TUESDAY October 30,2012
LnnkfOr HIGH QESERIT PULSE t'Uise,= =
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AID ADVERTISEMENT
Jason Congeris Endorsed by: Organizations
Individuals
• Stand for Children
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
• Oregon Small Business Coalition • National Federation of Independent
Business/Oregon (NFI B) • Oregon Business Association • Oregon Chiefs of Police Association • Oregon Sheriff's Association • Oregon Farm Bureau Federation
• Oregon Taxpayers Association • Oregon Health Care Association • Oregon Technology PAC • Oregon Right to Life • Oregonians for Food and Shelter • AG PAC • NRA • Independent Party of Oregon
Ch eri Helt, Bend School Board member Peggy Kinkade, Bend School Board member De schutes County Commissioner Tammy Baney Be nd Mayor Jeff Eager Re dm ond Mayor George Endicott Be nd City Councilor Scott Ramsay Fo r m er Sheriff Les Stiles Mr s. Kelly Lyster Th eodore C. Lyster, III Ste ven and Deborah Lee Gl adys I. Biglor Ja ck Souhrada Dr K evin Miller Dr E den Miller Da niel Walker Ja son and Adeline Gammack Mr. and Mrs. Dan Cardot Juan Pablo Gonzalez-Ocegueda Ka t h ryn Gonzalez Mi chael Bird Maj & Mrs. Aadam Trask (Ret) Ri chard and Marylyn Morehead Re v. Timothy and Allison Sternberg
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• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
CJ & Andie Edmonds Jo hn and Dixie Farnsworth We n di Murphy Da vid and Tharon Lyon Saundra Caron The Dressler Family Da ve and Margaret Klepper Jo hn and Mary Philo St e phen Williams Sarah Williams, PhD Th o mas Bahrman Rob ert G. Chamberlain Rob ert B. Kennedy Jim Bruce Wi l l iam B. Anderson Ma rk and Wendy Knowles Bi ll and Kelly Conklin Lt. Colonel Shawn Dinkel (Ret) De l ores Dinkel Bi ll and Lucy Brackett Ge ne and Maria Langworthy Dr. Richard and Christine Aguilar
FOR STATE REPRESENTATIVE
«a proven voice for Central Oregonrr "C o nger fought to extend the state's enterprise zones, which gives businesses a tax incentive to expand or locate in Oregon. That program is part of the reason why companies such as Facebook and Apple decided to locate in Central Oregon."
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«Conger showed a willingness to work across the aisle with Democratic Gov. John Kitzhaber on health care reform and education reform and now on medical malpractice reforms. He was one of the few legislators to show any sort of leadership in reform of the state's pension system. "
The Bulletin October 7, 2012
lason Congeris Endorsed by: • Stand for Children • Oregon Small Business Coalition
• National Federation of Independent Business/Oregon (NFI B) • Oregon Business Association • Oregon Chiefs of Police Association • Oregon Sheriff's Association
• Oregon Farm Bureau Federation • • • • • • • •
Oregon Taxpayers Association Oregon Health Care Association Oregon Technology PAC Oregon Right to L i fe Oregonians for Food and Shelter AG PAC NRA I ndependent Party of Orego n
FOR 5TATE REPRESENTATIVE
www.ReplasonConger.com Paid for by the Committee to Elect Jason Conger
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FOR STATE REPRESENTATIVE
I'm working hard to bring focus to the needs of Central Oregon. From j ob creation and affordable health care to responsible spending and bet ter schools, I'm fighting t.o make our state and local economy stronger. — Jason Conger
Improving Educational Opportunities
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As a member of the House Education Committee, Jason helped pass bipartisan education reforms to eliminate outdated and unneeded mandates onlocalschools, increase coordination and fiscal accountability, and enhance choice for students and parents.
Saving Schools Money Working with Bend-La Pine School District leaders,Jason Conger developed his "School Savings Act" which will allow Oregon schools to save hundreds of million of dollars — and put that money back in the classroom.
A Champion for OSU-Cascades Jason championed efforts to secure a permanent home for OSU Cascades' new graduate and research facility — a key step toward establishing a four-year, university in Central Oregon. He will continue to fight to grow and expand higher educational opportunities here in Bend.
Attracting Jobs to Central Oregon
Helping Small
Protecting the Rights
Businesses
of Homeowners
Jason Conger worked hard to expand Oregon's Enterprise Zone program which provides tax credits to employers who create new longterm local jobs. Thanks to his work, companies like Facebook and Apple are creating new jobs right here in Central Oregon.
Jason Conger cosponsored legislation that established the Oregon Growth Fund and Oregon Growth Board which provide capital to Oregon businesses, heI ping them g row, expand, and hire new workers.
As our State Representative, Jason Conger worked to pass legislation that protects Oregon homeowners from predatory foreclosure practices and ensures homeowners have access to financial counseling and are able to pursue mediation with their lender. The bill also ended the "dual track" process that allowed banks to renegotiate loan terms while simultaneously pursuing foreclosure.
JISONr Learnmoreat www.RepJasonCollger.com = :::- -
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FOR STATE REPRESENTATIVE
Balancing the budget without raising taxes For the first time in years our state budget is based on available revenuerather than major tax increases on Oregon families. Jason will continue to advocate for budgets that work within existing revenues, push for more efficiency, and save for another rainy day.
www.RepJasonConger.com
Serving Central Oregon since1903 75$
TUESDAY October 30,2012
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Nature of Wordspreview /,;" COMMUNITY LIFE• B1
AT HOME• F1
bendbulletin.com
Libya warningswere plentiful,
CI p gpp g i pcmg pi
but strategylargelyunchanged on - erm senior care By Michael R. Gordon, Eric Schmitt and Michael S. Schmidt New York Times News Service
WASHINGTON — In the months leading up to the Sept. 11 attacks on the U.S. diplomatic mission in Benghazi, the Obama administration received intelligence reports that Islamic extremist groups were operating training camps in the mountains near the Libyan city and that some of the fighters were "al-Qaidaleaning," according to U.S.
and European officials. tacks on the Red Cross and The warning about the a British envoy's motorcade. camps was part of a stream Ambassador J. Christopher of diplomatic and intelligence Stevens, who was killed in the reports that indicated that the September attack, emailed security situation throughout his superiors in Washington the country, and particularly in in August alerting them to "a eastern Libya, had deteriorated security vacuum" in the city. sharply since the U.S. reopened A week before Stevens died, its embassy in Tripoli after the the U.S. Embassy warned that fall of Moammar Gadhafi's Libyan officials had declared government in September 2011. a "state of maximum alert" in By June, Benghazi had Benghazi after a car bombing experienced a string of asand thwarted bank robbery. sassinations as well as atSee Libya/A4
By Mac McLean The Bulletin
Facing a future in which the state's elderly population could almost double over the next 20 years, state administrators are on a month-long listening tour to find new ways to make what's considered one of the country's best long-term care systems even better. "Oregon has done a lot of
things the right way," said Bob Weir, the advocacy and development manager with the Aging and People with Disabilities Program, a part of the Oregon Department of Human Services. "What can we do that's better?" Oregon has the country's third best long-term care system after Minnesota and Washington, which
respectively had first and second places, according to a September 2011 scorecard released by AARP, the Commonwealth Fund andthe Scan Foundation. But when Weir met with a group of Bend residents dur-
ing a public hearing Monday, he said many people are surprised by this high mark. See Long-term /A5
Ariel kids are loyal to Boys &Girls Club unit s
By Hillary Borrud The Bulletin
Two weeks ago, Dan Shelfer gathered about 40 kids who attend the Boys 8 Girls Club Ariel Unit in southeast Bend to break some bad news. Shelfer, director for the Ariel Unit, told the kids that the club would soon close due to a lack of money. Some kids were in shock, while others broke into tears, Shelfer said. Anthony Barron, 8, was one of the first to pipe up with an idea to keep the club open. "He says, 'Why can't we sell some of the pool tables to keep going?'" Shelfer said. Quickly, other kids followed up with more ideas to raise money. Shelfer didn't want to break their hearts, but heknew the amount necessary to fill the hole in the annual budget — $75,000was more than the club could raise by selling its recreation equipment. One week before the Ariel Unit was scheduled to close on Thursday, Bank of the Cascades helped to close the funding gap with a pledge of approximately $40,000. Housing Works, the corporation that owns and operates the Ariel Glen and Ariel South apartments where many of the kids live, is also pitching in, and the Ariel Unit now has enough money to remain open until the end of the school year. Boys 8 Girls Clubs of Central Oregon and Housing Works are still trying to figure out how to pay for operations after that. "This will just get us through until the end of the school year," Executive Director Lisa Maxwell said Monday. "We've got some proposals in the pipeline, but you can't count on those ... So we'll continue to work on that." In the meantime, parents with children who attend the Ariel Unit said they were grateful to Bank of the Cascades and staff at the Boys gt Girls Clubs. Parents said the club is a positive place for their children to be while they work, and it gives the kids access to experiences they would not otherwise have. See Ariel /A4
Kirsteu Lucei New York Times News Service
Victor Concepcion stands on a trash can above floodwatersin the Brooklyn borough of New York Monday. The storm unexpectedly picked up speed as it approached the East Coast.
• EastCoast:Cycloneisexpectedtocausewidespreaddamage,di sruptions ::: •Air travel: Some flights .are grounded in Portland; ::: By james Barron storm-surge expected to accompany its Inside :: :Redmond isunaffected push onto land. New York Times News Service
A mammoth storm plowed into the coast ofNew Jersey on Monday evening on the way to carving what forecasters agreed would be a devastating path on land that is expected to paralyze life for millions of people in more than a half-dozen states, with extensive evacuations, once-in-a-generation flooding, widespread power failures and disruptions of mass transit. The storm made landfall close to Atlantic City, N.J., at about 8 p.m. with maximum sustained winds of a bout 80 mph, the National Hurricane Center said. It was headed north-northwest at 23 mph. A short time earlier, the National H u rricane Center r eclassified the storm: Hurricane Sandy became a post-tropical cyclone, a scientific renaming that had no bearing on the powerful winds, driving rains and life-threatening
TOP NEWS SYRIA: Cease-fire fails as both sides resume fighting, A3
TODAY'S WEATHER Light showers High 63, Low 40
Page G6
The enormous and merciless storm u nexpectedly picked up speed as i t roared over the Atlantic Ocean on a slate-gray day. Even the superintendent of the Statue of Liberty left to ride out the storm at his mother's house in New Jersey; he said the statue itself was "high and dry," but his house in the shadow of the torch was not. The wind-driven rain lashed sea walls and protective barriers in places like Atlantic City, where the Boardwalk was damaged as water forced its way inland. Foam was spitting, and the sand gave in to the waves along the beach at Sandy Hook, N.J., at the entrance to New York Harbor. Water was thigh-high on the streets in Sea Bright, N.J., a three-mile sand-sliver of a town where the ocean joined the Shrewsbury River. See Storm /A6
• The storm in photos and
graphics,A6 •Theeconomicimpact,E1
Stockmarket closures Stock markets were
closed Monday and will stay closedthrough
today becauseof Hurricane Sandy. The Buiietin's
Business section will resume stocks
coverage whenthe markets reopen.
INDEX B usiness E1-4 Comics B 4 - 5 Editorials C 4 O b ituaries C 5 C alendar B 3 C o mmunity B1-6 Horoscope B3 Sports D1 - 6 Classified G1-4 Crosswords B5, G2 Local News C1-6 TV & Movies B2
By Andrew Clevenger The Bulletin
WASHINGTON — As Hurricane Sandy pummeled and soaked the East Coast Monday, the massive storm forced cancellations of direct flights between Portland and New York, Boston and Washington. Airport closures on the East Coast resulted in 14 canceled flights to or from Portland International Airport on Monday, said airport spokesman Steve Johnson. Airport officials anticipated more cancellations Tues-
day morning, he said. But the canceled flights had not left any travelers stranded at the airport, he said. "There does seem to be a great awareness of the hurricane, and it appears that many people did check their flight information before coming to the airport," he said. See Flights /A4
The Bulletin AnIndependent
+ P We use recycleci newsprint
Vol. 109, No. 304, 7 sections
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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2012
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Discoveries, brealzthroughs, trends, names in the news — thingsyou need to hnow to start your day. Until Election Day, this page will focus on politics.
TART
TODAY
NATIONAL SECURITY AND FOREIGN POLICY
0 ama, Romney i er itteonsecurit By Matthew Schofield McClatchy Newspapers
WASHINGTON — After a campaign that's been about
of a private fundraiser, he cast doubts about the possibilities of a peaceful resolution to the Israeli-Palestinian q u estion. "The pathway to peace is almost unthinkable to accomplish," he said. He also said, "The United States will reduce assistance to the Palestinians if they continue to pursue United Nations recognition or form a u n ity government t h a t in c l udes Hamas, a terrorist group dedicated to Israel's destruction." His official stand is that he "will reject any measure that would frustrate direct negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians."
On securityissues Where the presidential candidates stand:
jobs, jobs and more jobs, the next president will be faced with a world full of problems that have little to do with improving the American economy. These are issues that oftenbear a geographic name: Afghanistan, Benghazi, Iran, Syria, Israel, or with out-thinking and overcoming those who seek to harm Americans. These are the issues for the commander in chief role of the Oval Office, and while they're often thrust upon a president more than sought, they will go a long way toward determining how history will view a
presidency. The two major party candidates, P r esident B a r ack Obama and M i t t R o mney, both generally back the same course on many of the major issues. Both would withdraw U.S. combat troops from Afghanistan by the end of 2014, for example, albeit at a slightly different pace. Both hope tough sanctions will force Iran to halt its nuclear program, while both reserve the right to use forceas a last resort. Obama even joked at their last debate that Romney's solutions consist of nothing more than speaking louder when saying the same things. Romney early inthe campaign appeared more hawkish. But as Election Day nears, Romney's worked t o a v oid
Defense spending
Obama
Wants to
His 2013 budget would reduce
increase fg~ defense («GG+ spending; would build more ships,
spending growth over 10 years while still raising the amount; wants a leaner military focused on intelligence, surveillance, reconnaissance, counterterrorism to take into account the ending of Iraq and Afghan wars
invest in a "robust" national ballisticdefense system; few details on how he'd pay for this; says he'd cut Pentagon civilian work force; says military spending is the most important duty for government so it should be funded first and cut other spending instead
Arab Spring Obama:
Wants to exempt Would exempt veterans defense spending from a ff airs spending from the cuts sequestration cuts
Looming "Sequester" cuts
Obama refers to the rapid changes in North Africa and the Middle East as both challenges an d op p o rtunities. During the most recent debate, he noted that in backing the growth of new democra-
Has increased the VA's budget about 40 percent in past three
Veteransaffairs Favors a computerized
data system to create an electronic record for each soldier
years; also favors electronic records
cies, he has specific goals:
Wants to cut the missile defense budget by 7 percent; replaced Bush-era missile plan in Europe with plan that he says will protect Europe and U.S. as foes develop more
Missile defense Would maintain current $10 billion spending; supports Obama's missile defense plan for Europe but says it was designed as much to appease Russia as to address Iran's threats
Ensuring support for American counterterrorism efforts, making sure Israel is protected, pushing for the protection of "religious minorities and women" and helping"the economic capabilities" of those nations.
hi-tech weapons Would withdraw troops in 2014, as currently scheduled, possibly keep troops longer if needed
Afghanistan War
Romney:
Has set a 2014 timetable to pull most U.S. troops out; transition to mainly
Romney also n oted t h at he focuses on convincing the "Muslim world to be able to reject extremism on its own." To do that, he said, he would tie foreign aid to protecting Israeli and American interests, through promoting economic development, improving education, creating gender equity and establishing civil societies. He voiced concern, however, about the results of the first democratic election in Egypt, which saw a candidate from the Muslim Brotherhood elected as president.
support role
Source: The Washington Post, Christian Science Monitor, NPR, AP
being tarred as trigger happy. "We can't kill our way out of this mess," he said in the last debate. They do differ on some key issues. Romney wants a defense buildup, including an increase in ships for the Navy that Obama ridiculed. Romney vows a close alliance with Israel. H ere's a b r e akdown o f where they stand on some of the major issues of national security and foreign policy. Issues relating to possible defense spending cuts because of th e p e nding s equestration are not included because both candidates seek to avoid implementation of those automatic cuts.
Romney
Judy Treible, Robert oorrenl© 2012 Mccratchy-Tribune News Serwce
Israel
idence. Obama maintains "the United States will always have Israel's back when it comes to Israel's security."
Obama: Obama m a i n tains th e American relationship with Israel is "rock solid," pointing to joint military exercises, missiledefense support, and the U.S.-Israel Enhanced Security Cooperation Act of 2012 as ev-
Romney: Romney says he would push for even closer relations with Israel. In asecretly recorded video
Military spending Obama: Obama sees slowing the
growth of Pentagon spending as partof a greatereffortto reduce projected budget deficits. As that slows, and the economy grows, he projects that military spending will d r op from more than 4.2 percent of gross domesticproduct to 2.6 percent of GDP by 2022.
Romney: Romney proposes that military spending should never fall below 4 percent of GDP.
He also proposes building 15 news ships a year for the Navy, with a goal of increasing the total from 286 ships today to 350. That's more than the existing plan to add nine ships a year to raise the total to 298 ships, and more than the 310 to 316 ships the Navy said it needs to handle its missions.
Afghanistan Obama: Obama plans to turn over the lead in combat missions to Afghan securityforces by the end of 2013, and to withdraw U.S. troops by the end of 2014. His timeline is the same as has been adopted by NATO and the international community.
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Romney: Romney wants to complete the transfer of combat missions to Afghan forces and withdraw U.S. combat troops by the end of 2014. He would give the U.S. military more say over the pace of withdrawal.
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Obama s a y s ec o nomic sanctions are both having an impact and maintaining international support in the drive to stop Iran from developing a nuclear weapon. He reserves the right to use force as last resort to stop Iran.
Romney: Romney supports sanctions but would strengthen them. He also reserves the right to use forceas a lastresort.
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It's Tuesday, Oct. 30, the 304th day of 2012. There are 62 days left in the year.
HAPPENINGS • Barack Obama and Mitt
Romneycancelcampaign events and stock markets are closed as Hurricane Sandy hits the East Coast.
IN HISTORY Highlights:In1912, Vice President James S. Sherman,
running for a second term of office with President William Howard Taft, died six days
before Election Day. (Sherman was replaced with Nicholas Murray Butler, but Taft, the Republican candidate,ended
up losing in anElectoral College landslide to Democrat
Woodrow Wilson.) Ten years ago:Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's broad-
based coalition collapsed when Cabinet ministers from the
moderate Labor Party resigned in a dispute over funding for Jewish settlements.
Five years ago:Democrats Barack ObamaandJohn Edwards sharply challenged Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton's
candor, consistency and judgment in a televised debate in Philadelphia.
One year ago:Britain's Sunday Telegraph published an interview with Syrian President
Bashar Assad, whowarned that a western intervention in Syria would lead to an "earthquake" that "would burn the whole region."
BIRTHDAYS Rock singer GraceSlick is 73. Actor Henry Winkler is 67. Country/rock musician
Timothy B. Schmit (The Eagles) is 65. Country singer T. Graham Brown is 58. Actor Kevin Pollak is 55. — From wire reports
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2012 • T HE BULLETIN A 3
TOP T ORIES
U.S. coor inatesant-militant push in Mali By Michael R. Gordon
a scheduled meetingbetween New York Times News Service Clinton and the Algerian presALGIERS, Algeria — Sec- ident, Abdelaziz Bouteflika. retary of State Hillary Clinton An array of Islamist militant arrived in Algeria on Monday groups haveseized control of as the United States sought northern Mali, including alto coordinate support for an Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb. emerging international effort The area has emerged as a hato push Islamic militants out of ven for terrorists. northern Mali. Earlier this month, the U.N. "One of the things that the Security Council adopted a secretary wants to talk about r esolution u nderscoring i t s is how w e w o uld see this "readiness" to send an interworking," a senior State De- national force to evict the milipartment official said before tants in response to a request
Oversight of specialty pharmacies inadequate, report says
from the Mali government. While a military plan has yet to be drafted, the basic idea is for forces from Nigeria and other West Africa countries to help Mali's military mount a campaign against the militants. France, the U.S. and other countries would help with training, intelligence and logistics. U.S. and French officials have met in Paris to discuss how to cope with the security situation in Mali, and Clinton's
trip to Algeria follows a similar visit by France's foreign minister. U.S. officials indicated that they were not asking Algeria to send troops to Mali but wanted to discuss the role it might play while West Africans and Mali's military provide the "boots on the ground." Algeria is a regional power a nd Mali's neighbor to t h e north, and its political support for such a campaign is essential, diplomats say.
"It is telling for the state of democracy when the right to celebrate the national holiday in one's own peaceful way is strained." — Exerpt from a column by Yavuz Baydar in the daily newspaper Today's Zaman
By Lena H. Sun The Washington Post
WASHINGTON — State boards have failed to adequately regulate the safety of practices at specialty pharmacies like the one at the center of the deadly fungal meningitis outbreak, according to a congressional report to be released Monday. The report by Rep. Edward M a r key, D - M ass., looked at enforcement actions against compounding pharmacies in all 50 states and found that only six stateshad records of taking action. The information was based on what was available on websites and through follow-up telephone calls. By contrast, the federal Food and Drug Administration issued nearly 60 warning letters about unsafe compounded drugs dating to June 2001, the earliest publicly available information, the report found. " State r egulators a r e not, or cannot, perform the same sort of safety-related oversight of compounding pharmacy practices that FDA has historically undertaken," the report said. Industry executives said it was the first state-by-state examination of safety issues like the ones raised by the Massachusetts company that made the tainted steroid injections implicated in the outbreak. In the wake of the worst public health crisis in recent U.S. history,consumer a dvocates, members o f Congress, and some pharmacy professionals are calling for more FDA authority. Twenty-five people have died and 344 others have been infected from batches of c o ntaminated steroid injections for back and joint pain traced to the New England Compounding Center. About 14,000 people received injections. "The NECC tragedy is c learly just the tip of an industry iceberg that has long needed reform and federal oversight," Markey said in a statement. Traditional c o mpounding pharmacies mix or alter ingredients to make custom medications for individual patients. But in the past two decades, this little-known corner of the pharmaceutical industry has expanded to include large compounders that operate like drug manufacturers. The FDA regulates drug manufacturers, requiring clinical trials and enforcing rigorous manufacturing standards. But compounding pharmacies are regulated by state boards of pharmacy, which often lack resources to conduct regular inspections. And compounded drugs are not FDA-approved. The FDA h a s s o ught greater oversight, but repeated legal challenges by the industry have restricted its authority, the report noted.
SYRIA
ease- ire ais as vio ence eru tsa ain By David Enders
himi, the United Nations special envoy to Syria, coincided BEIRUT — Fighting ap- with the Muslim holiday of peared to have returned to Eid al-Adha. The Syrian govits former pace Monday on ernment had agreed to the the final day of Syria's four- cease-fire with c onditions, day holiday cease-fire, un- along with some of the rebel derscoring the difficulties of groups that are fighting the finding a negotiated end to government, while other rebthe country's civil war. el groups rejected the idea A nti-government a c t i v - outright. ists who'd reported a drop V iolations c a m e fr o m in violence Friday, when the both sides, including rebel cease-firebegan, said Moncar bombs and government day that shelling, clashes aerial bombing. "There was no desire from and airstrikes had resumed their previous intensity, and either side to stop fighting," they claimed that govern- said Mousab al-Hamadee, ment forces had launched an anti-government activthe heaviest airstrikes in ist near the city of Hama. the capital, Damascus, since The rebels "didn't want this fighting began there three cease-fire to succeed because months ago. it would be a chance for the The four-day cease-fire, regime to redistribute forces proposed by Lakhdar Bra- in different areas." McClatchy Newspapers
BBC opensinquiry into sexabusecase Burhan Ozbilici / The Associated Press
Thousands of people holding national flags and banners depicting Turkey's founder, Kemal Ataturk, march to the mausoleum of Ataturk to celebrate the Republic Day in Ankara, Turkey, Monday. Police used tear gas and water cannons to try to break up a demonstration by tens of thousands of pro-secular protesters, but the march to mark the founding of the Turkish republic went on in defiance of a government ban.
In Turkey, a power struggle is on vivid display in streets By Tim Arango
democratic and Islamic values are being put forward as ISTANBUL — At areception a model for an Arab world in Monday evening at the pres- turmoil, the country is facing ident's mansion to celebrate its own internal power strugTurkey's founding 89 years gles — between Islamists and ago, something previously un- secularists, civilian l eaders heard of occurred: The coun- and military commanders. The try's top military commander outcome could not only deterstood alongside the wives of mine the future of Turkey but, the president and prime min- as it takes on a greater role in ister, even while the women the affairs of the Middle East, wore Islamicheadscarves. also shape the region. In years past the military While many praise the dielite would never have stood minished power of the military, b eside women w e aring a critics say these struggles have symbol long at the center of also laid bare the deficiencies Turkey'sstruggle over the role of Turkey's democracy, pointof religion in public life. These ing in particular to the Islamistmenwere heirstothetraditions leaning government's crackof Turkey'ssecularist founder, down on dissent and the press Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, who — there are more journalists in zealously banished religion jail here than anywhere else from public life. They had for in the world. That has given years refused toattend such rise to a chorus of frustration gatherings — in protest of the that was on vivid display in the headscarf. streetsMonday as Turkey celBut the scene from the reebrated its birthday. ception Monday was broadIn Ankara, the capital, thouc ast on t elevision, and f o r sands of secularist protesters many Turks the striking imclashed with riot police after age underscored an emphatic they went ahead with a rally break from a past when civil- to celebrate Republic Day, ian leaders were subservient the holiday marking Turkey's to the military, and Islam was founding as a republic in 1923, filtered from public life. that had been banned by the "The Turkish army is now g overnment of P r ime M i n withdrawing f ro m p o litics," ister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, said Taha Akyol, a columnist vaguely citing intelligence refor Hurriyet, a Turkish daily ports that the gathering could newspaper. become violent. "It is telling for the state of At a t ime when Turkey's prosperity and its melding of democracy when the right to New York Times News Service
celebrate the national holiday in one's own peaceful way is strained," wrote Yavuz Baydar, a columnist, in Monday's edition of the daily newspaper Today's Zaman. Among the many changes brought about by t h e g o vernment of Erdogan, a pious Muslim whose rule has transformed T u rkey's e c onomy but alienated the secular old guard, has been to decisively establish civilian control over a military that four times in the past 89 years has acted above the law to remove elected governments. In late September more than 300 military officers received prison sentences for conspiring to overthrow the government, in a trial known as the Sledgehammer case. The proceedings deeply polarized Turkish society, raised questions about the independence of the j udiciary and seemed at times to rely on fabricated evidence. But the case represented a turning point in Turkish history by diminishing the power of the military, for decades the enforcersof secularism. "The era of coups in this country will never return," Erdogan said in a recent speech. One news report, in anticipation of Monday evening's reception, declared, "This symbolic act will mark the beginning of a new era in civilianmilitary relations in Turkey."
By Nicholas Kulish and Alan Cowell
television star. They described a depraved environment in SaNew York Times News Service vile's dressing room at the BBC LONDON — The British studios where teenage girls Broadcasting Corp. said on were molested by Savile and Monday that a former sen- others, including Gadd. ior judge has begun an inThe investigation by Dame quiry into the corporation's Janet Smith, a former appeals "culture and practices" that court judge, is one of two that lay behind the sexual abuse the BBC has commissioned s candal surrounding t h e into the scandal. The other by late television host Jimmy Nick Pollard, a former head of Savile. the rival Sky News, is looking The inquiry opened on specifically into a decision last the first anniversary of Sa- December by an editor at the vile's death at age 84 and a BBC to cancel an investigation day after the British police, of Savile's misconduct at a time widening the scandal, ar- when other sections of the corresteda former pop starin poration were planning Christconnection with the case. mastime tributes to him. The Metropolitan Police The case has shocked the arrested Paul Gadd, better nation and shone an intense known as Gary Glitter from spotlight on the BBC. Nagging the 1970s heyday of glam questions remain there about rock, who is a c onvicted why the investigation by the pedophile. Gadd's arrest fol- " Newsnight" p r ogram w a s lowed accusations that he abruptly canceled, and how abused a teenage girl on the much BBC executives knew premises of the BBC. He was about serious allegations that released on bail late Sunday one of its stars had engaged in after he was questioned in a widespread sexual molestation London police station. in the 1970s and 1980s. Since the British television station ITV broadcast a documentary about Savile earlier this month, some 300 541-548-2066 people have come forward claiming that t hey w e re Adjustable abused by the outlandish Beds 5
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Ukraine's rulingparty leadsin election By Maria Danilova and Yuras Karmanau The Associated Press
KIEV, Ukraine — The Ukrainian president's party will retain its strong grip on power, according to returns Monday from a parliamentary election that was criticized by Western observers as unfair and biased against the opposition. The West was paying close attention to Sunday's vote in the strategic ex-Soviet state of 46 million people, which lies between Russia and the European Union and serves as a key transit nation for Russian
energy supplies to many EU countries. Observers from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe called the vote a setback to Ukraine's democratic a n d E u r o pean aspirations. That assessment could lead to a further freeze in Kiev's ties with the West and push it closer to Russia. Monitors said the election was marred by the absence of jailed former Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko and another opposition leader, the ruling party's use of government funding for the campaign and
the skewed media coverage that favored the ruling party. While the voting process got positive ratings at most polling stations observed, the vote tallying lacked transparency, the
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group said. " Considering t h e ab u s e of power and the excessive role of money in this election, democratic progress appears to have reversed in Ukraine," said W a l burga H a b sburg Douglas, the special coordinator who led the OSCE election observation mission. "We do not think that this election was fair because it was not level."
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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2012
Libya
strategy" so that the Tripolibased team couldbe replaced Continued from A1 by Libyan guards and U.S. ciIn the closing weeks of the vilian officials. p residential campaign, t h e Charlene Lamb, one of the circumstances surrounding department's senior diplomatthe attack on the Benghazi ic security officials, told memcompound have emerged as bers ofthe House oversight a major political issue, as Re- committee last month t h at publicans, led by their presi- by June, one of her aides and dential candidate, Mitt Rom- Nordstrom had identified a ney, have sought to lay blame need for 21 security positions for the attack on President and that 16 of them were to be Barack Obama, who they ar- filled by Libyan bodyguards. gued had insufficiently pro- Americans were to fill the retected U.S. lives there. maining slots, and two assisBut interviews with U . S. tant regional security officers officials and an examination were also to be sent. of State Department docuThe securityarrangements ments do not reveal the kind in Benghazi appeared to reof smoking gun Republicans ceive little scrutiny in Washhave suggested would emerge ington. During the Gadhafi in th e a t t ack's a f termath, government there had not such as a warning that the been a m i ssion there, and diplomatic compound would in December 2011 Kennedy b e targeted and t ha t w a s issued a memo to keep the overlooked by administration Benghazi mission open for officials. only a year. What is clear is that even Housed in a r ented comas the State Department re- p ound, the m ission and a sponded to the June attacks, n earby annex used by t h e crowning the Benghazi com- Central Intelligence Agency pound walls with concertina enabled the United States to wire and setting up concrete interact with Libyans in the barriers to thwart car bombs, eastern part of the country it remained committed to a from a city that had been the security strategy formulated cradle of their revolution. in a very different environBut eastern Libya also had ment a year earlier. another face. Although the In the heady early days af- region had been a wellspring ter the fall of Gadhafi's gov- for the uprising against Gadernment, the administration's hafi's government, it was also plan was to deploy a modest known as one of the major U.S. security force and then sources of militants who travincreasingly rely on trained eled to Iraq in 2007 to join the Libyan personnel to protect main terrorist group there, alU.S. diplomats — a p o l icy Qaida in Mesopotamia. that reflected White House The number of State Deapprehensions about putting partment security agents at combat troops on the ground the compound in Benghazi as well as Libyan sensitivities fluctuated, sometimes d i pabout an obtrusive U.S. secu- ping to as few as two. Five rity presence. U.S. security agents were at In the following months, the compound on Sept. 11the State Department pro- three stationed there and two ceeded with this plan. In one traveling with Stevens. instance, State Department In addition to the Amerisecurity o f f i cials r e placed cans, t here w e r e s e veral the U.S. military team with armed Libyans who served trained Libyan bodyguards, as a q u i ck-reaction f orce. while it also maintained the The Americans were a l so number of State Department able to call on the February securitypersonnel members 17 Martyrs Brigade, a militia at the Benghazi compound supportive of the Libyan govaround the minimum recom- ernment. Yet another small mended level. group of Libyan guards stood watch at the gates and peQuestions at home rimeter of the compound, but B ut the question on t h e this group was unarmed and minds of s ome l awmakers equipped with only whistles is why th e declining secu- and batons. rity situation did not prompt When it came to weapons, a f u ndamental r e t hinking the U.S. security team was of the security needs by the outgunned. The A m ericans S tate Department and t h e were equipped with M4 rifles White House. Three congres- and side arms. But Libya was sional investigations and a rife with rocket-propelled greState Department inquiry are nades, machine guns, mortars examining the attack, which and AK-47s. U.S. officials said included Much of the security departicipants from Ansar alpended on maintaining a low Shariah, al-Qaida in the Is- profile. When venturing into lamic Maghreb and the Mu- town, the Americans drove hammad Jamal network, a a Toyota Land Cruiser, from militant group in Egypt. which they removed the dip"Given the large number lomatic plates and which they of attacks that had occurred intentionally did no t w a sh. in Benghazi that were aimed At one point, Nordstrom, the at Western targets, it is inex- regional security officer, proplicable to me that security posed establishing guard towwasn't increased," said Sen. ers, but the State Department Susan Collins of Maine, the rejected that on the grounds s enior Republican o n t h e that it would make the comHomeland Security and Gov- pound more conspicuous. ernmental Affairs CommitThere was no doubt, howtee, one of the panels holding ever, that there were many inquiries. in Benghazi who knew the Defending their p r epara- compound's location. On June tions, State Department offi- 6, a bomb was planted near cials have asserted that there the U.S. Mission's outer wall, was no specific intelligence blowing out a 1 2 -foot-wide that warned of a large-scale hole. No one was injured. attack on the diplomatic comOn June 11, the lead vehicle pound in B e nghazi, which of the British ambassador's they asserted was u nprec- convoy was hit by an armoredented. The department said piercing r ock e t-propelled it was careful to weigh secu- grenade, wounding a British rity with diplomats' need to medic and driver. The British meet with L i byan o f f icials envoy left Benghazi the next and citizens. day, and the British post in "The lethality of an armed, the city was closed June 17. masked attack b y d o z ens About the same time, the of individuals is something Red Cross in the city pulled greater than we've ever seen out after it was attacked a secin Libya over the last period ond time. "When that occurred, it was that we've been there," Patrick F. Kennedy, the State apparent to me that we were Department'sundersecretary the last flag flying in Bengfor management, told report- hazi; we were the last thing ers at a news conference Oct. on their target list to remove," 10. said Lt. Col. Andrew Wood, But David Oliveira, a State the head of the military secuDepartment security officer rity team in Tripoli. who was stationed in BengIn the event of a significant hazi from June 2 to July 5, attack, the Americans were said he told members and counting o n t h e F e bruary staff of the House Commit17th Brigade to rush to their tee on Oversight and Govern- aid, as it had during the June ment Reform that he recalled 6 bombing. The embassy had thinking that if 100 or more also established a series of assailants sought to breach "trip wires," classified benchthe mission's walls, "there marks about intelligence on was nothing that we could do a ttack preparations or e s about it because we just didn't calating unrest that w ould have the manpower, we just prompt the United States to didn't have the facilities." evacuate theBenghazi compound. But the trip wires did A temporary stay not work. From the start, the State New security cameras with Department's Bureau of Dip- night vision capability were lomatic Security advised the shipped to the Benghazi comembassy's security officer, pound but were still sitting in Eric A. Nordstrom, that he crates when the September needed to develop an "exit attack occurred.
Court hearschallenge to law letting U.S.eavesdrop By Adam Liptak
advocates could show they had been harmed and so had WASHINGTON A standing to sue, and several challenge to a federal law that justices seemed open to the authorized intercepting inter- idea. national communications inIf the case is dismissed volving Americans appeared for lack of standing, there is to face an uphill climb at the a fair prospect that the SuSupreme Court on Monday, preme Court will never rule but not one quite as steep as on the constitutionality of many had anticipated. the law, a 2008 measure that The question in the case broadened the government's was w h ether j o u r nalists, power to eavesdrop on inlawyers and human rights ternational communications. New vorlz Times News service
The law, an amendment to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, wa s p assed after the 2005 disclosure of the Bush a d m inistration's secret program to w i r etap international co m m u nications of people inside the United States without ob taining court warrants. The electronic spying, intended to help pursue terrorists, began after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.
The 2008 law was challenged by Amnesty International, the A merican Civil Liberties Union and o ther groups and individuals, including journalists and lawyers who represent prisoners held at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. The plaintiffs said the law violated their rights under the Fourth Amendment by allowing the government to intercept their international phone calls and emails.
Laycee Oistad works on her math homework Monday during the power hour, a time when kids at the Boys & Girls Club's Ariel Unit receive help on their school work. Ryan Brennecke The Bulletin
Ariel Continued from A1
Role models V ivian Bertucci, 48, i s unemployed and looking for w o rk . B e r tucci l i v es d own the street from t h e Ariel apartments and her 10-year-old daughter, Laycee Olstad, attends the Ariel club. "It's been an amazing place," Bertucci said. "My daughter right now is in a program called Girls on the Run, which teaches kids to have respectfor themselves and how to eat healthy and make the right choices. It's a program I never could have afforded." Shelfer h e lped L a y cee obtain a s c holarship, her mother said. Shelfer even arranged for a professional photographer to take portraits of families whose children attend the Ariel Unit. "Dan is so important to the club," Bertucci said. "He makes the club what it is." Kim Gitchell-Young, 31, lives in the Ariel apartments and is studying criminal justice at Central Oregon Community C o llege. G itchell-
Young said the club has provided structure for her three children, in particular her two sons Malachi, 10, and Jaden, 9. Gitchell-Young and her husband, Teryl Young, also have a daughter Makayla, 11, who attends the club. "My oldest boy looks at Dan (Shelfer) as a mentor, so he was pretty devastated" to hear the club would close, Gitchell-Young said. "There are a lot of kids around here and without this here, a lot of the kids would be on the street." N ikki B arron, 28, i s a single mother of two sons, Marcos, 9, an d A n t hony, 8. Barron lives at the Ariel apartments,where she also works as the housekeeper, cleaning apartments to prepare them fornew tenants. It was a blow for Barron to hear the Ariel Unit would close. "When I heard about this, I got emotional about it," Barron said. She knew how important the program was to her sons. Recently, Anthony came home after t h e p r o gram and told B a r ron, "Dan's kind of like my dad," she said. "Sometimes like any
single parent, it's hard to meet all those needs and Dan is
amazing."
Service workers In addition to housekeeping, Barron babysits a couple of children in the afternoons and evenings, and w o rked at a Shari's Restaurant until she resigned approximately a month ago due in part to a lack of childcare options. Barron said the Power Hour homework program at Boys & Girls Club is "a huge help" because sometimes work takes up so much of her time she cannot give the boys enough help with their homework. Kenny L a Point, h ousing and resident service director for Housing Works, said many families are in a similar situation at the Ariel apartments. "Most of the families are in the service industry, so they don't necessarily work an 8-to-5 job," LaPoint said. "So the after-school programs benefit the families in that the parents can continue to work without having to t ake the
a~~aCLASSIC
Continued from A1 F lights in a n d o u t o f Redmond Airport, which does not have any direct flights to the East Coast, w ere unaffected by t h e storm. Weather events in other parts of the country lead to cancellations in Portland about three times a year, but most often because of snowstorms or ice storms, he said. "This is about the impact that we usually experience for a (major weather event in a) widespread area of the country," he said. Sandy'simpact may have been typical in Portland, but the giant storm soaked and battered a huge swath f rom North C a rolina t o Maine. High storm surges caused extensive flooding on coastal and low-lying areas, and officials warned that the flooding could extend as far i nland. West Virginia was expected to see heavy snowfall overnight, particularly at higher elevations. Up and down the East Coast, the storm caused school and public transportation closures. In Washington, the federal government and the Metro were closed Monday and Tuesday. Early voting was cancelled at least through Tuesday in Maryland and the District of Columbia. Amtrak su sp e n ded service through Tuesday throughout the Northeast Corridor between Boston
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— Reporter: 202-662-7456, aclevenger@bendbulletin.com
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flooding. S peaking a t t h e W h i t e House, P r esident B a r a ck Obama urged the millions of A mericans affected by t h e storm to take Hurricane Sandy seriously. "The most important message that I have for the public right now is, please listen to what your state and local officials are saying. When they tell you to evacuate, you need to evacuate. Do no t d elay. Don't pause; don't question the instructions that are being given, because this is a serious storm and it could potentially have fatal consequence if people haven't acted quickly," he said.
— Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrud@bendbulletin.com
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both of which work on building self-esteem and responsible behavior. Maxwell, t h e ex e c utive director of the Boys & Girls Clubs, said the Ariel club helps fill a basic need for kids, that is a "warm, comfortable haven ... We do a lot more family events over there and try and get the families more engaged and involved."
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time off and come home, or risk losing their job because they have no one to care for their children." Shelfer is adamant that the club is not a daycare program. "It's a place where kids can associate themselves with positive mentors," Shelfer said. For example, there is a Wise Guys program for boys and a Smart
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TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2012 • T HE BULLETIN A S
Long-term
Survey: Economiwoes c may e next resi ent
Continued from A1 They see plenty of w a ys his agency can improve the services i t p r o v ides o lder r esidents who c a nnot l i v e independently. That's why representatives of the program started meeting with key health and senior services personnel this summer and launched theircurrent state listening tour with an Oct. 9 hearing in Medford. The tour is scheduled to end Nov. 9 in Portland. The information gathered from these meetings will be used to help craft what prog ram a d m i nistrators c a l l "Long Term Care 3.0," the first overhaul of the state's long-term care system since t he 1980s. Back t hen O r egon switched from a model focused on nursing homes, where residents received 24hour care in a hospital-like environment, to one that encouraged home-based care services and community living arrangements like adult foster homes and residential care facilities. Weir said 82 percent of the state residents who receive long-term care choose to do so in the home- and community-based environment. Only 18 percent choose an i nstitutional setting l i k e a nursing home. The mission of Long Term Care 3.0 is to improve thisalready successful outcome, he said. "There are some things we can improve," said Selina Hickman, an operations and policy analyst with the Aging and People with Disabilities Program. Hickman said one of the biggest things the state can improve is how it p r epares people for th e r e ality t h at they may need some type of long-term care as they age. Studies show t h e n u m ber of Oregonians who are between 65 and 74 is expected to jump from 272,592 in 2010 to 491,501 in 2030; the number of people who are 75 and o lder is e x pected to j u m p from 229,352 to 459,418 in that same period. Hickman said many people find out they need long-term care during a crisis — after they've broken a hip or have suffered a mild stroke, for instance — and are often caught unprepared to use the services or to pay their costs. The state could work with various groups to improve existing financial planning services and create information lines clients can call to learn what options are available to them in their time of need. Weir also said the state can also improve on how it deals with the elderly when they suffer these crises. He's heard stories on the tour of p e ople t r ansferred out of a hospital or a nursing home beforethey fully recuperated from an injury or a medical issue and admitted to the same facility less than a month later. He's also heard of people forced to stay in one of these facilities longer than they needed to, a situation that poses a great cost to them, the facility and the taxpayer. "Let's have a system that will stop these readmissions," said Charles Frazier, a retired pharmacist who sits on the Central Oregon Health Councilboard of directors. He seconded the need to make sure people get the proper levels of care for the proper amount of time but said the current system "is not structured to do that." Weir said another change that might come with Long Term Care 3.0 is a p o l icy statement that Oregon residents are entitled to homebased health care services or community-based services, much as they are currently entitled to receive care in a nursing home or institutional setting. This type of language would make it easier for people to access these services in communities where they currently may not exist. Once they've finished their listening tour, Weir, Hickman and other program administrators plan to put the finishing touches on L e gislative Concept 371, which w ould officially direct them to come up with a detailed plan for Long Term Care 3.0. Weir said the program administrators will be able to present their comprehensive plan to the Legislature in 2014 if that proposal is approved during the 2013 legislative session. — Reporter: 541-817-7818, mmclean@bendbulletin.com
By Christopher S. Rugaber
mists who responded to the survey. A weaker European WASHINGTON — Whoeconomy would shrink deever wins the U.S. presiden- mand for U.S. exports and tial election will likely strugcost U.S. jobs. Yet there's gle to manage the biggest little the next president can economic threats he'll face. do about it. That's t h e cau t i onary An e ve n m o r e u r g e nt message that emerges from threat to the U.S. economy, the latest Associated Press the economists say, is ConEconomy Survey. gress'failure so far to reach E urope's r ecession w i l l a deal to prevent tax increaspersist deep into the next es and spending cuts from presidential term, according taking effect next year and to a majority of the 31 econo- possibly triggering another The Associated Press
recession. Yet as President Barack Obama has found, the White House can't force a congressional accord. And whether Obama or his Republican challenger Mitt Romney wins Nov. 6, he'll likely have to deal with one chamber of C o ngress
"It's not like there's a clean slate for someone to do what they want," says Joshua Shapiro, chief economist at MFR Inc. Still, there are some ways in w h ich t h e e c onomists t hink t h e Wh i t e Ho u s e w ill b e a ble t o d r iv e t h e
and looser business rules, more than 70 percent of the economists say. They think such policies — the core of Romney's economic m e ssage — would be more likely to help than would Obama's plans for more spending on public works and t argeted led by the opposing party. economy. tax breaks for businesses. Polls suggest th e S e nate The next president, for exOnly about one in five of will remain in D emocratic ample, could help lift growth the economists say Obama's hands after the election and and reduce unemployment policies would be more likethe House i n R e p ublican b y b a c kin g l o w e r i n d i - ly to help spur growth and control. vidual and corporate taxes reduce unemployment.
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Pnces inthis adareeffective 6 AMWednesday, October 31 thru Tuesday,November6, 2012 (unless otherwise noted) n all Safeway stores in Oregon (except Milton-Freewater) and S.W.Washington storesserving Wahkiakum, Cowlitz, Clark, Skamaniaand Klickitat Counties. Items offered for salearenot available to other dealers or wholesalers. Sales of products containing ephedrine, pseudoephedrine or phenylpropanolamine limited by law Quantity rights reserved.SOMEADVERTISING ITEMSMAY NOTBEAVAILABLE IN ALLsTQREs. someadvertised prices maybeeven lower in somestores. on Buyone, Get oneFreerBQGQ") offers, customermust purzhasethefirst item to receive the second item free.BQGOoffers arenot 1/2 price sales. If only a single item purchased,the regular price applies. Manufacturers' couponsmaybeused onpurchased items only — not on free items. limit one couponper purchased item. Customerwill be responsible for tax anddeposits asrequired by law onthe purchased andfree items. No liquor sales in excessof 52 gallons. No liquor sales for resale. liquor sales at l>o.nsed Safewaystores only. O 2012 Safeway InL Availabil>ty of >temsmayvary by store. Online and In-store prices,discounts andoffers maydÃer.
Safeway GreenSplit Peas 16-0z. Limit 1 FREE.
I1FREE WITH CAIID AND COUPON
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PostHoney Bunches of Oats
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•
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Ingredients for life.
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A6
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2012
Storm Continued from A1 "It's the worst I've seen," said David Arnold, watching the storm from his longtime home in Long Branch, N.J. "The ocean isin the road, there are trees down everywhere. I've never seen it this bad." In Queens, shortly after 7 p.m., a tree fell on a house, killing a 30-year-old man, the police said. In Manhattan, where the National Weather Service measured gusts of 54 mph at 2 p.m., a construction crane atop one of the tallest buildings in the city came loose and dangled 80stories over West 57th Street, across the street from Carnegie Hall. Water topped the sea wall in the financial district, sending cars floating in the rushing water. "We could be fishing out our windows tomorrow," said Garnett Wilcher, a barber who lives in the Hammells Houses, a block from the ocean in the Rockaways in Queens. Still, he said he felt safe at home. Pointing to neighboring apartment houses in the cityrun housing project, he said, "We got these buildings for jetties." Hurricane-force winds extended up to 175 miles from the center of the storm; tropical-storm-forcewinds spread out 485 miles from the center. Forecasters said t r opical-storm-force winds could stretch all the way north to Canada and all the way west to the Great Lakes. Snow was expected in some states, with blizzard w a r n i ng s i s s ued for mountainous stretches of Maryland, Virginia and West Virginia. Businesses an d s c h ools were closed; roads, bridges and t u nnels w er e c l osed; and more than 13,000 airline flights were canceled. Even the Erie Canal was shut down. Subways were shut down from Boston to Washington, as were Amtrak and the commuter rail lines. About 1,000 flights were canceled at each of the three major airports in the New York City area. Philadelphia International Airport had 1,200 canceled flights, according to FlightAware, a data provider in Houston. A replica of the HMS Bounty, a tall ship built for the 1962 movie "Mutiny on the Bounty" starring Marlon Brando and used in the recent "Pirates of the Caribbean" series, sank off the North Carolina coast. The Coast Guard said the 180-foot three-masted ship went down near the Outer Banks after being battered by 18-foot-high seas and thrashed by 40-mph winds. The body of one crew member, C l audene C h r i stian, 42, was recovered. Another crew member remained missing. D elaware b a n ne d c a r s and trucks from state roadways for other than "essential personnel." "The most important thing right now is for people to use common sense," Gov. Jack Markell said. "We didn't want people out on the road going to work and not being able to get home again." The storm k n o cked o ut power to hundreds of thousands of homes, stores and office buildings. Consolidated Edison said68,700 customers had lost power — 21,800 in Westchester County, 18,500 on Staten Island and 18,200 in Queens. In New Jersey, the Public Service Electric and Gas Co. said the storm had knocked out power to 36,000 customers. I n C o n necticut, nearly 70,000 people had lost electricity, utility officials reported. Con Edison, fearing damage to its electrical equipment, shut down power preemptively in sections of Lower Manhattan. President Barack Obama, who returned to the W h ite House and met with top advisers, said the storm would disrupt the rhythms of daily life in the states it hit. "Transportation is going to be tied up for a long time," he said, adding that besides flooding, there would probably be widespread power failures. He said utility companies had lined up crews to begin making repairs. But he cautioned that it could be
- 4-k & 4 % - n o
CX Matiash /The Associated Press
Sadie Stern looks out over the choppy Hudson Riverfrom a pier along the Hudson River Greenway Monday in New York. Hurricane Sandy continued on its path, forcing the shutdown of mass transit, schools and financial markets, sending coastal residents fleeing, and threatening a dangerous mix of high winds and soaking rain.
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© 2012 Mcclatchy-Tribune News Service
Then, for a moment, nothing. The sky lightened. Then another blast of rain. Then more wind.
The day brought a giddiness
to schoolchildren who had the day off and to grown-ups who were fascinated by the rough, rising water. Some went surfing, discounting the danger. "The days ahead are going Felquin Piedra, 38, rode his to be very difficult," Gov. Mar- Jet Ski from Queens to Lower tin O'Malley of Maryland said. Manhattan. "There will be people who die "I love the waves," Piedra and are killed in this storm," yelled from New York Harhe said. bor. "The water is warm. I've Alex Sosnowski, a senior jumped in several times." m eteorologist w i t h A cc u Driving t h r ough p l a ces Weather, said potentially dam- like Pompton Plains, N.J., late aging winds would continue Monday afternoon was like Tuesday from Illinois to the an X-Games contest for drivCarolinas — and as far north ers. They had to do tree-limb as Maine — as the storm bar- slaloms on side streets and reled toward the eastern Great gunned their engines anxLakes. iously as they passed wind Gov. Andrew M . C u omo funnels of leaves swirling on of New York, who ordered highways. many of the most heavily used On City Island, off the Bronx bridges and tunnels in New mainland, C h eryl B r i n k er York City closed, warned that sprayed "Sandy Stay Away" the storm's surge could go on her boarded-up art stuslow going. two feet higher than that as- dio, expanding a collage she "The fact is, a lot of these sociated with Tropical Storm started during Tropical Storm emergency crews are not go- Irene last year. The PATH Irene last year. But by midafting to get into position to start system, buses and the Staten ernoon, nearby Ditmars Street restoring power until some IslandFerry system were also w as under as much as five feet of these winds die d own," suspended. of water and Steve Van Wickthe president said. He added, As the storm bore down on lersaid the water had cracked "That may take several days." the Eastern Seaboard, weath- the cement in his cellar. "It's like a little river runForecasters attributed the er was episodic: a strong gust power of the storm to a con- of wind one minute, then mist. ning in my basement," he said. "There are cracks and leaks vergence ofweather systems. More wind. Thin sheets of As th e h u r r icane s w i rled rain dancing down the street. everywhere."
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Source. National HurricaneCenter, Reuters, AP,Weather Underground n orth i n t h e A t l a ntic a n d then pivoted toward land, a wintry storm w a s h eading toward it from the west, and cold air was blowing south from the Arctic. The hurricane left more than 60 people dead inthe Caribbean before it began crawling toward the Northeast.
a
Rath Fremson New York Times News Service
ABOVE: Waves lap over a park walkway near Franklin D. Roosevelt East River Drive in Manhattan on Monday.
Ozier Muhammad
New York Times News Service
RIGHT: People gathered near the Little Red Lighthouse at Jeffrey's Hook in Fort Washington Park in New York on Monday.
Dale Gerhard, The Press of Atlantic City/The Associated Press
A row of houses standsin floodwaters at Grassy Sound in North Wildwood, N.J., as Hurricane Sandy pounds the East Coast Monday.
TV& Movies, B2 Calendar, B3 Horoscope, B3 Comics, B4-5 Puzzles, B5 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2012
O www.bendbulletin.com/community
*
SPOTLIGHT
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Holiday parade seeks 'Misfits'
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Parade onNov. 24in
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downtown Redmond. Inspired by the
popular holiday film "Rudolphthe Red Nose
Reindeer," this year's parade theme is "The Island of Misfit Toys." All entries "must be decorated with lights and will be awarded ribbons based on adher-
ence to the themeand originality," according
to the news release. Entries and floats are divided into six categories: Children, KS
Individual, Family, Commercial, Organization and Mounted/Animal.
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Check-in begins at 3:30 p.m. on the corner of Sixth Street
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judging starts at 4 p.m. Participation is free. The
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parade starts at 5 p.m. Applications will be accepted through Nov. 24. Contact: www.visit
redmondoregon.com or v,'1,
541-923-5191. — From staff reports
YOUR PET
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Say hello to Sammy, an 11-year-old orange tabby who loves corn on the cob. The only thing that he enjoys
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",-:,='.-;-.--.t.":;,"-'~'-::;,;-.:..;Tracy Daugherty —:.,;-''.„:..;: ,.„',.-, Aimee Nezhukumatathii'-:.;::„ .,: „,;.r,-"
more is his morning cantaloupe. Sammy lives with Priscilla, a
6-year-old gray tabby, and Jackie Ralph in Bend. The cats love to
take long napsandthen race through the house
playing andknocking things over. To submit a photo for publication, email a high-
resolution imagealong with your animal's name,
age andspecies or breed, your name,age,city of residence and contact information, and afew
words about whatmakes your pet special. Send photos to pets©bendbulletin.com, drop themoff at1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. in Bend, or mail them to The Bulletin Pets section, P.O. Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708. Contact: 541-3830358.
ADOPT ME
By David jasper • The Bulletin
:::Gettickets
lready the author of four novels and p u b lished. Publishers Weekly gave it a starred Tjckpts fpr as many short-story collections, Cor- r e v iew, calling it "an exemplary account of the Thp ffat rp pf Mfprdp ;-'vallis writer Tracy Daugherty took man." Daugherty followed that success with 2Q12 gjtprar Fpptjygl ' :;::'a turn toward a different kind of , "Just One Catch: A Biography of Joseph Heller" ;t ' htt //' m /nowtix . storytelling a few years ago: literary -,'.: in 2011. "The Brooklyn Book Festival was interested ,biography. '" -. According to Booklist magazine, Daugherty in having me out because Heller was a Brooklyn was working on a biography about his former b o y , so that kind of stuff has been wonderful for teacher and friend, the humorous short-story m e , a nd alotoffun,"DaughertytoldTheBulletin. writer Donald Barthelme, when he had a converTher e 's plenty more fun ahead, a lot closer to : f pntactlnfo@thenature .~/'-'," . sa t i on with his editor about the absence of a biog- h o me. Daugherty — who once shared rhythm raphyabout JosephHeller,authorof"Catch-22." s e c t ion duties with Barthelme in an '80s band So Daugherty wrote that one, too. called Moist and the Towlettes — will soon ar- . :541 647 2233 In addition to reinvigorating attention paid to r i v e in Bend for the eighth annual The Nature his own fiction books, the two biographies have o f W ords festival, a long weekend of readings, 4 -.-;~-:-::.: .- landed Daugherty invitations to an increasing w o r k shops, a dinner with the author and other :' in S i d e number of literary events since 2009, when "Hid- e v ents. • Schedule of The Nature ing Man: A Biography of Donald Barthelme" was . SeeNOW/B6 o f Wor d s events, B6 '
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My dark companion: How a serial killer improved alife
Submitted photo
By Jordan Smith
Addie girl
Special to The WashingtonPost
Meet Addie, a friendly 2-year-old cat looking for that special home to
call her very own. Sheis friendly, outgoing, loves all the attention she can
getandseems toenjoy the company of other
cats and dogs.
If you would like to meetAddie, orany other
animal availablefor adoption at the shelter, visit 61170 S.E. 27th St., Bend. All adoptions include
spay or neutersurgery, a free health exam at a local vet, microchip ID, collar,
leash or carrying box, ID tag, training DVD, free
food and more.
Contact: 541-3823537.
Psychologist Jack Apsche says he found help for himself and troubled youth through correspondence with Gary Heidnik, who kidnapped and tortured a string of women in the 1980s, killing two.
Jack Apsche is one of the few people in history happy to have crossed paths with a serial killer. That was Gary Heidnik, who tortured six women and killed two, and was one of the inspirations for the Buffalo Bill character in "The Silence of the Lambs." Heidnik, who was arrestedin 1987,was considered inscrutable even by sociopathic standards. More than 150 mental health workers in 22 hospitals interviewed him during his life. But perhaps the individual Heidnik most revealed himself to was Apsche. The interactions of the two men are a bizarre and intriguing tale of depravity and redemption, resulting in the creation of an experimental psychological technique that Apsche now touts as a treatment for others whose lives have spun out of control. Now 65, Apsche works at the Ross
Center for Anxiety and Related Disorders in Washington, D.C., a specialist in treating troubled, often violent young men. He commutes from Shepherdstown, WVa., where he lives with his daughter, wife and seven dogs. Apsche has a gruff demeanor nurtured by years of drug use, violent outbursts and 20 months of service in the Vietnam War. Though now an esteemed psychologist, when he was hired as a researcherfor Heidnik's defense, Apsche, who had just received his PhD
A T
P R O N G H O R N
Whether your holiday p arty is a formal din n er in an i n t i m a t e setting or a larger event with live music and dancing, Pronghorn is an extraordinary backdrop for your holiday memories.
in counseling psychology, says he was addicted to sex, suffering from nightly combat flashbacks and battling a cocaine addiction. These days, Apsche looks back on the case as a lifeline. "Gary Heidnik and September 1987 was an absolute turning point for me," Apsche writes in a book he recently completed and is hoping to publish about his relationship with Heidnik. SeeKiller/B6
Book be fore ¹ v e mber t5'" and receive... G O M P L I M E N T A R Y S H U T T L E S E R V I C E TO A L O C A L B END/ R E D M O N D L O C A T I O N
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B2
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2012
T
a M O V IES
FallTV, so ar: Meh
LOCAL MOVIE TIMES FOR TUESDAY,OCT.30 EDITOR'S NOTES:
By Eric Deggans Tampa Bay Times
Before you get too far into this column, I'm going to start with an admission: Some people in the TV business won't think it's very fair. After all, they'll say, the fall TV season has been disrupted by everything from the presidential debates to b aseball playoffs and the World Series. And though the
season officially
Ty
Small wonder ABC is letting creator Shonda Rhimes put anything else on air she wants; it sorely needs whatever lightning Grey's has caught in a bottle.
Comedy
The only s cripted shows in the Top 10 for the 18-to-49 viewers sofar are comedies: "Modern Family" and "The Big Bang Theory." Look at t he Top 2 0 , a n d there are just two 5poTL
started Sept. 24, some n e t w ork shows didn't debut until last week. No matter. It's time to start proclaiming the winners and losers of this latest TV season, five weeks after it started.
Winners NBC and "The Voice" Good news for the formerly l ast-place network: NB C i s the only broadcaster to grow ratings among viewers ages 18 to 49 from last season, now No. Iover the pastfour weeks. That's mostly thanks to NFL football on Sundays and "The Voice" on Mondays and Tuesdays. "This proves one series can ignite a network," said Berman, who w o ndered i f moderately successful shows such as Ryan Murphy's "The New Normal" and Matthew Perry's "Go On" could survive long without " The V oice's" lead-in audience. I'm thinking, um, not.
NFL games Speaking of pro football, a look at the first four weeks of ratings shows six of the Top 10 shows among key viewers are football broadcasts on NBC, CBS and Fox. Itmay be the last place TV still draws a big crowd.
"Grey's Anatomy"
Surprise! It's the highestrated drama among the 18-to49 crowd in its ninth season.
dramas ("Grey's" and "NCIS") among
comedies such as "2 Broke Girls," "The Simpsons" and" Two and a Half Men." Young people, it seems, would rather laugh than cry. Cable TV What are the shows people are buzzing about this fall? Cable series: "The Walking Dead" (AMC), "Sons of Anar-
chy" (FX) and "Here's Comes Honey Boo Boo (TLC). ABC's "The Neighbors" and Fox's "Ben and Kate?" Not so much.
Losers ABC, CBS and Fox T hese networks saw d eclines in t heir 18-to-49 audience, with A B C d i p ping 11 percent, CBS down 18 percent and Fox sinking 25 percent, according to Gorman. Their bets aren't paying off.
Comedy Though established comedies are doing w ell, n ew comedies aren't working as well as advertised. Fox's "The Mindy Project" and "Ben and K ate" have struggled w it h a situation made worse by baseball pre-emptions; ABC's "The Neighbors" sits in the middle o f r a t i ngs, despite airing just before the highe st-rated scripted show o n TV, "Modern Family." And the less said about dreck like NBC's "Guys With Kids," the better.
Accessibility devices are
BEND
available for somemovies at Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 tI /MAX. • There may be an additional fee for 3-Oand IMAX films. • Movie times are subject to change after press time.
Regal Pilot Butte 6 2717 N.E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend,541-382-6347
ARGO (R) 1:15, 3:50, 6:25 ATLAS SHRUGGED:PART II (PG-13) 12:15, 6:15 BEASTS OFTHESOUTHERN WILD (PG-13) 1, 7 CHICKENWITH PLUMS(PG-13) 3:15 ENDOF WATCH(R) 12:30,3:30,5:55 THE MASTER(R) Noon, 3, 6 THE PERKSOFBEINGA WALLFLOWER(PG-13) 12:45, 3:45, 6:45 SEARCHINGFOR SUGAR MAN
(PG-13) 4
Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX 680S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend,541-382-6347
ALEX CROSS (PG-13) I:55, 4:55, 7:30, IO:05 ARGO(R) 12:05,3,6,9 CHASINGMAVERICKS(PG) 12:15, 3:05, 6:05, 9:05 CLOUDATLAS(R) Noon, 4, 7:45 FRANKENWEENIE(PG) 12:55, 4:05, 6:35, 9:25 FUN SIZE(PG-13) 12:45, 3:35, 6:30, 9:20 HERE COMESTHE BOOM (PG)2, 4:30, 7:10, 9:45 HOTEL TRANSYLVANIA3-D (PG) 3:30, 9:15 HOTEL TRANSYLVANIA(PG) 12:35, 6:20 LOOPER(R) 3:20, 9:30 PARANORMAL ACTIVITY4 IMAX (R) 1:45, 4:45, 7:55, 10:15
Warner Bros. Pictures via The Associated Press
Haiie Berry and Jim Broadbent star in "Cloud Atlas," an epic spanning centuries and genres. PARANORMALACTIVITY4 (R) 1:40, 4:40, 7:45, 10:10 PITCH PERFECT (PG-13) 12:20, 3:15, 6:15, 9:IO SILENT HILL: REVELATION(R) 1:30 SILENT HILL: REVELATION3-D (R) 3:55, 7:15, 10 SINISTER (R) 1:25, 4:10, 7:20, 9:55 SEVENPSYCHOPATHS(R) 1:05, 4:15, 6:55, 9:35 TAKEN 2 (PG-13) 1:15, 4:25, 7, 9:40 TROUBLE WITHTHE CURVE (PG13) 12:30, 6:45
McMenamins Old St. Francis School 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend, 541-330-8562
THE BOURNELEGACY(PG-13) 6 V/H/S (R) 9:15 After 7 p.m., shows are 21and older only.Youngerthan21may attend screenings before 7 p.m.if accompaniedby a legalguardian.
