The Bulletin Paper 11-30-12

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Serving Central Oregon since1903 75f t

FRIDAY November30,2012

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Makingmemories

SPORTS• D1

FAMILY• B1

bendbulletin.com

Last gameasanofficial will be first forstatetitle By Bill Bigelow The Bulletin

He'll be retiring after a 40year career, butDave White is expecting no particular fanfareor recognition.Truth is, he would far prefer that the crowd at Hillsboro Stadium this Saturday night barely even knows he's there. After all, for a high school football official, anonymity is the highest form of praise. Forty years. That's a lot of long, tedious drives to distant outposts. A lot of muddy fields, frozen toes, penalty flags and irate coaches. And for most of

Dave White, 71, of Alfalfa, will work the last game of his 40-year career as a high school football official Saturday in the 5A state championship game at Hillsboro.

those years, it's been a battle to overcome cancer. Saturday in Hillsboro, White will make a fitting farewell. At age 71 he will, for the first time, be officiating in a state football title game.

"Lots of playoff games,

semifinals," White says. "But this will be the first final." White will head a crew of five Central Oregon officials working the Oregon School Activities Association's Class 5A state championship game between Marist and Sherwood. SeeWhite/A5

Ryan Brennecke The Bulletin

• Bend Rep. JasonConger praisesthe plan to cut $865milion fromthe pensionsystem By Lauren Dake The Bulletin

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SALEM — Oregon Gov. John Kitzhaber's proposed 2013-15 budget includes more than $800 million in assumed savings by making cuts to the state pension system. Today, the governor will unveil more details of his $16.2 billion proposed budget for the upcoming biennium. But a preview of the budget released Thursday shows a push for curtailing pension

ere

costs by capping cost-of-living increases and curbing an outof-statecredit some retirees receive. Rep. Jason Conger, R-Bend, who pushed for pension reforms in the 2011 and 2012 legislative sessions, called the move by the Democratic

Za

governor "a major step in the right direction." The $865 million in proposed cuts to the Public Employees Retirement System would affect not only state government, but local governments and schools. About $253 million of the

biennium spending plan is tied to K-12 education. The governor's budget is considered a road map; lawmakers use it as a starting point for negotiations. PERS faces a $16 billion unfunded liability. School districts in general are expected to see a higher increase than other public employers in contributions imposed by the PERS Board of Directors. See Budget/A5

The cost ofPERS Much of PERSrevenue comesfrom its investment fund. When the fund doesn't do well, earnings fall and employers must make up the difference to keep the fund stable. Rates vary depending on the

ru,

employer. Onaverage, the rate increase is 45percent. Thesystem's current unfunded liability is $16 billion. School districts in general

are expected to see agreater increase than other public employers. IL=

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RATES FORMOST PUBLIC EMPLOYEES

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Central Jefferson Crook Oregon I a pni„u of Bend $ohp I County County Community Collngn City

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20% Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

Ray Ross,48, a ski instructor at Mt. Bachelor Ski Resort, brushes a layer of fresh snow off his truck

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15 13%

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Thursday afternoon in the Mt. Bachelor parking lot. The current snow depth at West Village is 20 inches, with several additional inches of snow forecast to accumulate at the resort through the weekend. Hoodoo Mountain Resort on the Santiam Pass is still waiting for enough snowto open but operators there are

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'11- '13'l3 ' l5

11- '13'13 '15

By Tom Schoenberg B(oomberg News.

WASHINGTON — CIA employees murdered military scientist Frank Olson in 1953 after he raised concerns about testing chemical and biological weapons on human subjects without their consent, according to a lawsuit brought by his two sons. Eric and Nils Olson, in a complaint filed Wednesday against the United States in Washington, said the agency has covered up the cause of their father's death for 59 years. Frank Olson, who the CIA admitted was given LSD a few days before his death, didn't jump from a 13th-floor

window of the Statler Hotel in New York City, but rather was pushed, they claim. "The circumstances surrounding the death mirrored those detailed in an assassination manual that, upon information and belief, the CIA had drafted that same year," Scott Gilbert, a lawyer for the Olsons, wrote in the complaint. Olson's family has tried to piece together how Frank Olson died and the circumstances surrounding his death ever since a 1975 government report on CIA activities in the U.S. said that he committed suicide after being given LSD without his knowledge. See Suit/A4

e p We use recycled newsprint AnIndependent

Vol. 109,No. 335,

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Source: Oregon PERS

hopingforenough by thew eekend.Fora completeforecast,seeWe ather,PageC6.

Sons'suit allegesCIA hid causeof dad'sdeath

'11- '13'13 '15

Andy Zetgert / The Bulletin

"Something is causing the entire reef system here in Kauai to lose its immune system." Terry Lilley, marine biologist

Coral reefinfection hasbiologists alarmed By Kim Murphy Los Angeles Times

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Kim Murphy/ Los Angeles Times

Marine biologist Terry Lilley has been documentingthe disease afflicting coral along Kauai's north shore in Hanalei, Hawaii.

INDEX Business E1-4 Comics B 4 - 5 Family B1 - 6 S ports D I-6 Calendar B 3 C r osswords 85, F2 Local News C1-6 Stocks E2-3 Classified F1-4 Editorials C 4 M o vies GO! 26 TV B2

HANALEI, Hawaii — When compiling a list of places that may be described as paradise, Hanalei Bay on the rugged north shore of the island of Kauai surely qualifies. The perfect crescent bay, rimmed by palm trees, emerald cliffs and stretches of white sand, has always had a

dreamy kind of appeal. The problem is what lies below thesurface ofthe area's shimmering blue waters. Since June, a mysterious milky growth has been

spreadingrapidly acrossthe coral reefs in Hanalei and

TODAY'S WEATHER Rainy High 46, Low 34

the surrounding bays of the north shore — so rapidly that biologist Terry Lilley, who has been documentingthe phenomenon, says it now affects 5 percent of all the coral in Hanalei Bay and up to 40 percent of the coral in nearby Anini Bay. O ther areas are "justas bad, if not worse," he said. The growth, identified by scientists at the U.S. Geological Survey as both a cyanobacterial pathogen — a bacteria that grows through photosynthesis — and a fungus, is killing all the coral it strikes. SeeCoral/A4

TOP NEWS SYRIA:Internet shut down, A3

FISCAL CLIFF:Obama's plan, A6


A2 THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 20'I2

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Discoveries, breakthroughs, trends, names in the news — things you need to know to start your day.

TODAY

MILESTONE

exico ru war artners i ro enew roun un er a eron By Tracy Wilkinson, Richard Fansset and Brian Bennett Los Angeles Times

MEXICO CITY — In the six years of outgoing President Felipe Calderon's war against drug gangs, the U.S. became a prin-

cipal player in Mexico, sending drones and sniffer dogs, police trainers and intelligence agents to a country long suspicious of its powerful neighbor. Calderon, who steps down Saturday, essentially rewrote the rulesunder which foreign forces could act in Mexico in matters of national security. There has been relatively little public protest, reflecting the severity of a conflict that has killed tens of thousands nationwide and spread violence south into Central America — without significantly reducing the flow of drugs. Incoming President Enrique Pena Nieto, whose Institutional Revolutionary Party long embodied avocal Mexican nationalism, has said he wants to maintain cooperation with the United States at a high level,

although he i s

suggesting

some policy shifts. U.S. intelligence has led to some of C alderon's biggest successes, the killing or arrest of several key drug capos. At a more modest level, U.S. trainers are teaching Mexico's notoriously corrupt police how to fill out reports and collect evidence. American military officers sit side by side with Mexican navy c ounterparts planning and monitoring operations from classified centers. But the United States also has at times been sucked into relationships w it h s e curity agencies that have been accused of serious human rights abuses. A number of embarrassments, including the shooting by Mexican police of CIA operatives and a fatal attack on civilians by Honduras forces aided by U.S. agents, have highlighted some of the failings of the multibillion-dollar effort. In both cases, local forces involved had received U.S. money, vetting and training. The military, once one of Mexico's respected i n stitutions, has committed numerous abuses, including torturing detainees and killing innocent people. Overall, however, officials and experts on b ot h s ides praise the cooperation. "The r elationship ( w i t h

It's Friday, Nov. 30, the 335th day of 2012. There are 31 days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS • Missouri lottery officials verified a winning ticket from

