tom Osborne said of the matchup.
cause the Longhorns did not
committee will decide which
and what someone hears is
four teams will compete for the national championship at
not the same thing," Applewhite said. "I can assure you
rotating bowl sites.
Next season, the Rose Bowl and Sugar Bowl will host the national semifinals on Jan. 1,
2015. The championship game will be played on Jan. 12, 2015, a t Cowboys Stadium in A r -
lington, Texas. The Ducks, who have a chance to finish the 2013 sea-
son ranked in the top 10 with a win over Texas on Monday in the Alamo Bowl, figure to
be in the mix for the four-team playoff with the return of star quarterback Marcus Mariota
to lead an experienced and talented roster.
Astudyof Big12offenses
Texas struggled against fast-paced, spread offenses that I h ave never told any this season. Brigham Young recruit that he's not good was able to get 99 snaps off enough to play at our school. I and piled up 679 yards (550 don't do that. It's not the way I rushing) during its 40-21 vicdo business. I may have told a tory over the Longhorns. kid that we don't have a scholMack Brown fireddefenarship for you at this point, sive coordinator Manny Diaz but as a 5-foot-ll, 5-flat quar- and replaced him with vetterback, I'm not into telling eran Greg Robinson. Texas people that they are not good responded with a 6-0 start in enough." the Big 12. Applewhite s a i d the But the Longhorns' lossamount of college-level talent es to Oklahoma State (38-13) in Texas results in many lo- and Baylor (30-10) proved cal players being upset about costly for Brown, who has anbeing passed over by the nounced that the Alamo Bowl Longhorns. will be his final game after 16 "We didn't have a place for
seasons at Texas.
ESPN has Oregon No. 5 in him, we didn't have a scholarits early 2014 preseason top-25 ship," he said of Huff. "That's projections; Athlon Sports has the tough thing for a lot of kids
Oregon's coaches and players studied the high-scoring Cowboys and Bears in prepa-
tabbed the Ducks No.6.
to understand. In this state,
ration for Texas.
at you. That comes with the
sive coordinator Scott Frost
First-year Oregon head coach Mark Helfrich said he had no problem with the BCS.
In fact, he is a little nostalgic about the outgoing system. "I love the bowl system. I guess I'm one of those weird guys that I think the BCS has
been great for college football," Helfrich said. "Without the BCS there is no Boise
have to stay committed to it
lose a division game. This is and give DeMarco Murray a the Vikings' last game in the chance to gain a rhythm.
in the Alamo Bowl, Helfrich said the film indicates Texas
"That's the key." Offensively, the Longhorns recruit him. He recently wrote are led by running back Malon Twitter that Texas offensive colm Brown, who has nine Playoffs? coordinator Major Applewhite career 100-yard games. The If all goes well next fall, Or- "said I wasn't good enough." 6-foot, 225-pound junior is egon will not play in a tradiApplewhite, a former Tex- probably looking to follow tional bowl game. as quarterback, disputed the the Stanford an d A r i z ona The College Football Playoff Oregon senior wide receiver's ground-and-pound game plan begins after the 2014 regular claim on Friday. against the Duck defense. "Sometimes what you say season. A 13-person selection pick by some NFL scouting services.
to their season if they were to
"We do things a little bit difwhen you have 400 to 500 Division I kids per year and you ferent than Baylor. It was fun can only take 25, there are watching them and seeing usually about 470 ticked off what they did," Ducks offenneighborhood."
Texas still talented Despite the Longhorns' 8-4
record and Las Vegas making the Ducks a 14-point favorite
said. "Oklahoma State does some similar things, Oklahoma does some similar things, Kansas State does some similar things. We definitely had some tape to look at."
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Market Recap, E4-5 Sunday Driver, E6
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, DECEMBER 29, 2013
New FDA ru es cou snu out e-a arette Iz
Bitcoin: It's money, only digital By Sean Sposito Cox Newspapers
ATLANTA — Forget Amex.
By Rick Romell Mawauftee Journal Sentinet
For Christmas next year, you could be buying your dog a discount bed with bitcoin, the digital curren-
The surging popularity of electronic cigarettes is spurring growth at two
cy that's become infamous
Milwaukee-areacompa-
as a way of sidestepping The discount online retailer Overstock.com
nies that have emerged as important producers of the key ingredient, and is creating opportunity here and elsewhereforstorefront
the traditional financial system. plans to start accepting
entrepreneurs.
the alternative to government-minted money by the
The local participants have jumped into a mar-
end of June, said the com-
ket that some believe will
pany's chief executive Patrick Byrne. The news first
eclipse that of traditional smokes within a decade. "This is one of those
broke late last week on the
bitcoin blog NewsBTC.
few times where you see a brand new industry, and it's amazing," said Christian Berkey, founder and majority owner of
The Salt Lake City com-
pany will be the largest Internet outfit of its kind to
make themove, opening the door for regular folks to start getting comfortable
Hartland's Johnson Creek
Enterprises LLC, which
with bitcoin.
country's largest manufacturer of the flavored, nicotine-laced liquids that are at the heart of electronic
said Aaron Williams, the founder of Atlanta Bitcoin, a local operator of one of world's first bitcoin ATMs
cigarettes. But it's also an industry
(made to dispense the currency into digital wallets). "It definitely gives it more legitimacy in the retail space, and it gives more legitimacy in the eyes of potential adopters, because one of the big questions people always ask is: Where can you spend it?"
merchants. The shoppers
can make onlinepurchases as simply as they pay in a store, without filling out te-
dious forms. The merchants can accept bitcoins without
paying costly fees, and at less risk, because bitcoin
lllustration by Jennifer Montgomery/The Bulletin
transactions are irreversible
bitcoins — just like dollars, there are denominations-
is randomly generated by a decentralized network of
computer servers. Each time a bitcoin changes hands, that same network authenticates it
and posts the transaction to a public, online ledger, the Blockchain. In that sense, the system is totally open and trans-
parent. On the other hand, bitcoin transactions are essentially anonymous, because most users share their information only with brokers or exchanges in order to buy into bitcoin. Unlike acardtransaction but like paying in cash, bitcoin payments don't require a person to share any
• When it comes to brick andmortar versusonline banking, customerservicereignsover convenience "Customer service makes a
illary Rich, 22, is comfortable with
huge difference," Rich said.
mobile apps and
That seeming dichotomy-
online banking, but she prizes
appreciation for both personal
one thing above all the rest
customerserviceand the convenience of online and mobile
bank: customer service.
banking — is changing the way
Rich, a Bend real estate broker, bankers see themselves doing
not bailing on brick and mortar.
merchant.
someone face-to-face oron the
Not yet, anyway.
That's an attractive feature in an erain which data
phone is the way to go.
See Mobile /E3
Nodile andonline dankiagtrends
Target that cyber-thieves
Means of accessing banking services bymobile phone owners in the past12 months
complex and expensive
Have youvisited a bankbranch? Have youusedonline banking? Have youusedanATM? Have youusedtelephone banking? Haveyouusedmobilebanking? Have youmadeamobile payment? ~ 1
Unlike
regular surfboards, the wooden boards
canbe refined and improved throughout their lifespan
using simple tools like
handsaws and sand-
paper.
really fast. Malloy was riding a board called an alaia (pronounced ah-LIE-ah), descended from the original Hawaiian surfboards. He wouldbegin riding its smaller, but equally fast
slab of wood with one rounded edge. It was a board like none he had ever seen, remarkable for being so slender and for lacking contours or fins. Malloy, then living in Lompoc, Calif., took the
counterpart, the paipo (pronounced PIPE-oh), a year later.
and there's no chance I can
ate separate businesses, Tom
Both types of surfboards
are made by Tom Wegener, an American living in Australia, and his brother, Jon Wegener, who is based in Encinitas, Calif. The brothers grew up surfboard to a nearby surf ing in Palos Verdes, Calif., and break. He propelled himbegan shaping regular foam self into a wave, stood and and fi berglasssurfboards as thenpanicked. a hobby when they were teen"I thought, 'Oh, this agers and then professionally wave is way too fast for me, after college. They now opermake it,'" said Malloy, who
Wegener Surfboards and Wegener Surfboards, but they often share ideas and collabosoon was gliding effortless- rate on designs. ly through the water — and See Surfboard /E3 has surfed for decades. But he did make it and
lar news. Take, for instance, this month's revelation by
that it's not cost effective
That could shake up the business models of the Inter-
Surfboard design: iI Catching a ,' I'/I( wave from Old Hawaii
mail from Australia. In it was a thin, rectangular
about her account, dealing with
computer systems needed
net-based vendors and tiny,
ceived a package in the
when it comes to choosing a
account information with a
to generate them are so
To be determined
In 2008, Dan Malloy, a professionalsurfer,re-
communitybanks, especially, are
Bitcoins are also very difficult to counterfeit. The
products.
By Claire Martin
online. But when questions arise
formation of as many as 40 million of its shoppers.
closed rules under its authority to oversee tobacco-derived
that soon could change dramatically.
New York Times News Service
business in the near future. But
had stolen the personal in-
to step in with as-yet undis-
• Brothers resurrect late 1800sstyle using lightweightwoodinsteadof fiberglass,foam
By JosephDitzler • TheBulletin
does most of her banking
breaches are makingregu-
though, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is poised
home-based juice-makers that more or less the Wild West, have sprung up over the last with production and sales few years. totally unregulated. Now, See E-cigarettes/E5
Proponents of bitcoin
and numbers. Each unit of
of e-cigarettes and fluid, shows how to add the fluid known as e-juice to the e-cigarette.
To this point, it's been
say there are advantages forboth shoppers and
string of random letters
the store Milwaukee Vapor as well as being a good customer
describes itself as the
"Here's the firstbigmover, and we're going to see more come along behind it,"
once they're made. You can think about the crypto-currency as a long
Michael Sears/ Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
Matt Kostecki who helps out at
85% 74/o 74/o 34/o
29% %
for forgers to reproduce
Usinga mobile phone,have youdoneany ofthese inthe past12 months?
bitcoins.
There are bitcoin naysayers, though. They point to wild swings in priceat its height, a bitcoin was worth as much as $1,200, almost twice its current value — as a reason not to
use the crypto-currency. And, famously, New York Times columnist Paul Krugman has argued that bitcoin is a form of "monetary regress." See Bitcoin /E3
Checkedanaccount balanceof recent transactions? Transferredmoneybetweentwo accounts? Downloaded yourbank'smobilebankingapp? Received a text messagealert from your bank? Made abill payment usingbanking website orapp? Located theclosest in-networkATMfor your bank? Deposi tedacheckusingmobilephonecamera? Refused toanswer? • 5% Received a fraud alert? • 4% Other banking-relatedactivities? I1% Source: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
87% 53 o
4g 29% 27% 24% 21%
i:
urr ',
'C
y
Photos by Sandy Huffaker / New York Times News Service
Jon Wegener with one of his surfboards at his home in EnciniGreg Cross / The Bulletin
tas, Calif. Wegener and his brother Tom, who lives in Australia, shape boards inspired by designs that date back to the late 1800s using a lightweight wood called paulownia.
E2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, DEC 29, 2013
B USINESS TODAY No Business events listed.
MONDAY OREGON ALCOHOLSERVER PERMIT TRAINING:Meets the minimum requirements by the Oregon Liquor Control Commission to obtain an alcohol server permit, registration required; $35; 9 a.m.1 p.m.; Round Table Pizza, 1552 N.E Third St., Bend; 541-447-6384 or www.happyhourtraining.com.
TUESDAY
END A R
BREWING?:Discuss the three most important things for Bend to do in the next three years, registration required; $15 for members, $20 for nonmembers; 5 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W.Century Drive; 541-382-3221, bonnie© bendchamber.org or www.
FRIDAY No Business events listed.
SATURDAY No Business events listed.
bendchamber.org. SCORE —SMALLBUSINESS COUNSELING: Thosewho operate or wish to start a small business candiscuss business planning, organization and startup, finance, marketing and other issues, no
SUNDAY jan. 5 No Business events listed
appointment necessary; free; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W.Wall St.; 541-617-7050 or www.
MONDAY Jan. 6
scorecentraloregon.org.
No Business events listed.
No Business events listed.
WEDNESDAY
TUESDAY WEDNESDAY No Business events listed.
THURSDAY No Business events listed.
Email events at least 10days before publication date to businessibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at wwtv.bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0323.
Jan. 8
Jan. 7 INTRODUCTION TOFINDING FUNDERS:Freeworkshop on finding funders for nonprofit organizations; 9-11 a.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-7089 or jennyp© deschuteslibrary.org. BEND CHAMBER,WHAT'S
OREGON ALCOHOLSERVER PERMITTRAINING:Meetsthe minimum requirements by the Oregon Liquor Control Commission to obtain an alcohol server permit, registration required; $35; 9 a.m.-1 p.m.; Round Table Pizza, 1552 N.E. Third St., Bend; 541-447-6384 or www.happyhourtraining.com.
BUSINESSSTARTUP CLASS: Learn what it takes to run a business,
how to reachyour customer base,
funding options for your business, how muchmoney you need to get started and legalities involved, registration required; $29; 6-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600N.W.CollegeW ay,Bend; 541-383-7290.
THURSDAY
McGrath Road, Bend; busch@ teleport.com or www.pmiwv.org. BEND CHAMBER MASTER SERIES: Discuss the topic of Business Development — Understanding You, registration required; call Bend Chamber for pricing;1 p.m.; Smart Sales Solutions Inc.,123 S.W. Columbia St., Suite 110; 541-3823221, bonnie©bendchamber.org or www.bendchamber.org.
SUNDAY jan. 12 No Business events listed.
MONDAY jan. 13
IOSAPP DEVELOPMENT COURSE 1 — FOUNDATIONSKILLS: Learn the basics and create your first iOS FRIDAY MANAGING DAYTO DAY app, first in a series of three classes PERFORMANCECOURSE: Identify Jan. 10 on making iOSapps, Mondays performance gaps for improved and Wednesdays through Jan. 27, CCB LICENSE"TEST PREP" productivity in your workplace, registration required; $169; 6-8 p.m.; registration required; $95; 8 a.m.COURSE FORCONTRACTORS: Central Oregon Community College Two-day test preparation noon; Central Oregon Community — Crook County OpenCampus, course approved by the Oregon College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Construction Contractors Board, fee 510 S.E. Lynn Blvd., Prineville; Bend; 541-383-7270. includes required current edition of 541-383-7270. PMP/CAPM CERTIFICATIONPREP the Oregon Contractor's Reference MTA SERVERFUNDAMENTALS COURSE:Course for experienced Manual, registration required; $305; COURSE:Class for beginners project managers looking to become 8:30 a.m.-6 p.m.; Central Oregon who have an interest in computer certified Project Management Community College, 2600 N.W. technology, class will prepare you Professionals andthose looking College Way, Bend; 541-383-7290 to pass the MTAexam in Servers, to become a Certified Associate in or ccb©cocc.edu. Mondays and Wednesdays until Project Management, sponsored by Feb. 3, registration required; the Willamette Valley PMI Chapter of $299; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon the Project Management Institute, SATURDAY Community College, Crook County registration required by Dec. 31; Open Campus, 510 S.E. Lynn Blvd., $885 for chapter members, $985 for Jan. 11 Prineville; 541-383-7270. nonmembers; 8:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m.; Water Reclamation Facility, 22395 No Business events listed.
jan. 9
DEEDS Deschutes County • Old Town Properties Inc, who acquired title as OldTown Properties, to Stephen J.and Joyce M. Stepanek, trustees for the Stepanek Living Trust, Aero Acres, Lot 3, Block 2, $200,000 • Frank E. andLarissa J. Smodeto Stacie A. andRoyD.Cook, Frontier West, Lot 3, Block1, $269,900 •WayneJ.Semonto DavidC. Haugeberg, as trustee for the benefit of First Federal Savings and Loan, Ridge atEagleCrest 39, Lot 75, $643,328.06 • Luelling Construction Inc. to Terry L. and Melody A. Luelling, Sandalwood, Phase 2,Lot 23, $213,333 • Grace M.P.Miller, trustee of the Grace Miller Trust, to Jonhenry C. Grizzle, Orion Estates, Lot 22, Block 15, $352,100 • Stanley G. Turel to TamraL. and Eric F. Chapin, Desert Woods 2, Lot 16, Block14, $224,000 • Linda M. Cooperto William L. and Amber M.Rumenapp, Pine Tree Meadows, Phase 2,Lot 84, $151,000 • Sharon L. Rungeto Garland P. and Judy M. Master,StonehedgeSouth, Phase1, Lots12and13, $199,900 • Joseph and Marylee Dobbesto Jaralyn G. Rennels, Howell Tracts, Lot 7, $239,000 • Branden S. Warner to Kristin M. Harris, RedHawk, Unit3, Lot53, $163,200 • ML Bend U.S.A. Limited Partnershipto Pahlisch HomesInc., McCall Landing, Phase1, Lots1215, 63-65 and 76-78, $310,000 • Susie J. Backstrom, Bonnie J. Bond, Robert C.Backstrom, Judy A. Dodds, Douglas Kerkoch, trustee for the George D.RayTestamentary Trust, and Shirley V.Ray,trustee for the Shirley V.RayTrust, to Bend Area Habitat, Riverside, Lots1-12, Block 20, $1,050,012.19 • Susan J. Backstrom and Douglas R. Watson to BendArea Habitatfor Humanity, Riverside, Lot11, Block 15, $155,987.81 • Laura Lathrop to Matthew K. and LaceyA. Haasenritter, Empire Crossing, Phases1 and 2, Lot 39, $207,000 • Bend Equity Group LLCto Three Boys 401(k) PSP,Brookland Park, Lot11, $239,900 • Deschutes County Sheriff to Wells Fargo BankN.A., Ranch WayAcres, Lot1, Block 3, $201,885.51 • Steven C. Phillipsto Mike Kruska, Gardenside P.U.D.,Phase1, Lot 22, $284,900
• Patricia M. Hershberger, trustee for the Patricia M. Hershberger Revocable Living Trust, to David L. Hogan andCheryl A. Allbaugh, Ridge at EagleCrest, Replat of Common Lots A and 8,Lots41-48, 57-60 and 68, $235,000 • Michael S. and April E. Frey to Cason A. McCainandKathryn E. Chipko, Rolling Hills, Lot 2, Block 2, $201,000 • Connie L. Hulbertand Kayla J. Shaff, who acquired title as Kayla J. Hulbert, to John R.andPatricia A. Smith, Partition Plat 2006-04, Parcel1, $159,900 • Gregory M. and SusanC.Caeton to Kathleen J.andPeter A. Enna, Brightenwood Estates 3, Lot 2, Block 7, $184,500 • Jack C. Shannonto Mark and Susan Kneeshaw,Northwest Crossing, Phase 5,Lot227, $305,000 • Gerald D. andMarilyn L Gerdes to Ryan P.Watne, Deschutes River Woods, Lot 34, Block S,$178,000 • Pahlisch HomesInc. to Seymour Migdal and PamelaWilson, Newport Landing, Lot 7, $349,950 • James D. Owensand Toni S. Hanson, trustees for the HansonOwens RevocableTrust, to Clint E. and Diane A.Harris, Majestic Ridge, Phase 2, Lot 52, $450,000 • Bruce Baker, who acquired title as Bruce S. Baker, to Raymond L.and Mildred A. Fields, Ridge atEagle Crest 43, Lot 9, $320,000 • Ruth R. McCorkle to Harold R. Mundy, Portions of Township 19, Range11, Section 32, andPortions of Township 20, Range11, Section 5, $190,000 •Michael J.and Susan Sheato Frederick A. andAnna M.Jeter, River Village 3, Lot 9, Block17, $445,000 • HF HFR LLCto Amy M. and Cameron P.Ruddell, Lot4, Block11, $335,100 • Awbrey Woods U.S.A. Limited Partnership to Pahlisch HomesInc., Awbrey Woods, Phase1, Lots1-3, 9, 10, 13, $600,000 • Fred and JeanHemp,trustees for the William J. Servers and Constance R.Servers Revocable Trust,to DuaneJohnson, Buena Ventura, Lot 4, Block 2, $326,875 • Joann J. Hubbard to Robertand Jennifer Stewart, Township17, Range12, Section 8, $210,000 • Doyle and KarenMalott to Amy W. and Stephen K.Hunter, Orokla, Lots 7-9, Block 8, $355,000 • Les Schwab Profit Sharing Retirement Trust to the State of
Oregon and theDepartment of Transportation, Township18, Range12, Section17, $733,350 • Samuel D. Hunsakerand Laureen L. Lampe, trustees for the Samuel Hunsakerand LaureenLampe Revocable Living Trust, to Harold and AnneSexton, trustees for the Sexton Family Trust, Awbrey Butte Homesites ,Phase3,Lot5,Block4, $475,000 • Tim R. and Mary K. Walker to Gregory N. McKeeverandBethA. Massingill, Fall River Estates, First Addition, Lot11, Block1, $225,000 • Yelas Development Inc. to Bradley C. and Judith S. Rode,Awbrey Park, Phase 3, Lot 86, $733,518 • George andOlgaHnyp, trustees forthe Hnyp RevocableTrust, to James C.and Elvira W.Blanchard, Mountain High, Lot1, Block2, $419,000 • Marian B. Gabriel to Steven W. Strouts, Volcano Subdivision, Lot 16, $155,000 • Danielle M. Powell to Steven L and Heather A. Denio, Blakley Heights, Lot1, $306,000 • Craig A. and Christy L. Christiansen, trustees for the Craig A. Christiansen RevocableTrust and the Christy L. Christiansen Revocable Trust, to AlvedaCoker and Bernice Mote, Fairhaven, Lot 24, $169,000 • Paul T. andCaroline Swart to Mary Angelo and Robert A. Angelo Jr., Second Addition to West Hills, Lot 1, Block 3, $560,000 • Jack D. Barringer and Dorothy E. Barringer, whoacquired title as Dorothy Elenanor, to Patrick S. and Cindy L. McMullen, Sunpointe, Phase1, Lot 5, $208,000 • Federal National Mortgage Association to Amber D.and Matthew B. Ballard, TheWinchester Arms, Lot12, Block 2, $193,050 • B&L Fine Woodworks Inc. to Skyler D. Pinnick, Huettl Park, Lot 6, $253,500 • James D. andNancy S. Bruce, trustees of the BruceFamily Trust, to David S. andBrette A. Hampton, Partition Plat1997-14, Parcels1 and 2, $1,400,000 • Shirley J. Childress to Leslie D. and Catherine J. Carr, Summit, Phase1, Lot 3, $250,000 • Thomas D. andVirginia D. Kinsman to Charles A.and Katherine L. Rood, Ridge atEagle Crest 41, Lot 29, $150,000 • Highlakes Investments Inc. to Sweistris Properties LLC,Parkway Addition, Block 3, $220,000 • Jonathan H. andElaine A. Austin
to Alex Thompson, BrokenTop, Phase 58, Lot 454, $242,500 • Richard and Lou E.Pearson to Sandra K. Egge,Overlook Park 2, Lot10, Block10, $275,000 • Jim A. Thomasto lan C. Klotz, Silver Sage, Phase 2,Lot 25, $174,000 • Sahara Robles to AnnaUnruh, Romaine Village, Unit 4, Lot13, Block 9, $165,000 • HSBC BankU.S.A. to Patricia A. Prinz, Township16, Range11, Section12, $290,000 • JLS Rental RealEstate LLCto James andJanice Osher, trustees for the JamesandJanice Osher Revocable Trust, Quail Run,Phase 1 and 2, Lot 8, $240,000 • Craig W. Howell and SusanE. Howell to Bruce L.andJanet L. Daucsavage,Awbrey Glen Homesites, Phase 7Lot144, $645,000 • Maria L. Benavides andWiliam P. Sharp to Arthur B. andMichelle K. Jackson, Center Addition to Bend, Lot 7, Block19, $235,000
• Joseph S. Roberts and Lindsay M. Cameron to Nicholas M.and Stephanie D.Kohler, Hillman, Lots 13-20, Block177, $218,000 • Charles V. Sanderson III and Helen L. Sanderson to Richard W.Magill and Tracy A.Farrell, First on Hill Sites, Lot 5, Block 2, $545,000 • Karoma Properties LLC to Robert L. Belknap andSharonClarkBelknap, Ni-lah-sha, Phases 2and 3, Lot171, $177,000 • Jennifer D. Moon to Colin M. and Stephanie K. McVey,Northwest Crossing, Phase14, Lot 639, $660,000 • Susan Perrigot to Jeffrey J. and Meghann M. Putnam, Mason Estates, First Addition, Phase 2,Lot 18, $218,000 • Gerald D. andMarilyn Gerdes to Jeff and Lisa G.Richards, Deschutes RiverW oods,Lot32, Block S, $161,797 • Jeffrey L. Payne to Christopher J. Reese, Pettigrew Highlands, Lot11, $255,528 • Gary and Catherine Cravento
Kenneth CravenandMackenzie Miller, CompassGardens, Lot 8, $410,000 • Mark S. Rappand Robin A. ThomastoAlan and CarolYankey, Davidson Addition to Sisters, Lots 5 and 6, Block 29, $250,000 • George andAudrey Franklin to John and Maria Britton, Township 17, Range12, Section 25, $465,000 • James 0. and Ellen McDonnell, trustees for the McDonnell Family Trust, to Timothy D.Hand, Pine Tree Meadows, Phase 2,Lot 52, $186,000 • Elizabeth A. Hewlett to lan and Jessica Swihart, Deschutes River Woods, Lots 79and 80, Block ZZ, Township18, Range11, Section 27, $370,000 • Charles C. andCheryl L. Brown to Jason W.andKerry A. Blomgren, Partition Plat1997-12, Parcel 2, $237,000 • Robert W. Branum andSigne A. Hurd to Alex and Tiffany Goodrich, Township17, Range13, Section19, $332,000
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30-yeaj mortgagerisesto 4.48 percent The Assoclated Press
TheCommerce Department WASHINGTON — Average reported Tuesday that newU.S. rates for fixed mortgag- home sales dipped 2.1 percent es crept higher this week but in November to a seasonally remained low by historical adjusted 464,000. Butstronger standards. figures for the previous three Mortgage buyer Freddie months suggested that housMac said Thursday that the ing mayberegaining strength rate on the 30-year loan in- after a summer lull. creasedto 4.48 percent from
4.47 percent last week. The average on the 15-year fixed loanrose to 3.52 percent from
3.51percent. Mortgage rates peaked at 4.6 percent in August on ex-
pectations that the Federal Reserve would reduceits $85 billion-a-month in bond purchases. Those purchases push mortgage andother long-term
The National As sociation
of Realtors said last week that the number of people who bought existing homesin November fell for a third straight month. Higher rates and the
lingering effects of the partial government shutdown in October may have deterred some
sales. Still, the government said
was 23percent higher than in October.