Tin Pan Theater
As of press time, complete movie
l ase r
Redmond Cinemas 1535 S.W. DdemMedo Road, Redmond, 541-548-8777
FUN SIZE (PG-13) 4:45, 6:45 HERE COMESTHE BOOM (PG)4:45,7 HOTEL TRANSYLVANIA(PG) 5:15, 7:15 PARANORMALACTIVITY4(R)5,7
SISTERS Sisters Movie House 720 Desperado Court, Sisters, 541-549-8800
ARGO (R) 6:15 FRANKENWEENIE(PG) 6
E~vress
S PA c en t er
(541) 318-7311
www.northwestmedispa.com
•
Madras Cinema 5 1101 S.W. U.S. Highway 97, Madras, 541-475-3505
CHASINGMAVERICKS(PG) 4:15, 6:40 FRANKENWEENIE 3-D (PG) 4:35, 6:50 FUN SIZE(PG-13) 5, 7 PARANORMAL ACTIVITY4(R)5:30, 7:30 SILENT HILL: REVELATION(R) 4:50, 7:10
PRINEVILLE Pine Theater 214 N. Main St., Prineville, 541-416-1014
HERE COMESTHE BOOM (PG)4,7 TROUBLEWITH THECURVE (UPSTAIRS — PG-13) 6 Pine Theater's upstairs screening room has limited accessibility.
„.«,(I',lr' © Hat Oint GE Hotpoint i Laundry Pair 8 wash cyc/es i 4 dty cyc/es
541-389-1505
Rebecca Nonweiler, MD, Board Certified •
MADRAS
400 SW Bluff Dr Ste 200 Bend, OR 97702
N O R T H W E ST
Warehouse Prices
REDMOND
Providing unparalled service across a variety of industries since 1983.
869 N.W. Tin PanAlley, Bend, 541-241-2271
ME D I
times were unavailable. For more information, visit www.tinpantheater. com.
LOOPER(R) 6:15 PITCH PERFECT (PG-13) 6:30
vvvvw.expresspros.com
68
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HNsoN TV.APPLIANCE
LOCALTV LISnNr.S TUESDAY PRIME TIME 10/30/12
ALSO INHD;ADD600 TOCHANNELNo •
KATU
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'
*In HD, thesechannels run three hours ahead. /Sports programming mayvary. BD-Bend/Redmond/Sisters/BiackButte Di ital PM-Prineviiie/Madras SR-Sunriver L-LaPine
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tRRRX~RKHK~RKR2RRRK~RRK~RREK~RKR2RREI~~RRKREEK~XKEHt EHK~RDiRH t 1RK KATU News World News K A TU News at 6 (N) n cc Jeopardy! 'G' Wheel Fortune Dancing With the Stars: All-Stars Happy Endings Apartment 23 Private Practice (N) n '14' ac KA TU News (11:35) Nightline
Nightly News Newsohannei 21 at 6 (N) « Jeop ardy! 'G' Wheel Fortune The Voice Vocalists compete against eachother. (N) 'PG' « Jay Leno (tg:gt) Go On New Normal News News Evening News Access H. Ol d Christine How I Met 30 Rock n '14' NCIS A petty officer is shot. (N) N C IS: Los Angeles (N)n 'PG' V eg as Solid Citizensn(N) '14' N e w s Letterman KEZI 9 News World News K EZI 9 News KEZI 9 News Entertainment The insider (N) Dancing With the Stars: Aii-Stars Happy Endings Apartment 23 Private Practice (N) n '14' « KEZ I 9 News (11:35) Nightiine Videos Two/Half Men Two/Haif Men Big Bang Big Bang Rai s ing Hope Ben and Kate New Girl (N) '14' Mindy Project News KFXO iDi IEI IEI IEIAmerica's Funniest Home TMZ (N) n 'PG' The Simpsons Family Guy '14' Ellen DeGeneres:TheMark Twain Prize (N) 'PG' E r ma Bombeck FrontiineSky, BigBig Money(N) VOCES on PBS Lemon'PG' « Koae O B Q B Wild Kratts Y Electric Comp. This Old House Business Rpt. PBS NewsHour (N) n « NewsChannel 8 NightlyNews NewsChannel 8 News Live at 7 (N) I nside Edition The Voice Vocalistscompeteagainst eachother. (N) 'PG' cc KGW 0 (10:01) GoOn New Normal NewsChannel 8 Jay Leno Emily Owens, M.D.(N) '14' « Sei n feld 'PG' S einfeid 'PG' 'Tii Death 'PG' 'Tii Death 'PG' KTYZDT2IEI 0 B IH We ThereYet? We There Yet? King of Queens King of Queens Engagement Engagement H art of Dixie (N) n 'PG' « Mexico/Bayless Simply Ming 'G' New Tricks Half Life n cc Frontline PresidentBarackObamaandMitt Romney. n 'PG' cc World News Tavis Smiley (N) Charlie Rose(N) n cc PBS NewsHour n cc OPBPL 175 173
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Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars "Friday the 13th (5:45) * "Friday the 13th Pert Vii: JasonTakesManhattan" (1989,Horror) Jensen Daggett, Scott * "Jason Goesto Hell: TheFinal Friday" (1993,Horror) JonD.LeMay,Kari * "Jason X" (2002, Horror) LexaDoig, Lisa Ryder, ChuckCampbell. The • *AMC 102 40 39 Part V/i" Reeves.Hockey-maskedslasher follows teensoncruise. « Keegan.SlasherJasongoesafter blood relatives. « maskedkiler stalks studentsaboard a spacecraft. « *ANPL 68 50 26 38 The Haunted Land of Misery 'PG' The Haunted n 'PG' cc Life: Reborn Challenges n 'PG' Lif e: Reborn n 'PG'ac Life: RebornMammals(N) 'PG' L i fe: Reborn Fish (N) n 'PG' Lif e : Reborn n 'PG' cc BRAVO1 37 4 4 Flipping Out « Flipping Out Houseof Lies « Flip ping Out Jeff upsets Gage. F l i pping Out Cleaning House Fli p ping Out Windy City Wedding Flipping Out Barbie Bitch(N) Wh a t Happens Flipping Out CMT 190 32 42 53 Roseanne 'PG' Roseanne 'G' Reba 'PG' cc R eba 'PG' cc R eba 'PG' cc R eba 'PG' cc R eba 'PG' cc R eba 'PG' cc K i tchen Nightmaresn '14' cc K i tc hen Nightmares n '14' cc K i tc h en Nightmares n '14' cc CNBC 54 36 40 52 Billions Behind Bars 60 Minutes on CNBC American Greed Mad Money 60 Minutes on CNBC American Greed Younger- Skin Skin Secrets CNN 55 38 35 48 Anderson Cooper360 (N) cc P i e rs Morgan Tonight (Liv(N) e) Anderson Cooper 360(N) cc M a ssachusetts Senate Debate P i ers Morgan Tonight Anderson Cooper360 cc Anderson Cooper360cc COM 135 53 135 47(4:56) Futurama Always Sunny South Park 'MA' (6:29) Tosh.0 Colbert Report Daily Show W o rkahoiics T o sh.0 '14' To s h.0 '14' Tos h.0 '14' Tos h.0 (N) '14' Brickleberry (N) Daily Show C o lbert Report COTV 11 Dept./Trans. C i ty Edition P a i d Program Kristi Miller R e dmond City Council Kristi Miller Ci t y Edition CSPAN 61 20 12 11 Capitol Hill Hearings Capitol Hill Hearings *DIS 87 43 14 39 Gravity Fallsn Gravity Falls n Phineas, Ferb Good-Charlie Austin & Ally n Jessie 'G' cc A.N.T. Farm 'G' "Girlvs. Monster" (2012)Olivia Holt. n 'PG'cc Shake it Up! 'G' Phineas, Ferb A.N.T. Farm 'G' Phineas, Ferb *DISC 156 21 16 37 I (Aimost) Got AwayWith it '14' A l aska: The Last Frontier n '14' Alaska: The Last Frontier n '14' Alaska: The Last Frontier n '14' Alaska: The Last Frontier (N) 'PG' Fighting Tuna CapeCodBay'14' Alaska: The Last Frontier n 'PG' *E! 1 36 2 5 (4:00) "She'sOutof MyLeague" Keeping Up With the Kardashians E! News (N) Ice LovesCoco Jonas Jonas Jonas When TeensKill (N) '14' Chelsea Lately E! News ESPN 21 23 22 23 30 for 30 (N) 2012 World Series of PokerFinalTableFromLas Vegas. (N) (Live) Spo r tsoenter (N) (Live) « SportsCenter (N)(Live) « Sportsoenter (N)(Live) « Sportsoenter (N)(Livei « AII.AccessKent AINAccessKent BestoftheNFL NFLLive cc ESPN2 22 24 21 24 Auto Racing GlobalRallycross Championship (N) 2 0 12 Gold Glove Awards E:60 (N) 30 for 30 ESPNC 23 25 123 25 Bay City Blues « College Football From10/26/02. « Bay City Blues « AWA Wrestling « College Football 1993Washington at California From Oct. 9, 1993. H-Lite Ex. H-L i te Ex. H-L i te Ex. H-L i te Ex. H.L i te Ex. H-L i te Ex. ESP NFC Press H-Lite Ex. ESPNN 24 63 124203SportsCenter (N)(Live) cc SportsCenter (N)(Live) cc SportsCenter (N)(Live) cc *** "Edward Scissorhands" (1990)Johnny Depp,WinonaRyder. *** "Beetieluice" (1988,Comedy)Michael Keaton, Aiec Baldwin. FAM 67 29 19 41 * "Poltergeist iii" (1988)TomSkerritt, Nancy Allen. Premiere. The 700 Club n 'G' « FNC 57 61 36 50 The O'Reilly Factor (N) cc Hannity (N) On Record, GretaVanSusteren The O'Reilly Factor cc Hannity On Record, Greta VanSusteren The Five *FOOD 177 62 98 44 BestDishes Pauia's Cooking Chopped Chopped FarFarcut! 'G' ChoppedSayingSayonara Chopped CakeWalk'G' Chopped Fourfirefighters battle. C hopped 'G' FX 131 How I Met Ho w I Met How I Met Two /Half Men Two/Half Men ** "X-Men Origins: Wolverine" (2009, Action) HughJackman, Liev Schreiber. Sons of AnarchyAblation 'MA' (11:05) Sons ofAnarchy 'MA' HGTV 176 49 33 43 Property Virgins Property Virgins Property Virgins Property Virgins Hunters int'I H o use Hunters Love it or List it 'G' « Property Virgins Property Virgins House Hunters Hunters int'I M i l lion Dollar Rooms (N)'G' « *HIST 155 42 41 36 The MenWho Built America A NewWarBegins 'PG' cc The MenWhoBuilt America 'PG' The Men Who Built America 'PG' The Men Who Built America Changingthe Game(N) 'PG' cc Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Abby's Ultimate Dance LIFE 138 39 20 31 Wife Swap n 'PG' « Wife SwapHeene/Siiver n 'PG' W i fe Swap Parker/Robinson'PG' Abby's Ultimate Dance PrankMy Mom Prank My Mom The Houstons The Houstons MSNBC 59 59 128 51 The Ed Show(N) TheRachelMaddow Show (N) The Last W ord The Ed Show The Rachel MaddowShow The Last Word Hardball With Chris Matthews MTV 192 22 38 57 Friendzone 'PG' Friendzone 'PG' Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Totally Clueless Pranked: Love Jersey Shore n '14' « Teen Mom 2: Catch Up Special 2 Underemployed (N) n '14' « (1t:01) Underemployed '14' « NICK 82 46 24 40 SpongeBob SpongeBob Spongeaob Spongeaob Drake & Josh Figure ItOut'Y' FullHouse'G' Full House'G' Full House'G' Full House'G' TheNanny'PG' TheNanny'PG' Friendsn '14' (11:33) Friends OWN 161103 31 103Personal Justice n '14' « Personal Justice n '14' « Oprah: WhereAreThey Now? n Oprah: Where AreTheyNow? n Oprah: Where AreThey Now? n Oprah: Where AreThey Now?(N) Oprah: Where AreThey Now?n ROOT 20 45 28* 26 Bull Riding Ac t ion Sports World Tour MarkFew Show Golden Age Bensinger UEFA Champions LeagueSoccerBorussiaDortmundvsRealMadridCF GoldenAge The Dan PatrickShow SPIKE 132 31 34 46 Tattoo Night. T attoo Night. I n k Master n '14' « ink Master SemiNude911'14' i n k Master n '14' « ink Master TattooHerWhat?'14' ink Master Trick or Freak (N) '14' Tattoo Night. T attoo Night. SYFY 133 35 133 45Face Off Creatingmonsters. '14' Face Off '14' Face Off Junkyard Cyborg'PG' F ace Off Scene of the Crime'14' Face Off Immortal Enemies(N) T o tal Blackout Viral Video F a ce Off Immortal Enemies TBN 05 60 130 BehindScenes JoyceMeyer J osephPrince RodParsley P r aisetheLord'Y'« ACLJ Full Flame S e c rets Crefio Dollar P raise the Lord TBN Classics *TBS 16 27 11 28 Friends n 'PG' Friendsn 'PG' King of Queens King of Queens Seinfeld 'PG' Seinfeld 'PG' Big Bang B ig B ang B ig B ang B ig B ang B ig B ang B ig B ang C ona n (N) '14' cc ***"The Unknown" (1927)Lon Horror) BorisKarloff Anna Lee, **** "One Flew Overthe Cuckoo's Nest"(1975, Drama)Jack Nichoison, LouiseFletcher, Brad ****"The Snake (615) *** "Freaks"(1932, Horror)WallaceFord, Oiga *** "Bedlam" (1946, TCM 101 44 101 29 Chaney,NormanKerry. Prt" « Baclano va,LeilaHyams.« Billy House. ~c Dourif. An irreverenttroublemaker iscommitted to an asylum. « *TLC 178 34 32 34 19Kids-Count 19Kids-Count 19Kids-Count 19Kids-Count 19Kids-Count 19Kids-Count BreakingAmishrt'14'« 19 Kids and Counting (N) rt 'G' E x treme Chea. Extreme Chea. 19 Kids and Counting 'G' « *TNT 17 26 15 27 NBA Basketball BostonCeitics at MiamiHeat (N)(Live) cc NBA Basketball DallasMavericks atLosAngeles Lakers(N) (Livei ac inside the NBA(N) (Live) ac The Mentalist SeeingRedn '14' 'TOON 84 "Dear Dracula" (2012),RayLiotta MAD 'PG' Wri d, Gumball Wrid, Gumball Level Up 'PG' Looney Tunes Adventure Time King of the Hill King of the Hill American Dad American Dad Family Guy '14' Family Guy '14' 'TRAV 179 51 45 42 Bourdain: NoReservations Biz a rre Foods/Zimmern Man v. Food 'G' Man v. 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TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
B3
ADVICE & ASTROLOGY
Teachershaveenough to do without having to do it all Dear Abby:"Chaplin, Conn.,
Reader" (Aug. 16) suggested thatteachers should be sharing life lessons with children. Unfortunately, many people in our society believe it — including parents. Students come to us w i t h e v er-increasing deficits in many noncurricular areas. But it is NOT the job of public educators to teach them the importance of f a milies,
helping grandparents, caring forhousehold pets,etc. If these things come up in the course of the day and there is aneed to address them, we try to clarify any misconceptions. But taking time to prepare and teach a lesson on any of these small but important subjects is no longer an option. The demands placed on teachers today are vast and complex. Just getting parents to follow through at home on school responsibilities is a job in itself. Many of them don't seem to think they need to help their kids be successful in school. — Seenlt All in Michigan Dear Seen It AII:Thank you for your comments. The letter from "Chaplin, Conn., Reader" brought a HUGE number of responses on this issue, primarily from teachers: Dear Abby:I have worked in an elementary school for nine years. A teacher is a counselor, doctor, social worker and behavioral specialist all in one. Kids come to class dirty, hungry, tired, with no manners or clue about the alphabet or counting. Teachers have halted lessons because a child is in a meltdown. Some kids have never held a pencil or scissors and don't know how to share ortake directions from an adult. It's sad to hear them say they have no crayons at home or books to read. As for testing, unless the parents do THEIR job, we will see little improvement in scores. And no, I don't work in a big-city school district — this is a nice suburban area. — Still Love My Job
DEAR ABBY Dear Abby:I spend half my teaching time on behavioral issues, social skills, bullying, how to work in a group and just trying to hold kids' attention. Many children today are so used to constant stimulation from TV, video games, texting, etc., that their attention spans max out at 30 seconds. I practically have to sing and dance to reach them or they tune out. I suggest "Chaplin" go to a school, volunteer, and try to become a part of the solution instead of adding to the burden of a lready overworked teachers. — Teaching in Tacoma Dear Abby:You said parents should be the ones teaching the kinds of things the Connecticut reader wrote about. Then you asked where the parents are. Let me tell you! They're too busy on their smartphones talking to or fighting with their
latest boy- or girlfriend, playing electronic games, out drinking and partying so much they don't know or care where their kids are. Parents who actually spend time with their children and give them undivided attention are sadly in the minority. Those who help to teach them are even fewer in number. — Kansas Reader Dear Abby: You are correct thatteachers are overwhelmed by many curricular, legislative and administrative demands. However, educators can instill many of these life lessons into students by acting as positive role models who consistently demonstratecore values such as integrity, respect and determination. Students tend to do and learn what they see even more than what they are told — by parents AND teachers. — Anne in Nevada — Write Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069.
Horoscope:HappyBirthday for Tuesday,Oct. 30, 2012 By Jacqueline Bigar Life events this year will encourage you to transform andgrow in new ways. When changeemanatesfrom the person ashis or herchoice, it is far easier to adapt to thanwhen it is forced. Others will likethe results, though at times they might be reactive to the process. Yourstyle of communication also will changeand be more effective. If you aresingle, you will attract manyadmirers. Until you are with someonefor ayear, do not consider the relationship long term. Ifyou are attached, your relationship evolves, which is areflection of the transformation happening within yourself. TAURUS understands you. The Stars Showthe Kind of DayYou'll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult ARIES (March21-April19) ** * You will want to deal with an authority figure, especially if your interactions with this person involve your funds. An associate might be more successful than you in handling this issue, so let him or her takethe lead. Tonight: Time for a little more fun and a goodmeal. TAURUS(April 20-May 20) ** * * * Y ou might want to have a situation go yourway.This might seem like anexcellent idea, but be aware that there will be ramifications if you becometoo demanding. Others appear to have the cards stacked in their favor, ultimately. Tonight: Beamin what you want. GEMINI (May 21-June20) * ** Much goi is ng onbehindthe scenes. Step backand observe. By using whatyou learn, you will be able to handle an uncomfortable situation involving a financial matter. You find that a partner changes quickly in your interactions. Give this person space by being less judgmental. Tonight: Not to be found. CANCER(June21-July 22) ** * * Z ero in on your priorities, with the knowledge thatyou have an excellent opportunity to accomplish a lot. Others seem to bechanging in front ofyour eyes. Knowthat how they are now might not be theway they will be in the future. Just watch the process rather than react to it. Tonight: Where the gang is. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ** * * You are in the limelight, whether you like it or not. You might decide to make an adjustment to your schedule asyou become more aware of others observing your style. Postpone some personal errands for
a different day. Tonight: Stay on top of your work. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ** * * * Reach out to someone at a distance. Youcould feel likeyou're being stretched a little thin, and you might need tomakean adjustment. Your ingenuity comes tothe rescueand allowsyou to relaxasyou discover the correct path for you.Just go with the moment. Tonight: Take innewvistas. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ** * * * Y ou might want to get to the bottom of an issue that involves your funds and/or a partner. A change involving your domestic life becomes possible, finally. Are you having secondthoughts? Know thatyou do notneed to makea decisionnow. Tonight: Chat with a dear friend. SCORPIO(Oct. 23-Nov. 21) ** * * Defer to others, and allow greater give-and-take.Youare full of energyand want tosharemore of your ideas.Perhapsyou might be more successful if youtried a different approach. Friendsand loved onesseek you out; makechoices accordingly. Tonight: Gowith someone's suggestion. SAGITTARIUS(Nov. 22-Dec. 21) ** * * Be more opencompromise to in your daily life. Let go ofstructure and rigid ideas.Youalso might beholding back someinformation regarding an importantpersonalmatter. Followyour sixth sensewith this and aseparate matter involving your finances.Tonight: Get someexercise. CAPRICORN(Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ** * * * E xpress your creativity with openness and awillingness to listen to feedback. Others enjoy being with you whenyou are like this. Whetheryou are brainstorming or simply making plans, you enjoyall the advice. Tonight: Forget tomorrow. Live it up now. AQUARIUS(Jan. 20-Feb. 18) ** * * You mightfeel saddled with more responsibilities, andcouldbe in the mood to rebel.Your instincts come through foryou with aninvestment or a financial decision. Listen toyour inner voice, andfollowthrough on whatyou are hearing. Tonight: Headhome. PISCES (Fed.19-March 20) ** * * You have a lot to say, and there is a lot on your mind. Stop, and do more listening. Theanswers to questions you might havearewithin your grasp. A friend appears to be changing right in front of you. Make no judgments yet. Don't close down, either, even if you want to. Tonight: Out and about. © 2012 by King Features Syndicate
O M M U N IT Y
A LE N D A R
Pleaseemail event information to communitylife@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Allow at least 10days before the desired date of publication. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351. the Oregon Athletic & Educational Foundation; $12, $20two haunts, $25 all haunts; 7 p.m.; old Parr Lumber SLIGHTLYSPOOKY STORIES: buildings, 443 S.W.Evergreen Ave., Storyteller Heather McNeil Redmond; www.scaremegood.com. entertains with family-friendly FOR ANIMALSSAKEART songs and "Slightly Spooky, AUCTION:Featuring live music, Somewhat Silly Stories"; for food, a costume contest and more; ages 3 and up, costumes encouraged; free; 6:30 p.m.; proceeds benefit the Redmond Humane Society; free; 7:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7080 AmbianceArt Co-op,435 Evergreen Ave., Redmond; www.ambiance or www.deschuteslibrary .org/calendar. artonline.com. CABINPROJECT: The PortlandHISTORYPUB:A presentation by Harriet Langmas, legendary based folk-pop band performs; $5; Bend clothes designer 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. and socialite; free; 7 p.m.; Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879. McMenamins Old St. Francis THE REVERENDPEYTON'S BIG School, 700 N.W. Bond St., DAMN BAND:The Indiana-based Bend; 541-382-5174 or www country-blues act performs, .mcmenamins.com. with Harley Bourbon and Boxcar THE CAPITOLSTEPS:A parody, Stringband; $10 plus fees, $13 with music, of contemporary at the door; 8:30 p.m., doors politics; SOLD OUT;7:30 p.m.; open at 8 p.m.; Domino Room, Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall 51 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or 541-788-2989. www.towertheatre.org. MOON MOUNTAINRAMBLERS: The Americana bandperforms, with a scream contest; $7, $5with a costume; 9:30 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing 8 WEDNESDAY Taproom, 24 N.W.GreenwoodAve., HOWL-0-WEEN:With pet Bend;541-388-8331. photos, a costume contest, THRILLERDANCE PARTY:W ithMC refreshments and more; Mystic and Gainon the lllyrikill, a proceeds benefit the Humane costume contest and more; free; Society of Central Oregon; free; 10 p.m.; Astro Lounge, 939 N.W. 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m.; Humane Bond St., Bend; 541-388-0116. Society of Central Oregon, 61170 S.E. 27th St., Bend; 541382-3537 or www.hsco.org. THURSDAY PUMPKIN PATCH: Free admission; noon-6 p.m.; Central "BONESBRIGADE,AN OregonPumpkin Company, AUTOBIOGRAPHY":A screening 1250 N.E. Wilcox Ave., of the unrated 2012 film about a Terrebonne; 541-504-1414 or skateboarding team in the 1980s; www.pumpkinco.com. $8; 6 p.m., doors open at 5 p.m.; OLD MILL DISTRICT McMenamins Old St. Francis School, HALLOWEEN PARTY: Pumpkin 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382painting, crafts, trick-or-treating, 5174 or www.mcmenamins.com. wagon rides, circus performers "GREENFIRE":A screening and more; free; 4-7 p.m.; Center of the documentary film about Plaza, Old Mill District, Bend; legendary conservationist Aldo 541-312-0131 or www.theold Leopold, hosted by the Ochoco mill.com. National Forest Service; free; 6-8:30 REDMONDFIREANDRESCUE p.m.; Crook County High School, HALLOWEEN PARTY:Trick-ortreat at the Redmond fire station, Eugene Southwell Auditorium, 1100 S.E. Lynn Blvd., Prineville; with games and information 541-416-6647. about fire safety; free; 4-8:30 SCOTT PEMBERTON BAND:The p.m.; Redmond Fire 8 Rescue, Portland-based rockers perform; 341 N.W. Dogwood Ave.; 541-504-5000. free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 N.W. Bond St., COMMUNITY HARVESTPARTY: Bend; 541-382-5174 or www Featuring games, candy and .mcmenamins.com. more; free; 6-8 p.m.; Calvary "IT'S ONLYMONEY": Preview night Chapel Redmond, 616 S.W. Ninth St.; 541-923-8614. of Cascades Theatrical Company's presentation of the musical comedy DOWNTOWN TRICK-ORabout mixing love and money; $10; TREAT:Trick-or-treat at various businesses; see website for a list 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, of participating businesses; free; 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www 6 p.m.; downtown Bend; 541.cascadestheatrical.org. 788-3628 or www.downtown bend.org. "JESUSCHRISTSUPERSTARUK ROCKSPECTACULAR":A screening HALLOWEEN HALL:Trick-orof the Andrew Lloyd Webber rock treat at the COCC'sJuniper opera, starring Ben Forster, Tim Hall; for ages12 and younger; Minchin and Melanie Chisholm; $18; free; 6-8 p.m.; Central Oregon 7:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium Community College, 2600 16 & IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse N.W.College Way, Bend; Drive, Bend; 541-382-6347. 541-383-7593. PROPHETSOFADDICTION: The HAUNTEDHOUSES:Featuring three haunted houses; Seattle-based rock band performs; "Dark Intentions" and "The $6,plusfeesin advance;8 p.m., Haunt at Juniper Hollow" are doors open at 7:30 p.m.; The Sound recommended for ages12 and Garden,1279 N.E. Second St., Bend; older; "Distortions" 3-D haunt 541-633-6804 or www.bend is all ages; proceeds benefit ticket.com.
TODAY
LOCALANDLOVIN' IT: More than 70 vendors; blood drive for American Red Cross, canned food DIA DELOS MUERTOS drive for Saving Grace, yoga, zumba CELEBRATION: Celebrate the Day and a fashion show; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; of the Dead with live music, a DJ, traditional art installations, Mexican The Riverhouse Convention Center, 2850 N.W. Rippling River folkloric ballet and food; proceeds Court, Bend; 541-389-3111 or benefit Rise Up International and Recursos para Derechos Humanos; prbystormie@hotmail.com. free admission; 3 p.m.; The Old WILDFIREPOTTERY SHOWCASE: Stone, 157 N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend; The Clay Guild of the Cascades 541-390-6213. hosts an event of continuous ceramic demonstrations, potter FIRSTFRIDAY GALLERY WALK: Event includes art exhibit openings, booths with pieces for sale and more; free admission; 10 a.m.artist talks, live music, wine and 5 p.m.; Highland Magnet School, food; free; 5-9 p.m.; the Old Mill 701 N.W. Newport Ave., Bend; District and downtown Bend. 541-388-2636 or www.clay "IT'S ONLY MONEY": Opening night guildofthecascades.com. of Cascades Theatrical Company's AUTHORPRESENTATION:Larry presentation of the musical comedy Jacobs, Don Kunz, John Kvapil, Pete about mixing love andmoney; with Lovering and John Martin read from a champagneand dessert reception; theirbooks,"The GuysBig Book $24, $18 seniors, $12 students; of Poetry" and "TheGuys Home 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, Maintenance Poetry Manual"; free; 148 N.W. GreenwoodAve., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www.cascades 2-4 p.m.; Dudley's Bookshop Cafe, theatrical.org. 135 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-749-2010. "MOONRISEKINGDOM": A screening of the PG-13-rated 2012 BECOMING A HUMORIST: Joel film; free; 7:30 p.m.; Jefferson Clements talks about what it takes County Library, Rodriguez Annex, to become a humorist; free; 2 p.m.; 134 S.E. E St., Madras; 541-475Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. 3351 or www.jcld.org. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1032 or www.deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. HIGH DESERTCHAMBER MUSIC — ENLIGHTENMENT TRIO: String HUMAN DIGNITYCOALITION musicians play selections of ANNIVERSARYPARTY:A barn chamber music; $35, $10 children dance featuring a BBQ, anauction, and students; 7:30 p.m.; The live music and a Western-themed Oxford Hotel, 10 N.W. Minnesota costume contest; $10 in advance, Ave., Bend; 541-382-8436, info© $15 at the door; 6-10 p.m.; Sons highdesertchambermusic.com or of Norway Hall, 549 N.W. Harmon www.highdesertchambermusic.com. Blvd., Bend; 541-385-3320 or www THE INFAMOUSSTRINGDUSTERS: .humandignitycoalition.com. The progressive bluegrass band BIG NIGHT IN THEBIG HOUSE:A performs, with Polecat; $15 plus benefit for the Juniper Junction fees in advance, $20 at the door; Relief Nursery; featuring Trivial 8 p.m.; Domino Room, 51 N.W. "Prison" Pursuit, snacks and a Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-788souvenir mug shot; registration 2989 or www.p44p.biz. requested; $35; 7-10 p.m.; Deer JOSH AND MER:The PortlandRidge Correctional lnstitution, based indie-rock act performs, with 3929 E. Ashwood Road, Madras; BrokenDown Guitars;$5;8:30 p.m .; 541-475-2537. Liquid Lounge, 70 N.W. Newport KATHY BOYD8(PHOENIX RISING: Ave., Bend; 541-389-6999. The roots music group performs, preceded by a songwriting workshop; proceeds benefitthe High 8 Dry Bluegrass Festival; $10 SATURDAY general admission, $20 workshop; VFW BREAKFAST: Community 2 p.m. workshop, 7 p.m. concert; breakfast with eggs, bacon, ham, Runway Ranch, 22655 Peacock eggs, hashbrowns, biscuits and Lane, Bend; 503-691-1177. gravy and more; $8.50, $7.50 "IT'S ONLY MONEY": Cascades seniors and children12 and younger; Theatrical Company presents the 8:30-11 a.m.; VFWHall, 1503 N.E. musical comedy about mixing love Fourth St., Bend; 541-389-0775. and money; $24, $18 seniors, $12 LORD'S ACRE DAY:The 66th annual students; 7:30 p.m.;Greenwood event features a sale of crafts, Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood baked goods and art, live music, a Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www barbecue dinner, an auction, 10K .cascadestheatrical.org. run, 5K walk and more; proceeds TRIBUTE TO ANDREW LLOYD benefit Powell Butte Christian WEBBER: A musical tour of Andrew Church projects; free admission, Lloyd Webber melodies; featuring $10 barbecue, $15 in advance or the Youth Choir of Central Oregon $25 day ofeventto race;7:30 a.m. and choral groups from Bend and registration, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. events; Sisters High Schools; proceeds Powell Butte Christian Church, benefit CASA of Central Oregon; 13720 S.W. State Highway126; $15-$75 plus fees; 7:30 p.m.; Tower 541-548-3066 or www.powell Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; buttechurch.com. 541-317-0700 or www ART PARTY:View and purchase .towertheatre.org. art from a variety of artists; food POLYRHYTHMICS: The Seattleand drink available; a portion of based Afro-funk band performs, proceeds benefits the St. Charles Foundation and Sara's Project; free; with Eleven Eyes; $8 plus fees in 10 a.m.-6 p.m.; Harkness-Williams advance, $12 at the door; 8:30 p.m.; Domino Room, 51 N.W.Greenwood home, 1 Beech Lane, Sunriver; 541-593-2127 or sunriversisterO Ave., Bend; 541-788-2989 or chamberscable.com. www.p44p.biz.
FRIDAY
PET CALENDAR Desert Sage Agility, 24035 DoddsRoad, Bend; StephanieMorrisat541-6336774 or www.desertsageagility.com. BEHAVIORALTRAINING: PUPPY MANNERS CLASS: Social Cost by quotation; times by appointment; W ednesdays;Lin's skills for puppies up to 6 months; $110 for seven-week class,cost School for Dogs, 63378 Nels includes materials; 6-7p.m. Anderson Road, Suite 7, Bend; Mondays; preregister; Friendsfor Life Lin Neumann at 541-536-1418 or www.linsschoolfordogs.com. Dog Training, 2121 S.W.Deerhound Ave., Redmond;DennisFehlingat AKC RING-READYCOACHING: 541-350-2869 or www Cost by quotation; times by .friendsforlifedogtraining.com. appointment; W ednesdays;Lin's PRIVATE TRAINING: Foraggression School for Dogs, 63378 Nels and other serious behavior problems Anderson Road, Suite 7, Bend; and one-on-one training; cost by Lin Neumann at 541-536-1418 or www.linsschoolfordogs.com. quotation; times by appointment; Friends for Life Dog Training, 2121 PUPPY101:Puppies ages8 S.W. Deerhound Ave., Redmond; to13 weeks old mayjoin any Dennis Fehling at 541-350-2869 or week; $85; 7-8 p.m. Tuesdays; www.friendsforlifedogtraining.com. Dancin' Woofs, 63027 N.E.Lower PRIVATEBEHAVIORAL COUNSELING: Meadow Drive, Suite D,Bend; Cost by quotation; times by Mare Shey at 541-312-3766 or appointment; Dancin' Woofs, 63027 www.dancinwoofs.com. Lower Meadow Drive, Suite D,Bend; PUPPYKINDERGARTEN Mare Shey at541-312-3766 or CLASSES: Ongoing training, www.dancinwoofs.com. behavior and socialization classes PRIVATETRAINING:Cost by for puppies10 to16 weeks old; $80 for four weeks; 6:15-7:30 p.m. quotation; times by appointment; Thursdays; Pawsitive Experience, Chris Waggoner at 541-633-0446 or www.DeschutesRiverDogs.com. 65111 High RidgeDrive, Tumalo; Meredith Gageat 541MUTTSABOUTYOU: Positive methods 318-8459, trainingdogs123© for basic training, all agegroups; $115 for five weeks;class sizelimited; call for bendbroadband.com or www .pawsitiveexperience.com. class hours; TheDogPatch Boutique, info@thedogpatchboutiqueinc.com or OBEDIENCE CLASSES: Six541-678-5640. week, drop-in classes; $99.95; 5 and 6 p.m. Mondays, 6 p.m. SOLVECHALLENGING BEHAVIOR: Fridays, and10 a.m. and 5 p.m. S.A.N.E. Solutions for challenging Saturdays; Petco, 3197 N.U.S. dog behavior, private lessons; cost Highway97, Bend; Loel Jensen by quotation; times by appointment; at 541-382-0510. Kathy Cascade at 541-516-8978 or kathy@sanedogtraining.com. OBEDIENCE FORAGILITY: Six weeks; $120; 4p.m.Saturdays; TELLINGTONTTOUCH: Learntools
DOGS
to reduce stress and reactivity, help your dog become more confident and improve social skills; cost by quotation; times by appointment; Kathy Cascade at 541-516-8978 or kathy©sanedogtraining.com. FIXLEASH AGGRESSION: Costby quotation; times byappointment; Dogs Ltd 8 Training, 59860 Cheyenne Road, Bend; LindaWest at 541-3186396 or www.dogsltdtraining.com. ABETTER-BEHAVEDDOG: Individual marker training with positive reinforcement; cost by quotation; times by appointment; Anne Geser at 541-923-5665. BOARD ANDTRAIN: Minimum of one week boarding; cost by quotation; times byappointment; La Pine Training Center, Diann Hecht at 541536-2458 or diannshappytails@msn .com or www.diannshappytails.com. PRIVATETRAINING:For owners and their dogs with special behavior or scheduling needs; cost by quotation, times byappointment; La Pine Training Center, Diann Hecht at 541-536-2458, diannshappytails Omsn.com or www.diannshappy tails.com. DAY SCHOOL FORDOGS:Training basics for companion dogs, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. four days a week for three weeks; cost by quotation; times by appointment; Dogs Ltd & Training; 59860 Cheyenne Road, Bend; Linda West at 541-318-6396 or www.dogsltdtraining.com. K9 NOSE WORK: Drop-in class for advanced students; $15 per session; 6 p.m. Fridays; preregister; Friends for Life Dog Training, 2121 S.W. Deerhound Ave., Redmond; Dennis
Fehling at 541-350-2869, Pam Bigoni at 541-306-9882 or www .friendsforlifedogtraining.com. BOARD ANDTRAIN: Board your dog with a certified trainer; cost by quotation, times by appointment La Pine Training Center, Diann Hecht, 541-536-2458 or diannshappytails@msn.com or www.diannshappytails.com. OFF-LEASHPLAYCLASS: Learn about off-leash recalls and manners, for nonaggressive dogs; $10 per session; 7-8 p.m. Thursdays; La Pine Training Center, Diann Hecht, 541-536-2458 or diannshappytails©msn.com or www.diannshappytails.com. OBEDIENCE FORAGILITY: $120 for six weeks; 7:15 p.m. Tuesdays; Desert Sage Agility, 24035 Dodds Road, Bend; 541-633-6774, www.desertsageagility.com. TREIBALLCLASS: $120 for six weeks; 7 p.m. Tuesdays; Desert SageAgility,24035 Dodds Road, Bend; Jan at 541-420-3284 or www.desertsageagility.com. PUPPY LIFE SKILLS: $120 for six weeks; 5 p.m.; Tuesdays; Desert SageAgility,24035 Dodds Road, Bend; Jan at 541-420-3284 or www.desertsageagility.com. FOR THEANIMALS' SAKEART AUCTION:Costume contests and more, benefitting the Redmond Humane Society, music by Steve Thorpe and Company; free; 7:30 p.m. Oct. 31; Ambiance Art Gallery, 435 S.W. Evergreen Ave., Redmond; 541-548-8115 or http://ambianceartonline.com/ GalleryEvents.html.
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"It's our wedding anniversary. She'll have pasta here, and for me, a roast beef sandwich Io go."
Print your answer here: (Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: ROBOT FORCE SALMON FRIGHT Answer: Everyone ai the clockfactory neededTIME OFF
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By Kevin Christian (c)2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
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10/30/1 2
B6
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2012
NOW Continued from B1 The event officially begins at7p.m. Nov. 7, withthe Rising Star Creative Writing Awards ceremony andreception atthe Barber Library on the Central Oregon Community College campus, where a number of NOW events will be held (see
"If you go").
This year's roster of writers includes Daugherty and fellow nonfiction writer Thor Hanson; fiction authors Jean M. Auel, Ayad Akhtar and Brian Doyle; and poets Aimee Nezhukumatathil, S h e r w in Bitsui, Michael Meade, Kevin
Gordon (also a songwriter) and Paisley RekdaL Two evenings of readings will be at the Tower Theatre on Nov. 8 and 9. Workshops will be held on Nov. 9 and 10 at Oregon State University-Cascades campus, with the popular author dinner being held at the Century Center on Nov. 10. Dan Wieden, of Wieden + Kennedy advertising agency, will be the keynote speaker. Finally, on Nov. 11, writers Gordon and Rekdal will take part in a morning author reading at the Downtown Bend Public Library. Robert McDowell, executive director of The Nature of Words, is in his first year with the festival. "I wasn't part of the process ofselecting any
Killer
Ifyou go WEDNESDAY, NOV. 7
FRIDAY, NOV. 9
• 7:30 p.m.— Rising Star Creative Writing Competition awards
• 9-10:30 a.m. and 1-2:30 p.m.
ceremonyandreception; book
• 9-10:30 a.m., 2-3:30 p.m. Workshops with Ayad Akhtar,
• 5:30- 9:30 p.m.— Gala author dinner with keynote speaker Dan Wieden. Brief readings by
Tracy Daugherty, Kevin Gordon,
guest authors. Century Center,
SATURDAY, NOV. 10 -
Workshops and lectures by Sherwin Bitsui, Aimee
-
launch for "Note to Self," NOW's 2012 anthology of student writing.
Nezhukumatathil, Tracy
Michael Meade, Paisley Rekdal, Daugherty, Thor Hanson, Paisley Sherwin Bitsui, Brian Doyle,
700 S.W. Century Drive. Friends
Central OregonCommunity
Rekdal. OSU-Cascadesand
Thor Hanson andAimee
author table.
College Barber Library, 2600 N.W.
COCC campuses, 2600 N.W.
Nezhukumatathil.
CollegeWay.Admission is free.
College Way.Tickets are $45. • 5:30-6:30 p.m.— Umpqua Bank's VIP reception, Umpqua
OSU-Cascadesand COCC campuses, 2600 N.W.College Way. Tickets are $45.
THURSDAY, NOV. 8 • Noon-2 p.m.— Sherwin Bitsui lecture "The Strategy Within." COCC Wille Hall. $30 • 7 p.m.— Author readings and
book signings by (in order of appearance) Sherwin Bitsui, Ayad Akhtar, Tracy Daugherty
and Jean M.Auel. Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St.
Tickets are $25. of the authors," he said. "I've stepped in in the middle of dealing with all of them, and it's been fun." McDowell says that landing poet Meade was "a great coup" for The Nature of Words. "Michael Meade is a great American treasure. He's just one of the greatest storytellers I've ever seen or heard," he said.
"(Meade) was a leading figure in the whole Men's Movement," McDowell said, referring to a 1990s movement led by another poet, Robert Bly,
and a half. "I was originally only hired as a researcher, but Continued from B1 because I knew more about I mmersing himself in t h e Heidnik than anyone else, I proceedings gave Apsche a was asked to testify," he said. sense of purpose and spurred But Heidnik's intelligence and him toward self-reflection. "By articulateness, combined with looking into my own scared the premeditated nature of his and desperate experience, I crimes, convinced the jury of could better understand what his competence, and he was was driving Heidnik's obses- sentenced to death. Apsche, sions and sexual violence," who maintains that Heidnik Apsche writes. w as, indeed, mentally ill Perhaps it w a s A p sche's says jurors rarely accept the inown coarseness that appealed sanity defense for people such to Heidnik. The first time they as Heidnik because they are met, in a room at Holmesburg "so seemingly adept at finding prison in Philadelphia, Apsche victims and concealing their remembers being annoyed by grisly crimes, and so skilled Heidnik's evasions. and diabolical in their detailed "'Listen, when I was in Viet- planning and deception, that nam, I killed more people than ordinary people cannot believe the Manson family, so let's cut the killer was not clearly in the s--,'" Apsche said he told control of his actions." the murderer. After the trial, the young psyPerhaps their s i milarities chologist proposed writing a resonated. Both w ere p oor book on the killer, and Heidnik husbands and fathers, Apsche agreed to cooperate. The men now recalls, prone to grandi- had a "unique trust," says Apose thinking and depressed, sche, who admits he empadisturbed, violent i n dividu- thized with the killer, whom he als who engaged in obsessive viewed as beset by powerful insexual behavior. ternal demons. They met five or Whatever the reasons, over six times in prison, for two-hour the next three years, while on sessions, and traded the letters. death row, Heidnik exchanged Ranging from one to 28 pages, 26 letters with Apsche. The the condemned man's letters more than 150 handwritten are penned in blue ink on yelpages ofletters provide har- low legal-sized paper. Their tone rowing insights into the mind oscillates between hostility and of one ofthe most perverse friendliness, and they are filled killers in U.S. history. Among with spelling mistakes, gramHeidnik's writings are draw- matical errors and smiley faces. ings ofthe torture chambers Read cumulatively, he dug under his house, as well Heidnik's letters — s elf-abas descriptions of his crimes. sorbed and wholly lacking in They are now the basis for Ap- empathy — illustrate how the sche's book, tentatively titled mind of a tormenter works. He "Greetings From the Crypt" repeatedly and p assionately — an opening line in one of denies being a serial killer. "Those two deaths were purely the condemned man's letters. The letters changed Apsche's accidental," he wrote. He says life. He quit cocaine, booze and more than once that if he wantwomanizing,gotremarriedand ed to kill the women, he would regained custody of his daugh- have used a different method. ter. He is now the pioneer of a In Heidnik's mind, the fact that psychotherapeutic a p proach he kept his victims locked in a known as mode deactivation cell, tortured and starving for therapy, a technique for treat- months, was simply incidening angry, sexually disturbed tal to their deaths. The single patients. There is no doubt, most disturbing letter contains Apsche says in a series of inter- a hand drawing of Heidnik's views, that the MDT approach dungeon. "From purely the depends, to some extent, on the technical aspect neither death understanding of human na- seems possible," he writes. ture he gained through interAfter three years, the letacting with Heidnik. ters stopped. Apsche thinks it Apsche encountered was because he was homing Heidnik shortly after complet- in on "what was really going ing his doctorate in counseling on" with Heidnik. "I was askpsychology at Temple Univer- ing him questions nobody else was," Apsche says, "and could sity in Philadelphia, the city where Heidnik committed his relate to him in ways others crimes. In September 1987, couldn't, forcing him to conHeidnik's attorney hired him front what he was and what as a researcher on the case. he'd done." He spent three months poring over two boxes filled with After the execution Heidnik's arrest records and Eight years later, in July psychiatric reports in an at1999, Heidnik was executed tempt to ascertain the killer's at a state prison in Rockview, mental state. Pa. After consuming two cups Apsche was convinced that of black coffee and two slices he could understand Heidnik of cheese pizza, he was put to as nobody else. "To make up death by lethal injection. for my lack of experience, I As Gary Heidnik's life was determined that I would be- ending, Jack Apsche's was come the consummate expert beginning. on Gary M. Heidnik and serial Apsche says that working murderers," he writes in his with Heidnik helped him unbook. "I dedicated myself to derstand troubled psyches. "I learning and knowing more realized that most people are about the subject than anyone redeemable," he said. "Heidnik else in the world. And I did." was on the end of the spectrum Heidnik's attorney claimed as far as evil goes, and most insanity, and A p sche testi- people, even ones that seem fied to that effect for a day like a lost cause to most others,
• 11 a.m.-noon — Jean M. Auel lecture "Thirty Thousand Years for eligible sponsors and donors. Ago." Hitchcock Auditorium, Pioneer Hall, COCC. Tickets are 7 p.m.— Author readings and Bank, 828 N.W. Wall St. Admission is by invitation only
book signings by (in order of appearance) Thor Hanson,
$40.
Doyle and MichaelMeade.
• 12:30-1:30 p.m.— Michael Meade lecture, Hitchcock Auditorium, Pioneer Hall, COCC.
Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St.
Tickets are $40.
Aimee Nezhukumatathil, Brian
table: $75 per person, $110for
SUNDAY, NOV. 11 • 11 a.m.-1 p.m.— Author
readings by KevinGordon and Paisley Rekdal andopen mic. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St. Admission is
free.
Tickets are $25.
hoping to help men connect and reclaim something of their lost ways.
Jean M. Auel will give a lecture Nov. 10 in COCC's Hitchcock Auditorium. She'll also "(Meade) was very quickly receive this year's Caldera snapped up by Robert Bly," Special Recognition Award. "She's a powerhouse. She's added McDowell. "He's a great drummer; he tells stories while easy to forget post-'Harry Potter' and the explosion of fanhe drums." Meade will do a special pro- tasy/sci-fi writing, but back gram at Deer Ridge Correc- in the day, 'Clan of the Cave tional Institute while in Cen- Bear' was right there at the tral Oregon. "He summons front," McDowell said. "That up the angels of our better na- sort of opened the floodgates ture," McDowell said. for a lot of people, so I would Rather than a w o rkshop, call her a real trailblazer." best-selling f a ntasy a u thor Auel will also give a reading
Nov. 8 at the Tower, the same evening as Daugherty. In additionto reading during the festival, Daugherty plans to lead workshops in which he'll explore the similarity of fiction and nonfiction. "One of the things I'll probably be talking about ... is the difference and the similarity between fiction and nonfiction," he told The Bulletin. "For me, it's all really a matter of narrative and telling as good a story as you can." When he's not traveling and
can be redeemed." Apsche was motivated to work with kids, haunted by them. He saw similarities in the acutely troubled young men he worked with and thosewith whom he had served in Vietnam, people who had committed and been exposed to unimaginable violence. Apsche now works with aggressive, inner-city 14- to 18year-olds. "If a kid is tough, you can't out-bully him," Apsche said. "This boot-camp bull-you see on TV only makes them more aggressive." Most of the kids aren't sociopathic, despite their appearances, he said. There are kids so far gone they can't be helped, he admits. But most can advance.One youth Aspche counseled, who physically assaulted staff members at a mental health institution, was
youngsters proved immune to MDT's benefits, Apsche says. It's effective "because it combines a number of approaches," said Scott Zeiter, the former chief executive of North Spring B ehavioral Health C are i n Leesburg. "Here you have all these kids that society struggles with — and w ith Jack they're d o in g m i n d fulness techniques in the corner." MDThas yet tobecome wellknown enough to elicit significant critical appraisal. Says Stephen Hayes, a psychologist at the University of Nevada: "The first book (on MDT) just appeared, and that is usually when the critics start showing up." One recent review in a behavioral-therapy journal holds that problems such as small sample sizes and lack
reacting to his own fears, Apschetheorized.His parentshad subjected him to unimaginable abuse. After receiving MDT counseling — which combines behavioral science with concepts of acceptance and mindfulness,derived from Eastern and Western meditative practices — the boy changed, Apsche says, eventually enlisting in the Marines. A series of 20 studies, conducted mostly b y A p s c he and published in the peer-reviewed International Journal of Behavioral C onsultation and Therapy showed MDT to be effective in treating both young sexual offenders and violent ones. After two years of treatment, fewer than 10 percent committed offenses again. Onlyseverelydepressed
writing, Daugherty is a professor of English and creative writing at Oregon State University, where he helped found the Masters of Fine Arts program in creative writing. Daugherty is from Midland, Texas, where he grew up reading Ray Bradbury and Laura Ingalls Wilder's "Little House on the Prairie" books. But it was his grandfather who sparked an interest in becoming a writer. "My g r andfather was a politician in O klahoma," he said. "He was a speech writer and I heard him give a lot of speeches in th e O k l ahoma H ouse of Representatives, and I just loved reading his speeches and seeing him write them out. I was named after him so when I saw his name in print, it was like seeing my name in print. I think all of that sort of led me toward writing." A lot of t ime has passed since he was in " the worst band in Houston, if not the universe," as Texas Monthly o nce called Moist and t h e Towlettes. "It's good we stuck to writ-
ing," he said, chuckling. But Daugherty still plays the drums. Now he keeps time in a Corvallis band called The Remnants. "We're a bunch of old guys pretending we're teenagers," he said. — Reporter: 541-383-0349, djasper@bendballetin.com
of random subjects in existing MDT studies must be considered, even as the article finds that the effectiveness of the approach is "overwhelming." "Thousands of new psychological approaches" crop up all the time, "but only a handful areeffective" says Joseph D. Cautilli, editor of J BCT. Cautilli carried out an indep endent evaluation of M D T and said he found it to be one of those rare treatments. In 2010, Apsche turned to his long-unfinished business — writing the Heidnik book. "Forbetterorworse, Heidnik was my dark companion on the journey to health," Apsche writes. H eidnik d e s troyed many lives. But, in his years on death row, he inadvertently saved Jack Apsche's.
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News of Record, C2 Obituaries, C5 Editorials, C4 Weather, C6 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2012
O www.bendbulletin.com/local
LOCAL BRIEFING St. Charles Bend nurses OKcontract
ODD JOBS
If you have an idea for this photographic series about unusual vocations and occupations in Central Oregon, email dguernsey@bendbulletin.com. Q» To follow the series, visit www.bendbulietin.com/oddjobs.
St. Charles Bendnurses have ratified a new,
three-year labor contract with the hospital, with
95 percentvoting in support of the agreement. The ratification was an-
nounced Monday bySt. Charles Health System and OregonNursesAssociation officials.
The hospital and
recious Paws owner Kelly Carter says that she has spent 14 years as a pet groomer working on as many as 13 dogs and two cats in a 12-hour day. A her cat-grooming services. She has learned
Negotiations beganMay 23. Hundreds ofnurses stood on aninformational picket — with nowork stoppage — inSeptember. Theagreement was reached after abargain-
that cats are always on their own time and always looking for a way to escape. Photos by Rob Kerr • The Bulletin
By Ben Botkin The Bulletin
WHEN GROOMING CATS Kelly Carter, left, gets some helpfrom her son, Colton, with holding down Sacha as she trims the cat's hair.
ing session that lasted more than 24 hours.
"These negotiations dealt with very difficult issues," said Alison
Hamway, labor repre"We are very pleased that such a large majority voted to ratify it. We
etamuc -nee e trim
believe it is afair contract; it was unanimously
recommended by the ONA negotiating team." The contract in-
cludes 2 percent general wage increaseseach year and changes in the health plan. St. Charles
caregivers may choose a caregiver-directed plan with a health sav-
ings account or a traditional preferred provider
organization plan. Both choices have avoluntary wellness program with incentives. "Both teams worked very hard to reach this
agreement and I am proud of the work that went into it," said Re-
becca Morgan, director of Human Resources for St. Charles Health
System. "We arehappy the nurses voted to approve the contract and look forward to working together to continue to improve patient care." Under the contract,
and focus on clinical development and expertise to mentor and aid other
nurses. Thehospital also will hire clinical
•
SOME ARE TOLERANT
"You never know how the cat is going to respond," Carter says, "until you get them on the table." Here, a matted hair Persian named White Pearl gets the top of its head trimmed. White Pearl was remarkably tolerant of the process and extra care helped clear up some painful fur around the eyes. Many breeds of cats need help grooming around their eyes to help control excessive shedding.
supervisors in eachunit
management, according to the press release.
Fire destroys Metolius home A fire that broke out at a Metolius residence
early Sunday morning caused $78,000 in damage, the Jefferson County Fire District said. The fire took place at a residence on Eighth Streetataround1:30
SOME FIGHT
By Lauren Dake
BACK ...
The Bulletin
Carter washes a cat at her Bend shop. Carter has accepted the task of working with cats when many groomers opt not to. Grooming a cat, Carter says, can be a battle. In one attack, she recalls, she had a cat's claws embedded in her hand so deep that she lifted it off the table.
a.m. The occupants were notified of flames
coming from the house by a couple passing by the property, and evacuated the home before it went up in flames. Fire officials say strong winds fanned the fire, making it difficult to sup-
press. Thehomeand five vehicles onthe property were a completeloss. The cause of the fire is still under investigation. — Bulletin staff report More briefingand News of Record, C2
STATE NEWS
• Portland:Two hikers missing since Saturday are found safe. Story on C3
Following up on Central Oregon's most interesting stories. Email ideas to news@ bendbulletin.com.
Stieg er, DugBll cjllCl Ontheir feet
for leadership and better communication between the units and hospital
Portland
Tracie Renwick, a longtime Redmond School District employee, is the new principal at Elton Gregory Middle School. / « r Renwick was / appointed to the ( iii job Oct. 8by Superintendent Ren w lck Mike McIntosh. She fills an unexpected vacancy left when Principal John Hartford died in a motorcycle accident Sept. 21. Renwick, 48, is in her 15th year with the school district, and has worked at the middle schoolforfive years as the vice principal. She started the school year as a vice-principal at Ridgeview High School and moved to the middle school principal job following Hartford's passing. "It's an honor to return to this staff who are absolutely outstanding," Renwick said. "I think what stands out for me is they're exceptional teachers, but they're also exceptional people." Teachers and support staff go above and beyond the minimum, such as staying after school ends to assist students in intervention classes, Renwick said. "They contribute to our school culture," she said. Renwick also has worked as a counselor and vice principal at Redmond High School. See Principal /C2
WHATEVER HAPPENED TO ...
charge nurses will keep their current positions
Middle school gets new principal
peculiar specialty, she often gets referrals for
ONA agreed to a tentative contract Oct. 11.
sentative for the ONA in Bend, in astatement.
REDMOND SCHOOLS
BUT AT THE END
A CLEAN AND HAPPY PET
A pile of domestic cat hair, the product of Carter's work, sits on the floor of her workspace.
Car t er cleans the face of a cat she has finished grooming at her office in Bend.
Once an infected finger from a cat bite put Carter temporarily out of work after she required an antibiotic injection. She said she has learned her lesson — if the cat is too aggressive, she will send it to a vet to have it groomed under sedation.
Two years ago, a picture on the front page of The Bulletin captured former Deschutes County District Attorney Mike Dugan and his wife, Judy Stiegler, as election night returns revealed Dugan was going to be unseated after serving for 24 years. "We're looking low," Stiegler said of the photo. It's true, the couple didn't look happy. That was in May 2010. A few months later, Stiegler, a Democrat, lost her bid for re-election to the stateHouse of Representatives to Rep. Jason Conger, a Republican. Stiegler's mother, Frances Hampel, died that same year. And the couple's family dog died, too. All that made 2010 a rough year for the Stiegler-Dugan household. Now, two years later, the couple has rebounded. Ask them separately if they would consider another run at public office and their 34 years of marriage shine through in their nearly verbatim response. "Never say never," Stiegler, 59, said. "You can never say no," Du-
gan said. See Update/C6
C2
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2012
LOCAL BRIEFING Continued fromCt ing for Godot" improved. The Final mytaiyi fallS On
• ggs • I •
comPany went on to Produce several shows over the sumInnovation Theatre Works, a mer, including "TheTempest," Bend-based theater company a Woodstock-era retelling of combining Professional and Shakespeare's play. Bfsyid thfscitey gpfyipgyiy
Can you work a camera, and capture a great picture? And can you tell us a bit about it? Email your color or blackand-white photos to readerphotos@bendbulletin.com and we'll pick the best for publication in the paper and online.
community theater, closed
But according to Hills, finan-
Monday after four years of staging Plays, musicals, readings, classes andmore.
Submission requirements:Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.
cial support from the community wasn't strong enough. "Nationwide, nonprofit
Artistic Director Brad Hills theatrical organizations deannounced the closure in an p e nd on at least 50 percent email to suPPorters, citing of their revenue coming from low attendance and dwindling
and grants and we have been surviving on an average of roughly15 percent to 20 per
we have tried to do to build financial secunty in the long term," Hills said. "The lack of
cent — an unsustainable fig-
"
P,. I rc
'er V
donations sponsorships
financial support. .. (T)here are simPly not enough of you whovaluewhat .
ure, especially when coupled with less than 50 percent of capacity audience sizes," he said in his email announce-
response to our recent Match-
h
ing Challenge Donation, along with ever-dwindling audience
size for all of our programs is the no-longer-deniable proof of that." Innovation came close to closing in April, when it announced it would have to shut
r'
-, r.
Hill said, and heinvited sup-
por t ers to donate to help settle
loose ends. Contact; www.innovationtw
its doors unless attendance for .org or 541-504-6721.
':ir Mrr,
its spring production of "Wait-
— Bulletin staff report
Principal
Mclntosh co u l dn' t be reached for comment on Continued from C1 Monday. Prior c o m in g R e d mond At Ridgeview High School, S chool District, she was a Steve Stancliff wa s m oved middle school counselor for from dean ofstudents to vice Tigard-Tualatin School District. principal, according to meetShe has a bachelor's degree ing minutes. in journalism from the UniverH artford d ied w h e n h i s sity of Portland and a master's motorcycle struck a guardrail degree in psychology from on U.S. Highway 26 in Crook Lewis and Clark College. County. The 54-year-old left a Mclntosh reported Ren- wife, Maryann, and two chilwick's appointment as princi- dren, Haley and Kevin. pal at the Oct. 10 school board — Reporter: 541-977-7185, meeting. The decision came bbotkin@bendbulletin.com after getting input from staff, McIntosh said, according to meeting minutes.
t
\
The theater still has about $5,000 in outstanding debt,
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THE BUCK STOPS HERE This photo of a buck robbing a bird feederwas captured by Terese Dinges in the front yard of her Bend home using a Nikon Coolpix S610.
Ikenfelil
Find It All Online
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I H I G H DESERT BANK
NEWS OF RECORD
POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log when such a request is received. Any new information, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358. Redmond Police Department
Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at 9:25 p.m. Oct. 23, in the 300 block of Northwest Oak Tree Lane. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 4:11 a.m. Oct. 22, in the 100 block of West Antler Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 7 a.m. Oct. 22, in the area of Southwest Sixth Street and Southwest Evergreen Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 8:22 a.m. Oct. 22, in the 1300 block of Southwest15th Street. Theft —A theft was reported at9:59a.m. Oct. 22, in the 4500 block of Southwest Elkhorn Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at11:13 a.m. Oct. 22, in the 300 block of Northwest Oak Tree Lane. Theft —A theft was reported at11:32 a.m. Oct. 22, in the 200 block of Southwest Second Street. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at 4:03 p.m. Oct. 22, in the 1300 block of South U.S. Highway 97. Theft —A theft was reported at 5:48 p.m. Oct. 22, in the 300 block of Northeast Larch Place. Theft —A theft was reported at 11:58 p.m. Oct. 22, in the 2400 block of Southwest 26th Street. Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at10:23 a.m. Oct. 23, in the area of South U.S. Highway 97 andSouthwest Veterans Way. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at11:58 a.m. Oct. 23, in the 1500 block of Northwest Fir Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at 7:17 p.m. Oct. 23, in the 1000 block of Northwest Sixth Street. DUII —Charles Gustav Firch Jr., 40, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 7:33 p.m. Oct. 23, in the1000 block of Northwest Sixth Street. DUII —Dudley Arthur Steademan, 23, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 11:20 p.m. Oct. 23, in the area of Southwest Highland Avenue and Southwest Parkway Drive. Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at1:54 p.m. Oct. 24, in the 1400 block of Southwest Evergreen Avenue. DUII —Laura Ann Phillips, 36,
was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 3:21 p.m. Oct. 24, in the 2200 block of Southwest Reindeer Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at 5:37 p.m. Oct. 24, in the 300 block of Northwest Oak Tree Lane. Theft —A theft was reported at 6:12 a.m. Oct. 25, in the 2000 block of South U.S. Highway 97. Theft —A theft was reported at 10:04 a.m. Oct. 25, in the 2000 block of Southwest Canyon Drive. Burglary —A burglary was reported at10:23 a.m. Oct. 25, in the 2400 block of Southwest Timber View Court. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at11:49 a.m. Oct. 25, in the area of Northwest Fifth Street and Northwest Elm Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:03p.m.Oct.25,inthe 2200 block of Southwest19th Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 7:29 p.m. Oct. 25, in the1700 block of South U.S. Highway 97. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 8:40 p.m. Oct. 25, in the 1400 block of South U.S. Highway 97. DUII —Jonathan Lee Hopkins, 19, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at12:13 a.m. Oct. 26, in the 1100 block of Northwest Eighth Street. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 5:52 p.m. Oct. 26, in the 800 block of Southwest 11th Street. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 8:21 p.m. Oct. 26, in the 3100 block of Southwest 25th Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:25 p.m. Oct. 26, in the 2500 block of Southeast Jesse Butler Circle. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 10:21 p.m. Oct. 26, in the 900 block of Southwest17th Street. DUII —Jessica Starr Mortensen, 36, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 1:06 a.m. Oct. 27, in the area of Southwest Seventh Street and Southwest Black Butte Boulevard. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 8:24 a.m. Oct. 27, in the 200 block of West Antler Avenue. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 8:31 a.m. Oct. 27, in the 600 block of Southwest 12th Street. Unauthorized use — A vehicle was reported stolen at 8:50 a.m. Oct. 27, in the 2200 block of Southwest Yew Avenue. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 9:22a.m. Oct. 27, inthe100 block of Southwest Second Street.
Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at12:42 p.m. Oct. 27, in the 900 block of Southwest Veterans Way. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at 5:44 p.m. Oct. 27, in the 900 block of Southwest Veterans Way. Theft —A theft was reported at 6:49 p.m. Oct. 27, in the 1600 block of Southwest Odem Medo Road. DUII —Mark Robert Haley, 54, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at10:46 p.m. Oct. 27, in the area of U.S. Highway 97 and West Antler Avenue. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at10:52 p.m. Oct. 27, in the 2500 block of Southwest lndian Avenue. Burglary —A burglary was reported at 9:19 a.m. Oct. 28, in the 2200 block of Southwest 29th Street. Burglary —A burglary was reported at 10:29 a.m. Oct. 28, in the 2000 block of Southwest Timber Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 11:02 a.m. Oct. 28, in the 200 block of Southwest12th Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 1:24 p.m. Oct. 28, in the 2100 block of Northwest Maple Tree Court. DUII —Crystal M. North, 38, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at1:43 p.m. Oct. 28, in the 300 block of Northwest Oak Tree Lane. Theft —A theft was reported at 6:04p.m. Oct.28,in the 2900 blockofSouthwest Lava Avenue.
7:30 AM - 5:30 PM MON-FRI 8 AM - 3 PM SAT.
Road in Crooked River Ranch. Theft —A theft was reported Oct. 24, in the 16800 block of Southwest Chinook Drive in Crooked River Ranch. Burglary —A burglary and an act of criminal mischief were reported Oct. 25, in the 300 block of Fourth Avenue in Culver. Unauthorizeduse —A vehicle was reported stolen Oct. 27, in the area of Third and D streets in Culver. Vehicle crash —An accident was reported Oct. 27, in the area of Third and D streets in Culver.
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541-382-4171 541-548-7707
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Oregon State Police
DUU —Jeffery Robert Rood, 43, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 10:23 p.m. Oct. 27, in the area of U.S. Highway 97 near milepost143. DUII —Kenneth F. Cushen, 60, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 12:42 a.m. Oct. 28, in the area of U.S. Highway 97 near milepost143. DUU —Gavriel Josiah Smith, 23, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants Oct. 28, in the area of Northeast Greenwood Avenue and Northeast Third Street in Bend.