Wednesday's Powerball

drawing and scheduled anews ment as of December 2011, the conference in Dearborn, Mo. most recent statistics available. Although neither side will speak of it publicly, the DeIN HISTORY partment of H o meland Security has dispatched PredaHighlights:In 1782, the United tor drones based in southern States and Britain signed Arizona to fly o ver Mexico preliminary peace articles in and collect so-called patternParis, ending the Revolutionary of-life information that allows War. In1803, Spain completed authorities to find safe houses the process of ceding Louisiana and predictdrug traffi ckers' to France, which had sold it movements, say current and to the United States. In1835, former department officials. Samuel LanghorneClemens U.S. Customs and Border — better known as Mark Twain Protection oversees a fleet of 10 — was born in Florida, Mo. drones. It works with the FBI, In1874, British statesman Sir Drug Enforcement AdminisWinston Churchill was born at tration and Mexican authoriBlenheim Palace. In1939, the ties, streaming live images to Winter War began asSoviet the Coast Guard and Southern troops invaded Finland. (The Command in Doral, Fla., for conflict ended the following drug interdiction operations. March with a Soviet victory.) In addition to the drones, Ten years ago:A nightclub fire the U.S. helps vetted Mexiin Caracas, Venezuela, killed can units compile intelligence 50 people. through telephone and radio intercepts and by paying off Five years ago:A man took low-level cartel members who hostages at a Hillary Clinton turn on their superiors, say campaign office in Rochester, current and former law enN.H.; Leeland Eisenberg forcement officials. surrendered about five hours This kind of i n telligencelater. sharing is believed to have led One year ago:Police in Los to the detection of key fugitive Angeles and Philadelphia drug lords such as Arturo Beldismantled Occupy Wall Street tran Leyva in 2009 and Antoencampments in both cities. ligence was a game-changer nio Ezequiel Cardenas Guillen in the drug war. "The Ameria year later. Both were killed can intelligence systems are in shootouts with Mexican naBIRTHDAYS simply more potent than the val special forces. "This is by far the greatest Mexican ones," he said. Actor Efrem Zimbalist Jr. is Mexican naval special forces cooperation between the two 94. Actor Robert Guillaume and a corps of specially vetted armed forces in recent memis 85. Radio talk show host federal police units have proved ory," said Roderic Ai Camp, G. Gordon Liddy is 82. Movie most ready to put aside anti- a government professor and director Ridley Scott is 75. U.S. sentiment to work closely Mexico expert at Claremont Playwright David Mamet is 65. with the A m ericans. Other McKenna College. "I can't Actor Mandy Patinkin is 60. organizations, like the hide- think of any other time when Musician Shuggie Dtis is 59. bound, top-heavy army, have that collaboration was as ex— From wire reports been slower to come around, tensive and pragmatic." say current and former U.S. officials and Mexican analysts. U.S. officials have had to adjust as well, overcoming deep mistrust o f t h ei r M e x ican partners to focus on those vetted units and consult regularly with Calderon's security chief, o appear in the Classifieds through December~+ Genaro Garcia Luna. Only $35.00 per week*! Americans have had to tread *Your ad will publish 7 consecutive days carefully, even with the new Mexican mentality: In a sign and is limited to one inch of lingering sensitivity, U.S. of(I0 lines of text or (ewer lines with text and graphics) ficials interviewed for this artiCoIor may be addedfor $I.OOlday extra! cle did not want to be identified by name and sought to cast Call today to list your event in Classifieds! their participation as more ad~44; Mon day ugh thro Friday,7:30a.m.to 5:00 p.m. visory than operational. 54t-385-5809or54t-382-rott More than 14,000 Mexican police, guards, prosecutors and othershad received U.S. training under Calderon's governAmerica, an area historically more susceptible to U.S. intervention. That has prompted the United States to expand its presence there as well. In Mexico,the U.S. expansion represents a c u l t ural shift. History is replete with U.S. meddling. Mexican law, rhetoric and sentiment have long rejected any hint of foreign interference. C alderon's strategy h a d b een w i dely c r i t icized a t home, but more for how he has executed it. The drug war has left an enormous toll of dead, abused and m i ssing, even while cartel dominance has extended to wide swaths of Mexican territory. The public acceptance of U.S. involvement in the crackdown is largely the result of a wareness of how d ire t h e threat from cartels is, and how ill-equipped Mexican forces are to fight them. "Mexican political culture has changed in r ecent decades," said Eduardo Guerrero, a security expert at a Mexico City consulting firm. "Especially with the free-trade agreement, we see the U.S. as more of a partner." Guerrero said U.S. intel-

Felipe Calderon Former president of

Mexico; a fiscal liberal but social conservative

EARLY YEARS Born 1962 in Morelia, Mexico; his father helped form the National Action

Party (PAN) Education Law degree;

master's in economics from Autonomous Technical Institute of Mexico; master's in public administration from Harvard University

ROAD TOTHE PRESIDENCY • Served twice in federal Chamber of Deputies; national president of PAN, 1996-1999; state-owned development bank director; energy minister

PRESIDENCY • Elected in 2006; known

for his war on Mexico's drug cartels, which led to

violence • Raised salaries for police and armed forces, but capped those for high-level civil servants • Has had friendly relationship with U.S.; working with lawmakers on immigration issues • Mexican presidents may

only serve onesix-year term Source: San Francisco Chronicle, Reuters, MCT Photo Service

©2012 Mcclatchr-rribone News service

Mexico) is at an all-time high," a top U.S. law enforcement official based in Mexico said in an interview. "There is a partnership across the board, and it is extremely effective." Since Calderon took office six years ago, Washington has pumped more than $2 billion into Mexico's drug war and discreetlydeployed hundreds of operatives from the CIA, the Treasury and Justice departments and the FBI, as well as retired cops and judges. As Calderon's forces have worked with the Americans to take on the powerful Sinaloa, Gulf and Zeta cartels, among others, many of these have moved steadily into Central

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DID YOU HEAR?

ElvisDay? Congressman has hunko' love By Richard Simon Los Angeles Times

W ASHINGTON — Wi t h lawmakers singing the blues about the looming "fiscal cliff," why not a resolution to show their support for designating Jan. 8 as Elvis Presley Day? Ten members of Congress have signed onto the resolution to show they have a big hunk o' love for the king of rock 'n' roll. Presley, born Jan. 8, 1935, in Tupelo, Miss., died at age 42 on Aug. 16, 1977, at Graceland in Memphis, Tenn. He "remains one of the most famous American entertainers of all time whose influence on music and whose cultural impact continues today," according to the resolution. The resolution was introduced by Rep. Larry Kissell, DN.C., who was defeated for reelection this month. Presley's "impact on rock music, our culture and our nation is long overdue to be recognized," Kissell said in a letter to colleagues. With time running out on the c ongressional s ession, it's u ncertain w hether t h e measure wil l c o m e b efore the House before Congress leaves.

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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012•THE BULLETIN

Top

A3

T O RIES

Obama, Romneymeet: Chili, not chilly By Ben Feller

Over a private lunch on Thursday, Obama and RomWASHINGTON — T h r ee ney had some white turkey weeks after the election, Mitt chili, S outhwestern g r i lled Romney made it to the White c hicken salad and — f r o m House. the reports of it — the kind For about 90 minutes. After of actual conversation that an odd arrival in which a man never occurswhile two presirushed his SUV and ended up dential nominees are bashing getting arrested by the Secret each other's ideas during a Service. campaign. It wasn't the start of a term They shook hands in the as Romney had envisioned. Oval Office. They spoke of But it was, at least, all on good A merican leadership in t h e terms with the man who de- world. They pledged to keep feated him,President Barack in touch. Maybe even work Obama. together. The Associated Press

All that, at least, according to a White House statement about what happened behind closed doors. The two men themselves never faced reporters. "Each man wanted to have a private conversation," said White House spokesman Jay Carney. "They didn't want to turn it into a press event." And, according to the White House s t a tement, "They pledged to stay in touch, particularly i f o p portunities to work togetheron shared interests arise."

Former Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney arrives Thursday at the White House for his luncheon with President Barack Obama. t t A

Pss,

In ria,air ort,We s ut own By Anne Barnard New York Times News Service

By Ethan Bronner New York Times News Service

raising fears of an impending

U NITED NATI O N S — More than 130 countries voted Thursday to grant Palestine the upgraded status of nonmember state in the United Nations, a stinging defeat for Israel and the United States and a boost for President M a hmoud Abbas of the Palestinian Authority, who was weakened by the recent eight

escalation of the government's crackdown on t h e u p rising there — and the largest commercial airport in the capital was shut down because of

fighting nearby, opponents of

days of fighting in Gaza.

Homs City Union of The Syrian Revolution via The Associated Press

Syrian citizens walk Thursdayin a destroyed street in Homs province that was attacked by Syrian government warplanes a day earlier. The image was provided by the Homs City Union of The Syrian Revolution and its authenticity was confirmed by other reporting by The Associated Press. purposes, but the activist in Beirut said the shutdown was because of"hit-and-run" strikes by rebels intending to force the closure of the facility, a key conduit for supplies and cash for the government. Other activists also reported the closure of the Damascus airport, and several airlines said that they had halted regularly scheduled flights to Syria's capitaL Syria's information minister, Omran al-Zoubi, was quoted on a Lebanese news web-

%O R LD IN BRIEF

Missouri confirms 1 Powerball winner DEARBORN, Mo. — Missouri Lottery o f ficials on T hursday verified one o f two tickets that matched all six numbers to split a record $588 million Powerball jackpot, but that ticket holder — and another in Arizona — remained a mystery, even as neighbors and co-workers lamented their l osses and gossiped about who may have won. The tickets were sold at a convenience store in suburban Phoenix, Ariz., and at a gas station in Dearborn, Mo., just off Interstate 29, the highway linking Kansas City to the Canadian border. Missouri lottery officials said they verified a t icket that was presented to them Thursday and set a n ews conference today at a high school near where the ticket was purchased. L ottery C h i e f Op e r a tions Officer Gary Gonder couldn't provide any details, including whether the ticket was bought b y s o meone from Missouri.