To calculate average mortgage rates, Freddie Mac sur-
Mortgagerates are sharply higher than they were a year ago when the 30-year fixed rate was 3.35percent and the
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Investing for income
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try between Monday and Wednesday each week. The averagedoesn'tinclude extra
fees, known as points, which most borrowers must pay to get the lowest rates. One point
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Mark N. Tompkins
The average fee for a 30year mortgagewas 0.7point. The fee for a 15-yearloan was
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The average rate on a oneyear adjustable-rate mortgage
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0.7 point.
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15-year was 2.65percent.
Planning for retirement
veys lenders across the coun-
builders broke ground on 2.57percent last week. The fee rates lower and en courage homesat a seasonally adjust- was 0.5point. borrowing and spending. On ed annual rate of 1.09 million The average rate on a fiveDec. 18, the Fed finally decid- homes and apartments in No- year adjustable mortgagerose ed the economy was strong vember. That was the fastest to 3percent from 2.96 percent. enough to allow it to reduce pace sinceFebruary 2008 and The fee was 0.4 point. the monthly purchasesby $10 billion.
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TheBulletin
PlanWithSterling.COm Securities offered through LPL Flnanclal. Member FINRA/SIPC. Insurance products offered through LPL Financial or its licensed affiliates. Not FDIC Insured Not B ank Guaranteed May L ose Value Not a Bank Deposlt N o t Insured by Any Federal Government Agency
SUNDAY, DEC 29, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
E3
Surfboard Continued from E1 In recent years, they have
revived Hawaiian surfboard designs to innovate in a sport that had become increasingly reliant on factory production and on synthetic materials, like foam and fiberglass. While resurrecting ancient innovation is not a new practice, "it tends to be very rare," said Joel Mokyr, a professorof economics and history at Northwestern University. But, he said, some in-
novators, inspired by nostalgia and the belief that the wisdom of the past can trump what
we know today, decide to look back in time. Tom Wegener started mak-
ing alaias after visiting the Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum in Honolulu in 2004 and
measuring traditional boards dating to the late 1800s and
early 1900s. Captivated by their simplicity, he began creating his own versions, using a lightweight, naturally water-resistant wood c alled
paulownia. In 2006, Jon Wegener visit-
ed his brother in Australia and saw the new designs. Almost
on the spot, Jon Wegener began shaping alaias of his own. "You see something like that, and you freak out," he said. "You just want to instant-
ly shape one." And so the two began coll aborating i n formally o n designs. After returningto California,
Mobile Continued from E1 "Bill Gates in the late '80s predicted the demise of bank-
ing. He said branch banking was done and in 10 years won't be h ere," said Terry
Zink, president and CEO of Bank of the Cascades. "I can't deny Bill Gates is a smart guy and makes a lot of money, but he was wrong on that one." For the majority of custom-
ers, a trip to the bank remains their most frequent interaction with their f i nancial institu-
tions, according to a March 2013 Federal Reserve report. It found 85 percent of custom-
ers still visit bank branches. Banking online or by ATM are the second most popular op-
tions; 74 percent of customers use those services. With 29 percent of custom-
ers using it, mobile banking
Fins on a
wooden surfboard constructed by
Jon Wegener at his shop.
ing simple tools like handsaws shapers in California. "It's starting to get more and sandpaper. They are also relatively impervious to dings traction for sure," Roy Coffand dents. man, manager of the Cardiff While demand for a laias Patagonia store, said of the has begun to decline because paipo. Still, he considers it a of their difficulty, paipo sales niche product, and sales rehave increased, Jon Wege- main modest, about 15 boards ner said. He sells his boards in the last year. through his website and Nalu The main challenge is that Dry Goods, located in Bay the paipo is essentially an anShore, N.Y., and a handful cient boogie board — and in Photos by Sandy Huffaker/New York Times News Service of Southern California surf surfing circles, boogie boards Jon Wegener with one of his wooden surfboards at Moonlight Beach in Encinitas, Calif. shops. The Patagonia store are notconsidered cool.This in Cardiff-by-the-Sea, Calif., stigma is a hurdle, but atnorth of San Diego, sells his titudes could be starting to Jon Wegener continued mak- As the Wegeners experiment- ers call the pocket. paipos for $325 each. change, Jon Wegener said. ing alaias, and from 2008 to ed with different designs, they Because the exact shapes of Paipos also are made in He recently embarked on a 2010, alaias grew to be rough- realized that the more diminu- waves vary, the Wegeners have South Africa, where design- new set of designs using both ly 80 percent of his business. tive paipo was easier to ride. It createdvarious paipo designs ers at Wawa Wooden Surf- paulownia wood and foam. Regular foam-and-fiberglass was also more fun, partly be- for different types of surf, a boards shape them, and in The boards are flat, like those boards, which he had been cause it performs well in small common practice among mod- Brazil, where L asca Surf- of the traditional designs, but shaping and selling for 15 waves. "Big waves are cool; ern surfboard shapers. boards produces them. In Ja- more buoyant — having the years, made up the rest. Cus- small waves aren't," Jon WeUnlike regular surfboards, pan, Nobbywood Surfboards best qualities of each style of tomers for the alaias included gener said. "But small waves which are a finished product makes rectangular designs board. well-known professional surf- are what you have 90 percent by the time they first hit the resembling kitchen cutting "What's so great about this ers, like Malloy and Rob Mach- of the time." water, the w o oden b oards boards. The U.S. market also wood movement is it's a whole ado. The boards even landed The paipo ranges in length can be refined and improved includes Grain S u r fboards new book," he said. "A whole roles in several surfing movies. from three to five feet; some throughout their life span us- in Maine and several other new chapter for surfing." But there was a problem: models are as slender as a Non-elite surfers found alaias half-inch thick. This allows hard to ride because they don't riders to tuck into a wave's float as well asmodernboards. sweet spot, he said, what surf-
10steps to protectyour mohile device: 1. Using the passcode lock or thumbprint scan onyour smartphone will make it more difficult for thieves to access your information if your device is lost or stolen. 2. Log out completely when you finish a mobile banking session. 3. Install mobile security software that protects your phone from viruses andmalicious software, or malware. 4. Use caution whendownloadingapps.Appscancontain malicious software, worms and viruses. Beware of apps that ask for unnecessary permissions. 5. Download the updates for your phone andmobile apps regUlarly.
6. Avoid storing sensitive information like passwords or a Social Security number on your mobile device. 7. Tell your financial institution immediately if you changeyour phone number or lose your mobile device. 8. Be aware of shoulder surfers. The most basic form of information theft ls observation. 9. Wipe your mobile device before you donate, sell or trade it using specialized software or using the manufacturer's recommended technique. Some software allows you to wipe your device remotely lf it is lost or stolen. 10. Report any suspected fraud to your bank immediately.
for the Finance and Security Analysis Center at Lundquist
according to the Federal Re-
them do banking regularly have a philosophy that it's not by phone and haven't stepped inconvenient to branch bank," into an actual bank in a long he said.
15 years to reach the level that online banking achieved in five. And growing rates of smartphone ownership among the young and the "un-
College of Business, University of Oregon. "I'd be willing to bet that more than half of
time." Security is a concern ex-
pressed by respondents in the Federal Reserve survey; mobile phone owners who don't
use their devices for banking banked" indicate the poten- cited doubts about security tialfor new forms ofpersonal as the primary reason they banking that are still evolving, chosenotto use theirphones said Linda Navarro, president to make payments from their and CEO ofthe Oregon Bank- accounts. But even with the ers Association. theft of millions of Target cus"Mobile phones are continu-
ing to be more and more available to underserved populations and young people," she said. "It's a way to work with banks to get banking services
tomers' debit and credit card information the week before
Christmas in the background, Rich said she feels her data is
relatively safe online, provided she takes simple precautions, that they may not have other- like using secure, not open, wise utilized." networks to do her banking; Mobile-phonebanking has not sharing her information; a generational bias. More than and using password-protected a third of surveyed account devices. Online banking proholders age 44 and younger vides its own form of security, said they banked by mobile Rich said. "I can check my account phone in the past year, according to the study. Convenience balance, and I do feel more seis certainly a factor. Mobile
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•
hind banking by telephone. But mobile banking grew by 7 percentage points since 2011 and may surpass telephone banking in the coming year, Zink recalls that ATM use, ubiquitous now, took about
Maybeit's time to get your hearing checked...
Source: Oregon Bankers Association
ranks a d i stant fourth, be-
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Nonetheless, fewer trans-
actions in the future will take place a t
br i c k -and-mortar
branches as those services become more available on the Internet. Zink said branches will
become theplacewhere loans and other financial services
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Cascades has plans to shutter some branches in 2014 as part of a planned merger with Idaho-based Home Federal Bank, Zink said those plans are based on redundant branches,
not a move to online banking. Some financial services and commercial banking will continue face-to-face as clients look for confidence in their in-
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phone apps allow customers check it," she said. to deposit checks instantly, For the time being, residents row, but we're not talking at check that automatic deposits of Central Oregon still tend any stretch about the demise arrive on time and ensure ac- toward banking in-person, of any location where you count charges are correct. Zink said. In Bend, branch can talk to a banker who has "I'm thinking of my class of banking is a simple task. To expertise." 279 19 year olds," said Michele illustrate, Zink, a former Chi— Reporter: 541-617-7815; Henney, program manager cagoresident,compared atrip jditzler@bendbulletitt.com
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stitutions, Navarro said. "Cus-
tomers cite convenience as the main reason they like online and mobile banking," she said. "Every bank is looking at the delivery mode of tomor-
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Bitcoin
puter; mobile wallets that store
bitcoin, but I do think it's an al-
your cash on your phone; and ternative payment system that Continued from E1 web wallets that host bitcoins will make us and the country On Christmas Day, a single on the Internet. more robust," he said. "We bitcoin was worth just over $700, A secret key, really just a don't like a fiat currency. We accordingto CoinAbout.com string of letters and numbers, don't like a monetary system The dramatic fluctuation of that can be stored on a com- that something, that a governbitcoin's value matters if you're puter, written down or stored ment, can swipe into existence buying it as an investment, but on a QR code, unlocks a per- with the stroke of a pen. "That applies to dollars, and not if you acquire and spend son's wallet and allows a payit in quick succession, using it ment to be sent and the Block- we're against that." simply as a convenient meth- chain to be updated. So, just how worried should od of payment. Byrne of Overstock said American Express be? In order to undertake a that for his company, acceptWell, as a website managed transaction, consumers first ing bitcoins means more than by Bitcoin core developers have to sign up for a digital just allowing people to pay in says: The bitcoin software is wallet. There are software anew way. a work in progress, "still not "I'm agnostic on the value of ready for everyone." wallets that live on your com-
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E4
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, DEC 29, 2013
Consolidated Stocks NYSE andNasdaq For the weekending Friday, December27, 2013 WK VTD NAME
DIV LAST
CHG %CHG
ADT Corp .50 41.15 +1.46 -11.5 AES Corp .20f 14.45 +.13 +35.0 AFLAC
1.48f 67.25 +1.60 +26.6
AK Steel u8.12 +.96 +76.5 AT&T Inc 1.84f 35.18 +.88 +4.4 AbtLab s .88f 38.37 +.53 +22.4 AbbVie n 1.60 52.55 -.04 +53.8 AberFitc .80 33.38 +.47 -30.4 AbdAsPac . 42 5 . 8 2 +.02 -24.8 AcadiaPh 25.30 +1.14 +444.1 Accenture 1.74e 82.51 +1.96 +24.1 Achillion 3.38 +.25 -57.8 ActivsBliz .19f 17.82 -.05 +67.8 AdobeSy 59.51 +.25 +57.9 AMD 3.78 +.09 +57.5 Aercap u38.35 +.20 +179.5 Aeropostl 9.11 +.61 -30.0 AEtern grs 1.42 +.22 -46.5 Agnico g .88 26.66 +1.47 -49.2 AlcatelLuc .18e 4 . 52 e.15 e225.2 Alcoa .12 u10.69 +.75 +23.2 Allergan .20 110.85 +3.12 +20.8 AffdNevG 3.59 +.38 -88.1 Allstate 1.00 53.65 -.12 +33.6 AlphaNRs 7.21 +.78 -26.6 AlpAlerMLP1.07e 17.63 +.36 +10.5 Alteracp If .60 32.39 +.89 -5.8 Altria 1.92 38.31 +.22 +21.9 Amarin 1.82 -.18 -77.5 Amazon ... u398.08 -4.12 +58.7 Ambareffa u31.89 +3.95+186.6 Ambev n 7.37 +.25 +2.1 AMoyilL .34e 23.39 e.74 e1.1 AmAirl n 24.94 -1.39 +1.4 AcapAgy 3.75e 19.21 -.01 -33.5 AmcapLtd u15.48 +.27 +28.8 AEagleOut .50 14.43 +.05 -29.6 AEP 2.00f 46.50 -.22 +9.0 AmExp .92 u89.19 e1.62 e55.7 AmlntlGrp .40 51.18 +.15 +45.0 ARltcapPr .94 12.78 +.18 -3.5 Amgen 2.44f 115.12 e1.09 e33.5 Anadarko .72 79.40 +.63 +6.8 AnglogldA .17e d11.74 +.50 -62.6 Annaly 1.50e 9 . 83 +.03 -30.0 Anworth .50e 4 . 23 +.06 -26.8 Apache .80 86.68 +.27 +10.4 AppleInc 12.20 560.09 +11.07 +5.2 ApldMatl .40 17.43 +.24 +52.4 ArcelorMit .20 17.75 +.91 +1.6
Archcoal ArchDan
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MutualFunds For the we ek ending Friday, Decem ber 27, 2013
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AmericanBeacon LgcpVlls 2 8 . 63+.42 +35.0 +16.1 AmericanCentury Eqlnclnv 8.55 +.02 +19.5 +11.2 32. 5 1 +.39 +29.7 +13.2 34. 0 0 e.41 e37,5 e16.3
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-3.1 e5.6
SUNDAY, DEC 29, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
E-cigarettes
d o ctorate, chemical the domain of small upstarts engineers and food scientists worries many in the e-ciga— in space at the Milwaukee rette industry. County Research Park. But Berkey, a 42-year-old S ecurience, started b y accidental entrepreneur who Muehlbauer four years ago studied political science in on a picnic table in his base- college and was managing an ment with help from his son, Applestore before he started a chemical engineer, sells tinkering with electronic cigjuice in everything from half- arettes, isn't too worried. "There is far and away ounce bottles to 55-gallon drums. enough business for every"We stock thousands of body," he said. gallons of this stuff, which in For Johnson Creek, which the e-liquid world translates also has a staff of chemists to a few million packs," Bar- and food scientists, it has certholow said. The firm doesn't tainly been the case. Started with a
Continued from E1 It could even lead to an ef-
fective ban on e-cigarettessomething industry observers discount as a
r e a listic
possibility. But regulations also could solidify the positions of firms, such as Johnson Creek Enterprises and Wauwatosa's Securience LLC, which already have made the move from basement to production lab. "Regulations will, in general, be good for our particular business," said Don Muehlbauer, owner of Securience,
which says it, too, is among the nation's biggest manufacturers of e-cigarette liquids. "They will drive out the little
players." E-cigarettes
a re
bat-
tery-powered devices with a heating coil that turns a nic-
otine-containing liquid — the stuff Johnson Creek and Securience make — into a vapor the user inhales.
" Vaping" g enerally i s cheaper than smoking and, advocates say, safer because it doesn't produce the tars and many of the harmful substances found in cigarettes. Critics, however, say the vapors contain dangerous chemicals, and that research on e-cigaret tesisneeded.The U.S. Centers for Disease Con-
trol earlier this year said that while the products "appear to have far fewer of the toxins
found in smoke compared to traditional cigarettes, the impact of e-cigarettes on longterm health must be studied."
An apology Mike
C o t t r i ll , 4 9 , of
Waukesha, smoked for 35 years (Marlboro Menthols) before switching to e-cigarettes Jan. 1. The habit, he
said, was costing him about $20 a day. With e-cigarettes, he said, "I probably spend about $50 a
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10 WORST SMALL-CAP STOCKS
Friday close:S21.52
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15 BEST SMALL-CAP STOCKS
1-week change ~ $4.21 or5S.1%
15 BEST LARGE-CAP STOCKS $CHG %CHG t WK 1WK
Broker,ABR, SRES Coldwell Banker Morris Real Estate Direct . 541-322-2410 Cell 541-419-8639 lisamccarthy08@gmail.com
MORRIS REAL ESTATE
541-389-9690
Emerald
FRIDAY C L OS E
Lisa McCarthy
Serving Central Oregon for over22years!
Since <ggg
ltt1 SW10th • Redmond • (S41) S48-8616 www.redmondwindowtreats.com
Contact Lisa to be your real estate specialist.
Beltone-
Enjoy all the health benefits of a swimming pool & spa in one! Come try one today.
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With Lisa's professionalism, strong communication and negotiation skills, YOU, as a buyer or seller, are in good hands during your real estate transaction. Customer service and a strong work ethic is key to Lisa's success.
OFF MSRP
NDOW
FCX
B e rkey's home
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BIG
REDMOND
FMC&G
in 2008 i n
Lisa McCarthy
Cottrill said his triglyceride levels and blood pressure have dropped, and he's less
TICKER
disclose annual sales.
*
Johnson Creek does — $1.2 basement in the village that million in 2009, $7.6 million gave the firm its name, the in 2012, and, Berkey said, company now leases 52,000 more than $16 million this square feet of space in a Hartyear. land industrial park. One reason for the growth: Berkey expects to hire anJohnson Creek makes all other 20 over the next few the juice used in blu eCigs, months and t o d o uble the the largest-selling electronic firm's footprint by buying brand. the building it now leases. He Blu was purchased last also envisions opening a secMichael Sears / Milwaukee Journal Sentinel year by Lorillard Inc., giving ond, highly automated plant Stephanie Mendenhall, left, and Jessie Santana, of Milwaukee, with their e-cigarettes at Miiwaukee Vapor. Johnson Creek a toehold with in Waukesha sometime next one of the Big Three tobacco year. "Things have taken off in a companies. Th e i n e vitable congested. counterparts. will draw roughly even by migration of big tobacco into way none of us ever imagined "I started feeling b etter, Whether tiny b u sinesses 2023, with revenue to mana field that so far has been it would," he said. and smelling and tasting like these survive is an open ufacturers of e - cigarettes more things," he said. And question, but t h e i n d ustry jumping in front even earlier. "The potential's huge," said the cigarette smoke he used as a whole may hold great COLDWELL BANKER to cravebecame anauseating promise. Dan Bartholow, general manodor. Earlier this year, CitiGroup ager at Securience, which MORRIS REAL ESTATE "I went back to a lot of my labeled e-cigarettes 1 of 10 employs not quite 50 people Welcomes friends and apologized for disruptive technologies and — among them a chemist "I how I smelled," he said. ideascapable ofcreating new never knew I s m elled that markets. Wells Fargo Securibad." ties analyst Bonnie Herzog, Lisa McCarthy, licensed Oregon real Convinced of the benefits meanwhile, labels e-cigaLittle ad estate broker, works with sellers and to tobacco smokers, Cottrill rettes "a game changer." buyers in residential real estate including has become something of an Herzog estimates 2013 reresort, retirement, investment, and horse e-cigarette evangelist and, in tail sales of e-cigarettes at properties. She has sold distressed savings! July, took a job helping run a $1.8 billion. That's a small properties for the last 7 years. Lisa earned the Accredited Buyers West Allis store that recent- fraction of the $81 billion for Representative (ABR) and Senior Real Estate Specialist (SRES) ly changed its name from conventional cigarettes, but designations and is a m ember of the National Association Smokin Deals to Milwaukee the e-cigarette sales have triof Realtors. Vapor. pled in just two years. Lisa is a native Oregonian and graduated from Washington The shop sells cigarettes And Herzog — an e-cigaState University earning a Bachelor's Degree in Business but has been shifting its em- rette bull — estimates that reAdministration/Accounting. She enjoys hiking, kayaking, and phasis to t heir electronic tail sales of the two products watching college sports with family.
month on coils and juice."
COMPANY
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52-week range
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$47.25
Wk. volJ7.t m (4.2x avg.) Mkt.Cap:S727.54 m Yie ld: ...
Note: Stocks classified by market capitalization, the product of the current stock price and total shares outstanding. Ranges are$100 million to $1 billion (small); $1 billion to $8 billion (mid); greater than $8 billion (large).
GlobalMarkets Screener
INDEX 52-WK
YTD
COMPANY
It's tough to stand out when everyone in the class is doing well, but several stocks behaved as if on steroids in an already juiced year. The Standard & Poor's 500 index shot to a record high amid growing optimism in the economy and continued earnings growth: The index jumped 29.2 percent this year through Thursday. The last time it did this well over a year was in 1997, when it rose 31 percent. Netflix, meanwhile, quadrupled. Its stock closed Thursday at 3376.93, after starting the year at 392.59. The video service continues to lure new subscribers, and its earnings per share quadrupled in the third quarter from a year earlier. This screen shows the other stocks that are at the head of the S&P 500 class. All have at least doubled this year, and they span across many industries.
CLOSE
Nefflix (NFLX) Best Buy (BBY) Micron Technology (IIIIU) Delta Air Lines (DAL) Pitney Bowes (PBI) E-Trade Financial (ETFC) Facebook (FB) Celgene (CELG) Boston Scientific (BSX) Genworth Financial (GNW) Gilead Sciences (GILD) Yahoo (YHOO) GameStop (GME) Lincoln National (LNC)
$376.93 41.04 2 1.74 27.88 23.77 19.45 57.73 169.14 12.16 15.57 75.20 40.65 50.36 51.95
CHAN G E
LOW
HIGH
307. 1 % 246. 3 242. 9 134. 9 123. 4 1 17. 3 116 . 9 115. 5 1 12. 2 1 07.3 104. 8 104. 3 100. 7 100. 6
$89 11 6 11 10 9 23 77 6 7 36 19 22 25
$389 45 24 29 24 20 59 174 12 16 76 41 58 52
Data through Dec. 26 Sources: Credit Suisse; FactSet
Index closing andweekly net changesfor the week ending Friday, December 27, 2013
I6,478.4l
+
257'27
Nasoaa ~ 4,156.59
518 5
+
S&P500 1,841.40
RUSSELL2000 t,l61.09
+
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WILSHIRE 5000 ~ 253 43 I 9,623.62 ~
s&P 500 Frankfurt DAX London FTSEt00
LAST FRI. CHG FRI. CHG WK M O QTR Y T D 1841.40 -0.62 0.03% +29.11% 9589.39 +100.57 +1.06% +25.97% 6750.87
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ASIA Seoul Composite Singapore Straits Times Sydney All Ordinaries Taipei Taiex Shanghai Composite
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E6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, DEC 29, 2013
UNDAY D
R
ona a
Frequent brake-fluid changesseemsuspicious
I'I IS SO I
By Peter Couture and Lyra Solochek
By Brad Bergholdt
Tampa Bay (F/a.) Times
McClatchy-Tribune News Service
Like other successful midsize sedans, Hyundai's stylish
brake fluid replacement inter• My daughter has a 2012 val — still more frequent than
Q
Sonata has a hybrid counterpart. For 2013, the Hybrid
• Nissan Altima that she
I can certainly see more frequent oil changes for vehides driven for short trips and placed the brake fluid among demanding conditions, but other things. The rest of the I'm having a little trouble unitems seemed normal mainte- derstanding how these connance items to me, but the re- ditionsare tougher on brake placement of the brake fluid fluid, unless your daughter seemed excessive. fordsdeep culverts or leaves W hen I l o o ked i n t h e the hood open during urban "Serviceand Maintenance rainstorms. Brake fluid atGuide" that came with the tracts moisture, which can vehicle, it shows replacing lead to expensive problems the brake fluid every 15,000 or loss of braking effectivemiles. I know it wears out ness. Humid or wet driving over time and at some point conditions certainly seem to should be replaced, but what be worthy of consideration is with the brake fluid that when deciding an appropriit only lasts 15,000 miles? I ate service interval. None of took the car in for the 15,000mile service, the dealer re-
motor and a smaller — and lighter — bat-
REVIEW tery. H yundai says this results
in improved fuel efficiency. Also new is the Limited trim level, which was the model we
drove. The Hyundai badges and a prominent logo on the trunk
lid announce it's a hybrid. It also has styling features unique to the hybrid, such as a blacked-out hexagonal grille instead of the regular Sonata's horizontal chrome
slats. The look is more like sis Coupe. The hybrid shares the "Fluidic Sculpture" design philosophy that was a breath of fresh air in the midsize sedan market when this generation Sonata was introduced
as a 2011 model. This design philosophy translates into a curvaceous car w it h
f r o nt-
to-back body creases and an elegant roof line. The car's s olar-control w i n dows
are
large, which helps reduce blind spots. Both the upswept headlamps and taillights get LED accents.
The Sonata Hybrid has Hyundai's Blue Drive tech-
nology, which puts out a combined 199 horsepower from the electric motor and a 2.4-li-
Lyra Solochek, Tampa Bay (Fla.) Times
2013 Hyundai Sonata Hybrid Limited is a curvaceous car with an elegant roof line.
2013 Hynndai SonataHydrid Base price:$25,650 As tested:$32,490 Type:Midsize family sedan Engine:2.4-liter Atkinson Cycle 4-cylinder hybrid engine with permanent magnet high-power density motor, 270V lithium-polymer battery, 6-speedautomatic transmission with Shiftronic, FWD Horsepower:199combined horsepower Mileage:36 mpg city, 40 mpg highway
worth the extra cost when
the four-cylinder Sonata gets
a rearview camera. The cabin is laid out sensibly and it's
24/35? Hyundai made its lith-
roomy, except for rear headroom because of the sloping roof. The driver gets a welcome eight-way power seat
slightly by 2 t/~ cubic feet to a
with lumbar support. Most of the car'scontrols are er-
ium-polymer battery pack 5 pounds lighter and smaller. The trunk space increased good-for-a-hybrid 12.1 cubic feet. Also, to reduce weight,
there's no spare tire (you get a tire repair kit instead). The regenerative brakes are not as jarring as some hybrids we've driven. The low-rolling resistance tires help with mileage, but unfortunately take away
the mileage game, there are ly detectable. The 6-speed lots of on-screen monitors to show how the Blue Drive
system is working. Lyra finds those driver aids distracting.
talked to the dealer and he
the vehides in my stable even
said they were just following factory specs. My email to
have a recommendation for replacing brake fluid. I shoot
Nissan was not very informative. Can you tell me what
for 5 years or50,000 miles
I am missing here? This will prove to be quite a costly
and do transmission fluid, all belts, hoses and coolant at the same time.