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BEND FIRE RUNS Thursday 20 —Medical aid calls.
Prineviiie Police Department
Theft —A theft with an estimated loss of $3,000 was reported at 9:36 a.m. Oct. 27, in the area of Northwest Fifth Street. Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at 11:01 a.m. Oct. 27, in the area of Northwest Ninth Street. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported and an arrest made at 2:45 p.m. Oct. 27, in the area of Northeast Third Street. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 6:54 a.m. Oct. 28, in the area of South Main Street. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 9:32 a.m. Oct. 28, in the area of Southwest Second Street. Burglary —A burglary and theft were reported and an arrest made at 2:01 p.m. Oct. 28, in the area of Northwest Fourth Street. Jefferson County Sheriff's Office Vehicle crash —An accident was reported Oct. 22, in the 6400 blockofSouthwest Shad
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TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
C3
REGON NEWS OREGON IN BRIEF
Arrest made in Harney killing BURNS — A u thorities in Harney County say a man has been arrested in the killing of a Burns-area man. A statement from District Attorney Tim Colahan provided no details of the killing of 30-year-old Eddie Ben Barela except that he died Saturday of a chest wound. The district attorney said Monday the suspect accused of murder is 49-yearold Thomas Reyes Garcia of Burns.
Victim in park ID'd as California girl, 15 PORTLAND — P o lice say a woman killed in Portland's Washington Park earlier this year has been identified as a 15-year-old California girl. The police said Monday that Mayra Sophia Cruz Rodriguez was identified through dental records. Detectives learned that Cruz wa s v i siting r elatives in Vancouver, Wash., when she was reported as a runaway on June 15. She had earlier been reported as a runaway in San Diego County, Her body was found in the park June 26. Investigators charged Mark Beebout with murder, rape, sodomy and sexual abuse. He has pleaded not guilty. Beebout, a transient and registered sex offender, has also pleaded not guilty to the killing of a Portland woman he met through her volunteer work with a charity for the homeless.
Argument ends in stabbing, arrest MEDFORD — Police say a homeless man stabbed another transient multiple times in an argument in a Medford greenway. Sgt. Kerry Curtis says the 32-year-old victim was likely saved by the Medford Fire Department and Mercy ambulance crews. He was taken to Rogue Regional Medical Center for surgery and is expected to recover. The stabbing happened Saturday afternoon. The 61year-oldsuspectwastracked Sunday to a campsite, where he was arrested on assault
charges. He's being held in the Jackson County Jail on $2 million bail. The Mail Tribune reports the suspect has previous convictions for assault in 2009 and 2004.
2 hurt when car hits sandwich shop KEIZER — An 84-yearold driver told police she mistook the gas pedal for the brake and accelerated over a curb and through the front window of a sandwich shop in Keizer. The crash Sunday afternoon injured a Eugene couple. Police say a 43-year-old man has leg injuries and his wife suffered cuts and bruises. Both were taken to Salem Hospital. T he d r iver w a s no t injured.
Cartoonist leaves The Oregonian PORTLAND — P r i z ewinning editorial cartoonist Jack Ohman is leaving The Oregonian newspaper, where he has worked for nearly 30 years. The paper reported Monday that Ohman said the decision to leave was his, and he would disclose his plans for what he called "a new chapter in my career" on Wednesday. Ohman was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize this year. Among the prizes he's won: the Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award for editorial cartoons in 2009, Sigma Delta Chi, and the Scripps Howard award for cartooning. He has written or illustrated several books. — From wire reports
Missing sinceSaturday, judge delayssenteneing for man with gun at sehool two hikersfound safe By Steven Dubois
By Jeff Barnard
cerns." Panner added that he The Associated Press had not seen the notes when MEDFORD — A f e d eral he ordered Amoroso released. "You have a lot of anger in judge postponed sentencing Monday for an Oregon man your mind toward not only who authorities feared may this," Panner told Amoroso. "The question is, what I have have been planning a sniper attack on a high school foot- to do about that." ball game, saying he wanted to T he document w a s n o t be sure atreatment program made public. to deal with his pent-up anger Citing fears Amoroso could would be available in prison. be capable of a mass killing, U.S. District Judge Owen the prosecution asked Panner Panner rescheduled sentenc- to sentence Amoroso to seven ing for Raphael E. Amoroso, years in prison. "We all know there are folks 27, of Grants Pass, until Thursday. Amoroso has pleaded who take weapons, and hurt a guilty to having a firearm on whole bunch of people with schools grounds and being a those w eapons," A s sistant marijuana userin possession U.S. Attorney Judith Harper of firearms. said, referring to th e m ass Panner said notes from a shooting earlier this year at psychologist who treated Am- a movie theater in Colorado. oroso during a court-ordered She said authorities were consession last August, after Am- cerned that "this was one of oroso was released pending those cases brewing." sentencing,raised "great conDefense lawyer Larry Rol-
off asked that the sentence be limited to the 10 months in jail Amoroso has already served while awaiting trial. Amoroso was arrested a
year ago after approaching a policeman outside Grants Pass High School a few hours after a football game. Police said he was drunk, had been smoking marijuana, and had a loaded automatic pistol in his car, along with a novel about a rogue federal agent who shoots up a professional football game, 200 rounds of rifle ammunition, binoculars and a camouflage jacket. A search of hishome a week laterturned up seven more guns, mostly vintage military rifles, as well as sniper gear — a camouflage sniper's suit, sniper manuals, a ballistic helmet, a bulletproof vest, 2,000 rounds of rifle ammunition and armor-piercing bullets.
The Associated Press
PORTLAND — Two Oregon teenagers who didn't return f r o m a wee k end hike are safe after spending two nights in wet, windy weather. Jackson Chandler, 17, and Bradley Nelson, 16, were found M o nday a f t ernoon by a driver not connected to the search party, Clackamas County Sheriff's Deputy Nate Thompson said. They did not need medical attention. Television cameras captured the boys' emotional reunion with relatives after rescuers escorted them to the trailhead. Chandler and Nelson told reporters they went in t h e wrong direction and got lost. The Boy Scouts and avid hikers did not have food, but they drank water and slept under trees that blocked the rain.
" I wa s d e f initely c o nc erned. I d i d n't w a n t t o be spending the night out there," Chandler said. "Said a prayer and asked our heavenly father for direction on which way we needed to go." The pair left West Linn in suburban Portland on Saturday afternoon and planned to return to their vehicle by nightfall. Their parents called for help when the boys didn't come back. On Sunday, a s earcher d i scovered t h e teens' pickup five miles east of the Table Rock Wilderness area. About 50 people from volunteer groups, joined by a helicopter, searched the foothills south of Portland on Monday. "Thank you to everyone who put all the effort in to find us," Nelson said. "It's good to be home."
Medical potgrower gets 10 yearsfor illegal sales By Jeff Barnard The Associated Press
MEDFORD — A registered medical m a rijuana g r ower was sentenced Monday to 10 years in federal prison for con-
he asked for the stiff sentence because Nelson lied during h is trial, claiming h e w a s
growing only for four medi-
cal marijuana patients, denying he sold any of it, and tryspiring to sell his crop illegally ing to shift the blame to his and for having machine guns co-defendant, Richard Sherand other illegal firearms. man, who worked in the bike Jason Michael Scott Nelson, shop and testified to helping owner of a Grants Pass bike Nelson. Fong added that the shop, admitted taking advan- guns and the fact Nelson was tage of the Oregon Medical running the operation addM arijuana Program out o f ed to the prison time called greed and apologized to his for i n fe d eral s e ntencing family, the judge and the pros- guidelines. ecutor for his lies. In arguing for a five-year "I was out of control," Nel- sentence, defense lawyer Mike son said in U.S. District Court, Arnold said Nelson developed " this massive growing o p adding that even after his arrest he tried to grow more eration out of a sense of hard marijuana and sell it to "keep work and competitive spirit myself afloat." with other growers." Authorities have said NelThe judge said he had no son, 37, was one of four medi- doubt Nelson would n ever cal marijuana growers from commit another crime, but S outhwestern Oregon w h o added that he had no choice pooled their h a r vests and but to impose a harsh sentence made m o nthly s h i p ments due to Nelson's lying, which from Portland to Boston in would earn him years more in pods loaded with f u r niture prison if it were prosecuted. bought from Goodwill. Police Panner waived the $20,000 spotted one of the shipments fine Nelson offered to pay, sayand traced part of it back to ing his family would be facing Nelson. enough financial difficulties Wheninvestigators searched when he got out of prison. Nelson's property, they found Panner scolded Nelson for a room elaborately set up for trying to shift the blame to growing marijuana, mature Sherman — who worked for and immature plants, and an- him for wages — for putting other room hidden behind a illegal immigrants in j e opgun safethat contained 29 heat- ardy by employing them in sealed packages of trimmed his growing operation, and marijuana buds. Investigators for arranging for friends to also found the illegal firearms dismantle a shop building so and silencers. there was nothing of value for Prosecutor Doug Fong said federal authorities to seize.
Money woesmayhalt JosephineCounty racing The Associated Press GRANTS PASS — Saddled by red ink, a half-century tradition of h orse racing may come to an end in Southern Oregon's Josephine County. The county fair board says it can't afford the losses putting on the nine-day event — about $50,000 in 2011 and $22,000 this year. "But that doesn't mean we don't want it," said Fair Board President Terry C a n avello. "Horse racing has a long tradition here. It is important to
people." Josephine County has been struggling with budget cuts because of declining federal timber subsidies. The county commissioners have told some departments to find ways to become selfsustaining, and that's been difficult for the fairgrounds, The Grants Pass Daily Courier reported Monday. It said
that horse racing has been in a financial hole for years. The county fair board is negotiating with the Southern Oregon H orse Racing Association to take over the event, saying th e a s sociation wouldn't face the same administrative overhead the county does and it could pay lower wages. Canavello said she's enthusiastic about the talks with the association. A member of the
group, Harvey Boyle is gathering estimates on liability insurance. The manager of the 2012 races, Lonnie Craig, said the insurance could cost as much as $20,000 and could be a deal breaker. Horse racing fans are planning a fundraiser next year featuring chariot, harness and match races — as well as live music — to raise money, and the horse racing association would get a share.
Find Your Dream Home In Real Estate •
••
TheB u lletin
CENTRAL OREGON COMMUNITY COLLEGE HEALTH CAREERS CENTER hanks to the voters of Central Oregon who, in fall 2009, passed a bond measure that helped fund construction of five new buildings for the students of Central Oregon Community College. The Health Careers Center, opening this fall, will house programs in nursing, medical assistant, dental assisting, massage therapy, and pharmacy technician.
I
DENTAL ASSISTING The COCC Dental Assisting program would like to thank the following dentists and their staff for their participation in the Dental Assisting program by having COCC students work in their offices as part of their education: Dr. Lisa Adams Dr. Taylor Bybee, Dn Evan Olson, Dr. Matthew McCleery Advantage Dental Clinic Dr. Brook Derenzy Aesthetic General Dentistry Dr. Scott Anderson Dr. Marci Aplin-Scott Dr. Carlo Arredondo Bend Family Dentistry Dr. Donald Delisi Bend Oral, Facial and Implant Surgery Dr. Scott Burgess Dr. Emine Loxley Cascade Endodontic Group Dr. Kevin Coombe, Dr. Greggery jones Coombe andJones Dentistry Dr. Yoli DIGiulio Cornerstone Family Dentistry Dr. Jeff. M. Thayer Deer Ridge Correctional Facility Dr. Steve Christensen, Dr. Stephanie Chflstensen Deschutes Pediatric Dentistry Dr. Kelly Mingus Distinctive Dentistry Dr. Richard Gilmore Gilmore Dental Dr. Greg Ginsburg, Dr.Janell Ginsburg Ginsburg Family Dental Care Dr. David Gobeille Gobeille Orthodontics Dr. Chad Stephenson juniper Dental Dr. Mark Keener Dr. Chris Keldsen Keldsen Family Dental
cocc.edu 541.383.7700
Dr. Keith Krueger Dr.jim Murtaugh, Dc Ginny Murtaugh Murtaugh General Cosmetic Dentistry Dr. jonathan Yang Northwest Dental Group Dc Tony Parsley Dc James Ford, Dr. Brent Powell, Dr. jay Vaikuntam Pediatric Dental Associates Dn Eric Caldwell, Dn Adam Veitschegger PureCare Dental Dr. Thomas Rheuben Dc Ben Grieb River Park Family Dentistry Dn Brian Rosenzweig Rosenzwei g Orthodontics Dc Steve Schwam Dr. Ben Crockett Sisters Dental Dr. Mehdi Salari, Dr. Michael Olin, Dr. Zach Porter, Dr. I<aren Coe Skyline Dental Dn juliana panchura Smile Central Oregon Dc Quach-Miller SmileKeepers of Bend Dc jeffTimm, Dr. Andy Timm, Dr. Ryan Timm Timm Family Dentistry Dr. Brandon Turley Dc Dennis Holly West River Dental Dc Chris Williams Willamette Dental
C EH T R A L
O RE G O H
community college
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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2012
The Bulletin
EDITORIALS
AN LNDEPENDENT NEwsPAPEB
Ban 's enerosi t oBo s i r s u setsanexam e
BETsY McCooc
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JOHH COSTA RlcHAHD CHE
Fditur in-Clnrf Editor of Edttorials
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eeping a Boys 8 Girls Club up and operating is no small task. Unlike most youth activity organizations, clubs are open five days a week year-round and are staffed by professionals, supplemented by volunteers. All this doesn't come cheap, Tha t g ives the club and Housas you might imagine. Thus it i n g Works, which owns the apartwas sad news, though certainly m ent complex in which the club is no surprise, to hear that the Ariel located, time to line up funding to Unit club in southeast Bend would keep the club open through 2013. close for lack of operating money. For those who worried that the The Ariel Unit serves a neighbor- departure of Patty Moss, longtime hood of r e latively inexpensive chief executive officer of Bank of apartments and it costs just over T h e Cascades, would mean the $100,000 a year to keep it open. inst i t ution would lose its interest The club was unable to raise in its hometown, the BoYs 5 Girls that money. In fact in a news story Club gift can be nothing but good announcing its closure earlier this have the same ties to Bend as month, Lisa Maxwell, executive not did his predecessor, but he is interdirector of the Boys & Girls Clubs estedinthecommunit aswell of Central Oregon, said the Ariel The real winners in all this are Unit was about $75,PPP short ofbe the children who attend the Ariel ing able to meet its expenses. Unit, of course. They will continue Bend-based Bank of the Cas- to have a safe place to spend time cades came to the rescue late last when parents are away, doing week with a pledge of $40,000. something more than simply starThat gift, combined with a pledge ing at a computer screen or televifrom Housing Works of Central sion set. Equally important, the Oregon, will be enough to keep the bank's leadership may help perclub up and operating at least until s uade others that the club, and what school is out next spring. it does, are a worthy investment.
IN MY VIEW
Measure 79 will help keep homes affordable By Bill Robie he Bulletin's Oct. 15 editorial on Measure 79 was basically a statement against using the state constitution to resolve Oregon's tax problems. It didn't take a position on real estate transfer taxes. But the editorial did a service by reminding us that property taxes are already high and that Oregon's tax structure is sorely in need of stability. And that's exactly why Measure 79 is a good idea: it prevents further taxation of real estate and property. The cost of buying a home may have fallen in recent years, but so have the incomes of buyers. It can be difficult for many people to save enough money to make down payments and cover closing costs. A real estate transfer tax would place an even bigger burden on all home buyers and home sellers around the state. For instance,a 2 percent real estate transfer tax would add $4,000 to the price of a $200,000 home. Even at a lower level, a few thousand dollars can bethe difference between buying your first home and remaining a renter. I know of a situation in Bend involving personal friends where $1,000 in septic system improvements was a financial obstacle to a transaction. A real estate transfer tax a l so would represent a second tax on the same property. After all, you already pay annual property taxes. A transfer tax would essentially constitute a double tax on your property. A new tax on property owners also doesn't seem to be a fair way for state and local governments to fund their spending habits. It's no secret that home values have plummeted in Central Oregon. Many families here are selling at a loss. Given the numerous attempts made to get real estate transfer taxes on the books in Oregon, it seems crazy to turn to target home owners and struggling families with a double tax in an attempt to find new sources of government revenue. Zeroing in on homeowners and potential homeowners in t hi s c l imate offoreclosures, short sales and underwater mortgages doesn't seem
I
right. Here in Central Oregon where the housing market has such a disproportionate impact on the local economy, a new tax on the homebuying process would be particularly
damaging. Remember, if real estate transfer taxes are authorized in Oregon, it would allow all local and county governments to assess such taxes. So you might be taxed half a percentage point from Deschutes County, another half point from the City of Bend, and maybe another half point from the park and recreation district — and those would be on top of whatever the state of Oregon might levy statewide. And it's important to note that Measure 79does not take any money away from schools or local government services. A new tax on housing would harm local communities by making home ownership less attractive and more difficult to attain. This has ramifications throughout th e e conomy. There's abundant research on how higher rates of home ownership are associated with positive community attributes — from lower crime rates to better schools. Homeowners simply have more invested in their neighborhoods, town and cities. Oregon's home-ownership rate is less than the national average, another indicator of our state's troubled economy. Yet legislators at the state and local levels continue to express an interest in creating a real estate t ransfer that w o uld m ak e h o me ownership even less affordable. Voters have the opportunity this year to make a statement that home ownership is a priority in Oregon. Owning a home is a fundamental part of the American dream. Adding a new tax, on top of our property taxes, seems like government — even though well intended — is pushing that American dream further out of reach. That's why I recommend voting "Yes" on Measure 79. — Bill Robie is the government affairs director for Central Oregon Association of Realtors. He lives in Bend.
•
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M IVickel's Worth Elect water project opponents The Bulletin's Oct. 20 editorial states that reasonable public policy and community decision-making has led to a compromise that ought to satisfy all concerned about the surface waterproject. It also states that the project's cost is $68 million. But that's exactly the same cost as before the "compromise" was announced. Yes, "the city made numerous adjustments to the plan" to delay the hydro generator, and hopes the EPA will drop the treatment plant requirement. Delay defers cost, it does not eliminate it. A true compromise would be to cut the total cost of the project through design changes. Otherwise it's just the hollow misdirection we've been served up by the city and now see endorsed by The Bulletin. The city's own documents show that costs could easily be cut in half, retain all the water, the rights, and meet the EPA requirements. That's nothing like the so-called compromise that w a s a d o pted. Check the city website. It's all there, all $68 million of it, same as it's been for the last two years. If The Bulletin believes there is real cost compromise, show us your math. Perhaps the federal injunction will encourage more serious attention to ratepayers' input in future. And perhaps before The Bulletin decides to carry water again for the city, it will look below the surface. Several council seats will be on the ballot Nov 6. Choose wisely. Elect members who will show leadership insupport of ratepayers by standing up against the grandiose projects of unelected city staff.
to big, outsider-driven projects, like the expensive and unnecessary water project pushed through by our current City Council. C ampbell i s a sm a r t , h a r d working, conscientious person who worked her own way up from dedicated employee to successful business owner and community supporter. Now she wants to serve her city to make sure others can follow in her footsteps. What more could we want in a Bend city councilor? Bruce Morris Bend
is far from the population center. Is there any unique natural area there that is not already found in nearby Tumalo State Park, the High Desert Museum or National Forest land? The proposed icerink is also a "nice-to-have," but at w hat cost? There is a balance point here — why should all Bend voters pay for a small population of skaters on prime real estate? Vote against BPRD 9-86. BPRD, reprioritize and resubmit to voters. David C. White Bend
Balyeat is better choice
Support Campbell for council
Judicial ethics rules severely restrict what candidates for judge can say when running for office. This makes it extremely difficult for the public to decide which candidate is the better choice. Voters have to carefully examine the candidates' experience and read between the lines. Of the two candidates for the Deschutes County race, Andy Balyeat is the one with decades ofexperience in both criminal and civil cases at the trial and appellate levels. Another indicator of the candidates is what their peers, who interact with the candidates in their everyday practice, think of them. Balyeat was favored by Deschutes County attorneys by m ore t h an 2 to 1 in a bar poll in which 183 votes were cast. Balyeat is supported by both civil and criminal attorneys. In my cases against Balyeat, he treated all parties with respect and worked efficiently to resolve the disputes in a fair manner. Balyeat is the better choice for Deschutes County Circuit
Roger Dressier Court judge. Bend
Campbell has the right background
Bob Turner Bend
Vote against park bond
Barb Campbell is a d owntown Bend business owner running for Bend City Council, position one. Campbell's background gives her exactly the experience and viewpoint needed fora Bend economy still struggling to recover from our very deep recession. She worked as a carpenterin her own smallbusiness during the construction boom, while also waiting tables and tending bar at some of our most popular spots. She then taught middle school science in Harney County before returning to Bend and founding her smash-hit downtown store, Wabi Sabi. Wabi Sabi is not only a fun and successful business, but Campbell makes sure it gives back to the community by d onating merchandise and use of its meeting room to our
Bend Park 8 Recreation District's bond Measure 9-86 proposes many fine recreational opportunities that are nice-to-have, but in this economy, and with critical water, sewer and school obligations, are not essential for Bend. I recommend that Bend citizens vote against the bond measure. BPRD should t he n r e prioritize/ redefine some projects and then resubmit the bond as a set of smaller proposals — allowing voters a fair evaluation of each project. For example, the proposed purc hase of three properties in t he North Deschutes Canyon, adjacent to BPRD-owned Gopher Gulch, includes the 28-acre Jeffers property. For approximately $3.5 million, BPRD p l ans t o p u r chase young people and other good causes. this charming house and barn on A healthy, positive future f or acreage with a great view of the Bend depends on building a bal- canyon. Wouldn't it be cheaper to anced, sustainable, self-sufficient lo- simply purchase a right-of-way in cal economy, while exercising wise which to cross the river and extend stewardship over our amazing natu- the Deschutes River Trail? The purral blessings. Campbell wants to do chase of two other properties in the just this. She believes our city gov- area of comparable size is also proernment should focus on support- posed. Is a nature reserve or park ing local businesses and creating needed there? Unlike the majority locally based jobs and opportunities of beautiful parks in Bend, to which for our neighbors. She is opposed most families can walk, this area
I am writing to show my support for Barb Campbell in the Bend City Council race. Our city needs smart, capable officials who understand the economy. As an entrepreneur who has watched her downtown business grow for years, Campbell fits these requirements. In the past, she has worked in the area's hospitality, education and construction fields. Campbell understands what life in our town is like, and how hard we work to make ends meet. She is not a recent transplant with a big bankroll, which is my concern with Victor Chudowsky. Instead she has lived here and worked for years helping to improve this city. We need city councilors who will be smart with the citizens' money. Campbell has consistently opposed the waste of millions on this nowstalled water expansion plan. Her foresight in trying to avoid an expensive pitfall gives me confidence that she will show good judgment in other matters before the council. Her extensive private-sector experience will be an important asset in fixing the city's perennial budget messes. I want to see a responsible City Council that respects its residents and saves taxpayer money. I want to see councilors who understand my needs and listen to their constituents' opinions. That is why I want to see Campbell elected this year. Josh Gatling Bend
Don't repeat negative ad As if it isn't bad enough that our airwaves are flooded with negative political ads, your paper feels it necessary to give credibility to one on the front page on Oct. 26. Your article basically repeats the content of an ad for Brown, that at best contains misleading information. This bafflesme. Why would you give credibility to a negativead and do it on Page One of your paper'? Getting their negative accusations on the front page is something that Brown would have had to pay serious money for. You even endorse Buehler. I think your paper has better items to cover than a political TV ad. Come on guys, you can be a better paper than this. Bob Norman Sisters
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TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
CS
WEST NEWS
Harriett E. Fitzgerald
Melvin Willis Grant
Dorothy Shedd
Despite safety, engineered foods carrystigmafor some
Jae. 25, 1930 - Oct. 6, 2012
Sept. 1, 1922- Oct. 26, 2012
June 27, 1916 - Oct. 16, 2012
By Rosie Mestel
Harriett E. Fitzgerald, 82, passed away, on Saturday, O ctober 6, 2 012, i n P o r t land, Oregon, after a l o ng battle with leukemia. Harriett was born, Harriett Edna Gregg, in Sacramento, Cah f o r n ia , o n January 25, 1930, and was t he only c h il d o f t h e l a t e Harry and Dorothy Gregg. S he graduated f r o m M t . Shasta H i g h Sc h o o l i n 1947, and soon after m ar ried Arthur Henry Fitzgera ld, on June 29, 1947. Ar t , w ho was th e l ov e o f h e r life, passed away in 2 006, l eaving Harriett w it h l o v i ng memories of t h ei r 5 8 years of marriage. H arriett an d A r t m o v e d t o Prineville i n t h e e a r l y 1 960s and were long t i m e members of the First Baptist Church o f P r i n e ville, and supporters of the Central O r e go n O p p o r tunity C enter. H a r r iett w a s a c tively in v o l ve d in t h e C hristian W o m e n' s C l u b for decades and shared her love of the Lord with many y oung w o m e n , mo t h e r s a nd f r i ends t h r o ug h h e r f ellowship w i t h o t h er s i n t his organization. A r t a n d Harriett spent many happy years sharing a d v entures a nd f r i endsh>ps wit h t h e X.Y.Z. Group (Extra Years of Zest) in Prineville. H arriett may best be r e membered as the ultimate hostess, the coffee pot was a lways on , on e c o ul d a l ways find an extra plate at the table, an ex tr a p i l l ow and blanket for guests and f amily. T h o s e wh o k n e w H arriett, w i l l r em e m b er her gift of hospitality, welcoming you into her home, in a way t hat m ade you f eel l i k e s h e h a d b e e n waiting for you to stop by. H arriett l e a v e s l o v i n g memories to be c h erished by her four c h i l dren, Guy F>tzgerald o f F e r n andina, Florida, Susan W a g aman of D e p ew , N e w Y or k , Gerri Badden of Portland, Oregon and Cy nthia Costanzo of Alamo, California. A dditionally , 12 g r an d children, 1 2 g r e a t-grandchildren and a large numb er o f ext e n de d f a m i l y w ho l o v e d H a r r i et t a n d c onsidered her M om , w i l l c herish m em ories o f h e r generous love and spirit. A C e l ebration o f L i f e m emorial s ervice w i l l b e held at the Ochoco Creek P ark, i n Pr i n e v i l le , O r egon, on Sunday, July 21, 2013, at I:30 p.m. F r i ends and relatives are invited to join the family at a casual potluck, w h il e c elebrating Harriett's life. In lieu of flowers, memor ial contributions may b e made in Harriett's name to E xpressions' Ed uc a t i o n a nd T r a i n in g Pr o g r a m , S ummerplace A ssi s t e d Living, 15727 N E R u ssell St., Portland, OR 97230.
Dorothy Kellogg, 96, died Melvin Grant of Winston, O R, died f r o m a g e d r e - at Wind R iver R ehabilitalated causes on Friday, Oc- tion Center in Riverton, on October 16, 2012. She curtober 26. He was 90 years r ently r e s ided a t H o m e old. Mr. Grant was born in stead Assisted living in RiHarlan, OR, to Noel Lester and A l - verton, WY. D orothy B e r t h a S h e d d t hea M a e was born June 27, 1916 in (Brown) Norwich, CT, to Martin E. Grant. He and Bertha (White) Shedd. graduS he moved f r o m R h o d e a ted fr om i sland t o B e nd , O R w i t h Harlan her parents in 1921. After a High s hort stay i n B e n d , D o r S chool i n o thy a nd h er par e n t s 1940, and m oved a r ound t h e W e s t married Melvin W. C oast i n C a l i f o r ni a a n d Gr»t Oregon. In 1939, she marRuth Schmid on June 13, 1942. ried Wil liam M o f f itt ( B i l l) Eu g e ne , O R . S he passed away i n D e c . K ellogg i n 1 995. H e la t e r m a r r i e d They moved t o B u r b ank , C lara ( W heeler) H u f f o n C A du r in g W W I I , w h e r e t hey b o t h w or k e d for November 18, 1997. Mr. Grant served in the L ockheed A i r c r af t C o m pany. T h e i r on l y son , Naval Air Patrol Bombing Squadron from September, D avid was b or n i n G l e n 1942, a n d r ec e i ve d a n dale, CA in 1943. They reH onorable d i s c h arge i n turned to Bend in 1946 and remained until 1967. Dor1946, rate AMM 2nd Class. o thy w o r ke d f o r C e n t r a l Melvin worked as timber O regon C o m m unit y C o l faller, log hauler, and then as s e l f - employed r oa d l ege f r o m i t s be g i n n i ng a nd was a ssistant t o t h e b uilder co n t r a cte d by f ounding president of t h e Willamette I n dustries. He College, Dr. Don Pence. urchased the home ranch D orothy a n d h e r hu s rom his parents and lived t here m o s t of h i s li fe , b and, B i l l , m o v e d f r o m m oving t o Pr i n e v i ll e i n B end t o E u g ene, OR , i n 1 967, where sh e w o r k e d 1998, and then to Winston in 2009. H e a t t ended the for Lane County CommuF irst Christian C h urch i n nity C o l lege. Sh e r e t i r ed P rineville. M e l v i n l o v e d from LCCC in 1980 and in 1 989, an d s h e a n d B il l riding his horses, working m oved t o W a l d p ort , O R , them on cattle ranches, atf ulfillin g th e i r l i fe l o n g tending rodeos and h o r se e vents an d c o m p eting i n d ream to l i v e o n t h e O r egon Coast. team penning and c utting Bill died in 1995, and in contests. He also loved to 2008, she moved to Riverdance, play p i nochle, and t ravel. H e l o v e d v i s i t i ng ton, WY, i nt o a n a s sisted l iving f a cility, an d t o b e Hawaii and m ad e several nearer her son, David. trips there, once riding for Dorothy was preceded in t he Parker R a nc h f o r a death by her parents; husweek. He i s s u r v i ve d b y h i s band, Bill; sisters, Marion wife, C l a r a ; s o n - i n -law, Shepard a nd El i z a b eth Bob Fodge; a g r a n d son, D enham P e nrod. S h e i s survived by h er son , Brent of M c M i n nville and h is w i f e , K ee l i Mi l l e r David, and wife, Carol, of Fodge; tw o g r a n d d augh- L ander, WY ; t w o g r a n d t ers, Tonya F odge o f A l - c hildren, Julia K e l logg o f b any, an d J a m i a n d h e r B ondurant, W Y a n d A b bey Smith of Jackson, WY; husband, Donnie V r o m an o f Junction C i ty . H e s u r - four great- grandchildren; vived by s i x g r e at-grand- and numerous nieces and c hildren. H e i s a l s o s u r - nephews. A t he r r e q uest, n o s e r vived by fi ve step d aughters, P a m el a ( J e f f) vices w il l b e c o n d u cted. She will b e cr emated and Eisner, Linda H u ff , P atricia H u f f , T e r es a ( D o u g) b uried n ex t t o h e r hu s band, Bill, in Scotts Mills, Gideon, and C i ndy ( R ich) Lund; 1 0 s t ep-grand-chil- Oregon. dren, 26 step-great-grandc hildren a n d tw o ste p FEATURED OBITUARY great-great-granddaughters. He will be dearly missed by all his extended family and his many friends. He was preceded in death by his parents, his daughter, S u sa n Fo d g e , tw o brothers, Frank Grant and Norman Grant, two sisters, J une G r e y an d Joyc e G rant. H e w a s a l s o p r e ceded in death by three infant sisters. By Elaine Woo Los Angeles Times Special thanks to M a n or House f o r t h e e x c e l lent P hilosopher P au l K u r t z care they gave him during was called many unflattering h is s ta y t h e r e . A l s o to names during his long career, A medisys H os p i c e S e r including "Satanic free-thinkvices. A funeral service i s s e t er" and "dangerous corrupter of young minds." for 11:00 a.m., Friday, NoBut the name some of his vember 2, at McHenry Funeral H om e i n C o r v a l lis. critics considered most damnC asket w il l b e o p e n o n e ing was th e on e h e m o st hour prior t o t h e s e rvice. prized. I nterment w il l b e a t H a r They called him a secular lan Cemetery. Online conhumanist. dolences may be sent via: "You can call me a skeptic, www.mchenryfuneralh ome.com. M c H enr y F u - a non-theist, an atheist, an n eral Home , i s h a n d l i n g agnostic, a skeptical, agnostic atheist, but the best term," arrangements. Kurtz, a champion of science and debunker of religions and the supernatural, told the AsDEATHS sociated Press years ago, "is secular humanist. I have a phiELSEWHERE losophy, a point of view, and I express it." Deaths of note from around Kurtz, a forceful leader of the world: the secular humanism moveBetty Anne Ward McCaskill, ment that holds human free84: Mother of U.S. Sen. Claire dom and creativity supreme, McCaskill, D-Mo. and a died Oct. 20 at his home in trail-blazing politician in her Amherst, N.Y. He was 86. own right as the first woman His son Jonathan said Kurtz elected to the Columbia, Mo., had heart problems but deCity Council in 1971. Died clined to give an exact cause Monday in St. Louis of cardio- of death. renal failure, her daughter Kurtz taught philosophy at sa>d. State University of New York Gudmund Vigtel, 87: Former at Buffalo for 26 years but was director of the High Museum not anivory tower recluse. He of Art in Atlanta and credited created the magazines Skeptiwith lifting a modest museum cal Inquirer and Free Inquiry, into a world-class facility the journal Human Prospect during his 28 years as and the publishing company director, beginning in 1963. Prometheus Books. Died Oct. 20 of cancer at his He also founded several orhome in Atlanta, the museum ganizations, the most promiannounced. nent being th e 2 1-year-old John Johansen, 96: Last of C enter for I n quiry, a N e w the "Harvard Five" architects, York-based group, dedicated a group famed for design ex- to fostering a society based periments in the 1950s. Died on science, reason, freedom Friday in Brewster, Mass. of i n quir y a n d h u m a nist — From wire reports values.
BITUARIES
Obituary policy Death Notices are free and will be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeralhomes. They may be submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825. Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday and Monday publication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by 1 p.m. Fridayfor Sunday or Monday publication, and by 9a.m. Mondayfor Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; please call for details. Phone: 541-617-7825 Email: obits©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254 Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708
Kellogg
I(',urtz was debunker of supernatural
Los Angeles Times
LOS ANGELES — To the naked eye, the white puffs of cotton growing on shrubs, the yellow flowers on canola plants and the towering tassels on cornstalks look just like those on any other plants. But inside their cells, where their DNA contains instructions for how these crops should grow, there are a few genes that were put there not by Mother Nature but by scientists in a lab. Some of the genes are from a soil bacterium called Bacillus thuringiensis that makes proteins lethal to flies, moths and other insects. Others are from the soil bacterium Agrobacterium that programs plants to make a k e y e n zyme that isn't vulnerable to a popular weed killer. These modifications allow farmers to grow crops with easier weed control and fewer pest-killing chemicals. To an increasingly vocal group of consumers, this genetic tinkering is a major source of anxiety. They worry t hat e ating engineered foods could be bad for their health or cause unanticipated environmental problems. At the very least, they insist, they deserve the right to know whether the foods they might buy contain genetically modified ingredients. In California, this unease has culminated in Proposition 37. If approved on Nov. 6, the initiative would require many grocery store items containing genetically modified ingredients to carry labels. But among s c ientists, there is widespread agreement that such crops aren't dangerous. The plants, they say, are as safe as those generated fo r c e n t uries by conventional breeding and, in the 20th century, by irradiating plant material, exposing it to chemical mutagens or fusing cells together to produce plants with higher grain yields, r esistance to f r o s t a n d other desirable properties. Now they want to insert other genes into plants to make them m ore n utritious, resistant to drought or able to capture nitrogen from the air so they require less fertilizer, among other useful traits. "There's n o mys t ery here," said U CLA p l a nt geneticist Bob G oldberg. "When you puta gene into a plant, it behaves exactly like any other gene."
Abundant research Genetically engineered crops have been extensively studied. Hundreds of papers in academic journals have scrutinized data on the health and environmental impacts of the plants. So have several in-depth analyses by i ndependent p anels convened by t h e National A c a demy of Sciences. The reports have broadly concluded that genetically m odified plants are n o t only safe but also in many r espects friendlier to t h e e nvironment t h a n n o n -
engineered crops grown via conventional farming methods. For instance, a reviewthis year of 24 long-term or multigenerational studies found that genetically modified corn, soy, potato, rice and wheat had no ill effects on the rats, cows, mice, quail, chickens, pigs and sheep that ate them. Growth, development, blood, t i ssue structure, urine chemistry and organ andbody weights were normal, a ccording to the report in Food and Chemical Toxicology. About 90 percent of the corn, soy and cotton now grown in the U.S. is genetically modified, and that has led to less use of pesticides, more targeted insect control, a shift to fewer toxic chemicals and less soil erosion compared with conventional farms, according to a 250-page analysis from the National Academies in 2010. "There were hundreds
were under attackfrom the papaya ringspot virus; a new genetically altered papaya is Percentage ofthese resistant. U.S.-grown crops that are None of this means that genetically engineered: modified crops are perfect. ~ Co t ton (2012: 94%) Problem weeds like w ater• • • • Soybeans (2012: 93%) hemp and Palmer pigweed ~ cor n (2012: 88%) are developing resistance to Roundup around the U.S., un100 dercutting the usefulness of eee 75 Roundup Ready crops. That doesn't surprise Owen, 50 who saw the same thing happen with older herbicides for 25 conventional crops. The reason was the same: overuse of '00 '02 '04 '06 '08 '10 '12* one chemical. The solution, he said, is not to ditch engineered *2012 figure as of July 3 crops but to incorporate them Source: U.S. Department of Agriculture Graphic: Los Angeles Times with a variety of herbicides, cover crops, crop rotation and © 2012 Mcclatchy-rribune News service tilling of the soil. He said he gets irked by and hundreds o f p e e r-re- talk ofmonster "superweeds" viewed articles we combed spawned by genetically modithrough," said environmen- fied crops: "It was the decision tal economist David Ervin of of how the genetic engineerPortland State University, who ing was going to be used that chaired the panel. created the problem." Though genetically modifiedcrops are widespread, the Buffer zone alterations are quite limited. To discourage the evoluT he most c o mmon o n e tion of pests that are resistant makes crop plants tolerate the to Bt proteins, the Environherbicide Roundup, allowing mental Pr otection A g ency them to thrive while weeds requires farmers to plant a die. Roundup kills weeds by buffer zone of conventional disabling an enzyme called crops near ones engineered EPSPS that plants need to for resistance. Farmers have make amino acids. been lax about this, underBut crops are v ulnerable mining the technology's usetoo. So scientists at Monsanto fulness, said Gregory Jaffe, Co. developed seeds with a director of the biotechnology resistant version of the EPSPS project for the Center for Scigene from A g r obacterium, ence in the Public Interest in splicing it i nt o soy, alfalfa, Washington. corn, cotton, canola and sugIndeed, reports of Bt-resisar beets.The resulting crops tant pests are cropping up, just have built-in protection to the as occurred with traditional herbicide; hence the b rand insecticides, said entomologist name Roundup Ready. Yves Carriere of the University of Arizona in Tucson. To stave Documented benefits off the trend, companies are It was such an easy way to creating crops with multiple control weeds that f armers Bt genes, since it's harder for flocked to it, said weed scien- insects to develop resistance tist Mike Owen of Iowa State to all of them at once. U niversity i n A m e s : "The E ngineered crops c a n siren song of simplicity and — and do — cross with conconvenience was i ncredibly ventional crops, creating ocpowerful." casional embarrassments for Scientists u se d a n o ther the plant biotech industry and strategy to make crops that headachesfororganic farmers can resist insect pests, such as who want their products free the European corn borer and of genetically modified ingrecotton bollworm. dients. In Europe, rules state For this job, the key genes that products can be labeled are from Bacillus thuringi- alteration-free if they contain ensis, known as Bt , w h ich up to 0.9 percent genetically makes proteins that are toxic modified content. There is no to insects but harmless to fish, such cutoff in the U.S., Carribirds, people and other ver- ere said. tebratesbecause they lack a Stacy Malkan, a s p okesreceptor to which the proteins woman for California's Yes bind. on 37 campaign, said she and For decades, Bt p r oteins others were not c o nvinced have been sprayed on organic by the safety data on geneticrops to control insects. In the callymodified crops because, genetically modified version among other reasons, many of the strategy, genes for Bt of the studies were done by proteins are spliced into the industry scientists and didn't plant's DNA so that it makes assess effectsof eating such the protein itself. crops for a long enough period Adoption of these crops has of time. It's also a matter of basic led to several documented benefits. American farmers cut consumer rights, she added. "When we're the ones buyback on their use of traditional insecticides that kill a broader ing the food, we should get to array of b ugs — i n cluding know what we want to know helpful ones — between 1996 about it," she said. and 2008, the National AcadAs the wife of an organic emies review found. f armer, Pamela Ronald i s China's broad adoption of heartenedthat consumers are Bt cotton led to a rise in num- interested in food safety and bers of beneficial ladybugs, sustainability. But as a Univerlacewings and spiders and sity of California, Davis, plant fewer aphidsand other pests, geneticist, she said the labels according to an April study in required by P r oposition 37 the journal Nature. wouldn't tell people what they In one famous case, ge- want to know. "It has no meaning, whether netic engineering saved a crop headed for extinction. it's (genetically modified) or Papaya plantations in Hawaii not," she said.
Altered crops
DEscHUTEs MEMQRIAL CHAPEL R GARDENs 63875 N. HIGHWAY97 ' BEND
S41.382. S S92
~.~.~ g~.. cM~Z Deschutes Memorial now displays obituaries on our website. Please go to www.deschutesmemorialchapel.com to leave condolence messages for the family and to learn about funeral/ memorial services.
FUNERALs ~ BURIALs ~ CREMATIQN
LOCALLY FAMILY OWNED6LOPERATED We honor all pre-arranged plans including Neptune Society.
C6
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2012
W EAT H E R
F O R ECAST Maps and national forecast provided by Weather Central LP ©2012.
•
-
• •
I I 4
•
•B4
• n
Today:A few light afternoon showers. CHANNE
WIGH
Kxoz.com
63
40
4 44 4 4 d
d ikckx x x x x x x xx x x xx x
wAStOria 4 4 4 4 4 4 Cxxxx x x x x x x x x x x x x
4 4 *9/54 4 o 4 4 4 4 S easideo 4 4 0 4 4 4 4 4 4 C i i»~~ w ~~~~~xx x x x x
Umatilla
65/53
~~~~,et/46'~~gageS~et»> v Arlingtan
Tillamookd, o 4 m«9
Lincoln Ci
x h o x xxhlwasco ~~ ~ o~ s a ndv xN 'x x x x ixx 6 i s i J o '1 4 xxwxet»tx x'xx
N eWPOtdt4 4x
4Corvaiifg %64»8
Yachats 59/54
„„
63/51
Joseoh
I La Grande• 61/43 53/43
• •
Baker City
~
e' t ~X •
63/38
ew49 I • Mitchell 62/48 n •John PnneVllle 60/47 Day
XX X X X X X X X X 5 8 /43
Unity
61/37
•
„ „ „ „ „ „ , Sfs t e rs
xxx'e u9enexxxxxxxxv 8x x x x x x x x x i 43/45 Florencenii 58/55 %~ 65/seixx x x x x x k x x i >uiisiver
Co +age
Ruggs
65/50
•
sh
67/50
Condon
~a„s , . ss
Wa owa • Enterprise • Meacham 58/40
• Pendleton v,ss«5
Wtlluwdale
k
Alba
• Hermiston 65/54
xxx
i i camP<t/40,'
,s Ie 'i i
4
'
)62/57 .'
YJ d d deI/58wxx
•
Redmond 63/46 Bend
• Paulina 56/43
62/43
Ontario Partly to mostly 66/42 cloudy skies and Valeo 67/43 • not as cool today.
Juntura
• Burns
66/42
67/39
6i/44
58/4
iii Medford xxu 73/49
> Brookingk~ 58/54 '
68/41
Ashland
Yesterday's state extremes
Rome
• 72'
70/39
Paisley
Chiloquin
63/36
Frenchgle
62/38
xxp rarlts x 58»5.
Jordan Valley
• Chn s tmas Valley Silver l.ake
58/40
Partly to mostly cloudy with a chance of showers north today.
Nyssa
•
' Po>qq r
CENTRAL
Hermiston
65/40
62/38
• Klamath
67/46
FallS i 4/37
• Lakeview 63/37
• 30'
Fields•
McDermitt
68/43
Klamath Falls
69/30
A few clouds, mostiy'dn.
and wetter.
Partly cloudy to mostly cloudy skies.
HIGH LOW
HIGH LOW
HIGH LOW
HIGH LOW
64 38
50 35
55 40
58 41
SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE WEST today...... 7:40 a.m. MOOn phaSeS Cloudy and breezy Sunrise SunsettodaY...... 5 57 P.m. I.ast hlew with rain likely F i rst Full Sunrise tomorrow 7 41 a m today. Rain may be Sunset tomorrow... 5:56 p.m. heavy at times. Moonrisetoday.... 6:27 p.m. Nov. 6 Nov.13 Nov. 20 Nov. 28
EAST
• Brothers 60/42
6)kridge>
x i i La Pineeo/dz — 'HamPton Coos Bay>« < ' 6 4/49i >x ~xxx I'es cellt • 6i/55 • + + +< Riley xxxx x x x x x x x Lakx6% C r escen t • Fort Rockevidd 64/37
• Beac
loween, late evening showers
BEND ALMANAC
IFORECAST:5TATE
I
Much cooler, cloudier
Tonight: Drying out, staying cloud.
Moonset today 8.35 8 m
PLANET WATCH
TEMPERATURE PRECIPITATION
Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....9:56 a.m...... 6:45 p.m. Venus......4:37 a.m...... 4:43 p.m. Mars......11:08 a.m...... 7:52 p.m. Jupiter......7 43 p m.....10 54 a.m. Satum......7:09 a.m...... 5;51 p.m. Uranus.....4:35 p.m...... 454 a.m.
Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low.............. 63/54 24 hours endmg 4 p.m.*. . 0.00" Recordhigh........77m1987 Monthtodate.......... 0.28" Recordlow.......... 3in1971 Average monthtodate... 0.53" Average high.............. 56 Year to date............ 7.02" Averagelow ..............31 A verageyeartodate..... 7.71"
Barometricpressureat 4 p.m30.09 Record24 hours ...2.72 in1950 *Melted liquid equivalent
FIRE INDEX
OREGON CITIES
WATER REPORT
Y esterday Tuesday W e d . Bend,westofnwy 97.....Low Sisters..............................Low The following was compiled by the Central Hi/Lo/Pcp H i / Lo/W H i /Lo/WBend, eastof Hwy.97......Low La Pine...............................Low Qregon watermaster and irrigation districts as
City Precipitationvaluesare24-hour totals through4 p.m.
Redmond/Madras........Low Prinevine..........................Low
Astoria ........ 57/55/0.11 ..... 59/54/r...... 57/48/r Baker City......56/38/0.06.....63/38/c.....62/38/sh Brookings...... 64/56/0.05....58/54/sh...... 55/49/r Burns..........64/32/0.00.....65/35/c.....62/34/sh Eugene........67/59/0.13....65/56/sh.....61/46/sh Klamath Falls .. 65/30/0 00 .64/37/pc ...59/35/sh Lakeview..... MM/MM/NA ...63/37/pc.....60/38/sh La Pine........60/49/0.00.....60/42/c.....58/29/sh Medford.......70/46/0.00.....73/49/c.....64/47/sh Newport.......57/54/0.14.....57/54/r......56/49/r North Bend......63/59/NA....65/56/sh.....58/51/sh Ontario........60/39/0.00.....66/42/c.....64/39/sh Pendleton......67/57/0.00.....67/50/c.....66/42/pc Portland ....... 68/60/0.30..... 62/57/r...... 60/50/r Prineville.......60/52/0.04.....60/47/c.....61/37/sh Redmond.......65/53/0.02.....67/40/c.....62/39/sh Roseburg.......71/56/0.02....65/53/sh.....61/48/sh Salem ....... 67/59/013 .63/58/sh ... 60/47/r Sisters.........63/50/0.00....61/45/sh.....59/33/sh The Dages......71/52/0.12.....63/46/c.....63/45/sh
a service to irrigators and sportsmen.
Mod. = Moderate; Exi. = Extreme
Reservoir Acre feet C a p acity Crane Prairie...... . . . . . . 35,293...... 55,000 Wickiup...... . . . . . . . . . 125,945..... 200,000 Crescent Lake..... . . . . . . 72,452...... 91,700 Ochoco Reservoir..... . . . 16,662...... 47,000 The higher the UV Index number, the greater Prineville...... . . . . . . . . . 82,525..... 153,777 the need for eye and skin protection. Index is R iver flow St at i o n Cubic ft./sec Deschutes RiverBelow Crane Prairie ...... . 279 solar at noon. Deschutes RiverBelow Wickiup .... . . . . . . . 248 Crescent CreekBelow Crescent Lake ..... . . . 24 LDW MEDIUM HIGH Little DeschutesNear La Pine ...... . . . . . . . 172 0 2 4 6 8 10 Deschutes RiverBelow Bend .... . . . . . . . . . 672 Deschutes RiverAt Benham Falls ..... . . . . . 813 Crooked RiverAbove Prineville Res.. ... . . . . . 33 Crooked RiverBelow Prineville Res..... . . . . 77.9 Updated daily. Source: pollen.com Ochoco CreekBelow OchocoRes. .... . . . . . 7.27 Crooked RiverNear Terrebonne ..... . . . . . . 172 Contact: Watermaster, 388-6669 MEDIUM LDW I or go to www.wrd.state.or.us
To report a wildfire, call 911
ULTRAVIOLET INDEX
0
IPOLLEN COUNT
O
g%g
Legend Wweather,Pcp precipitation, s sun,pcpartial clouds,c clouds,h haze,shshowers, r rain,t thunderstorms,sf snowflurries, snsnow, i-ice, rs-rain-snow mix,w-wind, f-fog,dr-drizzle, tr-trace
TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL
INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS
Yesterday Tuesday Wed. Yesterday Tuesday Wed. Yesterday Tuesday Wed. Yesterday Tuesday Wed. City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene,TX ......70/41/0.00...76/51/s.. 80/54/s Grand Rapids....48/33/0.00..,44/38/r. 47/40/sh RapidCity.......64/32/000..66/43/pc. 68/42/pc Savannah.......64/48/0 00..61/40/pc.. 67/46/s Akron ..........43/39/054...46/39/r. 47/38/sh Green Bay.......49/27/0 00..44/29/pc.46/32/pc Reno...........78/39/0.00...71/39/s. 69/44/pc Seattle..........60/50/0.63...55/51/r...57/49/r Albany..........60/53/006...64/50/r. 56/45/sh Greensboro......51/43/0.00..4I37/sh. 54/33/pc Richmond.......53/45/1.78... 50/39/r .. 56/38/c Sioux Falls.......55/39/0.00... 57/34/c. 57/36/pc Albuquerque.....73/39/000...71/43/s.. 72/44/s Harnsburg.......52/50/208...47/40/r. 49/40/sh Rochester, NY....49/46/0.93... 52/43/r. 47/43/sh Spokane........63/46/0.39 .. 55/47/sh. 56/46/sh d d d d d d d. xk Anchorage ......34/18/0 00...26/19/c.. 25/18/c Hartford CT.....67/52/0 41...61/50/r. 58/44/sh Sacramento......79/50/000... 77/52/s. 71/54/pc Springfield, MO ..55/27/000 ..60/36/pc.. 65/42/s d xt d d d d d d d d Yesterday's Vaneuuuerd~ • Ca lgaryx Saskatoon Atlanta .........56/44/0.00..55/35/pc.. 60/39/s Helena..........64/43/0.00...59/38/c. 63/40/pc St Louis.........56/34/000...57/36/s ..58/37/s Tampa..........68/55/000...68/58/s. 75/62/pc 4 o d d 4 4 Quebec "+ + + + 54/50 4 4 pdx 44/18 Winnipe d d d d d d z extremes Atlantic Ci t y.....63/51/4.33...56/49/r. 55/49/sh Honolulu........86/74/0.00...85/70/s.. 84/69/s Salt Lake Ci t y....73/45/000... 71/45/s .. 75/46/s Tucson..........89/56/000...88/54/s .. 87/54/s 43/21 sb/S X+ X X• d dd dd dddg Thunder Bay Austin ..........71/34/000...73/51/s.. 81/56/s Houston .........71/1/0 00...75/60/s. 80/60/pc SanAntonio.....69/41/000... 74/55/s .. 80/60/5 Tulsa...........64/30/000...72/42/s.. 73/46/s (in the 48 4 ddd ddd d 50 Sea le vvx Ha h f ax Baltimore .......54/48/443... 48/40/r. 53/40/sh Huntsville.......57/37/0.00 39/24 d 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 x ..57/37/pc. 61/3ipc SanDiego.......76/55/000... 75/60/s .. 72/59/s Washington,DC..55/49/3 08... 48/41/r.54/41/sh contiguous 51 4 d d. Ax's 4d4d4d4d44 ' tp++ d 61/55 states): * Billings.........62/41/002..67/42/pc. 65/40/pc Indianapolis.....52/36/0.00...47/35/c .. 47/34/c SanFrancisco....70/54/000..69/55/pc.. 66/56/c Wichita.........67/34/000... 71/40/5.. 75/46/s Bismarck [g x x x x d d" L ' 62/54 Birmingham.....57/37/000...57/40/s .. 63/40/s Jackson, MS.... 60/40/0.00. 66/42/pc .. 73/46/s SanJose........69/48/000..72/52/pc 68/52/pc Yakima.........70/47/003. 58/44/sh. 60/41/sh 57/35 T ol'onto d 4 d ortland ' Bismarck........54/27/000 ..57/35/pc.. 53/34/c Jacksonvile......65/46/000... 65/40/s.. 70/50/s SantaFe........70/36/0.00... 66/33/s .. 67/36/s Yuma...........91/58/0.00... 90/65/s .. 90/65/s • 91' "82/57 St. Paul Green Ba b d55/49 • 4 . ton Boise...........70/45/000..68/44/pc.. 67/41/s Juneau..........33/17/000..32/27/sn..35/29/rs 50/30 El Centro, Calif INTERNATIONAL Boston..........61/54/055...69/55/t. 62/49/sh Kansas City......55/39/000 ..60/39/pc. 68/41/pc 66/43 Bos 68/44 6 / Bndgeport,CT....66/53/032... 61/52/r. 59/47/sh Lansing.........44/34/0.00... 42/36/r. 46/38/sh Amsterdam......50/43/054 49/42/sh 50/45/c Mecca.........102/79/000 101/79/s. 101/78/s • 14' Buffalo.........43/41/0.62... 51/42/r. 46/43/sh LasVegas.......80/54/0.00... 81/56/s .. 81/57/s Athens..........78/66/015 ..73/61/pc. 69/62/sh Mexico City .....73/48/000... 72/49/t...71/51/t Sparta, Wis. I Bps ~ l 55/35 ( hlcagiy do eolumbudi odocx gp L iladelphia BurlingtonVT....65/47/000... 65/55/r. 59/46/sh Lexington.......45/34/0 00..42/35/sh. 47/34/pc Auckland........70/55/000..68/50/pc.. 66/55/s Montreal........63/48/000... 57/52/r. 58/44/sh w Caribou, ME.....62/51/0.00...56/52/t...59/52/r Lincoln..........61/43/0.00..61/38/pc. 67/41/pc • 6.49 San Francisco Baghdad........80/60/0.00... 84/63/s .. 86/63/s Moscow........34/28/0.00... 33/30/i .. 36/28/c Salt Lake 65/39 58/37 Charleston, SC...64/48/000...59/40/c. 65/46/pc Little Rock.......60/37/0.00 ..66/43/pc .. 66/44/s Bangkok........93/82/0.00... 94/80/t...92/79/t Nairobi.........81/59/0.00... 80/59/t...79/59/t Dover Del. Charlotte........54/42/000 ..49/37/sh.. 58/34/c LosAngeles......72/57/0 00... 71/57/s .. 68/58/s Beifng..........61/45/000... 46/29/s .. 45/27/s Nassau.........77/70/000 ..73/64/pc. 75/64/pc 4QS DenVer X „m C.,t„oi , «LOuiSVi le~o o 4 Chattanooga.....55/41/000...56/35/c.. 58/36/s Louisville........57/39/000...49/35/c.51/35/pc Beirut..........84/68/000 ..85/74/pc. 84/73/pc New Delhi......l00/59/000...88/65/s.. 89/65/s Cheyenne.......59/45/000 ..65/39/pc.. 68/36/s MadisonWl.....51/23/000...48/28/s. 48/28/pc Berlin...........45/23/000 ..44/36/sh. 49/35/pc Osaka..........68/55/000 ..65/51/pc. 64/49/pc Chicago.........51/36/000..48/35/pc.48/36/pc Memphis....... 58/37/000 63/40/s.. 66/46/s Bogota.........70/41/000..68/53/sh.67/51/sh Oslo............34/27/000..32/24/pc.41/35/sh Los Angelebx Albuquerque oklh ox ;I x " h il l fio Cincinnati.......47/40/0.00... 45/37/r. 45/35/sh Miami..........74/62/0.00... 74/58/s. 78/64/pc (x Budapest........39/32/025 ..39/23/pc. 48/33/pc Ottawa.........$9/45/000...56/49/r.57/43/sh 74/44• I 57/36 • 66/43 Cleveland.......43/41/129...49/45/r. 49/43/sh Milwaukee......48/35/000..47/36/pc.47/36/pc BuenosAires.....70/64/3 69 ..69/54/sh .. 73/56/s Paris............52/43/003 ..53/37/pc.50/41/pc Colorado Sp nngs.66/35/000...68/36/s .. 69/39/s Minneapol i s.....45/31/0 00 ..50/30/pc .. 51/33/s Honolulu tmb, 90/62 CaboSanLucas ..88/64/000..88/68/pc .. 86/67/s Riode Janeiro....88/88/000... 90/76/t...93/74/t Columhia,MO...51/31/000... 56/35/s. 60/38/pc Nashville........56/36/0 00..57/36/pc .. 58/37/s Cairo...........84/64/000.. 87/69/s 86/66/pc Rome...........55/43/0.00..60/47/pc. 62/52/sh Columhia,SC....64/47/0.00...56/41/c. 62/40/pc New Orleans.....65/49/0.00..68/52/pc .. 76/60/s Calgary.........30/23/001 ..44/18/pc 41/32/c Santiago........79/48/000 ..71/51/pc.. 75/57/s Columbus, GA....61/45/000...60/40/s.. 66/41/s New York.......63/54/052...60/49/i. 57/49/sh Cancun.........81/64/0.00.. 78/67/pc.80/70/pc SaoPaulo.......90/68/0.00... 91/72/t...91/67/t HAWAI I 68/52 • lando Columbus, OH....41/38/0.21 ...42/36/r. 44/37/sh Newark,Nl......64/54/0.48... 58/48/r. 57/47/sh Duhlin..........50/37/002...44/43/c.47/33/sh Sapporo........55/55/1 02...51/34/c. 48/33/pc • 8/49 Chihuahua Concord, NH.....59/49/065... 65/51/t. 57/39/sh Norfolk VA......59/45/378... 51/40/r ..57/44/c Edinburgh.......48/36/000 ..44/40/sh. 48/36/sh Seoul...........59/43/000... 57/31/s. 50/33/sh 78/46 Corpus Christi....76/48/0.00...78/67/s. 81/66/pc Oklahoma City...66/34/0.00...74/44/s .. 75/48/s Geneva.........43/30/000 ..47/33/pc. 49/33/sh Shanghai........72/57/000 ..69/54/sh.. 66/51/s • Miami DallasFtWonh...68/41/000...77/52/s.. 80/53/s Omaha.........57/42/000..5I37/pc. 64/40/pc Harare..........82/55/000..83/60/pc...84/58/t Singapore.......90/79/000... 87/80/t...88/78/t 74/58 20s Dayton.........43/36/000...43/36/r. 45/36/sh Orlando.........69/51/000...68/49/s. 75/55/pc Hong Kong......82/79/000...81/70/r. 75/65/sh Stockholm.......43/23/000..39/29/sh.41/33/pc Monterrey O S La Paz Denver....... 68/39/000...68/36/s .. 69/34/s PalmSprings.....91/58/0.00. 94/60/s .. 92/59/s Istanbul.........77/61/0.00 ..71/60/sh.67/59/pc Sydney..........72/55/0.00 ..75/59/pc. 83/62/pc 10s 79/59 q 86/66 Mazatlan DesMoines......52/36/000..55/35/pc.. 57/36/s Peoria..........53/30/000... 51/30/s.. 51/33/s lerusalem.......82/55/000 ..84/62/pc.83/63/pc Taipei...........79/72/000...77/69/r.71/65/sh Anchorage • 84 /68 Detroit......... 44/42/000... 46/40/r. 47/41/sh Philadelphia.....63/52/2.22... 50/42/r. 53/43/sh Johannesburg....72/55/000... 69/51/t.62/51/sh Tel Aviv.........84/61/000 ..86/67/pc. 84/67/pc 26/19 Duluth......... 48/32/000 ..44/27/pc.. 45/31/s Phoenix.........89/61/000...90/62/s .. 89/60/s Lima...........68/63/000 ..71/61/pc.71/62/pc Tokyo...........72/59/000..65/54/pc. 67/49/pc Juneau CONDITIONS El Paso..........80/41/000...79/51/s .. 79/51/s Pittsburgh.......43/41/085... 47/38/r. 44/38/sh Lisbon..........63/46/000 65/52/sh 65/58/pc Toronto.........39/37/054 32/27 ..55/49/sh 53/43/sh .%+ o4 * * FRONTS r 4+++ . 4 4 * * * b Fairbanks........t8/12/0 I6.... I8/3/c... 18/3/c Portland,ME.....60/51/041... 62/54/t...59/44/r London.........55/45/0.13...49/38/c.53/47/sh Vancouver.......57/48/0.51 ... 54/50/r. 55/50/sh + +VV ' 3 d 4 d * * * Fargo...........51/37/000...47/34/c.47/35/pc Providence......67/53/0.51... 65/52/t. 61/47/sh Madrid .........55/32/000..49/37/sh.. 57/41/s Vienna..........36/32/019..41/25/pc.48/31/pc O A L A S KA x 4 x * + Cold W a r m Stationary S hnwi rs T stnrms R a m Fhirries Snnw In Flagstaff........69/26/000...69/26/5 .. 66/26/s Raleigh.........50/42/0.29 ..49/38/sh.. 56/35/c Manila..........90/75/000..88/77/pc. 92/77/pc Warsaw.........36/18/000..36/29/pc.38/32/pc
o www m
/
-
//x,tm g "„rc'
Gas prices tumble13 cents
NEED SOMETHING FIXEDT
The Associated Press PORTLAND The AAA auto club reports the average price of a gallon of +.
•
gasoline in Oregon is $3.85.
Check out our classifieds to flnd the service professional you need!
That's down 13 cents in a week. It's 31 cents higher than the national average. Some metro pricesfrom the AAA's Monday survey: Portland$3.84,Salem$3.80,
I
Eugene-Springfield Q .85, Medford-Ashland $3.87.
Clas'sifjeds
Food, Home 8 Garden
www.bendbullelin.corn
TheBulletin
ABOVE:It vvas a glum night in 2010 as then-Deschutes County District Attorney Mike Dugan and his wife, Judy Stiegler, watched election returns showing Dugan being voted out of office. A few months later, Stiegler lost her seat in the Oregon House of Representatives.
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Call 54 I -385-5809 '
•
Rob Kerr / The Bulletin file photo
Langston Clarke
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RIGHT:The couple relax Monday on the porch of their Bend home.