U.N. gives Palestine new status

BEIRUT — Two major links with the outside world were shut down Thursday in Syria when Internet access disappeared across the country-

the Syrian government said. Two companies that monitor Internet traffic, Arbor Inc., and Akamai, released data suggesting the outage had continuedfor several hours since about 10 a.m. Syrian time, and that there was no indication it had stopped. The Internet has been a strategic weapon for the uprising and the government alike, allowing activists to organize and communicate but also exposing them to surveillance. Fighters, activists and ordinary citizens upload video showing rebel exploits and government crackdowns, but video footage has also exposed rebel atrocities. There were conflicting reports of the reason for the airport closure. An anti-government activist in Beirut said that the airport in Damascus, the capital, had been closed as rebelfighters edged ever closer, while the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights blamed a fiercegovernment offensive. State media had reported that it was closed for maintenance

Pahlo Martinez Monsivais The Associated Press

whether his treatment at the Quantico, Va., facility was so punishing that it w a rrants dismissal of his case. The hearing c ontinues F r iday with prosecutors likely to cross-examine the 24-yearold intelligence analyst.

Manning, speaking publicly for the first time since his May 2010 arrest, said he got so used to leg irons and being locked up 23 hours a day that when he was finally transferred to m edium-security confinement at Fort Leavenworth, Kan., in April 2011, he felt uneasy moving freely around the cell block. Besides being classified "maximum custody," Manning was subjected to additional restraints during his nine months at Quantico.

Gunmen kill activist despite protection

MEXICO CITY — An environmental activist who attempted to protect Mexican forests from drug traffickers has been slain along with her 10-year-old son, even though they were under police protection, her associates said Thursday. WikiLeaks suspect J uventina V i l l a M o j i ca was Wednesday when rails against jail rules aboutkilled 30gunmen intercepted FORT MEADE, Md. — An her police convoy in the minArmy private charged with eral-rich hills o f s outhern sending reams of classified Guerrero state, colleagues information to t h e s ecret- said. Her son, Rey, was also busting website WikiLeaks killed, an d a 7- y e ar-old testified Thursday that his daughter survived, the assojailers at a Marine Corps brig ciates said. answered hi s c o m plaints H er death f o l lows t h e about "absurd" restrictions recent slayings of at l east by tightening the screws. 15 other local activists, inPfc. Bradley Manning tes- cluding Villa's husband last tified on the third day of a year, in increasingly violent hearing atFort Meade, near Guerrero. Baltimore, t o de t e r mine — From wire reports

site as denying reports that the airport road was closed, and declared that the government was not responsible for the Internet outage. There were no immediate reports of the fighting at the commercial airport by state media on Thursday, according to the SANA Twitter feed. But fighting has been especially intense around Damascus over the past two weeks, with rebels seizing many air bases and weapons, attacking

in a string of suburbs around the eastern edge of the city and approaching the airport to the southeast. Some analysts have speculatedthat if the government felt itscore interests were threatened, the military might unleash a desperate crackdown. " Deliberately or n o t , t h e rebels could be forcing the regime's hand," said Yezid Sayigh, a military analyst at the Carnegie Middle East Center in Beirut.

EGYPT

Islamistsrushto approval of conservativeconstitution By Hamza Hendawi and Maggie Michael

l iberal opposition an d t h e powerful judiciary. Voting had The Associated Press not beenexpected for another CAIRO — Islamists on Thurs- two months. But the assembly day rushed to approve a draft abruptly moved it up in order constitution for Egypt without to passthe draftbefore Egypt's the participation of liberal and Supreme Constitutional Court Christian members, aiming to rules on Sunday on whether to pre-empt a court ruling that dissolve the panel. could dissolve their panel and To come into effect, the further inflaming the clash be- draft must be passed in a natween the opposition and Presi- tionwide referendum, which dent Mohammed Morsi. Morsi said Thursday will be The move advances a charter held "very soon." "I am saddened to see this with an Islamist bent that rights experts say could give Muslim come out while Egypt is so clerics oversight over legisla- divided," Egypt's top reform tion and bring restrictions on leader,Nobel Peace laureate freedom of speech, women's Mohamed E l Baradei s a i d, rights and other liberties. speaking on private Al-Nahar The assembly that has been TV. But he predicted the docuworking on the constitution ment would not last long. "It for months raced to pass it in will be part of political folklore a single marathon session that and will go to the garbage bin continued past midnight, with of history." members voting article-by-arThursday's vote escalates ticle on the more than 230-ar- the already bruising confronticle draft. The lack of inclusion tation sparked last week when was on display in the nation- Morsi gave himself near abally televised gathering — of solute powers by neutralizing the 85members in attendance, the judiciary, the last branch there was not a single Chris- of the state not in his hands. tian and only four women, all Islamists. Many of the men wore beards, the hallmark of Muslim conservatives. Providing unparalled For weeks, liberal, secular service across a variety of and Christian members, alindustries since 1983. ready a minority on the 100541-389-1505 member panel, have b een 400 SW Bluff Dr Ste 200 withdrawing to protest what Bend, OR 97702 they call the Islamists' hijacking of the process. The sudden rush to finish came as the latest twist in a EMPLOYMENT PROFESSIONALS week-long crisis pitting Morsi and his Islamist supporters www.expresspros.com against a mostly secular and

E~nress-

The new ranking could make it easier for the Palestinians to pursue Israel in international legal forums, but it r e mained unclear what effect it would have o n attaining w hat b o t h sides say they want — a two-state solution. Still, the vote offered a showcase for an extraordinary international lineup of support forthe Palestinians and constituted a deeply symbolic achievement for their cause, made even weightier by arriving on the 65th anniversary of the General Assembly vote that divided th e f o rmer British Mandate of Palestine into two states, one Jewish and the other Arab — a vote that Israel considers the international seal of approval for its birth. The tally, in which 138 members voted yes,nine voted no and 41 abstained, took place after a speech by Abbas to the General Assembly, in which he called the moment a "last chance" to save the two-state solution amid a narrowing window of opportunity. Abbas and Ron Prosor, the Israeli ambassador to the United Nations, blamed the other side for not doing enough to pursue peace. "We have not heard one word from any Israeli officialexpressing any sincere concern to save the peace process," Abbas said. Prosor, speaking after Abbas but before the vote was taken, said the U.N. resolution would do nothing to advance the process. "Today the Palestinians are turning their back on peace," he said. "Don't let history record that today the U.N. helped them along on their march of folly."

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A4 THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012

Suit

lawsuit, which c ites statements from Williams Sargent, Continued from A1 a psychiatrist who consulted T he family's lawsuit i n for the B r itish i ntelligence cludes one claim of negligent agency MI6 and worked with supervision by th e agency Olson in Europe. " Concerned that Dr . O l and requests that damages be decided at trial. son had serious misgivings CIA spokesman Preston relatedto those murders and Golson said in a n emailed might therefore pose a secustatement that th e a gency rity risk, Dr. Sargent recomdoesn't comment on pending mended to his superiors that courtcases. Dr. Olson no longer have acHe said t hat t h e a gen- cess toclassified research facy's covert behavioral r e- cilities in Britain," according s earch program known as to the complaint. MK-ULTRA was investigated Someone at the CIA also in 1975 by the Rockefeller placed a memorandum in Commission and the Church Olson's file claiming he may Committee, and in 1977 by have violated security restricthe Senate Select Committee tions in connection with his on Intelligence and the Sen- trip, the sons allege. ate Subcommittee on Health The complaint lays out an and Scientific Research. alleged chronology of the nine "Without commenting days precedinghisdemise. on this specific legal matCointreau laced with LSD ter, CIA activities related to MK-ULTRA have been thorIn November 1953,Olson oughly investigated over the allegedly attended a meeting years, and the agency coop- in Deep Creek, Md., involverated with each of those in- ing men from his division and vestigations," Golson said. "In the CIA. At dinner, Olson was addition, tens of thousands of one of several men who unpages related to the program wittingly drank from a bottle have been declassified and of Cointreau that had been released to the public." laced with LSD. Olson's sons said in the suit Two CIA scientists in atthey have asked repeatedly tendance, Sidney G o ttlieb "to be told the truth" about and Robert Lashbrook, were theirfather's death and "each responsible for the drugging time, the government has re- and did it as an experiment, sponded with falsehoods." according to the complaint. Five days later, Olson told A bioweapons expert a colleague, Vincent R u F rank Olson was a b i o- wet, that he was considering weapons expert with a spe- resigning. "Upon information and becial operations division of the Army's biological laboratory lief, Dr. Olson's statement was who specialized in aerobiol- based onhis ethicalconcerns ogy. Since 1950, Olson's divi- regarding the CIA's conduct," sion worked closely with the according to the complaint. Central Intelligence Agency, That same day, Ruwet and according to the lawsuit. Lashbrook took Olson to New In 1953, Olson traveled to York, explaining to Olson's Europe to visit biological re- wife that it was for psychiatsearch facilities in London, ric treatment because Olson P aris, Norway a n d W e s t might be dangerous to his Germany. family, the sons allege. D uring the t ri p h e w i t In New York, Olson was exnessed "extreme interroga- amined by an "allergist," Hartions in which the CIA com- old Abramson, who gave him mitted murder using biologisedatives and recommended cal agents that Dr. Olson had Olson be hospitalized for psydeveloped," according to the chiatric treatment, according