I'd be inclined to go with life of the vehicle. the Schedule 2, 30,000-mile • Ouch! This is unusual. r ecommendation f o r the • I took a close look at brake fluid and do the right the Altima's recommended thing, based on conditions, maintenance scheduleand for the oil/filter changes. compared it to similar vehiOne thing I couldn't help cles built by other manufac- but notice when I viewed dozturers, and the brake fluid ens of maintenance schedreplacement interval is sig- ules is how frequently many nificantlymore frequent. car makers want the cabin You apparently were sold air filter replaced — often evand are looking at the Sched- ery15,000 milesorso.Armed ule 1 maintenance, which is with an inexpensive screwfor "severe" conditions, such driver/bit set and procedural as short trips; stop-and-go instructions gleaned from driving; driving on dusty, the Web, this could be a satmuddy or salty conditions; isfying 15-minute project that using a car-top carrier; and/ doesn't involve getting dirty. or towing a trailer. Schedule — Bergholdt teaches automotive maintenance item over the
gonomic, and we liked the crisp, if slightly cluttered, e lectroluminescent g a u ges. The standard features include Bluetooth, but Lyra found that the audio stream-
ing stopped working on a drive to Miami.
The bottom line: The car has many strengths of the regular Sonata, including Our tester was loaded with the starting price, but it's for features, including such ame- those who just have to have a nities as an upgraded audio hybrid. some from a sure-footedride.
from EV mode to gas is bare-
operator. For those who play
system, panoramic sunroof age is 36 city and 40 highway, ($1,000 option), front and which is OK for a hybrid, but rear heated leather seats, a should make you ask: Is it 7-inch navigation screen and The Sonata's estimated mile-
ter, 4-cylinder gas engine (159 horses). The transition automatic transmission with Shiftronic also is a smooth
most othercar makers.
purchased new. When she
gets an upgraded electric
Hyundai's Elantra or Gene-
miles under temperate conditions. It calls for a 30,000-mile
But overall, the road feel is composed.
2 maintenance is for folks
who drive mostly highway
technology. Email questions to under-the-hood@earthlink.net.
s
n,
\'
)i \ y$
w
f
r)'s
!hv
s«
lt's everything that brings us together. It's a million conversations happening at once and sometimes, it's one momentous event that we all witness together. It's our shared sense of wonder. It's our collective hope. It's not just the place we live but the place we're all creating. Il
hpt I/e Shgt"e
bendbroadband" 541.382.5551
INSIDE BOOKS W Editorials, F2 Commentary, F3
© www.bendbulletin.com/opinion
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, DECEMBER 29, 2013
DAVID BROOKS
Legitimacy
problem
t
t's pretty clear that the implementation of Obamacare will set the tone for how Americans think about
government for years to come. There are two large questions to be settled,
which you might call the questions of competence and coercion. The first is whether the government
is competent enough to manage large programs. Can the administration get the website to work, set rules for the
rightinsuranceproductsorimpose efficiencymeasures to restrain costs'? These are still open questions. Dem-
ocratssee the early messiness asthe temporary teething pains inevitable to a new large enterprise. Republicans see them as the first stages in the unmveling of an unworkable Rube Goldberg machine. But the fact is that we
• Why it haunts us aswe look back ... andwhy it shouldcontinue to trouble usaswe look ahead
can't yet know who is right. Over the next few years, the implementation
By Margaret MacMillan«New York Times News Service
will either go more smoothly and build faith in federal competence or go as it has been and destroy it.
But we're already getting a dearer answer on the question of coercion. Cast aside for a second any negative
OXFORD, Englandarlier this year, I was on holiday in Corsica
not lit the fuse'? In the second year of the conflagration that engulfed most of Europe, a bitter
connotation to that word. Almost all
and wandered into the
joke made the rounds: "Have you
large government programs,even very popular ones like Social Security, involvea degreeofcoercion.Governmentbuilds a system and forces every-
church of atinyham-
seen today's headline? 'Archduke Found Alive: War a Mistake."'
one to operate within it.
Obamacare, as originally envisioned, mandated that people join the system in order to redistribute money
fromthe healthy andyoungtothe sicker andolder.Itcoercessome peopleto do something they might not want to
do, and which, in fact, may not be in their short-term interest to do. Already, it's very dear that millions
let in the hills where I found a memorial to
That is the most dispiriting ex-
the dead from World War I. Out of apopulationthat canhavebeen no more than 150, eight young men, bearing amongthemonly three last names, had died in that
planation of all — that the war
was simply a blunder that could have been avoided. The search for explanations
began almost as soon as the guns opened fire in the summer of
conflict. Such lists can be found all
over Europe, in great cities and in small villages. Similar memorials are spread around the globe, for the Great War, as it was knownbefore 1940, also drew soldiers from
1914 and has never stopped. The
approaching centenary should make us reflect anew on our vulnerability to human error,
of Americans — andnot just Tea Party types — do not accept the legitimacy
Asia, Africa and North America.
sudden catastrophes, and sheer accident. History, in the saying
World War I still haunts us,
attributed to Mark Twain, never
of the government to overrule individ-
partly because of the sheer scale
ual dedsions, even on something like health insurance. This is not the Amer-
of the carnage — 10 million combatants killed and many more
repeats itselfbut it rhymes. We have good reason to glance over
ica of 1932 or of 1964. This is an Amer-
wounded. Countless civilians lost their lives, too, whether through
ica steeped in ~
of g o vernment.
It's an America that is, onboth left and right, steeped in the ethos of individu-
al choice. It's an America steeped in a morality of authenticity, which says that it is right to listen to the individual
voice within and immoral to be forced to conform to the external commands from without.
When Obamacare was still a bill, members of Congress succumbed to
politicalpressure and lowered the penalties that would be imposed on those who violated the mandates. Then the
our shoulders even as we look
ahead. If we cannot determine how one of the most momentous conflicts in history happened, how can we hope to avoid another such catastrophe in the future? Though the era just before World War I, with its gas lighting and its horse-drawn carriages,
military action, starvation or disease. Whole empires were destroyed and societies brutalized. But there's another reason the war continues to haunt us: we still
cannot agree on why it happened. Was it caused by the overweening ambitions of some of the men in power at the time? Kaiser Wilhelm II and his ministers, for example, wanted a greater Ger-
many with a global reach, so they challenged the naval supremacy
Supreme Court majority decided the penalties weren't even penalties; they
of Britain. Or does the explana-
were just an optional tax.
National rivalries? Or in the
When disgruntled groups have objected to the employer and other man-
sheer and seemingly unstoppable
tion lie in competing ideologies? momentum of militarism'? As an
seems very far-off, it is similar
to ours — often unsettlingly so — in many ways. Globalization — which we tend to think of as
Library of Congress
A French sergeant and adog, both wearing gas masks, on their way to
a modern phenomenon, created
the front line during World War I.
by the spread of international businesses and investment, the
arms race accelerated,generals and admirals made plans that became ever more aggressive as well as rigid. Did that make an
growth of the Internet, and the widespread migration of peoples — was also characteristic of that era.
explosion inevitable? Or would it never have happened had a random event in an
Austro-Hungarian backwater
SeeWar /F6
dates during implementation, the ad-
ministration has generally loosened, delayedor suspended them Latelast w eek, the administration ~
a
"hardslup exemption" to people who had theirprior coverage cancel ed and who believe that the mandated
Obamacare off'erings areunaffordable. Most telling, the administration hasn'teven made a moml argument
forthemandates. It now seems possible that no one will be paying the mandate penalties in2014. Havingexemptedsomegroups from the mandate already, it will be politically difficult to start enforcing
it on others. And, looking further into the future, why should we think Democrats will suddenly crack down and
enforce the mandate in the run-up to the next presidential election?
Governing in an age of distrust is different from governing in an age of trust. Government now lacks the legiti-
macy to impose costs on losers, so politicians faceunprecedentedpressureto create situations in which everybody looks like winners. Government lacks
the legitimacy to coerce. People like Social Security, but I bet you that Con-
gress could not pass a Social Security law today. If people were unfamiliar with the concept, you couldn't pass a
bill that said: Government is going to confiscat e money from each paycheck and spend it on other things, but don't
worry because you'll get it back decades from now whenyou retire. The erosion of the mandate won't
I
P
~ g» e?'SO+g
kill Obamacare overall. It'll just make it much more expensive for the government. But the larger lesson is that to
sustain a program in this culhue, you probablyhave to rely on policy mechanisms that maximize consumer-style
choice, not mandates. — David Bmoksis acolumnist for TheNew York Times. John Costa's columnwill return.
Library of Congress
U.S. infantry troops march northwest of Verdun, France, in World War I.
F2 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, DEC 29, 2013
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ext year could be a better year for Deschutes County's breweries. Congress is considering lowering the federalexcise tax on beer. Rep. Greg Walden, R-Hood River, supports the bill, as do Oregon Sens.Jeff Merkley and Ron Wyden, bothDemocrats. The tax on beer is already progressive. Breweries producing less than two million barrels a year pay $7 in federal tax on the first 60,000 barrels. Above that, they pay $18 a barrel. A barrel is 31 gallons. The proposed Small BREW Act would drop the tax on the first 60,000 barrels to $3.50. Above 60,000 barrels but below 2 million the tax would be $16 per barrel. Over 2 million barrels and it would be $18 per barrel. To give you some perspective on size, most craft breweries produces lessthan 60,000 barrels.Deschutes Brewery recently installed capacity tomake more than 450,000 barrels a year. A megabrewery like Anheuser-Busch InBev produces millions. W hy should beer taxes drop for small breweries? Lower the taxes and instead of the money going to Uncle Sam it will go back into the industry. A brewery couldexpand itscapacity. That means hiring more workers. That's arguably better for the
Y
with logging and thinning.
You can fight wildfire with public service announcements. Sens. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., and Mike Crapo, R-Idaho, are trying to fight fire with better funding. They have introduced legislation to change the way big blazes are paid for. If you look at the statistics on the National Interagency Fire Center's website, the general trend of federal wildfire suppression costs is up. That's no guarantee that the costs will always go up, but it is the trend. In 2012 the wildfire suppression costs of the federal government were $1.9 billion. The national figures are not available yet for 2013. In Oregon, 2013 was the worst fire season in 50 years. Some 103,000 acres burned costing the state $122 million, though federal reimbursements may bring that
E
There are naysayers who don't like the bill. The megabreweries
don't. They are feeling growing competition from small breweries. They have an alternative bill to cut taxes on all breweries. There are also those who want to capture more revenuefor the government by increasing the taxes on breweries. Inflation has gone up, so should beer taxes, they
argue. We'd rather grow jobs than grow thefederalgovernment. And small breweries have shown they can grow American manufacturing jobs.They make a product more and more Americans and people around the world crave. Congress should give them the tax break.
Finding a better way to fight forest fires ou can fight wildfire with fire. You can fight wildfire
-+44~4
county and the country. Deschutes County already has some of the highest pint per capita sales in the state. According to the state data from a few years ago, it also had one of the highest concentrations of jobs in the brewery industry. But you didn't really need statistics to tell you that. Breweries are booming here with no sign yet that it's just a bubble.
down to $71 million. The way the federal firefighting budget is written, federal agencies exhaust firefighting money and have to turn around and strip money from other programs to fight fires. That means money for recreation, planning and thinning projects get eliminated. Wyden and C r apo p ropose funding wildfires more like the Federal Emergency Management Agency gets funding. In t h eir plan, the Interior Department and the Forest Service pay the first 70 percent of average fire costs. Additional spending would come from emergency accounts. It's an approach that's hard to argue with. It's got support from some environmentalgroups and from the logging industry. But unless more active management of federal forests is allowed, it's like coming up with a better way to pay for the mistake of not
thinning and logging.
Undocumented need a fair bargain
t
f we can agree to listen to our common h u m a nit y in s t ead
IN MY VIEW
of our politics, we will collec-
tively hear the timeless sound of
We havecollectively built a country that offers more opportunity than many others. Throughout our history, that progress has been realized by a blend of both fairness and injustice. From Native Americans, to slavery, to child labor to gender
a straightforward injustice; 14 million people in America living, working and dying in socio-economic purgatory. None of us would have advocated this treatment for our i m m igrant a n cestors. "But
they are illegal and need to pay the price" is our common justification. But what about the ethical
and economic consequences of our complicity'? Are we willing to "pay the price" of our collective Faustian Bargain to hire illegal immigrants, pay
discrimination, we have all
benefited from the bargain we call "progress."
them, eat their food, use their clean
dishes, collect their rent, sell them our cars and to transact the other countless deals that we negotiate
with the, "aliens"'? If justice is the clarion call of the proper political stead of our ethics would wither in solution, than those of us who have the face of the decisions most imbenefited from illegal labor in any migrants confront when they come way owe a pound of our own flesh. to the U.S.: "Do I buy the big TV or But we, like they, can't simply pay the really big TV?" vs. "Do I leave this debt back. For us, it accrues my country and my family'?" "Do I buy the organic dog food against our collective conscience. For them, it's paid each day when or the regular dog food?" vs. "Do they retreat back into the shad- I risk my life to cross an infernal ows after our low wage business desert to feed my family?" is done. If justice is our common We have collectively built a imperative, have we achieved it by country that offers more opportusaving a few dollars on labor? The nity than many others. Throughimmigration debate is an opportu- out our history, that progress has nity for all of us, legal and illegal to been realized by a blend of both reconcile a shared debt. fairness and injustice. From NaMany of the decisions we make tive Americans, to slavery, to child to maximize our consumption in- labor to gender discrimination, we
have all benefited from the bargain we call "progress." "Progress" has made our country rich. But justice makes it great. Self interest satisfies our immediate needs. But ethics and morali-
ty are timeless. We can no longer hide behind the convenience of
our strongly held political views. We need to stand in the light of our common humanity and create a
fair bargain for the undocumented people we are already sharing our lives and economics with. A ny-
thing less is unjust. By accepting our complicity in illegal immigration and by honoring our shared humanity as people we can transcend politics, patriotism, economics and simply advocate for what is just: an interim legal status followed by a path to citizenship after complying with whateverlaws areenactedto make legal status and even citizenship possible over time. Any reasonable
solution would include honoring our country's tradition of laws and
recognizing the thousands of people who have come here legally, stood in line and waited years. But
by benefiting from the subsidized labor of millions of illegal immigrants for decades, we have for-
feited our collective right to expect that they alone bear the burden of coming here illegally and remain forever inlimbo. We have shared
the benefit and now must share the solution. — Will Warne lives in Bend.
Letters policy
In My Viewpolicy How to submit
We welcomeyour letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250words and include the writer's signature, phonenumber and address for verification. Weedit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhereandthose appropriate for other sections of TheBulletin. Writers are limited to one letter Or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
In My View submissions should be between 550and 650 words, signed and include the writer's phone number and address for verification. Weedit submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject those published elsewhere. In My View pieces run routinely in the space below, alternating withnational columnists. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
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An ode to spam — from the creative to the crazy By Gail Collins
t
would like to take time now to
thank everyone who sent me holiday messages via the Internet: The wishes ofgood cheer,the reports of family achievements in the year past, and the multiple requests for my email or bank password. Possibly that last group was not acting on its own volition. Just last
week I got a note from the novelist
Erica Jong, asking me for my email password, and another from the historian Carol Berkin, requesting my Bank of America account number. Thanks to my skills as a journalist, I instantly deduced that both were
fraudulent. Also, I had immediate doubts
our home television, but I blame that on Time Warner Cable, which is re-
sponsible for half the problems in our m odern world. Someday,we 'regoing to find out it was Time Warner Ca-
blethatscrewed up the Obamacare website and then I will say that I told
you so. But, on the plus side, I've refrained from responding to a number of people in my address file who suddenly wrote to announce that they were stranded in remote locations and in
desperateneed of a money transfer. My husband, Dan, got one recently from a woman who begged him to send her money to get back from Japan. He quickly deduced that if the situation had been genuine, she
l've refrained from responding to a number of peoplein my address
my pension account and find it empty," she said darkly.
the account of a dead client. While
Berkin wants to find the culprit
the scheme is pretty familiar, the let- who stole her email identity just so ter is in a category all its own when it she can bill him/her for the time it file who suddenly wrote comes to level of detail. It goes on for took to assure all her friends and relpages, and you learn quite a lot about atives: "Yes, I changed my password." to announce that they the difficulty the author had in dealAh, the passwords. This is the were stranded in remote ing with this demanding client and price we pay for living in the 21st locations and in desperate his shock in discovering said client century. We have wonder drugs and need of a m oney transfer. had died of a heart attack in Cannes. Skype, but we also have 200 passThere was also a touching concern words, none of which are supposed about my own reliability. ("I do not to involve names and numbers we particularly know you so I would wait would naturally remember. "When tection, Brunton says he's avoid- on your response to judge your level you call specialists, they say Change ed ever getting a Facebook page: oftransparencyandhonesty....") your password every month,'" Jong "Whenever there's a new privacy It turns out there really is a Rainer said. "Then they say: 'Don't store it in scandal I say — being friendless pays Neske who really is head of Private 5 your computer.'" off again." Business Clients at Deutsche Bank. Erica and I are considering a joint A lot of the old classic email come- However, a spokeswoman for the venture for the marketing of charm ons are now relegated to spam lim- bank said that he: I) did not write the bracelets bearing nothing but little bo before we even set eyes on them. letter,2) knows how to spell Deutsche gold passwords. "Or you could have tattoos all over I like to visit them occasionally and Bank and 3) does not want to help me say a mental hello to Sung Lee of get $2.5 million. your body," Berkin said. "Which Let's hope that he's recovered from would appeal to many of the students Hong Kong, who is unflagging in his attempts to get me to accept a money the experience. Jong said her en- I've taught." transfer of $43,600,000. counter with a hacker from hell left We can make 2014 the Year of the But the holiday spam creativity her feeling "invaded and helpless" as Illustrated Person. Or the Illustrated award goes to a correspondent who well as nursing a rather dim view of Password.
would not be reaching out to the peoinent author I know, offering to help ple who adopted her poodle in 2009. me turn my computer "into a monOur sense of being in semi-control ey-making machine." And I quickly may not last long. Finn Brunton, the figured out that the email I appeared author of "Spam: A Shadow History to have sent myself, offering an inside of the Internet," says scammers are track on "male penis meds" did not getting more sophisticated, scrubreally come from me. bing their targets' Facebook pages I have been feeling pretty darned to pull out details that will m ake proud of my own increasing techno- the pleas for help more convincing. logical sophistication. True, I am still (What if the Japan email had said: said he was "Rainer Neske, Head of not fully skilled in the operation of "Dan — do it for the dog!") In self-pro- Private & Business Clients at Deutsch about a message from another prom-
Bank" whooff eredto give me around $2.5 million if I would help him drain
the Internet in general.
"I fully expect someday I'll go into
— Gail Collins isa columnist for New York Times News Service.
SUNDAY, DEC 29, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
F3
OMMENTARY
ammer us ice
Thousands of prisoners are serval, was convicted and is serving 240 ing life without parole for nonviolent minimum to 20 years. He went to tri-
ederalJudge John Gleeson of
F "statements of reasons" are an opthe Eastern District of N ew York says documents called
GEORGE
months for an offense that, without the escalating coercions aimed at a
WILL
tional way for a judge to express
guilty plea, would have received a sentence of 46-57 months.
"views that might be of interest." The
one he issued two months ago is still reverberating. It expresses his dismay that al-
though his vocation is the administration of justice, his function frequently is the infliction of injustice.
The policy of mandatory minimum sentences for drug offenses has empowered the government to effective-
ly nullify the constitutional right to a trial. As Lulzim Kupa learned. Born to
A l b anian i m migrants,
he was convicted in 1999 and 2007 of distributing marijuana. Released from prison in 2010, he again engaged in trafficking, this time with enoughcocaineto earn him charges involving a sentence of 10 years to life. On March 5, 2013, prosecutors offered this: In exchange for a guilty plea, he would effectively be sentenced within the range of 110-137
rea s
years (assuming good time credits) would be appropriate, prosecutors were threatening a sentence of life without parole. This gave him no incentive to plead guilty. Then, however, they immediately proposed another plea agreement involving about nine years' imprisonment. Given a day to decide, he acted too slowly, so prosecutors again in-
In 2008, an 851 notice was filed
againstCharles Doutre, based on two prior convictions for distribution of $50 worth of drugs and simple possession of drugs. The judge who was required to sentence him to life in prison said, "I've imposed a life sentence six times, and it was for a murder each time." Doutre is 32. Eleven years ago, Dennis Capps, creased the recommended sentence. 39, a methamphetamine addict, pled Finally, Kupa caved: "I want to plead guilty to two instances of traffickguilty, your Honor, before things get ing involving a quantity of drugs he worse." If, after the 851 notice, he had could hold in his hand. He conquered insisted on a trial and been found his addiction for a long time, then reguilty, he would have died in prison lapsed, and in this year was convictfor a nonviolent drug offense. He is ed of another drug offense. Because 37.
Tyquan Midyett, a high-school dropout from a broken home and fos-
ter care, began using marijuana at 14. He was 26 when arrested for selling
he insisted on a trial, the government filed an 851 notice. He was convicted,
and is serving life without parole. Kenneth Harvey was 24 in 1989
when he committed a crack cocaine offense. He had two prior offenses that qualified as felony drug convictions even though they were not deemed seriousenough for impris-
less than four ounces of crack. Bethe next day. Kupa rejected the of- cause this was his second offense, the fer,so on March 15 prosecutors filed best he could do pleading guilty was a "prior felony information," aka an a 10-year sentence. When he hesitat851 notice, citing the two marijuana ed, the government gave him a date onment. They,however, enabled the convictions. So, 10 days after saying to agree or it would file an 851 notice, government to make an 851 filing. He a sentence of perhaps less than eight which would double the mandatory will die in prison. Harvey is 48. months — but the offer would expire
crimes. Gleeson, who is neither na-
ive nor sentimental (as a prosecutor, he sent mobster John Gotti to die in a supermax prison), knows that most defendants who plead guilty are guilty. He is, however, dismayed at the use of the threat of mandatory
minimums as "sledgehammers" to extort guilty pleas, effectively vitiating the right to a trial. Ninety-seven percentof federal convictions are without trials, sparing the government the burden of proving guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. Mere probablecause,and them eagerpresentation required for a grand jury indictment, suffices. "Judging is removed," Gleeson says, "prosecutors become sentencers." And when threats of
draconian sentences compel guilty pleas, "some innocent people will plead guilty." Barack Obama, Attorney General Eric Holder and Sens. Pat Leahy, D-Vt., and Rand Paul, R-Ky., are
questioningthe regime of mandatory minimum sentences, including recid-
CHARLES
LANE
Prostitution
and the law
t
n 2001, the German parliament almost totally deregulated prosti-
tution. The majority, left-wing coalition of Social Democrats and the Green Party trumpeted the new law
as a reform that would end prudishness about "sex work" and bring the business into the open so prostitutes
could bargain for higher pay and claim social insurance. Things haven't quite gone according to plan. Large brothels have popped up in various cities, packed with women and girls lured by human traffickers from poverty-stricken Eastern Europe and handed over to pimps upon arrival. Sex tourists from around the globe flock to German establishments that offer unlimited sex for a "flat rate" of
100 euros (about $135) or, sometimes, "gang-bang" parties, according to
ivismenhancements, thatbegan with
extensive exposes of what some in
the Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1986.
the German press call "modern slav-
Meanwhile, the human and financial
ery." Meanwhile, there has been no
costs of mass incarceration mount.
increase in prostitutes signing up for socialbenefits. Amid a growing backlash from women's rights advocates, Chancellor Angela Merkel is promising tougher
— GeorgeWill is a columnist for The New York Times.
rules. A likely reform is the elimination of flat-rate brothels, though how that
G et tou
o n A ssa or sta o m e
wouldbe enforced is anyone's guess. Now the Supreme Court of Canada is trying its hand at prostitution re-
form. Thejustices unanimouslystruck down the country's prostitution laws
and ordered parliament to rewrite them within a year. Will this experi-
GAZbW E P, 'Ihrkey-
he three young Syrian women had managed to escape from
T fora few days'restacrossthe border the rebel-held section of Aleppo
TRUDY
ment end better than Germany's, or will it confirm that there's something
RUBIN
inherently exploitative about prosti-
in Turkey. Asma,26, auniversitygrad-
tution that neither market forces nor
uate in English literature, has been mitted by Assad rival anything seen volunteering for the past two years as in Darfur or Bosnia. a nurse in a field hospital, treating ciYet the international communivilian victims of the war, which has di- ty has failed to take steps that could vided Aleppo into conflict zones held slow or halt these war crimes. And bythe rebels and the regime. the Obama administration has unwitSalam, 30, and Islam, 28, sisters tingly helped Assad continue slaughwho wereteachers before the war, are tering civilians. volunteers in an orphanage that shelThis has to stop.
enlightened legislators and judges can eradicate? Prior to the court's ruling, Canadian
law took a characteristically middleof-the-road approach. Performing sex acts for money was not a crime. But it
ters 650 children who lost parents in
According to the Oxford Research
was illegal to solicit customers, operate a brothel or live off the "avails" of prostitution — Canadian for pimping. Basically, prostitution was permitted
the fighting. "These children are only a fraction of the number of war or-
Group, atleast11,000of themorethan 113,000 known dead were younger
but contained. To the Supreme Court, however,
phans," Salam told me. It was hard to
than 18; of those child victims, more
believe that these fresh-faced, smiling than 70 percentw erekilledby bombs women, their faces framed by head or artilleryshells. Therewere also 764 scarves, had lived for years under cases of summary execution of chilbombardments. drenand 389 ofsniperfirew ith clear But just after they arrived in Ga- evidence that children were targeted. ziantep,the Assad regime began (Indeed, the entire Syrian revolt was dropping "barrel bombs" filled with sparked in late 2011by the arrest and hundreds of pounds of explosives and torture of a group of children for writshrapnel on apartment buildings in ing anti-Assad graffiti on a wall.) their neighborhood, killing hundreds Indiscriminate bombing and shellof civilians and wounding hundreds ing have been Assad's weapons of civilians that includes widespread more. The three were planning to choice for depopulating whole urban abductions and disappearances. The rush back into the mayhem. neighborhoods and towns under rebel top U.N. human rights official, Navi "There are not enough doctors or control. The result is that nearly one- May, says evidence links Assad to nurses or supplies," Asma explained third of Syria's 23 million people are crimes against humanity, including as we sat over a simple lunchofbread, either refugees in neighboring coun- horrendous torture and rapes in recheese and cucumbers in the apart- tries or internally displaced, living in gime prisons. (Yes, some opposition ment of friends who had escaped schools, in mosques, or on the ground. groups have also committed war from Aleppo. "They are operating in As winter sets in, Assad is prevent- crimes, but they amount to a tiny fracthe corridors, cutting off limbs with- ing food and medicine from reaching tion of the regime's atrocities.) out anesthetic." A school had been 250,000 starving civilians in besieged Yet Assad is sitting pretty in the hit, and many of the new victims were areas surrounded by regime forces. run-up to peace talks with the opposichildren. As I heard from doctors in Gaziantep, tion, to be held in Switzerland on Jan. No surprise. Bashar al-Assad's war the dictator is abetting a growing po- 22. His Russian backers blocked a against his own people is a deliberate lio epidemic, which is on the verge of U.N. Security Council statement last war against civilians and children. exploding in the rebel-held north. week that would have condemned The greatest humanitarian catastroU.N. investigators have allegedthat the barrel-bomb attacks. Their veto phe of the 21st century thus far is un- the Syrian government has carried makes it impossible to refer Assad to folding in Syria. The war crimes com- out "a campaign of terror" against the International Criminal Court for
this"arbitrary" scheme"imposed dangerous conditions" bypreventingprostitutes from working indoors, from
hiring drivers, receptionists or bodyguards, and from talking to would-be dients ahead of time to screen out potential abusers. The imposition of these risks was
out of proportlon to any social benefit, thus violating Canada's 1982 Charter crimes against humanity. Obama's decision to forgo a strike on the regime's military sites in favor of a deal to destroy its chemical weapons gave the dictator a green light to slaughter civilians by other methods. As Assad ups the killing before peace talks, Obama's only
of Rights, the court ruled. In contrast to the knee-jerklibertarianism that informed the 2001 German law, the Canadian court professed its intent to protect the vulnerable. It was
not in denial about the fact that poverty, addiction or other problems leave
Peace talks in Geneva are unlikely to end the war, but at least they
"many prostitutes ... no meaningful choice" about selling their bodies. One obvious remedy — banning prostitution — was never on the court's agenda, however. That's be-
might stop Assad's assault on civil-
cause the plaintiffs in the case were
card is to ask Moscow to rein him in.
ians. If Obama cannot persuade the Russians to force Assad to permit
self-styled sex workers who claimed theirs is a profession like any other
the delivery of food to the starving
and were trying to use the case to
and vaccine to the children, the U.S. delegation should stay home.
eliminate limitations that the law had placed on it.