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Update
everyone knows that going
Continued from C1 Dugan, 61, is working parttime as a deputy district attorney in M a l heur County. He's back to prosecuting drug addicts, animal abusers and violent criminals. There's l ess p a perwork, no management responsibility and no personnel issues. A paperless office means he can work in online in part from home. It takes him back to the days before he became district attorney, when he l i ved and breathed being a trial lawyer. "It's just a kick," he said. Not that he doesn't miss his
Stiegler i s a part - t ime instructor at Central Oregon Community College. This term, she's teaching a n introductory c ourse i n U.S. government and politics. A nd as shewatches the fierce race between her former opponent, Conger, and his challenger, Nathan Hovekamp, it's bittersweet. She misses going d o orto-door, talking with constituents. She misses the town halls and even the candidate forums. T he fundraising and t h e mud-slinging adv e r t i sements, well, those she can do without. Negative campaigning is something she's addressing with her students currently. "The campaign atmosphere has gone away from (public discourse). There were nasty campaigns in the 1800s, but now it's overtaken, it's en-
old job. "I still wish I was district attorney," he said. "It was a job I wa s honored to have and I think I did a good job. But I don't let myself worry too much about that. When you're a politician, your job is at the whim of the voters and
in. u
veloped the whole political scene," she said. Shottly after the couple both lost their jobs, they packed up and hit the road. They traveled to California and visited friends and relatives, then they headed e ast to v i s i t m o r e . T h e y traveled the country, spendi ng about a m onth on t h e road. But then they came back to Bend, settled in and decided on their next moves. "Do I want a year like that ever again? Heavens, no, u Stiegler said. But, she said, despite the threats she made jokingly to her family of moving to Oklahoma and opening a pie shop, neither of them buried their heads in the sand. "Neither of us threw in the towel," she said. "We didn't go to the desert and lick our wounds." — Reporter: 541-554-1162, ldafee@bendbulletin.com
EARN YOUR MASTER'S IN BEND Oregon StateUniversity —Cascades graduate programs prepare you for a life of meaningful professional serviceand leadership. Comelearn how you can embark on your journey to a graduate degree, right herein Bend. I
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Scoreboard, D2 College basketball, D3 Prep sports, D2 Motor sports, D4 Community Sports, D5, D6 NFL, D3
© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2012
COMMUNITY SPORTS
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
ow o ta in a on tri AMANDA MILES
Gody Vaz
Beavers go with Vaz against ASU
hristian Radabaugh has a long drive ahead of him. Radabaugh, 21, hails fr om Prineville, but is currently attending school at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. But Radabaugh, with four horses in
or s ortri es
tow, plans to depart from Vegas one of my goals, and hopefully I on Wednesday afternoon and can do well." roll into Central Oregon in the The top 12 money-winners wee hours of Thursday mornin each event for this year's ciring — a drive of about 12 hours. cuit — which consists of more He is coming home to compete Ra d aba ugh tha n t wo dozen rodeos in Orin one of the biggest rodeos of egon, Washington and Idaho his young career: The Columbia River — qualified to compete in the finals Circuit Finals are being staged practi- this week, and they will be gunning cally in his backyard on Friday and for spots in next spring's Professional Saturday in Redmond. Rodeo Cowboys Association National "I've always wanted to make it," Rad- Circuit Finals Rodeo in O k lahoma abaugh says about qualifying. "It was City. Radabaugh finished ninth in the
steer wrestling season standings to advance to the Columbia River Circuit Finals. In steer wrestling — often referred to as "bulldogging" in the rodeo world — a cowboy starts the event mounted on a horse behind a barrier. Then he chases down a quarter-tonsteer with the help of another cowboy known as a "hazer," who is also on horseback and assists in keeping the steer running in a straight line. SeeRodeo/D6
CORVALLIS — Or-
egonStatecoachMike Riley has decided to start junior Cody Vaz at
quarterback Saturday against Arizona State. Vaz had started two
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
games for the No.13 Beavers while starter
Sean Mannion recovered from arthroscopic knee surgery. Mannion returned Saturday to start
4'
against Washington, but threw four interceptions
before Vazreplaced him in a 20-17 loss.
tiJR '~
"Obviously, it's one of those things that's not
easy," Riley said. "You look at the integrity of
the competition and you try to make adecision for the team that's right this minute. We think
Cody's playing a little
bit better right now and deserves the start."
Before he injured his left knee, Mannion was
averaging morethan 339 yards in passing
• Running backICenjonBarner haspiled up great numbersbut hasbeenplaying second fiddle to other great playersat Oregon
with seven touchdowns
in four games.
"It's a little disappointing, but at the same time I know it's about the team, it's not
about any oneplayer," Mannion said. "We're supporting
EUGENE — After practice on a r ecent Tuesday, Kenjon Barner climbed inside his Camaro, an audacious combination of burnt orange and black stripes with No. 24 decals on the taillights. The engine purred. The bass thumped. Barner, a muscular running back with a mohawk haircut, pointed the car toward the University of Oregon campus. His destination: ballet class. "I love it, man," he said. "I mean, I was worried I was going to have to wear tights. I'm not a tights guy. But we wear shorts." Barner weaved through downtown with a subtle series of lane shifts, the Camaro speeding up, then slowing down, always one stepahead oftraffic.Barner drives a car w i t h c o lors d angerously close to those of his in-state rival
each other, we're both in this together. I told him that after the game on Saturday," Vaz said about the situation with
Mannion. "We're both each other's biggest fan. No matter who is play-
ing, we're both going to be on the sidelines trying to help each other out. Whatever it takes to win." — The Associated Press
NBA Blazers hire new president/CEO PORTLAND — The Portland Trail Blazers have appointed AEG Sports executive Chris McGowan as the team's new president and chief
geles Kings andMajor League Soccer's Los Angeles Galaxy aschief
the Blazers' business performance, which is key to the team's overall
success," Blazers owner Paul Allen said in a pre-
pared statement. McGowan, who joins the Blazers on Nov.12, succeeds Larry Miller, who was with the Blaz-
ers for five years before he returned to a position at Nike in the offseason. "I admire the strength ofthe Trail Blazers' brand and the passion of their fan base," Mc-
Gowan said. "I ameager to join the staff and continue to build an organization of which the
city can be proud."
McGowan will man-
age all business operations of the team and the Rose Garden. — The Associated Press
4 p.m. • TV:Fox
• Radio: KBND-AM 1110
(Oregon State), but he is without a doubt an Oregon back, which is to say speedy and shifty and explosive. As he walked toward class, he complained of the fatigue associated with that job description, of practices that consist almost entirely of running, of legs so sore it hurts to walk. He arrived at the classroom door, ready to unleash his inner Baryshnikov, only to find thatclass had been canceled. Charmed life, this kid. See Duck/D4
Rushing Oregon running back Kenjon Barneris second in the Pac-12 in rushing with an average of 121.8 yards a game.
Games 8 Receiving Games 8
guide the NHL's Los An-
find ways to improve
Oregon at USC • When: f~Saturday,
KenjonBarner2012statistics
operating officer. McGowan helped
operating officer of AEG Sports. "With his demonstrated leadership with the Kings and Galaxy, I am confident he will
Nextup
By Greg Bishop New York Times News Service
Don Ryan/The Associated Press
NBA
Floppers on notice as NBA The Associated Press
Receptions Yards 13 158
I„,
r
-
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Long Ave./Game 80 121.8
Average TD 122 1
Long Ave./Game 48 121.8
By janie McCaufey
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The Associated Press
t
'ot" de
ing to squash. C OM P A S S T R
s9 ANS
by flinging his leg out on a jump shot and falling to the ground when it makes contact with Celtics guard Mikael Pietrus. It's Danilo Gallinari "flailing" and holding his face in a soccer-style, "gross over-embellishment" — the league's own words — after running into a screen by the Lakers' Pau GasoL See Floppers/D4
Average TD 6.9 14
GiantS OLin OrmLI a taWin again
It's not just the flopping that the NBA is tryIt's Reggie Evans looking like he was zapped by about 10,000 volts of electricity when Memphis guard Tony Allen's arm hit him while Evans — yes, Evans — was setting a screen. It's Dwyane Wade trying to trick the referees
Netyards 974
MLB: WORLD SERIES
season tips off By jon Krawczynski
Attempts 14I
Jeff Chiui The Associated Press
San Francisco Giants' Pablo Sandovalcarries the World Series trophy outside of AT&T Park in San Francisco, Monday.
SAN F R A N CISCO — T h e G i a n t s' championship formula is a familiar one, just with new faces all over the diamond two years later: stellar starting pitching backed by a shut-down bullpen, a late-season surge and a manager making all the right moves. San Francisco captured its second World Series title in three seasons with a stunning sweep of the Detroit Tigers, and only catcher Buster Posey was in the lineup for the Game 5 clincher in 2010 at Texas and also the finale at Comerica Park in 2012. "We're just happy right now," Posey said. "It's an unbelievable feeling." Two of the four games against Detroit were started and won by a pair of pitchers not even on the World Series roster in 2010, and in Ryan Vogelsong's case he was not even in the majors back then. See Giants/D6
D2
THE BULLETIN•TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 20'I2
ON THE AIR
SPORTS
COREBOARD
TELEVISION
IN BRIEF
Basketball
Today BASKETBALL 5 p.m.: NBA, Boston Celtics at Miami Heat, TNT. 7:30 p.m.: NBA, Dallas
Mavericks at LosAngeles Lakers, TNT.
Wednesday BASKETBALL Sp.m.: NBA, San Antonio
Spurs at NewOrleans Hornets, NBA TV. 7:30 p.m.: NBA, Los Angeles Lakers at Portland Trail
Blazers, NBATV. SOCCER
6p.m.: MLS playoffs, Chicago Fire at Houston Dynamo, ESPN2. VOLLEYBALL
7 p.m.: Women's college, Colorado at Washington State, Pac-12 Network.
RADIO Wednesday BASKETBALL
7:30p.m.: NBA, LosAngeles Lakers at Portland Trail Blazers, KBND-AM 1110, KRCO-AM 690.
ON DECK Today Boys soccer: Madrasat Molala, 6 p.m.,Mountain View atSisters, 430p.m Girls soccer: Molallaat Madras,6p.m. Volleyball: Class 5Aplayin, Wilsonat Mountain View 6 p.m.;Class4Aplay-in, Ridgeviewat CottageGrove,6 p.m.
Saturday Cross-country: Class5A,4Astate championships at Lane Comm unity College in Eugene,11:15 a.m. Volleyball: First round Class5A, 4A,2A, state piayoffs,TBA
Bulletin staff report COTTAG E G ROV E C o-champion of t h e Sky-Em League, Sisters will have to settle for the l eague's No. 2 b e rt h i n the Class 4A girls soccer playoffs after falling 5-2 to Junction City in a seeding match played Monday at neutral Cottage Grove High School. Sisters an d J u n c tion City tied for the Sky-Em championship, both teams finishing at 9-1 in league play after splitting their two regular-season meetings. Monday's match was to determine the Sky-Em's Nos. 1 and 2 seeds in the 1 6-team bracket for t h e state playoffs, which get under way a week from today. The Outlaws struck first
in Monday's game, taking a 1-0 lead 17 minutes in on an unassisted goal by Natalie Ambrose. But ShayLee Miner, the Tigers' standout senior forward, scored the first two of her four goals before halftime for a 2-1 Junction City lead at the break. Miner's third goal made it 3-1 Tigers eight minutes into the second half, but Emily Corrigan answered for Sisters with an assist from Ambrose just a minute later to pull the Outlaws back within one. That was as close as Sisters would g et, however, as M i n er scored again in the 60th minute of the match and Junction City t acked on another late goal to secure the win and the league's top seed. Sisters ( 12-2 o v erall) had won eight consecutive matches going i n to Monday's seeding contest, including a 4-2 home victory over Junction City on Oct. 16. The Outlaws had not lost since falling 1-0 to the Tigers in Junction City on Sept. 25.
Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonrottery.org
MEGABUCKS The numbers drawn Tuesday night are:
46 020>O>s060zz0 The estimated jackpot is now $2 million.
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NBA NATIONALBASKETBALLASSOCIATION Times POT
Today's Games WashingtonatCleveland,4 p.m. BostonatMiami, 5p.m. Dallas atL.A.Lakers,7:30p.m. Wednesday'sGames Indiana atToronto,4 p.m. DenveratPhiladelphia, 4 p.m. Houstonat Detroit, 4:30p.m. Sacramentoat Chicago, 5p.m. San Antonioat NewOrleans, 5 p.m. Dallas atUtah,6 p.m. GoldenStateatPhoenix, 7p.m. Memphisat L.A.Clippers, 7:30p.m. L.A. Lakersat Portland, 7:30p.m. Thursday'sGames NewYorkat Brooklyn, 4p.m. Oklahoma City atSanAntonio, 6:30p.m.
FOOTBALL NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE All Times POT
Sisters falls in seeding match
• P
m
Friday Football: Class5Aplay-in game,Parkrose at Mountain View,7p.mJClass5Aplay-ingame,Lebanon at BendHigh,7 p.mJClass 4Aplay-in game,Crook CountyatMadras, 7p.m.; Class4Aplay-in game, Ridgeview atSiuslaw, 7p.m.; CulveratWaldport, 7 p.mz Gilchrist atChiloquin, 7p.m.
NFL
PREP GIRLS SOCCER
IN THE BLEACHERS
AMERICANCONFERENCE
NewEngland Miami Buffalo NY Jets
East W L T P ct PF 5 4 3 3
W Houston 6 Indianapolis 4 Tennessee 3 Jacksonwge I
Baltimore Pittsburgh Crncinnati Cleveland
W 5 4 3 2
PA 3 0 625 262 170 3 0 571 150 126 4 0 429 171 227 5 0 375 168 200 South L T P ct PF P A 1 0 3 0 5 0 6 0 North L T 2 0 3 0 4 0 6 0
857 216 128 571 136 171 375 162 257 143 103 188
P ct PF P A 714 174 161 571 167 144 429 166 187 250 154 186
West W L T P ct PF P A Denver 4 3 0 .571 204 152 SanDiego 3 4 0 .429 154 144 Oakland 3 4 0 .429 139 187 Kansas City 1 6 0 .143 120 209 NATIONALCONFERENCE East W L T P ct PF P A N.Y.Giants 6 2 0 750 234 161 Philadelphia 3 4 0 429 120 155 Dallas 3 4 0 429 137 162 Washington 3 5 0 375 213 227 South W L T P ct PF P A Atlanta 7 0 0 1.000 201 130 TampaBay 3 4 0 .429 184 153 NewOrleans 2 5 0 .286 190 216 Carolina 1 6 0 .143 128 167 North W L T P ct PF P A Chicago 6 I 0 857 185 100 Minnesota 5 3 0 625 184 167 GreenBay 5 3 0 625 208 170 Detroit 3 4 0 429 161 174 W SanFrancisco 6 Arizona 4 Seattle 4 St. Louis 3
West L 2 4 4 5
T 0 0 0 0
P ct PF P A 750 189 103 500 127 142 500 140 134 375 137 186
Thorsday'sGame Tampa Bay36, Minnesota17 Sunday'sGames GreenBay24,Jacksonvile15 Indianapohs19,Tennessee13, OT Chicago23,Carolina22 Miami30,N.Y.Jets9 Cleveland7, SanDiego6 Atlanta30,Phiadelphia17 Detroit 28,Seattle24 Pittsburgh27, Washington12 NewEngland45, St.Louis 7 Oakland 26, KansasCity16 N.Y.Giants29,Dallas24 Denver34, NewOrleans14
OpenBaltimore,Buffalo,Cincinnati, Houston Mondey'sGame SanFrancisco24,Anzona3 Thursday, Nov. 1 KansasCityat SanDiego,5.20 p.m. Sunday,Nov.4 ArizonaatGreenBay,10 a.m. ChicagoatTennessee,10a.m. Buffalo atHouston, 10a.m. CarolinaatWashington, 10a.m. Detroitat Jacksonvile,10a.m. DenveratCincinnati,10am. Baltimoreat Cleveland, 10a.m. Miami atIndianapolis,10a.m. MinnesotaatSeattle,1:05 p.m. Tampa Bayat Oakland,1:05 p.m. Pittsburghat N.Y.Giants,1:25 p.m. Dallas atAtlanta,5:20 p.m. Open. N.Y.Jets, NewEngland, SanFrancisco, St. Louis Monday, Nov.6 PhiladelphraatNewOrleans,5:30 p.m
"Another. puny baby! Man, I'd love to hook into their momma."
College Schedule All Times POT
(Sublect to change) Thursday's Games
SOUTH VirginiaTechatMiami, 4:30p.m.
Middl eTennesseeatW.Kentucky,6.15p.m. MIDWEST E Michigan at Ohio, 3p.m.
Ravens
SEAHAW KS RAIDERS GIANTS FALCONS
3 11 35 3.5 4 4.5 2.5 3.5 5
3.5 10 3.5 3.5 3.5 5 2 3.5 4.5
Buccaneers Steelers Cowboys
SAINTS
3.5
3.5
Eagles
TEXANS REDSKINS
Lions Bears
College Thursday
Friday's Game FAR WEST
Washington at California, 6 p.m.
Saturday's Games
EAST Air ForceatArmy,9 a.m.
Miami(Ohio)at Bufalo, 9a.m. TowsonatDelaware, 9a.m. William 8, MaryatNewHampshire, 9a.m Yale atBrown,9:30a.m. Dartmouth at Comel, 9:30a.m. Lehigh atHolyCross,9:30a.m. Wagner atAlbanyINYI,10 a.m. Sacred Heart atBryant,10 a.m. Fordham atBuckneg,10 a.m. LafayetteatCogate,10a.m. Columbraat Harvard, 10a.m. CCSU atMonmouth (NJ),10 a.m. Penn atPrinceton, 10a.m. TCU at West Virginia, noon JamesMadisonatMaine,12:30 p.m. FAUat Navy,12:30 p.m. Duquesne atRobert Morris,12:30 p.m. San Diego atMarist,1 p.m. VMI atStonyBrook,3 p.m. SOUTH Missouri atFlorida,9a.m. TexasA8Mat Mississippi St., 9a.m. HoustonatEast Carolina, 9a.m. Vanderbilt atKentucky,9a.m. TempleatLouisville, 9 a.m. Tennessee St.at Murray St., 9a.m. Troy atTennessee,9a.m. NewMexicoSt atAuburn,9:30a.m. GeorgraTechat Maryland,9:30 a.m. Virginia atNCState, 9:30a.m. Valparaiso atCampbell,10 a.m. Hamptonat Howard, 10a.m. DavidsonatMoreheadSt.,10 a.m. Bethune-Cookman atMorganSt.,10 a.m Jacksonvrge St.at UT-Martin,10a.m. CoastalCarolinaatGardner-Webb,10:30 a.m. FloridaA8Mat NcABT,10:30a.m. SouthernU.at AlabamaABM,11 a.m. Culver-StocktonatAustin Peay,11a.m. AppalachianSt.at GeorgiaSouthern, 11a.m. AcornSt.atMVSU, 11a.m. MemphisatMarshall, 11a.m. Delaware St.at NCCentral,11 a m. Savannah St. atNorfolk St., 11a.m. Elon atTheCitadel,11 a.m. E. I linois atTennesseeTech,11:30 a.m.
Jackson St.at Grambling St., noon Wofford atSamford, noon Mississippi atGeorgia,12:30 p.m. Old DominionatGeorgiaSt.,12:30 p.m. CharlestonSouthernat Liberty,12:30 p.m. FIU atSouthAlabama,12:30 p.m. Rice atTulane12:30p.m. Chattanooga atW.Carolina,12:30 p.m. BostonCollegeatWakeForest,12:30 p.m. UTSAatLouisianaTech,1 prm. Louisiana-Lafayette atLouisiana-Monroe,1 p.m. McNeese St.atNicholls St.,1 p.m. Rhode IsandatRichmond,3p.m. ClemsonatDuke,4p.m. Uconn atSouthFlorida,4 p.m. SMU atUCF,4p.m. UAB atSouthernMiss, 4:30p.m. Aabama at LSU, 5pm
MIDWEST Jacksonville atButler,9a.m. Syracuse at Cincinnati, 9 a.m. Oklahoma at lowaSt., 9a.m. MichiganatMinnesota, 9a.m. WMichiganatCent Michigan,10a.m DrakeatDayton,10a.m. Akron atKentSt.,11 a.m. N. Dakota St. atMissouri St., 11a.m. S. Utahat NorthDakota,11 a.m. E KentuckyatSEMissouri,11a.m. N lowaatW.lllinois,11a.m. SouthDakotaat YoungstownSt.,11a.m. RlinoisSt.at IndianaSt.,11:05 a.m. Monday's Summary S. Dakota St.at S.Illinois, noon lowa atIndiana,12:30p.m. Nebraska at MichiganSt., 12:30p.m. 49ers 24, Cardinals 3 UMass at N.Illinois,12:30 p.m. Pittsburgh atNotre Dame,12:30 p.m. S anFrancisco 7 10 7 0 — 2 4 Rlinois atOhioSt., 12:30p.m. Arizona 0 0 3 0 — 3 PennSt. atPurdue,12.30 p.m. First Quarter Oklahoma St. at KansasSt., 5p.m. SF — Crabtree 3passfrom Ale.Smith IAkerskick), SOUTHWEST 1:53. Tulsa at Arkansas, 9:21a.m. SecondOuarter Aabama St.at PrarrieView, noon SF — FGAkers43,5:58. SE Louisiana atSamHoustonSt., noon SF — Crabtree 9passfromAle.Smith (Akerskick), Ark.-Pine Bluffat TexasSouthern, noon 1.41. Kansas at B a y lor,12.30 p.m. Third Quarter atTexasTech, 12:30p.m. SF — Moss 47 passfrom Ale.Smith (Akers krck), Texas Arkansas St.at North Texas, 2 pm. 7:27. LamaratStephenF.Austin, 4p.m. Ari —FGFeely 28 .57. N orthwestern St. atCent. Arkansas,5 p.m. A—62,810. FAR WEST StanfordatColorado,11a.m. SF Ari Washi n gton St at Utah, noon First downs 15 16 Texas St. atUtahSt., noon Total NetYards 317 265 Montana at Weber St.,12:30 p.m. Rushes-yards 29-113 9-7 NewMexicoatUNLV,1p.m. Passing 204 258 N. Col o rado atPortlandSt.,1.05 p.m. PuntReturns 5 -59 4-1 5 ColoradoSt.atWyoming,1.30p.m. KickoffReturns 1-31 0-0 Cal PolyatEWashington,1:35 p.m. Interceptions Ret. 1-0 0-0 daho,2p.m. Comp-Att-Int 18-19 0 32-52-1 SanJoseSt.atI atIdahoSt., 3p.m. Sacked-YardsLost 4 -28 4-3 2 N. Arrzona Hawaii at Fresno St., 4 p.m. Punts 5-48.8 7 - 47.3 OregonatSouthern Cal, 4p.m. Fumbles-Lost 0-0 0-0 St. atSacramentoSt., 4:05p.m. Penalties-Yards 1 0-80 7-5 1 Montana St.at BoiseSt., 7:30p.m. Time ofPossession 31:16 2 8 : 44 San Diego Arizona at UCLA, 7:30p.m. ArizonaSt.atOregonSt., 7:35p.m. INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —San Francisco: Gore 16-55, Hunter10-43,Crabtree1-8,Ale.Smith1-6, Miger1-1. Betting line Arizona: Stephens-Howlin8-6, g Skelton1-1. PASSING —SanFrancisco: Ale.Smith18-19-0NFL 232. Arizona:Skelton32-52-1-290. (Home teamsin Caps) RECEIVING —San Francisco: Crabtree5-72, Favorite Opening Current Underdog Mannin gham 4-20,Walker2-38,V.Davis2-34,Moss Thursday 1-47, Gore1-11,Hunter1-6, KWi iams1-4,GinnJr. CHARGERS 9 8.5 Chiefs 1-0. Arizona: Roberts7-65, Fitzgerald5-52, Floyd Sunday 5-36, Housler4-32, King 3-43, Stephens-Howling BENGALS 3. 5 3.5 Broncos 3-32, Doucet2-21, Sherman2-11, Peterson1-(miPACKERS 1 0 10 Cardinals nus 2) Dolphins 2.5 2.5 COLTS MISSEOFIELD GOALS— None.
Monday
BROWN S Bills Panthers JAGUAR S TITANS Vikings
VirginiaTech
WKENTU CKY
16 5 2 9.5
17 2.5 9.5
E Michigan MIAMI-FLA Mid TennSt
CALIFORN IA
4
3.5
Washington
OHIO
Friday
Saturday PennSt 35 3.5 PURDUE AirForce 75 7 ARMY KENTST 21 21 . 5 Akron Vanderbilt 8.5 7.5 KENTUCK Y N. ILLINOIS 3 6.5 3 6 .5 UMass LOUISVILLE 1 4 14 . 5 Temple WAKEFOREST 35 3.5 BostonCollege Houston 3 3.5 E. CARO LINA INDIANA PK I lowa GeorgiaTech 6 7 MARYLAND Clemson 14 13 . 5 DUKE ARKANSA S 5.5 5.5 Tulsa AUBIJRN 22 22 NewMexicoSt Stanford 28 28 COLOR ADO UTAHST 26 27 TexasSt Alabama 9 9.5 LSU WYOMING 9.5 9.5 ColoradoSt NC STAT E 12.5 11 Virginia OREGO NST 5 5.5 ArizonaSt FLORIDA 16 16 . 5 Missouri MICHIGAN ST 1 .5 I Nebraska W. VIRGINIA 6.5 7 Tcu OHIOST 24.5 25 lginois NOTRE DAME 1 7 16 . 5 Pittsburgh LOUISIANA TECH32 31 Tex San Antonio SanJoseSt 17 18 IDAHO C. FLORID A 1 0.5 1 2 .5 Smu S. FLORID A 8.5 8.5 Connecticut C. MICHIGAN NL NL W. Michigan BIJFFALO 2.5 3.5 Miami-Ohio GEORG IA 13 5 14 Mississippi CINCINNA TI 55 5 Syracuse UTAH 12 12 WashingtonSt S. MISSISSIPPI 3.5 3 Uab MARSHALL 20.5 21 Memphis Michigan NL NL MINNESO TA KANSASST 8 9 Oklahoma St TEXASTECH 55 7 Texas TexasA&M 5 6.5 MISSISSIPPI ST BAYLOR 1 7.5 17 Kansas Oklahoma 11 10 . 5 IOWA ST Oregon 6.5 7.5 USC Rice 3.5 3.5 TULANE FRESNO ST 33 5 3 3 .5 Hawaii UCLA NL NL Arizona UNLV 4.5 4.5 NewMexico BOISEST 14 14 San DiegoSt NAVY 14.5 14 FloridaAtlantic Florida Int'I 45 4.5 S. ALABAM A TENNESE SE 19 18 . 5 Troy ArkansasSt 3.5 4.5 N.TEXAS UL-MONR OE 1 0.5 1 0 UL-Lafayette
TENNIS Professional Paris Masters Monday At Palais Omnisports dePeris-Bercy Paris Purse: $3.82 million (Masters 1000) Surface: Hard-Indoor Singles First Round AndreasSeppi, Italy, def. MartinKlizan,Slovakia, 6-2,2-6, 7-6(5). Carlos Berlocq, Argentina,def. Denis Istomin, Uzbekistan,7-6(2), 6-2. Kevin Anderson,SouthAfrica, def. ThomazBellucci, Brazil, 6-2,6-1. JerzyJanowicz,Poland,def. Philipp Kohlschreiber, Germany, 7-6(5),6-4. Julien Benneteau,France,def ViktorTroicki, Serbia, 6-4, 7-5. AlelandroFaga, Colombia,def. Florian Mayer, Germany, 7-6(3I,6-2. Marcel Granollers,Spain, def. Mikhail Youzhny, Russia,6-4, 6-3. AlbertRam os, Spain, def. Feiciano Lopez, Spain, 7-6 (5),6-4. GigesSimon,France,def. MarcosBaghdatis, Cyprus, 7-5,6-1. Benoit Paire,France,def. PabloAnduiar,Spain, 6 3, 6-4. ATP WorldTourRankings Through Oct. 28 q-qualified for ATP World Tour Finals, London, Nov.6-12
Singles
1 q-RogerFederer, Switzerland,12315 2. q-NovakDlokovic, Serbia,11970 3. q-AndyMurray,Britain, 7690 4. q-RafaelNadal, Spain,6905 5. q-DavidFerrer,Spain,5610 6 q-TomasBerdych, CzechRepublic,4985 7 Jo-WilfriedTsonga,France, 4710 8. q-JuanMartindel Potro,Argentina,3990 9. JankoTipsarevic, Serbia,3100 10. JuanMonaco, Argentina,2775 11. JohnIsner,UnitedStates,2565 12. RichardGasquet, France,2550 13 NicolasAlmagro, Spain,2435 I4. MilosRaonic,Canada,2300 15. MarinCilic, Croatia,2210 16. KeiNishikori, Japan,2000 17. StanislasWawrinka, Switzerland,1955 18 AlexandrDolgopolov,Ukraine,1935 19. PhilippKohlschreiber,Germany,1830 20. GigesSimon,France,1815 21. Tommy Haas, Germany,1701 22. Andreas Seppi, Italy,1620 23. Sam Querrey,UnitedStates,1560 24. MarcelGranogers,Spain,1545 25 Fernando Verdasco, Spain,1525 26. MardyFish,UnitedStates, 1345 27. MikhaiYouzhny, l Russia,1335 28. FlorianMayer,Germany,1295 29. MartinKlizan,Slovakia,1193 30. Jurgen Melzer, Austria,1167 31. AndyRoddick, UnitedStates,1150 32. MarcosBaghdatis, Cyprus,1150 33. ViktorTroicki, Serbia,1135 34. Jeremy Chardy, France,1131
35. Thomaz Begucci, Brazil, 1112 36. Felrciano Lopez,Spain,1085 37. JulienBenneteau, France, 1075 38.Radek Stepanek, Czech Republic,1070 39.KevinAnderson,SouthAfrica,1020 40. PabloAnduiar, Spain,950 41. NikolayDavydenko, Russia, 930 42. DavidGoffin, Belgium,908 43. DenisIstomin,Uzbekistan, 907 44. BenoiPai t re,France,902 45. JarkkoNieminen,Finland,897 46. FabioFognini, Italy,895 47. MarinkoMatosevic, Australia, 845 48. AlbertRam os, Spain, 830 49. BernardTomic, Australia,825 50. RobinHaase, Netherlands,825 WTARankings ThroughOct. 28
Singles
1. VictoriaAzarenka,Belarus,10595 2 Maria Sharapova,Russia,10045 3. Serena Wiliams, UnitedStates,9400 4. Agnieszka Radwanska,Poland, 7425 5. Angelique Kerber, Germany, 5550 6. SaraErrani, Italy,5100 7. Li Na,China,5095 8. PetraKvitova,CzechRepublic,5085 9 SamStosur,Australia,4135 10. MarionBartoli, France,3740 11. CarolineWozniacki, Denm ark,3685 12. AnaIvanovic, Serbia,2900 13. NadiaPetrova, Russia, 2725 14. DominikaCibulkova,Slovakia,2495 15. MariaKirilenko, Russia,2463 16. Roberta Vinci, Italy,2400 17. LucieSafarova,CzechRepublic,2125 18 JuliaGoerges,Germany,1965 19. KaiaKanepi, Estonia,1929 20. EkaterinaMakarova, Russia,1841 21. Varvara Lepchenko, UnitedStates,I835 22.JelenaJankovic, Serbia,1751 23. Yanina Wickmayer, Belgium, 1680 24. Venus Wiliams, UnitedStates,1650 25. Yaroslava Shvedova, Kazakhstan,1565 26. Sorana Cirstea, Romania,1565 27. HsiehSu-wei, Taiwan,1546 28. KlaraZakopalova, CzechRepublic,1535 29. Zheng Jie, China,1530 30. TamiraPaszek, Austria, 1523 31. UrszulaRadwanska, Poland,1490 32. DanielaHantuchova, Slovakia,1465 33. ChristinaMcHale, UnitedStates,1451 34. CaraSuarezNavarro, Spain,1450 35. Francesca Schiavone, Italy,1436 36.AnastasiaPavlyuchenkova,Russia,1430 37. SabineLisicki, Germany,1424 38. Sloane Stephens, United States,1418 39. Mona Barthel, Germ any,1416 40. Peng Shuai, China,1380 41. SofiaArvidsson,Sweden,1380 42. Aleksandra Wozniak, Canada,1320 43. AlizeCornet, France,1320 44. Tsvetana Pironkova,Bulgaria,1285 45. FlaviaPenneta, Italy,1240 46. LucieHradecka,Czech Republic,1224 47.SimonaHalep,Romania,1220 48. Lourdes DominguezLino, Spain,1181 49. Heather Watson, Britain,1165 50. AnabelMedinaGarrigues, Spain,1160
SOCCER MLS MAJOR LEAGUESOCCER AH TimesPOT WILD CARDS Wednesda y Oct.31:HoustonatChicago,6 p.m. Thursday,Nov. 1: Vancouver at Los Angeles, 7:30
p.m.
EASTERNCONFERENCE Semifinals O.C. United vs. NewYork Saturday,Nov.3: D.C.Unitedat NewYork,5 p.m. Wednesday,Nov.7:NewYorkat D.C. United, 5p.m.
Kansas City vs. Chicago/Houstonwinner Sunday,Nov.4: KansasCity at Chicago/Houstonwinner, 12:30 p.m. Wednesd ay,Nov.7:Chicago/HoustonwinneratKansas City, 6p.m. Championship Saturday,Nov.10:semifinalwinners,12:30 p.m. Saturday,Nov.17or Sunday, Nov.18 semifinalwinners, TBD WESTERNCONFERENCE Semifinals
Sen Josevs. Vancouver/LosAngeles winner Sunday,Nov.4: SanJoseat LosAngeles/Vancouver winner, 6or7:30p.m. Wednesda y Nov.7:Vancouver/LosAngeleswinnerat SanJose,Bp.m. Seattle vs. Reel Selt Lake Friday,Nov.2: Real Salt LakeatSeatie, 7p.m. Thursday,Nov.8:Seatle at Real Salt Lake,6:30 p.m. Championship Sunday,Nov,11 orMonday, Nov. 12:semifinal winners, 5 or 6 p.m. Sunday,Nov.18:semifinal winners,6p.m. MLS CUP
Saturday,Dec.1:Eastern championvs.Westernchampion,1:30p.m.
DEALS Transactions BASEBALL
American League MINNESOT ATWINS—Agreed to termswith RHP PJ. Walters on a minor-league contract. Declinedto exercise their 2013option on thecontract of RHP Scott l3aker. NEWYORKYANKEES—Exercrsethe2013contract options onthecontracts of RHPDavid Aardsma,28 Robinson CanoandCFCurtis Granderson. OAKLAND ATHLE TICS—Exercised the 2013 contractoption onthe contract of RHPGrant Balfour. Declined toexercisethe2013 contract option onthe contractofSSStephenDrew. National League LOSANG ELES DODGERS—Declinedto exercise the 2013contract options onthecontracts of RHP ToddCoffey,OF-18JuanRiveraandCMatt Treanor. MILWAU KEE BREWERS—Reinstated 1B Mat Gamel, SSAlex Gonzalez andLHPChris Narveson from the60-dayDL. Agreedto termswith INFHector Gomez onaminor-leaguecontract. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association DALLASMAVERICKS—WaivedGDelonteWest. OKLAHOM ACITYTHUNDER—Exercisedits thirdyear optiononGReggieJackson. PORTLANDTRAIL BLAZERS NamedChris McGowan president andchiefexecutiveofficer. CYCLING TEAMSKY—Announced sports director Stevende Jonghhaslefl thesquadafter admitting todopingduring hrscycingcareer. FOOTBALL
National Football League
CAROLINAPANTHERS— Waived CB Brandon Hogan. INDIANAPOLISCOLTS— Waived RB Mewelde Moore andNTAntonio Dixon. PromotedDB MarshayGreenandFBRobert Hughesfromthe practice squad. SignedCBTeddyWiliams to the practice squad MINNES OTAVIKINGS—Signed GTyler Holmesto the practicesquadWaived DEErnest Owusufromthe practicesquad. COLLEGE NCAA —Suspended New Mexico senior basketball GJamalFenton forthefirst threegamesof theregular seasonforaminor rueviolation regardingimpermissible benefits. CI.EMSO N—Named Dan Radakovich athetic director. MONTANA Suspended freshmanLB Nick Holt, junior LB JohnKanongata'a andjunior 0KielbyOiland one game eachfor violating teamrules. NORTHCAROLINASTATE— Announcedtheresig-
nation ofwomen'ssoccercoachSteveSpringthorpe.
FISH COUNT Upstreamdaily movement ofadult chinook,jack chinook, steelhead andwild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonSunday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 175 88 125 35 The Dalles 132 96 191 60 John Day 116 1 0 3 239 62 McNary 12 8 73 226 88 Upstream year-to-date movementof adult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadatselected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonSunday Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 588,775 143,425 233,405 84,702 The Dalles 411,818 125,356 198,210 69,806 John Day 335,162 108,485 160,724 61,036 McNary 340,137 62,799 148,907 50,786
• Zeller near unanimous preseason pick: Indiana sophomore center CodyZeller and Creighton junior forward Doug McDermott are the leading vote-getters on The
Associated Press' preseason All-America men's college basketball team. Also on the team
announced MondayareOhio State junior forward Deshaun
Thomas and threeguardsseniors Isaiah Canaan ofMurray State and C.J. McCollum
of Lehigh and sophomoreTrey Burke of Michigan. McCollum and Burke tied for the fifth spot with16 votes each.
Football • Vick still starter for Eagles: Michael Vick remains the starting quarterback in Phila-
delphia, for now. Threepeople familiar with the decision told The Associated Press on Monday night that coach Andy Reid
hasn't benchedVick.
College sports • NCAA poised to approve new enforcementpolicies: Rule-breakers areabout to find out just how tough the NCAA is going to be. After debating
changes for more than ayear, the board of directors is poised
to vote today on anenforcement proposal that would streamline the infractions
process, impose harsher sanctions on the worst violators, expand the current two-tiered penalty structure to four and
create a morestandard set of
penalty guidelines. The details were first released in August
when the board endorsed a proposal that has remainedessentially unchanged.
Baseball • Yankees exercise Cano, Granderson options: Baseball's businessbegan Monday with the New York Yankees exercis-
ing $15 million options onsecond basemanRobinsonCano and center fielder Curtis Grand-
erson, two of the disappointments in their AL championship series loss to the Detroit Tigers.
Oakland exercised a $4.5 million option for closer Grant Balfour and declinedits half of a $10 million mutual option for shortstop Stephen Drew, who receives a $1.35 million buyout. Minnesota declined a $9.25 million option on right-hander Scott Baker, who missed the
entire seasonbecauseofa torn elbow ligament. The Twins are interested in keeping him at a
lower salary. TheLosAngeles Dodgers declined options on first basemanJuanRivera ($4 million), right-hander Todd Cof-
fey ($2 5 million) andcatcher Matt Treanor ($950,000). Rivera gets a$500,000 buyout, Coffey $300,000 andTreanor $150,000.
• World Series averages record lowtelevision rating: The San Francisco Giants' sweep of the Detroit Tigers set a record low for the World Series' television ratings. The
four games onFoxaveraged a 7.6 rating and12 share, Nielsen MediaResearchsaid Monday.
The previous low was an8.4 for the 2008 Phillies-Rays and 2010 Giants-Rangers series,
which each went five games. Last year's Cardinals-Rangers World Series went the full
sevengames and builtmomentum to average a 10.0/16. The Giants' 2-0 win in Game 3
on Saturday earned a6.1/11, and their 4-3, 10-inning victory in the clincher Sunday drew an 6.9/14.
Golf • Mcllroy beats Woods in China exhibition: Rory Mcllroy shot a 5-under 67 to beat
Tiger Woods by onestroke in a head-to-head, 18-hole exhibition match between the world's two top-ranked golfers at the Jinsha Lake Golf Club in
Zhengzhou, China, on Monday. Mcllroy, the World No.1, took an early lead with two birdies
on the first three holes and heldon to beatW oods,who
had two bogeys to goalong with his six birdies for the day. The 14-time major winner finished with a 68. Both players
had to make long journeys to Zhengzhou, an industrial city in
China's Henanprovince, after competing elsewhere onSunday. Mcllroy finished second to Peter Hanson in the Euro-
pean Tour's BMWMastersat Shanghai, while Woods tied for fourth in the PGA Tour's CIMB
Classic in Malaysia. — From wire reports
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
WOMEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL
o ssi es e ssu ers orm an The Associated Press The fury o f H u r r icane Sandy barely laid a glove on sports around the country. While the superstorm flooded shore towns i n t h e N o r t heast, washed away a section of the Atlantic City Boardwalk and shut down transit and school systems, sports emerged practically untouched on a quiet Monday. Perhaps the biggest dislocation came inthe NFL. The league moved its trade deadline back two days to Thursday because of potential complications from the storm. All 32 teams were notified that the league'soffices would be closed through today. The deadline now is 1 p.m. PDT Thursday, when waivers forvested veterans also begin. Just as a c ombination of m eteorologicalforces made for a particularly harsh storm, sports was spared Monday by a confluence of elements.
The World Series ended a day earlier. The Monday night football game was in Arizona. Hockeyis shut down by labor problems. The NBA does not begin until tonight. College basketball has not yet begun. So the disruptions were minor: The Philadelphia Eagles closed their complex, and the New York Knicks canceled practice. The Washington Wizards adjusted travel plans, taking a morning flight to Cleveland for tonight's opener against the Cavaliers. Some Major L eague Baseball staff left the World Series in Detroit on Sunday to get back to New York before the storm shuttered transportation. Trotting at Yonkers Raceway in New York and thoroughbred racing at Suffolk Downs in Boston already had been called off. New York City Marathon organizers said they expect Sandy to have little effect on Sunday's race.
"We're extraordinarily lucky the marathon is not today," New York Road Runners president Mary Wittenberg said during a conference call as wind and rain started to batter the city. Instead, she said, "we have time on our side" — enough to prepare the courseand forrunners totravel to the city after the storm passes through. The NCAA offered its support, saying it is working with schools in the hurricane's path. "During natural d isasters, the NCAA routinely gives flexibility to institutions and conferences to
fornia, 17 horses arrived Monday morning following a flight that left Newburgh, N.Y., at 1 a.m., eight hours earlier than initially scheduled. The airport also was a change, replacing Islip on Long Island that was more directly in the path of the storm. The contingent of horses included the powerful quartet of Flat Out, Ron the Greek, To Honor and Serve, and Royal Delta for Hall of Fame trainer Bill Mott. Royal Delta is the defending champion in the Ladies' Classic, while the other three are entered in the $5 million Classic. The flight included horses for
help them quickly provide neces- Chad Brown, Shug McGaughey, sary assistanceand resources that may include meals or other benefits, relocating teams and rescheduling games," the governing body said in a statement. "We stand ready to do so today and as the storm continues ashore." At the Breeders' Cup in C ali-
Mike Hushion, Michael Trombetta and Diane Alvarado. They were the lucky ones. Todd Pletcher's New York-based horses, including the unbeaten Shanghai Bobby in the Juvenile, were scheduled to fly this morning, but the flight was pushed back to Wednesday.
NFL
Seahawks look for answers to third down defensive woes By Danny O'Neil The Seattle Times
RENTON, Wash.— No team in the league has forced opponents into more third-andlong situations than Seattle. That fact is evidence of the Seahawks' fortitude against the run and an ability to hold their ground on first and second downs. No team in the league has allowed opponents to convert more third-and-long plays than the Seahawks. That fact points to an underlyingweakness of the defense, a persistent inability to get off the field that could
posing passer. "I don't disagree with that thought," Carroll said. The Seahawks had two sacks Sunday in Detroit, one by defensive tackle Brandon Mebane and theother by linebacker Leroy Hill, who blitzed. The Seahawks missed defensive tackle Jason Jones — a staple of their nickel pass rush — who was out with an ankle injury. They also mistimed several blitzes, according to Carroll. It's not like Seattle's personnel undergoes a wholesale overhaul on third down. The same guys who are the reason Seattle has allowed the third-fewest points in the league are largely the same guys on the field on third down. But after that performance Sunday, the pressure is on Seattle to improve the thirddown defense that threatens its season.
UConn coach
proposes lower rims By Zach Schonbrnn New York Times News Service
At a recent dinner in Norristown, Pa., the Connecticut women's basketball coach, Geno Auriemma, asked Harry Perretta, the Villanova coach, for feedback on an idea he had been considering for some time. Auriemma's thought wa s n ovel: lower the 10-foot-high rims on basket-
ball hoops for women's leagues by 7 inches to help generate more offense and attract more fans. Perretta had never heard such a suggestion. "My initial reaction was I d o n't know yet," Perretta said. "I understand the rationale — men are closer to the rim when they're laying it up, and it would make our field-goal percentages go up. I do agree with that to some extent." A uriemma went public with h i s opinion last week, telling The Hartford Courant that he believed fan interesthad waned because teams were not scoring with the ease and regularity that they should. "Some of the players can't shoot and they miss layups, and that forces the game to slow down," Auriemma told the newspaper. "Now there would be fewer missed layups, because the players are actually at the rim. Shooting percentages go up. There would be more tip-ins." For decades, women have played with a smaller basketball than men, a nd Auriemma compared that t o women's volleyball nets, which are lower than men's, and softball field dimensions that are shorter than those for baseball. Other coaches around the country applauded Auriemma's forwardthinking outspokenness. Most believed an immediate switch would be impractical — considering the number
of high school gyms and playgrounds
endanger Seattle's playoff hopes.
"It's disturbing," coach Pete Carroll said, "that we're not able to be like we are in the rest of our game. We'll try to take the turn here. We've had some deep discussions about it, and see if we can get it fixed right away." The Seahawks allowed the Detroit Lions to convert 12 of the 16 third downs they faced Sunday, the highest percentage by any Seattle opponent since December 2004. Those are the kind of numbers you'd expect when an opponent repeatedly faces the equivalent of gimme putts on t h ird down. That wasn't the case, though. Six of Detroit's 12 third-down conversions came on plays in which the Lions needed seven yards or more. It was a continuation of a seasonlong trend. Third-and-long is the situation when Seattle tends to take it in the shorts. NFL teams convert an average of 26.1 percent when it's third-and-seven or longer this season, beforeMonday's game, according to Stats Inc. The Seahawks have given up a first down 39.3 percent of the time, which is a much bigger difference that it sounds. If Seattle was an average NFL defense, it would have allowed opponents to convert 16 third downs that required seven or more yards. The Seahawks have actually allowed 24. That's a difference of eight plays. Eight drives that were extended. Eight times a stop would have forced a kick and instead resulted in a first down. In a season in which Seattle's four losses have come by a combined total of 21 points, those eight plays could have made all the difference. Besides, Seattle is not an average defense. The Seahawks have allowed the third fewest points in the NFL, the fifth-fewest yards. They went two consecutive road games without allowing an offensive touchdown, and yeteven before Sunday's game, the Seahawks were a decidedly mediocre No. 16 in terms of third-down defense. Now, they're No. 27, the only one of the league'stop six scoring defenses to rank outside the top 10 in that category. Diagnosing the problem isn't as important as fixing it, though. The problem is that there hasn't been one consistent theme to the third-down struggles. "It would be easy if we got beat in man coverage the whole time," Carroll said, "or it was thezone stuff,or the pressures." That last category is key because often defensive difficulties on third down are attributed to an inability to pressure the op-
D3
n4 ' //'
((jj/ k,:
Paul Connors /The Associated Press
San Francisco 49ers wide receiver Michael Crabtree (15) pulls in a touchdown pass as Arizona Cardinals cornerback Patrick Peterson defends during the first half of Monday night's game in Glendale, Ariz. San Francisco went on to take a 24-3 victory.
amos e e In vld'.0 over ar inas By Bob Banm The Associated Press
GLENDALE, Ariz. — Three touchdown passes, one incom-
day it wasn't like he had to make the longperfect throws. He had some guys open and we missed some tackles and they made
plete pass.
plays."
N ot a ba d n i ght fo r A l e x Smith, and it could have been better, considering that the one incomplete pass was dropped by a wide-open receiver. The San Francisco quarterback completed 18 of 19 passes for 232 yards and three touchdowns — two to Michael Crabtree and one to Randy Moss — to help San Francisco flatten the Arizona Cardinals 24-3 on Monday night. "Eighteen of 19, I have never seen that," 49ers coach Jim Harbaugh said. "How important for your quarterback to play very well'? It is very important and I don't know how you play much better. It was a fantastic game by him." Arizona defensive tackle Darnell Dockett could hardlybelieve what Smith had done. "Everyone's surprised. My 5year-old son's surprised," Dockett said, "but at the end of the
Smith said he had no idea his stats were that good. "Which is a good thing," he said. "I don't want to think about my stats or i ncompletions or anything like that. I was kind of in a good rhythm, the whole offense was." Smith has w ithstood more than his share of criticism after he was the No. 1 overall pick in the draft in 2005. He was not interested in calling this a statement performance. "At this point I don't care," he said. "if you ask me a few years ago, yeah maybe, but at t his point I don't really care. I am concerned about winning. The guys in the locker room know what I am about and that is what really matters." As for reports he had lost his confidence, Smith said, "It was in my closet. I found it." Smith was 14 of 15 for 146 yards and two touchdowns, both
to Crabtree, as the 49ers built a 17-0 halftime lead. Moss caught a 47-yard TD pass, dodging tacklers down the sideline on a play that seemed to turn back the clock to the receiver's prime. With the catch, he tied Terrell Owens for fourth on the NFL career touchdown list with 156. Smith, who tied a career high with the three touchdown passes, spread out his completions to 10 receivers. Crabtree led the way with five catches for 72 yards. A rizona's d e f ense, s u p posed to be the team's strength, missed tackle after tackle in an embarrassing nationally televised performance at h o me. The 24 points were the most allowed by the Cardinals this season. "This was a big test for us, and everyone saw how it went," Arizona coachKen Whisenhunt said. "It was disappointing to say the least." Quarterback John S k elton called the loss "embarrassing" and "humiliating."
that would need adjusting — but they agreed with his central tenet: More people should be considering ways to improve women's basketball as an attraction for fans. "The logistics — I don't think it's possible," Gonzaga coach Kelly Graves said. "But I like the train of thought, I really do." Perretta said he would need to study it more closely and practice with a lower rim before signing off on the idea. He worried about its effect on outside shooters. But he certainly did not scoff when Auriemma brought it up. "He's a student of the game, and he thinks things out before he says them," Perretta said. "He brought up a point of view with some evidence to back it up, and I'm going to listen." California coach Lindsay Gottlieb liked that Auriemma chose to "stir the pot to get people thinking," although she did not agree that lowering the rims would be the best way to generate more fan interest. "I think the women's game has been developing as a product," Gottlieb said. "We're continuing to get more athletic, we're continuing to get faster, and I think that's going to grow the game and grow fans. And I think people who like women's basketball like the fact that we play under the rim." Auriemma's idea — which he said he planned to propose to the NCAA rules committee — was linked to the fact that only 11 women's teams in Division I shot 45 percent or better from the field last season, compared with 109 men's teams. In part because male playersare generally taller than female players, they can reach the rim for layups and dunks more routinely. Attendance for Division I women's basketball games set a record last season with more than 8.1 million fans, and the 2012 championship game, in which Baylor defeated Notre Dame, was the most watched women's final since Auriemma's Huskies played Tennessee in 2004. But Auriemma said that the game had not grown "as much as it should" and that faster tempos and more scor-
ing would help. "That's what people want to see," St. John's coach Joe Tartamella said. "Players like to play it; fans like to watch it. Is it something that could help the game'? I'm sure it would." Rosalyn Gold-Onwude, an analyst for ESPN and MSG Network, said a faster pace would be better suited for fans. She liked Auriemma's other suggestions, including reducing time on the shotclock from 30 seconds to 24 and instituting an eight-second backcourt rule.She said she got nervous, however, about the suggestion that the women's game needed more dunking to thrive. "I think the emphasis should be less about making it more like the men's," Gold-Onwude said, "and instead understanding how to optimize what the women can do and put that in a light that is exciting."
D4
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2012
Floppers
MOTOR SPORTS
a 's e anin n
al?
By jenna Fryer
Oct. 19, citing a conflict of interest in holding a seat while pursuing Surelythere must be some misthe series. "I realize that my recent efforts understanding, and the board of directorscharged with overseeto explore the possibility of acing IndyCar really does have a k' quiring IndyCar represent the ap./~ long-term strategy for the series. pearance of a conflict, and it is in The sacking of CEO Randy everyone's best interest that I resign," George said in a statement Bernard has played out like an episode of Keystone Cops, threatthat day. "It goes without saying ening to push IndyCar into a fullthat I want to do what is best for blown crisis. this organization." Vilified two weeks ago, it now One problem'? IndyCar doesn't seem to think it has a crisis, even appears that George indeed did though powerful t eam o w n er want only what was best for the Roger Penske accused the board series. of directors of showing "poor Penske is now b l asting the judgment" following Sunday board for a pattern of bad decinight's firing of Bernard. sions, and George apparently felt "There is no future plan," Penthe same way. Bernard wouldn't ske said. "They need to realize have made the cutunder George's this will hurt teams with major newgroup, but George was at least sponsors. We need continuity." trying to take the board out of the Instead, the series has a grossly picture and take a step toward fixmishandled situation by the Huling what is clearly a broken model in IndyCar management. man & Co. and IMS boards, which let Bernard twist all season amid Terry Renna /The Associated Press file There were no public reassurrumors team owners wanted him Tony George, founder of the Indy Racing League,talks about the auto ances from IndyCar on Monday racing series during a news conference in Homestead, Fla., in 2008. fired. The board did nothing to that everything will be fine, the quiet the talk during a paranoid George wants to buy IndyCar, and his interest in reacquiring the series can do better without Berfinal month, and it reached absur- series has cost him his seat on the board of directors of the company nard and that a strategy is in place dity late last week with a report that owns Indianapolis Motor Speedway. for growth and stability. That's a problem, said Ramsey Bernard had indeed been fired. But it was denied by both BerPoston, a crisis communications nard and the speedway on Friday, direction that Randy was taking IndyCar. expert and president of Tuckahoe only for the Indianapolis Motor IndyCar." The Associated Press on Mon- Strategies who managed NASSpeedway board to meet Sunday A saddened Christine Cesare day obtained a copy of George's CAR communications for nearly night and decide in an emergency Montez of California also reached five-page proposal, which had 10 years. "Without a leader, a vision or an executive session that Bernard her breaking point. him listed only as member of the "After 40 years of watching it should step down. board in the group that would apparent transition plan, IndyCar Why? No r eason has been and 36 yearsattending the races, take over the m anagement of is in crisis," Poston said. "There is given. my 500 flag will fly no more," she IndyCar. no offseason in sports and every The proposal by ICS Acquisi- day that goes by without a leader What did Bernard do wrong'? said. "I will never buy another No examples were cited. ticket and the 36 years of collect- tion didn't include a single car or a well-defined plan is damagWhat will IndyCar do next'? Jeff ing merchandise is over." owner, just a management team ing to the 2013 season and beyond. Belskus, the interim CEO, plans IndyCar has done little to calm that included: Zak Brown, founder At this point, every major staketo conduct a search for Bernard's the storm brewing since the sea- and CEO motorsports marketing holder, including the fans, team replacement and said he hasn't son ended Sept. 15. agency Just Marketing Interna- owners, sponsors and broadcastBernard rolled out his 19-race tional, Mike O'Driscoll, chairman ers are watching closely and wonset an established timeline to hire a CEO. schedule on Oct. I, but it was im- of Jaguar Heritage and a non-ex- dering what is happening. "IndyCar needs to demonstrate Bernard was no messiah and he m ediately overshadowed by a ecutive director of the Williams was polarizing in the paddock, so report thatseries founder Tony Fl team, Terry Angstadt, former sooner than later that it has a plan it's not as if he can't be replaced. George was trying toreacquire president of IndyCar's commer- that will positively move the seBut he was popular with fans IndyCar, which is a part of his cial division and Claire Roberts, ries forward." and made improvements to the se- family's Hulman 8 Co. portfolio. the CEO of A r b iterSports, an But team owner Chip Ganassi NCAA-owned sports technology ries in his three years on the job. Belskus, the president of IMS said this current storm has been But his departure has been messy and president and CEO of Hulman company. blown out of proportion by the and that has created uncertainty 8 Co., has repeatedly addressed George's plan called for Brown media and is much ado about for teams searching for sponsors, the situation only by saying that to be the CEO and commissioner nothing. " Every year y ou've got t h e who must be wondering if the se- IndyCar is not for sale. But it did of IndyCar and O'Driscoll to be ries is a viable investment. nothing to ease the panic in fans the president and chief operat- same old people asking the same It also has enraged fans who who feared George regaining ing officer. O'Driscoll would have old questions and the fact of the are threatening to turn away for control of the series many blamed also run the day-to-day opera- matter is IndyCar racing goes him for ruining during his 14-year tions of the series. good. up and down with the rest of the "Done w it h I n d yCar," said reign. The offer would have taken the economy. For five people in the Geoff Gray, who attended the It was always assumed that series away from George's moth- press to be wound up about it, it is Indianapolis 500 first with his fa- George had collected support er and three sisters,and made not really having the finger on the ther and grandfather and has had from several team owners who all IndyCar operate separately from pulse of what's going on," he said his own tickets for 10 years. But wanted Bernard out as CEO. So Indianapolis Motor S peedway. Monday. "Everything is fine. We he said "inside politics once again it was assumed they had pooled It included a stipulation that a have the same old problems togot in the way of the shortsighted their money in a bid to buy the sanctioning agreement would be day that we did before Randy got board of directors." series and put George back in reached on the Indianapolis 500. there. A lousy TV package, the "The sponsors see nervous fans, control. G eorge's offer,w hich was for$5 same old gravitational problems and there is no longer an apparent Turns out, George had no inten- million cash and proof of $25 mil- any sport has today. "It's the offseason and there's path or objective," said the Florida tion of regaining control at all. lion in reserves for stabilization of nothing else to talk about. So evresident. "The fans have also been He just didn't want the board the league, expired Oct. 15. nervous because they liked the to have any more power over He resigned from the board erybody just take a deep breath." The Associated Press
Duck
he now plays for the NFL's 49ers. "I mean, this dude sprays cologne on his socks." How Barner ended up at Oregon, in a late starring role, is also an atypical blend, of sweat and chance, of hurry and p atience. The journey included an epiphany, eight-man football, the
shade of green. For the fashionable Barner, that seemed like a Continued from 01 good fit. In each of the past four weeks, Oregon recruited Barner to Barner has exceeded 100 rushing p lay cornerback. Early on, h e yards for Oregon, including 104 played everywhere. He played the yards and two touchdowns on role of gunner on the punt team, just nine carries this past Saturreturned kickoffs and punts, lined day against Colorado. Nine days up at cornerback and running earlier against Arizona State, he Ducks' gaudy uniforms, yoga, back and wide receiver. tiptoed toward the offensive line, sleds pulled, hills run, time bided, In 2009,he seta team record for pushed into a crease and shot 71 a concussion scare and a position kickoff return yardage. In 2010, yards into the end zone, a blur of switch. when James sat out the opener, white and gray. By halftime, OrO n Monday o f l a s t w e e k , suspended, Barner scored five egon led the Sun Devils 43-7. Barner satin a conference room touchdowns, including four on the With each game, each score, at Oregon. He wore Air Jordan ground. Yet Oregon faced a faBarner has continued to escape sneakers and a Detroit Tigers cap. miliar problem: too many capable the shadow cast by his best friend, He relayed stories of his youth, running backs, in the tradition of Oregon's career leading rusher, stories about basketball, his first Jonathan Stewart and Jeremiah LaMichael James. Barner ranks love, the way he imitated Stephon Johnson and LeGarrette Blount. "Since I've been here, that's among the top six at Oregon in Marbury and Allen Iverson, both career rushing yards, kick-re- small and fast and unafraid. been thedilemma," Ducks coach turn yards and all-purpose yards. O ne morning d u r ing s i x t h Chip Kelly said. "For all Kenjon's He once scored five times in one grade, Gary Barner woke his son success, he was overshadowed." game, and he finished last sea- for basketball practice. Oregon, with its hurry-up, so"I quit," Kenjon responded. son with the eighth-most rushing called blur offense, has averaged "What?" his father asked, about 53 rushing attempts a game yards in the Pac-12. He is the first Oregon playersince 1965 to score incredulous. this season. Barner, because of "I don't want to play basketball what Kelly called his "great vitouchdowns rushing, receiving, sion" and "ability to accelerate," returning a punt and returning a anymore. I'm going to the NFL." "You're crazy. You don't even has received a l arge share of kickoff in his career. Despite those numbers, despite play football. I'm going to get your them. the flashy car and both rare hair mother." Two years ago, he wondered if Barner is the youngest of seven he would play again, after a heland rare air, Barner also seems perpetually overshadowed. First children, the baby of the fam- met-to-helmet hit against Washby James and now by De'Anthony ily, sheltered by one and alL He ington State left Barner crumpled Thomas, his backup and close speaks to his mother, Wilhelmen- on the field,concussed. James, friend who has the rapper Snoop ia, 10 times daily on average. She so close to Barner that he wept Dogg on speed dial. forbade him from playing football for much of the remainder of that "I haven't wished for more at- early on. game, visited his friend afterward tention," Barner said. "Would I Eventually, a neighbor persuad- in the hospital. He wanted Barner have liked it? Yeah. I'd be lying if ed her to change her mind. Barner to watch the play immediately, to I said I wouldn't." played in an eight-man league at alleviate concern. Barner's answer — candid and Calvary Chapel Christian School James pulled out his cellphone, different — underscored his per- in Moreno Valley, Calif., then at found the play on YouTube and sonality, which teammates have Notre Dame High School in near- provided commentary. "Here it comes," he said. "Here described asindescribable. They by Riverside. He scored so many note thepenchant for pedicures, touchdowns he lost count. it comes. Watch for it. Watch for He knew next to nothing about it." the Louis Vuitton luggage, the love of country music. Oregon. But one of his brothers At the moment of impact, James "Pretty much everything you liked the Ducks' uniforms, blind- told Barner, "You've got to protect would expect out of a f ootball ing and different all the t ime, yourself, man." player,he's the opposite," James all that neon and black and a He added, "You got smoked!" said from San Francisco, where diamond-plate pattern and every Despite the humor, Barner un-
derstood the seriousness ofthe injury. The next week, Eric LeGrand, a Rutgers defensive end, was paralyzed on the field. Barner's mother hardly called him for two weeks. He knew she was concerned. Before this season, Barner flirted with the NFL after scouts predicted he would be drafted after the third round. When he decided to return to Oregon, the running backs coach Gary Campbell challenged Barner to train harder to eliminate the nagging injuries that cost him some games in previous seasons. Barner spent most of the summer in Eugene, in the weight room, on the track. He took up yoga; his favoritepose, he said, "comes out of the 'warrior two' position, where you can go into the downward dog, but you have to lift one
leg and stack your hips." He ran up hills, with a sled dragging behind him, or a parachute. He focused on flexibility and core strength. When Campbell saw Barner for the first time after all that, he said, Barner "looked physically different." Gary Barner said his son wrote out goals over the summer and hung them on the refrigerator. Most of them came true. Kenjon Barner asked his father not to reveal the specifics, but the goals ranged from football to course work to the future. Because Barner has already graduated with a degree in crimin ology, his schedule this f a l l consists of two classes, yoga and ballet. Well, those and football. He wants to play in the NFL, then become an FBI agent, then rid the world of crime and drugs. Last week, the cancellation of ballet class allowed for more immediate concerns. "Man," Barner said, "I need a
nap."
Continued from 01 Those were some of the examples the NBA used in a video sent to players and teams describing what exactly will be subject to fines this season in the first year of a new program aimed at curbing the kind of deceptive, and sometimes downright laughable, acting jobs that made Ray Allen's performance in "He Got Game" appear Oscar-worthy. And the video did not even include the hilarious attempted double dupe from Oklahoma City's James Harden and San Antonio's Manu Ginobili on the same play in Game I of the Western Conference finals last season. Floppers beware. The league is coming for you, and your money, this season. The NBA season begins tonight with three games — Washington at Cleveland, Boston at Miami, and Dallas at the Los Angeles Lakers — and for the first time, the players will face the possibility of stiff punishment for trying to trick the referees into a foul that was not warranted. Commissioner David Stern issued an edict that he hopes will make flopping go the way of the four-corneroffense and the short shorts. The tactic has been prevalent for yearsPacers sharpshooter Reggie Miller and Kings center Vlade Divac were among the more creative floppers of the previous generation — as players looked for any edge they could get to swing the outcome in their favor. At full speed and with bodies everywhere, determining in the blink of an eye which players were flopping and which were making good basketball plays proved to be incredibly difficult for referees. The league is trying to give them some help. After each game, officials will monitor the action and review plays that could have included an egregious flop. Everyone gets one warning, but after that, the bills start piling up. The second offense will cost a player $5,000, a third will go to $10,000. Four flops and it's $15,000,
and a fifth will be a whopping $30,000. "I hope that they give the offensive floppers the same amount of time and dedication that they're going to to the defensive floppers," said Heat forward Shane Battier, who has been accused of flopping ever since his days at Duke at the turn of the century. "Because flopping's a problem. Flopping is a silent killer. It really is a silent killer. It'll be interesting to see how they administer that." Some think it has been a long time coming. Miller pioneered the move that Wade used in that video, kicking his leg out as he released his jumper to draw contact and try to force a call from an official. Paul Pierce has attempted more than 8,500 free throws in his career thanks in part to coercing officials into blowing a whistle as he drives to the basket. And Divac nearly led the Kings to an upset of the Lakers while hitting the deck every time Shaquille O'Neal even brushed against him in the paint. "Back in the '80s, they didn't flop," said the Lakers' Metta World Peace. "Flopping is very stupid. It's not even basketball. I don't know who taught people to flop. It's ridiculous. Just make the right call. But it's not my league. I think it looks bad on TV, too. When you're in the playoffs and somebody flops, and there's all this money on the line, it's terrible." While many players, coaches and fans have come out as vocal proponents of the new measures, it remains unclear how the process will work. Which flops will be deemed worthy of punishment and which will be allowed to slide? Which types of flops will draw the most attention? Trying to draw charges on defense? Embellishing in hopes of getting to the free-throw line on offense? Everyone is about to start finding out. "My fear is that they're going to find some fresh Harvard BusinessSchool intern in the league office to be the flop reviewer — flop czar, the flop czar! — fresh out of the HBS and his or her highest level of basketball probably will be intramural," Battier said. "And they're making some potentially lucrative financial decisions. So I don't know. I don't know how they're going to administer it." The system will likely evolve as the season goes on, and players will adjust. But it will take some time. "It'll mess up a lot of people's games," Kings big man DeMarcus Cousins said. "Maybe some of these All-Stars won't be All-Stars after that." It certainly is a label that applies to some of the game's biggest stars, including a few on the Miami Heat as they marched to the championship last season. "I don't know how they're going to gauge what's a flop and what's not a flop," LeBron James said. "Sometimes it's obvious, but it doesn't change my approach, honestly. I think it'll be good in the paint, though. When you're
posting guys up and guys know they're smaller than you, they just take one bump and they already know before you even touch them the next time that they're going to automatically falL" With all this in mind, here are a few candidates who may have a little flop sweat, so to speak, as they prepare to play under these new guidelines: • Anderson Varejao, F/C, Cavaliers: The big Brazilian has long been one of the league's most prolific floppers, letting loose with loud screams each time he is hit and falls to the floor. "I'm not flopping anymore," Varejao said with a smile on media day. "I used to flop a little bit." • Harden, G, Rockets: Whether he was snapping his head back while hitting a screen on defense or flying to the deck on a drive to the basket on offense, the savvy Harden has quickly gained a reputation for flopping. Now that he will be getting more minutes as a starter in Houston, will that equate to more flops? "It was bound to happen at some point," he said. "Obviously, the league got fed up with it and they put it in. I'm happy they did." • Ginobili, G, Spurs: The Argentinian's roots in that soccer-mad country can be seen in his approach on the court, where the lefty flops every chance he can get. • J.J. Barea, G, Timberwolves: The diminutive spark plug has had to use any means necessary to succeed against bigger competition, and he knows that "absolutely" people across the league consider him a flopper. "I'm going to play the same way since I was a kid," he said, "so whatever happens, happens."