Coral killer Areas around Hanalei Bay, Hawaii, have been hit

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to the complaint. staff to President Gerald Ford, On Nov. 27, Olson an d w r o t e a memorandumtoforLashbrook checked into the m e r S e cretary o f D e fense Statler Hotel. The men had D o n ald Rumsfeld, Ford's chief two martinis each before go- o f s t aff at the time, noting ing to bed in the same room. t h a t th e administration had At about 2:30 a.m., Olson fell n o t f ully investigated Olson's from the window. death and saying he was conLashbrook didn't call poc e r ned that a lawsuit could relice. Instead, he called hi s s u l t i n t h e disclosureofclassisupervisor Gottlieb and then f i e d information, according to Abramson, Olson's the complaint. sons claim. T he f a m i l y "WithOut "During one of t hen met w i th thesecalls,thehotel Cpmmgritjrlg Ford, who told

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and homes are connected to The person on the v iously be e n r6/BtBd tp cesspoolsand septicsystems. o ther end o f t h e told the truth," "There have also been some Continued from A1 call re s ponded MK-ULTRA according to What's more, it's spreading studies of sediment and nu'That's too bad,'" the complaint. /IByg Qggrl at the rate of 1 to 3 inches a trients, primarily in H analei a ccording t o t h e They later met Orpu~ Erh/y thprpu week on every coral it infects. River, and during rain events, with the CIA's pl t friyr-Ste Btr-d "There is nowhere we know there is excessive suspended Olson's death is then-Director "substantially simi- p y | Dr t/Ig of in the entire world where an sediment in the river, exceedWilliam Colby, entire reef system for 60 miles ing water quality standards," lar e to an a ssaswho apologized has been compromised in one she said. "I've seen plumes exsination technique for any role the t/I~ Bg~rICg fell swoop: This bacteria has tendinginto the ocean. I've seen described in a CIA agency played been killing some of these 50- sediment settling on corals." manual published CpppgrBtgd in the suicide. to 100-year-old corals in less But is that what led to the re1953, which recColby later said Wlt/I BBC/1 than eight weeks," Lilley said. cent outbreak of a bacterial inommends disguisin a me m o i r "Something is causing the en- fection'? No one can say. Lilley ing the murder as Of t/IOS~ that Olson was tire reef system here in Kauai theorizes that pollution could an accident and j r I y fDStjgBtj prI S " a CIA agent. to lose its immune system." have weakened the coral and suggests drugging E ach m e m — PrestonGolson, ber of O l son's The discovery of the new made it more susceptible to a the person, hitting coraldisease is only one of a bacterial outbreak, but can't them in the temple CIA sp o kesman f a m ily was paid number of ailments afflicting be certain. with a blunt object $187,500 as part nearly all the w orld's coral In a preliminary review in and then causing of a settlement. "The family's acceptance reefs, which are threatened September, the USGS said the them to fall more than 75 feet by poisonous runoff, rising general healthof coral reefs onto a hard surface, accord- o f t h ose funds was induced oceans, increasingly a cidic along Kauai's north shore was ing to the complaint. by theCIA's false representawaters and overfishing. poor. "The overall picture was A c l osed-casket f uneral t i o n that it had disclosed all But this one could jeopar- one of a severely degraded concealed that O lson ha d r e l evant information regarddize a multibillion-dollar tour- reef impacted by sediments been hit in the head prior to i n g the circumstances of Dr. ist industry in Hawaii, which and turf algae," the agency's hisfall,thesonsalleged. Ol son ' s death," the sons said depends on the stunning dis- report said, with symptoms of At the time of their father's i n their complaint. plays of color and wildlife for "chronic stress." death, Eric Olson was 9 and In 1 9 94, the sons had their divers and snorkelers. That Work, the USGS scientist, Nils Olson was 5. father's body exhumed. An is especially true along the saidthe loss of coral means a The CIA determined that Ol- a u topsy revealed a hematoma beaches of Kauai, where the danger of losing the fish, turson died in the course of his of- o n Olson's temple, according north shore with a few excep- tles and various invertebrates ficial duties and that his family t o the complaint. tions remains a place of pris- that depend on it for sustewouldreceivedeathbenefits. Base d i n p ar t on the autine natural beauty. nance and shelter. Twenty-three years later, t o p sy, the New York District "It's very alarming," said "A lot of people come to after the report linking LSD A t t o rney's Office sent a letter Wendy Wiltse of the federal Hawaii in part because it is a to their father's death, the t o t h e CIA in 1996 stating it Environmental Pr o t e ction beautiful place both on land Olsons threatened to sue the p l a nned to reopen the invesAgency in Honolulu. "All of and in the water, so coral reefs government unless they re- t i g ation into Olson's death. us areconcerned about it.We are a resource with tangible ceived answers and a finan- T h e investigation was closed want to do more. Part of the economicvalue,"he said."Like cial settlement, according to a y e ar later with the official problem is we don't know what it or not, ecosystem health is the complaint. cause of death changed from to do, especially in the case of closely intertwined with huFormer Vice President Dick "suicide" to "unknown," aca disease that's spread by a man and animal health." Cheney, then deputy chief of c o r d ingtothecomplaint. pathogen. It's not like we can put antibiotics in the ocean." SPECIAL SPECIAL SPECIAL EXTRA R esearchers at t h e U . S . SPECIAL 65% OFF 21.99 50% OFF 20% OFF Geological Survey r eported CLEARANCE COTTON SWEATERS DESIGNER COATS DENIM JEANS last week that the disease had Special Reg. $50, after Special162.50. Special 29.40-41.70. Reg. reached "epidemic" propor17.32-24.32. $49-69.50. after special special 24.99. Only at Reg./Orig.* $325, "This is the first time a tions. Orig.*49.50-69.50, Macy's. From after special $195. 36.75-52.1 3. after special John Ashford. From Kenneth From Calvin Klein Jeans, cyanobacterial/fungal disease 19.80-27.80. S-XXL*WeblD our Style atCo., more. Cole (+ Weblo on this scale has been docuDress shirt & tie 720822. 685200), Misses. Selections mented in Hawaiian corals," selections. Calvin Klein, for petites and Thierry Work, USGS wildlife DKNY & more. women. Women's Misses. disease specialist, said in an prices slightly higher. analysis released Wednesday. Scientists say there are no signs so far that the bacteria killSPECIAL SPECIAL 69.99 SPECIAL 50% OFF SPECIAL ACTIVE OUTERWEAR HAGGARe PANTS ing the coral are dangerous to 199.99 24.99 Reg. $195-$250, after special Special 32.50. humans or wildlife, though they SUITS SLEEPWEAR & POBES 99.99. Hawke & Co. lightweight Reg. $65, after special49.99. Reg. $495, after special Reg. $55 ar 59.50, are conducting further tests. down & active styles. S-XXL. Select casual ar dress styles. 239.99. From an awardafter special 38.50 But Lilley, who does not *WebI o 706913. Waists 30-42.*WebID 446971. winning American at 41.65. hold a graduate degree but designer (+Weblo From Nautica at dives daily around the reefs 702031) & our ourJenni SPECIAL 16.99 SPECIAL 55% OFF Alfani Red in slim & by Jennifer Moore. JUNIORS' SWEATERS DRESSY DRESSES all across the north shore, said regular fits. Reg. 29.50, afterspecial Special 26.10-35.10. Reg. $58-$78, he has documented a large 29.99. From It's Our Time, after special 34.80-46.80. From Rare number of cases of black-andSweater Project Editions, Sweetheart Rose e< Bonnie white toby fish feeding near and more. Jean. Girls' 2-16; infants' 3-24 mos. diseased corals that turned completely black, lost their fins and died. He has also videotaped a sea turtle, seen feeding on sea• g • ~ e • ~ weed growing out of an infecta ed coral, whose eyes seemed to have rotted away. When Lilley saw it, the creature was SPECIAL S79 SPECIAL S99 SPECIAL SPECIAL 49.99 bumping blindly into the reef BLACK & DECKER DIAMOND PENDANT DIAMOND ACCENT HOOPS in an attempt to find food. 50%-75% OFF Reg. $250, after special Reg. $300. after TOASTER OVEN WHEN YOU TAKEAN The disease was first spot112.50. In 14k rose gold special $1 35. Reg. 99.99, after EXTRA 30% OFF rI -' ted around Hanalei in 2004, and sterling silver. In 14k yellow special 69.99. With SPecial 4.41-130.20. but "at very low levels," and is *WeblD 661438. bt Weblo 471894) Qi t t V nonstick interior. Orig.* $18-$248, after special or white gold ¹CTO4500S. the fourth coral disease out5.04-148.80. Clearance <o<es, Q (+ WeplD 47 l e92) *Weblo 339717. handbags, wallets & more. break documented in the state since 2009,said Greta Aeby, t SPECIAL 60% OFF~ SPECIAL 29.99 • a coral expert with the UniFITZ AND FLOYD QUEEN OR KING DOBBY SHEET SET when you use your Macy's Card or savings pass during our versity of Hawaii Institute of Special $8-$64. Reg. $100 or $120, after special 49.99 or Perfect Giff Sale. tExclusions apply, see pass. Marine Biology who has been Reg. $20-$160, 59.99. Only at Macy's. In 310-thread working with Lilley to docuafter special $1 0-$80 •A count cotton. Other Holiday serveware sizes also on sale. ment thephenomenon. • • s s and gifts. • "Hawaii'sreefs are in de• • a cline. They are faced with the chronicstressors ofland-based pollution, overfishing and hur r i i •• r g• I man use. The reefs have been ' ' I' t ' I I I ' r I I I sl I SPECIAL 29.99 SPECIAL dealing with these problems I'. I t ' l 't t l s s sl I I ' ' s CALPHALON ' ' 19.99 I ' '' for years,and are starting to t l t t t t Reg. 79.99, after special 3-IN-1 BODY WRAP ' t I ' t t t' I t' 'I ' t t' t I' show thesigns,"she said."We 39.99. Everyday nonstick ' Reg. $50, after special I I ' I I 'I 't 'I I t t I t t t t t 3-qt.saute pan. need to help people understand I II 24.99.Only at Macy's. I rs • t r *VVeblD 520653. the seriousness of the situation From Charter Club. ¹AT81441. before it is too late." *WebIo 493561. Lilley said the rapid growth I L00033806100318893111 of the coral disease this year MACY'S CARD/SAVINGS PASS DISCOUNT DOESN'T APPLY TO SPECIALS. follows two years of heavy sedimentation traveling down s•• a a a • I • the Hanalei River, which he believes could be traced to the magic of * development upstream and heavy rains. Thick mud often coated the corals, he said, and studies B E ND R I V E R P R O M E N A D E , B E N D • 5 4 1 . 3 1 T . 6 0 0 0 .c om paid for by a community group ~ Fin e jewelry specials are only available at stores that carry fine jewelry. showed high levels of heavy metals in the water — studies 90 DAYS. THE PERFECTGIFT SALE PRICES IN EFFECT 11/28-12/3/12. MERCHANDISE WILL BE ON SALE AT THESE StOTHER SALE PRICESNOW THROUGH 1/1/13, EXCEPT AS NOTED. *Intermediate price reductions may have been taken. Jewelry photos may be enlarged or enhanced to show detail. Fine jewelry at select stores; log on to macys.com for locations. Almost that were dismissedby the state all gemstoneshavebeen treated to enhance their beauty & require special care, log on to macys.com/gemstones or ask your sales professional. Specials & clearance items are available while supplies last. Department of Health, which Advertised merchandise may not be carried at your local Macy's & selection may vary by store. Prices & merchandise may differ at macys.com. Prices may be lowered as part ofa clearance. Electric items carry said such metals are natural to mfrs' warranties; to see a mfr's warranty at no charge before purchasing, visit a store or write to: Macy's Warranty Dept., PO Box1026 Maryland Heights, MO 63043, attn: Consumer Warranties.+Enter the volcanic soil of Hawaii. the WeblD in the search box at MACYS.COM to order. N2110151. Wiltse said other studies have OPEN A MACY'5 ACCOUNT FOR EXTRA 20% SAVINGS THE FIRST 2 DAYS, UP TO $100, WITH MORE QUACK FOR A CAUSE! shown high levels of sewage- REWARDS TO COME. Macy's credit card is available subject to credit approval; new account savings valid Take home a2012 Aflac Holiday Duck and make a diff erence in a related bacteria in the Hanalei the day your account is opened and the next day; excludes services, selected licensed departments, gift cards, child's life this holiday season. 100% of the proceeds will benefit restaurants, gourmet food & wine. The new account savings are limited to a total of $100; application must River, likely because the town pediatric cancer hospitals across the country. Available in two sizes, 6" for $10 and 10" for $15. Only at Macy's. While supplies last. of Hanalei has no sewer system, qualify for immediate approval to receive extra savings; employees not eligible. •