— Z3udy Rubin is a columnist for the Philadelphia Inquirer.
So the court ordered parliament to
make life safer for prostitutes without offering any ideas for how to do that. Allowing prostitutes to hire "driv-
U.S. scores gains in war on cultural turpitude
ers" or "bodyguards" would mean de facto legalization of pimping, as Canada'sprosecutors unsuccessfull y argued. Citing the notorious case of serial killer Robert Pickton, who preyed on prostitutes in British Columbia,
By Albert R. Hunt
the increasing number of single-par- mothers; the number for whites was Bloomberg News ent families and the huge prison only 3 percent. he U.S. political system is dys- population. On health matters, cigaFour and ahalf decades later,the functional and the economy rette-smoking continues to drop, but rate for blacks has tripled to 72 peris still struggling, especially druguse doesn't. cent of all births. The rate for whites for those in the middle and working Crime has been declining steadily, has increasedtenfold,to 29 percent, dasses. But when it comes to the big- with rare exceptions, for the past cou- higher than the rate for blacks in the gest concern of some experts a gener- pleofdecades.Since 1995,them urder Moynihan report. (For Hispanics, it's ation ago — the decay of our culture rate has been reduced almost by half, 53 percent.) — there is evidence that the countryis and violent crime is down by more It has been condusively demondoing all right. than 43 percent. strated that, on average, children In the 1990s, the conservative Bill Although compared with ahnost raised without two parents do conBennett, a former educationsecretary any other country, the United States siderably worse educationally and and drugczar,devised his "Index of is plagued by an epidemic of gun vi- economically. There is little consenLeading Cultural Indicators." He wor- olence, firearms-related homicides sus, however, on how to reverse the ried about a pervasive dedine in U.S. — in keeping with other crime datatrendor even its underlying causes. moral values and "eroding social pa- have declined sharplysincethe 1990s. A decade and a half ago, the current thologies." A few years later, he temBennett and other social observ- Federal Reserve chairman nominee, peredhis negative assessment, seeing ers have analyzed many indicators, Janet Yellen, and her Nobel laureate some improvements, but he was still induding educational and economic economist husband, George Akerpessimistic. data. The state of the family is always lof, wrote a paper on "out-of-wedlock In a recent interview, Bennett said central. Americans marry and dichildbearing" that refuted both conthat he now sees more progress than vorce more than the citizens of any servative ideas and a few liberal ones. deterioration and that his worst fore- other industrialized nation. Any new theory has been elusive. bodings hadn't materialized. One of the most troubling elements Even so, an especially encouraging "We're not headed for catastrophe," of the picture isn't a new one. In 1965, harbinger of change is the dramatic he said. a young, relatively unknown Labor progressover the pasttwo decades in The positive developments include Department official named Daniel reducing pregnancies and birth rates falling crime rates, fewer abortions Patrick Moynihan authored a report among teenagers. Although they reand aremarkabledecline in teenage that warned that almost a quarter of main higher than in most other counpregnancies. Less encouraging are black Americans were born to single tries, both rates have dropped about
T
icans; in one survey, half of the respondents said teen pregnancies and
the court implied that repealing existing laws could be justified if doing so saved "one" woman. What are the justices going to say the first time a pros-
birth rates were still rising. This turnaround has been led by
titute gets killed by her driver? For all of its confusion, the Canadi-
groupssuch as the National CampaigntoPreventTeen andUnplanned Pregnancy, whichuses education and pressure on the entertainment industry and media and sidesteps polarizingideologicalpostures. "The magic combination of less sex
an ruling may have done a service: re-
and more contraception has contrib-
with their own bodies in their own
uted to this national success story," says Sarah Brown, the chief executive officer of the campaign. Teens arewaMnglongertohave sex, havefewer partners,use contraceptives
homes. On the other hand, we want gender equality and maximum protection of vulnerable individuals, espe-
more and, perhaps most important,
government should learn from Ger-
40 percentin 20 years.This would come as a surpriseto most Amer-
"thee is a gtowing social norm," she says,"that teenpregnancyis not OK." The U.S. remains beset by difficul-
ties, political, economic and cultural. Some of the social trends, however, are more positive. To study them pro-
vides hope that the country isn't, as one doomsayer declared in the 1990s,
slouching toward Gomorrah. — Albert R.Hunt is a Bloomberg View columnist.
minding us that modern norms about
sex and the law push in potentially conflicting directions. We want maximum privacy; the
state has no business telling consenting adults what they can and can't do
cially children. Prime Minister Stephen Harper's many's experience and that of other countries, induding Sweden. There, what's illegal is buying sex — so the burden of law enforcement falls on customers (mostly men), not prostitutes (mostly women). Since Sweden passed that rule in 1999, human trafficking and prostitution have dedined inthat country. — Charles Laneis a columnist for TheWashington Post.
© www.bendbulletin.com/books
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, DECEMBER 29, 2013
A mystery that's not
a mystery: 'Hunted' "Hunted" by Karen Robards (Gallery
Books, 384 pgs., $26) By Lezlie Patterson McClatchy-Tribune News Service
C ompared t o
ot h e r
books out at the moment,
"Hunted" is among the best.
Compared to Karen Ro-
bards' past novels, it's not. The book is well written, with interesting characters
who come to life from the first page. The intrigue ensnares you from the start
and you become invested in the drama immediately. The problem is, while there is tension (romantic and suspense) there isn't
n irin "Rock in Fashion"
in
with more than 250 photo-
Then there are the images
graphs of rock gods, from the that Varvatos created himly George-Warren (Harper Rolling Stones to the Kings self.Since 2005, he has collabDesign) of Leon. The images, shot by orated on ad campaigns for "Perry Ellis: An American Mick Rock, Bob Gruen, Elliott his line with musicians who Original" Landy and other legendary include Iggy Pop, Willie Nelby Jeff rey Banks, Doria de la lensmen, were cuson and Alice CooChapelle and Erica Lennard rated by Varvatos, per. A 2007 image (Rizzoli) who provides comof Cooper in a tux mentary dissecting and top hat, posed By Booth Moore every detaiL with a n 18- f o ot Los Angeles Times Each chapter is anaconda draped s LOS ANGELES — Wheth- devoted to a specifover his shoulders er you're an aspiring fashion- ic style flourishand across his lap, ista or just looking for some hair, sunglasses or seems likely to beinspiration, a couple of books military jackets, for come as iconic as published this fall might fill example. the ones Varvatos the bill. There are well-known im- so diligently studied. In "Rock in Fashion," mens- ages, such as that of Jimi Henby John Varvatos with Hol-
wear designer John Varvatos
drix in his velvet military coat
breaks down the elements of with gold-braided trim, which rock 'n' roll style that have in- inspired a design in Varvatos' spired him since his youth in spring 2002 collection. And Detroit in the 1960s and '70s, there are lesser-known imaglooks including Robert Plant's es, such as that of Thin Lizzy's "way too small" girls' blouses, Phil Lynott in an outsized afro Elvis Costello's shades and and tribal necklace. ("What's Bob Dylan's scarves. the first thing about a person More than a fashion book, it that says rock 'n' roll?" Varvais a rich catalog of men's style tos writes. "Hair.")
Perry Ellis
r from the archives of L.A.based photographer Erica
book tells the story of his first
L ennard, with w h o m E l l i s
major fashion show, for the fall 1978 season, for which
worked almost exclusively,
Ellis i m p orted
as well as sketches and other
cheerleadingsquad to lead a pep rally on the runway.
historical material. Ellis, born and raised in V i r gini a, came on t h e
The book offers
insight to connect the dots to Jacobs,
scene at the same time Ralph Lauren a nd Calvin K l e i n
were
P r i nceton's
who was mentored
by Ellis at the Parsons School for Design and who eventually took o v er
lau n ching
their b us i n esses in New Y ork. But
instead of A n glo American heritage or Minimalist polish, Ellis built his brand on clean-cut American style in the form
"Perry Ellis: An American
the brand in 1988 after Ellis died. Ja-
cobs showed his own "slouch look" with the
1992 grunge collection he designed for the Perry Ellis label.
of effortless soft tailoring, including g iant-shouldered A s Jacobs writes in t h e graph devoted to the 1970s- coatsover straight corduroy foreword, "Perry, for m e, and '80s-era sportswear de- skirts and baggy pants worn offered the possibility t h at signer who mentored Marc with s h r u nken h a n d -knit American fashion could be J acobs, Isaac Mizrahi a n d sweaters. fashion as I imagined it. It many others. Much of his clothing had a could have a voice: young, The lavish book includes collegiate feel that the design- personal, whimsical, emoeditorial, ad campaign and er himself described as "the tional, creative — something runway images unearthed slouch look." And, indeed, the that pulls at your heart." Original" is the first mono-
enough plot twists and sur-
prises to keep a reader's interest for 384 pages. Too much of the story is spent
in a charmingly shabby shack in a bayou, where Caroline and Reed spend a lot of time resisting the passion simmering between them.
Until they don't. The mystery isn't really a mystery, since everyone pretty much knows the bad guys from the beginning. Caroline is summoned to a hostage situation on
'Prisci a'a portraito Engis auntwit ar secrets "Priscilla: The Hidden Life of an Englishwoman in Wartime France" by Nicholas Shakespeare
(Harper,423 pgs., $27.99) By Anna Shapiro New York Times News Service
T he m y t hical
s t atus o f
Christmas Eve. She's the
Nicholas Shakespeare's aunt
police department's negotiator, but this is tricky
Priscilla, the subject of this
situation because her es-
tranged father — the superintendent of the New Orleans police department
— is one of several VIP hostages being held by police detective Reed. Reed
has his reasons, but he's reluctant to share them with Caroline. He has his
reasons for not sharing. Caroline doesn't like any of those reasons.
Eventually, Caroline and Reed become a team. Their
banter is engaging, and Caroline's spunk is fun to see.
BEST-SELLERS Publishers Weekly ranks the best-sellers for the weekthat ended Dec.22 HARDCOVERFICTION 1. "Sycamore Row" by John Grisham (Doubleday) 2. "The First PhoneCall from Heaven"by MitchAlbom (Harper) 3. "CommandAuthority" by Tom Clancy (Putnam) 4. "Doctor Sleep" by Stephen King (Scribner) 5. "Cross My Heart" by James Patterson (Little, Brown) 6."Takedown Twenty" by Janet Evanovich (Bantam) 7."TheGoldfinch"byDonna Tartt (Little, Brown) 8. "The Longest Ride" by Nicholas Sparks (GrandCentral) 9. "Innocence" by DeanKoontz (Bantam) 10. "King and Maxwell" by David Baldacci (GrandCentral) HARDCOVER NONFICTION 1. "Killing Jesus" by O'Reillyl Dugard (Henry Holt) 2. "Things That Matter" by Charles Krauthammer (Crown Forum) 3."Guinness World Records 2014" (GuinnessWorld Records) 4."GeorgeWashington's Secret Six" by Brian Kilmeade (Penguin/Sentinel) 5. "David andGoliath" by Malcolm Gladwell (Little, Brown) 6. "The PioneerWoman Cooks" by ReeDrummond (William Morrow) 7. "Miracles andMassacres" by Glenn Beck(S&S/Threshold) 8. "Si-Cology" by Si Robertson (Howard Books) 9. "The Bully Pulpit" by Doris Kearns Goodwin (Simon 8 Schuster) 10. "I Am Malala" by Malala Yousafzai (Little, Brown)
biographical memoir, took shape in his family on her return to London after the lib-
eration of Paris. A glamorous survivor of four years as a British enemy alien in France
during World War II, married to a French viscount, astonishingly and adulterously dating the British movie star
Robert Donat. The family's image couldn' thave been how she saw herself, as the onceadored daughter of a father she barely glimpsed after she was swept off to Paris by a mother she described (seemingly accurately) as "a selfish, vain, stupid woman," next as an aspiring ballet dancer crippled by illness, then a shy 20-year-old whose parents wouldn't support her, andon her way to have a French abortion — a pickup by the viscount. But to the author and his
parents, she was all mystery and romance. They knew she'd been in a concentration
camp, and they strongly suspected she'd played a role in
the Resistance. Shakespeare, 39 Steps." Priscilla's mother
What he also found was that
a prizewinning novelist and sleeps with Gillian's father. survival for the French — or biographer, began to purAs Shakespeare does his re- for the British in occupied sue Priscilla's story after her search, the mystery of Priscilla territory — often meant coldeath, when a pile of letters beginsto recede, and so does laboration. In Priscilla's case, and photographs she'd saved, her glamour.She is revealed after her starved internment, among them portions o f a a s possibly less worthy — but it was sexual collaboration, fictionalized autobiography, maybe more intriguing. She with men powerful enough to more or less fell into was not, he found, keep her not only safe but also his lap. He also drew in the Resistance. comfortable. o n works b y h i s And Gillian, who This section of the book is grandfather, P r i ssurvived her friend, the most sensational, largely cilla's father, S.P.B. said that Besanqon, because of the detail it reveals Mais, a BBC broadthe camp where Pris- about high-level black-market caster an d w r i t er, cilla wa s i n t erned characters rather than about who had, among his for four months with Priscilla, who seems less to 200 books, written other British pass- connect with people than to about his daughter. ricochet between them, hopAnd, stumbling on not a concentration ing to score security. She a familiar name in a library c amp, although the Germans sticks with her viscount, who archive, Shakespeare found c a l led it that. For them, it was is impotent, but feels betrayed a further trove of such d ocu- Frontstalag 142 — and it had when she is incarcerated at ments by Priscilla's lifel ong m u c h i n c o mmon w ith t h e Besanqon, and he shows no infriend Gillian, quite a charac- notorious camps: the wooden terest in getting her out. ter in her own right. The w om- bunks, meager food and froOthers were more potent en, in fact, wrote novels featur- z e n latrines into which elderly in every way: Daniel Vernier, ing each other. inmates sometimes slid, to be a married businessman, who This referential incestuous- found dead in the morning. Of had himself smuggled into the ness is one of the slightly wt'ck- the 4,000 women interned in camp and protected her pretty ed pleasures of Shakespeare's Besanqon, 700 died. much from 1941 to the liberabook "Priscilla: The Hid den Wh ic h i s t o say, it wasn't tion of Paris in '45; a Belgian Life of an Englishwoman in a de a t h c a mp, o r e ven a racecar driver who jealously Wartime F r ance." Gr ah am forced-labor camp, but it was beat her;a German named Greene, to whom Priscilla's bad enough. What is most Otto, "one step away from father had been kind, returns shocking about what Shake- Hermann Goring," who kept the favor by naming a fiction- speare discovers, however, her in caviar and couture; and, al character for him. As a fa- is that none of this ever hap- weirdly, Madame Vernier's mous olderman, Greene fea- pened, atleast so far as the brother, the one man she ever tures in Gillian's life in France. Besanqon townspeople are fell in love with. Priscilla's beau Donat plays c o ncerned. When it comes to The s ensational a s pect, the dashing lead in the Hitch- t h e Occupation, most of what though, mainly has to do with cock film of the book that had even French officialdom offers the flamboyant characters long been Mais' lodestar, 'The ' is still blankness and denial. that Priscilla may or may not
have known directly: Nazis and other goods traffickers living the high life in Paris.
One, said to have inspired the title character in Louis Malle's
"Lacombe, Lucien," is a highvoiced epicene youth who sells out Jews but, like Ferdinand
the bull, just wants to smell the pretty flowers, though only if they're white.
There is, finally, almost too much here. The sheer richness of sources can induce a kind
of double vision. Shakespeare is also telling the story of how he got Priscilla's story; both chronology and perspective can be tricky to parse. And while he offers some overview,
you may wish the whole had been framed less as a series of mysteries and been allowed
more analysis — not to mention a timeline of the princi-
pal's life and a cast list or, at least, an index, deficiencies probably to be laid at the publisher's door.
Purc 6md.6 Ca
aj B~ dv Bend Redmond
John Day Burns Lakeview
La Pine 541.382.6447
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SUNDAY, DEC 29, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN F 5
Apples for a seasonedacting teacher "Wynn Place Show" by Jeremy Gerard(Smith & Kraus, 400 pgs., $50)
Giammetti's snapshots
of a glittering world
fierce style had inspired an equally fierce devotion among students across generations.
By Suzy Menkes
Chris Cooper, who studied
By Patnck Healy New York Times News Service
NEW YORK — A s o ther acting students watched in a ater veteran,stepped toward
a spotlight to begin a monologue from Shaw's "Caesar and Cleopatra." His eyes wide, Safier delivered his first line in a low, awe-struck tone. "Hail, Sphinx!" Sara Krulwich/The New York Times "I'm going to stop you right Wynn Handman, founder of the American Place Theater, teaches there," his teacher, Wynn an acting class ln New York, on Dec. 21. Handman ls celebrated ln Handman, interrupted from a new book, "Wynn Place Show," and by students like actors Chris his swivel chair. "You're in the Cooper and Frank Langella. back of your throat. Bad place to start."
To the untrained ear, Safier sounded just right. But
years of marriage, Handman lost his wife, Bobbie, who died
at their home in Wyoming do not. He has been teach- f rom complications of A l z ing since 1950, so he heimer's disease. He hasn't been getting knows a thing or two about the voice, like much sleep since, and when a f aulty start he has been moving w ill prevent it f r o m a little slower, pushbuilding strength for ing his rolling walker a two-minute speech. and using its seat on Now 91, Handman occasion on the twostill leads four classblock journey from his Handman hears things others
es a week, each four
Manhattan apartment
hours long, using the to his teaching studio same school desk he began in Midtown. Most of the times with, and the same chalkboard when he speaks of his wife, he andthe same dassics — aswell tears up, and his voice halts. As as plays that became classics for the loneliness, classes help. "I was teaching a class later beforehis eyes. And students still come, notbecause he has a that day, the day Bobbie died, Tony Award-winning resume because I can easily lose the or connections to agents (he pain in theater," Handman doesn't), but because they trust said during a recent interview that he knows how to make a scene work. I t's hard no t t o t r u s t a
91-year-old who can still re-
in the studio, his fleshy cheeks
ruddy on a windy day, his green eyes clear and fixed. Nor has h e
g o tten over
cite Shakespeare in perfect
losing his artistic home, the
pentameter. "A lot of acting teachers will
American
pussyfoot with sensitive artists,
but Wynn is the most direct guy," said Safier, who has been studying with Handman on and off since 1981."People say, 'Was he different 30 years ago?' I say, 'Well, he might be a little nicernow — but not much.' And there's nothing he had then that he doesn't have now."
In dass, perhaps, but not in life. In November, after 63
LONDON — This year was defined by Instagram
out being "Lone Star," his
darkened rehearsal studio, Alan Safier, a 64-year-old the-
fused to go back since. Friends have tried to get a plaque commemorating th e
A m e r ican
Place, but the Roundabout has declined; a spokesman said this week that there were no
latest being "August: Osage County"), said he still adhered to one of Handman's guiding philosophies: Preparation is everything. "Wynn told me long ago that someday you're going
world leaders were caught at Nelson Mandela's memorial serviceusing a smartphone to capture their own images.
to work with a director — in theater or film, more likely
the holiday season at least for t h ose
in film — where you're going
who follow fashion, is based not on 21st-century technology but on Polaroid images and holiday snaps, for an intimate view of high society. "Private: Giancarlo Giammetti," published by Assouline, weighs more than 12 pounds and contains more
Yet the book of pg
to have to save your performance," Cooper said. "It has
totally come to pass. So I get the script as early as possible to prepare, research, work on my character. Because once you know your material backward and forward, know your lines so you don't think about them, you can leave yourself open for all the possibilities that come your way."
P l ac e Th e ater, Still, a measure of due came which opened in 1962 in Hell's this month in a new book, Kitchen. The company, for "Wynn PlaceShow," part biwhich he often directed, of- ography and part theater hisfered productions starring stu- tory, written by Jeremy Gedents like Frank Langella and rard. At the Players club a counewcomers like Dustin Hoff- pleofweeks ago,Langellaand man. The theater, out of mon- other former students, includey, stopped producing shows ing Richard Gere and John more than a decade ago; the Leguizamo, joined current Roundabout Theater C o mones and scores of others to pany took over its last home, celebrate the book and Handturning it into the Laura Pels man. Gerard said afterward Theater, and Handman has re- that Handman's sometimes
Sherr's Alexa ha d
"The Fat Lady Sang"
ture" had great stories to tell,
and a sharp, slangy narrative voice that worked well on the
231 pgs., $17.99)
page, even better when it was
By Janet Maslln New York Times News Service
In 1998, R obert
E v ans,
the least bashful producer in H ollywood, s u ffered
t h r ee
strokes inrapid succession. Their combined effects were so debilitating that it was not
clear whether Evans would e ver walk, t al k
or
chase women again. But as his new memoir, "The Fat Lady Sang," makes clear, at least Evans' capacity for bragging and
s e lf-promotion
remained mercifully unimpaired. He is still able t o
s ay
"Wham, bam, there I am" in as many ways as this stubbornly upbeat book will allow. "The Fat Lady Sang" would not exist were it not for Evans' four-star memoir, "The Kid
heard on the audiobook version. It became an interesting And he intended to fly with her if stilted documentary, since to Cap d'Antibes, France, from Evans refused to be filmed for California, but reality set in: the story of his own life. And it The flight would be too taxing. made him a person of interest They wound up honeymoonto younger readers who may ing in California. He wound have known nothing about up not being able to get out of him before. But it was not a the bathtub. The marriage was book that cried out for over before Oxenberg's livea sequel. in companion, who had been Using the strokes gone for the weekend, came as a strange form of home. good luck, "The Fat E vans s eems t o h av e Lady Sang" crosscuts bounced back in the 15 years between the fears of since he was stricken. And the debilitated Evans
The early stories are much more grating and less glamorous than anything in "The Kid Stays in the Picture," perhaps
lished in 1994, it has earned
guage. (About his early days
career. He began in front of
Paramount Pictures during
invented. Giammetti, w h o now lives in London but is still a
globe-trotter, has never been in Valentino's shadow. He
began when I met Valenti-
alty and stars. It moves back- no," according to the author. ward and forward in time, from an I t alian childhood
He explains in the frank text that at one point their person-
through 50 years of fashion,
al relationship broke up, yet the couple's two mothers remained inseparable friends.
with a certain focus on the
carefree 1970s. The appeal of "Private" is
"Valentino was incredibly
seductive with his deep tan,
not that Giammetti has made
his life public by writing it, blue eyes and soft but intense but that the book is a visu- way of speaking," Giammetti al link to a world that has a says of the early years. blue-sky happiness — not The book also has a large least because "the tribe," as section detailing the develGiammetti calls the Valenti- opment of the business side no circl e offriends, seemed of their r e lationship and to spend so much time in the their ongoing battle to equal sunshine on the Mediterra- the power and influence of nean waters or on mountains Yves Saint Laurent. The duo in Gstaad, the Swiss resort. bowed out of the Valentino Even Madonna is caught on fashion company after 45 the grounds of Valentino's years in 2008, while a movie chateau in France, throw- that year about Valentino being herself onto the springy came a hit.
b ecome
fail." stu d e nts
laughed heartily. Sheer began again, and nailed the scene. "If we were in r ehearsal,
I'd feel I had the right actress for the role," he told her. Sherr smiled. And then, his
voice strong, Handman said, "Thank you," as he always has
Need an extra$2,QOO?
when one student is done, and moved on to the next.