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
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CO M M U N ITY SPORTS CALENDAR Pleaseemail Community Sports event information to sports® bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" on our website at bendbulletin.com. Items are published on a spaceavailability basis, and should be submitted at least 10days before the event. in grades five through eight who live in the Mountain View High School attendance boundaries;Tuesday, BEND ELKS CAMPS: First of Nov.13,andThursday, Nov.15;6 seven winter camps (mostly onep.m.-8 p.m.; Mountain View High day camps) isSaturday; Bend School west gym, Bend; $150-$180 Fieldhouse, Bend;9 a.m.-1 p.m . for COBOseason, includes uniform; for players 12 and younger, 11 Steve Riper, 541-355-4527, a.m.-3 p.m. for players18 and mvgirlsjuniorcougars©gmail.com. younger; various camps will include HIGHSCHOOL BASKETBALL instruction from professional and college coaches,playersand scouts; LEAGUE:For players not participating in their high school $89;bendelks.com/Fieldhouse/ basketball programs; one league Upcoming+Camps/default.aspx. for freshmen and sophomores, and one league for juniors and seniors;Sunday mornings, Dec. BASKETBALL 2 through mid-March; Pilot Butte ADULT OPEN GYM: Age 18and Middle School, Bend; recreational older;Mondays and Wednesdays league with T-shirts, officials through Dec. 19; 7 p.m.-9:30p.m.; and scorekeepers provided; subject to school closures and registration deadline is Tuesday, activities; no drinks besides water in Nov. 27; $54 park district residents, water bottles or food allowed; $3 per $73 otherwise; 541-389-7275; visit; 541-548-7275; raprd.org. bendparksandrec.org. RAVENYOUTHBASKETBALL: For MIDDLESCHOOL BASKETBALL: boys in grades five through eight For girls in grades six through living in the Ridgeview High School eight in Bend-La Pine Schools; attendance boundaries; tryouts Jan. 14-March12;emphasis on today,andThursday; 6 p.m.-8 p.m.; skill development, participation, RidgeviewHighSchool,Redmond; sportsmanship and fun; practices boys who make the teams will and games will take place on compete in Central Oregon weekdays; uniform tops provided; Basketball Organization and regional registration deadline is Thursday, tournaments; $100 (for season); Dec. 27; walk-in registration only; Nathan Covill; 541-504-3600, ext. $54, scholarships available; 5416248; nathan.covill©redmond.k12. 389-7275; bendparksandrec.org. or.us. LITTLE HOOPSTERS:Ages 6-8; Tuesdays, Oct. 30-Nov. 13;3:45 HIKING p.m.-4:30 p.m.; RAPRDActivity LEARNTHEART OFTRACKING Center, Redmond; learn to pass, dribble and shoot in this skills-based ANIMALS:Guided walks and workshops with a professional class; $20; 541-548-7275; raprd. tracker;ongoing;8 a.m.-noon; olg. learn to identify and interpret PEEWEE HOOPSLEVLES IAND II: tracks, signs and scat of animals Ages 3-5;Thursdays, Nov. 1-15; in the region; two or more walks Level I 11 a.m.-11:30 a.m. and 12:30 per month; $35; 541-633-7045; p.m.-1 p.m.; Level II 3:45 p.m.dave©wildernesstracking.com; 4:15 p.m.; RAPRDActivity Center, wildernesstracking.com. Redmond; Level I is for beginners, teaches basic skills; Level II is for kids who have taken a Level I class HORSES previously; $17; 541-548-7275; raprd.org. WYLENE WILSONHORSEMANSHIP, RIDGEVIEWGIRLS YOUTH CAMP: TRAILAND BRIDLELESS CLINICS For girls in grades three through AND LESSONS: Sessions available eight;Saturday; 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; through Saturday,Silver Horse RidgeviewHighSchool,Redmond; Ranch, 63950 Tyler Road, Bend; $30; Randi Davis, ravenhoops@ instruction in fundamentals, redmond.k12.or.us. advanced loading/trailering, problem horses, adjusting the SUMMIT BOYSCOBO TRYOUTS: horse, and rider confidence; For boys in grades five through space limited 541-408-4080; eight;Saturday,9 a.m. for grades silverhorseranch.com. five and six, 11 a.m. for grades seven and eight;Sunday, 5 p.m. ALL-DAYTRAIL COMPETITION: for grades five and six, 7 p.m. for Open for all levels, judged by Wylene grades seven and eight;Monday, Wilson;Sunday;Silver Horse if necessary; Summit High School, Ranch; 63950 Tyler Road, Bend; Bend; registration information must 541-408-4080, silverhorseranch. be submitted by Nov. 1, available com. at summit basketball.com; lan CHARLEYSNELLHORSEMANSHIP Swihart, 541-633-8169, ianswi© CLINIC: Friday, Nov. 16-Sunday, gmail.com. Nov.18; W estonEquine Services, BITTY BALL:For boys and girls in LLC,68810 Holmes Road, Sisters; kindergarten through grade two; $50-$125 per dayand $15 haulSaturdays, Nov. 3-Dec. 15;Sky in fee, $20 per person to audit; View Middle School, Bend; players Alison Weston; 541-728-7004; shoot at 8-foot baskets and play westonequineservices.com; five-on-five on shorter courts; charleysnellhorsemanshipv.vpweb. registration deadline is Saturday, com. Oct. 14; $43 park district residents, EECO JUMPERJACKPOT:Saturday, $58 otherwise; 541-389-7275; Nov. 17;10:30 a.m.; Fruition Farm bendparksandrec.org. 5707 S.W. Quarry Ave., Redmond; BEND HIGHSCHOOL GIRLS COBO indoor facility; $15-$20 per class TRYOUTS:For girls in grades five and $10-$20 arena usage fee per through eight;Monday,Nov.5,and horse; 541-410-9513; turi©ykwc. Thursday,Nov. 8;7 p.m.-9 p.m.; net; coeventers.com. High Desert Middle School, Bend; ROLLINGRANCH INSISTERS:Open players should be prepared to attend for trail-course practice and shows; both sessions; Todd Ervin; 541-355- ongoing; $10 per horse; 69516 3828; todd.ervin@bend.k12.or.us. Hinkle Butte Drive, Sisters; Shari, 541-549-6962. REDMOND BOYSYOUTH BASKETBALL:For boys in grades five through eight living in the MISCELLANEOUS Redmond HighSchoolattendance boundaries; tryouts onMonday, COCC RUGBY:Upcoming home Nov. 5,andThursday, Nov. 8; match for the COCC Rugby Football 6 p.m.; Redmond High School, Club; Gonzaga University, Saturday; Redmond; boys who make the 1 p.m. start time; Mazama Field, teams will compete in Central COCC campus. Oregon Basketball Organization DESCHUTESMATCLUB and regional tournaments; $150 WRESTLING:All youths in grades (for season); Shonette Benso, 541one through eight welcome;through 788-2846, mykatisdun©gmail.com Saturday, Feb. 2;age divisions for iteams.co/rsba. kids in grades one through three PANTHER GIRLSYOUTH HOOPS: and four through eight; $115-$165 For girls in grades five through eight for season; registration is ongoing living in the Redmond High School throughout the season; online attendance boundaries; tryouts for registration and more information teams that will compete in Central Oregon Basketball Organization and available at bendwrestling.com. YOUTH WRESTLING: Forkids other select tournaments;Tuesday, in gradesthree through eight; Nov. 0,andWednesday, Nov. 7; Tuesdays, Thursdays andFridays, RedmondHighSchool,Redmond; Nov. 1-Jan. 29;5:30-7:30 p.m.; grades five and six, 6 p.m.-7 p.m.; Bend High School; $99 for park grades seven and eight, 7 p.m.-8 district residents, $134 otherwise; p.m.; players expected to attend Bend Park8 Recreation District, both dates; $150 (for season), 541-389-7275, bendparksandrec. includes new uniform; Angela OI'g. Capps,541-923-4800,ext.2175, angela.capps@redmond.k12.or.us; ARCHERY:Ages 8-13; topics include Shonette Benso,541-788-2846, safety and bow handling, archery mykatisdun@gmail.com; iteams. etiquette and games;Thursdays, co/rgyb. Nov. 1-29;5:30-7 p.m.; at Cent Wise Sporting Goods, 533 S.W. RIDGEVIEWHIGH SCHOOL GIRLS Fifth St., Redmond; $25; raprd.org; COBO TRYOUTS: For girls in 54 I-548-7275. grades five through eight who are scheduled to attend Ridgeview High ACROVISIONTAEKWONDO: School;Wednesday and Thursday, Age 6 and older;Tuesdays and Nov.7-8;6 p.m.-7:30 p.m.; Thursdays, Nov. 13-Dec. 11; RidgeviewHighSchool,Redmond; 7-8 p.m.; RAPRDActivity Center, seasonschedule is12 games plus Redmond; students will train in league tournament; $110, Randi a complete martial arts system; Davis, ravenhoops©redmond.k12. uniforms are required and will be or.us. available for purchase; $69; 541548-7275 or raprd.org. MOUNTAINVIEW GIRLS CENTRALOREGONBASKETBALL REDMOND COMMUNITYYOGA: 7 ORGANIZATION TRYOUTS: For girls p.m.on Mondays andWednesdays;
BASEBALL
$49 per six weeks, drop-in available, beginner to intermediate levels; Rebound Physical Therapy, 974 Veterans Way, Suite 4, Redmond; 541-504-2350. WINTER FENCING: High Desert Fencingin Bend welcomes youths age10 and older and adults for competitive training and fitness; Mondays,4 p.m.-7 p.m., and Tuesdays throughThursdays, 5:30 p.m.-7 p.m.; introductory coached fencinglesson on Mondays at4:30 p.m. for new members; Randall, 541-389-4547;Jeff,541-419-7087. ADULTOPENPLAY ROLLER HOCKEY:Sundays, 6:30 p.m.-8 p.m.; $5; Cascade Indoor Sports, Bend; www.cascadeindoorsports. com; 541-330-1183. OPEN ROLLER SKATING: For all ages and ability levels; $5 per skater (includes skate rental), children under 5 are free;Tuesdays,12:30 p.m.-3:30p.m.;Wednesdays, 1 p.m.-4 p.m.; Fridays, 2 p.m.-5 p.m. and 6 p.m.-9 p.m.;Saturdays, 1 p.m.-4 p.m. and 6 p.m.-9 p.m.; Sundays,1 p.m.-4 p.m. 541-3301183; callie©cascadeindoorsoccer. com; www.cascadeindoorsports. com. BENDTABLETENNIS CLUB:Evening playMondays; 6 p.m.-9 p.m.(setup 30 minutes prior); beginner classes available, cost is $60; at Boys & Girls Club of Bend, 500 N.W.Wall St.; drop-in fee, $5 for adults, $3 for youths and seniors; Jeff at 541-4802834; Don at541-318-0890;Sean at 267-614-6477; bendtabletennis@ yahoo.com;www.bendtabletennis. com.
PADDLING KAYAKROLLSESSIONS: Sundays; 4:15 p.m.-6 p.m.; Juniper Swim & Fitness Center, Bend; sessions limited to 12 boats, advance registration recommended; boats m ust be clean,and paddles mustbe padded and taped; no instruction provided; $12 per boat for park district residents, $16 otherwise; 541-389-7275; bendparksandrec. Ol'g.
KAYAKING:For all ages; weekly classesand open pool;equipment provided to those who preregister, first come, first served otherwise; Sundays,4 p.m.-6 p.m., Cascade Swim Center, Redmond; $3; 541548-7275; raprd.org.
PICKLEBALL BEND PICKLEBALLCLUB: Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays,8:30 a.m.-noon (approximately), Larkspur Park, Bend, weather permitting, rsss© bendbroadband.com;Tuesdays, Thursdays andSaturdays, 9 a.m.-1 p.m. (beginner session 11 a.m.-1 p.m. on Saturdays), Boys 8 Girls Club of Bend, $5 for first two hours for non-BPC members and $2 for second session, $3 and $1 for BPC members, respectively (beginner session is free), 16 players per session, sign up at signupgenius. com/go/508094EA8AB2AA75pbplay;Wednesdays, 8 a.m.-10 a.m.,andSaturdays, 8 a.m.-11 a.m.; Athletic Club of Bend (indoors), $15 drop-in fee (includes full club usage),541-385-3062;Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays, 9a.m.-11 a.m., Valley View tennis courts, 3660 S.W. Reservoir Drive, Redmond, weather permitting, jsmck©hotmail.com;Mondays, 4 p.m.-6 p.m., indoor courts at Sage Springs Club 8 Spa, Sunriver, $7.50 drop-in fee (includes full club usage), call 541-593-7890 in advance to sign up, palcic57@live. com;weekly playschedulesalso available at The Racquet Shoppe in Bend; oregonhighdesertpickleball. blogspot.com; bendpickleballclub© hotmail.com.
RUNNING CORK CROSS-COUNTRYSERIES: Today;Old Mill District, Bend; courses will be 5 to 6 kilometers in length; registration starts at 5 p.m.; $5 per race; footzonebend. com/events. CORK YOUTHCROSS-COUNTRY: For youths in grades two through 12;Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridaysthrough the end of November; 4:45 p.m.-6 p.m.; Drake Park, Bend; training for Junior Olympicsraces;coachesareM ax King, Kevin Cornett, Kari Strang and Andrew Jensen; free; 541-3899199; cork.youth.running©gmail. com; centraloregonrunningklub.org. LORD'S ACRE: Saturday; Powell Butte Christian Church, Powell Butte; 9 a.m.10 run and 5K run/walk; $15-$20 (technical T-shirts available for $15); Dave Pickhardt; pickhardt5@yahoo.com; 541-977-3493. HAPPY DIRTYGIRLS: Saturday; 8 a.m.; Sisters; half marathon and 5K trail runs; field limited to 250 participants; $35-$75; happygirlsrun.com/dirtygirls. MAX KINGNIGHT:Thursday,Nov. 8;7 p.m.; FootZone, downtown Bend; Central Oregon running standout will recap his 2012, including the track and field Olympic trials, multiple race wins, and his training schedule; free; 541-317-3568.
VETERANS DAY/MARINECORPS BIRTHDAYRUN: Saturday, Nov. 10;9a.m.; City Hall,710 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 5K run and1-mile walk; fundraiser for Disabled American Veterans; $15-$21; chandler© bendbroadband.com;541-3508512; entry form available at vetsdayrun. homestead.com. FOOTZONE/SUNNYSIDESPORTS COTA TRAILWORK PARTY: Saturday, Nov.10;9a.m.;meet at Sunnyside Sports, Bend; work is scheduled for the Funner trail; for a list of required items to bring to the work party, go to cotamtb. com;footzonebend.com/events/ footzone-cota-trail-work-party. NUTRITIONFOR ATHLETES CLINIC: Wednesday, Nov. 14; 7 p.m.; FootZone, downtown Bend; presentation presenting nutrition guidelines for before, during and after competition; with Bend crosscountry skier and ultrarunner StephanieHowe;footzonebend. com/events/nutrition-for-athletesclinic. FOAM ROLLERCLINICS:Saturday, Nov.17, 8:30 a.m.; Sunday, Dec. 16;9:45 a.m.; FootZone, downtown Bend; taught by Ashleigh Mitchell, CPT; learn basic myofacial release with a foam roller; bring yoga mat and foam roller if you own them; foam rollers available for purchase; limited to15 participants; $5; register at FootZone; footzonebend. com. COCCTURKEYTROT: Saturday, Nov.17;13th annual event;10 a.m.; 3-mile run/walk starts at COCC track; registration begins at 9 a.m. at Mazama Gym; benefitfor COCC Foundation; free for COCC and OSUCascades students, $10 otherwise; Bill Douglass, bdouglass©cocc.edu. I LIKE PIE:Thursday, Nov. 22; 9 a.m.; start is directly behind FootZone in downtown Bend, on Brooks Alley; untimed 2K, 5K and 10-mile runs; recommended $5 cash or check and five cans of food for Neighbor Impact; pie for participants; footzonebend.com; 541-317-3568. BGCCO TURKEYTROT: Thursday, Nov. 22;9 a.m.; Les Schwab Amphitheater, Bend; 5K and 10K runs/walks, 1.5-mile trotter's walk; benefit for Girls on the Run and Boys 8 Girls Clubs; $15-$25, technical T-shirts available for $20; 541-617-2877; info@bgcco.org; bgccoturkeytrot.com. BEND TURKEYTROT: Thursday, Nov. 22;Bend; 5K and IOK runs/ walks,1-mile walk; donation of one bag of nonperishable food encouraged; $15 for 5K, $20 for 10K, $7 for walk; bendturkeytrot. com. SISTERSTURKEYTROT: Saturday, Nov. 24;11 a.m.; Sisters, 5K and 10K runs/walks, 1-mile walk; donation of one bag of nonperishable food encouraged; free; sistersturkeytrot.com. PLANTARFASCIITIS CLINIC: Wednesday, Nov. 28; 7 p.m.; FootZone, downtown Bend;with physical therapist Steve Leary of Hands On Physical Therapy; learn well-rounded approach to treating this injury; free; 541-317-3568; footzonebend.com. SCREW YOUR SHOESWORKSHOP: Thursday, Dec. 13; 6 p.m.-7 p.m.; FootZone,Bend;with local ultrarunner Jeff Browning; "winterize" a pair of running shoes with some studs, which won't hurt the shoes and are removeable; learn to do ityourself or enjoy full stud service; 541-317-3568; footzonebend.com. REDMOND OREGON RUNNING KLUB (RORK):Weekly run/walk; Saturdaysat 8 a.m.; all levels welcome; free; for more information and to be added to a weekly email list, email Dan Edwards at rundanorun19@yahoo.com; follow Redmond Oregon Running Klub on Facebook. REDMOND RUNNINGGROUP: Weekly runs onTuesdays at 6:30 p.m.; meet at 314 S.W.Seventh St. in Redmond for runs of 3 to 5 miles; all abilities welcome; free; pia©runaroundsports.com; 54 I-639-5953. MOMS RUNNINGGROUP: Tuesdays;9:15 a.m.; contact lisa.nasr©me.com for more information. MOVE IT MONDAYS: Mondays at 5:30 p.m.; open to both genders and all paces; carpool from FootZone to trailheads when scheduled; melanie@footzonebend.com; 541-317-3568. GOOD FORM RUNNINGLEVEL1 AND 2 CLINICS:Level 1 is a free 90-minute clinic that uses drills and video to work on proper mechanics; see scheduleonline for Level1 dates;Level 2 is offered thefirst Tuesday of every monthwith Dave Cieslowski of Focus Physical Therapy to help runners find their best form; clinic sizes limited; 541317-3568; sign up at footzonebend. com/events/clinics; teague@ footzonebend.com. PERFORMANCE RUNNINGGROUP: 5:30p.m.on Tuesdays;withM ax King; locations will vary; max© footzonebend.com; 541-317-3568. ASK THEEXPERTS:First four Tuesdaysofeachmonth; 6 p.m .;at FootZone; informal, drop-in Q-andA session with a physical therapist;
individual attention dependent on the number of attendees; teague© footzonebend.com; 541-317-3568. NOON TACORUN: Wednesdays at noon; meet at FootZone; order a Taco Stand burrito before leaving and it will be ready upon return; teague©footzonebend.com; 541-317-3568. LEARN TORUN ALUMNI RUNNING GROUP: Wednesdays, 5:30 p.m.; meet at FootZone; easy, supportive and informal midweek running group; caters to slower paces and walkers/runners; free; marybel@ footzonebend.com; 541-317-3568. WEEKLYRUNS:Wednesdays at 6 p.m.; Fleet Feet Sports Bend, 1320 N.W. Galveston Ave.; 3 to 5 miles; two groups, different paces; 54 I-389-160 I. YOGA FORRUNNERS: Wednesdays at 7 p.m.; at Fleet Feet Sports Bend, 1320 N.W. Galveston Ave.; $5 per session or $50 for12 sessions; focuses on strengthening and lengthening muscles and preventing running injuries; 541-389-1601. FUNCTIONALFITNESS WORKOUT FOR RUNNERS:Thursdays starting at 6p.m. atFootZone ofBend,845 N.W. Wall St.; personal trainer Kyle Will will help participants strengthen muscle groups to help avoid common injuries; $5; 541-330-0985.
SNOW SPORTS BEND SKI CLUB MEETING: Thursday, Nov. 8;7 p.m.; Pappy's Pizzaria, next to Bend Fred Meyer; all alpine enthusiasts welcome, membership encouraged; discussion and presentations about upcoming season; free, including food and drink; 541-382-1772; bendskiclub.info. SHE'S ON SKIS: Skate ski program for advanced beginner women and above; Session1 isWednesdays or Saturdays, Nov. 28-Dec. 22;Session 2 isWednesdays or Saturdays, Jan. 2-Feb. 9; combined session also available; Mt. Bachelor ski area; $95$295; 541-382-1709, ext. 2211; mtbachelor.com. BABES INSNOWLAND:Ages 4-5; Sundays, Dec. 16-Feb. 24;11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.; Mt. Bachelor ski area; introduces kids to nordic skiing in a fun, safe environment; $175; 541-382-1709, ext. 2211; mtbachelor.com. K'S FORKIDS: Ages 6-8; Sundays, Dec. 16-Feb. 24;10:15 a.m.-11:15 a.m.; Mt. Bachelor ski area; skiers should be able to cover 5K in one hour; learn the Mt. Bachelor trail system and track distances covered; $125-$175; 541-382-1709, ext. 2211; mtbachelor.com. DAWN PATROLFOR WORKING PARENTS:With Dave Cieslowski; Wednesdays, Dec. 5-Feb. 14;10 a.m.-11:30 a.m.; Mt. Bachelor ski area; limited to10 advanced nordic skiers; weekly work on technique and specific workouts; $155$175; 541-382-1709, ext. 2211; mtbachelor.com. INTROS TO SKATESKIING/CLASSIC SKIING:Four-week programs start at the beginning of each month; for beginning nordic skiers; Mt. Bachelor ski area; $120-$160; 541382-1709, ext. 2211; mtbachelor. com. SKI CONDITIONINGCLASS: Tuesdays andThursdays, 6 a.m.; WillPower Training Studio, Bend; work on core strength, anaerobic conditioning, leg strength and more; 12 hour-long classes, $80; 541-350-3938. MT. BACHELORSPORTS EDUCATIONFOUNDATION ALPINE, NORDIC, FREERIDEFALL DRYLAND TRAINING:Started in early September; 541-388-0002;mbsef@ mbsef.org; mbsef.org. BEND ENDURANCE ACADEMY MINI NORDIES:Ages 3-6; sessions duringwinter breakand in February;introductory ski skills and fun games with small class sizes; four one-hour practices per session; bendenduranceacademy.org. NORDICYOUTHCLUB:Ages 711;Saturdays and/or Sundays, Dec. 8- Feb. 24;includes a camp during winter break; introduces basic skate and classic techniques through games and adventures; transportation provided; bendenduranceacademy.org. MIDDLESCHOOL NORDIC DEVELOPMENTTEAM:Form iddle schoolers ages 11-14;Wednesdays, Saturdays andSundays, Nov. 14-March10;participants to ski in small groups based on ability and improve classic and skate techniques in a fun, friendly atmosphere; includes camps during Thanksgiving and winter breaks; transportation provided; bendenduranceacademy.org. HIGHSCHOOL NORDIC DEVELOPMENTTEAM:Forhigh schoolers ages 14-18; weekday or weekend enrollment options, Nov. 14- March10;improve skiing efficiency by working with coaches and teammates in small group; participants are encouraged to fully participate in their high school nordic teams; includes camps during Thanksgiving and winter break; transportation provided; bendenduranceacademy.org.
NORDICMASTERS:For adults; Tuesday, Thursday or Sunday morning enrollment options; skate technique;Dec. 11-Feb. 17;join a lively, social group to improve skiing efficiency through successful technique progressions; bendenduranceacademy.org. NORDICCOMPETITION PROGRAM: Ages14-23;Tuesdays through Sundays throughMay1; times vary; instruction in varying activities to improve strength, technique, coordination, agility, and aerobic and anaerobic capacities with the goal to apply these skills to ski-racing environments; transportation provided; ben© bendenduranceacademy.org or 541-678-3864; enroll online at bendenduranceacademy.org.
SOCCER SOCCEROPENPLAY(ADULT): Age14and older; no cleats, but shinguards required; $7;Friday nights; coed 7 p.m .-8:30 p.m ., men 8:30 p.m.-10 p.m.; Cascade Indoor Soccer, Bend; 541-330-1183; callie@cascadeindoorsoccer.com; cascadeindoorsports.com.
SOFTBALL HIGH DESERTYELLOWJACKETS: For girls ages 8-12 interested in playing softball during the 2013 season; 12U division is for players born on or after Jan.1, 2000;10U division isfor players born on or after Jan. 1, 2002; Jeremy (12U), 541-325-3689; Missy (10U), 541647-0636; highdesertyellowjackets. com. PRIVATELESSONS:Private fastpitch softball pitching and hitting lessons offered by former college/prep/club coach and current player evaluator for college programs; $25 per session; Tom Maudlin, 541-948-9501. SKILL INSTRUCTION: Age 10and older; with Mike Durre, varsity softball coach at Mountain View High School; lessons in fielding, pitching and hitting; $30 per hour or $50 per hour for two players; mdurre©netscape.net; 541-480-9593.
SWIMMING CSC CLUB POLO:With the Cascade Swim Club;Thursdays;7:15 p.m.8:25 p.m.; beginners through experienced players; drop-in fees apply; 541-548-7275. ADAPTIVESWIMLESSONS: All ages; for swimmers with disabilities; instructional staff is trained in adaptive aquatics and instruction techniques for patrons with developmental disabilities; Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, Nov. 5-23;5:30 p.m.6 p.m.;Cascade Swim Center, Redmond; $32; 541-548-7275; I'ap I'd. 0I'g.
WATERBABIES:Basic water skills for infants and toddlers; ages 6 months through 3years;games and challenges; parent participation; nextsessionis Mondays, Wednesdays andFridays, Nov. 523; 6 p.m.-6:30 p.m.; Cascade Swim Center, Redmond; $32; 541-5487275; raprd.org. AQUA KIDSSWIM LESSONS: Ages 3-5 and 6-11; next session is Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, Nov. 5-23;5:30 p.m.-6 p.m.and 6 p.m.-6:30 p.m .options; Cascade Swim Center, Redmond; $32; 541-548-7275; raprd.org. PRECOMP KIDS: Grades one through eight; advanced swimlesson program that serves as a feeder for Cascade Aquatic Club; must be able to swim one length of crawl stroke with side breathing and one length of backstroke in a level positi on;Mondays, W ednesdays and Fridays, Nov. 5-23;5:30 p.m.-6 p.m.; Cascade Swim Center, Redmond; $32; 541-548-7275; www.raprd.org. REDMONDAREAPARKAND RECREATIONDISTRICT FAMILY SWIM NIGHT:7:25 p.m.-8:25 p.m., Tuesdays,Cascade Swim Center, Redmond;adultm ustaccompany anyone under age18; $10 per family; 541-548-7275, raprd.org.
VOLLEYBALL OREGON VOLLEYBALLACADEMY INFORMATIONALMEETINGS: Sunday,5 p.m.-6 p.m., Pappy's Pizzeria, Bend;Sunday, Nov. 11, 6 p.m.-7p.m.,Pappy's Pizzeria, Bend; for the 2012-13 season; parent meetings for local and travel teams that will cover tryouts, schedule and costs, and will include question-and-answer period; Nov. 11 meeting is regarding U18 and U16 teams for high school-age players; 541-419-1187; turner© oregonvolleyballacademy.com; oregonvolleyballacademy.com. OREGON VOLLEYBALLACADEMY TRYOUTS:Saturday, Nov. 3, 9 a.m.-noon; Sunday, Nov. 4,3:30 p.m.-5:30p.m.; Monday, Nov. 5, 6 p.m.-8p.m.;Cascade IndoorSports, Bend; tryouts for14U and12U travel and local club teams; attendance at all three session is required; $15; 541-419-1187; turner© oregonvolleyballacademy.com; oregonvolleyballacademy.com.
D6
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2012
Rodeo
Giants Continued from D1 T he onl y r e g ular s t i l l around from that team is Posey, and the catcher had to rebound from devastating ankle and leg injuries sustained in a h o me-plate collision in late May 2011 to put together an MVP-caliber season and become the National L e ague b a t ting champ. He played far more than anybody envisioned his body would allow. This time, a c o uple of bench warmers from that last October run shined for San Francisco — MVP Pablo Sandoval and Game 1 winner Barry Zito. The lefty Zito was left off the postseason roster for all three rounds in 2010. "Just as a player, certainly you want to play on a team that wins the World Series. And to go out there and contribute, there's nothing like that," Zito said. "We were very adamant that we have to step on their throats. We saw what they did to New York." Marco Scutaro and Hunter Pence were this year's midseason additions, with Scutaro following up Cody R oss in 2010 to earn N L championship series MVP honors. While Scutaro produced the timely hits, including a go-ahead single with two outs in the 10th inning of Sunday night's 43 win, Pence did plenty and became th e m o t ivational speaker of this group. He reminded his teammates to keep the focus even when they jumped to a surprising 3-0 Series lead against the
Tigers. These Giants showed they could rally back — a gain and again — and also thrive when playing out in front. T hey f el l b e h in d t w o games to none to the Cincinnati Reds in the division series, then became the first team in major league history to rally back in a five-game s eries by w i n n in g t h r ee
straight road games. They did it again against the defending champion St. Louis Cardinals, erasing a 3-1 deficit thanks largely to Zito's Game 5 victory at B usch Stadium that sent the Giants back to the Bay Area to finish it off in San Francisco. Six victories in six elimination games. "The thing that made this team so special is just playing as a team, caring for each other," Pence said. "We had our backs against the wall and we knew it wasn't going to be easy. It's not supposed to be. That was one of our mottos, and we went out there to enjoy every minute of it and it was hard-earned. Just an incredible, incredible
group of guys that fought for each other." San Francisco ended the season on a s e v en-game winning streak. Reliever George Kontos summed it up the best he could in one Twitter post late "WORLD.....SESunday: RIES.....CHAMPS!!!! That's all that needs to be said... This team is special.... We did what no other team could." Much like that 2010 team of "castoffs and misfits," as they referred to themselves, manager Bruce Bochy had to make some tough calls. He moved struggling starter Tim Lincecum to the bullpen, where the two-time Cy Young Award w i nner became a dominant reliever. Nobody figured the Giants would leave AT&T Park with a 2-0 lead Thursday night for the Motor City and not have to come back home for a Game 6, or 7 for that matter. Bochy, for one, is tired of hearing people call it luck. "For us to play like w e did against this great club, I couldn't be prouder of these guys," Bochy said. "To be world champions in two out of the last three years, it's amazing. Believe me, I know how difficult it is to get here, and I couldn't be prouder of a group of guys that were not
going to be denied." When the Giants take to Market Street in downtown San Francisco for Wednesday's Halloween championship parade, there will be no costumes needed. Brian Wilson, whose season ended in April when he needed Tommy John elbow surgery, and the man who finished off the clincher in his place by striking out the side Sunday on 15 pitches — Sergio Romo — are still sporting those
Jeff Chiu/The Associated Press
San Francisco Giants' Ryan Vogelsongwaves with his son Ryder outside of AT8T Park in San Francisco, Monday.
in 2009.He also trained the horse he rode can apply for his pro card. But with school to his high school state championships, to finish up — he expects to complete a deContinued from D1 along with Putts, the quarter horse he gree in history at UNLV next fall — he is As the contestant overtakes the steer, he rode while qualifying for the circuit finals going to wait a little longer before chasing leans from his horse, grabs the animal and and the one that he plans to ride this week rodeos. His goal is also to work the fammaneuvers it to the ground on its side, with in Redmond. ily cattle ranch, on which the Radabaughs all four legs pointing in the same direction. Now competing against professional raise calves to sell. When properly executed, the fast and furi- cowboys, Radabaugh has noticed the in"When I get out of school, then I can go, ous eventis overin justa few seconds. creased level of competition from that in because there's so many rodeos that you It is also Radabaugh's passion. the lower ranks. can go to that I cannot when I'm down "Steer wrestling is my m ain event," "Going from high school to college was here at school," he points out. says Radabaugh, a member of the UNLV a step, but going from college and amaAnd as for this weekend, Radabaugh rodeo team. "It's the No. 1 thing I do and teur rodeo to the PRCA, it's a big step," plans to heed some advice from his father, I love." Radabaugh observes. "It's kind of mind- Christian Radabaugh Sr., who emphasizAnd even though he is still a young blowing how much faster, how much you es consistency in performance. "He says, 'It's one run at a time,' " the man, he has gained considerable experi- need to be more on top of what you do. It's ence in the event. Radabaugh started par- a whole different game." younger Radabaugh says. "So that's what ticipating in peewee rodeo when he was As for his own plans to turn profession- I'm going to do.... I just want to make eva boy. He won Oregon high school state al, Radabaugh says he intends to keep his ery run the best I can." championships in 2007, 2008 and 2009 in permit in 2013. A cowboy needs to earn But first, that long drive awaits. — Reporter:541-383-0393, addition to playing football and basketball $1,000 in winnings in a year to fill his peramiles@bendbulletin.com. at Crook County High before graduating mit, Radabaugh explains; after that, he
CoMMUNITY SP0RTs IN BRIEF dark postseason beards that have made these two such huge hits. Along with their pitching, of course. When it comes to pitching, Giants general manager Brian Sabean ha s n ever wavered. He has won more often than not by building around a balanced and versatile staff. And all five starters are under contract heading into 2013. A couple of big decisions facing Sabean are whether to re-sign Scutaro and center fielder Angel Pagan. It is unclear whether the Giants will consider giving Melky Cabrera a second chance after the All-Star Game MVP was suspended Aug. 15 for a positive testosterone test and then not added to the NLCS roster once he was eligible to return. S andoval, the Kung F u Panda, earned Series MVP h onors after sparking his club with that three-homer o uting in a G a m e 1 w i n against Justin Verlander and Co. He batted .369 this postseason with f iv e d oubles, six homers and 13 R BIs. That's after he was benched for four of the five games in 2010, when he hit just .176 with two RBIs. In three mighty swings last Wednesday night, he showed how far he has come since then — even aftera pair of stints on the disabled list this season, one for a broken hamate bone in his hand that required surgery. "You know, I still can't believe that game. It's the game of your dreams. You don't want to wake up," the 26year-old Sandoval said. The Giants again will ask the portly Sandoval to shape up this offseason — and he is on board. Sandoval wants to be at his best not only for San Francisco but also to play for Venezuela in next spring's third World Baseball Classic. Zito's turnaround is just as noteworthy. The left-hander, who signed a $126 million, seven-year contract before the 2007 season, went 158 for hisbest season since moving across the bay from the O a k l an d A th l e tics, where he won the 2002 AL Cy Young Award. The Giants wo n Z i t o's last 14 starts, and he did not lose after Aug. 2 against the Mets. "I think there's a lot of learning that goes on in life away from the ball f ield," Zito said. "To go through it on the big stage ... the lows are lower, but I've changed the way I think about a lot of things." Zito will be part of an experienced rotation heading into 2013, led by ace Matt Cain. Cain's season began with a hefty new contract, then only got better with the first perfect game in f r anchise history on June 13, the start in July's All-Star win that sealed home field for the National League, and then another championship. "What we just did these last couple months is a pretty full year, and something that I'm going to enjoy definitely sitting down and watching at the end of the year," Cain sa>d. Scutaro was around for only part of it, but with the remarkable numbers he put up since coming from the Colorado Rockies on July 27 nobody would know any better. "It's what you work for all season," Scutaro said."I don't even know what to say right now. We just won the World Series. It's still priceless."
Cycling • Trebonrides te victory in Colorado:Bend professional cyclist Ryan Trebon won the UCI men's elite/U23 race at the Boulder Cup
pusisnow openforplay.Thecourse,whichhad
Sharman, who alsowon theeventin2009.
been closed during drier months due to fire risk, reopened Oct. 19. The first tee can be found just north of the school library. The course is open
resident Kimber Mattox was the overall winner
to the public, and playersmaypark inthe school
Bend. Mattox, a former distance runner at Wil-
•Bendwoman winsMo nsterDash:Bend of the inaugural Monster Dash onSunday in
cyclocross event, staged Sunday atValmont
parking lot near the first tee box.
Bike Park in Boulder, Colo. Trebon just edged out Daniel Summerhill, of Englewood, Colo., for the victory. Trebon finished the race in 59 minutes, 54.105 seconds, while Summerhill was timed in 59:54.163. James Driscoll, of Winooski, Vt., was third in 59:55.766. Another
For more information, contact Bill Douglass at 541-383-7794 or bdouglass@cocc.edu.
runner-up and first male finisher, Nic Ballard, of Bend, by 52 seconds.Bend residents Rigo Ramirezand Ben Brockman,timedin19:11and 19:28, respectively, were the second- and third-
Running
Bend resident, Barry Wicks, took19th place in a field of 51 finishers.
Disc golf • COCC course open:The disc golf course at Central OregonCommunity College's Bendcam-
lamette University in Salemand the University of Oregon, covered the 5-kilometer course in17 minutes, 2 seconds. Shedefeated the
• Central Oregonman wins marathon:lan Sharman, of Bend, won the Tri-Cities Marathon
inRichland,Wash.,onSunday.Sharman cov-
place male finishers. Bend's Mary Wellington (19:42) and DeniseBorossa (20:25) rounded
ered the 26.2-mile course, which also went into the cities of Kennewick and Pasco, in 2 hours,
out the top three women. Complete results of the Monster Dash are
35 minutes, 17seconds. Hedefeated176 other
available in Community Sports Scoreboard, see below.
finishers to win the race. The runner-up crossed the finish line more than eight minutes behind
— Bulletin staff reports
COMMUNITY SPORTS SCOREBOARD Bend,31:30.83,AshleyBeatty, Bend,31:33.84,KassandraRajewski, 31:37.85,DavidPresland,31:37 86, HeidiWright,31:45.87, KeithWright, 31;45.88, Carina McCarthy,31:57.89,Seth McCarthy, 31:57. 90, Susan Newton, 31:57. 91, AlisonEmerson, Bend,31:59. 92, MarlaCre233/611;JaneFletcher,155)424. craft ,Bend,32:07.93,Robin Failon,Bend,32:07.94, Hisand Hers — Go Ducks;Jayme Dahlke, carol Leespaw,3z08. 95, KathryII Bottoms,prine278/758,MaryStratton,197/534. ville,32:17. 96, VictoryHowry,Pacific City, 32:52 Guysand Gals Bowling Movement;Toby 97,Susan Strible,32:53.98,Lenora James,32:59. Cundell,258/716;Michel eSmith, 205/56. 99, ColetteTowell, 33:05. 100,MeganMinkiewicz, Rejects — Old Geez ers; DougGray, 236/628; Bend,33:10. HazelKeeton,175/461. 101, DevonQuiring, Bend, 33:16. 102, Skylar LavaLanesClassic— CannonBowlers;Jayme Durham, 33:29. 103, ShannonSwenson, 33:49 Dahlke ,258/683;DebbieSmi th,203/575. 104, CarrieBurleigh,34:01.105, KellyHicks,34:22 WednesdayInc Auntie Em'sDeli; Wil Piland, 106, Brian Hicks, 34:2z 107, Brittany Desadier, 299/792 ;DaveSims,279/74z Terrebonne, 35:06. 108,Alissa Barrett, Bend,35:07. Tea Timers — Spl>t Ends; Shari Hamel, 109, Cameron Zipper, Bend,35:20. 110,Julie Zipper, 244/594. Bend,35:23. Latecomers — HighCountry Disposal; Christy 111,Mili Timm,35:24. 11z KenediTimm,35:24 Watson,177/503. 113, Andrew Timm, 35:29. r t Tim HeggeIIberger, TNT Roller Coasters;DaveGrimes, 279/793; 35:55. 115, Rebeccasnead, 35:56. 06, Lyndsey Meagan Waltosz,191/47t Holub,Bend,36:06.117,JandaPacheco, Bend,36:13. Progressive —Hils Horseshoe> ng; Brian Hil, 118, Penny Smith, LaPine, 36:28.119, JaneRossetter, 232/585. 36:38.120,Rachel Morris, Bend,37:24. Free Breathers — Pin Heads; John Scott, 121, AndyMorris, Bend,37:25 122,Janice De246i651,LindaGilbert, 198)513. mers,Sisters,37:27 123, KimberlyBraden,37:51 T.G.I.F. Man On; Dave Grimes, 269/714; WaldaBerry,234/594, Have-A-Bal l— Team 5,Ryan Pierce,223/529; BrianaMarler,172/48z Draft — ComingForYou;MikeSima,237/626, KarenDougan,179/447 Rimrock Lanes,Prineville
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Leaguestandingsandhigh scores Lava Lanes,Bend Oct. 15-21 Casino Fun —All In TheFamily; JosiahOhlde,
(Teamscratch game;teamscratch series; men's scratch game;men's scratch series; women's scratchgame;women' sscratch series) Week7 Rimrock Cold StoneCreamery,971; TheGrayMayers ,z927;RonDavis,260;GeneMcKenzie,657; Julie Mayers,210;ChrisGray,596. Happy Bowlers — Bandaids,587; Bandaids, 1,561; JohnHammer Sr., 278; Carl Johnson,714, FranBristow,273;MaryMcLain,728. Week B 50+ or -— Its A U Turn,622; FireBaller's,1,970; M>ke Ko<v<sto, 204; MattHawes, 561;Stela Ola, 169; LauraHawes, 470. Grizzly Mountain Men's — Cougar Cuts, 1,029, KBW Engineering, 3,033; Larry Gerke,260, Roy Fuller,696.
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CORK CrossCountry Series Race No. 2 Oct. 23, Bend Approximately 3.5miles 1, santi ocariz, 20:00 z FranzAlagoki, 20:2z 3, Jeff Caba,20:44. 4, Michael Dennis, 20.49. 5, Andy Young,20:51. 6, DamonKluck, 20:58. 7, Lucas AIberg,21:5z 8, Javier ocariz, 22:08.9, Jason Townsend,22:17.10, BryanHitchcock,222z 11, FrancisCain, 22:31. 12,Zita Bauge,23:01. 13, NicBallard,23:11. 14, NancyCitriglia, 23:45. 15, JimmyClarke,23:50.16, ChrisReeves,24:42 17,Ron Deems,24:44.18,DaveWebster,25;05.19, GrantByllock, 25:19.20, ZachKirkland, 25:27. 21, DaveThomason, 25:39. 22, RodThompson,
26:06.23,AmandaUri, 27:09(twolaps). 24, DaveUri, 2710 (twolaps),25,AmbroseSu,2717. 26, Carolyn Daubeny,27:54 27,ChassenJohnson, 2800. 28, Liz Francher,29;29.29,JoeBenevento,30:59. 30,Jessica Czmowski31:47. , 31, BenCaba,31:59. 32, JackStrang, 31:59. 33, ChrisWest,32:45. 34, HunterCraft, 33:50.35, John Craft, 33:50.36, MaryTheobald, 36:38 37, Caitlin Wheeler,36:39.
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Show your appreciation to your customers by thanld.ng them in a group space ad
VolleybaII Redmond Volleyball Association
Standings asof Thursday
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Women's — 1,Hit List, 25-3-0. 2, PurpeBand Aids, 20-8-0. 3,Just Lucky,18-9-1. 4, Voley Girls, 18-10-0. 5, MuffinTops,16-12-0. 6, SettingDucks, 12-18-0. 7,ChatterBoxes,9-20-1. 8,TheOtherGusy, 5-23-0. 9,SnapCrackle Pop, 4-24-0. Tuesday Coed 1, Chets Electric, 25-3-0. 2, Penguins, 23-5-0. 3,HotChils, 23-5-0. 4,Acers, 237-0. 5,Dysfunctionals,12-15-1. 6,ToeGoods, 10-180. 7, All Stars,8-20-0. 8,Drywall Specialties,3-26-1. 9, Bros tl Hoes, 0-28-0. Thursday Coed — 1, I 1st W3 Tryd,20-20. 2, NetResults, 18-2-0. 3, HotChilis, 14-6-0. 4, PeakPerformance,14-7-1. 5, NumberOne,10-111. 6, SuperAwesomes, 7-14-1. 7, Cal A Code,517-0. 8, League OfLegends, 4-15-1. 9, TheBeans, 2-20-0.
Nov. 22nd, Thanksgiving Day, the most-rend pepev o f the yenv! This special one page group ad will showcase your business along with a message of thanks to your customers.
Running Monster Dash5K Sunday, Bend (Hometownslisted as available) 1, Kimber Mattox, Bend,1702 2, Nic Ballard, Bend, 17:54. 3,RigoRam irez, Bend,19:11. 4, Ben Brockman,Bend,19:28.5, JusI>nGrady,Bend, 19:3z 6, JosephBabich, Bend,19:34.7, MaryWellington, Bend,19:42 8,DerekHubler,Bend,19.5z 9, Fisher Bien,Bend,20:24.10, DeniseBorossa, Bend,20:25. 11, JohnFischer, Bend,20:26 1z statia smith, Klamath Fals,2038 13, PaulRogers,2041.14, Rod Thompson, Bend,21:16.15, LauraCooper, 21:17. 16, Wendy Boyer,Bend,21:26.I7,NicholasLopez,Bend, 22:1z18, sydneyLapine, 22:2z19, JustynKirkpatrick, 22:38.20, RichardNkansah,22:53. 21, KimSwanson, Bend, 23:06. 22, SteveDavenport, Bend, 23:17 23, KathleenPhilips, Bend,2319 24, KefinPfebBend,23:19. 25,QmnnOlarrea, Bend, 23:26. 26,CindyKing, 23:28.27, MarkHubler, 23:41. 28, RobertRossetter,23:44. 29,SusieRossi, Bend, 24:16.30,Angie Hubler, 24:3z 31, Gregg Swanson,Bend, 24:43 32, Chris Cooper,25:04. 33,Robert Zipper,25:13 34, Randy Stutzman,25:13.35, Gharret Brockman,25:13. 36, Chuck Brockman,25:14. 37, Carina Rosterolla, Gilchrist, 25:30. 38, AaronKennen,Bend, 25:42. 39, BrianMattox, Monticello, Utah,25:48. 40, Emily Miller, Bend, 26:00. 41, DougStewart, SanDiego,26:02 42, Brandi Jo Mol es,Bend,26:05.43,Hank Weathers,26:10. 44,CherylYounger,Bend,26:23.45,ElizabethLopez, Bend, 26.40.46,RuthMattox, silverton, 26:4z 47, Dustin Garrison,Redmond, 26:51. 48, Bob Smith, 26:53. 49,TaylorLewis, Redm ond, 27:20. 50,Jade Hartman,Bend,27:25. 51, Jennifer Hunt, 27:25.52, Ka> tlin Brouillard, 27:30. 53,Siobahn McNulty,Bend,28:00.54,Jim Quise nberry, Coburq, 28.27.55, Lene Richelsen, 28:30. 56, Diklah OIevi, Florence,28: 28:31. 57, Nikla ssjogren,Bend,283z58,Annesjogren,Bend, 28:37. 59, JennifferSmith, Bend,2900 60, Justin Mohan,Redmond,29:06. 61, Kalvin Timm,Bend,29:07. 62, Keli Timm, 29.07. 63,Kevin Cozad,2930.64, Marjorie McGreevy ,29:13.65, Cathy Ostman,29.34.66,Jodi Burch, Redmond,29:35.67,KatrinaDunmire,2935 68,Judy Rosen,2955.69,Nicole Roselio,Bend, 30:40.70,JasonMagenheimer,Bend,30:41. 71, Amanda Uri, 30:4t 72, DavidLimburg, Bend, 30:42. 73, Ali Meyer,Bend,30:4z 74, David Uri, 30.43. 75, JaneQuale,30:49. 76, Mallory Helton, Bend, 3057. 77, SusanPoole, 3120. 78, Mandy Doering,31:25.79,LauraChance, Bend,3126 80, Ange Jordan, a Bend,21:27. 81, StaceyArata, 31:29. 82, Michelle Hardesty,
,
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Ad sizes are 3.33" x 2.751" and are only 8 9
in cl u d ing full colof".
ONLY 18 SPOTS WILL BE AVAILABLE! Deadline for ad. spaceand. copy: Thursday, November 15, 2012 Publishes on Thursday, November 22nd
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Contact your Bulletin Advertising Representative for more information Tonya McKiernan: 541-617-7865 email: tmckiernan@wescompapers.com
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THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2012
BEC AUSEOFHURRICANESANDY,U.S,STOCKMARKETSWERECLOSEDMONDAYANDWILLBECLOSEDAGAINTODAY. IN BRIEF
Breweryfounder receives award
HURRICANE SANDY
orm'sim a
e o come
Gary Fish, founder
and president of Deschutes Brewery, is scheduled to receive a leadership award at
The 2012Governors' Gold Award tonight in Portland.
Fish has beenselected as the winner of The Al and Pat Reser
Civic Leadership Award, which is awarded to those who have contributed to the community and the state, said Mar-
gie Hunt, CEO of Special Olympics Oregon. The
By Nelson D. Schwartz New York Times News Service
From the mighty New York Stock Exchange to local restaurants and retailers, businesses up and down the East Coast came to a halt Monday as the effects of Hurricane Sandy swept ashore. Financial markets, department stores and many big companies on the East Coast announced plans to close Tuesday for the second day in a row. Unlike past hurricanes
that blew through in a day or two, Hurricane Sandy's fallout will be felt for much of the week, broadening the economic fallout. Overall, total economic losses from the storm could be $10 billion to $20 billion, according to an analysis by Equecat, a firm that performs catastrophe risk-modeling for the insurance industry and government. "We think it's goingto be big," said Tom Larsen, senior vice
president and product architect at Equecat, suggesting the toll couldfallsomewhere between that of Hurricane Ike in 2008 and HurricaneIrene lastyear. Besides the halt in both electronic and floor trading in virtually all Wall Street financial markets Monday and Tuesday, several prominent companies also delayed scheduled announcements. Pfizer, the big drugmaker, put off its third-quarter earnings report until Thursday,
while Thomson Reuters and NRG Energy delayed their reports until Friday. Google was forced to cancel Monday's event to unveil a new smartphone, the Nexus 4, as well as several new tablets, all aimed at the holiday shopping season. Facebook also called off an event, showcasing its new Facebook Gifts platform, that had been set to take place at FAO Schwarz in Manhattan on Thursday. See Impact/E4
contribution can range
from time to resources, and Fishhas doneboth, she said. "He's one of those extraordinary entrepreneurs who decided from
EXECUTIVE FILE
his company would be about the community,"
she said. "He can(also) be considered oneof
having present and past governorsinvolved in the selection is a special honor for him and Des-
chutes Brewery. "These things always humble me quite a bit because I didn't do this by myself," he said. "I look at this as an honor
AND A NICE PROFIT, TOO. • A portable photobooth meansentertainment andlaughs for customersof Redmond High teacherNateMunoz
for our entire organization."
By Rachael Rees The Bulletin
Verizon will sell Nokia phone NEW YORK — Verizon Wireless, the largest
cellphone carrier in the U.S., says it will sell a Nokia phone for the first
time in years. Verizon says it will sell the Lumia 822, an
exclusive model that's part of Nokia's lineup of
smartphones basedon Microsoft's Windows software.
Halloweendy the numbers TRICK ORTREAT 41 million:The estimated number of potential trickor-treaters in 2011 — children age 5 to 14
— across the United States. 115 million:Number
of occupied housing units across the nation in 2011 — all potential stops for trick-ortreaters.
JACK-O'-LANTERNS AND PUMPKIN PIES $113 million:Value of
pumpkins harvested from the top six
pumpkin-producing states, lllinois, California, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania and
Michigan in 2011. CANDY AND COSTUMES
hen you step inside Nate Munoz's portable photo booth and press the touchscreen, the countdown
behemoth By Eric Pfanner New York Times News Service
PARIS — Two European mediacompanies, Bertelsmann and Pearson, confirmed Monday that they had agreed to combine their book publishing divisions, Random House and Penguin, creating the largest consumer book publisher in the world. The deal would give the combined companies, already two of the biggest ers, an even greater scale to deal with the challenges arising from the growth of e-books and the power of Internet retailers like Amazon.com. Together, the combined publishers would have a global market share of slightly more than 25 percent, and a book list that includes contemporary best-sellers like Random House's "Fifty Shades of Grey" trilogy and Penguin's back list of classics from authors like George Orwell. "That is very attractive in a business that is going to become moreand more digital," said Douglas McCabe, an analyst at Enders Analysis in London. See Merger /E3
begins. 4, 3, 2, 1 — flash! Whether you're ready or not, your look will be captured and printed out seconds later. Munoz, the owner of High Desert Photo Booth, said when guests walk in and close the black curtain they can do whatever they want — which is part of the fun. Before they enter, they can also choose props, ranging from vintage mustaches to firefighter helmets. By the time they step out, the Canon 18megapixel digital camera and printing equipment will have produced a 5-by-7-inch card with four pictures. The booth can also make vldeo. Munoz, a full-time teacher at Redmond High School, started High Desert Photo Booth, formerly Flash Photo Booth Oregon, as a side business in January. He purchased the 7-foot tall digital photo booth for about $10,000.Overhead costsprinting paper, travel to events and independent contractorsfor setup and graphic design — are low, he said, for his home-based business. Renting the booth costs between $450 for a two-hour session and $800 for four hours. Munoz saidhe averages a 90 percent profit from each event. The 31-year-old Redmond r esident h as worked at about 30 events throughout Central Oregon, with weddings making up 95 percent of his business. "It's not just about dancing anymore," he said, referring to wedding receptions. "It's about pictures." People want to take care of their guests, and that's what a photo booth does — it entertains them, he said. Along with pictures, guests can make video messages for the bride and groom. Munoz has also taken the photo booth to other events like reunions, birthday parties and high school graduations throughout the region. SeePhotos/E3
Apps that gather data pose legal questions By Kevin j. O'Brien New York Times News Service
BERLIN — Angry Birds, the top-selling paid mobile app for the iPhone in the United States and Europe, has been downloaded more than a billion times
by devoted game players around the world, who
often spend hours slinging squawking fowl at groups of egg-stealing pigs. While regular players are familiar with the particular destructive qualities of thesebirds,many are unaware of one facet: The game possesses a ravenous ability to collect personal information on its users. When Jason Hong, an associate professor at the Human-Computer Interaction Institute at Carnegie Mellon University, surveyed 40 users, all but two were unaware that the game was storing their locations so that they could later be the targets of ads.
HighDesertPhotoBooth
1,155:Number of
Where:Based in Redmond
establishments that
Employee:1
produced chocolate and cocoa products in
Phone:541-977-1370
U.S. manufacturing
pLjb ishing
English-language publish-
the very beginning that
the major drivers of the craft beer industry." Fish, the third recipient of the award, said
Merger creates
"When I am giving
RobKerrl The Bulletin
Website:www.flashphotoboothoregon.com
2010, employing 35,074
Nate Munoz, owner of High Desert Photo Booth,stands inside his digital photo booth at his Redmond home. Munoz, who started his business in January, has done about 30 events throughout Central Oregon, primarily weddings.
a talk about this, some people will pull out their smartphones while I am still speaking and erase the game," said Hong.
SeeApps/E3
people. 409: Number of
U.S. establishments that manufactured
nonchocolate confectionary products in 2010. These establishments
employed17,526 people. 1,634:Number of costume rental
and formal wear establishments across the nation in 2010. Sources:U.S. Census Bureau; Agricultural Marketing Resource Center
High court weighs closely watched copyright case By Mark Sherman The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Supreme Court justices on Monday weighed copyright protections for publishers, creative artists and manufacturers in a global marketplace in a case that has attracted the interest of Costco, eBay and Google. The outcome has important implications for consumers and multibillion dollar annual sales online and in discount stores.
The court was about the only Washington institution open on Monday. The justices and spectators who braved the rain and wind saw a book publisher face off against a Thai graduate student in the U.S. who resold the publisher's copyrighted books on eBay after relatives first bought nearly identical, cheaper versions abroad. The court seemed to struggle with whether it matters where the books
w ere producedand firstsold. The justices' answer to those questions is of enormous interest to discount sellers like Costco and online business like eBay and Google that offer good prices on many products that were made abroad. Publisher John Wiley & Sons won a copyright infringement lawsuit against the student, Supap Kirtsaeng. The high court is considering Kirtsaeng's ap-
peal, which argues that Wiley lost its right to control resale of the books once his relatives bought them legally. Kirtsaengused eBay to sell$900,000 worth of books published abroad by Wiley and others and made about $100,000 in profit. The international editions of the textbooks were essentially the same as the more costly American editions. SeeCourt /E3
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TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2012 • T HE BULLETIN E 3
Photos
Apps
Continued from E1 So far, he said, the summer has been his busiest time. Now, he saidhe's averaging three to five events a month. While there are two other b usinesses r e ntin g p h o t o booths in town, he said since it is his secondary business and Central Oregon is a destination location for weddings, there is plenty of business. "We don't have to rely on it for income," he said. "We want to make a c e rtain amount a year off the business, but the biggest part is it gives us an opportunity to be around
Continued from E1 What is going on, according to experts, is that applications like Angry Birds and even more innocuousseeming software, like that which turns your phone into a flashlight, defines words or delivers Bible quotes, are also collecting personal information, usually the user's l ocation and sex an d t h e unique identification number of a smartphone. But in some cases, they cull information from contact lists and pictures from photo libraries. As the Internet goes mobile, privacy issues surrounding phone apps have moved to the front lines of the debate over what information can be collected, when and by whom. Next year, more people around the world will gain access to the Internet through mobile phones or tablet computers than from desktop PCs, according to Gartner, the research group. The shift has brought consumers into a gray legal area, where existing privacy pro-
people."
Q
• How did you decide to • start your o wn p h o to booth business? • A buddy of mine owns • a huge wedding event
A company, which originally
started as a photo booth business. It was ... something I've always had in the back of my mind. So, I decided to put some resources together and make it happen. I just like entrepreneurship, and I'm always looking into different business ideas. • What is y o ur f a vorite • part about operating a photo booth? • The whole experience is • fun. We have a monitor, and you can see what's going on inside. I enjoy hearing people's laughter. When people
tections have failed to keep up with technology. The move to mobile has set off a debate between privacy advocates and online businesses, which consider the accumulation of personal information the backbone of an ad-driven Internet. In the U.S., the data collection practicesof app makers are loosely regulated, if at all; some do not even disclose what kind of data they are collecting and why. Last February, California A t torney General Kamala D. Harris reached an agreement with six leading operators of mobile application p l atforms that they would sell or distribute only mobile apps with privacy policies that c o nsumers could review before downloading. I n announcing th e v o l untary pact with A m azon, Apple, Google, Hewlett-Packard, Microsoftand Research in Motion, whose distribution platforms make up the bulk of the American mobile app market, Harris noted that most mobile apps came without privacy policies. "Your p ersonal p r i vacy
should not be the cost of using mobile apps, but all too often it is," Harris said at the time. But simple disclosure, in itself, is often insufficient. T he makers o f A n g r y Birds, Rovio Entertainment of Finland, discloses its information collection practices in a 3,358-word policy posted on its website. But as with most a p plication m a k ers around the world, the terms of Rovio's warnings are more of a disclaimer than a choice. The company advises consumers who do not want their data collected or ads directed at them to visit the website of its analytics firm, Flurry, and to list their details on two industry-sponsored w ebsites. But Rovio notes that some companies do not honor the voluntary lists. As a last resort, Rovio cautions those who want to avoid data collection or ads simply to move on: "If you want to be certain that no behaviorally targeted advertisements are not displayed to y ou, please do not use or access the services."
Swiss watch maker Omega. Justice Elena Kagan sat out Continued from E1 the Costco case, but is taking A jury in New York award- part in the new dispute. She ed Wiley $600,000 after de- signed the government's leciding Kirtsaeng sold copgal brief in the Costco case ies of eight Wiley textbooks that took Omega's side. The without permission. government is backing the The issue at the Supreme publisher against Kirtsaeng, Court concerns what protec- but it advocates something of tion the holder of a copyright a compromise in laying down has after a p r oduct made a rule for other disputes. outside the United States is The court already has resold for the first time. In this jected copyright claims over case, the issue is whether U.S.-made items that were sold U.S. copyright protection ap- abroad and then brought back plies to items that are made to the United States for resale. abroad, purchased abroad The justices did not appear and then resold in the U.S. entirely comfortable with eiwithout the permission of the ther side's arguments, or the manufacturer. The high court government's middle ground. split 4-4 when it tried to anE. Joshua R osenkranz, swer that question in a case Kirtsaeng's lawyer, ran into in 2010 involving Costco and skepticism from Justice Ruth
Bader Ginsburg when he suggested that a ruling for Wiley would allow publishers and other copyright holders control overrepeated resale of their products if only they made them abroad. "So a U.S. manufacturer who wants to sell into the U.S. market has this incentive to go and send jobs overseas. It's an irresistible incentive if this court says the law is what Wiley says," Rosenkranz said. Ginsburg replied, "Has that ever happened?" Rosenkranz said he is sure it has, but could not come up with any specifics. On other hand, Theodore Olson, representing W i ley, struggled to satisfy justices who w o n dered wh e ther Rosenkranz might be right.
Court
put on props before they go in, it really loosens them up, and when they've had a few drinks, it's even funnier. • S ince you work at s o • many weddings, do you do anything special for the bride and groom'? • We do a memory book • for the bride and groom. You usually have to wait a few months to get your wedding pictures, so the book gives t hem something to l ook a t memory-wise, and cherish until they actually get their wedding pictures.
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— Reporter: 541-617-7818, rrees@bendbulletin.com
Varicose Vein Experts
Merger Continued from E1 Under the agreement, no cash is changing hands; Bertelsmann, which owns Random House, would control 53 percentof the combined entity, to be called Penguin Random House, with Pearson owning 47 percent. Bertelsmann and P earson said they would share e xecutive oversight, w i t h Markus Dohle of Random House serving as chief executive and John Makinson
of Penguin becoming chairman. The combined company, to be based in New York, would have annual revenue of about $3.8 billion. Thomas Rabe, chief executive of Bertelsmann, said in an interview that the merger would allow the combined c ompany to i n v est m o r e in digital operations and emerging markets, where book sales are growing faster than in developed markets like the United States and Western Europe. Rabe said t h e m e rger would allow the publishers to cut costs in their back offices, making it possible to spend more on authors, too. "The intention is to continue to invest in the creative potential of the businesses," he said. Rabe added in a conference call that while there w ere o p p o rtunities fo r "economies ofscale,"these cuts would not affect the p ublishers' individual i m prints, which work directly with the authors. "While we will be combining the strengths ofboth companies, we will be maintaining the distinctive identities of all our imprints," he said. E nthusiasm a bout t h e
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agreement has been more muted amongliterary agents, however, with some responding to reports of a possible deal last week by saying it could reduce the number of outlets for authors. Dohle, in a letter to Random House authors, insisted that the new entity would be "author-, publisher- and editor-centered." "Your relationship with your editor and your publishing team will be unaffectedby the new company," he wrote. Makinson, currently the chief executive of Penguin, said in a n i n terview that consolidation was inevitable as the industry adapts to the imperatives of th e d i gital revolution. "We decided it was better to get in early rather than be a follower," he said. Even i n t h e o l d -fashioned world of printing in ink on paper, McCabe said there would be advantages to greater scale in a world where the retail side of the business was also consolidating around fewer, more powerful chains that are often focused on marketing a handful of top titles. "There's a real advantage to being a superpower when the market is focused on bestsellers," he said. While small p u blishers with a niche focus and loyal groups of authors and readers might survive, he said, midsize publishers publishi ng m a ss-market b o o k s might come under further pressure to combine with competitors. A nother p u blisher, t h e H arperCollins division o f News Corp., has a lready s ignaled i t s i n t e rest i n consolidation.
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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2012
1f you have Marketplace events you would like to submit, please contact Ashley Brothers at 541-383-0323,email business@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Please allow at least 10days before the desired date of publication.