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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012•THE BULLETIN AS

white

Donna, returned to Central Or- noma — for 24 years now. His egon. They live in a log home remaining adrenal gland was Continued from A1 on 18 acres near Alfalfa, and removed in2003. Currently, he It's a rare assignment for h e h a s been working games takes oral chemotherapy daily officials f ro m t h ese p a rts. f o r t h e COFOA for the past to keep the cancer at bay. According to T i m H u n tley, n i n e years. He credits his doctors for commissioner of the Central That ' s a total of 40 years. tinkering with his medication "Seemed likea nice,round Oregon Football Officials Asthis fall to allow him to avoid sociation,noCOFOAcrewhas n u m ber," White says while debilitating side effects and be worked a larger-schools state r e f lecting on his officiating ca- ready to hit the field on football final since 1990. reer and his decision to hang Friday nights. "He never really talks about White got his start in stripes u p his whistle. "I'm pretty well in 1973 in the Cenrespected still — at or dwells on his illness," says tral Oregon assoleast, I think I am Curfew. "He just goes out and / m Pf «4 I A'~// — and I want to go does his job." ciation. Hi s f i r st a ssignment w a s I'gSpgC)gg S/j// ou t t hat way and White says that his impendat tiny Crane High let th e y o unger ing retirement from officiating >g /<>>g School in remote guys take over." has not taken him off task this / ~/I Irik / ~m Harney C o u nty, Dave C u r f ew week. where he worked — grid / yygrI[ i s on e o f t h o se "I'm still focusing on Satur-

aneight-mangame $p Qp pU) /hg/ as part of a threeman crew. "It was a threeh our d r i ve," h e says. "I had to take a full day of vacation to go work a

14 ~Y ~rld /« /Qg ypUrlggf ~UQS $8k6

$15 game."

.

"younger guys." A

longtime COFOA out on my treadmill, reviewofficial h im s elf ing my rule book. .. . We're ("15 o r 1 8 years," still looking for that perfect he estimates), Cur- g ame. It might not b e o u t few has w orked there, but we're always lookw ith W h ite f r e - ing for it." quen t l y o ver t h e Donna White says officiatyears — and he

g White learned a lot when he serves as about the eastern head linesman for side of the state, the 5A final. drawing a s signC urfew sa y s ments in Burns, Mitchell and h e has learned a lot about the Paisley. nuances of officiating from "Many trips to Paisley," he W h i t e. "He's got a very calm derecalls. A mong his early officiating m e a nor a b ou t h i m , wi t h memories is working the in- c o a ches and other officials," augural Bend-Mountain View s a y s C urfew. "He's a great Civil War game back in 1979. c o mmunicator." "You probably aren't going Last month, he was back as the "white hat" — referee or to finda more congenial guy, head official — for the 34th a g u y who can get along with Civil War at Mountain View's a n y one," says Huntley, the Jack Harris Stadium. longtime head of the COFOA, "Dave has Minutes b e fore k i c k off , r e f erring to White. White was notified by Moun- a p r esence on the field, but he's tain View a t hletic d i rector n o t c o nfrontational. He's the Dave Hood that the game ball c a l m voice in a storm." would be delivered to him at Ku r t R enstrom has been ofmidfield by the school's most f i c i ating football for 23 years, famous alumnus, Olympic de- i n c luding 19 years with the cathlon gold medalist Ashton C O FOA — about half as long Eaton. as White has been working "He rode up in a convert- p r e p games. Renstromsayshe ible, gave me the ball right at c a n not imagine officiating at the 50-yard line, and I shook a g e 71. "He's crazy!" exclaims Renhis hand, and his girlfriend's hand(Eaton'sfiancee, Brianne s t r om, who otherwise speaks Theisen)," White excitedly re- o n l y i n r everent tones about counts. "It was quite an honor, W h i te, a man he considers his I thought. mentor. "He's a rare, rare person "He (Eaton) congratulated m e on my 40 years of service," — a gift," says Renstrom. "He's White says, adding with a pr o b ably forgotten more than laugh: "Dave Hood must have I k n ow about officiating. He's set him up with that." been a great help to me and my career, that's for sure."

Started in Bend

A California native, White grew up in rural northwest Oregon and developed his love of sports at Banks High School, where he was a three-sport athlete: football, b asketball and track. He began his officiating career in Bend and served in the Central Oregon association for 10 years before moving to Salem forhis job as safety director with the Oregon Department of Transportation. He joined the Salem-area officiating a ssociation a n d worked prep football games i n the Willamette Valley for 21 years before he and his wife,

day night," he says, "working

Friday night fixture Fr om t h e start, White has b een a Friday night fixture on h i g h school gridirons. As best h e c a n recall, he has missed o n l y one assignment — the last game of the 1988 season. That w a s shortly after he had been d i a gnosed with the cancer that w o u l d cost him a kidney and a n adrenal gland. A scary episode, to be sure. "But," he says, "in 10 weeks, I w as b ack on the basketball f l o or." (Did we mention that W hi t e also spent 25 years as a h i g h s choolhoopsofficial?) W hit e h a s dealt with h i s d i s ease — r enal cell carci-

ing has been good for her husband of 52 years. "He loves people, loves being out there with the kids," she says. "I think he's going to miss it." Miss it ? M i s s s l o gging around in the driving rain of the valley, or feeling his fingers and toes go numb in the bitter cold of a November night on the High Desert? "No, I won't missthat,"White says, chuckling. "There's a lot of aspects I'm gonna miss, but not that." He notes that among the things he will take away from his long career in officiating memories, relationships, tokens of a ppreciation and the like — will be piles of coldweather clothing. "After all these years," he

says, "I do have a great supply of Under Armour." —Reporter: 5 4 1-383-0359, bbigelow@bendbulletin.com