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is a natural attention getter,
even if the Kid stopped being a kid a long time ago. But in the earlier book he did not need
spend any way you like.
to emphasize every standing ovation that had brought him to tears. He didn't end chapters
Just go to: WWW.puISepOII.COm
with lines like "Thus began the greatest odyssey of my entire life" and "And thus be-
gan the most celebrated years of my entirecareer. " And he didn't need to play back every bit of puffery that came his way, like "They're putting you on a pedestal you deserve." He seems to have forgotten the value of understatement,
c u ctin
Serving Central Oregon since 1903
which served him so well the first time around.
his 1998 medical calamity
because less trouble was taken to tame Evans' native lan-
the camera and parlayed his good looks into life as a ladies' man. He got lucky with his first foray into producing. He was head of production at
a new book by the author of
a world where that
expression had not yet been
(who is now 83) and the glory days that occurred long before
Stays in the Picture." Pubits place in Hollywood history because of its author's endless supply of gossipy, embarrassing stories and because of the high drama of his movie
actress Catherine Oxenberg (who was more than 30 years his junior). He made his case by givingher a Jaguar andhaving her drive it to a jewelry store.
legs are making a splash as she dives, the book becomes a "celebrity study," in
Valentino, couturier to roy-
A honcho inwinter with moretales to tell by Robert Evans (It Books,
a nd Pr incess D i ana's wel l - toned
I'lAwl'ARLo siaMMs~v
has been more of an elegant costs $250. enabler for the half-centuFilled with images of those ry since the couple met by who were once known as the chance in a cafe on the Via "beautiful people," the book Condotti in Rome in the postis an exploration of the life of war period. "I always felt that my life Giammetti and his partner,
have now," Handman told her. "That character is destined to 20 - o d d
Zy
there is naturally a deep vein of glamour. And when the principals play host on their yacht, where Gwyneth Paltrow is sunbathing on the deck, Elle Macpherson is posing at the edge of the ocean
than 300 illustrations. It also
wildly narcissistic. "I like that character you
The
her and E l izabeth Taylor,
and the selfie even before
plans for one at this point. Tothat end, Handmanwants While the American Place his students so immersed in Theater lives on in its staged their roles that during class reading program called Liter- they speak to him in characature to Life, the theater itself ter. Working on a scene from — known for producing ex- Douglas Carter Beane's "As perimental plays and noncom- Bees in Honey Drown," a satmercial fare like "The Can- ire about a con artist passing nibals" (about cannibalism as a New York sophisticate, in a concentration camp) and Handman stopped the action "Isadora Duncan Sleeps With after two minutes and asked the Russian Navy" — has been the actress, Jessica Sherrlargely forgotten, Handman or rather her character, Alexa sald. Vere de Vere — what she was "I was drawn to challeng- doing in the scene. Sherr, as ing plays, plays that would Alexa, began fuming about not s ucceed c o mmercially her inability to win a person and therefore needed a home," over on the phone, alternately he said. "It was never in my sneering and pouting as she mind to do a play that would talked. In a matter of seconds, become a hit. But that's what most New York theaters are all about today."
green turf. When your tribe includes
New York Times News Service
with Handman for years before making films (his break-
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as a bobby soxer's dreamboat, now more popular than in ear-
lier versions: "Them mobs of girls, busting through them ropes, grabbin' and screamin' for my autograph.") This book also includes a
heavy dose of man talk, as conducted by Evans and buddies like Alain Delon, Jack
Nicholson and Warren Beatty. According to this book, it's
the early 1970s, a great time to all about which women can be there. "The Godfather" and be gotten into bed how quick"Rosemary's Baby" happened ly and whether they're good on his watch. In the midst of looking enough to be worth that, his marriage to Ali Mac- it. It's not hard to believe that Graw unraveled as publicly as Evans really thinks this way. possible. But when he cites a talk with In the 1980s, he hit the skids Beatty about which of them after being convicted of co- bagged the oldest "above-thecaine trafficking and dragged line star," he seems to live in into a murder trial. He could a world where men are lost in easily have slid into obscuri- their memories, and status, ty after that, but he remained sex and acquisitiveness are too well connected, visible and hopelessly confused. vain. For a satirical glimpse of The one truly dumbfounding Evans' personal style, watch story in "The Fat Lady Sang" is Dustin Hoffman produce a that of Evans' decision to defy war as if it were a movie in his doctors in a very big way. "Wag theDog," and geta load Under instructions to be very of that wardrobe. cautious about his health, he "The Kid Stays in the Pic- suddenly decided to marry the
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Primary Care. Specialty Care. Urgent Care. Total Care. Bend Eastside Clinic I Bend Westside Clinic I Sisters I Redmond bendmemorialclinic.com I Call 541-382-4900 to make an a ointment
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F6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, DEC 29, 2013
War
pacityto see the larger strategic more control over the Damas- picture. Instead, the key powers cus government to compel it to had weak, divided or distracted the negotiating table than it had leaders. Today, America's presiover Serbia in 1914. dent faces a series of politicians
fered military setbacks in Iraq and Afghanistan, and has had
must hope that Russia will have
Continued from F1 Even remote parts of t he
world were being linked by new means of transportation,
difficulty finding allies that will
stand by it, as the Syrian crisis demonstrates. Uncomfortably aware that they have few reli-
in China who, like those in Ger-
Dismissing a threat
fields of commerce and manufacture were opening up, such as the rapidly expanding chemical and electrical industries. Einstein was developing Library of Congress his general theory of relativi- A tank moves through a trench andstarts toward the German line ty; radical new ideas like psy- during World War I near Saint Michel, France. choanalysis were finding a
many a century ago, are deeply able friends and many potenLike our predecessors a concerned that their nation be tial enemies, the Americans centuryago, we assume that taken seriously. In Vladimir V. are now considering a return all-out war is something we no Putin, President Obama must to a more isolationist policy. Is longer do. The French Social- deal with a Russian nationalist America reaching the end of its istleader Jean Jaures, a man who is both wilier and stron- tether, as Britain didbefore it? of great wisdom who tried un- ger than the unfortunate Czar It may take a moment of real successfully to stanch the rise Nicholas II. danger to force the major powof militarism in the early years Obama, like Woodrow Wil- ers of this new world order to of the20th century,understood son, is a great orator, capable come together in coalitions able this well. "Europe has been af- of laying out his vision of the and willing to act. Instead of flicted by so many crises for world and inspiring Ameri- muddling along from one crisis so many years," he said on the cans. But like Wilson at the end to another, now is the time to eve of World War I, and "it has of the 1914-18 war, Obama is think again about those dreadbeen put dangerously to the dealing with apartisan and un- ful lessons of a century agotest so many times without war cooperative Congress. Perhaps in the hope that our leaders, breaking out, that it has almost even more worrying, he may with our encouragement, will ceased to believe in the threat be in a position similar to that thinkabouthow they canwo rk
following; and the roots of the
and is watching the further de-
from railways to steamships,
/
and communication, including the telephone, telegraph and
4w~
wireless.
The decades leading up to 1914 were, as now, a period of dramatic shifts and upheavals,
which those who experienced them thought of as unprece-
~
«P
dented in speed and scale. New
predatory ideologies of fascism media, every airstrike, artillery and Soviet Communism were shell and doud of poison gas taking hold. that hits civilian targets is now filmed and tweeted around the
Global radicalization
Globalization can have the
paradoxical effect of fostering intense localism and nativism, frightening people into taking refuge in small like-minded groups. Globalization also makes possi ble the widespread transmission of radical ideologies and the bringing togeth-
world.
movements such as Hezbollah. velopment of the interminable The Middle East today bearsa Balkan conflict with decreased worrying resemblance to the attention and reduced disquiet." Balkans then. A similar mix of With different leadership, toxic nationalisms threatens to World War I might have been
Globalization can heighten rivalriesand fears between countries that one might oth-
draw in outside powers as the United States, 'Iltrkey, Russia
avoided. Europe in 1914needed
and Iran all look to protect their
the strength of character to
erwise expect to be friends. On the eve of World War I, Britain, the world's greatest naval power, and Germany, the world's
interests and their clients. We
a Bismarck or a Churchill with
of the British prime minister in 1914, Herbert Asquith — pre-
together to build a stable international order.
siding over a country so divided internally that it is unwilling
— Margaret MacMillan is warden of St. Antony's College, Oxford, and the author, most recently, of "The War That Ended Peace: The Road to 1914." This article is adapted from The Broohings Essay, aseries publishedby the Broohings Institution.
or unable to play an active and constructive role in the world. The United States on the eve of 2014 is still the world's stron-
gest power, but it is not as powstand up topressure and the ca- erful as it once was. It has suf-
greatest land power, were each other's largest tradingpartners. er of fanatics who will stop at British children played with nothing in their quest for the toys, including lead soldiers, perfect society. In the period made in Germany, and the RoybeforeWorld War I,anarchists al Opera House in Covent Garand revolutionary Social- den resounded with the voices ists across Europe and North of Germansingers performing America read the same works
German operas. But all that did
and had the same aim: to over- not translate into friendship. throw the existing social order. Quite the contrary. With The young Serbs who assas- Germany cutting into Britain's sinated Archduke Franz Fer- traditional markets and vying dinand of Austria at Sarajevo
with it for colonies and pow-
were inspired by Nietzsche and er, the British felt threatened. Bakunin, just as their Russian As early as 1896, a best-selling and French counterparts were. Terrorists from Calcutta to
British pamphlet, "Made in
as they hurled bombs onto the
State is arising to menace our
Germany," painted an ominous Buffalo imitated one another picture: "A gigantic commercial floors of stock exchanges, blew prosperity, and contend with us up railway lines, and stabbed for the trade of theworld." Many and shot those they saw as op- Germans held reciprocal views. pressors, whether the Empress When Kaiser Wilhelm and his Elisabeth of Austria-Hungary naval secretary Admiral ~ or the president of the United States, William McKinley. To-
day, new technologies and social media platforms provide new rallying points for fanatics, enabling them to spread their messages to even wider audi-
ences around the globe. With our "war on terror," we run the same risk of overes-
von Tirpitz built a deepwater
navy to challenge British naval supremacy, the unease in Britain about Germany's growing commercial and militarypower
Hurrg in for the
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turned into something close to paIllc.
It istempting — and sobering — to compare today's relation-
ship between China and Amertimating the power of a loose ica to that between Germany network of extremists, few in and England a century ago. number. More dangerous may Lulling ourselves into a false be our miscalculations about sense of safety, we say that the significance of changes in countries thathave McDonald's warfare. A hundred years ago, will never fight one another. Yet most military planners and the extraordinary growth in the civilian governments who trade and investment between watched from the sidelines got
China and the United States
the nature of the coming war catastrophically wrong.
since the 1980s has not served
The great advances of Eu-
to allay mutual suspicions. At a time when the two countries
and the increasing output of its
resources and influence from
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rope's science and technology are competing for markets, factories during its long period the Caribbean to Central Asia, of peace had made going on China has become increasingly the attack much more costly in casualties. The killing zone
ready to translate its economic
strength into military power. Increased Chinese military diershad to cross in the face of spending and the buildup of its deadly enemy fire — had ex- naval capacity suggest to many panded hugely, from 100 yards American strategists that Chi-
— the area that advancing sol-
in the Napoleonic wars to over 1,000 yards by 1914. The rifles
na intends to challenge the Unit-
and machineguns they faced
ed States as a Pacific power, and we are now seeing an arms
were firing faster and more ac-
race between the countries in
curately, and the artillery shells contained more devastating explosives. Soldiers attacking, no matter how brave, would suffer horrific losses, while defenders
that region. The Wall Street Journal has published authori-
sat in the relative security of
Before 1914, the great powers talked of their honor. Today,
their trenches, behind sandbags andbarbed wire.
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tative reports that the Pentagon
is preparing war plans against China — just in case. Secretary of State John Kerry
refers to America's credibility our own time is the assumption or prestige. It amounts to much that because of our advanced the same thing. technology, we can deliver Once lines are drawn bequick, focused and overpow- tween nations,reaching across ering military actions — "sur- them becomes difficult. In the gical strikes" with drones and Europe of 1914, the growth of cruise missiles, "shock and nationalist feeling — encourawe" by carpet bombing and aged from above but rising armored divisions — resulting from the grass roots where hisin conflicts that will be short torians, linguists and folklorists and limited in their impact, and were busycreating stories of A comparable mistake in
victories that will be decisive.
ancient and eternal enmities
— did much to cause ill will asymmetrical wars between among nations who might othwell-armed,organized forces erwisehavebeenfriends.What on one side and low-level in- Freud called the "narcissism of Increasingly, we are seeing
surgencies on the other, which
small differences" can lead to
can spread across not just a region but a continent, or even the globe. Yet we are not seeing clear outcomes, partly because there is not one enemy but a shifting coalition of local warlords, religious warriors and other interested parties.
violence and death — a danger amplified if the greater powers
What will victory look like? Think of Afghanistan or Syria, where local and inter-
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ON PAGE 2: NYT CROSSWORD M The Bulletin
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Pets & Supplies
Pets 8 Supplies
Pets & Supplies
Furniture 8 Appliances
Antiques & Collectibles
, • Bgn d
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Fosters needed for 5 POODLE pups AKC toy, G ENERATE SOM E cats just rescued from tiny teacup, cuddly people EXCITEMENT in your years of confinement dogs. 541-475-3889 neighborhood! Plan a How to avoid scam alone in a bedroom garage sale and don't and fraud attempts with minimal care. 2 forget Io advertise in VBe aware of interWhere can you find a Get your had to be shaved and classified! national fraud. Deal helping hand? business 4 need dental care. 541-385-5809. locally w h e never From contractors to 202 Nice cats, starved for possible. NEED TO CANCEL a ttention. Res c ue yard care, it's all here V Watch for buyers Want to Buy or Rent YOUR AD? group needs help with a ROWI N G who offer more than in The Bulletin's The Bulletin vet c o sts, f o s ters Wanted: Oak bedframe/ your asking price "Call A Service Classifieds has an while they heal, & with an ad in headboard for reg. or and who ask to have "After Hours" Line per manent Professional" Directory caring waterbed mattress. The Bulletin's m oney wired o r Call 541-383-2371 homes. 541 - 389541-408-0846 h anded back t o "Call A Service 24 hrs. to cancel 8420 598-5488. PO Aussies, Mini, AKC Red/ them. Fake cashier 205 your ad! Bx 6441, Bend 97708, Professional" Blue merle, Black Tris, 2 checks and money www.craflcats.org Items for Free litters. 541-788-7799 or Directory orders are common. 541-598-5314. V N ever give o u t Stearns & Foster Calif. personal f i n ancial Call a Pro Queensfand Heelers King AND full mattress/ Bichon Frise reg. AKC information. Standard & Mini, $150 Whether you need a boxsprings, sli g htly puppies and also a V T rust y o ur in& up. 541-280-1537 used. Moving; Free, Jf 6 -mo.-old male f o r fencefixed,hedges www.rightwayranch.wor stincts and be wary you haul. 541-647-2227 sale. 5 41-953-0755 dpress.com of someone using an HANCOCK & or 541 - 9 12-1905. trimmed or a house escrow service or MOORE SOFA BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS built, you'll find rwellette©yahoo.com Rodent issues? Free Salmon/Coral cheagent to pick up your Search the area's most professional help in adult barn/ shop cats, nille fabric with diamerchandise. comprehensive listing of fixed, shots, some The Bulletin's "Call a mond pattern. Tradiclassified advertising... friendly, some not. tional styling with The Bulletin Service Professional" real estate to automotive, Will deliver. 389-8420 loose pillow back, merchandise to sporting Directory Wolf-Husky pups, beau- down-wrapped seat goods. Bulletin Classifieds 541-385-5809 cushions, roll arms, Good classified ads tell tiful, gentle, $400 ea. appear every day in the Cavalier Puppies, skirt, two matching the essential facts in an 541-977-7019 print or on line. Ready 1/16/14. Takp illows an d a r m interesting Manner.Write Labradors AKCCall 541-385-5809 ing deposits. Only covers. L ike new Yorkie male, 6 months, 2 chocolate males left! from the readers view -not www.bendbulletin.com three left. $900/ea. GREAT personality! condition. $1000. Shots, wormed, health/ the seller's. Convert the 541-408-5909 or $500. Can deliver. 541-526-1332 hip guar. 541-536-5385 facts into benefits. Show The Bulletin 541-548-4574. Call 541-792-0375 www.welcomelabs.com Serving Cenlral Oregonsince at8 the reader howthe item will help them insomeway. People Look for Information The Bulletin 208 Thls About Products and recommends extra Pets & Supplies advertising up Services Every Daythrough I c a iion i e n p r brought to you by The Bulletin Classinorfs chasing products or • The Bulletin recomservices from out of I The Bulletin servlng central oregonsince 1%8 mends extra caution Chihuahua puppies, tiny, 210 the area. Sending l P EKINGESE P U P when purc hascash, checks, or c 1st shots/dewormed, PIES, small, spoiled, Furniture & Appliances l credit i n f ormation The Bulletin reserves ing products or ser$250. 541-977-0035 born 10/1 6/1 3, 1st the right to publish all vices from out of the may be subjected to shots, dews, back- A1 Washersa Dryers l FRAUD. For more ads from The Bulletin area. Sending cash, yard potty t r ained, $150 ea. Full warnewspaper onto The checks, or credit ininformation about an c parents on site, $400. Bulletin Internet webf ormation may b e ranty. Free Del. Also advertiser, you may l 541-514-8160 subjected to fraud. wanted, used W/D's 6 call the Or e gon 6 site. 541-280-7355 For more informa' State Atto r ney ' Just bought a new boat? The Bulletin tion about an adverl General's O f f i ce Sell your old one in the SewingCentral Omgonsince faa tiser, you may call classifieds! Ask about our Bed frame, beautiful Consumer Protec- • Dachshund mini piethe O r egon State 240 bald male, $450. Call Super Seller rates! Cali King, solid brass, tion h o t line a t i Attorney General's 541-508-0386 for info. 541-385-5809 $200. 541-508-2250 i 1-877-877-9392. Crafts & Hobbies Office C o nsumer Protection hotline at Donate deposit bottles/ l TheBulletin l 5ervmg Cenrrat Oregon srnce l903 1-877-877-9392. AGATE HUNTERS cans to local all vol., Poushers • Saws non-profit rescue, for A Canvfgn P eople g iving p e t s C.JJcept The Bulletin Dacfgc servfniicentral oreyons/nce farr feral cat spay/ neuter. away are advised to Just too many Visit our HUGE Repair 8r Supplies Cans for Cats trailer be selective about the collectibles? home decor Bend Petco; or do- new owners. For the Adopt a rescued kitten at consignment store. of the anior cat! Fixed, shots, nate M-F a t S mith protection New items Sell them in 1515 NE 2nd; or mal, a personal visit to ID chip, tested, more! Sign, arrive daily! home is recomThe Bulletin Classifieds Fin d exactly what Rescue at 65480 78th at CRAFT, Tumalo. the 930 SE Textron, St., Bend, Thurs/Sat/ Call for Ig. quantity mended. you are looking for in the Bend 541-318-1501 Sun, 1-5, 389-8420. pickup, 541-389-8420. The Bulletin www.redeuxbend.com CLASSIFIEDS 541-385-5809 www.craftcats.org www.craftcats.org Aussie/Heeler mix, shots & dewormed, $150. 541-977-4686
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ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202 - Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar 8 Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free Items 208- Pets and Supplies 210- Furniture 8 Appliances 211 - Children's Items 212-Antiques & Collectibles 215- Coins 8 Stamps 240 - Crafts and Hobbies 241 - Bicycles andAccessories 242 - Exercise Equipment 243 - Ski Equipment 244 - Snowboards 245 - Golf Equipment 246-Guns,Huntingand Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- Health and Beauty Items 249 - Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253 - TV, Stereo andVideo 255 - Computers 256 - Photography 257 - Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259 - Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - Medical Equipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 263 - Tools
264- Snow Removal Equipment 265 - Building Materials 266- Heating and Stoves 267- Fuel and Wood 268- Trees, Plants 8 Flowers 269 - Gardening Supplies 8 Equipment 270- Lost and Found GARAGESALES 275 - Auction Sales 280 - Estate Sales 281 - Fundraiser Sales 282- Sales Northwest Bend 284- Sales Southwest Bend 286- Sales Northeast Bend 288- Sales Southeast Bend 290- Sales RedmondArea 292- Sales Other Areas FARM MARKET 308 - Farm Equipment and Machinery 316 - Irrigation Equipment 325- Hay, Grain and Feed 333- Poultry, Rabbits and Supplies 341 - Horses andEquipment 345-LivestockandEquipment 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers 358 - Farmer's Column 375- Meat and Animal Processing 383- Produce andFood
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242
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Bicycles & Accessories
Exercise Equipment
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Life Fit R91 Recumbent BikeAbsolutely like new frame (small). Full with new batterysuspension, Maverick operates perfectly! s hock, SRAM X O Clean, always drivetrain & shifters, 9 housed inside home. speed rear cassette, $2100 new; 34-11, Avid Juicy disc selling for $975. brakes. Well t a ken Great Christmas gift! c are o .f $950 . 541-647-2227 541-788-6227. 2005 Maverick ML7 Mountain Bike, 15"
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P
NlonacoDynasty 2004-L~ ADED! solid Faturesinclude 4-dr s counter, su surface deconvectionmicro, built-inwasher/drye, ramictilefloor,TV,DUD, satellitedish,alrleveling, storage ass-through dk ingsizebed tray,ana' -Allforonly $149,000 541-000-000
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Convertl oupe 132 mffes -24mpg Ad sc"JPtiona„ ' teresflngfa o howmuch ould ha ln a c
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G2 SUNDAY DECEMBER 29 2013 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED •541-385-5809
T HE N E W GOOD ONE! By ELIZABETH C. GORSKI /
YO R K TIMES CR O S SW O R D 1
E d ited by Will Shortz
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Note: When this puzzle is done, draw a line connectingthe 21 circled letters from A to U in alphabetical order. The resulting shape will provida a clue to 6-, 8-, 14-, 53-aud 70-Down.
ACROSS I Help to harm 5 Part of a pharaoh's headdress 8 Worker with a trowel 13 Much 16 Mideast capital 17 Symbol of mass density 18 Mercurial 19 "The Caine Mutiny" captain 21 Many an early French settler in America 23 More off-putting 24 European capital 25 Special seating area in an airplane 26 Cry from Scrooge 27 With 63-Down, 1997 P.G.A. champ who captained the 2012 U.S. Ryder Cup team 29 Good scores in divnlg 30 Like many coats and tunes 33 Make calls 34 General chicken 35 Special mall event 37 Bride of 1981 Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle sud more than 4,000 psst puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords
($39.95a year).
84 Bach's " , Joy of Man's Desiring" 85 Greek earth dlI'. goddess 41 L.G.B.T. rights 86 Robe closer advocate 89 Nuke 42 Iowa city 90 Chef Lagasse 43 Done: Fr. $2 Unseen scenes 45 Lands 94 Taunt 47 Without 95 One (dangerously) customer 48 It may be full of 96 Name on a swim icons cap 51 Tease, with "on" 98 Funny Anne 54 2-Down, for one 100 Giving a boost 55 Some H.S. math 103 How56 Slanting 104 Moneymaker for 58 "Say what?" Money 59 One more 106 Compact Olds 61 Words that precede 107 Futuristic weapon "Born is the King 10$ Like a rendition of "Deck the Halls" 63 House committee 110 He's no Einstein chairman Darrell lll Boo-boos 64 Mexican sauces 65 Ear-related study 112 Thriller writer Follett 66 Hilarious types 113 Rural storage 67 Strain 68 Reproductive stock 114 Preserve, in a way 70 New hire, typically 115 China producer 72 Hydrocarbon suffix 116 Nettle 117 Half of a noodle 73 Target number dish? 74 Fr. holy woman 75 British rule in India DOWN 76 [I'm mad! ] 77 "Don Quixote" I Gray composer 2 Good source of aluminum 79 Idiosyncrasies 81 Overseas assembly 3 What cowlingscover 83 Number-crunching 4 Took up the slack in grp. 5 River of Pisa 39 Jules or Jim in "Jules et Jim" 40 Amarillo-to-Dallas
6 [See blurb] 7 Something it's not good to go to 8 [See blurb] 9 Cousin of "aargh!" 10 Lose traction II Mrs. cow 12 Braced (oneself) 13 Give it the gas 14 [See blurb] 15 Expulsion, as of a foreign diplomat 18 Majority owner of Chrysler 19 Play callers, for short 20 Big money units, in slang
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84 "Cloud Shepherd" artist 85 Departs 87 Writer Ann 88 Mideast national 89 Self-sealing bag 91 Vintage wedding gown fabrics 93 Mideast ruler 94 Spanish cession in the SpanishAmerican War
97 Millennia on end 99 Extension
101 Charge carrier 102 Greek diner order 105Winter sports locale
108 Son of 109 Bit of winter sports equipment
PUZZLE ANSWER ON PAGE G3
5 41-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 AD PLACEINENT DEADLINES
PRIVATE PARTY RATES
Monday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri. Tuesday... . . . . . . . ... . Noon Mon. Wednesday.. . . . . . . ... Noon Tues. Thursday.. . . . . . . . . ... Noon Wed. Friday.. . . . . . . . . . . Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate .. ... 11:00am Fri. Saturday.. . . . . . . . . ... 3:00 pm Fri. Sunday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri.
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A Payment Drop Box i s CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: available at Bend City Hall. MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW MARKED WITH AN*() REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any oui-of-area ads. The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since 1903 reserves the right io reject any ad is located at: at any time. 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave., Bend, Oregon 97702
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human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified
14-kt white gold ladies wedding band with a bright polish finish, 1.66 carat diamond Hearts and arrows, round cut, Sl -1 Clarity, F color. Appraised at $15,000. Very unique piece. Asking $9500. 541-281-7815
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Guns, reloading equipment, ammo, brass, knives & other sporting goods. 541-576-4213 Top Pin Archery Pro Shop New 2014 Bows havearrived! Check out our Bows on Clearance! 1 sf 1 South 1st St., Redmond, 541-316-1 784
Com p uters
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Misc. Items
Commercial/Office Equipment & Fixtures
Fuel & Wood
Lost & Found
Sales Northeast Bend
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T HE B ULLETIN r e - BUYING t9 SE L LING quires computer ad- All gold jewelry, silver 2-drawer metal file cabivertisers with multiple and gold coins, bars, net w/keys, $25. Call/text ad schedules or those rounds, wedding sets, 541-350-1555. selling multiple sys- class rings, sterling sil2Lr tems/ software, to dis- ver, coin collect, vinclose the name of the tage watches, dental Tools Fl e ming, business or the term gold. Bill "dealer" in their ads. 641-382-9419. New in box, Private party advertisor nearly new ers are defined as How to avoid scam those who sell one and fraud attempts Craftsman Tools: • 10 n Stationary computer. YBe aware of internaradial arm saw, tional fraud. Deal lo257 Model ¹315.220100, cally whenever posMusical Instruments 6375. sible. • 10 e Stationary table Y Watch for buyers saw w/guide rails, who offer more than your asking price and model ¹315.228590, 6325. who ask to have • 6-1/se Jointer money wired or handed back to them. planer "Professional" model ¹351.227240, Fake cashier checks $250 obo. and money orders Illlason & Hamlin Call 541-504-6413 Baby Grand Piano. are common. daytime hours. Beautiful black lacPNever give out perquer finish. Still unsonal financial inforder warranty. mation. Check out the A great Christmas s/Trust your instincts classifieds online Gift! $25,000 and be wary of www.bendbuffetin.com (orig. $47,000) someone using an Updated daily swingroll61 ©gmail. escrow service or com agent to pick up your 265 541-312-2425 merchandise. Building Materials
The Bulletin recommends payment for Firewood only upon delivery and inspection. • A cord is 128 cu. ft. 4' x 4' x 8' • Receipts should include name, phone, price and kind of wood
purchased.