MARI<ETPLACE BUSINESS CALENDAR
TODAY BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONALHIGH DESERT CHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING: Visitors are welcomeandfirst two visits are free; 7:15a.m.; Bend Honda, 2225 N.E. U.S.Highway 20; 541-4207377. ENTREPRENEURIALSUPPORT ORGANIZATIONSUBCOMMITTEE: Open to the public; 8 a.m.; City Hall, 710 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-3885529. KNOW WORD FORBEGINNERS: Reservations recommended; free; 2-3:30p.m.;Downtown BendPublic Library, 601 N.W.Wall St.; 541-6177050 or www.deschuteslibrary.org. SMALL-BUSINESSCOUNSELING: SCOREbusiness counselors will be available every Tuesdayfor free oneon-one small-business counseling; no appointment necessary; free; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W.Wall St.; 541617-7080 or www.scorecentraloregon.org. INVESTMENTBASICS:Learnabout different types of investments and howthey work; free; 6 p.m.; Mid Oregon Credit Union,1386 N.E. Cushing Drive, Bend;541-382-1795. KNOW MORE EMAIL: Reservations recommended;free;6-7:30 p.m.; Downtown BendPublic Library,601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7050 or www. deschuteslibrary.org.
WEDNESDAY BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONALBENDCHAPTER WEEKLY MEETING:Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free;7a.m.; BendSeniorCenter,1600 S.E. ReedMarket Road; 541-749-0789.
College Loop, Redmond; 541-383-7290. HOW TOSTART A BUSINESS: COCC Small Business Development Center workshopsfor people contemplating business ownership; registration required; $15; 11a.m.1 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-383-7290. AFFORDABLEHOUSING INTEREST SESSION:Forfamilies interested in becoming homeowners; BendHabitat only offers these sessions twice a year; families must attend asession to receive a homeownership application; noon; Habitat for Humanity, 1860 N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 541-385-5387. KNOWWORDII: Reservations recommended; free; 1-2:30 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-617-7050 or www.deschuteslibrary.org. FREETAXFRIDAY:Freetax return reviews; schedule anappointment at 541-385-9666 or www.myzoomtax. com; free; 2-4 p.m.; ZoomTax, 963 S.W.Simpson Ave.,Suite100,Bend; 541-385-9666. KNOW MORE EMAIL: Reservations recommended;free;3-4:30p.m .; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-617-7050 or www.deschuteslibrary.org.
SATURDAY LOCAL ANOLOVIN'IT:M orethan 70 vendors; blood drive for American Red Cross, canned food drive for Saving Grace, yoga, zumba and afashionshow;10 a.m.-4 p.m .; PhoenixInnSuitesBend,300 N.W . Franklin Ave.; 541-317-9292 or prbystormie©hotmail.com.
TUESDAY Nov. 6
THURSDAY
BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONALHIGH DESERT CHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING: BUSINESSNETWORK Visitors are welcome and first two INTERNATIONALOESGHUTES BUSINESSNETWORKERSCHAPTER visits are free; 7:15 a.m.; Bend Honda, 2225 N.E. U.S. Highway 20; WEEKLY MEETING:Visitors are 541-420-7377. welcome and first two visits are free; 7a.m.; Bend SeniorCenter,1600S.E. KNOW OIGITAL OOWNLOAOS: Reed Market Road;541-610-9125. Reservations recommended; free; 10:30 a.m.-noon; Downtown EXPLORETHEBENEFITS OF Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. WORKINGWITH SCHWAB:Free; noon-1 p.m.; Charles Schwab &Co., Wall St.; 541-617-7050 or www.deschuteslibrary.org. 777 N.W.Wall St., Suite 201, Bend; 541-318-1794. KNOW WORD II: Reservations OPEN COMPUTERLAB:Reservations recommended;free;2-3:30 p.m .; Downtown Bend Public Library, recommended;free;2-3:30 p.m .; 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7050 or Downtown BendPublic Library,601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7050 or www. www.deschuteslibrary.org. deschuteslibrary.org. OPEN COMPUTERLAB: Reservations recommended; free; 3BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONALWILDFIRE 4:30 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-617CHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING: Visitors are welcomeandfirst two 7050 or visits are free; 3:30 p.m.; BendHonda, www.deschuteslibrary.org. 2225 N.E U.S. Highway20; 541-480AFFORDABLE HOUSINGINTEREST 1765. SESSION:For families interested MAKE THATEMPLOYEE HANDBOOK in becoming homeowners;Bend Habitat only offers these sessions WORK FORYOU:Laborand employment law seminar with Tamara twice a year; families must attend a session to receive a homeownership Russell of Barran Liebman LLPand Nancy Gammond-Moody of BBSI; application; 5:30 p.m.; Habitat for Humanity, 1860 N.E. Fourth St., registration required byOct. 30; free; 4-6 p.m.; Awbrey GlenGolf Club, Bend; 541-385-5387. 2500 N.W.Awbrey Glen Drive, Bend; 541-388-8526, anelson©barran.com or http:I/www.barran.com/displayWEDNESDAY event.asp?EventlD=204.
Nov. 7
FRIDAY COFFEE CLATTER:8:30-9:30 a.m.; Redmond Fire 8 Rescue, 341 N.W. DogwoodAve. CENTRALOREGONREALESTATE INVESTMENTCLUB:Free; 11a.m.; ServiceMaster Clean,20806Sockeye Place, Bend;541-610-4006 or bobbleile@windermere.com. HOW MUCH MONEY OOYOU NEED TO GETSTARTED?: Registration required; $15;11 a.m.1 p.m.; Central OregonCommunity College, Redmond campus,2030S.E.
Impact Continued from E1 Major retailers began closing New York stores Sunday afternoon. Saks Fifth Avenue boarded up its flagship store in Manhattan, a striking image for a retailer known for its high-fashion windows. "We have taken the necessaryprecautionsin each store to protect our property and limit damage," a spokeswoman, Julia Bentley, mote in an emaiL Saks closed stores in nine other locations from Ma r yland to Boston. On Monday, about 130 of the 850 Macy's and Bloomingdale's stores nationwide were closed, said Jim Sluzewski, a spokesman. "We're not selling generators or bottled water or any of those sorts of items, so given that much of what we sell is discretionary, it's not as big of an issue for our customers," he said. Oliver Chen, an analyst for Citi, wrote in a research note that he expected traffic to retailers could be dovm as much
BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONALBENDCHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING:Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 7 a.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E Reed Market Road; 541-749-0789. 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.; Round Table Pizza, 1552 N.E.Third St., Bend; 541-447-6384 or www.happyhourtraining.com.
NEWS OF RECORD
OPEN COMPUTERLAB: Reservations recommended; free; 9:30-11 a.m.; Sisters Public Library, 110 N. Cedar St.; 541-617-7050 or www.deschuteslibrary.org. BANKS ANOOTHER FINANCIAL SERVICES: Call 541-318-7506 extension 309 to reserve aseat; 5:307:30 p.m.; Neighborlmpact, 20310 Empire Ave., Suite A110,Bend;5413 I8-7506.
THURSDAY Nov. 8 BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONALOESCHUTES BUSINESSNETWORKERSCHAPTER WEEKLY MEETING:Visitors are welcome andfirst two visits are free; 7 a.m.; BendSenior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road;541-610-9125. GETTINGTHE MOSTOUTOF SCHWAB.COM: Free; noon-1 p.m.; Charles Schwab &Co.,777 N.W. Wall St., Suite 201,Bend; 541-318-1794. OPENCOMPUTERLAB: Reservations recommended; free;1:30 p.m.; LaPine Public Library,16425 First St.; 541617-7050 or www.deschuteslibrary. org. OPENCOMPUTERLAB:Reservations recommended; free;2-3:30p.m.; Downtown BendPublic Library,601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7050 orwww. deschuteslibrary.org. BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONAL WILDFIRE CHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING: Visitors are welcomeandfirst two visits are free;3:30 p.m.; BendHonda, 2225 N.E.U.S.Highway 20; 541-4801765. WHO WILLMAKEDECISIONS FOR YOU?: Whether dueto abrief hospitalization or long-term incapacity, many of uswill have atime in our lives when wewonaE™t be ableto make ourownfinancial or medical decisions; estate planningandelder law attorneys RyanCorreaand Linda Ratcliffe will discuss themanyplanning options availableandthe potential consequences offailing to planahead; registration required; free; 6p.m.; Hurley Re,747S.W. Mil ViewWay, Bend; 541-317-5505.
FRIDAY
or www.deschuteslibrary.org.
TUESDAY Nov. 13 BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONALHIGH DESERT CHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 7:15 a.m.; Bend Honda, 2225 N.E. U.S. Highway 20; 541-420-7377. KNOW WORDIII: Reservations recommended;free;2-3:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7050 or www.deschuteslibrary.org. OPEN COMPUTERLAB: Reservations recommended; free; 23:30 p.m.; East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road; 541-6177050 or www.deschuteslibrary.org. OPEN COMPUTERLAB: Reservations recommended; free; 34:30 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-617-7050 or www.deschuteslibrary.org.
WEDNESDAY Nov. 14 BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONALBENDCHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING:Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 7 a.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. ReedMarket Road; 541-749-0789. KNOW DIGITALBOOKS: Reservations recommended; free; 9:30 a.m.; Sisters Public Library, 110 N. Cedar St.; 541-617-7050 or www. deschuteslibrary.org. BRING OUTTHE BEST:Cutting edge performance reviews and how to leverage team talent; $35 includes lunch; 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m.; Awbrey Glen Golf Club, 2500 N.W.Awbrey Glen Drive, Bend; 541-388-8526 or http:I/moementum.com/webinars. php. UNDERSTANDINGANO MANAGING CREDIT:Call 541-318-7506 extension 309 to reserve a seat; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Neighborlmpact, 20310 Empire Ave., Suite A110, Bend; 541-318-7506.
THURSDAY
Nov. 9 CENTRALOREGONREALESTATE INVESTMENTCLUB:Free; 11 a.m.; ServiceMaster Clean, 20806 Sockeye Place, Bend; 541-610-4006 or bobbleile©windermere.com. KNOW WORD III: Reservations recommended; free; 1-2:30 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-617-7050 or www.deschuteslibrary.org. FREE TAXFRIDAY:Freetax return reviews; schedule an appointment at 541-385-9666 or www.myzoomtax. com; free; 2-4 p.m.; Zoom Tax, 963 S.W.Simpson Ave.,Suite100,Bend; 541-385-9666. DIGITALOOWNLOADS DEMO: Reservations recommended; free; 3 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-617-7050 or www.deschuteslibrary.org.
Fannie Mae aka Federal National Mortgage Association to Laura J. Gibons,Crooked River Ranch Deschutes County No.4, Lot9, $229,000 HaydenHomes LLC to Gregg W. Floyd C. andChet Antonsen Geser,Village at Cold Springs, to Barry M. and Joyce M. Phase 2, Lot 86, $157,274 Metzentine,Madision Park, Lot Daren and PamCurry to John 15, $305,000 H. and Shirley D. Scroggins, Heritage Ranch, Lot17, $167,900 Robert Nutter to John A.and Carmen A. Sandefur,Maplewood, Terry and JudySteckman to Phase 2, Lot 40, $155,000 LauraC.Bolen,M ountainPeaks, Timothy R. andVirginia L. Brown Phase1, Lot5, $177,900 to Michael J. and Riva B. Jill H. Green to Sandra K. Johnson,Township 15, Range 10, Fischer,Township 14, Range 13, Section 25, $563,000 Section14, $318,000 Salvesen HomesLLCto Daniel P. andAngela K. Brobst to Patricia A. Stumpe andJoan E. Clifton M. and Carol A. Stevens, Guetschow,NorthWest Crossing, NorthWest Crossing, Phase 15, Phase16, Lot 732, $350,000 Lot 689, $445,000 Richard W. Secor Jr. andGecilia Dennis L. andGail M. Hungerford L. Secor to Justin A. andAthey to David J. Martin,Centennial A. Moravetz,Canal Crossings, Glen, Lot 36, $165,000 Lot17, $205,500 SD Perrigan1 LLC toBenjamin Sandra J. JohnsonandLynn H. Williston,First Addition to R. Vermeire to John J.Ripley, Bend Park, Lots11-13, Block 98, Township 16, Range 12, Section $245,000 32, $349,000 James H. Webb toMark W. and Scott M. and Rachael M. HaHett Julie A. EHington,Conestoga to Michael and Caryn Plinski, Hills First Addition, Lot11, Block Mountain Village East II, Lot17, 3, $335,000 Block12, $217,000 Hackbarth Builders Inc. to Danny R. andAmanda S. Lloyd D. andGeorgiana E. Purdy, Proudfoot to Alan P. andMelissa NorthWest Crossing, Phase 16, M. Williams,Stonehedge on Rim, Lot 742, $344,000 Phase 3, Lot19, $172,000 Federal HomeLoanMortgage James H. andHazelL.Gressto Corp. to Brian McLarty,A Portion Diana J. Vantress,Township 15, of Cimarron City, Lot 21, Block2, Range11, Section19, $243,000 $177,000 Dale and SuzanneAndersonto James R. Sickler HI andClaudia Donald C. andBrenda A. Coats, X. Liendo,who took title as Forest Park1, Lot18, Block4, Claudia X. Sickler, to Sibel D. $207,000 Edmonds, NorthWest Crossing, Phase 12, Lot 592, $425,000 Randy S. andJan A. Thornton to JanetT.Takayama and Gordon I. John H. and Marylyn S. Reep Hoberg,Hill Street Homesites, to Charles I. Rice H andMarcia Lot1, $180,000 Talia-Rice,Circle Four Ranch Condominium, Phase 5, Unit 31, Varenna Capital LLCto $282,000 Ramon A. andJudyA. Auerbach, RiverRim P.U.D., Phase 2, Lot184, Mary W. and Richard A. Cronin, trustees for Cronin Family Trust, to $455,000 Steven R. and Jodi Borer, trustees Nancy K. Cary to OregonHousing for Borer 2008 Family Trust, and Community Services Aspen Village at Mountain High, Department,Township 15, Range Lot 15, $246,650 13, Section 15, $223,992.06 Michael C. andSusan L. Taylor to Sandra L. Shackelford and Jeffrey R. and Mindy L Dlander, Michael Reuther to Jerry Awbrey Butte Homesites, Phase Tausend andCamille Hukari, 17, Lot 7, Block13, $455,000 Eagle Crest, Lot 9, Block 9, Oregon JoyLLCto Hayden Homes $365,000 LLC,Antler Ridge, Phase 2, Lots DavidD.andGarolyn M. Rasca to 38, 78 and 81, Partition Plat 2008- WiHiamL Parnell Jr.,Northwest 43, Parcel1, $282,400 Townsite Companys Second Paul J. Leatherwood andKatie Addition, Lots 15 and 16, Block14, R. Leatherwood,trustees for Paul $188,000 and Katie Leatherwood Family Federal HomeLoanMortgage Trust, to the Lev Boulaevskii and Gorp. to Judith S. andEdwinE. FainaBoulaevskaia Revocable Chesnut and Jane E. andDavid Trust, Arrowhead Acres Second Eidsaune,Meadow Village, Lot 6, Addition, Lot 7, Block 2, $341,000 Block 18, $249,900 Flagstar Bank FSB to Secretary Ricky R. and Terri S. Pedigo of Housing andUrban to Wilson CWProperties LLC, Development,First Addition to Whispering Pines Estates, Lot10, Osprey Pointe Condominiums, Unit 7, $510,000 Block 9, $268,214.06 Elsa M. Rogersto William A. John H. Myrwang andRenee D. Blankenship andKristin D. Renshaw-Myrwang,trustees for Kelso,Rockridge, Phase1, Lot15, Living Trust of John H. Myrwang $195,000 and Renee Renshaw-Myrwang, Greg Welch Gonstruction Inc. to to Daina B. Williams, Riverside Addition to Bend, Lot 27, Block 7, Gregory C. andStacy A. Borstad, $255,000 Shevlin Ridge 4,Lot77,$565,000
DEEDS
Nov. 15
BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONALOESCHUTES BUSINESSNETWORKERS CHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 7 a.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E Reed Market Road; 541-610-9125. OUTCOMES ANOOUTLOOKS, FROM THEELECTION TO THE ECONOMY:A post-election look at global and local economy and capital markets; $45 per individual member and $55 for nonmembers; 7:30-9:30 a.m.; The RiverhouseConvention Center, 2850 N.W. Rippling River Court,Bend; 541-389-3111. EXPLORETHE BENEFITS OF WORKINGWITH SCHWAB:Free; noon-1 p.m.; Charles Schwab & Co., 777 N.W. Wall St., Suite 201, Bend; SATURDAY 541-3 I8-1794. OPEN COMPUTERLAB: Nov. 10 Reservations recommended; HOME BUYINGGLASS:Registration free; 2-3:30 p.m.; Downtown required; free; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Neighborlmpact, 20310 Empire Ave., Wall St.; 541-617-7050 or www. Suite A110, Bend; 541-318-7506, deschuteslibrary.org. ext. 309.
FRIDAY
MONDAY
Nov. 16
Nov. 12
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KNOW DIGITALDOWNLOAOS: KNOW WORD FORBEGINNERS: Reservations recommended; free; Reservations recommended; free; 10:30 a.m.; Sunriver Area Public 10:30a.m.-noon; La PinePublic Library, 56855 Venture Lane; 541Library, 16425 First St.; 541-617-7050 617-7050 or www.deschuteslibrary.
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as 40percent for the week in affectedareas, and November comparable-store salescouldbe hitby asm uch as 2 to3 percent. However, he said, stores that
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sellemergency supplies,food and other staples should see an uptick in traffic and sales. The business effects of the storm only added to the uncertainty pervading markets, economists said, with investors and executives already worried by th e i m p e nding "fiscal cliff" in Washington as well as continuing economic problems in Europe and slowing growth in Asia. For now, economists were playing down the long-term impact from the storm, even if it results in billions of dollars in property damage from the high winds and lashing rain. In the short term, however, powerful storms disrupt consumer spending and can cause sharp month-to-month swings in economic data, said Christopher D. Carroll, an economics professor at Johns Hopkins University who analyzes the impact of weather events.
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Current Oregon iaw requires public notices to be printed in a newspaper whose readers are affected by the notice. But federal, state, and local government agencies erroneously believe they can save money by posting public notices on their web sites instead of in the local newspaper. If they did that,you'd have to know in advance where, when, and how tolook, and what to look for, in order to be informed about government actions that could affect you directly. Less than 10% of tlle U.S. population currently visits a government web site daily,* but 80% of all Oregon adults read a newspaper at least once during an average week, and 54% read public
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Food, F2-3 Home, F4
Ask Martha, F6
Recipe Finder, F6
Garden, F5
© www.bendbulletin.com/athome
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2012
HOME FOOD
The basics Ofbed COYBI'IAgS By Linda Turner Griepentrog For The Bulletin
Shopping for bed coverings can be a bewildering process. There is little standardization in bed covering dimensions, so knowing your bed measurements is key to a good fit.
Measuring up Mattresses come in several sizes — king, California king, queen, double/full and twin — and those length and width measurementsare universal within the industry, varying only an inch or two between brands. In addition to knowing your mattress length and width, notethe "drop,"which refersto the distance from the mattress top to the floor, and the depth of the mattress.
If you're shopping for a bed
skirt, also measure the distance from the top of the box spring to the floor.
Coming to terms In the retail bedding world, several names may be used to referto the same type ofcovering, depending on the brand. SeeCoverings/F4
Rob KerrI rhe Bulletin
Brownies are always on the menuat La Magie Bakery in downtown Bend. According to owner Di Long, "You have to use a good chocolate ifyou want to have a good brownie."
GARDEN
Golf course is miniature in gameonly Michael Tortorello New York Times News Service
MINNETRISTA, Minn. — If you botch the first hole on the Big Stone Mini Golf course
By Alison Highberger • For The Bulletin
(and you probably will), Bruce Stillman suggests you return the ball to the fairway and putt
upcakeshad theircraze.Macaroons had a moment. But brownies
again.
are beloved baked goods that don't go in and out of style.
The par-6 hole called the "Dead Tree Forest" is a stand of tall trunks. Forget a straight shot to the cup; you can hardly find the flag. "Who's to say you're not just starting a new game'?" Stillman reasoned on a recent
The reason for their enduring popularity could be the main ingredients: chocolate, butter and sugar. With add-ins like nuts, caramel andmore chocolate, and the ability to be fudgy or cakey, iced or not, brownies have the power to make every-
morning. It seems only polite to follow his rules. Not only did he design and build the course, it is also his front yard. SeeCourse /F5
one happy.
Photo courtesy Alexandra Grablewski
TODAY'S RECIPES • Fat Witch Brownies,F2 • La Magie Brownies,F2 • Butterscotch Flip,F2
Caramel Witches — a concoction of New York's Fat Witch Bakery — add a caramel element to the traditional chocolatey offering. And you don't have toknow magic to make them — just use the recipe on Page F2.
They're not hard to make, especially with a great recipe like one of the 50 in "Fat Witch Brownies: Brownies, Blondies, and Bars from New York's Legendary Fat Witch Bakery," by Patricia Helding (Rodale Inc., 2010). "These days, most people know brownies through a mix. I don't know how many
moms still bake from scratch, but brownies are so easy, it's almost pitiful not to," Helding said in a phone interview from New York City. Her Fat Witch Bakery opened in Manhattan's Chelsea Market in 1998. It's a hot spot for office workers who want treats, as well as a destination for large numbers of American, French and Japanese tourists. "We use really good chocolate, and a little more butter than most; that's why French people love us, which is very
flattering. Thirty percent of our walk-in traffic is Japanese, and one of the reasons is our logo. The Japanese like cute logos," Helding said, referring to their cute witch logo. She also sells brownies online at www.fatwitch.com. In 2002, Fat Witch brownies were chosen as one of Oprah's famous "favorite things." "One of the favorite things I've heard someone say about my brownies is, 'These are better than my mom's," Helding told us. See Brownies/F2
• Caramel Witches,F2 • Potato Tots,F3 • Chipotle Aioli,F3
• Tangy Soy Dipping Sauce, F3
"These days, most people know brownies through a mix. l don't know how many moms still bake from SCratCh, but brO W n i e S
a r e S O e a S y ,i t'S almOSt pitiful nattO." —Patricia Helding,owner,Fat WitchBakery
• Frikadelle (Belgian-style Meatballs),F6
Do you make greatcookies?TheBulletin wants to know. The At Home section is hosting a
cookie contest to determinethe best cookies in Central Oregon. Grand prize
is a two-night stay onthe OregonCoast, location to bedetermined. The winners will be selected by a panel
Cookies will be divided into categories: • Chocolate chip • Bar
preparations.) There will also be aseparate category for youth participants.
In order to register, email thefollowing
must bring a dozen cookies, covered, on a plate to The Bulletin for judging. Cookie submissions will be accepted the
•
.
evening of Nov.15 (upuntil7:30p.m.) or
• Decorated info to athome©bendbulletin.com: Name, the morning of Nov. 16 (between 8 and • Traditional (This category will include type of cookieandcontact information. 10 a.m.).
cookies suchassnickerdoodle,peanut
Registration canalso bemailed to: The
All of the winning recipeswill be pub-
butter, oatmeal raisin and others that
Bulletin, Cookie Contest, P.O. Box6020, Bend, OR 97708. Registration must be
lished, alongside photos of the winning cookies, in the At Home section. — Questions? Contact AlandraJohnson at 541-617-7860or ajohnson©bendbulletin.com.
of judges onNov. 16. Those interested in entering thecom-
people arefamiliar with.) • Nontraditional/wacky (This category
petition mustregister by Nov.9.
is for cookies with unusual ingredients or
received byNov.9.
Those entering the competition
Thinkstock
F2
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2012
Fooo
Next week: Hazelnut harvest
Brownies Continued from F1 She isn't a culinary school grad or trained pastry chef. Helding was a s t ressed-out Wall Street trader when she cooked upthe idea ofopening a brownie business. Baking brownies in her tiny M anhattan a partment w a s one of Helding's favorite ways to chill out after a hard day at work, and when she took her goodies into the office, people went wild for them. She knew she was onto something and eventually decided to change careers. "My brownies were fudgy, deep and incredibly rich. Their edges were crumbly and their centers were gooey. Buttery and bold, even the smallest corner broken off one could satisfy a ravenous craving," she writes in "Fat Witch Brownies." She named her company after a friend. Helding explains in her cookbook that everyone on Wall Street has a nickname. A friend who loved Helding's h ome-baked brownies w a s called "The Witch." "She would swoop in for seconds and thirds. We joked that I was going to turn her into a 'Fat Witch,' and the name stuck. To me, it has cometo symbolize the unabashed enjoyment of simple pleasures. Baking brownies is like making magic," Helding writes in her cookbook. B end bakery o w ne r D i
To serve Brownie serving tips from The Fat Witch: • Trim off crispy edges to make
sides evenand cleanlooking (save crusts for ice cream topping). • Sift confectioners' sugar on
top for a beautiful finish. • For a more elegant look, flip
add icing or a glaze. • Serve brownies on boldly
the pan of brownies onto a large patterned platters, antique plate so it's bottom-side up. Place a doily on top, and sift
confectioners' sugar over it. Remove the doily to reveal the pattern.
• For over-the-top decadence,
dishes and the like. • If you don't have a cake stand,
place a plate ontop of abowl for instant height. — From "Fat Witch Brownies," by Patricia Hetding, Rodate Inc., 2010
La Magie Brownies Makes 12 to 16 brownies. RobKerr/The Bulletin
Di Long, owner of La Magie Bakery in Bend,recommends leaving brownies in the oven for a few minutes after they're baked.
ies, home cooks should do what a completely dry bowl at methe bestbakeries do: buy great dium-power in 30- to 45-second c hocolate, don't overmix or intervals, Helding writes, warnoverbake, and melt chocolate ing that even one drop of water slowly over low heat. can make chocolate"seize," or Preheat your oven at least become grainy and firm. 15 minutes before putting the Both Long a n d H e l ding brownies in, suggests Helding, warn that it's important to let and begin checking the brown- brownies cool completely beies for doneness five minutes fore cutting them. (Brownie before the timer goes off. baking is a lesson in patience "Any sooner, you risk reduc- and willpower) ing the oven temperature. The Long recommends leaving best way to test if a batch of a pan ofhomemade La Magie brownies orbars is done isto brownies in the oven for a few stick a toothpick in the center. If minutes after they're baked, it comes out covered in wet bat- to allow them to firm up (see ter, they will need a few more recipe). "They'll be a little soft. Don't minutes. If the toothpick comes out mostly clean with a few let that scare you. Leave them moist crumbs attached, they're in the oven 5-10 extra minutes ready," Helding writes. with the heat off and the door ("Dee") Long would agree. She Helding encourages home open, and then take them out to opened La Magie Bakery in cooks to experiment with the cool. You don't want them overdowntown Bend last January, many different chocolates that baked. They'll become really and brownies are always on are available now. In her cook- hard," she said. If y o u've b een m a k i ng the menu, along with Europe- book, she details the varieties an-stylepastries,cakes, bread, and how to bake with them: co- brownies from box mixes, it's soup and sandwiches. coa powder, unsweetened, bit- time to rediscover how easy it is She named her bakery after tersweet, semisweet, dark, milk to make them from scratch. the French word for "magic" and white chocolate. All you need is some inspirabecause people often ask her, Melt chocolate over low heat tion from a cute Fat Witch, and "What's in that?" in a c ompletely dry, heavy- a little French magic. "I always say, 'Oh, a little bottomed saucepan, stirring — Reporter: ahighberger magic,'" Long told us. constantly, or microwave it in Cmac.com La Magie's brownie recipe came from Long's mentor, Marda Stoliar, director of Bend's InFat Witch Brownies ternational School of Baking. "Our brownie has a kind of Makes 12 to 16brownies. crust on top and bottom, it's This has been the Fat Witch Bakery's top seller for more than 12 years. fudgy in the middle and it isn't I like to think of this as the brownie that launched a thousand cravings. made with cocoa powder. I Instead of bittersweet chocolate chips, you can also use 4 ounces of unuse Callebaut dark chocolate. sweetened chocolate, melted and cooled, and increase the sugar by /s You have to use a good choco- cup. With this recipe, make certain to use unbleached flour, not cake flour. late if you want to have a good While these are perfection on their own, try stirring /2 cup of chopped brownie," Long said. nuts, semi-sweet chocolate chips or dried fruit into the batter. — Patricia Helding For great homemade brown-
'/4 C melted butter ('/2 stick) a/4C vegetable shortening (I used Sweetex brand) '/2 C chocolate chips (use high quality semi-sweet or bittersweet chocolate.
Guittard, Callebaut and Valrhona are good choices.) '/4 C pecans 3 Ig eggs a/4tsp salt
2 TBS glucose, light corn syrup or agave 1 C pastry flour (sifted), or allpurpose flour (sifted) 1 tsp vanilla
Preheat oven to 350degrees and butter a 9-inch by 9-inch square pan. Melt butter, shortening and chocolate in adouble boiler, stirring frequently, and then set aside to cool. Toast pecans in oven or in pan on top of the stove, watching them carefully so they don't burn. After they cool,
chop the pecans lightly by hand or in afood processor. Put the eggs, salt and glucose in a mixer with a paddle attachment and mix on medium speed for 8 minutes, scraping the bottom of the bowl several times. Decrease the speed of the mixer and add the melted butter, shortening and chocolate mixture while the paddle is moving, trying not to hit the sides of the bowl or the paddle. Mix
quickly (not more than 30 seconds). Add the sifted flour and vanilla to the mixer bowl, and mix just until well incorporated. Fold in the toasted pecans. Spread the brownie batter evenly in the buttered baking pan. Bake for 25-30 minutes. Center will remain soft, but slightly higher than the sides. If they seem too soft at 30
minutes, continue to bakefor 5 more minutes. When brownies are done, turn off the oven, but leave the brownie pan in the oven with the oven door slightly open for 5 minutes. Then remove the brownies and let them cool in the pan to room temperature before cutting. — Oi Long, LaNfagie Sakery, 949N.W. SondSt, Send, 541-241-7884, yywwiamagiebakerycom
Butterscotch Flip Makes 12 to 16 bars.
These bars have a thick, fudgy base layer and acakey butterscotch top shot through with butterscotch chips for added punch. At Fat Witch Bakery, this is a limited edition bar, meaning we make it only once in a while. When we
do, customers havebeen known to rush across town in taxicabs to stock up before we sell out. — Patricia Helding BOTTOM BROWNIE: 7 TBS unsalted butter '/4 C bittersweet chocolate chips 2 Ig eggs '/2 C granulated sugar a/2 tsp pure vanilla extract
'jcC unbleached flour Pinch of salt '/4 C semisweet chocolate chips (optional) BUTTERSCOTCH TOP LAYER: 4 TBS ('/2 stick) unsalted butter
1lg egg '/4 C packed light brown sugar '/4 tsp pure vanilla extract a/2 C unbleached flour Pinch of salt a/2 tsP baking Powder a/4C butterscotch chips
Grease a 9-inch by 9-inch pan with butter. Dust with flour and tap out the excess. Preheat the oven to 350
degrees. To make the bottom brownie, melt the butter and bittersweet chocolate chips together in a small saucepan over low heat, stirring frequently. Remove from the heat and set aside to cool. Cream the eggs, granulated sugar and vanilla together until smooth. Add the cooled chocolate mixture and
continue mixing until well blended. Measure the flour and salt and sift together directly into the batter. Mix gently until well combined and no trace of the dry ingredients remains. Stir in the semisweet chocolate chips by hand, if desired. Spread the batter
evenly in the prepared baking panand set aside. To make the top layer, melt the butter in a small pan or in the microwave. Beat the egg, brown sugar and vanilla together until light and fluffy. Add the melted butter and continue beating until well-combined.
Measure the flour, salt and baking powder and then sift together directly into the batter. Mix gently until well combined and no trace of the dry ingredients remains. Stir in the butterscotch chips by hand. With a spatula, spread the batter over the bottom layer in the prepared baking pan and smooth to the edges.
Bake for 32 minutes or until a toothpick inserted in the center comesout clean or with only crumbs, not batter,
ATTENTION ~ -,-
14 TBS (1'/4 sticks) unsalted butter '/2 C plus 2 TBS bittersweet chocolate chips 1a/4 C granulated sugar
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4 Ig eggs 1 tsp pure vanilla extract '/2 C plus 2 TBS unbleached flour Pinch of salt
Grease a 9-inch by 9-inch baking pan with butter. Dust with flour and tap out the excess. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees.
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WWW.CleaniligCliniCinC.COm Pw
Makes 12 to 18 brownies.
ring frequently. Set aside to cool. this combination. Who has the time (or the requisite candy thermometer) to make caramel from scratch? The Cream the sugar, eggs and vanilla together. Add the cooled chocolate cellophane-wrapped squares available at the supermarket work beautifully. Adding a big handful of chopped mixture and mix until well blended. pecans to the batter turns these bars into Turtle Witches. — Patricia Helding Measure the flour and salt and then sift together directly into the chocolate mixture. Mix the batter gently just until no trace of the dry ingredi'/2 C unbleached flour ents remains. Donot overmix. 14 TBS (1'/4 sticks) unsalted 1 C plus 1. TBS granulated At this point, if desired, stir in any extras like walnuts. Spread the batter butter sugar Pinch of salt evenly in the prepared baking pan and bake 33 minutes or until a tooth- a/2 C plus 1 TBS bittersweet 1 tsp pure vanilla extract 30 caramel squares 'y2 C coarsely chopped pecans 2 TBS lukewarm water pick inserted in center comes out clean or with only crumbs, not batter, chocolate chips on it. 3 Ig eggs (optional)
Remove from the oven and cool on a rack for1 hour. Cut just before serving.
Grease a9-inch by 9-inch baking pan with butter. Dust with flour and tap out the excess. Melt the butter and chocolate in a small saucepan over low heat, stirring frequently. Remove from heat and let
cool to room temperature. Meanwhile, beat theeggs, sugar and vanilla until smooth. Add the cooled chocolate mixture and mix until well
SERVICE
541-882-9498
Caramel Witches
Melt the butter and chocolate in a small saucepan over low heat, stir- A classic chocolate brownie with buttery caramel oozing out the sides, it's easy to seewhy people go crazy for
— From "Fat Mlitch Brownies,"by Patricia Helding, Rodale inc.,2010
FREE Pickup fit; Delivery
on it. The top should be a golden butterscotch color. Remove from the oven and letcool on a rackfor1 hour. Cut just before serving. — From "Fat IVitch Brownies," by Patricia Helding
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combined. If desired, stir in chopped pecans by hand. Measure the flour and salt, and then sift together directly into the chocolate mixture. Mix until well combined
and no trace of the dry ingredients remains. Pour half the batter into the prepared baking pan and spread it in an even layer, about '/4-inch thick. Put the pan in the refrigerator while you make the caramel layer.
Unwrap the caramels and put them in a microwaveable bowl with the water. Microwave on medium power and check every 60 seconds or until the caramels have melted into a thick liquid. Remove the bowl from the microwave and let cool for 5 minutes. Whisk the caramel with a fork to get a consistent texture. Pour the caramel
over the batter in the pan.Don't go all theway to the edges, and don't worry about covering every spot. Placethe
• ~
•
pan in the refrigerator for 20 minutes, allowing the caramel to set. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees.
Remove the panfrom the refrigerator and spread the remaining half of the batter evenly over the caramel using a spatula. Let the pan sit for15 minutes to come to room temperature before putting it in the oven. Bake for 35 minutes or until the brownies begin to pull away from the sides of the pan.
Remove from the ovenand cool on a rack for1 hour. Right before serving, I suggest cutting 18 pieces, since
Not if you choose any of our three facilities located on Bends west side.
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By Kathleen Purvis
Att STAR
Soften upthat hard-to-opensquash kin-carving kits around. The saw-tooth blade can help open • Now t h at t h e w i n t e r a winter squash. • squash season is here, But an easier way to tackle what's the trick to peeling but- hard but smooth-skinned winternut and spaghetti squashes'? ter squashes is to start with the They're so hard, I don't know microwave. how to use them. Use a metal skewer, a strong A fter h i ding a l l t h a t fork or the tip of a small par• flavor and those nutri- ing knife to poke several holes ents inside them, nature cer- through the skin. Then put the tainly didn't make hard-shell squash in the microwave for squashes easy to open. You about 3 minutes. could keep one of those pumpThat will soften the skin a The Charlotte Observer
A
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— From "Fat Mlitch Brownies,"by Patricia Helding
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little, so it will be easier to cut it in half for roasting, or to use a vegetablepeeler to remove the skin and dice the squash. A spaghetti squash can be poked and microwaved the same way. Instead of peeling it, though, cut it in half, scrape out theseeds and either bake or steam the halves until it is soft enough to use a fork to release the long strands. — Email questions to hpurvis@charlotteobserver com
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2012 • THE BULLETIN I
f
Take those totsfor adip
• Potato treats pop up in kitchens, barsandrestaurants
Whether you make from-scratch potato tots or rely on tried-andtrue Tater Tot originals, ketchup is often the condiment of choice.
"I live in Portland now, and you'd be By Bill Daley Chicago Tribune amazed at how many bars have Tater The Brothers Grigg had just started a Tots," she said. frozenfood company to make, among Tots lend themselves to more refined other things, french fries. But what to dining applications too. do with the scraps of spud left behind? At HauteDish in Minneapolis, chef These potato pieces were too small for Landon Schoenefeld has a "Tater Tot fries, but there were too many of them to HauteDish" on the menu. It's a play be discarded. not just on the wording but the inOne day in 1953, F. Nephi Grigg came nards of the dish itself. "Tater Tot hot dish is an iconic up with a delicious solution: He chopped up the potato scraps, shaped them into Minnesota dish," he said. "Typibite-size cylinders, then fried them gold- cally it's made with ground beef en and crunchy. and green beans and canned Thus were born Ore-Ida Tater Tots. cream of mushroom soup with As the last almost 60 years have Tater Tots on top." proved, Grigg's little brainstorm has Schoenefeld's version is both more been an enormous success. An esti- refined and deconstructed, with mated 3.5 billion Tater Tots are eaten braised short rib subbing for the by Americans every year, according to ground beef, a porcini bechaMax Wetzel, associate marketing direc- mel sauce in lieu of the canned tor for Ore-Ida. mushroom soup, and French Tater Tots and its imitators long ago haricots verts replacing green jumped from supermarket freezer cas- beans. es torestaurant menus across North The kicker, he said, are the America. Many chefs make their ovm; three tots crowning the plate. home cookscan as well,thanks to reci- Each tot is "essentially a cropes like Lara Ferroni's "Real Snacks: quette," Schoenefeld said, a cheesy Make Your Favorite Childhood Treats mashed potato bite that is shaped by without Al l t h e J u nk " ( Sasquatch, hand, fried to set the outer crust and $19.95). then baked to melt the insides. "Easily it is our most popular dish," Ferroni, an Oregon-based food writer, doesn't remember much junk food in the said the chef, who estimates he's sold house as she was growingup in southern 20,000plates in the two years HauteGeorgia, but "there was always a bag of Dish has been open. Today's price? frozen Tater Tots in the freezer." $24. "People don't blink an eye," While Tater Tots bring back childhood memories for her, they also have a he said. "It reminds them of a very adult connotation as well. dish they grew up on."
Want something more? Howabout a cheesydip? Or aspicy chipotle mayonnaise? Oraquicksoy-basedsauce? CLASSIC ROOTS Before you dismiss TaterTots andtheir ilk as another example of mid20th century American food tinkering, consider where tots may actually come from. Asked in an email if there was a classic culinary antecedent
for tots, the French-born and trained JacquesPepin replied quickly in the affirmative.
"Certainly potato croquettes (riced, cooked potato andegg yolk shaped like corks, balls or disks, breadedandfried) or potato duchesse (the samebut no breading and baked) arethe ancestors," wrote Pepin. He poi ntedcuriouscooksto "The"FannieFarmerCookbook"and other classics for recipes. WHERE ISTHE TATER NATION? Ore-Ida's iconic Tater Tots are sold across North America, of course, but where are those little treats most popular?
The west north-central parts of the United States, according to Max Wetzel, associate marketing director for Ore-Ida. That means lowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota and South Dakota. Wetzel theorizes this is due to the popularity of comfort foods in the region, including Tater Tot hot dish.
CHILECON QUESO In "The TexasCowboy Cookbook," RobWalsh recommends serving chile con quesowith tortilla chips or as atopping for tacos, chalupas or Frito pie. It also makes a great dipping sauce for tots. Walsh said the dish can be made in a double boiler or microwave, but he
also recommends aslow cooker. "You canleave it there for hours, ladling small amounts into serving bowls while the rest stays warm," he writes. His recipe calls for Velveeta cheese and a can of Rotel tomatoes, a brand of canned tomatoes with green chiles:
Melt1 pound processed cheese(cut into 1-inch cubes) in a slow cooker or double boiler. Stir in1 can (10 ounces) tomatoes with green chiles. Serve warm.
Tangy Soy Dipping Sauce
Potato Tots
Makes about /~ cup.
Makes about 54 tots. Lara Ferroni, author of "Real Snacks: Make Your Favorite Childhood Treats without All the Junk," likes to grate a little sweet potato or yam
A C light (regular) soy sauce 2'A TBS unseasoned rice vinegar 'k tsp sugar, optional
into her tots. Shealso keepsthe potato skin on to preserve morenutrients. Her recipe, adapted from CooksCountry magazine, calls for corn flour and ground millet flour; substitute whole-wheat flour if you prefer. 2 Ibs russet potatoes (5-6 med potatoes), cut into chunks 1 med sweet potato or yam P 4Ib), cut into chunks 2 C cold water 2'A tsp kosher salt
F3
2 tsp each: corn flour, ground millet flour Pinch cayenne pepper Freshly ground black pepper Safflower or peanut oil, for frying
1 to 3 TBS chili oil, optional 1 piece (1-inch long) fresh ginger, peeled, finely shredded, or 2 cloves garlic, minced
Combine the soy sauce, vinegar and sugar in a bowl. Stir to dissolve the sugar. Taste and adjust the flavors for a tart-savory balance. Add chili oil as you like for heat. Right before serving, add
the ginger or garlic.
Place the potatoes in a food processor. Pulse 5 or 6 times un-
Chipotle Aioii
til coarsely ground. Combine the cold water and 2 teaspoons salt in a large bowl. Add potatoes; stir to coat. Drain well through a fine
sieve, pushing out as much water as you can. Transfer the potatoes
Makes about 2 cups. At The Knick restaurant in Milwaukee, the housemadepotato tots are paired with a chipotle aioli. The
to a microwave-safe bowl; microwave, 4 minutes. Stir; microwave, 4 minutes. Stir in the corn flour, millet flour, cayenne and remaining ~/~
owner is keeping mum on his recipe, so try this one from "The Oldways Table," by chef Paul O'Connell of Chez Henri in Cambridge, Mass.
teaspoon salt. '/4 C lemon juice 'A C each: extra-virgin olive oil, canola oil 'A bunch cilantro, finely
~ egg
Line a 9-inch square pan with parchment; pour in the potato mixture. Spread it evenly; cool to room temperature. Chill in the freezer until frozen, at least 20 minutes. Cut into1-by-1/~-inch tots. Heat at least 2 inches of oil in a deep saucepan or skillet to 370 degrees. Fry the tots in batches, being sure not to crowd the pan, until tots are golden brown, 1-2 minutes. Remove the tots with a slotted spoon; place them on a parchment-lined baking sheet. Season to taste with salt and black pepper. Repeat with the remaining tots. Serve
2 egg yolks 2 crushed cloves garlic 1 TBS mustard
chopped 2 chipotle chilies, or more to taste 1 red onion, finely chopped
Combine the egg, egg yolks, garlic, mustard and lemon juice in a food processor or blender. Process until smooth. With the machine still running, add the olive oil and canola oil in a slow stream; blend until the mixture emulsifies to the consistency of mayonnaise.
immediately.
Add the cilantro and chilies; blend until smooth. Stir in the red onion; serve. Bill Hogan /Ch>cago Tnbune
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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2012
HOME
Next week: From blueprints to dream home
i'1
Q$p
A tailored bed skirt, comforter,pillow shams, bolsters (the cylindrical pillows), padded headboard and fabric screen.
Size wise The Better Sleep Council
lists the following common Photos Courtesy Calico Corners
A duvet cover (flower print),coverlet (white crosshatch quilted under the duvet), tailored bed skirt with contrast band and padded headboard. When shopping for bed coverings, knowing your bed measurements is the key to a good fit.
Coverings Continued from F1 It's good to understand what the terms really mean before
you shop. Bedspread: A fabric topper that covers the entire bed on both sides and the foot of the bed. It covers the mattress, box spring and pillows and hangs to the floor. Bed scarf: This decorative topper lies across the foot of the bed, over the bedspread or other covering, to add a decorative touch to the decor. Bed scarves are commonly found in hotels, not only to add color and/or pattern to the decorating scheme, but also to protect the bedspread when people hoist their suitcases onto the end of the bed to unpack. Bed skirt: A tailored covering that sits between the mattress and the box spring and
hangs to the floor, or almost sides and end of the bed and to the floor. It can be flat or is commonly used with a dust pleated, and is helpful to hide ruffle. Some coverlets only things stored under the bed. cover the mattress top. When a bed skirt is ruffled Duvet:Meaning "down" in or gathered, it's often called a French, this type of bed covdust ruffle instead. Bed skirts ering can also be made with and dustruffles are often sold a synthetic filling instead of as part of a bedding set so down feathers. I n E u r ope, they coordinate with sheets a duvet is used only with a and comforters. bottom sheet as a coverfor C ommon drops f o r b e d sleeping. skirts are 14 to 15 inches long, Duvet cover:Used to protect though some are available as duvets from wear and soil, a extra-long for higher beds, or duvet cover is like a big pilthose placed on risers to allow lowcase for the duvet that goes for under-bed storage. inside it. The duvet is buttoned Comforter: A thick, warm or tied in place inside the covbed cover that usually hangs er to keep it from shifting, and over thesides and end of the the cover is then closed with bed — often to the top of a buttons, ties, snaps or hookmatching bed skirt. A comand-loop fasteners. f orter might b e f i l led w i th Quilt: A pieced or patterned polyester, wool or silk batting stitched covering with insulaor with down feathers. tion (batting) between the fabCoverlet: D e s igned p r i - ric layers. It may be any size in marily for looks and not for relation to the bed size — from warmth, a coverlet hangs a topper to a bedspread. only a few inches over the Throw: Used for additional
warmth an d d e coration, a throw is usually smaller than any other bed cover-up. It's often draped like a bed scarf or folded across the upper bed
mattress sizes: Twin:38 by 75 inches Full:53 by 75 inches
Queen:60 by 80 inches
King:76 by 80 inches California king:72 by 84
inches Common mattress depths are designated as "standard" at 7 to 9 inches, "deep" at10 to15 inches and extra-deep at15 to
22inches.
look great on a full-size mattress, but be slightly skimpylooking on a queen-size bed. Before purchasinga dual-size cover,compare to your mattress measurements tojudge how the piece will look.
tips for making your own bed coverings: • Look for extra-wide decorator fabrics to minimize piecing and yardage requirements. edge. • S elect fabrics that a r e Topper: As its name sugw ashablefor easiest care; dry cleaning bed coverings can be gests, this covering sits atop the mattress only and does not On the flip side expensive. hang over the sides; it's often Comforters and duvet cov• Try to match large prints used with another bed cover- ers often come with duo colors w hen seaming fabrics for the ing foradded warmth or dec- — one on one side and a coor- width needed. oration. Sometimes antique dinate on the other side, sepa• For lightweight coverlets, pieces are used as toppers due rated by piping at the edges. place a small drapery weight in to their comparatively small Frequently, there's a pairing of the hem sectionsso the cover size in relation to today's mat- a solid and a print. This allows will hang better on the bed. tress sizes. you to flip the piece for variety, • Set the sewing machine or show off the coordinate as a on a large table to support the Double duty turn-back on the bed. Before w eight and size needed forbed Many bedding manufac- purchasing a bed cover, be covering construction. turers make coveringsin the sure you like the fabric on both • Round the c orners for common sizes, but often group sides. easier hemming and b etter together full and queen and list hanging. the sizing as full/queen, mean- DN coverings • Avoid using slippery fabing it will work for both bed Bed coverings are easy to ricson the underside of a bed sizes.Perhaps, but remember make because they are pri- covering, as it can cause the the difference in the mattress marily rectangles with long, topper to slip off the bed. sizes — depending on the actu- straight seams. The Sewing — Reporter:gwizdesigns al dimensions, the cover may 8 Craft Allianceoffers these @ool.com
isoricon eousi e,conem ora on einsi e • Sometimesit's better if a home'sdecor doesn't matchits exterior By Vern Yip
From the classic bungalow to theclassic ranch, and from Practicing as an interior de- cramped urban rowhouses to signer for nearly 20 years, with sprawling suburban mini-man13 of those on television trans- sions, I've seen it all and discovformation shows that h ave ered firsthand that the old adbrought me into the homes of age of not judging a book by its folks all across America, I've cover applies to our homes, too. been in (and worked on) pretNot that long ago, residenty much every style of home tial interior design wasn't that imaginable. m uch fun, especially if y o u Special to The Washington Post
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were working on a h i storic h ome. There seemed to b e hard-and-fast rules for what your home should look like and what every room in the house had to be used for, even if you had a different point of view or didn't use a formal dining room more than twice a year. The goal, apparently, was to do what was expected, and that often meant being guided by what the exterior of your home looked like. A Victorian-style home should probably have Victorian-style fur n i shings, and a perfectl y preserved midcentury masterpiece should logically be filled with pristine mid-century things. Unfortunately, this resulted in homes that felt like time capsules and operated like museums. They said practically nothing about the people inside. Living rooms and dining rooms wereusually sealed off unless someone special was visiting. On the surface, nothing seemed noticeably wrong about this approach, but it certainly didn't feel quite right to many who had to live in these static environments. I've always maintained that your home should be a physical manifestation of you, regardless of current trends or the exterior style of your home. I'm also a big fan of the idea that a home should be functional and practical as well as aesthetical-
ly pleasing — and designing a historically accurate home simply isn't functional in today's terms. No one I know is one-dimensional to the point where a single style could completely define him or her, so I also endorse the idea that a home ultimately is the harmonious coming together of function and aesthetics, and that those functions and aesthetics uniquely cater to and reflect the individu-
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Vern Yip lives in a historic home, but it doesn't look like Atlanta in 1925. His living room has a combination of contemporary light fixtures, clean-lined sofas and souvenirs from 43 countries. Vern Yip The Washington Post
als living inside. For example, we are way past the days when people felt obligated to purchase furniture in sets. We're now free to purchase a dining room table without t h e a c companying chairs and china cabinet. And unless you are preserving your home to put on a history tour, the inside of your home can dramatically depart from the outside. I have always loved living in older, historic homes. I grew up in older, historic houses and have always felt that they have a charm that is impossible to recreate in new construction. My current home in Atlanta was built in 1925 and is a hybrid neoclassical/neo-Georgian, featuring architecture inspired by a home in Birmingham, Ala., that the original owner fell in love with. It still has many of its original energy-inefficient windows with wavy panes of glass, and foot-thick plaster walls that make it painful and time-consuming to install cable for the Internet. When someone comes to our house, my hope is for the house and its contents to be another way to get to know us. This
house is the furthest thing from a museum, because it'sthe home of a family that includes two children under 3 (who like to eat ice cream on the sofa) and four dogs that range in size from 65 pounds to 125 pounds (who like to watch TV on the sofa). Keeping m y h i s toric home historic on the inside isn't really an option. Even without the kids and dogs, my home wouldn't look like Atlanta in 1925. My home looks like me and my family. There are sofas with clean lines, contemporary light f i x tures, Asian antiques and souvenirs from the 43 countries we've visitedover the pastdecade.When people come over, they usually comment that the house feels w arm, f a mily-friendly a n d completely like us, which is the best compliment of all. Here are some general rules for decorating interiors — historic or otherwise: • Make your home a physical manifestation of you and your family so that an invitation to your home is an invitation to get to know you. This place should be the most comfortable and desirable place for you and your family to be, and design-
ing it to reflect you will ensure this. • Make sure that you don't overlook function. The perfect confluence of f u nction and aesthetics for your specific situation is a worthwhile goal that will ensure that you'll love and use your home to its fullest. • Look for a common thread to tie together all the disparate items in a room. For example, if you have upholstered furniture from all different periods and of all different styles, look for a common fabric color to incorporate in each piece that will link them all together visually. • Select families of wood tones without getting obsessed with making sure al l y o ur wood is the same color. You are looking for common tones in all the different woods that fall within a general family. Dark, medium and light versions of a wood color or tone can live together harmoniously to create a rich, vibrant and layered look. • Most of all, don't worry about ensuring that the style inside your home coordinates with its outside architectural style. The goal should be to create the ultimate home, not the ultimate museum.
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
Next week: Root cellar storage
ARDEN Course Continued from F1 In a sense, you could say that Big Stone itself — the golf course, th e s c ulpture park, the overhauled farmhouse with a goat pen out the back door — is a mulligan on a life-scale. This homestead of o ddities and wonderments is what Stillman, 54, invented after winding down his first career as a commercially successful sculptor. He lined up his first putt and tapped his neon-green ball into the thicket.
Getting on course
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ramp at the elbow. Stillman lined up his putt and took a hard stroke. The ball will sometimes carom into the air. Which is fine, because the s tained-glass windows a r e actually made of shatterproof resin. This is the raw material for eyeglass lenses. A n acquaintance had " a whole batch c o ntaminated with microdust," he said. "I ended up taking that off of him." A thousand pounds of the stuff. And while he was at it, he bought the extruder machine, a kind of "giant hot-
glue gun."
BEGINNING AND END
LEFT:A sign by Bruce Stillman welcomes people to his mini-golf course and sculpture garden in Minnetrista, Minn. RIGHT:Hole T he second hole, a s t i f f No. 13, "Gently Down the Stream," sends your put floating along a river atop a granite tabletop. par 3, breaks a wobbly 6 feet from left to r i ght. Stillman calls it "Banking on Mound." If there's any place in America left to pun, it's a mini-golf course: Mound is the name of the nearby lakeside suburb, on the western edge of the Minneapolis metro area, where Stillman banked his fate. It's a landscape of country clubs, hobby farms and marinas, with "some of the most expensive real estate in Minnesota," said Heidi Hoy, a sculptor who has lived intermittently at Big Stone as Stillman's companion. When he first bought an old dairy farm here in 1991, he wanted to try his hand at landscape and environmental art: something in the spirit of the British site-sculptor Andy Goldsworthy. Another influence was a piece of popular A merican cinema called "Overboard," in w h ic h r e l uctant l o vers played by Goldie Hawn and Kurt Russell create a PuttPutt Seven Wonders of the World.
Hoy would end up being
Stillman birdied the seventh hole, but gave back two strokes on the eighth.
'Gently Down the Stream' You could try to save three putts by ricocheting the ball off a rock on the 10th hole. This sunflower maze, called "The Spiral," is Stillman's favorite hole and possibly his master stroke. Here, in a cow field, he has created a putt-putt homage to "Spiral Jetty," the 1970 earthart m o nument b y R o b ert Smithson. Even with a three-worker crew, Stillman sun k e i g ht weeks into crafting the sunflower spiral. He had originally intended to add a new hole to the course each year, but for now he has stalled at No. 13. This hole has a feel of finality to it, anyhow. Stillman tapped his ball up a ramp and it rolled back down. Mini-golf may be the closest most of us get to really understandi ng Sisyphus. A t l a st , h e plunked the fifth putt down a chute and onto a huge table of granite. Over the course of two months, Stillman had painstakingly drilled out a sluiceway. The hole is called "Gently Down the Stream." The ball plopped into the vermiform channel and began to float toward a hole in the rock. On the final scorecard, it doesn't matter if you hit a birdie or a bogey: all balls go to the same place and they don't come back. Some p e opl e m e a nder through the sculpture garden at this point. Others hustle off to the parking lot and their next appointment. Stillman was already home and he had nowhere else to be. The goats were snoozing on Goat Mountain. Another band of children was just arriving at the first hole, adding their hollers to the chorus. Stillman sat on a big stone and watched the green globe bobbing on >ts way. Merrily, merrily, merrily, merrily, life is but a dream.
Hawn's c haracter i n th i s remake. A f t e r s e p arating from her husband, a major league baseball team execuPhotos by Tony Cenicola / New York Times News Service tive, she moved with her two sons into the shambling 1846 MASTERWORK farmhouse. Bruce Stillman's favorite holeis called "The Spiral," a sunflower maze crafted as an homage to "Spiral Jetty," the 1970 earth-art S tillman r o ughed i t f o r monument by Robert Smithson. Stillman took eight weeks crafting the hole with the help of a three-worker crew. these two years in the unheated milking barn. "I could reprogram my life's ambition in this barn," he said. "For many years I was in the studio, grinding O riginally, S t i l lman i n metal and polishing it with a few helpers. You'd tended to install a mini-golf course in a public park. But feel isolated. Now, you hear people laughing local politicians did not seem and screaming, having fun with your artwork." to get his vision, something that baffles him to this day. — Bruce Stillman That's when he got to thinking, he said, that "this big farm field was like a blank canvas for a painter." delicately and beautifully he work, notto buy a BMW," he He started laying out the can operatethe boom truck, said. "If you're going to look first seven holes at h o me, balancing all these objects," at something every day, why even before he had cleared Hoy said. not make something that you the zoning. would love to see?" Raw materials It's easy enough to see the Ten truckloads of cobbleappeal of th e c ourse now. The truck can make easy stone remain in the horse and Each year, 15,000 to 20,000 AHOY work of a n 8 - ton block of miniature mule pasture. The v isitors pay $7 (or $6 , f o r A Chris-Craft boat with built-in stained glass windows covers granite. Which is fortunate, stones, like all things, will reyoung golfers) to play a round the seventh hole of Stillman's course. because Stillman ha s p er- veal their purpose in time. at Big Stone. But would a haps 1,000 tons of rock litT ake, fo r i n s t ance, t h e small-town city council memtered around the p r operty. Chris-Craft boat, turtled over ber understand the appeal of The majority of the big stones the seventh hole. Stillman erecting a backyard Stone- Palm Desert, Calif.; Aspen nice piece, sell it to someone came from the 1961 demolidiscovered it shipwrecked on henge and fire pit for marsh- and Vail, Colo. Call it the Koand then it would disappear." tion of the old Metropolitan a neighbor's junk-lawn and mallow roasts? kopelli belt. At the time, he added, "it nev- Building, the lost jewel of the hauled it away for $500. For "One of my mottoes is, it's "I was making a sculpture er bothered me." Minneapolis skyline. y ears, it languished in d r y easier to get forgiveness than a week and selling a sculpT he e x perience a t Bi g He paid good money for 15 dock, leaking gas in the parkit is to get permission," Still- ture a week," Stillman said. Stone is the opposite. The carved ornamental pieces. ing lot. "I asked him, 'Bruce, what man said. He had been developing his work stays in one place, and "It's very expensive being a Back on the second hole, style since he was 16. Doug- the viewers come and go. rock lover," Stillman said. Afare you going to do with that "For many years I was in he kicked a few t w ig s of f las Flanders, the Minneapolis ter a spring flood, he got an- boat?"' Hoy said. his putting line. Big Stone's gallerist,first came across the studio, grinding m etal other 200 massive blocks on And then one day the angreenskeeper, Al Soderstrom, a teenage Stillman when he and polishing it with a few clearance. swer occurred to him: flip it recently flew over his handle- was hawking his w ares at h elpers," S t i l l ma n sai d . S tillman, as a m a tter of upside down, gut the engines "You'd feel isolated. Now, you habit, does not pay retail. If bars on the rails-to-trails bike outdoor craft shows. and cut portholes in the hull. "He would have different p ath that runs next t o t h e hear people laughing and he can help it, he does not pay The green follows a horse17-acre property. Someone pieces in d i f f erent b oxes," screaming, having fun with at all. s hoe shape, with a m e t a l would have to p ower-wash Flanders said. "You would your artwork." When a local bridge-repair the artificial turf in his stead, pick and choose," and StillS ome people w o ul d b e crew needed access to the Stillman said. man would assemble them driven mad by the happy cat- parking lot at his old downinto a f u n c tioning k i n etic erwaul — it's almost a perma- town art studio, he struck a A new direction work. "Essentially, you could nent sound installation. Still- swap for 40 truckloads of salHWY 20E & Dean SwiftRd. Big Stone is not a theoreti- buy a pretty nice sculpture man shrugged and said, "It vaged cobblestone. Delivery (1 block West of Costco) cal golf course in the style of, for $60." works for me." included, of course. 541-323-3011 • starks.com PROMPT DELIVERY say, Donald Judd: a square Stillman found one of his After the fifth hole, StillSome of this material now Sewing Machine Repair & Service 541-389-9663 ball sealed in a w ood box. f irst patrons at t h e M a y o man was shooting 6-under- makes up G oat M o untain, Stillman's work has always Clinic i n R o chester, Minn. par, a score that was all the where Stillman keeps three been accessible. A prime ex- His name was Dr. Hugh Butt more impressivebecause he Alpine dairy goats, a Nubian hadn't found the time to play and two fainting goats. (Big ample stood on the third hole. and (Bart Simpson could not "All the o l d mi n i - golf make this up) he was a world- a full round in two years. Stone must have th e o n ly courses had a windmill," he renowned gastroenterologist. As Ho y o b served: "His golf clubhouse that sells goat said. "This one has a kinetic Butt bought up a d ozen of artwork is fraught with hufood.) And cobblestones clad sculpture." Stillman's sculptures and in- mor and levity and playful- Stillman's new garage, which o appear in the Classifieds through December~~ The 15-foot-tall piece com- troduced them to prominent ness. But in order to get that looks like a treasure vault for Only $35.00 per week*! prised a half-dozen swinging patients. w ork a c c omplished, h e ' s gnomes. *Your ad will publish 7 consecutive days rings, perfectly counterbalOne piece became a gift to ferocious." Characteristically, he has anced by polished steel blobs, Empress Farah Pahlavi, wife Recently, Stillman has been spent more o n d e corating and is limited to one inch and it rested on a raw stone of the last shah of Iran. Stillplanning a sizable expansion the garage than on the car (I0 lines of text or (ewer lineswith text andgraphics) base. man once spotted another of of th e s c ulpture g r ounds. inside (a Toyota Matrix). "I Co(or may be addedfor $I.OOlday extra! D uring t h e t e c h b o o m his large works in the back- Fulfilling big dreams takes made money to do more arto f th e l a t e '90s, Stillman ground of a p h ot o s pread a big budget. He estimated Call today to list your event in Classifieds! charged $35,000 for pieces with the film director Robert that he has poured more than ~44; Mon day ugh thro Friday,7:30a.m.to 5:00 p.m. like this one. He ran a studio Altman. $300,000 into the course. Weekly 54 I-385-5809 or 54 I-382- I8I I with three full-time employThe artist c o ul d h a r dly And big tools, too: Stillman Arts & Entertainment ees and sold his work out of keep track of his work. creates a lot of his art these "He sold a ton," Flanders days with a $ 49,000 utility I nside MAG A Z B K galleries across the vacationlands of the scenic West: Se- sa>d. boom truck. TheBdletin "You can't i m agine how dona and Scottsdale, Ariz.; Stillman said, "I'd build a
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F6 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2012
Meatballs just likethe ones momusedto make By julie Rothmaa The Baltimore Sun
Bev Hannon, of Marion, Iowa, was looking for a recipe for making meatballs similar to the ones her husband's mother, who was of Belgian descent, used to make. Her husband recalls that his mother made them with a combination of g r ound b eef a nd por k a n d fr e -
or beef, chopped onion, eggs, milk, breadcrumbs, season-
.
The resulting covers not only protect the trees, plants and shrubs on the farm, but they add interest and dimension to the grounds in winter. And the money saved by properly maintaining t hese c herished gardens i s w e l l worth the effort of erecting the protective structures each year.
. MARTHA STEWART
good, if slightly bland, meatball that I served with mashed potatoes and green beans. Evever, next time I likely would make a simple brown gravy to accompany the meatballs or do as Michel does and serve it patty style on abun.
Requests Carolyn Frey, of E ssex, Md., has lost her recipe for making ricotta cheesecake. She is hoping someone has a good one that they can share withher. M att M i l ler, o f Co c k eysville, Md., is looking for a recipe for a lamb stew with white gravy. — Loohing for a hard-to-find recipe or can answer a request? Write to Julie Rothman, Recipe Finder, The Baltimore Sun, 501 N. Calvert St., Baltimore, MD 21278, oremail baltsunrecipefinder@ gmail.com. Names must accompanyreci pes forthem to be published.