Budget Continued from A1 Publicemployers, such as school districts, pay into the system to fund pensions for their retirees. Another move applauded by the Central Oregon delegation was confirmation that the $16 million the Oregon State U n i versity-Cascades campus needs to become a four-year university is also included in the budget. The overall budget is an approximate 10 percent increase over the 2011-D budget. About $6.15 billion of it is reserved for K-12 schools. Bend-La Pine Superintendent Ron Wilkinson said he hopes, as the budget makes its way through negotiations, that K-12 schools receive a larger chunk of general fund dollars. What the governor has

proposed, he said, would require cuts. "We know that level of funding doesn't get us to the level without making additional reductions," he said. Wilkinson said he's hoping the figure gets much closer to $6.4 billion, which would maintain current spending. The governor's budget also eliminates furlough days for state employees. It has another $600 million in assumed savings from keeping state prison populations flat and by barely increasingthe number ofprison

beds. Rep. Mike McLane, R-Powell Butte, who was elected to serve as House Republican Leader in the upcoming session, said he worries the budget contains lot of "big assumptions on cost savings." — Reporter: 541-554-1162, ldaheNbendbulletin.com

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Despite pledgesto improve, delays soar onvets' claims By Chris Adams

that it'll get better, and it still doesn't get better, and we've WASHINGTON The seen tremendous frustration time needed toprocess veter- from our members in the last ans' disability claims shot up few months. It'sreached a by nearly40 percent lastyear breaking point." despite years of effort by fedThe VA said it is working eral officials to streamline and to speed its decision-making shorten the process, records process and is in the midst of show. an overhaul of its claims sysThe timesnecessary to pro- tem. It eventually will end its cess education benefitsand reliance on paper-based proburial benefits, as well as the cessing and reconfigure the time needed to wind through way claims move through 56 the Department of Veterans regional offices that handle Affairs appeals process, also them. "We recognize that f r om increased in fiscal 2012. The d i s ability-processing the standpoint of the veterans, time is closely watched by Con- they are waiting too long, and gress and veterans' advocates that's unacceptable," said Dias a measure of VA efficiency. ana Rubens, who helps overIn fiscal 2012, the average see the VA's regional offices. days to complete a VA disabil- "We've got to transform how ity compensation or pension we do things. We know that claimroseto 262 days,up from fixing decades-old problems is 188 days in fiscal 2011, accord- not going to be easy." ing to a recently completely VA America's veterans are eligiperformance report. ble for a range of benefits, from T he 262-day average i s access to the VA's well-regardthe highest that measure has ed medical system to lifetime been in at least the past 20 payments for disabilities sufyears for which numbers were fered during military service to available. access to education, life insurThe VA's long-term goal is to ance and home loan programs. get the processing time to an The disability benefits are average of 90 days. awarded to veterans who suf"The e ntire system i s a fer physical or mental injuries mess," said Paul Rieckhoff, during their military service. founder and chiefexecutive Benefits vary based on the of Iraq and Afghanistan Vet- severity of a d i sability and erans of America, a support beginning S aturday r a n ge and advocacy group. "They've from $129 a month to $2,816 a been saying now for 10 years month for a single veteran. McClatchy Newspapers

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A6 THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012

amao erSnew an toavert ear-en 'ei ' BUICK

The Washington Post

President Obama offered Republicans a detailed plan T hursday fo r a v erting t h e y ear-end "fiscal c l iff " t h a t calls for $1.6 trillion in new t axes, $50 billion i n f r e sh spending on the economy and an effective end to congressional control over the size of the national debt. The proposal, delivered to the Capitol by Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, mirrors previous White House d eficit-reduction p l ans a n d satisfies Democrats' demands t hat negotiations begin o n terms dictated by the newly re-elected president. The offer lacks any concessions to Republicans, most notably on the core issue of where to set tax rates for the wealthiest Americans. After two weeks of talks between the White House and aides to House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, it seemed to take Republicans by surprise. Boehner quicklyrejected the proposal and was trying late Thursday to decide how to respond, aides said. After meeting with Geithner for about 45 minutes Thursday morning, the speaker announced his frustration with a negotiation process in which nearly three weeks have lapsed since the election with "no substantive

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Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., flanked by Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., left, and Sen. Patty Murray, DWash., meets with reporters Thursday after talks with Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner on the fiscal cliff negotiations.

to agree on a plan to prevent more than $500 billion in tax increases and spending cuts that could rattle the economy. "This is a r e a l p r oblem. Every day, the delay brings us one step closer to the fiscal cliff that we simply must avoid," McConnell said. Democraticleaders, meanwhile, were triumphant after receiving s i m ilar b r i efings f rom Geithner an d W h i t e House legislative liaison Rob Nabors. Top Democrats have for months i n sisted t h a t an Obama victory would entitle them to demand far more in new taxes than Republicans progress." have been willing to consider, "I'm disappointed in where to seeknew measures to boost we are, and disappointed in economic growth, and to avoid what's happened over the last major cuts to entitlement procouple weeks," Boehner told grams, suchas Social Security reporters. "Going over the fis- and Medicare. "Democrats are on the same cal cliff is serious business. And I'm here seriously trying page," said S enate M ajorto resolve it. And I would hope ity Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev. the White House would get se- "The president has made his rious as well." proposal; we need a proposal Senate M i nority L e a der from them." Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., called Although the White House the proposal a"step backward" offer seemed to startle Repubfrom compromise — with time licans, it contains little that running out for policymakers would be unfamiliar to any-

one following the president's recent public statements. The exception was his proposal on the federal debt limit. GOP aides said Obama is seeking to permanentlyenact procedures that were temporarily adopted in the summer of 2011 that allow the White House to unilaterally increase the debt ceiling unless two-thirds of lawmakers disapprove. That process, initially proposed by McConnell, was not intended to become permanent. By trying to make it so, Obama is seeking to avoid another damaging battle over the debt ceiling that would again risk a national default. However, this change would also deprive Congress of its historic authority over federal borrowing. Unless Congress acts on the fiscal cliff, taxes will rise significantly in January for nearly 90 percent of Americans, and about $65 billion will be sliced out of the Pentagon and

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Muslims face ouster from W. Myanmar By Thomas Fuller New York Times News Service

SITTWE, Myanmar — The B uddhist monastery on t h e edge of this seaside town is a picture of tranquility. But in these placid surroundings teacher Nyarna's message is a far cry from the Buddhist precept of avoiding harm to living creatures. Unprompted, Nyarna launched into a rant against Muslims, calling them invaders, unwanted g uests and "vipers in our laps." "According t o Bu d d h ist teachings we should not kill," Nyarna said. "But when we feel threatened we cannot be saints." Violence here in Rakhine state — where clashes have left at least 167 people dead and 100,000people homeless, most of them Muslims — has set off an exodus that some human rights groups condemn as ethnic cleansing. It is a measure of the deep intolerance that pervades the state in w estern Myanmar, that Buddhist religious leaders like Nyarna are participating in the campaign to oust Muslims from the country. After a s eries of d eadly rampages and arson attacks over the past f ive months, Buddhists are calling for Muslims who cannot prove three generations of legal residence to be put into camps and sent to any country willing to take them. Hatred between Muslims and Buddhists that was kept in check during five decades of military rule has been virtually unrestrained in recent months. M uslims wh o f l e d t h e i r homes now live in slumlike encampments that are short on food and medical care, surrounded by a Buddhist population that does not want them as neighbors. "This issue must be solved urgently," said Shwe Maung, a Muslim member of Parliament. "When there is no food or shelter, people will die."

Top BBCofficials coMedefailures remunerations that has been pald. New York Times News Service Patten and another witLONDON — Two of the ness, Tim Davie, the acting most senior figures at the BBC director general, were British Broadcasting Corp. speaking just days before an said Tuesday that there had another inquiry into the sepbeen "elementary" failures arate phone hacking scandal, of the organization's journal- mainly at Rupert Murdoch's ism and "appalling editorial British newspaper outpost, is judgment" when it wrongly to deliver a long-awaited reimplicated a f o rmer Conport that could lead to tighter servative Party politician in regulation of the press. sexual abuse, compounding T he combination of i n a scandal that cost the BBC's quiries and findings seemed director general his job and to illustrate once more the plunged th e o r g anization intense scrutiny faced by deeper into crisis. journalists and editors in But, addressing a parliaBritain at a time when the mentary committee hearing, news business is struggling one of them, Chris Patten, to make a painful and costly the chairman of the super- adjustment to the digital era. visory BBC Trust, offered But Davie said that while the a sympathetic defense of BBC was going through a the former directorgeneral, "major crisis," it was not in George Entwistle, whom he chaos. "This is not an orgahad hired, and who had been nization that is falling apart labeled hapless and buminternally," he said, adding, bling by m any p oliticians "I've been overwhelmed by and newspaper columnists journalists at the BBC who before and after his resigna- are aghast at the errors that tion on Nov. 10. were made." "The easiest thing to do is Patten, too, described the to join in the general trash- failings that led to the scaning of a decent man, and I'm dal as ones that the BBC not going to do that," Patten would quickly put right. "The BBC tells the truth toldlawmakers. He described Entwistle as "a decent man" about itself, even when the who "doesn't deserve to be truth is appalling," he said. bullied or have his character He contrasted the b roaddemolished." caster's readiness to clean its Patten said the trust want- stables with what he said had ed to bring a quick end to been an opaque and trucuEntwistle's embattled tenure lent reaction among Britain's and so accepted his demand newspapers when confrontfor nearly $800,000, repre- ed by their own scandals. senting a year's salary and But Patten's composure other benefits, after he had faltered under a g gressive spent less than eight weeks questioning by one lawmakin the job. er, the Conservative Philip "What did we get in reDavies, who pressed him to turn'?" Patten said. "First of provide an itinerary of his all, we got a settlement that work schedule at the BBC. was less than we would have Entwistle appeared before got had we gone through the panel on Oct. 23 when its constructive dismissal." attention was focused on a deAnd second, he said, if any cision a year ago by the editor of the current inquiries finds of the current affairs program that Entwistle "has done "Newsnight" to c ancel an anything which is in breach investigation into the sexual of his contract or the BBC misconduct of Jimmy Savile, disciplinary guidelines, we a longtimetelevision host who can claw back some of the died last year at age 84.