• Firewood ads MUST include species & cost per cord to better serve our customers.
The Bulletin a Central Cveeensince Sate Sarvin
1 cord dry, split Juniper, $200/cord. Multi-cord discounts, & s/s cords available. Immediate delivery! 541-408-6193
All Year Dependable Firewood: Seasoned; Cedar, S p l it, D el. Bend: 1 for $175 or 2 for $325. Lodgepole 1 for $195 or 2 for
** FREE **
541-447-7178;
KIT INCLUDES:
• 4 Garage Sale Signs • $2.00 Off Coupon To
use Toward Your
or Craft Cats 541-389-8420.
Next Ad
• 10 Tips For "Garage Sale Success!"
280
Estate Sales
PICK UP YOUR GARAGE SALE KIT ai
Look What I Found! You'll find a little bit of everything in The Bulletin's daily garage and yard sale section. From clothes to collectibles, from housewares to hardware, classified is always the first stop for cost-conscious consumers. And if you're planning your own garage or yard sale, look to the classifieds to bring in the buyers. You won't find a better place for bargains! Call Classifieds: 541-385-5809 or email
1777 SW Chandler
325
Hay, Grain & Feed First quality OrchardiTimothy/Blue Grass mixed hay, no rain, barn stored, $250/ton. Patterson Ranch Sisters, 541-549-3831
TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin
Ave., Bend, OR 97702
The Bulletin servine cenvar oregon sincelsos
Garage Sales Garage Sales Garage Sales
341
Horses & Equipment
2008 Thuro-Bilt 3H slant Shilo, great c ondition. $ 5 9 00 obo. 541-317-0988.
Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds
The Bulletin's "Call A Service REDMOND Habitat Professional" Directory RESTORE Travel/Tickets is all about meeting *REDUCE YOUR Building Supply Resale $365. 541-420-3484. D irec TV - Over 1 40 channels only $29.99 Advertise VACATION CABLE BILL! Get an yourneeds. Quality at Call The Bulletin At All-Digital Sa t e llite a month. Call Now! SPECIALS to 3 milLOW PRICES 541-385-5809 Call on one of the Triple savings! lion Pacific N o rth- system installed for 1242 S. Hwy 97 541-385-5809 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail classified © bendbulletin.com professionals today! $636.00 in Savings, westerners! 29 daily FREE and program541-548-1406 Free upgrade to Ge- newspapers, AI: www.bendbulletin.com six m ing s t arting a t Open to the public. nie & 2013 NFL Sun- states. 25-word clas- $ 24.99/mo. FRE E day ticket free!! Start sified $540 for a 3-day HD/DVR upgrade for e Say egoodbuy Pine rit Juniper Split callers, SO CALL saving today! a d. Ca l l (916) new to that unused 1-800-259-5140 NOW (877)366-4508. 2 88-6019 o r vis i t PROMPT DELIVERY (PNDC) item by placing it in www.pnna.com for the (PNDC) 541-389-9663 Pacific Nor t hwest The Bulletin Classifieds YOUR Have an item to Daily Con n ection.REDUCE CABLE BILL!* Get a 269 (PNDC) sell quick? whole-home Satellite 541-385-580 9 Gardening Supplies 260 system installed at If it's under NO COST and pro8 Equipment Iit i sc. Items '500you can place ii in • Steel Building ramming starting at 1 9.99/mo. FRE E Allocated Bargains The Bulletin Auto Accident Attorney 40x60 on up BarkTurfSoil.com HD/DVR Upgrade to INJURED I N AN Classifieds for: We do deals AUTO A CCIDENT? new callers, SO CALL www.gosteelbuildings.com NOW PROMPT DELIVERY Call InjuryFone for a '10 - 3 lines, 7 days Source¹ 18X 542-389-9663 free case evaluation. 1-866-984-8515. 541-227-6921 (PNDC) '16 - 3 lines, 14 days Never a cost to you. (Private Party ads only) Don t wait, call now! 266 The Bulletin Offers 1-800-539-9913. For newspaper Heating & Stoves Free Private Party Ads delivery, call the DISH T V Ret a iler. (PNDC) • 3 lines - 3 days Circulation Dept. at Starting at Buylng Dlamonds • Private Party Only NOTICE TO 541-385-5800 Retall L Classified Display $19.99/month (for 12 ADVERTISER • Total of items adver/Gord for Cash To place an ad, call Advertising Deadllnes mos.) & High Speed Saxon's Fine Jewelers tised must equal $200 Since September 29, 54'I -385-5809 Internet starting at 541-389-6655 1991, advertising for or Less or email $14.95/month (where used woodstoves has cleeeified@bendbulletin.oom FOR DETAILS or to PUBLICATION ............... ................DEADLINE BUYING available.) SAVE! Ask been limited to modPLACE AN AD, Lionel/American Flyer Thursday 1/2 ........................ .... Monday, 12/30 8 am Bulletin About SAME DAY Inels which have been The Call 541-385-5809 Servine Centrel Oreeon sincesalB trains, accessories. stallation! CALL Now! certified by the OrFax 541-385-5802 Friday 1/3 .............................. .... Monday, 12/30 8 am 541-408-2191. 1-800-308-1563 egon Department of Friday GO! Magazine 1/3 ..... ....... Friday, 12/27 5 pm (PNDC) Environmental Qual270 BEND'S HOMELESS NEED OUR HELP ity (DEQ) and the fedLost & Found Samsung 42 " LCD The cold weather is upon us and sadly there are eral E n v ironmental HDTV, 1080p + Sam- still over 2,000 folks in our community without Protection A g e ncyFound: Black ski glove, sung BluRay player 8 permanent shelter, living in cars, makeshift (EPA) as having met Burton, zipper pocket, pwr strip, 2 HDMI cables, camps, getting by as best they can. CLASSIFIED LINE AD DEADLINES smoke emission stan- by Newport Ave. Call $300 obo. 541-306-3662 The following items are badly needed to dards. A cer t ified 541-389-5922. Wednesday, 1/1 - Deadline is Noon Tuesday, 12/31 help them get through the winter: w oodstove may b e Thursday, 1/2 - Deadline is Noon Tuesday, 12/31 S CAMPING GEAR: Used tents, sleeping bags, identified by its certifiNeed to get an Found Mt. B a chelor tarps, blankets. cation label, which is Classifieds • 541-385-5809 teen ski pass, lan ad in ASAP'? S WARM CLOTHING: rain gear, boots, gloves. permanently attached 541-388-8897, Robert. You can place it to the stove. The Bulonline at: PLEASE DROP OFF YOUR DONATIONS AT letin will not know- Lost: Men's prescripThe BulletinCirculationTelephoneService Holiday Hours(541-385-5800): THE BEND COMMUNITY CENTER ingly accept advertis- tion glasses 12/14 www.bendbulletin.com 1036 NE 5thSt.,Bend, Mon.-Sat.9 a.mns p.m. ing for the sale of NewYearsEve12/31: 6:00am- 3pm • 1/1: 6:30am-10:30 am possibly on north end Pleasehelp, you can make uncertified o f Bond o r W a l l 541-385-5809 a big differencein our community. woodstoves. 541-388-2596 253
246
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258
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The Bulletin will be closed on Wednesday, January 1
,
THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, DECEMBER 29, 2013 G3 THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWER
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
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Employment Opportunities
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N A R H 0 F I C K L E U E Chip Truck Drivers Information System Hiring 3 drivers - local Support Specialist U G U E O T I K I E R B E R N FINANCEANDBUSINESS EMPLOYMENT and regional line haul- High Desert ESD is 410 - Private Instruction 507 - Real Estate Contracts for our growing Madras hiring an Information X I T R O A H A V I S L O V division. CDL with System Support Spe421 - Schools andTraining 514 -Insurance I N E S E T E D R F T S O doubles endorsement cialist w i t hi n our 454- Looking for Employment 528 - Loans andMortgages and a good driving Technology Depart526 T E N T S A E L A D D I A M I 470- Domestic 8 In-HomePositions 543 - StocksandBonds record req. We hope ment. 4 0 hrs / wk, Loans & Mortgages 476 - EmploymentOpportunities 558 - Business Investments E S E A C L A S F I N I Mon.-Fri., you will consider join230 486- Independent Positions 573 - Business Opportunities ing the Chambers Madays/year. No l e ss D O C K S N T D E S K T O WARNING dras team - celebrating than $16.67/hr. Paid Bulletin recom476 The Bulletin our 50th Year in 2014! leave, full b enefits. The A G O R E A L G A T I L T H U mends you use cauTo Subscribe call Call 541-546-6489 or For details 8 applicaEmployment tion when you proA O T H E R N E N O E L I A 541-419-1125. tion: www.hdesd.org 541-385-5800 or go to Opportunities vide personal M O E S 0 O L O Y R O T S www.bendbulletin.com Advertise your car! information to compaAdd A Picture! nies offering loans or S I F Add your web address G E P O O T R A I N E E Reach thousands of readers! credit, especially to your ad and readPressroom Call 541-385-5809 E N E U T A S T E A G R R those asking for aders on The Bulletin's Night Supervisor The Bulletin Classigeds vance loan fees or web site, www.bendThe Bulletin, located in beautiful Bend, OrS T R A S T I C S E A T companies from out of NIGHT ATTENDANT bulletin.com, will be egon, is seeking a night time press supervistate. If you have able to click through Whispering W i n ds C P S J E S U G A A B I sor. We are part of Western Communications, 421 Retirement is seekconcerns or quesautomatically to your Inc. which is a small, family owned group conZ A E E R I L O U T A E S website. ing a person to work tions, we suggest you Schools 8 Training sisting of seven newspapers: five in Oregon the night shift (10 p.m. consultyour attorney G I B E O A S P E E D O M E A R A and two in California. Our ideal candidate will or call CONSUMER to 7 a.m.) Part-time Oregon Medical manage a small crew of three and must be U P R A I S I N G T O S P I N T A D HOTLINE, Training PCS Look at: av a ilable. able to l e arn ou r e quipment/processes position 1-877-877-9392. Duties include light Phlebotomy classes Bendhomes.com quickly. A hands-on style is a requirement for A L E R R A Y G U N S P I I T E D laundry, misc. office begin Jan. 6, 2014. our St/s tower KBA press. Prior management/ for Complete Listings of M O R O N E R R O R S K E N S I L O w ork. A b l e t o r e People Look for Information Registration now open: leadership experience preferred. In addition to spond t o re s ident About Products and ore onmedicaltrainin .com Area Real Estate for Sale our 7-day-a-week newspaper, we have nuC A E I N emergencies if Services EveryDaythrough 541-343-3100 merous commercial print clients as well. We needed. Former car- The Bulletin ClassMeds offer a competitive wage and opportunity for PUZZLE IS ON PAGE G2 egiving e x perience Pressman advancement. helpful b u t not If you provide dependability combined with a Experienced press operator 526 required. A p ply in BANK TURNED YOU positive attitude, are able to manage people DOWN? Private party Loans 8 Mortgages person to Whispering will and schedulesand are a team player, we Our Smith River, CA. production plant is seekloan on real esWinds, 2920 NE Con~wee o would like to hear from you. If you seek a ing an experienced Goss community press ners Ave., B e n d. tate equity. Credit, no S TRUGGLING W I T H stable work environment that provides a great operator. We have 8 units that have been well problem, good equity z DESCHUTES COUNTY YOUR M O R TGAGE P, Pre-employment drug place to live and raise a family, let us hear maintained and added to during the past sevis all you need. Call and worried a bout testing required. from you. eral years including rebuilt quarter folder. We CAREER OPPORTUNITIES Oregon Land Mortforeclosure? Reduce Contact Al Nelson, Pressroom Manager at have CTP operation with Kodak equipment as gage 541-388-4200. your mortgage & save anelsonOwescom a ers.com wi t h your well. Need to get an ad money. Legal loan complete resume, references and salary hisLOCAL MONEY:Webuy modification services. BEHAVIORAL HEALTH P R OGRAM in ASAP? tory/requirements. No phone calls please. We are Western Communications, Inc. a famsecured trust deeds & Free co n sultation. Drug test is required prior to employment. ily owned company that has 7 newspapers in note,some hard money Call Preferred Law MANAGER — Health Services. Full-time EOE. California and Oregon. Our company provides loans. Call Pat Kellev Fax it to 641-322-7263 1-800-335-6592. a great culture and work environment. This 541-382-3099 ext.13. position. Deadline: MONDAY,1/20/14. (PNDC) plant prints 2 of our publications plus a limited The Bulletin Classifieds amount of commercial printing, which we hope BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST to grow. This is a 4-day, 32-hour shift that reMECHANIC FOR FORKLIFT SHOP The Bulletin rervmg central oregon stnce 1903 Plumber, Journeymen H —Access Team, Behavioral Health quires hands on community press experience Needed for new conand ideal candidate will be willing to assist in Bright Wood Corporation in Madras is seeking struction. Start immediDivision. Full-time position. Deadline: other areas outside the pressroom such as an EXPERIENCED mechanic to work in our Prepress Systems Analyst prepress and mailroom as needed. forklift shop. The most qualified candidates ately! Good pay/benefits OPEN UNTIL FILLED. will possess a minimum of 2 years experience Call Gary, 541-410-1655 The Bulletin is seeking a Prepress Systems Smith River is centrally located between Cresworking with hydraulic plumbing, automotive Analyst. This person works with staff memSALES PERSON BEHAVIORALHEAI. TH SPECIALIST Hcent City, CA, one of our papers that prints evelectrical wiring, possess strong diagnostic/ Local floor coyering store bers in day-to-day production of The Bulletin's ery Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday a.m. with troubleshooting skills and be familiar with has immediate need products, and with Commercial Print customChild & Family Access Team, Behavioral approximately 5,000 circulation, and Brookdiagnostic equipment or have the ability to for F-T salesperson. ers, to ensure efficient prepress processing ings, OR. Our Brookings publication is also learn. A valid Oregon driver's license and • Must possess com- and successful runs on press. This position Health Division. Full-time, limited approximately 5,000 circulation that prints on good driving record is required. Applicant puter knowledge; have requires knowledge of computer hardware, Wednesday andSaturday a.m. Both Crescent duration position. Deadline: SUNDAY, must be able to lift 50 pounds, have your own sales & design experi- software and operating systems, as well as City and Brookings provide excellent quality of tools, possess good people skills, be selfence in-depth experience with litho plate production 01/12/14. life to raise a family. motivated and be able to work independently • Knowledge of carpet, and offset printing. The right candidate will and as a team player. A high school diploma vinyl, tile, hardwood & have an understanding and background in If this sounds like you, we would like to hear natural stone. CLINICAL INFORMATION SYSTEMS or GED equivalent is required. graphic arts workflow, and a thorough knowlfrom you. Please send resume with refer• Responsible for show- edge of prepress layout software. ANALYST — Behavioral Health Division. room coverage, manences and salary requirements to: David DePosition is full-time 40 hours or more a week agement of individual This is a hands-on position, involving work with longe, Qu a lit y Con t ro l Sup e rvisor with flexible hours to meet the demands of Two full-time positions. Deadline:OPEN accounts for c lients Commercial Print customers during job plan( ddelonge@triplicate.com), PO B o x 2 7 7 , production. We offer a competitive hourly working on remodel ning, production, and with troubleshooting as Crescent City, CA 95531. wage and benefits package (after your introUNTIL FILLED. and/or new construc- required. The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace ductory period) that includes medical, life tion. Material selecinsurance, vision, vacation, holiday and profit DEPUTY SHERIFF (PATROL) 8E tions, estimates, sales and an equal opportunity employer. General sharing. We are a drug free workplace and agreements, ordering Jefferson Coun Job 0 o r tunit equal opportunity employer. CORRECTIONS DEPUTY (JAIL) Send a resume with qualifications, skills, product, i n stallation experience and past employment history to: work orders and inJEFFERSON COUNTY Sheriff's Office. Full-time positions. A clean pre-employment drug screen is voicing. Actively purThe Bulletin ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT IV mandatory. Qualified candidates should apply 1777 SW Chandler Ave. sue new accounts and Deadline:WEDNESDAY,01/15/14. PUBLIC WORKS DEPARTMENT in person at: rospects. PO Box 6020 vt' ages based on experiBend, OR 97708-6020 We are looking for a person who is selfBright Wood Corporation, HEALTH SERVICES DIRECTOR —Fullence. Email resume Attention: James Baisinger motivated, energetic and enjoys working in Personnel Dept., and cover letter to: by Friday,January 9, 2014. time position. Deadline: OPEN UNTIL a fast paced environment. This is an 335 NINHess St., wall 70@! hotmail.com excellent opportunity for an individual with Madras OR97741. FILLED WITH FIRST REVIEW OF Just bought a new boat? proven skills in the use of Excel, Outlook Sell your old one in the and Accounting. This p o sition must APPLICATIONS ONTUESDAY, 01/21/14. classifieds! Ask about our exercise independent 8 technical thought Super Seller rates! Facilities Maintenance Worker and analysis in financial management to PAROLE & PROBATION OFFICER produce reports, statements and analysis. Parks/Cemetery/ Adult P&P. Full-time position. Deadline: If you have the desire to learn and grow, The Bulletin Central Oregon Community College has Facilities Maintenance this Administrative IV position may be right openings li s te d bel o w . Go to SUNDAY, 1/12/14. Worker I for you. https://jobs.cocc.edu to view details & apply Non-Exempt, chasing products or I online. Human Resources, Newberry Hall, PAROLE & PROBATIONSPECIALISTAssociation services from out of • 2600 NW College Way, Bend OR 97701; CLOSING DATE 01/14/2014 Represented f the area. Sending (541)383 7216. For hearing/speech impaired, Adult P&P. Full-time position. Deadline: For more information go to: c ash, checks, o r Oregon Relay Services number is 7-1-1. f credit i n f ormation COCC is an AA/EO employer. SUNDAY,12/22/13. SALARY GRADE: www.co.jefferson.or.us, go to Human • may be subjected to $2971 - $3652 per month Resources and click Job Opportunities. I FRAUD. CascadeCulinary Institute at PROPERTY APPRAISER I OR II For more informaMANDATORY REQUIREMENTS: Central OregonCommunity College Jefferson Countyis an Equal Employment tion about an adver~ Assessor's Office. Full-time position. High school diploma, or GED equivalent, See ad under Food Service.
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Food Service
Cascade Culinary Institute at Central Oregon Community Coll e ge . Go to https://jobs.cocc.edu to view details 8 apply online. Human Resources, Newberry Hall, 2600 NW College Way, Bend OR 97701; (541)383 7216. For hearing/speech impaired, Oregon Relay Services number is 7-1-1. COCC is an AA/EO employer. Learn more about the Cascade Culinary Institute at http://culinary.cocc.edu Part Time Instructor Positions Looking for talented individuals to teach part-time in any of the following disciplines: Culinary Chef, Baking and Pastry, Service & Beverage Management.Check our web site for details. All positions pay $525 per load unit (class credit).
Banking
MidOregori Credit Union Loan Officer (Financiat Service Representative) Full-time lending position in Bend includes openingnew accounts,processing, approving and disbursing loan applications, and educating members about the features and benefits of the credit union's products and services. Position requires excellent sales and customer service skills, sound decision-making, and the ability to understand and retain a variety of complex product and services information. Successful candidate must be PC-proficient in a Windows environment. 1-2 Years lending experience required. Go to www.midoregon.com for more information including job application. Please send resume, application, and cover letter to: Mid Oregon FCU, Attn: Human Resources, P.O. Box 6749, Bend, OR 97708. hlid Oregon Credit Union is a drug-freeworkplace
plus one (1) year experience and training / tiser, you may call / Oregon State which has provided specific knowledge in I the Attorney General'sf the areas of landscaping, irrigation sysC o n sumer s tems, light mechanical work, facilities I Office Protection hotline at I maintenance and repairs, cemetery tasks, i 1-877-877-9392. custodial services and snow removal. Ability to drive or operate vehicles, equipment, LThe Bulleting machines and tools safely. Understand and carry out written and oral instructions, work independently, and work well with others. Find It in The Bulletin Ctassifieds! HOW TO APPLY: 541-385-5809 Request application packet from DeAnne Wakefieid, City of Redmond Human Resources Department, via email onlydeanne.wakefield©ci.redmond.or.us.
ALL required documents must be received by City of Redmond Human Resources Department no later than 5:00 PM, Friday, January 17, 2014.
EOE
CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE Immediate opening in the Circulation department for an entry level Customer Service Representative. Looking for someone to assist our subscribers and delivery carriers with subscription transactions, account questions and delivery concerns. Essential: P o s itive a tti t ude, s tro n g service/team orientation, and problem solving skills. Must be able to function comfortably in a fast-paced, performance-based customer call center environment and have accurate typing, phone skills and computer entry experience. Most work is done via telephone so strong communication skills and the ability to multi task is a must.
Work shift hours are Monday through Friday 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Must be flexible on hours, as some Holidays, weekends or early morning hours might occasionally be required. Pre-employment drug testing required.
Please send resume to: ahusted Obendbulletin.com
The Bulletin serving cenrraforegon since e03
EOE/Drug free workplace
Trucking: Owner Operators4-Axle Chip Trucks. Currently hiring two owner operatorslocal and regional line haul. Based out of Madras, OR. We hope you will consider joining the Chambers Madras team - celebrating our 50th Year in 2014! 541-546-6489 or 541-419-1125.
The Bulletin To Subscribe call 541-385-5800 or go to www.bendbulletin.com Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com FIND IT!
SUY IT! SELL IT! The Bulletin Classifieds
Part Time Instructor NEW: Baking 8 Pastry, Dining Room Service& Beverage Management, & Culinary Chef Looking for talented individuals to teach part-time in a variety of disciplines. Check our Web site https://jobs.cocc.edu. Positions pay $525 per load unit (1 LU = 1 class credit), with additional perks.
DENNIS TURMON ENTERPRISES, LLC
• ""+"+" +"". Wishing You I Huppy HotisIay and Nnu Year! Dennis, Kris, P their hard-84IOrking Staff.
S EE YOU IN 2 0 1 4
!
DENNIS TURMON — AUCTIONEER -
Powell Butte • Oregon
Deadline:THURSDAY,01/02/14. RESERVEDEPUTY SHERIFF - Sheriff's Office. On-call positions. Deadline:THIS IS ANON-GOING RECRUITMENT. TELECOMMUNICATOR I — 911 Service District. Full-time positions. Deadline: THISISAN ON-GOING RECRUITMENT. COMING SOON: PSYCHIATRICNURSE PRACTITIONER
— Child 8 Family Program. DESCHUTES COUNTY ONLY ACCEPTS APPLICATIONS ONLINE. TO APPLY
FOR THE ABOVE LISTEDPOSITIONS, PLEASEVISITOUR WEBSITE AT wwtL deschutes.Drg/jods.All candidates will receive an email response regarding their application status after the recruitment has closed and applications have been reviewed. Notifications to candidates are sent via email only. If you need assistance, please contact the Deschutes County Personnel Dept., 1300 NW Wall Street, Suite 201, Bend, OR 97701 (541) 617-4722. Deschutes County provides reasonable accommodations for persons with disabilities. This material will be furnished in alternative format if needed. For hearing impaired, please call TTY/TDD 711. EQUAL OPPORTUNITYEMPLOYER
SUNDAY
1PM - 4PM Charming 2 bedroom, 2 bath single family home w/2-car detached garage. Amazing Mtn. views, very close to the new Discovery Park. 1370 NW Mt.Washington Dr. Washer, Dryer, Fridge Directions:Mt. Washington Dr. Included. BettssenCo//er 5 LemhiPass
$>>s,ooo LiSted byr
HOLLY POLIS Principal Broker
541-419-8710
G4 SUNDAY, DECEMBER 29, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
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RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605- RoommateWanted 616- Want ToRent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648- Houses for RentGeneral 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for RentSunriver 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663- Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RVParking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space
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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
BMP Mc88 ~0 ~ [ ]g
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682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726- Timeshares for Sale 730 - NewListings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744- Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746- Northwest BendHomes 747 - Southwest BendHomes 748- Northeast BendHomes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson County Homes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land
750
860
Redmond Homes
Motorcycles & Accessories
Looking for your next emp/oyee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5609 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
880
Motor h omes
880
Motorhomes
IIPo 744
Open Houses
Reai EstateAuction
Jan. 16th @ 1pm Open House/Preview Sun., Dec. 29, 1-4 8 Elk Lane Sunriver Home w/ master bdrm. on main level, 1 bath, 800 sq. ft., wood-burning stove, Storage for wood, skis & toys. www.StuartRealty Grouplnc.com 762 503-263-7253 Homes with Acreage 745
850
condition, $1000. Located in La Pine. Call 541-408-6149.