Frikadelle (Belgian-style Meatballs) Makes about12 golf ball-sized meatballs or 6 patties. 1 Ib ground beef (or a combination of beef, pork and veal) 1 med onion, finely minced 2 garlic cloves, finely minced ~h C breadcrumbs 1 TBS dried parsley '6 tsp dried marjoram
or w i n e r ?
on' or e our ar en
ing and flour. I decided to test Michel's recipe using a combination of 'r2 ground pork and '/2 half lean ground beef shaped into golf-ball sized meatballs and fried in a vegetable oil and butter mixture. Her recipe made a
quently served them R EC IPE eryone thought it made with cooked cabbage. FIN PER a hearty supper; howHe was not sure, but he thought they might have been called something like "frikadel." Leone Michel, of Granger, Ind., thought that her recipe for making German meat patties or Frikadelle is likely what Hannon is in search of. She said her husband is German and that she has adaptedthis recipe from several that she has in German and Austrian cookbooks. She said that meatballs can be served as part of a main meal with a sauce and side of potatoes or cooked cabbage or as her family prefers, as a patty on a bun, almost like an American-style hamburger. Many variations of Frikadelle exist, but traditionally they are made with a combination of minced pork, veal
e in re a
1 tsp paprika 1 tsp salt Ye tsp pepper 2 eggs, lightly beaten '/4 C water ~h C flour Vegetable oil
Put meat in abowl; addonion, garlic, breadcrumbs, spices, eggs and water. Mix well. Gently form meat mixture into small (golf-ball sized) balls, slightly flattened, or into individual patties. Roll in flour. Heat vegetable oil in a large skillet and cook the balls or patties in the
hot oil, turning sothat they brown evenly onall sides, about10 minutes.
hen I first moved to C antitoe Far m i n Bedford, N.Y., about eight years ago, I decided to plant many trees, shrubs and perennial plants to create a beautiful, lasting landscape. Such planting, whether in a small yard or in a larger environment,represents a serious investment for the homeowner, and several things can be done to offer winter protection — from snow, ice, freez-
Wrapping tips We've developed quite a system to efficiently construct the enclosures and barriers around the farm. Here are some tips that can be applied to even the smallest backyard garden. • Gather the right tools. We use bamboo poles and wooden stakes, burlap, jute twine,a carpet needle, rubber mallets (for sinking stakes), wood screws and an electric drill. • Do one taskata time. T he work w i l l g o m o r e quickly if you install the entire system of bamboo or wooden stakes first. Then go back to attach the burlap as a second step.
ing, thawing, desiccating high winds and harsh sunlight. Hopefully, these steps will establish longevity and good health for the plants. I cannot recall where I first got the idea of tailoring coverings for certain types of plants (and even for garden planters), but we have been wrapping and sewing and p rotecting woody things like boxwood, tree peonies, clematis, azaleas and many types of immature plants for a long time now. We use several techniques, but with a short, specific list of materials, the tasks can be done quickly and efficiently. We have lots to wrap at the farm, and we are always looking for ways to make the job easier and cheaper. I have a great group of talented groundskeepers, and each has developed his or her own techniques and methods and improved upon our system, adding flair and even beauty to the winter landscape. To get started, we spray an antidesiccant oil on the plants in clement weather, which helps keep the leaves from drying in the wind and cold. Then we wrap various objects around th e p r operty, including the long allees and
• Reuse and recycle. Frederic Legrenge / New York Times News Service
Once the burlap is stretched and sewn tightly over these boxwoods surrounding this peony garden, the bottom edge is secured like a camping tent.
The money saved by properly maintaining these cherished gardens is well worth the effort of erecting the protective structures each year. planterbeds, before the harshest weather arrives. We us e 8 - foot b a mboo stakes to make the boxwood tepees, and hardwood stakes for the larger plants and trees. Farm mechanic and selftaught lumber miller Dominic Arena decided last year to make stakes from some of the
We save our burlap, plastic and supports to use from year to year, replacing any wornout supplies. • Watch the weather. Be sure to unwrap everything before the temperature climbs too high in spring, or the plants may be harmed by the excess heat that builds up inside the tents. • Be selective. Smaller terra-cotta or ceramic pots can easily be protected indoors. Reserve the
boards he was cutting from fallen trees on the property; these hardwood stakes have wrapping job for large or worked very well as framing heavy items that would be difmaterial for the burlap we use ficult to move or store. to protect the apple trees, tree — Questions of general interest peonies and wisteria. can be emailed to msllet ters@ We use 6-foot-wide burmarthastewart.com. For more l ap fo r t h e c o v ering a n d information on this column, visit jute twine f o r t h e s e ams. www.marthastewart.com.
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WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD... To avoid fraud,
The Bulletin recommends payLionel/American Flyer ment for Firewood trains, accessories. only upon delivery 541-408-2191. and inspection. BUYING & SE L LING • A cord is 128 cu. ft. All gold jewelry, silver 4' x 4' x 8' and gold coins, bars, • Receipts should rounds, wedding sets, name, class rings, sterling sil- include phone, price and ver, coin collect, vin- kind of wood purtage watches, dental chased. gold. Bill Fl e ming, • Firewood ads 541-382-9419. MUST include species and cost per COWGIRL CASH We buy Jewelry, Boots, cord to better serve our customers. Vintage Dresses 8 More. 924 Brooks St. BUYING
00 Farm Equipment & Machinery W anted Use d F a r m Equipment & Machinery. Looking to buy, or
consign of good used quality equipment. Deschutes Valley Equipment 541-548-8385
ii f S5 0 0 Mattress/boxsprings, or less, or multiple Hay, Grain & Feed queen, pillowtop, bam541-678-5162 items whose total German S h orthairs boo fabric, used 9 mos, www.getcowgirlcash.com does not exceed 3A Livestock Supplies AKC - females & $899 new; asking $450. $500. Pfaff Model Quilt Expres- 6 C ords of seasoned •Panels Gates Feeders males $300/ea. Mom SE Bend. 541-508-8784 sions 4.0, like n ew, lodgepole f i rewood, Now galvanized! on-site, 1s t s h o ts,Refrigerator/freezer, Call Classifieds at sewing, quilting, $1200 Cut 16" rounds and •6-Rail 12' panels, $101 d ewormed. Cra t e Whirlpool ivory color, 541-385-5809 firm. 541-777-0101 •6-Rail 16' panels, $117 trained. 541-408-2114 split, $1000. You haul. Custom sizes available reg. size, exc. cond. www.bendbulletin.com Wanted- paying cash 541-420-7168 Great Dane puppies, $250 OBO. 541-475-1255 for Hi-fi audio & stublack 8 white, 2 males, 2 541-549-6528 A-1 Dry seasoned JuniFor Sale: FAL .308 with females, $300; $50 nondio equip. Mclntosh, horse hay, barn per, $200/cord split; Good scope and 20 round J BL, Marantz, D y refundable deposit. Born The Bulletin stored, no rain, $225 $175/cord rounds. mag. $700. Call Kyle 9/25/1 2. 541-480-7171 naco, Heathkit, Santon, and $8.25 bale. recommends extra Call 541-977-4500 or sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Delivery ava i lable ~ • p -I at (541) 678-3233 530-524-3299 z; Call 541-261-1808 541-410-4495. chasing products or, GUN SHOW All Year Dependable services from out of I Nov. 10 & 11th, 2012 WHEN YOU SEE THIS Firewood: Sp lit, Del.Wanted: Irrigated farm ly i the area. Sending I Deschutes Fairgrounds under pivot ir205 Bend. Lod g epole, ground, c ash, c hecks, o r ' OO rigation, i n C e n tral Buy! Sell! Trade! ~ Pine: 1 for $180 or 2 i credit i n f o rmation SAT. 9-5 • SUN. 10-3 Items for Free HAVANESE PUPPIES may be subjected to for $350. Cash, check OR. 541-419-2713 0 $8 Admission, AKC, Dewclaws, UTD On a classified ad o r credit card O K . Wheat Straw: Certified 8 i FRAUD. For more Stuffed chair and ottoshots/wormer, nonshed, information about an ~ 12 & underfree. 541-420-3484. go to Beddinq Straw & Garden man, free! You pick h ypoallergenic, $ 8 5 0 advertiser, you may I OREGON TRAIL GUN www.bendbulletin.com Straw;Compost.546-6171 up. 541-382-8954. 541-460-1277. Log truck loads of green SHOWS 541-347-2120 to view additional call t h e Or e gonI lodgepole delivered to Just bought a new boat? BtoOBMorePix at Bendbolletin.c i i State A photos of the item. ttor n ey ' Bend, $1000. M ixed ossberg 12ga. 2 8 " Looking for your Sell your old one in the pet adoption event, i General's O f f i c e Mbarrel, loads lodgepole, $1100. blued, $ 9 5. classifieds! Ask about our Boxer Pups, AKC / CKC, Huge next employee? PetSmart, Nov. 2, 11amConsumer P r otec• 541-81 5-41 77 Super Seller rates! Place a Bulletin 1st shots, very social 5pm. Shelters & rescue t ion Tools ho t l in e at I 541-647-8931 541-385-5809 help wanted ad $700. 541-325-3376 groups will have dogs, i 1-877-877-9392. Split, Dry Mossberg Maverick 88 I Want to Buy or Rent Woodworking T o o l s: Cedar or Lodgepole today and cats, puppies & kittens 208 camo pump shotgun, older Craftsman scroll reach over USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! ready for new homes! $200/Cord, $200. 541-647-8931 Wanted: $Cash paid for Pets & Supplies Low fees & PetSmart saw, Craftsman radial Delivery included! 60,000 readers vintage costume jewsaw, Delta Rock- 541-923-6987, Iv msg. Door-to-door selling with bonus to adopters. each week. Ruger77 300 Winches- arm elry. Top dollar paid for well spindle lathe, with www.craftcats.org 212 ter mag. 3x9 scope, access.; 2 Po w e r-Well seasoned Lodge- Your classified ad Gold/Silver.l buy by the The Bulletin recom- fast results! It's the easiest or call store for details. will also way in the world to sell. Antiques & $525. 541-548-4774. Estate, Honest Artist mends extra caution Matic shapers, $150 pole Pine, $180/cord Kittens/cats avail. thru appear on purc h asElizabeth,541-633-7006 when Collectibles each. Misc. clamps, split, 2 cord min. rescue group. Tame, Wanted: Collector The Bulletin Classified bendbulletin.com ing products or serFast, friend/y service! and hand drill with seeks high quality shots, altered, ID chip, WANTED: RAZORS, vices from out of the which currently 541-385-5809 541-410-6792 / 382-6099 bits. 541-383-5840. fishing items. more. Sat/Sun 1-5, Double or singlearea. Sending cash, receives over Call 541-678-5753, or call re: other days. edged, straight checks, or credit inCANARIES 1.5 million page A Cortctgtt „Cort pt 503-351-2746 65480 78th, B e n d. razors, shaving f ormation may b e 2012 Waterslagers, views every • Building Materials Gardening Supplies brushes, mugs & 5 41-389-8420; 5 9 8 subjected to fraud. Staffords, Red FacVisit our HUGE month at no 251 8 Equipment • scuttles, strops, 5488; photos, etc. at For more i nformators, 2 males, 12 fehome decor Bend Habitat extra cost. shaving accessories tion about an adverHot Tubs 8 Spas males, $45 ea. Terreconsignment store. RESTORE Bulletin & memorabilia. tiser, you may call bonne, 541-420-2149 New items Building Supply Resale For newspaper Classifieds Fair prices paid. the O r egon State H ot tu b $ 3 00 , 4 - 6 www.craftcats.org arrive daily! Quality at LOW delivery, call the Get Results! Call 541-390-7029 Attorney General's Dachshund male,9 wks people, Camp Sher930 SE Textron, PRICES Circulation Dept. at between 10 am-3 pm. Call 541-385-5809 Office C o n sumer old, 1st shots, ador- Labradoodle pups ready Bend 541-318-1501 man 541-595-0246 740 NE 1st 541-385-5800 or place your ad able. $300 to g ood for forever homes. 2nd www.redeuxbend.com Protection hotline at 541-312-6709 To place an ad, call 203 on-line at home. 541-447-0113. generation.541-647-9831 Sauna, 2-person, cedar, 1-877-877-9392. Open to the public. 541-385-5809 www.happytailsmini all bells & whistles. $999. bendbulletin.com Holiday Bazaar or email The Bulletin reserves 206-369-2016 (Bend) aussiesanddoodles.com DO YOU HAVE classified 0 bendbulletin.com & Craft Shows Serving CentralOregon c nre f9D3 the right to publish all Pergo Australian Labradoodles - Mini & SOMETHING TO ads from The Bulletin Eucalyptus flooring. 255 SELL med size, several colors newspaper onto The Community Clothing, NIB 897 s/f. Retail: Horses & Equipment I 541-504-2662 FOR $500 OR Computers Food and Dry Goods Bulletin Internet web$2,080. Asking www.alpen-ridge.com LESS? Drive @ High Desert site. $1000. Call Tony, SE Bend Boarding SUPER TOP SOIL Non-commercial T HE B U LLETIN r e Assisted Living, 2660 Adult companion cats Maltese pups, only 1 (208) 880-5254. www.hershe sonandbark.com $200/mo. Top Quality quires computer adNE Mary Rose Place, FREE to seniors, disadvertisers may male left! 9 weeks, parScreened, soil & com- grass hay, pen/shelter. 5er mg Cent al OreganSnCe l903 place an ad with vertisers with multiple Bend, Oct. 15-31. abled & vet e rans! ents on site $350. Adorm i x ed , no Over 1000 acres to ride. our ad schedules or those Sisters Habitat ReStore post Drop off your donaTame, altered, shots, able loving, frisky & High hu541-419-3405 243 "QUICK CASH selling multiple sys- Building Supply Resale rocks/clods. fluffy! Call 541-678-0120 tions between 8 a.m. ID chip, more. Will almus level, exc. f or Ski Equipment tems/ software, to disSPECIAL" ways take back if cirQuality items. and 7 p.m. daily. flower beds, lawns, Malti-poo male pup, close the name of the LOW PRICES! (Clothing may be new cumstances change. straight gardens, $495 obo. Shots, Farmers Column eeks 20i D ynaStar Intuitive 7 4 business or the term 389-8420. Visit Sat/ 0 2~ 150 N. Fir. or gently used and will s creened to p s o i l . doggy-door trained, 188cm, Look bindings, "dealer" in their ads. Sun 1-5. Photos, info: Ad must include 541-549-1621 be dispersed to BethBark. Clean fill. Desmart, shed-free, v ery good + , $ 9 5 . Atwood utility tilt trailer, Private party advertiswww.craftcats.org. price of single item Open to the public. lehem Inn residents) liver/you haul. g reat cond., $ 4 00 ready to go! White 541-389-9836. of $500 or less, or ers are defined as 541-312-2003 541-548-3949. w/beige ears. Will be AKC SIBERIAN HUSKY firm. 541-389-9844 multiple items those who sell one 5-7 lbs. 541-323-1069 246 $700 8 up. M/F. whose total does computer. 37th Annual Snowflake pups. Heating & Stoves www.oregonpups.com Mobile Home Space Guns, Hunting not exceed $500. Boutique is Fri. Nov. 2, stones-siberians@live Lost & Found • .com 541-306-0180 for rent, $350. 257 1-8 p.m., Sat. Nov. 3, Maremma Guard Dog & Fishing NOTICE TO Call Classifieds at 541-548-8052 9 a.m. 4 p.m., Despups, purebred, great ADVERTISER Musical Instruments Attn: archery hunters 541-385-5809 chutes County Fairdogs, $35 0 e a c h,12g Mossberg Maverick Since September 29, Barn/shop cats www.bendbulletin.com camped at L ookout 541-546-6171. Wanted: Irrigated farm 88 18" bbl, home progrounds R e d mond, FREE, some tame, 1991, advertising for just outside Prai- ground, under pivot irAdm. $3. Proceeds go t ection, $200. 5 4 1used woodstoves has Mtn. some not. We dePit Bull puppies, born r ie City.. t hey l e ft rigation, i n C e n tral to Family Access Netbeen limited to modliver! Fixed, shots. English Bulldog Puppy, Aug. 28th. 2 Females 647-8931 something at camp, I OR. 541-419-2713 work. www.snowflakeels which have been 541-389-8420 only one left! AKC reg- left. $200/ea. Tiffany 1911 Gold USMC Comit and would like boutique.org c ertified by th e O r - found istered. All shots up to 541-728-1416 Call or memorative, $1350. to return it. Call Dave date & m i crochipped, text and I can email or egon Department of Walther P22, $325. 541-643-5990 BEND'S HOMELESS NEED OUR HELP! Meat & Animal Processingj Environmental Qual$1500. 541-416-0375 text you with Pictures. Ruger Mini 14 tact. rifle, Piano, Steinway Model The cold weather is upon us and sadly there are ity (DEQ) and the fed- Found men's Rx glasses, 0 Baby Grand 191 I, $725. Rem 700 30-06, still over 2,000 folks in our community without POODLEpups, AKC toy rifle $425 541-647-8931 gorgeous, artist qual- eral En v ironmentalFoster Grant frame, Dil- BEEF: No h o rmones/ permanent shelter, living in cars, makeshift POM-A-POO pups, toy. ity instrument w/great Protection A g e ncylon Falls trail, 10/21. Call chemicals, $3/Ib hangcamps, getting by as best they can. So cute! 541-475-3889 2010 HBR Handi-Rifle, action & S t einway's ing, to be butchered Dec. (EPA) as having met to I.D., 541-382-3254 3-7. Half/whole, reserve The following items are badly needed to .243 Win., syn stock, warm, rich sound. Will smoke emission stanQueensland Heelers help them get through the winter: mount & rings in box, adorn any living room, dards. A cer t ified REMEMBER: If you now! 541-388-6905 standard 8 mini,$150 8 $250. 541-749-0636 church or music stu- w oodstove may b e have lost an animal, @ CAMPING GEARof any sort: @ English Bulldogs DOB up. 541-280-1537 http:// identified by its certife don't forget to check Need to get an dio perfectly. New reNew or used tents, sleeping bags, tarps, blankets. 8/6/12. Healthy show rigritwayrancn.wordprese.com bakpaknbow0gmail.com tail $ 6 9 ,000. Sacrication label, which is The Humane Society S WARM CLOTHING: Rain Gear, Boots, Gloves. p arents AK C ad in ASAP? re g . Siberian Husky, AKC! Buy/Sell/Trade an firefice at $26,000 OBO, permanently attached in Bend 541-382-3537 males/females $1600 Beaut, sweet female, 1yr, arms. Bend local pays You can place it PLEASE DROP OFF YOUR DONATIONS AT call 541-383-3150. to the stove. The BulRedmond, cash! 541-526-0617 obo. 541-410-0344 $500. 541-977-7019 THE BEND COMMUNITY CENTER letin will no t k n ow541-923-0882 online at: 1036 NE 5thSt.,Bend, Mon.-Sat.9 a.m.-5 p.m. • EoIMore Pix at Bendbolletin.ci Yorkie AKC 2 male pups, Prineville, CASH!! T echnics piano k e y - ingly accept advertiswww.bendbulletin.com FREE 5 kittens+ 6 mo. small, big eyes, shots, 541-447-71 78; For Special pick up please call For Guns, Ammo & board perfect cond. Was ing for the sale of Ken @ 541-389-3296 female cat, to good health gua r antee, Reloading Supplies. $1500 new; sell $425 uncertified OR Craft Cats, 541-385-5809 PLEASE HELP, YOU CAN MAKEA DIFFERENCE. homes. 971-218-4738 541-408-6900. obo. 541-388-2706 woodstoves. 541-389-8420. $850+, 541-316-0005.
The Bulletin
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The Bulletin
The Bulletin
THE BULLETIN•TUESDAY OCTOBER 30 2012
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The Bulletin
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Find Classifieds at
www.bendbulletin.com ••I
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cantact us:
haurs:
Place an ad: 541-385-5809
FAX an ad: 541-322-7253
: Business Hours:
Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the business hoursof 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Includeyour name, phone number and address
: Monday - Friday : 7:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Subscriber Services: 541-385-5800 : Classified Telephone Hours:
Subscribe or manage your subscription
24 Hour Message Line: 541-383-2371
: Monday - Friday 7:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
On the web at: www.bendbulletin.com
Place, cancel, or extend an ad
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B u i i e t i n : •
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C h a n d le r
264-Snow RemovalEquipment 265 - Building Materials 266- Heating and Stoves 267- Fuel and Wood 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers 269- GardeningSupplies & Equipment 270 - Lost and Found GARAGE SALES 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 and Equipment 345-Livestockand Equipment 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers 358- Farmer's Column 375- Meat and Animal Processing 383 - Produce andFood
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• B en
d
O r e g o n
208
208
246
260
267
Pets & Supplies
Pets & Supplies
Guns, Hunting & Fishing
Misc. Items
Fuel & Wood
Yorkie purebred female uppy, ready to go! 500. 541-460-3884
ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202- Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free ltems 208- Pets and Supplies 210- Furniture & Appliances 211 - Children's Items 212 -Antiques & Collectibles 215- Coins & Stamps 240- Crafts and Hobbies 241 - Bicycles and Accessories 242 - ExerciseEquipment 243 - Ski Equipment 244 - Snowboards 245 - Golf Equipment 246-Guns,Hunting and Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- Health andBeautyItems 249- Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253- TV, StereoandVideo 255 - Computers 256- Photography 257- Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259- Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - MedicalEquipment 262 -Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools
A v e .
DON'TMISSTHIS
541-389-6655
210
Frenchton pups. Ready for homes on 10/28. Registered parents on site. Puppy package included.$900 to $950.
Furniture & Appliances A1 Washers&Dryers
$150 ea. Full warranty. Free Del. Also wanted, used W/D's 541-280-7355
541-548-0747
~oMore Pix at Bendbolletin.ci
Buying Diamonds /Gold for Cash Saxon's Fine Jewelers
German Shorthair AKC GENERATE SOME exPups, FC Tonelli's Riscitement i n your ing Sun grand-sired, neighborhood! Plan a $550 ea. 541-598-6988 garage sale and don't forget to advertise in classified! 541-385-5809.
DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL FOR $500 OR LESS? Non-commercial
advertisers may place an ad with our "QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week3lines 12 or ~2
k
20i
Ad must include price of
9 7 7 0 2 Klku8@R
WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD... To avoid fraud,
The Bulletin recommends payLionel/American Flyer ment for Firewood trains, accessories. only upon delivery 541-408-2191. and inspection. BUYING & SE L LING • A cord is 128 cu. ft. All gold jewelry, silver 4' x 4' x 8' and gold coins, bars, • Receipts should rounds, wedding sets, name, class rings, sterling sil- include phone, price and ver, coin collect, vin- kind of wood purtage watches, dental chased. gold. Bill Fl e ming, • Firewood ads 541-382-9419. MUST include species and cost per COWGIRL CASH We buy Jewelry, Boots, cord to better serve our customers. Vintage Dresses 8 More. 924 Brooks St. BUYING
00 Farm Equipment & Machinery W anted Use d F a r m Equipment & Machinery. Looking to buy, or
consign of good used quality equipment. Deschutes Valley Equipment 541-548-8385
ii f S5 0 0 Mattress/boxsprings, or less, or multiple Hay, Grain & Feed queen, pillowtop, bam541-678-5162 items whose total German S h orthairs boo fabric, used 9 mos, www.getcowgirlcash.com does not exceed 3A Livestock Supplies AKC - females & $899 new; asking $450. $500. Pfaff Model Quilt Expres- 6 C ords of seasoned •Panels Gates Feeders males $300/ea. Mom SE Bend. 541-508-8784 sions 4.0, like n ew, lodgepole f i rewood, Now galvanized! on-site, 1s t s h o ts,Refrigerator/freezer, Call Classifieds at sewing, quilting, $1200 Cut 16" rounds and •6-Rail 12' panels, $101 d ewormed. Cra t e Whirlpool ivory color, 541-385-5809 firm. 541-777-0101 •6-Rail 16' panels, $117 trained. 541-408-2114 split, $1000. You haul. Custom sizes available reg. size, exc. cond. www.bendbulletin.com Wanted- paying cash 541-420-7168 Great Dane puppies, $250 OBO. 541-475-1255 for Hi-fi audio & stublack 8 white, 2 males, 2 541-549-6528 A-1 Dry seasoned JuniFor Sale: FAL .308 with females, $300; $50 nondio equip. Mclntosh, horse hay, barn per, $200/cord split; Good scope and 20 round J BL, Marantz, D y refundable deposit. Born The Bulletin stored, no rain, $225 $175/cord rounds. mag. $700. Call Kyle 9/25/1 2. 541-480-7171 naco, Heathkit, Santon, and $8.25 bale. recommends extra Call 541-977-4500 or sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Delivery ava i lable ~ • p -I at (541) 678-3233 530-524-3299 z; Call 541-261-1808 541-410-4495. chasing products or, GUN SHOW All Year Dependable services from out of I Nov. 10 & 11th, 2012 WHEN YOU SEE THIS Firewood: Sp lit, Del.Wanted: Irrigated farm ly i the area. Sending I Deschutes Fairgrounds under pivot ir205 Bend. Lod g epole, ground, c ash, c hecks, o r ' OO rigation, i n C e n tral Buy! Sell! Trade! ~ Pine: 1 for $180 or 2 i credit i n f o rmation SAT. 9-5 • SUN. 10-3 Items for Free HAVANESE PUPPIES may be subjected to for $350. Cash, check OR. 541-419-2713 0 $8 Admission, AKC, Dewclaws, UTD On a classified ad o r credit card O K . Wheat Straw: Certified 8 i FRAUD. For more Stuffed chair and ottoshots/wormer, nonshed, information about an ~ 12 & underfree. 541-420-3484. go to Beddinq Straw & Garden man, free! You pick h ypoallergenic, $ 8 5 0 advertiser, you may I OREGON TRAIL GUN www.bendbulletin.com Straw;Compost.546-6171 up. 541-382-8954. 541-460-1277. Log truck loads of green SHOWS 541-347-2120 to view additional call t h e Or e gonI lodgepole delivered to Just bought a new boat? BtoOBMorePix at Bendbolletin.c i i State A photos of the item. ttor n ey ' Bend, $1000. M ixed ossberg 12ga. 2 8 " Looking for your Sell your old one in the pet adoption event, i General's O f f i c e Mbarrel, loads lodgepole, $1100. blued, $ 9 5. classifieds! Ask about our Boxer Pups, AKC / CKC, Huge next employee? PetSmart, Nov. 2, 11amConsumer P r otec• 541-81 5-41 77 Super Seller rates! Place a Bulletin 1st shots, very social 5pm. Shelters & rescue t ion Tools ho t l in e at I 541-647-8931 541-385-5809 help wanted ad $700. 541-325-3376 groups will have dogs, i 1-877-877-9392. Split, Dry Mossberg Maverick 88 I Want to Buy or Rent Woodworking T o o l s: Cedar or Lodgepole today and cats, puppies & kittens 208 camo pump shotgun, older Craftsman scroll reach over USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! ready for new homes! $200/Cord, $200. 541-647-8931 Wanted: $Cash paid for Pets & Supplies Low fees & PetSmart saw, Craftsman radial Delivery included! 60,000 readers vintage costume jewsaw, Delta Rock- 541-923-6987, Iv msg. Door-to-door selling with bonus to adopters. each week. Ruger77 300 Winches- arm elry. Top dollar paid for well spindle lathe, with www.craftcats.org 212 ter mag. 3x9 scope, access.; 2 Po w e r-Well seasoned Lodge- Your classified ad Gold/Silver.l buy by the The Bulletin recom- fast results! It's the easiest or call store for details. will also way in the world to sell. Antiques & $525. 541-548-4774. Estate, Honest Artist mends extra caution Matic shapers, $150 pole Pine, $180/cord Kittens/cats avail. thru appear on purc h asElizabeth,541-633-7006 when Collectibles each. Misc. clamps, split, 2 cord min. rescue group. Tame, Wanted: Collector The Bulletin Classified bendbulletin.com ing products or serFast, friend/y service! and hand drill with seeks high quality shots, altered, ID chip, WANTED: RAZORS, vices from out of the which currently 541-385-5809 541-410-6792 / 382-6099 bits. 541-383-5840. fishing items. more. Sat/Sun 1-5, Double or singlearea. Sending cash, receives over Call 541-678-5753, or call re: other days. edged, straight checks, or credit inCANARIES 1.5 million page A Cortctgtt „Cort pt 503-351-2746 65480 78th, B e n d. razors, shaving f ormation may b e 2012 Waterslagers, views every • Building Materials Gardening Supplies brushes, mugs & 5 41-389-8420; 5 9 8 subjected to fraud. Staffords, Red FacVisit our HUGE month at no 251 8 Equipment • scuttles, strops, 5488; photos, etc. at For more i nformators, 2 males, 12 fehome decor Bend Habitat extra cost. shaving accessories tion about an adverHot Tubs 8 Spas males, $45 ea. Terreconsignment store. RESTORE Bulletin & memorabilia. tiser, you may call bonne, 541-420-2149 New items Building Supply Resale For newspaper Classifieds Fair prices paid. the O r egon State H ot tu b $ 3 00 , 4 - 6 www.craftcats.org arrive daily! Quality at LOW delivery, call the Get Results! Call 541-390-7029 Attorney General's Dachshund male,9 wks people, Camp Sher930 SE Textron, PRICES Circulation Dept. at between 10 am-3 pm. Call 541-385-5809 Office C o n sumer old, 1st shots, ador- Labradoodle pups ready Bend 541-318-1501 man 541-595-0246 740 NE 1st 541-385-5800 or place your ad able. $300 to g ood for forever homes. 2nd www.redeuxbend.com Protection hotline at 541-312-6709 To place an ad, call 203 on-line at home. 541-447-0113. generation.541-647-9831 Sauna, 2-person, cedar, 1-877-877-9392. Open to the public. 541-385-5809 www.happytailsmini all bells & whistles. $999. bendbulletin.com Holiday Bazaar or email The Bulletin reserves 206-369-2016 (Bend) aussiesanddoodles.com DO YOU HAVE classified 0 bendbulletin.com & Craft Shows Serving CentralOregon c nre f9D3 the right to publish all Pergo Australian Labradoodles - Mini & SOMETHING TO ads from The Bulletin Eucalyptus flooring. 255 SELL med size, several colors newspaper onto The Community Clothing, NIB 897 s/f. Retail: Horses & Equipment I 541-504-2662 FOR $500 OR Computers Food and Dry Goods Bulletin Internet web$2,080. Asking www.alpen-ridge.com LESS? Drive @ High Desert site. $1000. Call Tony, SE Bend Boarding SUPER TOP SOIL Non-commercial T HE B U LLETIN r e Assisted Living, 2660 Adult companion cats Maltese pups, only 1 (208) 880-5254. www.hershe sonandbark.com $200/mo. Top Quality quires computer adNE Mary Rose Place, FREE to seniors, disadvertisers may male left! 9 weeks, parScreened, soil & com- grass hay, pen/shelter. 5er mg Cent al OreganSnCe l903 place an ad with vertisers with multiple Bend, Oct. 15-31. abled & vet e rans! ents on site $350. Adorm i x ed , no Over 1000 acres to ride. our ad schedules or those Sisters Habitat ReStore post Drop off your donaTame, altered, shots, able loving, frisky & High hu541-419-3405 243 "QUICK CASH selling multiple sys- Building Supply Resale rocks/clods. fluffy! Call 541-678-0120 tions between 8 a.m. ID chip, more. Will almus level, exc. f or Ski Equipment tems/ software, to disSPECIAL" ways take back if cirQuality items. and 7 p.m. daily. flower beds, lawns, Malti-poo male pup, close the name of the LOW PRICES! (Clothing may be new cumstances change. straight gardens, $495 obo. Shots, Farmers Column eeks 20i D ynaStar Intuitive 7 4 business or the term 389-8420. Visit Sat/ 0 2~ 150 N. Fir. or gently used and will s creened to p s o i l . doggy-door trained, 188cm, Look bindings, "dealer" in their ads. Sun 1-5. Photos, info: Ad must include 541-549-1621 be dispersed to BethBark. Clean fill. Desmart, shed-free, v ery good + , $ 9 5 . Atwood utility tilt trailer, Private party advertiswww.craftcats.org. price of single item Open to the public. lehem Inn residents) liver/you haul. g reat cond., $ 4 00 ready to go! White 541-389-9836. of $500 or less, or ers are defined as 541-312-2003 541-548-3949. w/beige ears. Will be AKC SIBERIAN HUSKY firm. 541-389-9844 multiple items those who sell one 5-7 lbs. 541-323-1069 246 $700 8 up. M/F. whose total does computer. 37th Annual Snowflake pups. Heating & Stoves www.oregonpups.com Mobile Home Space Guns, Hunting not exceed $500. Boutique is Fri. Nov. 2, stones-siberians@live Lost & Found • .com 541-306-0180 for rent, $350. 257 1-8 p.m., Sat. Nov. 3, Maremma Guard Dog & Fishing NOTICE TO Call Classifieds at 541-548-8052 9 a.m. 4 p.m., Despups, purebred, great ADVERTISER Musical Instruments Attn: archery hunters 541-385-5809 chutes County Fairdogs, $35 0 e a c h,12g Mossberg Maverick Since September 29, Barn/shop cats www.bendbulletin.com camped at L ookout 541-546-6171. Wanted: Irrigated farm 88 18" bbl, home progrounds R e d mond, FREE, some tame, 1991, advertising for just outside Prai- ground, under pivot irAdm. $3. Proceeds go t ection, $200. 5 4 1used woodstoves has Mtn. some not. We dePit Bull puppies, born r ie City.. t hey l e ft rigation, i n C e n tral to Family Access Netbeen limited to modliver! Fixed, shots. English Bulldog Puppy, Aug. 28th. 2 Females 647-8931 something at camp, I OR. 541-419-2713 work. www.snowflakeels which have been 541-389-8420 only one left! AKC reg- left. $200/ea. Tiffany 1911 Gold USMC Comit and would like boutique.org c ertified by th e O r - found istered. All shots up to 541-728-1416 Call or memorative, $1350. to return it. Call Dave date & m i crochipped, text and I can email or egon Department of Walther P22, $325. 541-643-5990 BEND'S HOMELESS NEED OUR HELP! Meat & Animal Processingj Environmental Qual$1500. 541-416-0375 text you with Pictures. Ruger Mini 14 tact. rifle, Piano, Steinway Model The cold weather is upon us and sadly there are ity (DEQ) and the fed- Found men's Rx glasses, 0 Baby Grand 191 I, $725. Rem 700 30-06, still over 2,000 folks in our community without POODLEpups, AKC toy rifle $425 541-647-8931 gorgeous, artist qual- eral En v ironmentalFoster Grant frame, Dil- BEEF: No h o rmones/ permanent shelter, living in cars, makeshift POM-A-POO pups, toy. ity instrument w/great Protection A g e ncylon Falls trail, 10/21. Call chemicals, $3/Ib hangcamps, getting by as best they can. So cute! 541-475-3889 2010 HBR Handi-Rifle, action & S t einway's ing, to be butchered Dec. (EPA) as having met to I.D., 541-382-3254 3-7. Half/whole, reserve The following items are badly needed to .243 Win., syn stock, warm, rich sound. Will smoke emission stanQueensland Heelers help them get through the winter: mount & rings in box, adorn any living room, dards. A cer t ified REMEMBER: If you now! 541-388-6905 standard 8 mini,$150 8 $250. 541-749-0636 church or music stu- w oodstove may b e have lost an animal, @ CAMPING GEARof any sort: @ English Bulldogs DOB up. 541-280-1537 http:// identified by its certife don't forget to check Need to get an dio perfectly. New reNew or used tents, sleeping bags, tarps, blankets. 8/6/12. Healthy show rigritwayrancn.wordprese.com bakpaknbow0gmail.com tail $ 6 9 ,000. Sacrication label, which is The Humane Society S WARM CLOTHING: Rain Gear, Boots, Gloves. p arents AK C ad in ASAP? re g . Siberian Husky, AKC! Buy/Sell/Trade an firefice at $26,000 OBO, permanently attached in Bend 541-382-3537 males/females $1600 Beaut, sweet female, 1yr, arms. Bend local pays You can place it PLEASE DROP OFF YOUR DONATIONS AT call 541-383-3150. to the stove. The BulRedmond, cash! 541-526-0617 obo. 541-410-0344 $500. 541-977-7019 THE BEND COMMUNITY CENTER letin will no t k n ow541-923-0882 online at: 1036 NE 5thSt.,Bend, Mon.-Sat.9 a.m.-5 p.m. • EoIMore Pix at Bendbolletin.ci Yorkie AKC 2 male pups, Prineville, CASH!! T echnics piano k e y - ingly accept advertiswww.bendbulletin.com FREE 5 kittens+ 6 mo. small, big eyes, shots, 541-447-71 78; For Special pick up please call For Guns, Ammo & board perfect cond. Was ing for the sale of Ken @ 541-389-3296 female cat, to good health gua r antee, Reloading Supplies. $1500 new; sell $425 uncertified OR Craft Cats, 541-385-5809 PLEASE HELP, YOU CAN MAKEA DIFFERENCE. homes. 971-218-4738 541-408-6900. obo. 541-388-2706 woodstoves. 541-389-8420. $850+, 541-316-0005.
The Bulletin
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The Bulletin
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
G2 TUESDAY OCTOBER 30 2012 •THE BULLETIN
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD NO. 0925
Edited by Will Shortz Across 1 Formless lump 5 "Chop-chop!"
32 Fungusthat affects cereal 34 24-hour place to hit the links? 35 Pre-euro money 37 Medieval Eur.
9 Vague sense 13 Opera set in Egypt
domain
14 H.S. health
38 Subject of this puzzle 41 Biblical sanctuary 42 Feel in one's
course 16 To be, to Bernadette 17 Fraternity party
bones 43 "Your guess good ..."
purchase 18 City where 13-Across debuted 19 Blacken, in
44 Utterly tired 46 "You called?" cooking 47 100 smackers 20 Supposed 48 French states evidence of the 50 Marty's scientist 38-Across pal in "Back to 23 Year of the the Future" (what 2008-09 51 Field of study was) that includes the 24 Game piece on a 38-Across Stratego board 58 Voting alliance 26 Green figure, 60 All lit up briefly 61 Lotion additive 29 1999 Frank McCourt memoir 62 In-tray item
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE C A P S P A G E
AS I N O R E N A S I C K U P S A T G R U T H E V OL I T Y NO N T E T O F F O A U I R E S OD A T E P O N T E A T A M T V A P
S H E A P E F O R
E S T E E
S H E L L
P Y E A A M
V A I A R F M Y S T A H E G B E A O RT
E N D O F S T O R Y
P E S T O
I E T V E A A C L U O E RG L A S M W A R A I L
I D T A G
63 DEER XING and others 64 Quaint literary work 65 Some Halloween
decor 66 or 67 What some
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TRUCK SCHOOL
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Garage Sale Special
4 days .................................................. $18.50 7 days .................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50
4 lines for 4 days..................................
(call for commercial line ad rates)
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Puzzle by lan Livengood
31 Haulers on the highway 33 Hardly wandering support 12 Poetic contraction 35 Confident solver's tool 15 Homer Simpson 36 Rug rat outbursts 21 " y o ur heart 39 -gritty out!" 40 Upton who wrote 22 The Atlantic, e.g. "Oil!" 25 Tried to claw 45 Bust figures
47 Whisper sweet nothings 49 Five-star hotel offerings
54 Fall dead asleep, with "out"
55 Adjective for a shoppe 50 Search for water, 56 Prado artist in a way 57 Hoot and holler 52 "Whew! What a 58 Maker of the long week!" 7 Series 53 Korbut on a 59 Spike behind a balance beam camera
A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN ( * ) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin The Bulletin reserves the right to reject any ad at bendbulletin.com any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702
For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.49 a minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800-814-5554.
CC lX
Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. medalist lan AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visit 28 Grooming item nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past for one on the go puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). 29 Peckish Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords. 30 Debate topic
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476
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Employment Opportunities
Independent Positions
AptulMultlplex NE Bend
Sales
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We are seeking a full time Sales Rep to join our successful 528 team o f i n d ependent co n t ractors. Loans & Mortgages Must be goal oriented, mo t i vated, WARNING e nthusiastic, p e r The Bulletin recomsonable, outgoing, mends you use cauoptimistic and good tion when you prowith people. Sales vide personal experience is preinformation to compaferred, positive attinies offering loans or tude required! Must credit, especially have a valid driver's those asking for adlicense, insured vevance loan fees or hicle and cell phone. companies from out of We offer a complete state. If you have training program, all concerns or questools and s upplies tions, we suggest you needed for success, consult your attorney generous commisor call CONSUMER sion, d a i l y and HOTLINE, weekly bo n uses, 1-877-877-9392. cash incentives and unlimited in c o me BANK TURNED YOU DOWN? Private party potential. Email resume t o m i sterta- will loan on real estate equity. Credit, no clmaster© aol.com problem, good equity The Bulletin is all you need. Call now. Oregon Land Mortgage 388-4200.
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TURN THEPAGE For MoreAds The Bulletin
BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS Call a Pro Search the area's most Whether you need a comprehensive listing of classified advertising... fence fixed,hedges real estate to automotive, trimmed or a house merchandise to sporting CAUTION READERS: built, you'll find goods. Bulletin Classifieds professional help in Ads published in "Em- appear every day in the print or on line. The Bulletin's "Call a ployment Opportunit ies" i n clude e m - Call 541-385-5809 Service Professional" ployee and www.bendbulletin.com CNC Lathe Set Up, Directory i ndependent pos i with an emphasis on The Bulletin 541-385-5809 tions. Ads for posiMazak lathes and Ser ng Cenaai Ongoz nn<e i907 Mazak pr o g ram- tions that require a fee or upfront investment Independent Contractor ming software. Must must be stated. With b e able to l ift 5 0 any independent job pounds. C o mpetiopportunity, p l ease tive wage and beninvestigate thorefit package. Send oughly. cover letter and resume to: Use extra caution when KEITH Mfg. Co. applying for jobs onHuman Resources, line and never proPO Box 1, vide personal inforMadras, OR 97741 mation to any source or fax to you may not have re541-475-2169 ++++++++++++++++++ searched and deemed to be reputable. Use caution when Medical Billing for busy extreme r esponding to A N Y practice. Prior medical online e m p loyment exp req'd; 16-30 hrs/ week. Wage DOE. Fax ad from out-of-state. resume to 541-317-1777 We suggest you call the State of Oregon Pharmacist position Consumer Hotline at We are looking for independent contractors to available at Central 1-503-378-4320 service home delivery routes in: Oregonindependent pharmacy. ProfesFor Equal Opportunity sional setting, cusL aws: Oregon B u tomer-service orireau of Labor & Inented, 2 to 3 days dustry, C i vil Rights weekly. Division,
*Supplement Your Income*
DO YOU NEED A GREAT EMPLOYEE RIGHT NOW? Call The Bulletin before 11 a.m. and get an ad in to publish the next day! 541-385-5809. VIEW the Classifieds at:
www.bendbulletin.com
LAND LEASiNG MANAGER The Fres h water Trust seeks a motivated self-starter to
KOrj0rj 50rj0rj
Circulation Promotions
Looking for your next employee? caution when purPlace a Bulletin help chasing products or I wanted ad today and services from out of ' reach over 60,000 I the area. Sending readers each week. c ash, c hecks, o r Your classified ad I credit i n f o rmationI will also appear on bendbulletin.com I may be subjected to FRAUD. which currently 476 For more i nformareceives over 1.5 tion about an advermillion page views Employment I tiser, you may call every month at Opportunities the Oregon State no extra cost. I Attorney General's Bulletin Classifieds Resort Housekeeping Office Co n s umerg Get Results! The Pines at Sunriver Protection hotline at I Call 385-5809 Call 541-593-2160. I 1-877-877-9392. or place your ad on-line at LTlae Bulletin bendbulletin.com The Bulletin
I Recommends extra
I
Machinist KEITH Mfg. Co. has an opening for a CNC Mac h i nist. Perform setup and operate a variety of Mazak CNC lathes, i ncluding live t o ol and fourth axis, to make prec i sion parts. Maintain required tooling supplies. Inspect parts and adjust programs and tools to conform to prints. Minimum 2 years e x p erience
PLEASE NOTE:Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. Wewill gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or more days will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace eachTuesday.
Employment Opportunities
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FINANCEAND BUSINESS 507- Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 528- Loans altd Mortgages 543- Stocks andBonds 558- Business Investments 573- Business Opportunities
Placea photoin your private partyad for only$15.00 per week.
PRIVATE PARTY RATES
60
6 Reggae artist
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presentation
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0 Poetic contraction 1 Streisand, familiarly 2 In of 3 Baltic Sea feeder 4 Chart in many a PowerPoint
JZI: ~ M & EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools andTraining 454- Looking for Employment 470 - Domestic & In-HomePositions 476 - EmploymentOpportunities 486 - Independent Positions
5 14
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5 Cousin of a neckerchief
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES 4
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consider the 38-Across to be
M open D 26 Miserly Marner S 27 2000 and 2004 E swimming gold S S
1
Operate Your Own Business
LOCAL MONEY:We buy secured trust deeds 8 note,some hard money loans. Call Pat Kelley 541-382-3099 ext.13.
Reverse Mortgages bylocal expert Mike LeRoux NMLS57716
Call to learn more.
Independent Contractor
NMLS981 61
© Call Today ®
Business Opportunities
* Prineville *
Must be available 7 days a week, early morning hours.
Must have reliable, insured vehicle. Please call 541.385.5800 or 800.503.3933 during business hours apply via email at online©bendbulletin.com
The Bulletin
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541-350-7839 Security1 Lending 573
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
u . e
THEY ARE GONE! 2 bdrm, 1 bath
$530 & $540 Carports & A/C included! Fox HollowApts. f541) 383-3152 Cascade Rental Mgmt. Co *Upstairs only with lease
541-382-1885
KOZA K
541-382-0053 AVAILABLE BEND AREA RENTALS • 2 Bdrm, 1 Bath Apt. Near Hospital - Private setting. On site laundry. New carpet. Lots of storage. No Pets. $625.00 yyST • 2 Bdrm, 1 Bath SE Duplex -Single garage. Small fenced, natural back yard. Fireplace. W/D Hookups. New carpet 8 paint. No Pets.
$650.00 yysT
• Furnlshed 1 Bdrm/2 Bath Condo - next to Pioneer Park. Laundry facilities. Indoor Pool.
Murphy bed. Gated community. No pets. $675.00 (All Utilities includedexcept cable) • Furnished 1 Bdrm/1 Bath Condo -Mt. Bachelor Village. Murphy bed, too! Great place to transition or relax. Access to pool 8 Jacuzzi. Free Wi-Fi. No pets.$675.00 yyST • Open, bright, cheerful 2 Bdrm, 1.5 Bath House - Central location. Huge yard. Single garage.W/D Included. Gas FP. $825.00 H/S • Lovely Condo on the River -2 Bdrm, 2 Bath. Gated community. Single garage. Extra storage room. Gas FP. Vaulted ceilings. W/D Hook-ups. Great Floor plan.$1000.00 yyS • Open spacious 3Bdrm/2.5 Bath SW Home Near schools. Office at entrance. Hardwood floor. Lots of built-ins & pull outs. Large gas fireplace. Vaulted ceilings. Large upstairs laundry room. Fruit trees. Pets? $1450.00 AVAILABLE REDMOND AREA RENTALS 3 Bdrm/2 BathSW Home - Fenced back yard with large patio. Dbl. garage. New paint, carpet, appl., EFA + A/C. 1120 sq.ft. $825.00 *** FOR ADDITIONAL PROPERTIES ***
CALL 541-382-0053 &/or Stop By the Office at 587 NE Greenwood, Bend
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Full Color Photos For an additional GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPPIES,
('Special private party rates apply to merchandise and automofi)/e categories,)
We are three adorable, loving puppies looking for acaring home. Please call right away. $500.
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QUAINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES! Modern amenities and all the quiet you will need. Room to grow in your own little paradise! Call now.
FORD F150 XL 2005. This truck can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4X4,
and a tough V8 engine will get the job done Onthe ranch!
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Updated daily
Property Management, Inc.
In The Bulletin's print and online Classifieds.
'15 per week * '40 for 4 weeks *
*
Call for Speciaisi Share cozymobile home in Terrebonne, $275+ yz Limited numbers avail. 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. utils. 503-679-7496 W/D hookups, patios Call The Bulletin At or decks. 541-385-5809 MOUNTAiNGLEN, 541-383-9313 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail Professionally At: www.bendbulletin.com managed by Norris & Stevens, Inc. 630 636 Rooms for Rent Apt./Multiplex NW Bend NE Bend: Private bath/ entry/patio; internet/cable 141 NW P o rtland, 2 svc; laundry. No smkg. bdrm, oak cabinets, DW, $495. 541-317-1879 W/S/G 8 c able paid, laundry facilities. $650, Studios 8 Kitchenettes $500 dep. 541-617-1101 Furnished room, TV w/ cable, micro 8 fridge. Check out the classifieds online Utils & linens. New owners. $145-$165/wk www.bendbulletin.com
Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS
Newspaper Delivery
secure leases on agricultural and rural land for the imple541-419-4688. 971-673-0764 mentation. $40,000 base + commission. If you have any quesDetailed job descrip- Remember.... tions, concerns or tion and application A dd your web a d - comments, contact: instructions may be dress to your ad and Classified Department found at readers on The The Bulletin http://www.thefreshBulletin' s web site 541-385-5809 watertrust.org/aboutwill be able to click us/jobs-and-internthrough automatically ships. to your site. The Bulletin
605
Roommate Wanted
$299 1st mo rentii
GET THEM BEFORE
5 4 1 - 3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
G2 TUESDAY OCTOBER 30 2012 •THE BULLETIN
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD NO. 0925
Edited by Will Shortz Across 1 Formless lump 5 "Chop-chop!"
32 Fungusthat affects cereal 34 24-hour place to hit the links? 35 Pre-euro money 37 Medieval Eur.
9 Vague sense 13 Opera set in Egypt
domain
14 H.S. health
38 Subject of this puzzle 41 Biblical sanctuary 42 Feel in one's
course 16 To be, to Bernadette 17 Fraternity party
bones 43 "Your guess good ..."
purchase 18 City where 13-Across debuted 19 Blacken, in
44 Utterly tired 46 "You called?" cooking 47 100 smackers 20 Supposed 48 French states evidence of the 50 Marty's scientist 38-Across pal in "Back to 23 Year of the the Future" (what 2008-09 51 Field of study was) that includes the 24 Game piece on a 38-Across Stratego board 58 Voting alliance 26 Green figure, 60 All lit up briefly 61 Lotion additive 29 1999 Frank McCourt memoir 62 In-tray item
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE C A P S P A G E
AS I N O R E N A S I C K U P S A T G R U T H E V OL I T Y NO N T E T O F F O A U I R E S OD A T E P O N T E A T A M T V A P
S H E A P E F O R
E S T E E
S H E L L
P Y E A A M
V A I A R F M Y S T A H E G B E A O RT
E N D O F S T O R Y
P E S T O
I E T V E A A C L U O E RG L A S M W A R A I L
I D T A G
63 DEER XING and others 64 Quaint literary work 65 Some Halloween
decor 66 or 67 What some
P R I M
H O R N ET
S E R B
A D A G E S
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Down
27
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Schools & Training
TRUCK SCHOOL
www.llTR.net Redmond Campus Student Loans/Job Waiting Toll Free 1-888-387-9252
People Look for Information About Products and Services Every Daythrough The Bulletin 0iassiNeds 476
Employment Opportunities
9 15
30
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'UNDER '500in total merchandise
OVER '500in total merchandise
67
7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days ................................................ $16.00
Garage Sale Special
4 days .................................................. $18.50 7 days .................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50
4 lines for 4 days..................................
(call for commercial line ad rates)
66
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Starting at 3 lines
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Puzzle by lan Livengood
31 Haulers on the highway 33 Hardly wandering support 12 Poetic contraction 35 Confident solver's tool 15 Homer Simpson 36 Rug rat outbursts 21 " y o ur heart 39 -gritty out!" 40 Upton who wrote 22 The Atlantic, e.g. "Oil!" 25 Tried to claw 45 Bust figures
47 Whisper sweet nothings 49 Five-star hotel offerings
54 Fall dead asleep, with "out"
55 Adjective for a shoppe 50 Search for water, 56 Prado artist in a way 57 Hoot and holler 52 "Whew! What a 58 Maker of the long week!" 7 Series 53 Korbut on a 59 Spike behind a balance beam camera
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Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. medalist lan AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visit 28 Grooming item nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past for one on the go puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). 29 Peckish Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords. 30 Debate topic
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Employment Opportunities
Independent Positions
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Sales
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We are seeking a full time Sales Rep to join our successful 528 team o f i n d ependent co n t ractors. Loans & Mortgages Must be goal oriented, mo t i vated, WARNING e nthusiastic, p e r The Bulletin recomsonable, outgoing, mends you use cauoptimistic and good tion when you prowith people. Sales vide personal experience is preinformation to compaferred, positive attinies offering loans or tude required! Must credit, especially have a valid driver's those asking for adlicense, insured vevance loan fees or hicle and cell phone. companies from out of We offer a complete state. If you have training program, all concerns or questools and s upplies tions, we suggest you needed for success, consult your attorney generous commisor call CONSUMER sion, d a i l y and HOTLINE, weekly bo n uses, 1-877-877-9392. cash incentives and unlimited in c o me BANK TURNED YOU DOWN? Private party potential. Email resume t o m i sterta- will loan on real estate equity. Credit, no clmaster© aol.com problem, good equity The Bulletin is all you need. Call now. Oregon Land Mortgage 388-4200.
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TURN THEPAGE For MoreAds The Bulletin
BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS Call a Pro Search the area's most Whether you need a comprehensive listing of classified advertising... fence fixed,hedges real estate to automotive, trimmed or a house merchandise to sporting CAUTION READERS: built, you'll find goods. Bulletin Classifieds professional help in Ads published in "Em- appear every day in the print or on line. The Bulletin's "Call a ployment Opportunit ies" i n clude e m - Call 541-385-5809 Service Professional" ployee and www.bendbulletin.com CNC Lathe Set Up, Directory i ndependent pos i with an emphasis on The Bulletin 541-385-5809 tions. Ads for posiMazak lathes and Ser ng Cenaai Ongoz nn<e i907 Mazak pr o g ram- tions that require a fee or upfront investment Independent Contractor ming software. Must must be stated. With b e able to l ift 5 0 any independent job pounds. C o mpetiopportunity, p l ease tive wage and beninvestigate thorefit package. Send oughly. cover letter and resume to: Use extra caution when KEITH Mfg. Co. applying for jobs onHuman Resources, line and never proPO Box 1, vide personal inforMadras, OR 97741 mation to any source or fax to you may not have re541-475-2169 ++++++++++++++++++ searched and deemed to be reputable. Use caution when Medical Billing for busy extreme r esponding to A N Y practice. Prior medical online e m p loyment exp req'd; 16-30 hrs/ week. Wage DOE. Fax ad from out-of-state. resume to 541-317-1777 We suggest you call the State of Oregon Pharmacist position Consumer Hotline at We are looking for independent contractors to available at Central 1-503-378-4320 service home delivery routes in: Oregonindependent pharmacy. ProfesFor Equal Opportunity sional setting, cusL aws: Oregon B u tomer-service orireau of Labor & Inented, 2 to 3 days dustry, C i vil Rights weekly. Division,
*Supplement Your Income*
DO YOU NEED A GREAT EMPLOYEE RIGHT NOW? Call The Bulletin before 11 a.m. and get an ad in to publish the next day! 541-385-5809. VIEW the Classifieds at:
www.bendbulletin.com
LAND LEASiNG MANAGER The Fres h water Trust seeks a motivated self-starter to
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Circulation Promotions
Looking for your next employee? caution when purPlace a Bulletin help chasing products or I wanted ad today and services from out of ' reach over 60,000 I the area. Sending readers each week. c ash, c hecks, o r Your classified ad I credit i n f o rmationI will also appear on bendbulletin.com I may be subjected to FRAUD. which currently 476 For more i nformareceives over 1.5 tion about an advermillion page views Employment I tiser, you may call every month at Opportunities the Oregon State no extra cost. I Attorney General's Bulletin Classifieds Resort Housekeeping Office Co n s umerg Get Results! The Pines at Sunriver Protection hotline at I Call 385-5809 Call 541-593-2160. I 1-877-877-9392. or place your ad on-line at LTlae Bulletin bendbulletin.com The Bulletin
I Recommends extra
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Machinist KEITH Mfg. Co. has an opening for a CNC Mac h i nist. Perform setup and operate a variety of Mazak CNC lathes, i ncluding live t o ol and fourth axis, to make prec i sion parts. Maintain required tooling supplies. Inspect parts and adjust programs and tools to conform to prints. Minimum 2 years e x p erience
PLEASE NOTE:Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. Wewill gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or more days will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace eachTuesday.
Employment Opportunities
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FINANCEAND BUSINESS 507- Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 528- Loans altd Mortgages 543- Stocks andBonds 558- Business Investments 573- Business Opportunities
Placea photoin your private partyad for only$15.00 per week.
PRIVATE PARTY RATES
60
6 Reggae artist
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JZI: ~ M & EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools andTraining 454- Looking for Employment 470 - Domestic & In-HomePositions 476 - EmploymentOpportunities 486 - Independent Positions
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AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES 4
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Operate Your Own Business
LOCAL MONEY:We buy secured trust deeds 8 note,some hard money loans. Call Pat Kelley 541-382-3099 ext.13.
Reverse Mortgages bylocal expert Mike LeRoux NMLS57716
Call to learn more.
Independent Contractor
NMLS981 61
© Call Today ®
Business Opportunities
* Prineville *
Must be available 7 days a week, early morning hours.
Must have reliable, insured vehicle. Please call 541.385.5800 or 800.503.3933 during business hours apply via email at online©bendbulletin.com
The Bulletin
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541-350-7839 Security1 Lending 573
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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THEY ARE GONE! 2 bdrm, 1 bath
$530 & $540 Carports & A/C included! Fox HollowApts. f541) 383-3152 Cascade Rental Mgmt. Co *Upstairs only with lease
541-382-1885
KOZA K
541-382-0053 AVAILABLE BEND AREA RENTALS • 2 Bdrm, 1 Bath Apt. Near Hospital - Private setting. On site laundry. New carpet. Lots of storage. No Pets. $625.00 yyST • 2 Bdrm, 1 Bath SE Duplex -Single garage. Small fenced, natural back yard. Fireplace. W/D Hookups. New carpet 8 paint. No Pets.
$650.00 yysT
• Furnlshed 1 Bdrm/2 Bath Condo - next to Pioneer Park. Laundry facilities. Indoor Pool.
Murphy bed. Gated community. No pets. $675.00 (All Utilities includedexcept cable) • Furnished 1 Bdrm/1 Bath Condo -Mt. Bachelor Village. Murphy bed, too! Great place to transition or relax. Access to pool 8 Jacuzzi. Free Wi-Fi. No pets.$675.00 yyST • Open, bright, cheerful 2 Bdrm, 1.5 Bath House - Central location. Huge yard. Single garage.W/D Included. Gas FP. $825.00 H/S • Lovely Condo on the River -2 Bdrm, 2 Bath. Gated community. Single garage. Extra storage room. Gas FP. Vaulted ceilings. W/D Hook-ups. Great Floor plan.$1000.00 yyS • Open spacious 3Bdrm/2.5 Bath SW Home Near schools. Office at entrance. Hardwood floor. Lots of built-ins & pull outs. Large gas fireplace. Vaulted ceilings. Large upstairs laundry room. Fruit trees. Pets? $1450.00 AVAILABLE REDMOND AREA RENTALS 3 Bdrm/2 BathSW Home - Fenced back yard with large patio. Dbl. garage. New paint, carpet, appl., EFA + A/C. 1120 sq.ft. $825.00 *** FOR ADDITIONAL PROPERTIES ***
CALL 541-382-0053 &/or Stop By the Office at 587 NE Greenwood, Bend
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Full Color Photos For an additional GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPPIES,
('Special private party rates apply to merchandise and automofi)/e categories,)
We are three adorable, loving puppies looking for acaring home. Please call right away. $500.
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QUAINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES! Modern amenities and all the quiet you will need. Room to grow in your own little paradise! Call now.
FORD F150 XL 2005. This truck can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4X4,
and a tough V8 engine will get the job done Onthe ranch!
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Property Management, Inc.
In The Bulletin's print and online Classifieds.