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TV& Movies, B2 Horoscope, B3 Calendar, B3 Com ics, B4-5 DearAbby, B3 P u zzles, B5

© www.bendbulletin.com/family

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012 I

IN BRIEF

'

l

Talk focuses onrole models in media Elizabeth Daniels, an Oregon State University

— Cascadesassistant professor of psychology, willdir-

cuss how the media Daniels targets adolescents and the skills necessary to combat those

messages.

The talk, called "The

Wrong Heroes: Helping Young People Navigate Beyond NakedRoyals, Lindsay's Arrests and Snooki's Baby," will be

at 6 p.m. Monday at the Downtown Bend Public Library and at 2 p.m.

Dec. 8 at the Redmond Public Library. Daniels will discuss

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how parents canhelp young people, especially girls, develop media lit-

eracy skills and critique the messagesthey are receiving. She will talk about how to shift the attention from the ap-

pearance of womento the abilities of girls and women, and who they

are as people. Daniels' research focuses on body images, gender, mediaand positive youth development. This event is part of the Deschutes Public Library system's month

of programming called "Know Heroes." Contact: www.des

chuteslibrary.org or 541-312-1 034.

Looking for scary, silly Santa stories Sometimes a little one's visit with Santa Claus doesn't

go quit easMom and Dad planned. There's squirming, there's fretting, there can be down right freaking out. The Bulletin is collecting stories and pictures of kids whose visit with Santa wasn't ideal.

By Alandra Johnson The Butletin

If you have astory to share, contact Alandra

Johnson at ajohnson© bendbulletin.com by Thursday.

Boomer bucket lists wanted Are you retired and

planning to knock any of the items off your "bucket list" during the

coming year? Maybe you want to skydive,

drive across the country, travel abroad or write a book.

• What we recall from grandparents' homes as childrenoften stayswith us for a lifetime

Whatever your aspiration, The Bulletin would like to hear about it for a story about ac-

r

tive baby boomers and

end mom Sarah Daily remembers spending a lot of time in her mother-in-law's bedroom during the last few months of the woman's life. Daily, her husband, Quinn, and their infant daughter, Kila, made regular visits to see Quinn's mom, Rochelle O'Lear, while she underwent treatment for lymphoma. Kila used to snuggle in bed next to her grandma, known as Nonie, and loved to crawl down a hallway filled with mirrors. "It was her first and only grandchild; she was so excited," said Daily of Kila's visits. "I think it was a really uplifting time for her." The experience ofbeingthere "seemedhard atthetime," said Daily, "But now (the memory) feels warm and wonderful." Daily likes to re-tell Kila the story of their visits. Daily recalls sitting on leather couches, watching O'Lear feed Kila a bottle. O'Lear was the first one who noticed Kila had a star-shaped wrinkle on her toe. Although Kila's grandmother died when she was 9 months old, the girl, now 5, says she remembers visiting her. Logically, Daily says, it doesn't seem like Kila should be able to remember that far back. But Kila likes to talk about crawling through the hallway with mirrors and staring at herself. It's embedded as a positive memory of a grandmother who is now gone. See Memories/B6

1 lllustration by Greg Cross /The Bulletin

what they're planning to do with their spare time. Email your stories to Mac McLean at

mmclean©bendbulletin .com or call 541-5177816 by Dec. 14.

With aging, attitude counts A recent study found a positive attitude to-

ward aging makes adifference when it comes to seniors' physical health. According to the

study, which was published in the Journal of the American Medical

Association, seniors who had a positive attitude about aging — those who thought

older people were "spry" versus those who thought they were

"decrepit" — were

44 percent more likely to recover from a disability than those who did not. — From staff reports

As deadlinenears,guidance KID CULTURE through the Medicaremaze Teachable By Mac McLean The Bulletin

CentralOregon Medicare recipients have one week left beforeMedicare'sopen enrollm ent period expires Dec. 7. If they don't make any health coverage changes beforeopen enrollment ends, they will be stuck with their existing plan, even if it doesn't meet their health care needs. "We hope people will call us if they have questions," said Steven Guzauskis, a local coordinator with Oregon's Senior Health Insurance Benefits Assistance Program. People can learn more about their Medicare options by calling SHIBA at 800-722-4134. Medicare's open enrollment period is when most Medicare beneficiaries can sign up to

receive or change their existing benefits from a Medicare Advantage plan or a Medicare Part C plan. These privately managed plans — which covered 10,718 Central Oregon residents this month, according to the U.S. Centersfor Medicare and M edicaid Services,are an alternative to the governmentm anaged Medicare Part A and Part B plans that cover inpatient hospital stays, nursing home stays, doctor visits, medicalsupplies,hospice care and other health care services. Open enrollment is also when most beneficiaries can

sign up for a Medicare prescription drug plan or change their existing prescription drug coverage options. See Medicare /B6

moments

with toys Kid Culture features fun and educational books and toys for kids. Caroline Doll and Book, by American Girl $105 Ages 8 and older Toy Tips: A Fun: A Movement: B+ Thinking: A Personality: A Social Interaction: A Caroline Abbott learns how to overcome challenges of war while growing up in Sackets Harbor, N.Y., during the war of 1812. See Toys/B3

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B2

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012

TVa MO VIES

Find local movie times and film reviews inside today's GO! Magazine.

Let the 'BoyMeets World' reboot finds itsown path By jessica Goldstein

ABC Family reboot of "10 The Washington Post Things I Hate About You." Like the rest of humanity, The 1999 film"10Things" I have complicated feelings hope, and here's why: was its generation's Great "GMW" is entering a teen Teen Movie, with a swipedabout reboots. Reboots are f rom-Shakespeare s t o r y what I do to my phone or com- TV landscape that looks reputer when I cannot think of markably different from the lineand a remarkably good anything else to do to try to one in w h ich t h e o r i ginal cast. (We're talking Heath solve a problem. In my interac- aired. When "BMW" ran from Ledger and Joseph Gortions with technology, a reboot 1993 to 2000, it was one of don-Levitt.) Ten years later, is a last resort. many shows about everyday ABC Familyannounced the I have discovered that the kids and their everyday expe- premiere of a "10 Things" entertainment industry views riences, a middle ground be- TV show. Fans were nerreboots in a similar way: Pro- tween cheesy-but-beloved hits vous and none-too-pleased, ducers dig into the archives "Saved by the Bell" and "Cla- like parents watching their and attempt to jolt life back rissa Explains It All" and cult teenage child drive an exinto a l o ng-dead franchise. favorites "My So-Called Life," pensive car. For moviemakers, it's a hit-or- "Freaks and Geeks" and the Then, t h e i m p ossible miss proposition, heavy on the animated "Daria." Yes, Buffy happened: "10 Things" misses. For every Christopher was slaying the undead over turned out to be pretty good Nolan "Batman" trilogy, you in Sunnydale, but for the most teen television. get about 10 million unwatch- part,teen programming had What the " Girl M eets able movies based on board one thing in common — it was World" people can learn from "10 Things" is how to games and action figures. about thecommon problems The latest TV reboot headed of common people in common strike a balance between our way is a spinoff of "Boy places. holding on and moving Today's offerings i nclude on. There is, in fact, a way Meets World," a 1990s comingof-age sitcom about every-guy wolves, vampires, wolf-vam- to stay true to the DNA of one's progenitor while not Cory Matthews and his child- pire hybrids (I know; just roll hood sweetheart, Topanga. with it), beasts, witches, mur- falling into the trap of makThe newish take, "Girl Meets derous stalkers, scheming ing a nostalgia-fest for nosWorld," will air on the Disney Upper East Siders and a high talgia's sake (I'm looking at Channel and center on Cory school so packed with preg- you, "Melrose Place"); hiand T opanga's 1 3-year-old nant teens it should consider jacking a title for branding daughter. Actors Ben Savage spiking the tap w ater with purposes and abandoning and Danielle Fishel have signed birth control pills. A y oung everything else about the on to reprise their roles. Fishel adult in the market for some- original (I see what you did has already taken to Tumblr thing more straightforward, there, "Teen Wolf"); and to express her e x citement, a show that eschews fantasy also by just not being awful gratitude and words of caution: and zooms in on the honest, (ahem, "90210"). "GMW is a new show. It isn't soul-crushing and life-affirmBesides, " Girl M e e ts BMWbrought back to life but in ing reality of growing up, finds World" will focus on a midcurrent day. Give us a chance." zero options. dle school girl. How old are "GMW" could fill a gaping you now? Thirty? Let it go. Ha! How cute of her to think we won't compare the two. Out void just by being an honest "Homeland" is on. of loyalty to Topanga, though, show about regular adolesl et's try t o g iv e " GMW " a cents. It could stand out by beVaricose Vein Experts chance. The odds of it being ing ordinary. good are slim, even with origiOr it could stand out by benal "BMW" executiveproduc- ing absolutely terrible. This is er Michael Jacobs at the helm. the risk. And there is a surprisMy skepticism overwhelms ing place to learn how to avoid my optimism. And yet, there is this failure, and that place is the Call us today 541-728-0850

TV SPOTLIGHT

PARENTS GUIDE TO MOVIES This guide, compiled by Orlando (Fla) Sentinel film critic Roger Moore, should be used along with the Motion Picture Association of America rating system for selecting movies suitable for children. Films rated G, PG or PG-13 are included in this weekly listing, along with occasional R-ratedfilms that may have entertainment or educational valuefor older children with parental guidance.