Victory TC 2002, runs great, many accessories, new tires, under 40K miles, well kept. $5000. 541-771-0665
Get your business
ATVs
Snowmobiles 1994 Arctic Cat 580 EXT, in good
865
COACHMAN Freelander 2008 32' Class C, M-3150 Pristine - just 23,390 miles! Efficient coach has Ford V10 w/Banks pwr pkg, 14' slide, ducted furn/ AC, flat screen TV, 16' awning. No pets/ smkg. 1 ownera must see! $52,500. 541-548-4969
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? $6700. 541-815-9939
a ROW I N G with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
Honda TRX 350 FE Fleetwood D i scovery TIFFINPHAETON QSH 2006, 4 wheel drive, 40' 2003, diesel mo- 2007 with 4 slides, CAT 350hp diesel engine, electric start, electric torhome w/all $125,900. 30,900 miles, NOTICE s hift, n e w tir e s , options-3 slide outs, All real estate advernew Michelin tires, great $2500, 541-960-6006. satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, cond! Dishwasher, w/d, tised here in is sub860 etc. 3 2,000 m i les. ject to the Federal 18989 Couch Market Rd. central vac, roof satellite, 870 Iitotorcycles & Accessories Wintered in h eated aluminum wheels, 2 full F air Housing A c t , Tumalo Equestrian Boats & Accessories shop. $84,900 O.B.O. slide-thru basement trays which makes it illegal Facility! 541-447-8664 to advertise any pref- 14.56ac, 144x72 indoor & 3 TV's. Falcon-2 towerence, limitation or arena w/15 stalls & bar and Even-Brake indiscrimination based guest quarters + 5 stall cluded. on race, color, relibarn, 3.476 sf home, Tick, Tock Call 541-977-4150 indoorpool,fenced gion, sex, handicap, 7.22 irr, awesome mtn Tick, Tock... familial status or na2013 Harley Tioga 24' Class C 648 views. $699,900. tional origin, or intenMotorhome Davidson Dyna ...don't let time get Sunchaser Pontoon Call Peter at tion to make any such Houses for Houses for Rent Wide Glide, black, Bought new in 2000, boat - $19,895 541-419-5391 preferences, l i mitaaway. Hire a Rent General Redmond currently under 20K only 200 miles, 20' 2006 Smokercraft G~aallaCa iial.aam tions or discrimination. professional out miles, excellent brand new, all stock, cruise, S-6521. 2006 We will not knowingly shape, new tires, PUBLISHER'S Spacious 1800 sq.ft., 3 accept any advertisplus after-market 75hp. Mercury. Full 771 of The Bulletin's professionaly winterNOTICE bdrm, 2 bath home w/ ing for real estate exhaust. Has winter camping e n c losure. "Call A Service Lots ized every year, cutAll real estate adver- 2 car garage located which cover, helmet. Pop u p cha n ging is in violation of off switch to battery, tising in this newspa- in S W Re d mond. this law. All persons Selling for what I room/porta-potty, BBQ, Professional" plus new RV batterswim ladder, all gear. per is subject to the Large living room and are hereby informed owe on it: $15,500. Custom Home Directory today! ies. Oven, hot water F air H o using A c t utility room. F ridge Trailer, 2006 E asyCall anytime, Lots For Sale 632 all dwellings adheater & air condiloader gal v anized. which makes it illegal incl. $1200 mo. + sec. that 541-554-0384 In NorthWest vertised are available tioning have never Apt./Multiplex General to a d vertise "any dep. 615-400-8915 P urchased new, a l l on an equal opportuCrossing been used! records. 541-706-9977, preference, limitation $24,000 obo. Serious nity basis. The BulleCall for CHECK yOURAD or disc r imination Harley Davidson 2009 cell 503-607-1973. inquiries, please. tin Classified Information based on race, color, Super Glide Custom, Houses for Rent Stored in Terrebonne. The Garner Group religion, sex, handiStage 1 Screaming Sunriver 541-548-5174 What are you 541 383-4360 Eagle performance, cap, familial status, too many options to Gulfstream S u nmarital status or na- VILLAGE PROPERTIES looking for? list, $8900. sport 30' Class A tional origin, or an in- Sunriver, Three Rivers, You'll find it in 541-388-8939 1988 new f r idge, on the first day it runs tention to make any La Pine. Great TV, solar panel, new pre f erence,Selection. Prices range The Bulletin Classifieds to make sure it is cor- such 1 8' Maxum ski b oat , 200 0, refrigerator, wheellimitation or discrimirect. aSpellchecka and Check out the $425 - $2000/mo. inboard motor g r eat chair lift. 4 0 00W nation." Familial staclassifieds online human errors do ocView our full cond, well maintained, g enerator, G ood thegarnergroup cur. If this happens to tus includes children 541-385-5809 www.bendbutfetirLcom $8995obo 541-350-7755 inventory online at • a M I aaaaaa aaa • condition! $12,500 Winnebago Aspect under the age of 16 Vii/age-Properties.com your ad, please conUpdated daily obo 541-447-5504 living with parents or 2009- 32', 3 slide541 383 4360 tact us ASAP so that 1-866-931-1061 Planning a Move? aaaaatha a aamaqpmpaaam legal cus t odians, outs, Leather intecorrections and any Choose a pregnant women, and rior, Power s e at, adjustments can be Find exactly what Realtor® locks, win d ows, people securing cusmade to your ad. With Experience. tody of children under you are looking for in the Aluminum wheels. SHEVLIN RIDGE 541 -385-5809 17a Flat Screen, Call for 17,000 Sq.ft. Iot, apTheBulletin Classified 16. This newspaper CLASSIFIEDS will not knowingly acInformation 21' Sun Tracker Sig. seSurround s o u nd, proved plans. More camera, Queen bed, cept any advertising The Garner Group details and photos on ries Fishin' Barge, Tracker for real estate which is Foam mattress, Aw541 383-4360 craigslist. $149,900. Harley Davidson 50hp, live well, fish fndr, in violation of the law. 541-389-8614 ning, Generator, In2011 Classic Lim- new int, extras, exc cond, KOUNTRY AIRE 1994 37.5' motorverter, Auto Jacks, Meet singles right now! O ur r e aders a r e ited, LOADED, 9500 $7900. 541-508-0679 Air leveling, Moon home, with awning, No paid o perators, hereby informed that miles, custom paint Call a Pro all dwellings adverGood classified ads tell and one slide-out, roof, no smoking or just real people like "Broken Glass" by 500 sq. ft. upstairs Whether you need a the essential facts in an Only 47k miles p ets. L ik e n ew, you. Browse greet- tised in this newspa- office on NE side of Nicholas Del Drago, I $74,900 interesting Manner. Write and good condition. ings, exchange mes- per are available on town, private bath, all fence fixed, hedges new condition, 541-460-6900 sages and connect an equal opportunity util. paid. $500 month thegarnergroup from the readers view not heated handgrips, $25,000. trimmed or a house live. Try it free. Call basis. To complain of plus $500 deposit. the seller's. Convert the 541-548-0318 auto cruise control. ca l l 541-480-4744 built, you'll find now: 877-955-5505. d iscrimination (photo above is of a facts into benefits. Show 541 383 4360 $32,000 in bike, HUD t o l l-free at aaaaathagamaagraaa iacom similar model& not the (PNDC) only$20,000 obo. the reader howthe item will professional help in 1-600-877-0246. The Commercial Space at actual vehicle) 541-318-6049 help them insomeway. The Bulletin's "Call a toll f ree t e lephone Eagle Crest ResortWant to impress the This number for the hear- AvaiTable 3/1/2014. Can Service Professional" 746 relatives? Remodel advertising tip ing im p aired is accommodate corp. Directory Northwest Bend Homes HDFat Bo 1996 your home with the brought to you by 1-600-927-9275. Winnebaqo Suncruiser34' office, medical, dental, 541-385-5809 help of a professional law/accounting office, 2004, 35K, loaded, too The Bulletin banking, architects, engi- Planning a Move'? servingcentral oregonsince aaaa much to list, ext'd warr. from The Bulletin's Find It in neering, recreational thru 2014, $49,900 Den"Call A Service 775 Choose a The Bulletin Classifiedsl retail, etc. 8000+ sq ft. nis, 541-589-3243 ds published in the Professional" Directory Realtor® Manufactured/ ayion R V 200 8 , 541-385-5809 541-480-1199 "Boats" classification N With Experience. Sprinter chassis 25'. Mobile Homes Have an item to include: Speed, fish- Mercedes Benz diesel, Call for Completely ing, drift, canoe, sell quick? 24,000 miles, pristine Information Rebuilt/Customized 1994 Marlette 2 bdrm, 1 house and sail boats. cond., quality through2012/2013 Award The Garner Group bath, excellent shape, If it's under For all other types of rear slide-out w/ Winner 541 383-4360 new furnace & air condiwatercraft, please go out, queen bed, d e luxe '500 you can place it in tioning, no n -smoker. Showroom Condition to Class 875. captain swivel f ront Many Extras $14,000. 541-526-5920 The Bulletin 541-385-5609 seats, diesel generator, Low Miles. Call 5f I 385 580f io prO mOteyO ur S erV iCe• AdrertiSefOr 28doyi Starting al 'lf0Fe esmlpackogeiaaaiawilableaanr eMc! Classifieds for: awning, no pets/ smokFACTORY SPEC/AL $77,000 ing. $78,500 o b o . New Home, 3 bdrm, arain CentralOre an since 1903 541-546-4807 I Ready to deal! Financ'10- 3 lines, 7 days $46,500 finished on your site. Call The Bulletin At ing avail. '16 - 3 lines, 14 days Building/Contracting D o m estic Services Handyman thegarnergroup 541-382-2430 J andM Homes 541-385-5809 (Private Party ads only) 541-548-5511 NOTICE: Oregon state 541 383 4380 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail aaaawthagamargroapaom law requires anyone A.S'SISTiIiNG At: www.bendbulletin.com 881 LOT MODEL who con t racts for LIQUIDATION Travel Trailers construction work to .',„"-SEHiIQRS PHIL CHAVEZ 875 Slashed Huge be licensed with the '.Asstettrrtt Seiitoni'. BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS Prices Contracting Savings! 10 Year Watercraft Fleetwood Wilderness Construction ContracSearch the area's most Triumph Da ytona Services conditional warranty. N.W. Edition 26' 2002, tors Board (CCB). An ; .+',': at Howre.'P;ga 2004, 15K m i l es, comprehensive listing of Providence 2005 Finished on your site. ds published in aWa I.. 1 shde, sleeps 6 , active license :; LightHousekeeping > classified advertising... perfect bike, needs ome lhpeiis, Fully loaded, 35,000 ONLY 2 LEFT! tercraft" include: Kay means the contractor ,"- j e other'services.."-a queen bed, couch, nothing. Vin real estate to automotive, miles, 350 Cat, Very Remodels, Tile, Redmond, Oregon aks, rafts and motor is bonded & insured. ; ucensed & aofiiled. stove/oven, tub/ merchandise to sporting ¹201536. Carpentry clean, non-smoker, 541-548-5511 Ized personal Verify the contractor's shower, front elec. ",eee certified ' .; goods. Bulletin Classifieds $4995 3 slides, side-by-side Finish work, JandMHomes.com watercrafts. Fo CCB l i c ense at jack, waste tank heatappear every day in the Dream Car refrigerator with ice "boats" please se www.hirealicensedMaintenance. ers, s tabilizers, 2 print or on line. Auto Sales maker, Washer/Dryer, contractor.com Rent /Own Class 870. Honest 4, Reliable. prop. t a n ks , no ",!uxatedIn Redmond 1801Division, Bend Call 541-385-5809 Flat screen TV's, In 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes or call 503-378-4621. Bonded/Insured. 41-365-5809 smoking/pets, winterDreamCarsBend.com motion satellite. www.bendbulletin.com $2500 down, $750 mo. The Bulletin recomi zed, g oo d c o n d. 541-678-0240 Phil $95,000 mends checking with OAC. J and M Homes $8500 OBO Dlr 3665 541-279-0846 The Bulletin 541-460-2019 541-546-5511 the CCB prior to con541-447-3425 $«viay Central Omyonsince19N tracting with anyone. cce¹168910 Some other t rades also req u ire addiDrywall tional licenses and Landscaping/Yard Care certifications. Oregon LandWALLS R US NOTICE: scape Contractors Law BULLETINCUISSIFIEDS • Hang Tape (ORS 671) requires all Search the area's most businesses that adcomprehensive listing of • Texture vertise t o pe r form classified advertising... • ScrapingOld Landscape Construcreal estate to automotive, tion which includes: merchandise to sporting Popcorn Ceilings l anting, deck s , goods. Bulletin Classifieds • Painting ences, arbors, appear every day in the water-features, and inprint or on line. • Painting stallation, repair of irCall 541-385-5809 rigation systems to be • Union Taper www.bendbulletin.com l icensed w it h th e Military ifr Senior Landscape ContracThe Bulletin Discounts tors Board. This 4-digit S«viallCentral Oregon since1903 number is to be inCall Bob cluded in all advertisements which indiDebris Removal 760-333-401 I cate the business has a bond, insurance and workers compensaHandyman tion for their employees. For your proteccall 503-378-5909 I DO THAT! tion or use our website: www.lcb.state.or.us to Will Haul Away check license status SuppOrtedby OregOn neWSpaperS, "ClaSSifiedS.oregon.Com n iS a neW + FREE 't before contracting with the business. Persons For Salvage> '. doing lan d scape Any Location ' maintenance do not Handyman/Remodeli ng ..;..: Removal r equire an LCB l i the Stateof OregOn tOgether on One eaSy-to-uSe WebSite. Residential/Commercial cense. Also Cleanups gi, A4 Cleanowts' w Small Jobs io Just bought a new boat? FrOm jObSto hOmeS and inVeStment PrOPertieS,yOu'llfind the faSteSt Eeiire Room Remodels Sell your old one in the Garage orgaefzauoe n classifieds! Ask about our Home InsPectionRePairs grOWing ClaSSifiedS SeCtiOn iS "ClaSSifiedS.oregOn.COm Super Seller rates! Quali/y, Honest work 541-385-5809
Homes for Sale
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your web source for STATEWIDE cjassifieds
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541-389-3361 541-771-4463 Bonded - Insund CCB¹149468
Painting/Wall Covering
MARTIN JAINES European Pnfessional Painter Repaint Specialist! Oregon License ¹186147 LLC
541-815-28&8
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classifieds.
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THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, DECEMBER 29 2013 G5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 I
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881
881
Travel Trailers
882
Where can you find a helping hand? From contractors to yard care, it's all here in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Arctic Fox 2003 Cold Professional" Directory Weather Model 34 5B, licensed thru 2/15, exlnt cond. 3 elec slides, solar panel, 10 gal water htr, 14' awning, (2) 10-gal propane tanks, 2 batts, catalytic htr in addition to central heating/AC, gently used, MANV features! Layton 27-ft, 2001 Must see to appreciate! $19,000. By owner (no dealer calls, please). Call Front & rear entry or text 541-325-1956. doors, bath, shower, queen bed, slide-out, oven, microwave, air CHECK YOURAD conditioning, patio awning, twin propane tanks, very nice, great floor plan, $8895. 541-316-1388 on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be Orbit21' 2007, used made to your ad. only 8 times, A/C, 541-385-5809 oven, tub shower, The Bulletin Classified micro, load leveler hitch, awning, dual batteries, sleeps 4-5, Just too many EXCELLENT CONcollectibles? DITION. All accessories are included. Sell them in $14,511 OBO. The Bulletin Classifieds 541-382-9441 •
541-385-5809
Tango 29.6' 2007, Rear living, walkaround queen bed, central air, awning, 1 large slide, $12,000. 541-280-2547 or 541-815-4121
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WEEKEND WARRIOR Toy hauler/travel trailer. 24' with 21' interior. Sleeps 6. Self-contained. Systems/
appearance in good
condition. Smoke-free. Tow with t/s-ton. Strong suspension; can haul ATVs snowmobiles, even a small car! Great price - $8900. Call 541-593-6266
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541-385-5809
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Aircraft, Parts & Service
Antique & Classic Autos
Antique & Classic Autos
Pickups
Sport Utility Vehicles
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908
Aircraft, Parts 8 Service
Chevy Tahoe 2001 SuperhatNkOnly 1 Share Available
Economical flying in your own IFR equipped Cessna 172/180 HP for only $13,500! New Garmin Touchscreen avionics center stack! 1/3 interest in Columbia Exceptionally clean! 400, $150,000 (located Hangared at BDN. O Bend.) Also: SunriCall 541-728-0773 ver hangar available for sale at $155K, or lease, Advertise your car! © $400/mo. Add A Picture!
882
Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
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YEAR END SALES EVENT
your needs.
Fleetwood Prowler 32' - 2001 2 slides, ducted heat & air, great condition, snowbird ready, Many upgrade options, financing available! $14,500 obo.
Call on one of the professionals today!
What are you looking for? You'll find it in
HeatedLeatherSea!s, BMWCertified, AWD!
tbtta'
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For Sale 1990 5th Wheel
541-385-5809
Need help fixing stuff? Call A Service Professional Recreation by Design 2013 Monte Carlo, 38-ft. Top living room, 2 bdrm, has 3 slideouts, 2 A/Cs, entertainment center, fireplace, W/D, garden tub/shower, in great condition.$36,000 or best offer. Call Peter, 307-221-2422,
AILL DELIV/R
Transporter
Low miles, EFI 460, 4-spd auto, 10-ply tires, low miles, almost new condition, $3500.
Ask for Theo,
541-260-4293
3.2 V6, Ultra LowMiles, Loaded!
For the avid flyer, Madras Airport Hanger for sale, $8000. Call for info. 541-419-8583
TURN THE PAGE
• H • • %%
BMWCertified,1 Owner,LowMiles
The Bulletin Classifieds
Call Dick, 541-480-1687.
For More Ads The Bulletin
2011 BMW 328xi AWD 2011 BMW550xi AWD 2006AudiTTRoadsterQuattro
¹3943
find the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com
~24,67 5
2012P orscheCayenneSHybrid
Over 30MPG,LowMiles, WhyBuyNew?
«3 982
48 , 8 7 5
~1 8,975
2007AudiA40uattro 2011AcuraMDXAdvance
Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 1 96 8
A ero Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time, full panel. $23,000 obo. Contact Paul at
Take care of your investments 541-447-5184. with the help from The Bulletin's FIND IT! "Call A Service ggy l T I SELL IT! Professional" Directory The Bulletin Classifieds
¹53117A
64 , 8 7 5
¹A33089A >1 2,875
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Item Priced al: Y o ur Total Ad Cost onl . • Under $500 $29 • $500 to $99 9 $3 9 • $1000 fo $2499 $4 9 • $2500 and over $5 9
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2013 Audi A4 Quattro Premium PlusPkg, HeatedLeather Seats, LikeNew!
¹53075A ....................................................... 25, 875
ffA33039.......................................................3 5,84 5
2004 BMI 325ci Coupe
2011 BMW328 X-Drive Sport Wagon
Hard to Find, LowMiles, Must See!
Hard to Find, Loaded and BMWCertified.
4018............................................................@31,875
2013 Volvo S60 Premium All Wheel Drive, Loadedwith Options andSafety!
ff4032............................................................3 1, 875
2010 MINI Cooper Loaded with Options andFun. LowMiles, Like New.
ff73132A....................................................... 1 496 7 5
4035............................................................1 5,875
2011 BMW 328xi
2011 BMI 328xi Low Miles, 1 Owner,BMWCertified, Why BuyNew?
¹4022............................................................26, 875
¹3988............................................................ 527,845
2007VW PassatW agon 4-Motion
2012 Audi A4 Avant Wagon
Very Rare, Leather,Moonroof, 1 Owner!
ff33000A....................................................... 1 496 4 5
Hard to Find, AudiCertified, Why BuyNew?
4048............................................................@34,875
4 BRANDS, A THOUSAND POSSIBILITIES
Includes up to 40 words oftext, 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold headline and price.
1045 SE 3rd St • Bend • OR • 541-382-1711
• The Cent ralOregonNicltelAds + bendbulletin.com
'Piivatepartymerchandiseonly- excludespets&livestock,autos, Rvs, motorcycles, boats, airplanes,andgaragesale categories.
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Premium Pkg., BMW Certified, Low Miles!
All Wheel Drive, BMW Certified, 1 Owner!
RePlaCe that Oldtired Setof SkiSyOUgOt frOmyOur Ski BumBuddy!
$34,875
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Only 58,000 MilesandLoaded! Hurry, it won't last!
votkiskis
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2007 BMW 328i Sedan
• The Bulletin, • Central Oregon Marketplace
«5 4018A
Hard toFind,AWD,Low Miles, Pricedto Sell. All Options, Hardto Find,LowMiles, 1Owner!
¹3964............................................................~31,675
Some restrictionsapply
good. $1700.
541-633-6662
Call a Pro
+~
010 BMW 328i Convertible
541-385-5809
Ford Bronco II 4x4, 1989, auto, high miles, runs
©
Rare HardTopConvertible, BMWCertified!
Serving Centra/ Oregonsince 1903
541-460-0494
CLASSIC
//72117A............................................................8 ,87 5
The Bulletin
matching canopy, 30k original miles, possible trade for classic car, pickup, motorcycle, RV $13,500. In La Pine, call 928-581-9190
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541-000-000
FORD XLT 1992 3/4 ton 4x4
Jeep CJ5 1979, Original owner, 87k miles, only 3k on new 258 long block. Clutch 15 factory options includ- package, Warn hubs. 'Sloan docuing A/C. Excellent runner, very mentation." Quality re- dependable. Northpaint. COMPLETELY on- man 6trfr' plow, Warn inal interior 8 trunk area PRISTINE). Engine com- 6000¹ winch. $7900 best reasonable partment is VERY MUCH or original. No r ust, no offer. 541-549-6970 or leaks, evervthintt works! 541-815-8105. $19,900. 541-3Z3-1898 Model T Touring 1923 Chevy 1955 PROJECT Good cond. $ 10,500 car. 2 door wgn, 350 obo. 503-559-6618 or small block w/Weiand madsenm1 Ocomcast.net dual quad tunnel ram with 450 Holleys. T-10 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, Weld Prostar wheels, extra rolling chassis + extras. $6500 for all. Buick Skylark 1972 Matchless! 17K original miles! Sunburst yellow/ white vinyl/Sandalwood.
2011 BMW 328xi
and U)tlyusedskissn ' a. in' b'dingsingreatshap. 2seasonsofuse scrapesordingsinthe baseandlreshlywaxed andtttttedtortheseason e450oeo
5.3L V8, leather, air, heated seats, fully loaded, 120K mi. $7500 obo
Whether you need a fence fixed, hedges Reach thousands of readers! 541-948-2963 trimmed or a house ) Call 541-385-5809 built, you'll find The Bulletin Classtfieds II/8 (photo forillustration only) professional help in Pathfinder SE 916 The Bulletin's "Call a Nissan 1997, V6, auto, 4WD, Trucks & Service Professional' Keystone Challenger roof rack, moon roof, Heavy Equipment 2004 CH34TLB04 34' running boards, alloy Directory 541-389-7669. 1/3 interest i n w e llfully S/C, w/d hookups, wheels. Vin¹136692 Plymouth B a r racuda 541-385-5809 new 18' Dometic aw- equipped IFR Beech BoChevy pick-up truck $4,988 1966, original car! 300 ning, 4 new tires, new nanza A36, new 10-550/ 1954, all there, started hp, 360 V8, center© s uIUShRUOPSEHD.(NM s ARLL Kubota 7000w marine prop, located KBDN. restore, you finish! lines, 541-593-2597 diesel generator, 3 $65,000. 541-419-9510 $6800. 541-480-3646 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. slides, exc. cond. inLook at: BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS 877-266-3821 side & out. 27" TV Peterbilt 359 p o table Bendhomes.com Search the area's most I nternational Fl a t Dlr ¹0354 dvd/cd/am/fm entertain for Complete Listings of water t ruck, 1 9 90, comprehensive listing of Bed Pickup 1963, 1 center. Call for more 3200 gal. tank, 5hp classified advertising... ton dually, 4 s pd. details. Only used 4 Area Real Estate for Sale pump, 4-3" h oses, real estate to automotive, trans., great MPG, times total in last 5 t/s camlocks, $ 2 5,000. merchandise to sporting could be exc. wood years.. No pets, no 541-820-3724 Bulletin Classifieds hauler, runs great, smoking. High retail Ford Model A 1930 goods. new brakes, $1950. Just bought a new boat? Coupe, good condition, appear every day in the $27,700. Will sell for print or on line. 541-419-5480. Sell your old one in the $14,000. 541-588-6084 $24,000 including slid(photo forillustration only) classifieds! Ask about our Call 541-385-5809 ing hitch that fits in Nissan Pathfinder SE Super Seller rates! www.bendbulletin.com your truck. Call 8 a.m. 2005, V6, auto, 4WD, 1/5th interest in 1973 541-385-5809 to 10 p.m. for appt to roof rack, moon roof, The Bulletin see. 541-330-5527. Cessna 150 LLC t ow p k g . , all o y semng onlraloregon)rnce1)e 929 150hp conversion, low wheels. Vin¹722634 Price Reduced! time on air frame and Automotive Wanted 933 $12,988 Say "goodbuy" Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 engine, hangared in Pickups © s uIUShRUOPSEHD.(NM s ARLL to that unused Bend.Excellent per- DONATE YOUR CAR- engine, power everyiphoto forillustration only) thing, new paint, 54K formance & affordFAST FREE TOWToyota Tacoma Xtra2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. item by placing it in able flying! $6,000. ING. 24 hr. Response orig. miles, runs great, 877-266-3821 cab Pickup 2000, 4 exc. cond.in/out. $7500 The Bulletin Classifieds 541-410-6007 Tax D e duction. obo. 541-480-3179 Cyl., 2.7 liter, auto, Dlr ¹0354 UNITED BR E AST 4WD, tow pkg., alloy 1966 Ford F250 CANCER FOUNDAwheels, be d l i n er. 3/4 ton, 352 V8, 2WD, 5 41-385-580 9 Need to get an ad Need to get an TION. Providing Free Get your Vin¹648820 P/S, straight body, M ammograms & ad in ASAP? in ASAP? business $10,988 runs good. $2000. Breast Cancer Info. You can place it 541-410-8749 888-592-7581. SuaaaLL online at: Fax it to 541-322-7263 (PNDC) 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. e ROW I N G www.bendbulletin.com Chevy 1986, long bed, 877-266-3821 The Bulletin Classifieds 931 four spd., 350 V8 rewith an ad in Dlr ¹0354 Automotive Parts, 541-385-5809 built, custom paint, MONTANA 3585 2008, The Bulletin's great ti r e s and Service & Accessories exc. cond., 3 slides, 935 "Call A Service wheels, new t a gs, king bed, Irg LR, $5000 obo. Sport Utility Vehicles Professional" Pirelli Scorpion snow & Arctic insulation, all 541-389-3026 ice tires, 295/45-R20 on options $35,000 obo. Directory II Oz Italian racing rims, 541-420-3250 used 1 season, fits Jeep Grand Cherokee. $2500. 1974 Bellanca Want to impress the GNfC 8 ton 1971, Only Jerry 541-480-9005 1730A $19,700! Original low relatives? Remodel mile, exceptional, 3rd 932 your home with the 2180 TT, 440 SMO, owner. 951-699-7171 X3 2 0 07, 99K Antique & help of a professional Ford Supercab 1992, BMW miles, premium pack- iphoto for illustration only) 180 mph, excellent la~ brown/tan color with from The Bulletin's Classic Autos age, heated lumbar condition, always m atching full s i z e supported seats, pan- Toyota RAV4 Sport "Call A Service hangared, 1 owner c anopy, 2WD, 4 6 0 oramic moo n roof, 2007, 4 Cyl., 2.4 Liter, Professional" Directory for 35 years. $60K. over drive, 135K mi., Bluetooth, ski bag, Xe- auto, 4WD, tow pkg., full bench rear seat, non headlights, tan & a lloy w heels, r o of In Madras, slide rear w i ndow, black leather interior, rack, Vin¹066992 1921 Model T GMC Sierra 1977 short bucket seats, power n ew front & $15,988 call 541-475-6302 re a r Delivery Truck bed, exlnt o r iginal seats w/lumbar, pw, brakes O 76K miles, © s u a ARU. Restored 8 Runs cond., runs 8 drives HD receiver & trailer one owner, all records, Dramatic Price Reduc$9000. great. V8, new paint brakes, good t ires. very clean, $16,900. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. tion Executive Hangar 541-389-8963 and tires. $4750 obo. Good 877-266-3821 cond i tion. 541-388-4360 at Bend Airport (KBDN) 541-504-1050 60' wide x 50' deep, Dlr ¹0354 OPEN ROAD 36' $4900. 541-389-5341 w/55' wide x 17' high bi2005 - $25,500 fold dr. Natural gas heat, King bed, hide-a-bed sofa, 3 slides, glass offc, bathroom. Adjacent to Frontage Rd; great shower, 10 gal. water heater, 10 cu.ft. visibility for aviation business. 541-948-2126 or fridge, central vac, s atellite dish, 2 7 " email 1jetjockOq.com TV/stereo syst., front The Bulletin's M OT O B S front power leveling "Call A Service jacks and s cissor stabilizer jacks, 16' Professional" Directory awning. Like new! is all about meeting i t I 541-4f 9-0566 Fifth Wheels
Fifth Wheels
Need to get an ad in ASAP? You can place it online at: www.bendbulletin.com
00
AUTOS8ETRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916 - Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles
Travel Trailers
KeystoneLaredo 31' 20 06 w i th 1 2' slide-out. Sleeps 6, queen walk-around bed w/storage underneath. Tub & shower. 2 swivel rockers. TV. Air cond. Gas stove 8 refrigerator/freezer. Microwave. Awning. Outside sho w er. Slide through stora ge, E a s y Li f t . $29,000 new; Asking$18,600 541-4947-4805
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BOATS 8 RVs 805- Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies and Campers 890- RVs for Rent
RV
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908
www.carreramotors.com Atut5t
G6 SUNDAY, DECEMBER 29 2013 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
975
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975
975
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Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Looking for your next employee?