'15 per week * '40 for 4 weeks *
*
Call for Speciaisi Share cozymobile home in Terrebonne, $275+ yz Limited numbers avail. 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. utils. 503-679-7496 W/D hookups, patios Call The Bulletin At or decks. 541-385-5809 MOUNTAiNGLEN, 541-383-9313 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail Professionally At: www.bendbulletin.com managed by Norris & Stevens, Inc. 630 636 Rooms for Rent Apt./Multiplex NW Bend NE Bend: Private bath/ entry/patio; internet/cable 141 NW P o rtland, 2 svc; laundry. No smkg. bdrm, oak cabinets, DW, $495. 541-317-1879 W/S/G 8 c able paid, laundry facilities. $650, Studios 8 Kitchenettes $500 dep. 541-617-1101 Furnished room, TV w/ cable, micro 8 fridge. Check out the classifieds online Utils & linens. New owners. $145-$165/wk www.bendbulletin.com
Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS
Newspaper Delivery
secure leases on agricultural and rural land for the imple541-419-4688. 971-673-0764 mentation. $40,000 base + commission. If you have any quesDetailed job descrip- Remember.... tions, concerns or tion and application A dd your web a d - comments, contact: instructions may be dress to your ad and Classified Department found at readers on The The Bulletin http://www.thefreshBulletin' s web site 541-385-5809 watertrust.org/aboutwill be able to click us/jobs-and-internthrough automatically ships. to your site. The Bulletin
605
Roommate Wanted
$299 1st mo rentii
GET THEM BEFORE
5 4 1 - 3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
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RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605 - RoommateWanted 616- Want To Rent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomes for Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648 - Houses for RentGeneral 650 - Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Housesfor Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Housesfor Rent SWBend 658 - Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for Rent Sunriver 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 - RV Parking 676 Mobile/Mfd.Space
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THE BULLETIN•TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30 2012 G3 n
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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- New Listings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744 - OpenHouses 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 CountyHomes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780- Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land
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Boats & Accessories
Motorhomes
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Travel Trailers •
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17' 1984 Chris Craft - Scorpion, 140 HP inboard/outboard, 2 depth finders, troll-
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Looking for your next employee? .m E9 Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and ing motor, full cover, reach over 60,000 EZ - L oad t railer, Country Coach Intrigue Monaco Dynasty 2004, readers each week. $3500 OBO. loaded, 3 slides, dieYour classified ad 2002, 40' Tag axle. 541-382-3728. will also appear on 400hp Cummins Die- sel, Reduced - now Snowmobiles bendbulletin.com sel. tw o s l ide-outs. $119,000, 5 4 1-923which currently re4 1,000 m iles, n e w 8572 or 541-749-0037 S nowmobiles (2) o n 17' Seaswirl 1988 ceives over 1.5 miltires & batteries. Most trailer, s n o wmobiles lion page views evbow, rebuilt options.$95,000 OBO Garage Sales n eed s o m e wor k open Chev V 6 e n g ine, 541-678-5712 ery month at no $1500. 541-312-9292 extra cost. Bulletin new uph o lstery, Garage Sales Classifieds Get Re$3900 obo. Bend. Need help fixing stuff? 707-688-4523 sults! Call 385-5809 Call A Service Professional Garage Sales or place your ad find the help you need. on-line at Find them Snowmobile trailer www.bendbulletin.com bendbulletin.com 2002, 25-ft Interin state & 3 sleds, The Bulletin $10,900. 541-480-8009 Classifieds Fifth Wheels 18.5' '05 Reinell 185, V-6 541-385-5809
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Aircraft, Parts & Service
- '-AIIQIIIP>' 1/3 interest in Columbia 400, located at Sunriver. $ 1 38,500. Call 541-647-3718 1 /3 interest i n
w e llequipped IFR Beech B onanza A 36 , l o cated KBDN. $55,000.
low hrs., must see, Econoline R V 1 9 89, 541-419-9510 $15 QQQ 541 330 3939 fully loaded, exc. cond, 35K m i. , R e duced Harley Davidson SoftExecutive Hangar Tail De l uxe 2 0 0 7 , -.Q=W=P-=P.=P'-. $17,950. 541-546-6133 at Bend Airport Carri-Lite Luxury 2009 white/cobalt, w / pasL (KBDN) by Carriage, 4 slide- 60' wide CAN'T BEAT THIS! senger kit, Vance 8 20.5' 2004 Bayliner x 50' deep, outs, inverter, satelSouthwind 35.5' Triton, Hines muffler system 205 Run About, 220 L ook before y o u w/55' wide x 17' high 2008,V10, 2 slides, Dulite sys, fireplace, 2 buy, below market & kit, 1045 mi., exc. HP, V8, open bow, bi-fold door. Natural flat screen TVs. value! Size & mile- pont UV coat, 7500 mi. c ond, $19,9 9 9 , exc. cond., very fast gas heat, office, bathage DOES matter! Bought new at $60,000. 541-389-9188. w/very low hours, room. Parking for 6 Class A 32' Hurri$132,913; 541-480-3923 lots of extras incl. c ars. A d jacent t o Harley Heritage asking $93,500. cane by Four Winds, tower, Bimini & Frontage Rd; g reat Call 541-419-4212 Softail, 2003 2007. 12,500 mi, all custom trailer, visibility for a viation $5,000+ in extras, amenities, Ford V10, $19,500. bus. 1jetjockoq.com $2000 paint job, Ithr, cherry, slides, 648 750 541-389-1413 541-948-2126 30K mi. 1 owner, like new! New low • Tra v el Trailers Houses for Redmond Homes For more information price, $54,900. 541-548-5216 please call Rent General Fleetwood Wilderness 541-385-8090 36', 2005, 4 s l ides, Looking for your next or 209-605-5537 PUBLISHER'S S cen i c rear bdrm, fireplace, emp/oyee? 20.5' Seaswirl Spy- Gulfstream NOTICE AC, W/D hkup beauCruiser 36 ft. 1999, Place a Bulletin help der 1989 H.O. 302, All real estate adverHD FAT BOY Cummins 330 hp dietiful u n it ! $ 3 0 ,500. wanted ad today and 285 hrs., exc. cond., tising in this newspa541-815-2380 sel, 42K, 1 owner, 13 reach over 60,000 1996 ONLY 1 OWNERSHIP Pioneer Spirit 1 8CK, stored indoors for per is subject to the in. kitchen slide out, readers each week. Completely rebuilt/ SHARE LEFT! 2007, used only 4x, AC, life $11,900 OBO. F air H o using A c t new tires,under cover, Your classified ad customized, low Economical flying in tongue j ack, 541-379-3530 which makes it illegal 745 hwy. miles only,4 door electric will also appear on miles. Accepting ofyour ow n C e s sna to a d vertise "any fridge/freezer ice- $8995. 541-389-7669 Homes for Sale bendbulletin.com fers. 541-548-4807 172/180 HP for only preference, limitation Ads published in the maker, W/D combo, RO(JA Digorgio 1971 which currently re$ 10,000! Based a t or disc r iminationBANK OWNED HOMES! "Boats" classification Interbath t ub & fridge, heater, propane K omfort 25' 2 0 06, 1 BDN. Call Gabe a t ceives over HD Screaming Eagle based on race, color, include: Speed, fishshower, 50 amp pro- & elec. Iights, awning, slide, AC, TV, awning. Professional Air! FREE List w/Pics! 1.5 million page Electra Glide 2005, religion, sex, handi- www. BendRepos.com ing, drift, canoe, pane gen & m o re! 2 spares, extra insu- NEW: tires, converter, views every month ~ 54 1 -388-0019Q 103" motor, two tone cap, familial status, bend and beyond real estate house and sail boats. $55,000. lation for late season batteries. Hardly used. at no extra cost. candy teal, new tires, marital status or na20967 yeoman, bend or For all other types of 541-948-2310 hunting/cold weather $15,500. 541-923-2595 Bulletin Classifieds 916 23K miles, CD player tional origin, or an inwatercraft, please see camping, well maint, FIND IT! Get Results! hydraulic clutch, exTrucks & tention to make any No Reserve Class 875. very roomy, sleeps 5, Call 385-5809 or cellent condition. SUY IT! such pre f erence, Timed Online 541-385-5809 reat f o r hu n t ing, Heavy Equipment place your ad on-line Highest offer takes it. limitation or discrimi3200, 541-410-6561 SELL ITl AUCTION at 541-480-8080. Hunter's Delight! Packnation." Familial staEnds Nov.14th The Bulletin Classifieds bendbulletin.com jervmg Central Oregon s nce 1903 age deal! 1988 Wintus includes children Building Lot in ProngHonda Elite 80 2 001, nebago Super Chief, under the age of 18 h orn S u b . 23 0 1 3 GENERATE SOME ex1400 mi., absolutely 8K m i l es , gr e a t living with parents or Canyon View Loop 773 like new., comes w/ citement in your neig- 3 legal cust o dians, Selling to the Highest borhood. Plan a ga- shape; 1988 Bronco II Acreages carrying rack for 2" 4 x4 to tow , 1 3 0K pregnant women, and Bidder 28 Properties receiver, ideal for use rage sale and don't mostly towed miles, Diamond Reo Du mp people securing cus- in 5-States! w/motorhome, $995, forget to advertise in nice rig! $15,000 both. Springdale 2005 27', 4 MONTANA 3585 2008, Truck 19 7 4, 1 2 -14 tody of children under www.corbettbottles.com classified! 385-5809. 541-546-6920 slide in dining/living area CHECK YOUR AD 541-382-3964, leave yard box, runs good, 18. This newspaper 208-377-5700 sleeps 6, low mi,$15,000 exc. cond., 3 slides, Please check your ad msg. $6900, 541-548-6812 will not knowingly acking bed, Irg LR, Arcon the first day it runs 5erving Central Oregon smce1903 obo. 541-408-3811 cept any advertising Softail Deluxe NOTICE tic insulation, all opto make sure it is corGood classified ads tell for real estate which is All real estate adver2010, 805 miles, T he Bulletin tions $37,500. Sometimes inG K E AT Used out-drive the essential facts in an in violation of the law. tised here in is sub- srect. Black Chameleon. 541-420-3250 To Subscribe call tructions over t h e parts Mercury interesting Manner. Write O ur r e aders a r e ject to t h e F e deral $17,000 are misunderOMC rebuilt mafrom the readers view - not 541-385-5800 or go to Nuyya 29 7LK Hi t c hhereby informed that F air H o using A c t , phone CallDon I and a n e r ror www.bendbulletin.com Hiker 2007, 3 slides, Hyster H25E, runs all dwellings adver- which makes it illegal stood rine motors: 151 the seller's. Convert the can occurin your ad. 541-410-3823 well, 2982 Hours, 32' touring coach, left tised in this newspa- to advertise any pref- If this happens to your $1595; 3.0 $1895; facts into benefits. Show $3500,call kitchen, rear lounge, per are available on erence, limitation or 4.3 (1993), $1995. the reader how the item will ad, please contact us 541-749-0724 many extras, beautiful an equal opportunity discrimination based the first day your ad 541-389-0435 help them in someway. 870 c ond. inside 8 o u t , basis. To complain of on race, color, reli- appears and we will This Boats & Accessories $34,499 OBO, Prinevdiscrimination cal l advertising tip sex, handicap, be happy to fix it as 875 ille. 541-447-5502 days HUD t o l l-free at gion, familial status or nabrought to you by & 541-447-1641 eves, s oon as w e c a n . Watercraft 1-800-877-0246. The tional origin, or inten- Deadlines are: Week- 73' Smokercraft '85, toll f re e t e l ephone tion to make any such days 11:00 noon for The Bulletin good cond., 15I-IP 16-ft wide-body canoe, slide,Bunkhouse style, number for the hear- preferences, l i m ita- next day, Sat. 11:00 gas Evinrude + sleeps 7-8, excellent hand-laid fiberglass, long ing im p aired is tions or discrimination. a.m. for Sunday and Minnkota 44 elec. Peterbilt 359 p o table condition, $ 1 6 ,900, paddles & Stearns vests, 1-800-927-9275. We will not knowingly Monday. Itasca Spirit Class C 541-390-2504 water t r uck, 1 9 9 0, motor, fish finder, 2 $350. 541-233-8944 accept any advertis2007, 20K miles, front 3200 gal. tank, 5hp 541 -385-5809 extra seats, trailer, 654 ing for r ea l e s tate entertainment center, pump, 4-3" h o ses, Thank you! extra equip. $3200. Pilgrim 27', 2007 5th 2007 SeaDoo camlocks, $ 2 5,000. Houses for Rent which is in violation of The Bulletin Classified all bells & whistles, wheel, 1 s lide, AC, 541-388-9270 2004 Waverunner, 541-820-3724 this law. All persons extremely good conSE Bend excellent condition, TV,full awning, excelare hereby informed dition, 2 s l ides, 2 lent shape, $23,900. LOW hours. Double FIND YOUR FUTURE that all dwellings adHDTV's, $45,000 20257 Knights Bridge Look at: 541-350-8629 trailer, lots of extras. HOME INTHE BULLETIN vertised are available OBO. 541-447-5484 Utility Trailers Place, brand new Bendhomes.com $10,000 Sprinter 272RLS, 2009 deluxe 3 bdrm, 2y2 bath, on an equal opportu- for Complete Listings of Your future is just a page 541-719-8444 29', weatherized, like nity basis. The Bulle1880 sq. ft. home. Area Real Estate for Sale away. Whetheryou're looking tin Classified n ew, f u rnished & $1195. 541-350-2206 5o~ LA ST! for a hat or a place tohangit, Ads published in "Waready to go, incl WineThe Bulletin Classified is 775 tercraft" include: Kayard S a t ellite dish, Big Tex LandscapWhere can you find a What are you your best source. 26,995. 541-420-9964 aks, rafts and motoring/ ATV Trailer, Manufactured/ helping hand? Pilgrim In t e rnational ized personal looking for? Every day thousandsof dual axle flatbed, Mobile Homes From contractors to 2005, 36' 5th Wheel, watercrafts. For Jayco Seneca 2007, 7'x16', 7000 lb. buyers andsellers of goods You'll find it in Model¹M-349 RLDS-5 " boats" please s e e and services dobusiness in GVW, all steel, yard care, it's all here FACTORY SPECIAL 17K mi., 35ft., Chevy Fall price $ 2 1,865. Class 870. $1400. these pages.They know The Bulletin Classifieds 5500 d i e sel , toy Viking Tent t railer in The Bulletin's New Home, 3 bdrm, 541-312-4466 541-382-4115, or 541-385-5809 you can't beat TheBulletin hauler $130 , 000. 2008, clean, s e lf $48,900 finished "Call A Service 541-280-7024. Classified Section for 541-389-2636. contained, sleeps 5, on your site,541.548.5511 Professional" Directory www.JandMHomes.com selection andconvenience easy to tow, great 541-385-5809 cond. $5200, obo. - every item is just a phone 541-383-7150. call away. Automotive Parts, Get your The Classified Section is Service & Accessories business easy to use. Every item Regal Prowler AX6 Exis categorized andevery treme Edition 38' '05, 4 Studless winter traccartegory is indexed onthe 4 slides,2 fireplaces, all 4 -ROWI N G tion tires on wheels, Immaculate! section's front page. maple cabs, king bed/ 225/60R-16, $350. Beaver Coach Marquis call54I-3855809topromoteraur serviceAdvertise bdrm separated w/slide ' for 28daysstarting at I4) Ilbsspecr oipaciageis i x ovaiiableonourwetxv Whether you are looking for 40' 1987. New cover, Weekend Warrior Toy glass dr,loaded,always 541-410-0886 with an ad in a home or need aservice, Hauler 28' 2007, Gen, new paint (2004), new in only 3 Snow tires Wild CounThe Bulletin's your future is in thepagesof inverter (2007). Onan fuel station, exc cond. garaged,lived mo,brand new $54,000, "Call A Service LT24 5 - 75R16 6300 watt gen, 111K mi, sleeps 8, black/gray still like new, $28,500, try Building/Contracting L a ndscapingNard Care Landscaping/Yard Care The Bulletin Classified. & siped on parked covered $35 000 i nterior, u se d 3X , will deliver,see rvt.com, studded Professional" chrome rims, $500 obo. 541-419-9859 or $24,999. The Bulletin ad¹4957646 for pics. NOTICE: Oregon state Serv g Ceneal 0 egon since 19tB Directory 541-382-4144. 541-280-2014 541-389-9188 Cory, 541-580-7334 law req u ires anyone who c o n tracts for construction work Zorrttr gaaErip to be licensed with the Za~4ga ~/,. Discounts available C onstruction Con Call Cutting Edge tractors Board (CCB). More Than Service Lawnworks: A n active lice n se 541-815-4097 • Peace Of Mind means the contractor LCB ¹8451 i s bonded an d i n Fall Clean Up s ured. Ver if y t h e Don't track it in an Winter Call The Yard Doctor contractor's CCB •Leaves for yard maintenance, c ense through t h e •Cones thatching, sod, sprinCCB Cons u m er • Needles kler blowouts, water Website • Pruning features, more! www.hirealicensedcontractoc • Debris Hauling Allen 541-536-1294 com LCB 5012 or call 503-378-4621. The Bulletin recomGutter mends checking with Aeration/Fall Clean-up Cleaning the CCB prior to conBOOK NOW! tracting with anyone. Weekly/one-time service Compost avail. Bonded, insured, Some other t r ades free estimates! also req u ire addi- Applications COLLINS Lawn Maint. tional licenses and Use Less Water Ca/i 541-480-9714 certifications. $$$ SAVE $$$ Improve Soil Debris Removal Motorcycles & Accessories
I
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5'p<Q >
'
•
The Bulletin
The Bulletin
R U Y X
kir~,
The Bulletin
4
Wa ep
''I
I
Sprinkler B/owouts
your web source for STATEWIDE classifieds
Bend Landscaping
JUNK BE GONE
I Haul Away FREE For Salvage. Also Cleanups & Cleanouts Mel, 541-389-8107 Handyman ERIC REEVE HANDY SERVICES. Home 8 Commercial Repairs, Carpentry-Painting,
2013 Maintenance Package Available weekly, monthly and one time service EXPERIENCED Commercial & Residential
Senior Discounts Pressure-washing, 541-390-1466 Honey Do's. On-time Same Day Response promise. Senior Discount. Work guaranteed. 541-389-3361
Nelson Landscape Maintenance Serving Central Oregon Home/Rental repairs Residential Small jobs to remodels & Commercial Honest, guaranteed or 541-771-4463
Bonded & Insured CCB¹t 81595 I DO THAT!
work. CCB¹151573 Dennis 541-317-9768
Home Improvement Kelly Kerfoot Const.
28 yrs exp in Central OR!
Quality & honesty, from carpentry 8 handyman jobs, to expert wall covering install / removal. Sr. discounts CCBV47120 Licensed/bonded/insured 541-389-1413 /410-2422
Sprinkler
Blow-outs
• Snow Removal • Sprinkler Repair • Back Flow Testing • Fall Clean up •Weekly Mowing Senior Discounts Bonded & Insured 541-815-4458 LCB¹8759
Sprinkler Blowouts, and Winterization 541-382-1655 LCB¹ 7990
N OTICE: ORE G O N Landscape Contractors Law (ORS 671)
r equires a l l bu s i nesses that advertise t o p e r form L a n dscape C o n struction which incl u des: p lanting, deck s , fences, arbors, w ater-features, a n d installation, repair of irrigation systems to be licensed with the Landscape Contract ors B o a rd . Th i s 4-digit number is to be included in all advertisements which indicate the business has a bond,insurance and workers c ompensation for their employees. For your protection call 503-378-5909 or use our website: www.lcb.state.or.us to check license status before co n t racting with t h e bu s iness. Persons doing landscape m aintenance do not require a LCB license.
30Bs IREAL EsTATE IcLAssIFIEDs edS.oregOn.Com n iS a neW SuppOrted by OregOn neWSpaperS,"ClaSSifi WebSite dediCated to bringing CLaSSified LiStingS frOm arOund the StateOf OregOn tOgether on One eaSy-to-USe WebSite.
Fromjobsto homes and investment properties,you'llfind the fastest n
grOWing CLaSSifiedS SeCtiOn iS "ClaSSifiedS.Oregon.COm
BROWSE THE ENTIRE
STATE OFOREGON
classifieds.
Ore on
• ColYI
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
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RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605 - RoommateWanted 616- Want To Rent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomes for Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648 - Houses for RentGeneral 650 - Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Housesfor Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Housesfor Rent SWBend 658 - Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for Rent Sunriver 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 - RV Parking 676 Mobile/Mfd.Space
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THE BULLETIN•TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30 2012 G3 n
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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- New Listings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744 - OpenHouses 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 CountyHomes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780- Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land
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870
880
Boats & Accessories
Motorhomes
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Motorhomes
Travel Trailers •
o 0i
17' 1984 Chris Craft - Scorpion, 140 HP inboard/outboard, 2 depth finders, troll-
oQ/)
Looking for your next employee? .m E9 Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and ing motor, full cover, reach over 60,000 EZ - L oad t railer, Country Coach Intrigue Monaco Dynasty 2004, readers each week. $3500 OBO. loaded, 3 slides, dieYour classified ad 2002, 40' Tag axle. 541-382-3728. will also appear on 400hp Cummins Die- sel, Reduced - now Snowmobiles bendbulletin.com sel. tw o s l ide-outs. $119,000, 5 4 1-923which currently re4 1,000 m iles, n e w 8572 or 541-749-0037 S nowmobiles (2) o n 17' Seaswirl 1988 ceives over 1.5 miltires & batteries. Most trailer, s n o wmobiles lion page views evbow, rebuilt options.$95,000 OBO Garage Sales n eed s o m e wor k open Chev V 6 e n g ine, 541-678-5712 ery month at no $1500. 541-312-9292 extra cost. Bulletin new uph o lstery, Garage Sales Classifieds Get Re$3900 obo. Bend. Need help fixing stuff? 707-688-4523 sults! Call 385-5809 Call A Service Professional Garage Sales or place your ad find the help you need. on-line at Find them Snowmobile trailer www.bendbulletin.com bendbulletin.com 2002, 25-ft Interin state & 3 sleds, The Bulletin $10,900. 541-480-8009 Classifieds Fifth Wheels 18.5' '05 Reinell 185, V-6 541-385-5809
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Aircraft, Parts & Service
- '-AIIQIIIP>' 1/3 interest in Columbia 400, located at Sunriver. $ 1 38,500. Call 541-647-3718 1 /3 interest i n
w e llequipped IFR Beech B onanza A 36 , l o cated KBDN. $55,000.
low hrs., must see, Econoline R V 1 9 89, 541-419-9510 $15 QQQ 541 330 3939 fully loaded, exc. cond, 35K m i. , R e duced Harley Davidson SoftExecutive Hangar Tail De l uxe 2 0 0 7 , -.Q=W=P-=P.=P'-. $17,950. 541-546-6133 at Bend Airport Carri-Lite Luxury 2009 white/cobalt, w / pasL (KBDN) by Carriage, 4 slide- 60' wide CAN'T BEAT THIS! senger kit, Vance 8 20.5' 2004 Bayliner x 50' deep, outs, inverter, satelSouthwind 35.5' Triton, Hines muffler system 205 Run About, 220 L ook before y o u w/55' wide x 17' high 2008,V10, 2 slides, Dulite sys, fireplace, 2 buy, below market & kit, 1045 mi., exc. HP, V8, open bow, bi-fold door. Natural flat screen TVs. value! Size & mile- pont UV coat, 7500 mi. c ond, $19,9 9 9 , exc. cond., very fast gas heat, office, bathage DOES matter! Bought new at $60,000. 541-389-9188. w/very low hours, room. Parking for 6 Class A 32' Hurri$132,913; 541-480-3923 lots of extras incl. c ars. A d jacent t o Harley Heritage asking $93,500. cane by Four Winds, tower, Bimini & Frontage Rd; g reat Call 541-419-4212 Softail, 2003 2007. 12,500 mi, all custom trailer, visibility for a viation $5,000+ in extras, amenities, Ford V10, $19,500. bus. 1jetjockoq.com $2000 paint job, Ithr, cherry, slides, 648 750 541-389-1413 541-948-2126 30K mi. 1 owner, like new! New low • Tra v el Trailers Houses for Redmond Homes For more information price, $54,900. 541-548-5216 please call Rent General Fleetwood Wilderness 541-385-8090 36', 2005, 4 s l ides, Looking for your next or 209-605-5537 PUBLISHER'S S cen i c rear bdrm, fireplace, emp/oyee? 20.5' Seaswirl Spy- Gulfstream NOTICE AC, W/D hkup beauCruiser 36 ft. 1999, Place a Bulletin help der 1989 H.O. 302, All real estate adverHD FAT BOY Cummins 330 hp dietiful u n it ! $ 3 0 ,500. wanted ad today and 285 hrs., exc. cond., tising in this newspa541-815-2380 sel, 42K, 1 owner, 13 reach over 60,000 1996 ONLY 1 OWNERSHIP Pioneer Spirit 1 8CK, stored indoors for per is subject to the in. kitchen slide out, readers each week. Completely rebuilt/ SHARE LEFT! 2007, used only 4x, AC, life $11,900 OBO. F air H o using A c t new tires,under cover, Your classified ad customized, low Economical flying in tongue j ack, 541-379-3530 which makes it illegal 745 hwy. miles only,4 door electric will also appear on miles. Accepting ofyour ow n C e s sna to a d vertise "any fridge/freezer ice- $8995. 541-389-7669 Homes for Sale bendbulletin.com fers. 541-548-4807 172/180 HP for only preference, limitation Ads published in the maker, W/D combo, RO(JA Digorgio 1971 which currently re$ 10,000! Based a t or disc r iminationBANK OWNED HOMES! "Boats" classification Interbath t ub & fridge, heater, propane K omfort 25' 2 0 06, 1 BDN. Call Gabe a t ceives over HD Screaming Eagle based on race, color, include: Speed, fishshower, 50 amp pro- & elec. Iights, awning, slide, AC, TV, awning. Professional Air! FREE List w/Pics! 1.5 million page Electra Glide 2005, religion, sex, handi- www. BendRepos.com ing, drift, canoe, pane gen & m o re! 2 spares, extra insu- NEW: tires, converter, views every month ~ 54 1 -388-0019Q 103" motor, two tone cap, familial status, bend and beyond real estate house and sail boats. $55,000. lation for late season batteries. Hardly used. at no extra cost. candy teal, new tires, marital status or na20967 yeoman, bend or For all other types of 541-948-2310 hunting/cold weather $15,500. 541-923-2595 Bulletin Classifieds 916 23K miles, CD player tional origin, or an inwatercraft, please see camping, well maint, FIND IT! Get Results! hydraulic clutch, exTrucks & tention to make any No Reserve Class 875. very roomy, sleeps 5, Call 385-5809 or cellent condition. SUY IT! such pre f erence, Timed Online 541-385-5809 reat f o r hu n t ing, Heavy Equipment place your ad on-line Highest offer takes it. limitation or discrimi3200, 541-410-6561 SELL ITl AUCTION at 541-480-8080. Hunter's Delight! Packnation." Familial staEnds Nov.14th The Bulletin Classifieds bendbulletin.com jervmg Central Oregon s nce 1903 age deal! 1988 Wintus includes children Building Lot in ProngHonda Elite 80 2 001, nebago Super Chief, under the age of 18 h orn S u b . 23 0 1 3 GENERATE SOME ex1400 mi., absolutely 8K m i l es , gr e a t living with parents or Canyon View Loop 773 like new., comes w/ citement in your neig- 3 legal cust o dians, Selling to the Highest borhood. Plan a ga- shape; 1988 Bronco II Acreages carrying rack for 2" 4 x4 to tow , 1 3 0K pregnant women, and Bidder 28 Properties receiver, ideal for use rage sale and don't mostly towed miles, Diamond Reo Du mp people securing cus- in 5-States! w/motorhome, $995, forget to advertise in nice rig! $15,000 both. Springdale 2005 27', 4 MONTANA 3585 2008, Truck 19 7 4, 1 2 -14 tody of children under www.corbettbottles.com classified! 385-5809. 541-546-6920 slide in dining/living area CHECK YOUR AD 541-382-3964, leave yard box, runs good, 18. This newspaper 208-377-5700 sleeps 6, low mi,$15,000 exc. cond., 3 slides, Please check your ad msg. $6900, 541-548-6812 will not knowingly acking bed, Irg LR, Arcon the first day it runs 5erving Central Oregon smce1903 obo. 541-408-3811 cept any advertising Softail Deluxe NOTICE tic insulation, all opto make sure it is corGood classified ads tell for real estate which is All real estate adver2010, 805 miles, T he Bulletin tions $37,500. Sometimes inG K E AT Used out-drive the essential facts in an in violation of the law. tised here in is sub- srect. Black Chameleon. 541-420-3250 To Subscribe call tructions over t h e parts Mercury interesting Manner. Write O ur r e aders a r e ject to t h e F e deral $17,000 are misunderOMC rebuilt mafrom the readers view - not 541-385-5800 or go to Nuyya 29 7LK Hi t c hhereby informed that F air H o using A c t , phone CallDon I and a n e r ror www.bendbulletin.com Hiker 2007, 3 slides, Hyster H25E, runs all dwellings adver- which makes it illegal stood rine motors: 151 the seller's. Convert the can occurin your ad. 541-410-3823 well, 2982 Hours, 32' touring coach, left tised in this newspa- to advertise any pref- If this happens to your $1595; 3.0 $1895; facts into benefits. Show $3500,call kitchen, rear lounge, per are available on erence, limitation or 4.3 (1993), $1995. the reader how the item will ad, please contact us 541-749-0724 many extras, beautiful an equal opportunity discrimination based the first day your ad 541-389-0435 help them in someway. 870 c ond. inside 8 o u t , basis. To complain of on race, color, reli- appears and we will This Boats & Accessories $34,499 OBO, Prinevdiscrimination cal l advertising tip sex, handicap, be happy to fix it as 875 ille. 541-447-5502 days HUD t o l l-free at gion, familial status or nabrought to you by & 541-447-1641 eves, s oon as w e c a n . Watercraft 1-800-877-0246. The tional origin, or inten- Deadlines are: Week- 73' Smokercraft '85, toll f re e t e l ephone tion to make any such days 11:00 noon for The Bulletin good cond., 15I-IP 16-ft wide-body canoe, slide,Bunkhouse style, number for the hear- preferences, l i m ita- next day, Sat. 11:00 gas Evinrude + sleeps 7-8, excellent hand-laid fiberglass, long ing im p aired is tions or discrimination. a.m. for Sunday and Minnkota 44 elec. Peterbilt 359 p o table condition, $ 1 6 ,900, paddles & Stearns vests, 1-800-927-9275. We will not knowingly Monday. Itasca Spirit Class C 541-390-2504 water t r uck, 1 9 9 0, motor, fish finder, 2 $350. 541-233-8944 accept any advertis2007, 20K miles, front 3200 gal. tank, 5hp 541 -385-5809 extra seats, trailer, 654 ing for r ea l e s tate entertainment center, pump, 4-3" h o ses, Thank you! extra equip. $3200. Pilgrim 27', 2007 5th 2007 SeaDoo camlocks, $ 2 5,000. Houses for Rent which is in violation of The Bulletin Classified all bells & whistles, wheel, 1 s lide, AC, 541-388-9270 2004 Waverunner, 541-820-3724 this law. All persons extremely good conSE Bend excellent condition, TV,full awning, excelare hereby informed dition, 2 s l ides, 2 lent shape, $23,900. LOW hours. Double FIND YOUR FUTURE that all dwellings adHDTV's, $45,000 20257 Knights Bridge Look at: 541-350-8629 trailer, lots of extras. HOME INTHE BULLETIN vertised are available OBO. 541-447-5484 Utility Trailers Place, brand new Bendhomes.com $10,000 Sprinter 272RLS, 2009 deluxe 3 bdrm, 2y2 bath, on an equal opportu- for Complete Listings of Your future is just a page 541-719-8444 29', weatherized, like nity basis. The Bulle1880 sq. ft. home. Area Real Estate for Sale away. Whetheryou're looking tin Classified n ew, f u rnished & $1195. 541-350-2206 5o~ LA ST! for a hat or a place tohangit, Ads published in "Waready to go, incl WineThe Bulletin Classified is 775 tercraft" include: Kayard S a t ellite dish, Big Tex LandscapWhere can you find a What are you your best source. 26,995. 541-420-9964 aks, rafts and motoring/ ATV Trailer, Manufactured/ helping hand? Pilgrim In t e rnational ized personal looking for? Every day thousandsof dual axle flatbed, Mobile Homes From contractors to 2005, 36' 5th Wheel, watercrafts. For Jayco Seneca 2007, 7'x16', 7000 lb. buyers andsellers of goods You'll find it in Model¹M-349 RLDS-5 " boats" please s e e and services dobusiness in GVW, all steel, yard care, it's all here FACTORY SPECIAL 17K mi., 35ft., Chevy Fall price $ 2 1,865. Class 870. $1400. these pages.They know The Bulletin Classifieds 5500 d i e sel , toy Viking Tent t railer in The Bulletin's New Home, 3 bdrm, 541-312-4466 541-382-4115, or 541-385-5809 you can't beat TheBulletin hauler $130 , 000. 2008, clean, s e lf $48,900 finished "Call A Service 541-280-7024. Classified Section for 541-389-2636. contained, sleeps 5, on your site,541.548.5511 Professional" Directory www.JandMHomes.com selection andconvenience easy to tow, great 541-385-5809 cond. $5200, obo. - every item is just a phone 541-383-7150. call away. Automotive Parts, Get your The Classified Section is Service & Accessories business easy to use. Every item Regal Prowler AX6 Exis categorized andevery treme Edition 38' '05, 4 Studless winter traccartegory is indexed onthe 4 slides,2 fireplaces, all 4 -ROWI N G tion tires on wheels, Immaculate! section's front page. maple cabs, king bed/ 225/60R-16, $350. Beaver Coach Marquis call54I-3855809topromoteraur serviceAdvertise bdrm separated w/slide ' for 28daysstarting at I4) Ilbsspecr oipaciageis i x ovaiiableonourwetxv Whether you are looking for 40' 1987. New cover, Weekend Warrior Toy glass dr,loaded,always 541-410-0886 with an ad in a home or need aservice, Hauler 28' 2007, Gen, new paint (2004), new in only 3 Snow tires Wild CounThe Bulletin's your future is in thepagesof inverter (2007). Onan fuel station, exc cond. garaged,lived mo,brand new $54,000, "Call A Service LT24 5 - 75R16 6300 watt gen, 111K mi, sleeps 8, black/gray still like new, $28,500, try Building/Contracting L a ndscapingNard Care Landscaping/Yard Care The Bulletin Classified. & siped on parked covered $35 000 i nterior, u se d 3X , will deliver,see rvt.com, studded Professional" chrome rims, $500 obo. 541-419-9859 or $24,999. The Bulletin ad¹4957646 for pics. NOTICE: Oregon state Serv g Ceneal 0 egon since 19tB Directory 541-382-4144. 541-280-2014 541-389-9188 Cory, 541-580-7334 law req u ires anyone who c o n tracts for construction work Zorrttr gaaErip to be licensed with the Za~4ga ~/,. Discounts available C onstruction Con Call Cutting Edge tractors Board (CCB). More Than Service Lawnworks: A n active lice n se 541-815-4097 • Peace Of Mind means the contractor LCB ¹8451 i s bonded an d i n Fall Clean Up s ured. Ver if y t h e Don't track it in an Winter Call The Yard Doctor contractor's CCB •Leaves for yard maintenance, c ense through t h e •Cones thatching, sod, sprinCCB Cons u m er • Needles kler blowouts, water Website • Pruning features, more! www.hirealicensedcontractoc • Debris Hauling Allen 541-536-1294 com LCB 5012 or call 503-378-4621. The Bulletin recomGutter mends checking with Aeration/Fall Clean-up Cleaning the CCB prior to conBOOK NOW! tracting with anyone. Weekly/one-time service Compost avail. Bonded, insured, Some other t r ades free estimates! also req u ire addi- Applications COLLINS Lawn Maint. tional licenses and Use Less Water Ca/i 541-480-9714 certifications. $$$ SAVE $$$ Improve Soil Debris Removal Motorcycles & Accessories
I
OOO
5'p<Q >
'
•
The Bulletin
The Bulletin
R U Y X
kir~,
The Bulletin
4
Wa ep
''I
I
Sprinkler B/owouts
your web source for STATEWIDE classifieds
Bend Landscaping
JUNK BE GONE
I Haul Away FREE For Salvage. Also Cleanups & Cleanouts Mel, 541-389-8107 Handyman ERIC REEVE HANDY SERVICES. Home 8 Commercial Repairs, Carpentry-Painting,
2013 Maintenance Package Available weekly, monthly and one time service EXPERIENCED Commercial & Residential
Senior Discounts Pressure-washing, 541-390-1466 Honey Do's. On-time Same Day Response promise. Senior Discount. Work guaranteed. 541-389-3361
Nelson Landscape Maintenance Serving Central Oregon Home/Rental repairs Residential Small jobs to remodels & Commercial Honest, guaranteed or 541-771-4463
Bonded & Insured CCB¹t 81595 I DO THAT!
work. CCB¹151573 Dennis 541-317-9768
Home Improvement Kelly Kerfoot Const.
28 yrs exp in Central OR!
Quality & honesty, from carpentry 8 handyman jobs, to expert wall covering install / removal. Sr. discounts CCBV47120 Licensed/bonded/insured 541-389-1413 /410-2422
Sprinkler
Blow-outs
• Snow Removal • Sprinkler Repair • Back Flow Testing • Fall Clean up •Weekly Mowing Senior Discounts Bonded & Insured 541-815-4458 LCB¹8759
Sprinkler Blowouts, and Winterization 541-382-1655 LCB¹ 7990
N OTICE: ORE G O N Landscape Contractors Law (ORS 671)
r equires a l l bu s i nesses that advertise t o p e r form L a n dscape C o n struction which incl u des: p lanting, deck s , fences, arbors, w ater-features, a n d installation, repair of irrigation systems to be licensed with the Landscape Contract ors B o a rd . Th i s 4-digit number is to be included in all advertisements which indicate the business has a bond,insurance and workers c ompensation for their employees. For your protection call 503-378-5909 or use our website: www.lcb.state.or.us to check license status before co n t racting with t h e bu s iness. Persons doing landscape m aintenance do not require a LCB license.
30Bs IREAL EsTATE IcLAssIFIEDs edS.oregOn.Com n iS a neW SuppOrted by OregOn neWSpaperS,"ClaSSifi WebSite dediCated to bringing CLaSSified LiStingS frOm arOund the StateOf OregOn tOgether on One eaSy-to-USe WebSite.
Fromjobsto homes and investment properties,you'llfind the fastest n
grOWing CLaSSifiedS SeCtiOn iS "ClaSSifiedS.Oregon.COm
BROWSE THE ENTIRE
STATE OFOREGON
classifieds.
Ore on
• ColYI
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541 -385-5809
G4 TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2012•THE BULLETIN 933
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Pickups
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AUTOS &TRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916- Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932- Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935- Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles
Antique & Classic Autos
Just too many collectibles? Sell them in The Bulletin Classifieds
Spo r t Utility Vehicles
Vans
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Auto m o biles
Automobiles
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0
Chevy Silverado 2500 HD LT 2001 Crew 6.6L diesel auto 4X4 98K, exc. cnd $17,900 541-312-9312
Call 541-815-1216
Tick, Tock
Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates!
TiCk, TOCk... ...don't let time get away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today!
Mercury Mo n t errey 1965, Exc. All original, 4-dr. sedan, in storage last 15 yrs., 390 body is good, needs C o m pression some r e s toration, High engine, new tires & li- Ford 250 XLT 1990, runs, taking bids, c ense, reduced t o 6 yd. dump bed, 541-383-3888, 541-815-3318 $2850, 541-410-3425. 139k, Auto, $5500. Chrysler SD 4-Door 1930, CD S Royal Standard, 8-cylinder,
541-410-9997
Ford F250 2002
541-385-5809
Buick Enclave 2008 CXL AWD, V-6, black, clean, mechanicall y sound, 82k miles. $22,900.
Supercab 7.3 diesel,
541-385-5809
cars. Price? You tell me! I'd guess $2000-$4000. Your servant, Bob at
maint'd, regular oil changes, $4500. Please call 541-633-5149
Chrysler Sebring 2006 Fully loaded, exc.cond, very low miles (38k), always garaged, transferable warranty Chevy G-20 c u stom incl. $8600 conversion travel van 541-330-4087 1994 128k, 5.7L, rear elect. bed, 75% tires. a Ford Crown Vic. real beauty in 8 out! Travel in economy and 1997 4 door, 127k, style and under $4000. d rives, runs a n d looks great, extra Bob, 541-318-9999 set of winter tires on rims, only $3000. 975 541-771-6500. Automobiles
Chevy Tahoe LS 2001 4x4. 120K mi, Power seats, Tow Pkg, 3rd row seating, e xtra tires, CD, prNacy tinting, upgraded rims. Fantastic cond. $7995 BMW X5 2011 X Drive Contact Tim m at Prem., white, 26k mi. 541-408-2393 for info ¹406213 $4 6 , 988 or to view vehicle.
541-318-9999, no
charge for looking.
Legal Notices
Volkswagen Jetta SE, 2008. 40,500 mi, Great condition, FWD, ABS, automatic, AC, moonroof, CD/MP3 8 much more! $12,950
LEGAL NOTICE City of Bend
541-771-2312
WHEN YOU SEE THIS
~ OO
MorePixatBendbolletin,corn
On a classified ad Infinity G35 Coupe go to 2004, B l a ck , 1 www.bendbulletin.com owner, no accidents, to view additional manual trans., great photos of the item. cond., n a v igation, Oregon 74K m i . , $6 2 0 0. AutoSource Please call Looking for your 541-598-3750 541-593-2321 or next employee? aaacregonautcsource.com email Place a Bulletin help johnmason2280O wanted ad today and GMC Yukon XL SL T P eople Look for Information gmail.com reach over 60,000 2004, loaded w/facAbo ut Products and readers each week. tory dvd, 3rd seat, Services Every Day through Mitsubishi 3 00 0 GT Your classified ad $7100. 541-280-6947 1 999, a u to., p e a r l will also appear on Tlte ttelletle Cleee/71eds w hite, very low m i . bendbulletin.com $9500. 541-788-8218. which currently reBuick Lucerne CXL ceives over 1.5 mil2009, $12,500, low Nissan Sentra, 2012lion page views low miles; 2000 Buick 12,610 mi, full warranty, every month at Century $2900. You'll PS, PB, AC, & more! no extra cost. Bullenot find nicer Buicks $17,000. 541-788-0427 tin Classifieds One look's worth a Jeep Willys 1947,custom, Get Results! Call small block Chevy, PS, thousand words. Call 385-5809 or place Bob, 541-318-9999. OD, mags+trailer. Swap your ad on-line at for backhoe.No am calls for an appt. and take a bendbulletln.com drive in a 30 mpg. car please. 541-389-6990
I
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i
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i
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The Bulletin
Chevy Wagon 1957, 4-dr., complete, $15,000 OBO, trades, please call 541-420-5453.
Ford T-Bird 1966 390 engine, power everything, new paint, 54K original miles, runs great, excellent cond. in & out. Asking $8,500.
PMto.R!
VW Thing 1974, good cond. Extremely Rare! Only built in 1973 8 1974. $8,000. 541-389-2636
541-480-3179
541-41 9-5480.
Pickups
-t — L-mhI
Chrysler 300 C o upe 1967, 44 0 e n g ine, auto. trans, ps, air, frame on rebuild, repainted original blue, original blue interior, GMC V~ton 1971, Qnly original hub caps, exc. $19,700! Original low chrome, asking $9000 mile, exceptional, 3rd or make offer. owner. 951-699-7171 541-385-9350
Chev short box step-side pickup, 1987, excellent shape inside & out, all electric, all works, $4500. 541-382-5309
•
I nternational Fla t Bed Pickup 1963, 1 t on dually, 4 s p d. trans., great MPG, could be exc. wood hauler, runs great, new brakes, $1950.
RAM 2500 2003, 57L hemiV8, hd, auto, cruise,
Everydaythousandso!buyersand sellersofgoodsandservicesdo businessiiithese pages.They $4750. 541-362-5559 or knowyoucan't beatTheBule!!n 541-663-6046 ClassifiedSectionfor selection andconvenience- everyitemis Have an item to just phon a ecall away. sell quick? TheClassifiedSectionis easy If it's under Io use.Everyitemiscategorized '500 you can place it in aiid everycategoryis indexedoii the sec!ion'front s page. The Bulletin Whetheryouarelookingfor ahome Classifieds for: or need aservice, yourfuture is in 10-3lines 7days the pages of TheBulletin Cass!ied.
Chevrolet G20 Sportsman, 1993, exlnt cond,
t16-3 lines, 14days am/fm/cd. $8400 obro. (Private Party ads only) 541-420-3634 /390-1285
The Bulletin
llQll S
98k, 4 cyli Lots of miles left in these
Studded tires for Buick 130,000 miles, great shape with accessoPark Ave., 225/60R-16, ries. $14,900. used 1 season, on rims, Plymouth B a r racuda $400 obo. 541-389-3137 FIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, 1966, original car! 300 541-923-0231 day or 541-923-2582 eves. Tires (4) LT265/70R17 door panels w/flowers hp, 360 V8, center& hummingbirds, lines, (Original 273 on Ford 8-hole wheels eng 8 wheels incl.) 4 0% t r e ad , $ 4 0 0 . white soft top & hard top. Just reduced to 541-593-2597 541-480-9277 $3,750. 541-317-9319 Winter Tires 4 BridgeFord F250 XLT 4x4 or 541-647-8483 Take care of s tone 2 2 5/55 R 1 6 L ariat, 1990, r e d, Cadillac E l D o r ado 95W on alloy rims, Advertise your car! 80K original miles, your investments 1 994, Total c r e am Porsche 911 1974, low I The Bulletin recoml like new, tire presAdd A Picture! 4" lift with 39's, well mi., complete motor/ mends extra caution I puff, body, paint, trunk trans. with the help from Reach thousands cf readers! sure monitors incl. maintained, $4000 rebuild, tuned when as showroom, blue pu r chasing i (Retail@$1900) $650. Call 541-385-5809 obo. 541-419-5495 suspension, ext. The Bulletin's leather, $1700 wheels refurb., oi l int.c & i products or services In Bend 619-889-5422 The Bulletin Ctassifieds o o ling, "Call A Service w/snow tires although from out of the area. new in & out, Lincoln Navigator 2005 car has not been wet shows i S ending c ash , Find It in perf. m ech. c o n d. Professional" Directory great cond., 124k mi., in 8 years. On trip to checks, or credit inMuch more! The Bulletin Classifiedsl 3 rows seats, DVD Boise avg. 28.5 mpg., $28,000 541-420-2715 formation may be I PROJECT CARS: Chevy 541-385-5809 player, $11,500 cash $5400, 541-593-4016. i subject toFRAUD. PORSCHE 914 1974, 2-dr FB 1949 & Chevy only. 541-475-3274 For more informaCoupe 1950 - rolling Roller (no engine), about an adveroo Cadillac Seville STS lowered, full roll cage, i tion chassis's $1750 ea., Ford Galaxle 500 1963, tiser, you may call 2003 - just finished Chevy 4-dr 1949, comMore pixaj tet!IIjj)I!lletin.tom 5-pt harnesses, rac- I the Oregon State i 2 dr. hardtop,fastback, 1921 Model T $4900 engine work ing seats, 911 dash & Attorney General's I 390 v8,auto, pwr. steer 8 piete car, $1949; Caby Certified GM meDelivery Truck radio (orig),541-419-4989 dillac Series 61 1950, 2 instruments, d ecent Office C o nsumer dr. hard top, complete chanic. Has everyshape, v e r y c o ol! i Protection hotline at Restored & Runs Ford Mustang Coupe w/spare front c l ip., thing but navigation. $1699. 541-678-3249 Ford Ranger 1999, 4x4, 1-877-877-9392. $9000. 1966, original owner, $3950, 541-382-7391 Too many bells and Toyota Camry LE, 1999, 7 1K, X- c ab , X L T , 541-389-8963 w histles t o l i s t . V8, automatic, great auto, 4 . 0L, $ 8 4 00 sets of tires 8 wheels, Serv>ng CentralOregon since 1903 DON'TMISSIHIS OBO. 541-388-0232 Porsche Cayenne 2004, bought a new one. 2179,700 shape, $9000 OBO. miles, 1 owner. 530-515-81 99 $4900 $3250. 541-408-1984 86k, immac, dealer 541-420-1283 VW Karman Ghia GMC '/4-ton maint'd, loaded, now Say "goodbuy" 1970, good cond., $1 7000. 503-459-1 580 4WD, 1997, Toyota Camry's: Ford Ranchero new upholstery and Diesel engine, extra to that unused 1979 1984, $1200 obo; FIND YOUR FUTURE convertible top. Otak't-'i .i".«'~/V6c~%1+I 940 cab, good shape, with 351 Cleveland 1985 SOLD; item by placing it in $10,000. HOME IN THE BULLETIN Chevy C-20 Pickup electric windows, Vans modified engine. 541-389-2636 1986 parts car, 1969, all orig. Turbo 44; The Bulletin Classifieds door locks & seats, Yourfutureis Ius!a pageaway. Body is in $500. auto 4-spd, 396, model $5000 obo. excellent condition, Whether you're lookingfor ahai or CST /all options, orig. Call for details, 541-382-5309 $2500 obo. a place to han g i t , The B ull e ti n 5 41 -385-580 9 owner, $24,000, 541-548-6592 541-420-4677 541-923-6049 Classifiedis yourbestsource.
j ~r,n ~ < ~
83<RHcR
Toyotas: 1999 Avalon 254k; 1996 Camry,
Chevy Astro Cargo Van 2001, pw, pdl, great cond., business car, well
•
932
Studded tires 195-60-14 on 2001 Toyota Corolla wheels, like new set of 4,$250 OBO. 541-408-1389.
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BOATS & RVs 805 - Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885 - Canopies and Campers 890- RVsfor Rent
e
940
SOLD IN 19 DAYS! "Arctic Fox Silver Edition 1140, 2005. 5 hrs on gen; air, slideout, dry bath, like new, loaded! . A/so 2004Dodge Ram 3500 quad cab dually 4x4, 11,800 mi, SuperHitch..." Richard, Bend, OR
Get Results from Qualified Central Oregon Buyers! Call us at 541-385-5809 and ask about our Whee/ Deal S ecial!
Classifjeds www.ben d b u l l
e t . ir
Purchasing Division
PUBLIC NOTICE OF COOPERATIVE PROCUREMENT T he City o f B e n d Street Dep a rtment intends to enter into a contract with E l g in
Sweeper Company for the purchase of two Crosswind regenerative air sweepers, not to exceed $391,414.00, through an interstate coopera-
tive procurement established by the National Joint P owers Alliance (N J PA) in accordance with ORS 279A.220.
It is in the best interest of the City to acquire the Crosswind regenerative air sweepers through the existing NJPA c ontract to o btain cost and time savings associated with expediting th e p r o cure-
ment process using a
cooperative procurement selection. The purpose of this notice is to provide information to the public and invite interested persons an opportunity to submit written comment.
A ny p e rson m a y submit com m ents specific to this notice by November 7, 2012 at 4:00pm. The protest shall provide a detailed statement of the legal and factual grounds to s upport the protest, demonstrate how the procurement process is contrary to law, and the relief requested. Protests s h al l be handled pursuant to OA R 1 37-046-0470; ORS 279A.225, and O RS 2 7 9 B.400 t o 279B.425.
Written protest must be delivered to Gwen Chapman, Purchasing Manager, PO Box 431, Bend, Oregon 9 7709 o r 7 1 0 N W Wall S t reet, B e nd,
Oregon 97701. This notice is given in accordance with provisions of the Oregon Revised Sta t utes, 2 79A.220, an d O r egon A d ministrative Rules, 137-046-0400 to 137-046-0480. Published October 30, 2012
Lynnsey Bondi Purchasing Analyst (541) 388-5518
I
a re or n
em
1 Itam" 3 Lines" 3 Days" - FREE! and your ad appears in PRINT and ON-LINE at bendbulletin.com
+T
1
Ke ~~
e~g
CALL 541-385-5809FOR YOUR FREE CLASSIFIED AD *Excludes all service, hay, wood, pets/animals, plants, tickets, weapons, rentals and employment advertising, and all commercial accounts. Must be an individual item under $200.00 and price of individual item must be included in the ad.
ii 'ii i e
Ask your Bulletin Sales Representative about special pricing, longer run schedules and additional features. Limit 1 ad per item per 30 days.
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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541 -385-5809
G4 TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2012•THE BULLETIN 933
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Pickups
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AUTOS &TRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916- Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932- Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935- Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles
Antique & Classic Autos
Just too many collectibles? Sell them in The Bulletin Classifieds
Spo r t Utility Vehicles
Vans
•
Auto m o biles
Automobiles
•
0
Chevy Silverado 2500 HD LT 2001 Crew 6.6L diesel auto 4X4 98K, exc. cnd $17,900 541-312-9312
Call 541-815-1216
Tick, Tock
Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates!
TiCk, TOCk... ...don't let time get away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today!
Mercury Mo n t errey 1965, Exc. All original, 4-dr. sedan, in storage last 15 yrs., 390 body is good, needs C o m pression some r e s toration, High engine, new tires & li- Ford 250 XLT 1990, runs, taking bids, c ense, reduced t o 6 yd. dump bed, 541-383-3888, 541-815-3318 $2850, 541-410-3425. 139k, Auto, $5500. Chrysler SD 4-Door 1930, CD S Royal Standard, 8-cylinder,
541-410-9997
Ford F250 2002
541-385-5809
Buick Enclave 2008 CXL AWD, V-6, black, clean, mechanicall y sound, 82k miles. $22,900.
Supercab 7.3 diesel,
541-385-5809
cars. Price? You tell me! I'd guess $2000-$4000. Your servant, Bob at
maint'd, regular oil changes, $4500. Please call 541-633-5149
Chrysler Sebring 2006 Fully loaded, exc.cond, very low miles (38k), always garaged, transferable warranty Chevy G-20 c u stom incl. $8600 conversion travel van 541-330-4087 1994 128k, 5.7L, rear elect. bed, 75% tires. a Ford Crown Vic. real beauty in 8 out! Travel in economy and 1997 4 door, 127k, style and under $4000. d rives, runs a n d looks great, extra Bob, 541-318-9999 set of winter tires on rims, only $3000. 975 541-771-6500. Automobiles
Chevy Tahoe LS 2001 4x4. 120K mi, Power seats, Tow Pkg, 3rd row seating, e xtra tires, CD, prNacy tinting, upgraded rims. Fantastic cond. $7995 BMW X5 2011 X Drive Contact Tim m at Prem., white, 26k mi. 541-408-2393 for info ¹406213 $4 6 , 988 or to view vehicle.
541-318-9999, no
charge for looking.
Legal Notices
Volkswagen Jetta SE, 2008. 40,500 mi, Great condition, FWD, ABS, automatic, AC, moonroof, CD/MP3 8 much more! $12,950
LEGAL NOTICE City of Bend
541-771-2312
WHEN YOU SEE THIS
~ OO
MorePixatBendbolletin,corn
On a classified ad Infinity G35 Coupe go to 2004, B l a ck , 1 www.bendbulletin.com owner, no accidents, to view additional manual trans., great photos of the item. cond., n a v igation, Oregon 74K m i . , $6 2 0 0. AutoSource Please call Looking for your 541-598-3750 541-593-2321 or next employee? aaacregonautcsource.com email Place a Bulletin help johnmason2280O wanted ad today and GMC Yukon XL SL T P eople Look for Information gmail.com reach over 60,000 2004, loaded w/facAbo ut Products and readers each week. tory dvd, 3rd seat, Services Every Day through Mitsubishi 3 00 0 GT Your classified ad $7100. 541-280-6947 1 999, a u to., p e a r l will also appear on Tlte ttelletle Cleee/71eds w hite, very low m i . bendbulletin.com $9500. 541-788-8218. which currently reBuick Lucerne CXL ceives over 1.5 mil2009, $12,500, low Nissan Sentra, 2012lion page views low miles; 2000 Buick 12,610 mi, full warranty, every month at Century $2900. You'll PS, PB, AC, & more! no extra cost. Bullenot find nicer Buicks $17,000. 541-788-0427 tin Classifieds One look's worth a Jeep Willys 1947,custom, Get Results! Call small block Chevy, PS, thousand words. Call 385-5809 or place Bob, 541-318-9999. OD, mags+trailer. Swap your ad on-line at for backhoe.No am calls for an appt. and take a bendbulletln.com drive in a 30 mpg. car please. 541-389-6990
I
i
i
I
i
~
I
I
i
The Bulletin
Chevy Wagon 1957, 4-dr., complete, $15,000 OBO, trades, please call 541-420-5453.
Ford T-Bird 1966 390 engine, power everything, new paint, 54K original miles, runs great, excellent cond. in & out. Asking $8,500.
PMto.R!
VW Thing 1974, good cond. Extremely Rare! Only built in 1973 8 1974. $8,000. 541-389-2636
541-480-3179
541-41 9-5480.
Pickups
-t — L-mhI
Chrysler 300 C o upe 1967, 44 0 e n g ine, auto. trans, ps, air, frame on rebuild, repainted original blue, original blue interior, GMC V~ton 1971, Qnly original hub caps, exc. $19,700! Original low chrome, asking $9000 mile, exceptional, 3rd or make offer. owner. 951-699-7171 541-385-9350
Chev short box step-side pickup, 1987, excellent shape inside & out, all electric, all works, $4500. 541-382-5309
•
I nternational Fla t Bed Pickup 1963, 1 t on dually, 4 s p d. trans., great MPG, could be exc. wood hauler, runs great, new brakes, $1950.
RAM 2500 2003, 57L hemiV8, hd, auto, cruise,
Everydaythousandso!buyersand sellersofgoodsandservicesdo businessiiithese pages.They $4750. 541-362-5559 or knowyoucan't beatTheBule!!n 541-663-6046 ClassifiedSectionfor selection andconvenience- everyitemis Have an item to just phon a ecall away. sell quick? TheClassifiedSectionis easy If it's under Io use.Everyitemiscategorized '500 you can place it in aiid everycategoryis indexedoii the sec!ion'front s page. The Bulletin Whetheryouarelookingfor ahome Classifieds for: or need aservice, yourfuture is in 10-3lines 7days the pages of TheBulletin Cass!ied.
Chevrolet G20 Sportsman, 1993, exlnt cond,
t16-3 lines, 14days am/fm/cd. $8400 obro. (Private Party ads only) 541-420-3634 /390-1285
The Bulletin
llQll S
98k, 4 cyli Lots of miles left in these
Studded tires for Buick 130,000 miles, great shape with accessoPark Ave., 225/60R-16, ries. $14,900. used 1 season, on rims, Plymouth B a r racuda $400 obo. 541-389-3137 FIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, 1966, original car! 300 541-923-0231 day or 541-923-2582 eves. Tires (4) LT265/70R17 door panels w/flowers hp, 360 V8, center& hummingbirds, lines, (Original 273 on Ford 8-hole wheels eng 8 wheels incl.) 4 0% t r e ad , $ 4 0 0 . white soft top & hard top. Just reduced to 541-593-2597 541-480-9277 $3,750. 541-317-9319 Winter Tires 4 BridgeFord F250 XLT 4x4 or 541-647-8483 Take care of s tone 2 2 5/55 R 1 6 L ariat, 1990, r e d, Cadillac E l D o r ado 95W on alloy rims, Advertise your car! 80K original miles, your investments 1 994, Total c r e am Porsche 911 1974, low I The Bulletin recoml like new, tire presAdd A Picture! 4" lift with 39's, well mi., complete motor/ mends extra caution I puff, body, paint, trunk trans. with the help from Reach thousands cf readers! sure monitors incl. maintained, $4000 rebuild, tuned when as showroom, blue pu r chasing i (Retail@$1900) $650. Call 541-385-5809 obo. 541-419-5495 suspension, ext. The Bulletin's leather, $1700 wheels refurb., oi l int.c & i products or services In Bend 619-889-5422 The Bulletin Ctassifieds o o ling, "Call A Service w/snow tires although from out of the area. new in & out, Lincoln Navigator 2005 car has not been wet shows i S ending c ash , Find It in perf. m ech. c o n d. Professional" Directory great cond., 124k mi., in 8 years. On trip to checks, or credit inMuch more! The Bulletin Classifiedsl 3 rows seats, DVD Boise avg. 28.5 mpg., $28,000 541-420-2715 formation may be I PROJECT CARS: Chevy 541-385-5809 player, $11,500 cash $5400, 541-593-4016. i subject toFRAUD. PORSCHE 914 1974, 2-dr FB 1949 & Chevy only. 541-475-3274 For more informaCoupe 1950 - rolling Roller (no engine), about an adveroo Cadillac Seville STS lowered, full roll cage, i tion chassis's $1750 ea., Ford Galaxle 500 1963, tiser, you may call 2003 - just finished Chevy 4-dr 1949, comMore pixaj tet!IIjj)I!lletin.tom 5-pt harnesses, rac- I the Oregon State i 2 dr. hardtop,fastback, 1921 Model T $4900 engine work ing seats, 911 dash & Attorney General's I 390 v8,auto, pwr. steer 8 piete car, $1949; Caby Certified GM meDelivery Truck radio (orig),541-419-4989 dillac Series 61 1950, 2 instruments, d ecent Office C o nsumer dr. hard top, complete chanic. Has everyshape, v e r y c o ol! i Protection hotline at Restored & Runs Ford Mustang Coupe w/spare front c l ip., thing but navigation. $1699. 541-678-3249 Ford Ranger 1999, 4x4, 1-877-877-9392. $9000. 1966, original owner, $3950, 541-382-7391 Too many bells and Toyota Camry LE, 1999, 7 1K, X- c ab , X L T , 541-389-8963 w histles t o l i s t . V8, automatic, great auto, 4 . 0L, $ 8 4 00 sets of tires 8 wheels, Serv>ng CentralOregon since 1903 DON'TMISSIHIS OBO. 541-388-0232 Porsche Cayenne 2004, bought a new one. 2179,700 shape, $9000 OBO. miles, 1 owner. 530-515-81 99 $4900 $3250. 541-408-1984 86k, immac, dealer 541-420-1283 VW Karman Ghia GMC '/4-ton maint'd, loaded, now Say "goodbuy" 1970, good cond., $1 7000. 503-459-1 580 4WD, 1997, Toyota Camry's: Ford Ranchero new upholstery and Diesel engine, extra to that unused 1979 1984, $1200 obo; FIND YOUR FUTURE convertible top. Otak't-'i .i".«'~/V6c~%1+I 940 cab, good shape, with 351 Cleveland 1985 SOLD; item by placing it in $10,000. HOME IN THE BULLETIN Chevy C-20 Pickup electric windows, Vans modified engine. 541-389-2636 1986 parts car, 1969, all orig. Turbo 44; The Bulletin Classifieds door locks & seats, Yourfutureis Ius!a pageaway. Body is in $500. auto 4-spd, 396, model $5000 obo. excellent condition, Whether you're lookingfor ahai or CST /all options, orig. Call for details, 541-382-5309 $2500 obo. a place to han g i t , The B ull e ti n 5 41 -385-580 9 owner, $24,000, 541-548-6592 541-420-4677 541-923-6049 Classifiedis yourbestsource.
j ~r,n ~ < ~
83<RHcR
Toyotas: 1999 Avalon 254k; 1996 Camry,
Chevy Astro Cargo Van 2001, pw, pdl, great cond., business car, well
•
932
Studded tires 195-60-14 on 2001 Toyota Corolla wheels, like new set of 4,$250 OBO. 541-408-1389.
•
4
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BOATS & RVs 805 - Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885 - Canopies and Campers 890- RVsfor Rent
e
940
SOLD IN 19 DAYS! "Arctic Fox Silver Edition 1140, 2005. 5 hrs on gen; air, slideout, dry bath, like new, loaded! . A/so 2004Dodge Ram 3500 quad cab dually 4x4, 11,800 mi, SuperHitch..." Richard, Bend, OR
Get Results from Qualified Central Oregon Buyers! Call us at 541-385-5809 and ask about our Whee/ Deal S ecial!
Classifjeds www.ben d b u l l
e t . ir
Purchasing Division
PUBLIC NOTICE OF COOPERATIVE PROCUREMENT T he City o f B e n d Street Dep a rtment intends to enter into a contract with E l g in
Sweeper Company for the purchase of two Crosswind regenerative air sweepers, not to exceed $391,414.00, through an interstate coopera-
tive procurement established by the National Joint P owers Alliance (N J PA) in accordance with ORS 279A.220.
It is in the best interest of the City to acquire the Crosswind regenerative air sweepers through the existing NJPA c ontract to o btain cost and time savings associated with expediting th e p r o cure-
ment process using a
cooperative procurement selection. The purpose of this notice is to provide information to the public and invite interested persons an opportunity to submit written comment.
A ny p e rson m a y submit com m ents specific to this notice by November 7, 2012 at 4:00pm. The protest shall provide a detailed statement of the legal and factual grounds to s upport the protest, demonstrate how the procurement process is contrary to law, and the relief requested. Protests s h al l be handled pursuant to OA R 1 37-046-0470; ORS 279A.225, and O RS 2 7 9 B.400 t o 279B.425.
Written protest must be delivered to Gwen Chapman, Purchasing Manager, PO Box 431, Bend, Oregon 9 7709 o r 7 1 0 N W Wall S t reet, B e nd,
Oregon 97701. This notice is given in accordance with provisions of the Oregon Revised Sta t utes, 2 79A.220, an d O r egon A d ministrative Rules, 137-046-0400 to 137-046-0480. Published October 30, 2012
Lynnsey Bondi Purchasing Analyst (541) 388-5518
I
a re or n
em
1 Itam" 3 Lines" 3 Days" - FREE! and your ad appears in PRINT and ON-LINE at bendbulletin.com
+T
1
Ke ~~
e~g
CALL 541-385-5809FOR YOUR FREE CLASSIFIED AD *Excludes all service, hay, wood, pets/animals, plants, tickets, weapons, rentals and employment advertising, and all commercial accounts. Must be an individual item under $200.00 and price of individual item must be included in the ad.
ii 'ii i e
Ask your Bulletin Sales Representative about special pricing, longer run schedules and additional features. Limit 1 ad per item per 30 days.
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PRICES EFFECTIVE: •=
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Ad Items Subject To Availability
GRAVY MIX One Package Western Family Turkey or Brown
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Send
• F ood S t a m p s • W IC Vou c h e r s • M anu f a c t u r e r ' s
63455 Hwy. 97 N. 541-388-2100
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We reserve the right to limit quantities • Not all items availadle at all locations
Coupons
FOOD 4 LESS - BEND I TUESDAY, DCT 30, 2012 I PAGE 1
,— DESCHUTES BREWERY
-' BUDS
BEER 6 Pack 12 Oz Bottles Selected Varieties
EA + DEP
BUD LIGHT BEER ~c a n'L er
gg
18 P ack, 12 Oz Cans & Bottles
SIERRA
IS
'.- NATURAL 12
amnacs>(wm.al %4NRCllj tulll
COIIS
EA + DEP •
qj;,
KEYSTONE, HIGH LIFE,
ICEHOUSE 8 HAMMSBEER 30 Pack 12 Oz Cans Selected Varieties
WIDMERL SHOCKTO P BEER 6 Pack 12 Oz Bottles
W
•
PEPSI, MTNDEW, DR PEPPER, SIERRAMIST
EBERHAR ICE CREA
12 Pack, 12 Oz Cans Selected Varieties EA + DEP
EA 4
+ PFP
Q u art Pail Selected Varieti
EA + DEP
DEL MONTE RAVK
RAVENSW OOD WINE
YELLOW TAIL WINE
750 ML Selected Varieties
1.5 Liter Selected Varieties
EA
EA
SUNNYD
=I "
48 Oz
CORNL GREENBEANS
Tangy
14.5 to 15.25 Oz Selected Varieties
EA
EA
W OO D l VO O D
WESTERN
KST
0
ROCKSTAR ENERGY DRINK
WESTERN DASANI WATER
MUSHROO MS
16 Oz Cans Selected Varieties
24 Pack 16.9 Oz
40z Stems & Pieces
EA + DEP
EA + DEP
EA
PAGE 2 I TUESDAY, OCT 30,2012 I FOOD 4 LESS - BEND
FAMILY I 16JA
FAMILY CREAMOF MUSHROO M SOUP 10.5 Oz
EA
La
Qm
lOPS
I
FRITOS8c CHEETOS
es
9 to100z Selected Varieties
E4
FRESH STEAMER sa CLAMS
QAIIEQ VAlUES
EQQlEII VAIUES Tis
QAIIIV VAIUES
2X~™ ~~
QNig .,>' QiMiBST 'a-'p
KOMBUCHA MAMA 13 Oz Bottle
64 Oz G r o wler
S $8 S 98 EA
EA
+ DEP
+ DEP
'
'fPiMBS TQQ
BAKED
gsl G • Na g
20 Count
PIHA
EBERHARD'S SOURCREAM 16 Oz Regular & Lite
SRRRRRR s~A„...
EA
EA
L~ ' •
18 to 20 Count Selected Varieties
LB
QAIRV
VAlUES-„ , >'. ' -'
SLICED SWISS CHEESE
EA
EQQlEII '
TEA
EA
<SERRR RR'S~~
COOKIES
BIGELOW
TEA ..~, Bl d Ih gl
TOMBSTONE 21 to 29 Oz Selected Varieties
FRESH
V l E,(
•
K
I,.
QEll
I
LB
VAlUES
- / FLAV-R-PAC VEGETABLES
EBERHARD'S CHOCOL ATE MILK 64 Oz
16 Oz Selected Varieties
OFFICIAL DWNK O F HALLOW K E N !
EA
EA FOOD 4 LESS - BEND I TUESDAY, OCT 30,2012 IPAGE 3
Oper 1,000 NEW Chech Out Our Hetn
MEAT
PROGD0Ut E Department
PR DUCTS! I
I i 0
0
•
]
NEWYORK STEAK
FUJI
Boneless Beef
Washington Grown
LB
LB
CROSSRIB POTROAST Boneless Beef
GOLDENRIPE
APPLES
~48! DANISH SQUASH
JUMBO YELLOW
,'..98'
ONIONS
Northwest Grown
,,S $8
GREENBELL PEPPERS
LB
PORK SIRLOIN ROAST Bone-In
REDCRIMSON PEARS
I
I t
New Crop
8 38 LB
LB
RIB EYE STEAK
CORNISH GAMEHENS Frozen
CAULIFLO WER
' $$98
Snow White
Heads
$58 LB
WHOLE
TILAPIA Frozen
~~p
CHICKEN BREAST
Southern Grown
LB
Boneless
$i88
ROMA
TOMATOE S
HILL'S SLICED BACON
Red Ripe Best Flavor
8 28 P/
Y our L o c a l l y O wne d Ad Items Subject To Avoilobility PAGE 4 I TUESDAY, OCT 30,2012 I FOOD 4 LESS - BEND
LB
Slab
s
$348
LB
PRICES EFFECTIVE' •
•
I
I I
31 1
$3455 Hwy. 97 N., Bend • 541-388-2100
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