Porsche 911 Turbo
CorvetteCoupe 1996, 350 auto, 135k, non-ethanol fuel/synthetic oil,
garaged/covered. Bose Premium Gold system. Orig. owner manual. Stock! $10,500 OBO. Retired. Must sell! 541-923-1781
Buick Regal S Custom 1994,
6 1 ,752
mi., exc. cond., V6, 3.1 L, fuel injected, 4 dr., FWD, exc. all season tires, new battery and alternator, very clean, exc. a/c and heater, pb, pw and s t eering.
Corvette 1979
(photo for iiiustration only)
aged or abused. $12,900.
Find exactly what
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
©
Dave, 541-350-4077
$4000. 541-419-5575
GIJBARIJ.
USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! you are Iooking for in the Where can you find a CLASSIFIEDS helping hand? Door-to-door selling with From contractors to fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell. yard care, it's all here Acura Legend, 1992, black on black, chrome in The Bulletin's The Bulletin Classified wheels, new tires, "Call A Service 541-385-5809 beautiful cond! $2250. Professional" Directory R 541-549-6589 CORVETTE COUPE Cadillac El Dorado Glasstop 2010 People Lookfor Information 1994 Total Cream Puff! Grand Sport - 4 LT About Products and Body, paint, trunk as loaded, clear bra showroom, blue Services EveryDaythrough hood & fenders. $1700 wheels The Bulletin CleseiBeds leather, New Michelin Super w/snow tires although Sports, G.S. floor car has not been wet in mats, 17,000 miles, 8 years. On trip to Lincoln LS 2001 4door Crystal red. Boise avg. 28.5 mpg., sport sedan, plus set $4800. 541-593-4016. $42,000. of snow tires. $6000. 503-358-1164. 541-317-0324. BllllW M-Roadster, 2000, w/hardtop. $19,500 57,200 miles, Titanium silver. Not
many M-Roadsters available. (See Craigslist posting id ¹4155624940for additional details.) Serious inquiries only. 541-480-5348
USE THE CLASSIFIEDS!
Door-to-door selling with fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell. The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
Garage Sales
Garage Sales Garage Sales Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds
541-385-5809 N issan Altima SL 2007 sedan. moon/leather.
USE THE CLASSIFIEDS!
541-598-3750
Door-to-door selling with fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell.
www.aaaoregonautosource.com
The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809
(photo for iiiustration only)
Ford Fusion SE2012, 4 Cyl., 2.5 Liter, auto, FWD, power seats, CHECK YOUR AD alloy wheels, Please check your ad Vin¹418211 on the first day it runs $15,888 to make sure it is corSuEiARu rect. Sometimes inalHlauuouuuuu.oon s tructions over t h e 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. phone are misunder877-266-3821 stood and an error Dlr ¹0354 can occur in your ad. If this happens to your Good classified ads tell ad, please contact us the essential facts in an the first day your ad appears and we will interesting Manner.Write be happy to fix it as from the readers view -not s oon as w e c a n . the seller's. Convert the Deadlines are: Week- facts into benefits. Show days 12:00 noon for the reader howthe itemwill next day, Sat. 11:00 help them in someway. l a.m. for Sunday; Sat. This 12:00 for Monday. If advertisin9 tip we can assist you, brought toyou by
®
Buick LaCrosse CXS 2005, loaded, new battery/tires, perfect $8495. 541-475-6794
(photo forillustration only)
Honda F i t S por t Nissan Altima Hybrid Hatchback 2009, 4 2009, 4 Cyl., 2.5 Liter, Cyl., VTEC, 1.5 Liter, auto, FWD, leather, a uto, F WD , re a r rear spoiler, a lloy spoiler, alloy wheels, wheels, Vin¹102916 Vin¹040086 $12,988 $13,988 ® s u aAau
L82- 4 speed. 85,000 miles Garaged since new. I've owned it 25 years. Never dam-
please call us: 541-385-5809
The Bulletin Classified
The Bulletin Sur 'ug CuutntOneoosince raie
2003 6 speed, X50 added power pkg., 530 HP! Under 10k miles, Arctic silver, gray leather interior, new quality tires, and battery, Bose premium sound stereo, moon/sunroof, car and seat covers. Many extras. Garaged, perfect condition $5 9,700. 541-322-9647 Porsche Carrera 911 2003 convertible with hardtop. 50K miles, new factory Porsche motor 6 mos ago with 18 mo factory warranty remaininq. $37,500. 541-322-6928 Call The Bulletin At 541 u385-5809 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail At www bendbulletin com
Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 (photo for iiiustration only) (photo for iiiustration only) readers each week. Subaru lmpreza WRX Toyota yaris Sedan Your classified ad Limited 2008 4 Cyl. 2010, 4 Cyl., 1.5 Liter, will also appear on Turbo, 2.5 liter, 5 spd, auto, FWD, bendbulletin.com AWD, moon roof, rear Vin¹066953 which currently respoiler, pre m i um $8,888 ceives over 1.5 milwheels, Vin¹508150 lion page views ® s u aAau $15,888 every month at 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. no extra cost. BulleS UBA R l l auusuuonuruu uou tin Classifieds 877-266-3821 Get Results! Call 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Dlr ¹0354 385-5809 or place 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 your ad on-line at bendbullefin.com Subaru STi 2010, 16.5K, rack, mats, cust I The Bulletin recoml snow whls, stored, onemends extra caution i owner, $29,000, when p u rchasing 541.410.6904 Volkswagen I products or services from out of the area. Touareg 2004 Toyota Avalon XL 2008 Meticulously main- I S ending c ash , 4dr, only 49k mi, checks, or credit in- g tained. Very clean 19/28 mpg. formation may be I inside and out. V6. ¹273190. $ 15,795 Recently serviced I subject toFRAUD. For more informa60 point inspection I tion about an adversheet. $7200 tiser, you may call Call 541-480-0097 I the Oregon State 541-598-3750 Attorney General's I
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I I
I I
I Office
Just too many collectibles? Sell them in The Bulletin Classifieds
Check out the (photo for illustration only) classifieds online Subaru lmpreza OufIlllazda Illliata 1997 www.bendbttlletin.com back Sport Wagon M-edition 2009, 4 Cyl., 2.5 liter, Updated daily Mica Green, 5-spd, a uto, A W D , re a r original interior 8 extespoiler, roof rack, alrior. All power options, loy wheels, Porsche 911 leather, convertible Vin¹824283 Carrera 993 cou e boot, Tonneau Cover $16,888 & air screen. Suaaau 114K miles, synthetic uuuauuouuuuu.ooll oils, new timing belt 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. O 81K, extra set rims/ 877-266-3821 tires & more! $6195. Dlr ¹0354
Vehicle? Call The Bulletin and place an ad today! Ask about our 'Wheel Deal"!
f o r private party l advertisers
l The Bulletin l Serving Central Oregon since fgta
Q
541-385-5809
1996, 73k miles, Tiptronic auto. transmission. Silver, blue leather interior, moon/sunroof, new quality tires and battery, car and seat covers, many extras. Recently fully serviced, garaged, looks and runs like new. Excellent condition $29,700 541-322-9647
C o nsumer I
WHEN YOU SEE THIS I Protection hotline at 1-877-877-9392.
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cial Records of Des- a ttorney's fees n ot is in default and the programs, g o to please contact Housexceedingthe amount http://www.oregoning Works at (541) chutes County, OrBeneficiary seeks to egon. 4.DEFAULT. provided i n ORS foreclose the T rust lawhelp.org. Any 923-1018. H o using 8 6.753. Yo u ma y questions regarding Works does not disThe Grantor or any Deed for failure to other person o bli- reach th e O r egon pay: M o nthly pay- this matter should be criminate on the baThe Desc h utes State Bar's Lawyer ments in the amount directed to Lisa Sum- sis of race, color, naCounty H e a rings gated on the T rust Officer will hold a been appointed Deed and Promissory Referral Service at of $1,921.00 each, mers, Paralegal, (541) tional origin, religion, or due the first of each 686-0344 Public Hearing on Co-Administrators of Note secured thereby 503-684-3763 (TS sex, physical or mental disability or familJanuary 21, 2014, at the E S T AT E OF is in default and the toll-free in Oregon at month, for the months ¹15148.30343). 800-452-7636 or you of April 2012 through DATED: October 8, ial status. 6 :30 p.m. i n t h e REIKO WELLS, DeBeneficiary seeks to Barnes and Sawyer ceased, by the Circuit foreclose the T rust may visit its website September 2013; plus 2013. /s/ Nancy K. at: w w w.osbar.org. Cary. Nancy K. Cary, Rooms of the DesC ourt, State of O rDeed for failure to late charges and adLEGAL NOTICE chutes S e r vices egon, Des c hutes pay: M onthly pay- Legalassistance may vances; plus any un- Successor T rustee, TRUSTEE'S NOTICE Hun t er, O F SALE File N o . C enter, 1300 N W County, under Case ments in the amount be available if you paid real p r operty Hershner R e f e rWall St., Bend, to Number 13PB0145. o f $ l nterest o n l y have a low income taxes or liens, plus LLP, P.O. Box 1475, 7699.20469 Eugene, OR 97440. consider the followAll persons having a monthly payments for and meet federal pov- interest. 5.AMOUNT ence is made to that ing request: claim against the es- the months of March erty guidelines. For DUE. Th e amount c ertain trust d e ed more information and due on the Note which tate must present the 2012 through Sepmade by DEBRA L. WILSON, as grantor, FILE NUMBER: c laim w i thin f o u r t ember 2 01 3 a n d a directory of legal aid i s secured by t h e Where can you find a programs, g o to SP-13-20 months of th e f i rst each month thereafTrust Deed referred to to First American Title helping hand? http://www.oregonherein is: P r incipal publication date of this ter each, due the of Company, as trustee, lawhelp.org. Any balance in the amount From contractors to SUBJECT: The applinotice t o H e n drix, each month, for the in favor of Mortgage Electronic Registracant is requesting Brinich & B e rtalan, months of; plus late questions regarding of $299,576.12; plus yard care, it's all here site plan approval LLP, at 716 NW Har- c harges an d ad - this matter should be interest at the rate of tion Systems, Inc. as in The Bulletin's n ominee for M 8 T for the addition of a riman Street, Bend, vances; plus any un- directed to Lisa Sum- 6.625% per annum water Oregon 97701, ATTN: paid real p r operty mers, Paralegal, (541) from March 1, 2012; "Call A Service Bank It's Successors 686-0344 PS plus late charges of Professional" Directory and Assigns, as benfiltration building and Lisa N. Bertalan, or taxes or liens, plus ¹15148.30764). miscellaneous site they may be barred. interest. 5.DEFAULT. $4,610.40; plus adeficiary, dated improvements at the Additional information The Grantor or any DATED: October 7, vances and foreclo06/30/08, r e corded City of may be obtained from other person o b li- 2013. /s/ Nancy K. sure attorney fees and 07/07/08, in the mortBend's Outback Site. OF PUBLIC NOTICE the court records, the gated on the Trust Cary. Nancy K. Cary, costs. 6.SALE gage records of DECo-Administrators or Deed and Promissory Successor T rustee, PROPERTY. The SCHUTES C o unty, Hun t er, Trustee hereby states Housing Works will Oregon, APPLICANTS/OWNthe following-named Note secured thereby Hershner as LLP, P.O. Box 1475, that the property will open th e H o using 2008-28824 and subERS: John Erskine attorney f o r the is in default and the Co-Administrators. Beneficiary seeks to Eugene, OR 97440. be sold to satisfy the Choice Vouc h er sequently assigned to and Christine Close Erskine Date of first publica- foreclose the T rust obligations secured by Waiting List on Janu- M &T Bank b y A s t he Trust Deed. A ary 13th 17th, 2014. signment recorded as tion: December 15, Deed for failure to The Bulletin's APPLICANT: City of 2013. LISA N. BER- pay: I n t erest only Trustee's Notice of Applicants are asked 2013-037606, cover"Call A Service Default and Election to apply for the wait ing the following deBend, Attn: Heidi TALAN, OSB monthly payments for Lansdowne, PE ¹912122, H E NDRIX the months of March Professional" Directory to Sell Under Terms lists online at www.or- scribed real property of Trust Deed has egonhousingworks.org. situated in said county BRINICH & BERTA- 2012 through Sepis all about meeting OWNER: City of Bend LAN, LLP, 716 NW t ember 2 0 1 3 an d been recorded in the C entral Oreg o n and state, to wit: West your needs. Official Records of Community Service 1/2 of Lot 6 in Block 1 HARRIMAN, BEND, each month thereafLOCATION: The OR 97701, ter; plus late charges Deschutes C o unty, Agencies may assist of Parkway Acres, Call on one of the 541-382-4980. their clients in filling Deschutes C ounty, property is located and advances; plus professionals today! Oregon. 7. TIME OF at 18600 Skyliners any unpaid real propSALE. Date:February out the online applica- Oregon. PROPERTY erty taxes or liens, tion form. Upon re- A DDRESS: 1 5 724 Road, Bend, and is 20, 2014. Time:11:00 identified on Desplus i n t erest. 6. LEGAL NOTICE a.m. Place: Desquest, Housing Works PARKWAY DRIVE LA Need to get an ad AMOUNT DUE. The TRUSTEE'S NOTICE chutes County Court- staff will provide tech- PINE, OR 97739 Both c hutes Cou n t y Assessor's Map in ASAP? amount due on the OF S A LE - The house, 1 16 4 NW nical assistance for the beneficiary and 17-11 as Tax Lot N ote which is s e - T rustee under t h e Bond Street, Bend, clients filling out the t he t r ustee h a v e 6202. cured by the T rust terms of t h e T r ust Oregon.8.RIGHT TO online ap p lication. elected to sell the real Fax it to 541-322-7253 Any Pre-applications must property to satisfy the D eed referred t o Deed desc r ibed REINSTATE. STAFF C O NTACT: herein is: P r i ncipal herein, at the direc- person named in ORS be complete in order obligations secured by Kevin Har r ison, The Bulletin Classifieds balance in the amount tion of the Beneficiary, 86.753 has the right, to be accepted by the the trust deed and a Principal P l anner of $155,843.77; plus hereby elects to sell at any time that is not online wait list system notice of default has interest at the interest t he p r operty d e - later than five days for processing. (541) 385-1401 been recorded pursuLEGAL NOTICE rate of 5.250% from scribed in the Trust before the T r ustee ant to O regon ReTRUSTEE'S NOTICE February 2012; plus Deed to satisfy the conducts the sale, to Families may request vlsed Statutes Copies of the staff reOF S A LE - The late c h a rges of obligations s ecured have this foreclosure paper applications as 86.735(3); the default port, application, all T rustee under t h e thereby. Pursuant to d ismissed and t h e for which the foreclodocuments and evi$ 170.97; plus a d a reasonable accomdence submitted by terms of t h e T rust vances and foreclo- ORS 86.745, the fol- Trust Deed reinstated modation. R e ason- s ure i s m ade i s Deed desc r ibed sure attorney fees and lowing information is by payment to t he able ac c ommoda- grantor's failure to pay or on behalf of the applicant and appliherein, at the direc- costs. 7.TIME OF provided: 1. PARTIES: Beneficiary of the en- tions must b e in when due the followtion of the Beneficiary, SALE. Date:February Grantor:WILLIAM G. tire amount then due, writing and may be ing sums: monthly cable criteria are available for inspechereby elects to sell 20, 2014. Time:11:00 WECKS and SHERYL other than such por- granted should an in- payments of t he p r operty d e - a.m. Place: DesA. WECKS. Trustee: tion of the principal as dividual have barriers $1,350.68 beginning tion at the Planning Division at no cost scribed in the Trust chutes County Court- CHICAGO TITLE IN- would not then be due to completing the on- 0 4/01/13; plus l a t e COM - had no default ocline application. and can be p urDeed to satisfy the house, 1 16 4 N W S URANCE charges of $0.00 each chased for 25 cents obligations s ecured Bond Street, Bend, PANY OF OREGON. curred, by curing any month begi n ning thereby. Pursuant to Oregon. 8.RIGHT TO Successor T rustee: other default that is The Housing Choice 04/16/13; plus prior a page. The staff r eport should b e ORS 86.745, the folREINSTATE. Any N ANCY K . C A R Y. c apable o f be i n g Voucher Pr o gram accrued late charges lowing information is person named in ORS Beneficiary: WASHmade available 7 cured by tendering the provides rental assis- of $162.09; plus add ays prior to t h e provided: 1.PARTIES: 86.753 has the right, INGTON F EDERAL performance required tance for low-income vances of $ 176.74; Grantor:BILL WECKS at any time that is not FKA WASHINGTON under the obligation or households that meet together with title exd ate set f o r t h e h earing. Doc u CONSTRUCTION later than five days FEDERAL SAVINGS. Trust Deed and by income eligibility repense, costs, trustee's 2.DESCRIPTION OF m ents ar e a l s o INC., A OREGON before the T rustee paying all costs and quirements. This is a fees and attorney's available online at CORPORATION. conducts the sale, to PROPERTY: The expenses actually in- lottery to be placed fees incurred herein Trustee: FIRST have this foreclosure real property is de- curred in enforcing the onto the Waiting List. by reason of said dewww.deschutes.org. A MERICAN TI T L E d ismissed and t h e scribed as follows: Lot obligation and Trust Should funding befault; any further sums INSURANCE COM- Trust Deed reinstated Sixteen (16), SUM- Deed, together with come available within advanced by the benDeschutes C o unty e ncourages p e r - PANY OF OREGON. b y payment to t h e MERHILL PHASE 2, t he t r ustee's a n d a one year timeframe, eficiary for the protecSuccessor T rustee: Beneficiary of the en- r ecorded May 1 3 , a ttorney's fees n ot applicants will be pro- tion of the above desons with disabilities to participate in N ANCY K . C A R Y . tire amount then due, 2003, in Cabinet F, exceedingthe amount cessed in the order of scribed real property Beneficiary:WASHother than such porPage 474, Deschutes i ts int e rest all programs and provided i n ORS their Waiting List po- and activities. This INGTON F E DERAL tion of the principal as County, Oregon. 3. 8 6.753. Yo u ma y sition. If selected, the therein; and prepayFKA WASHINGTON would not then be due R ECORDING. T h e reach th e O r egon c onclusion of o n e ment penalties/premievent/location is accessible to people FEDERAL SAVINGS. had no default ocTrust Deed was reState Bar's Lawyer year, if funding has ums, if applicable. By 2.DESCRIPTION OF with disabilities. If curred, by curing any corded as f o llows: Referral Service at not been allocated, a reason of said default you need accomPROPERTY: The other default that is Date Recorded: De- 503-684-3763 or new Waiting List will the beneficiary has real property is de- c apable o f be i n g cember 14, 2006. Re- toll-free in Oregon at be opened and previ- d eclared al l s u m s modations to make p articipation p o s scribed as follows: Lot cured by tendering the cording No. 800-452-7636 or you ous applicants must owing on the obliga17 of BAILEY, City of performance required 2006-81 631 Official may visit its website reapply. tion secured by the sible, please call the ADA Coordinator at Bend, Des c hutes under the obligation or R ecords o f Des - at: w w w.osbar.org. trust deed i mmediCounty, Oregon. 3. Trust Deed and by chutes County, Or- Legalassistance may Housing Works will ately due and pay(541) 388-6584. R ECORDING. T h e paying all costs and egon. 4.DEFAULT. b e available if y o u offer technical assis- able, said sums being Just bought a new boat? Trust Deed was re- expenses actually in- The Grantor or any have a low income tance from 8:00 a.m. the following, to wit: corded as f o llows: curred in enforcing the other person o b li- and meet federal pov- to 5:00 p.m. at 405 $109,703.72 with inSell your old one in the SW 6th St., Redmond, terest thereon at the classifieds! Ask about our Date Recorded: July obligation and Trust gated on the Trust erty guidelines. For Super Seller rates! 31, 2008. Recording Deed, together with Deed and Promissory more information and OR 97756. For furrate of 6.375 percent No.: 2008-32138 Offi t he t r ustee's a n d ther info r mation per annum beginning 541-385-5809 Note secured thereby a directory of legal aid LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE TO INTERESTED PERSONS. STEVEN R. WELLS and C A R O L L. O'HALLORAN have
03/01/13; plus l ate at any time prior to charges of $0.00 each five days before the month beg i nning date last set for the 04/16/13 until p aid; s ale, to h a v e t h is plus prior accrued late foreclosure proceedcharges of $162.09; ing dismissed and the trust deed reinstated p lus advances o f $176.74; together with b y payment to t h e title expense, costs, beneficiary of the entrustee's fees and at- tire amount then due torneys fees incurred (other than such porherein by reason of tion of the principal as said default; any fur- would not then be due ther sums advanced had no default ocby the beneficiary for curred) and by curing the protection of the any o t he r d e f ault above described real complained of herein property and its inter- that is capable of beest therein; and pre- ing cured by tenderpayment p e nalties/ ing the performance premiums, if a ppli- required under t he tr u st cable. WHEREFORE, o bligation o r notice hereby is given deed, and in addition that the undersigned to paying said sums trustee will on March or tendering the per10, 2014 at the hour formance necessary of 10:00 o'clock, A.M. to cure the default, by paying all costs and i n accord with t he standard of time es- expenses actually int ablished b y OR S curred in enforcing the 187.110, at the folobligation and trust lowing place: inside deed together with the main lobby of the trustee's and Deschutes C o u nty a ttorney's fees n ot Courthouse, 1164 NW exceeding the amounts provided by Bond, in the City of said OR S 8 6 .753. Bend, County of DERequests from perSCHUTES, State of Oregon, sell at public sons named in ORS auction to the highest 86.753 for reinstatebidder for cash the ment quotes received i nterest in t h e d e - less than six days scribed real property prior to the date set which the grantor had for the trustee's sale or had power to con- will be honored only at vey at the time of the the discretion of the execution by grantor beneficiary or if reof the trust deed, to- quired by the terms of gether with any inter- the loan documents. est which the grantor In construing this noor grantor's succes- tice, the singular insors in interest ac- cludes the plural, the quired after the ex- word "grantor" inecution of the trust cludes any successor deed, to satisfy the i n interest t o t h e foregoing obligations grantor as well as any thereby secured and other person owing an t he costs an d e x - obhgation, the perforpenses of sale, in- mance of which is secluding a reasonable cured by said trust charge by the trustee. deed, and the words Notice is further given "trustee" and obenefithat for reinstatement ciary" include their reor payoff quotes re- spective successors quested pursuant to in interest, if any. The O RS 8 6 .757 a n d trustee's rules of auc86.759 must be timely tion may be accessed at ww w . northwestc ommunicated in a written request that trustee.com and are c omplies with t h a t incorporated by this statute addressed to reference. You may the trustee's "Urgent also access sale staww w .northRequest Desk" either tus a t by personal delivery westtrustee.com and to the trustee's physi- www.USA-Foreclocal offices (call for ad- sure.com. For further dress) or b y f i r st information, p l ease class, certified mail, contact: Kathy Tagr eturn r eceipt r e - gart Northwest quested, addressed to Trustee Services, Inc. the trustee's post of- P.O. Box 997 Bellefice box address set vue, WA 98009-0997 forth in this notice. 586-1900 W I LSON, (TS¹ Due to potential con- DEBRA flicts with federal law, 7699.20469) 1002.259470-File No. persons having no record legal or equitable interest in the BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS subject property will Search the area's most only receive informa- comprehensive listing of tion concerning the classified advertising... lender's estimated or real estate to automotive, actual bid. Lender bid merchandise to sporting i nformation is a l s o goods. Bulletin Classifieds available a t the appear every day in the trustee's web s ite, print or on line. www.northwestCall 541-385-5809 trustee.com. Notice is www.bendbulletin.com further given that any person named in ORS The Bulletin Serving Central Orugou sincefate 86.753 has the right,