'LIFE OF PI' Rating:PG for emotional thematic content throughout, and some

scary action sequencesand peril. What it's about: A teen, a tiger, a

hyena, azebra and anorangutan survive a shipwreck andare stuck on the same lifeboat together. The kid attractor factor:Critters and a kid in a survival story.

Goodlessons /badlessons:"Hunger can changeeverything you ever thoughtyou knewaboutyourself." Violence:Animal-on-animal

attacks, graphic enough to scare off the very young. Language: Quiteclean. Sex:Perfectly chaste. Drugs:Noneat all. Parents' advisory:Asreligious parables go, this one's too long and entirely too dense for the very

young. Suitable for13 and older.

20th Century Fox via The Associated Press

Suraj Sharma, background, is strandedon a boat with a Bengal tiger in the film adaptation of "Life of Pi."

Language:Someprofanity.

The kid attractor factor:A valuable

Sex:None, though there's flirting.

history lessonabout the messiness of governmentandahumanportrait

Drugs:None. Parents' advisory:More far-

of a sainted president.

fetched and action-packed than the '80s version of this story, with

fewer political overtones. OK for 12 and older.

'RED DAWN'

'LINCOLN'

Rating:PG-13for sequences of intense war violence andaction, and for language.

Rating:PG-13for an intense scene of war violence, some images of carnageand brief strong language.

What it's about:The North Koreans invade, and high school

kids resist the occupation. The kid attractor factor:Teenagers,

heroicallyshooting peopleand blowing stuff up. And occasionally

What it's about:Abraham Lincoln

Goodlessons/bad lessons:In politics, even the noblest ideals

have their detractors. Violence:Somegruesome Civil War combat. Language:A scattering of periodappropriate profanity, racial slurs. Sex:None. Drugs:None. Parents' advisory: Even if their school isn't assigning this, there's a lot to be said for rounding the kids up and letting them absorb a little Civil War history — suitable

and his fractious cabinet try to rally Congressional support for an amendment to endslavery. for10 and older.

getting shot or blown up themselves. Goodlessons/bad lessons:"We inherited our freedom. Nowit's up

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to all of us to fight for it." Violence:Plentiful, not particularly graphic.

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*In HD, thesechannels run three hours ahead. /Sports programming mayvary. BD-Bend/Redmond/Sisters/Blackeutte Di ital PM-Prineville/Madras SR-Sunriver L-LaPine

fRRRX~RKHK~RKR2RRRK~RRK~RREK~RKR2RREI~~RRKREEK~XKEHf EHK~RDiRH f 1RK KATU News World News K A TU News at 6 (N) n cc Jeopardy! 'G' Wheel FortuneLast.Standing Malibu Country Shark Tank n 'PG' sc KATU News (10:01) 20/20 n 'PG' cc (11:35)Nightline

I'j Nightly News NewsChannel 21 at 6(N) « Jeop ardy! 'G' Wh eel FortuneChristmas in Rockefeller Center Gr imm The Good Shepherd '14' Da teline NBC (N) n « News JayLeno KTVZ 0 0 0 0 News News EveningNews Access H. O ld Christine Ho w I uet 3 0 Ro ck n '14' Undercover Boss (N) 'PG'cc C S I : NY Blood(N) Out'I4' cc Blue Bloods HigherEducation '14' News Letterman KBNZ 0 KEZI 9 News World News K EZI 9 News KEZI 9 News En tertainmentThe Insider (N) Last-Standing Malibu Country Shark Tank n 'PG' « KEZI 9 News (11:35) Nightline KQHD 0 0 0 0 (10:01) 20/20 n 'PG' « Two/Half Men Big Bang Big Bang New s KFXO ioi fEIfEIfEI College Football Pac-12Championship —UCLA at Stanford (N) n (Live) cc TMZ (N) n 'pG' The Simpsons Family Guy '14' Bus i ness Rpt. pBS NewsHour (N) n « WashingtonW'k BBC Newsnight Nuremberg: NazisonTrial « M ast e rpiece Classic n 'pG' M ast e rpiece Classic n 'pG' Koae O B Q B Wild Kratts Y Electric Comp. Travel-Kids NewsChannel 8 NightlyNews NewsChannel 8 News Live at 7 (N) I nside Edition ChristmasinRockefeller Center Gr imm The Good Shepherd '14' Da t eline NBC (N)n sc NewsChannel 8 JayLeno KGW 0 (N)'14' Arrow Muse of Fire n '14' « S einf e ld 'pG' S e i nfeld 'pG' 'Til Death'14' 'Til Death'pG' KTvzDT2 fEI0 B lH WeThereYet? We ThereYet? King of Queens King ofQueens Engagement Engagement N i k ita The Sword's Edge Ciao Italia 'G' Hubert Keller Mark Russelrs America n 'pG' Masterpiece Mystery!n '14'cc(DVS) On Storyn 'G' world News Ta vis Smiley (N) Charlie Rose(N) n cc pee NewsHour n cc OPBPL 175 173 *ASIE 130 28 18 32 Parking Wars Parking Wars Parking Wars 'PG' «

DuckDynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty (4:00) *** "Fargo" (1996, Suspense) ** "Survival of the Dead" (2009, Horror) Alan VanSprang, KennethWelsh. ** "Land of the Dead" (2005, Horror) SimonBaker,John Leguizamo,Asia The Walking Dead The governor Comic Book Men Comic Book Men *AMC 102 40 39 PG cc PG cc FrancesMcDormand. « Residentsof an islandbattle a zombieepidemic. « Argento. Flesh-eatingzombiesthreaten a fortified city. seeksinformation. '14' « *ANPL 68 50 26 38 Monsters InsideMe'PG' cc Monsters InsideMe'PG' cc Monsters InsideMe'PG' cc Monsters InsideMe(N)o 'PG' Ra i sed Wild Birdof Boy Fiji 'PG' Raised Wild n 'PG' cc MonstersInside Me 'PG' cc **"Bad Boysli"(2003, Action) Martin Lawrence,Will Smith, Jordi Molla. BRAVO1 37 4 4 The Real Housewives of Atlanta * * * " TrainingDay"(2001, CrimeDrama)Denzel Washington, Ethan Hawke. ** haad Boys II" (2003, Action) comedy)Pauly Shore,carla Gugino. n CMT 190 32 42 53 Roseanne'G' Ro seanne 'PG'Reba 'PG' cc R eba 'PG' cc R e ba 'PG' cc R e ba 'PG' cc R e ba 'PG' cc R e ba 'PG' cc * "son-in-Law" I1993, (11:15) ** 'Yn the ArmyNow" CNBC 54 36 40 52 How I, Millions How I, Millions Crime Inc. Illegal Gambling American Greed MadMoney Crime Inc. IllegalGambling American Greed Paid Program You Breathe! CNN 55 38 35 48 AndersonCooper360 (N) cc P i e r s Morgan Tonight (N) Ander son Cooper360 cc ErinBurnett OutFront Piers MorganTonight AndersonCooper 360cc ErinBurnett OutFront "Dodgeball: Underdog" coM 135 53 135 47(4:57) Futurama Always Sunny Southpark 'MA' (6:28)Tosh.0 Co lbert Report Daily Show (7:59)Tosh.0 (8:29)Tosh.0 Ke y peele & T o s h.0 '14' Sout hpark 'MA' Brickleberry CQTV 11 Dept./Trans. C i ty Edition Pai d Program Kristi Miller Des e rt CookingOregon Joy of Fishing Journal Get Outdoors vi s ions of Nw The Yoga Show The Yoga Show KristiMiller C i t y Edition cspAN 61 20 12 11 Politics & Public Policy Today Politics & Public Policy Today *DIS 87 43 14 39 Jessie'G' sc Je s sie 'G' cc Phineas, Ferb Good-Charlie (6:50)"Radio Rebel" (2012)DebbyRyan.n 'G' Jessie(N) 'G' Ph ineas, Ferb Gravity Falls n A.N.T. Farm 'G' Good.Charlie Je ssie 'G' cc Good-Charlie *DISC 156 21 16 37 Jungle Gold n 'PG' « Gold Rush SecretWeapons'PG' Gold Rush n 'PG' a« Gold Rush (N) n 'PG' cc Gold RushGameChanger 'PG' J ungle Gold Mad Scramble'PG' Gold Rush Game Changer'PG' *E! 1 36 2 5 The E! True Hollywood Story '14' Love You The Soup '14' E! News (N) IceLoves Coco IceLoves Coco Nicki Minaj: My Nicki Minal: My Fashion Police (N) '14' Love You E! N ews ESPN 21 23 22 23 Basketball Co l lege Basketball Syracuse at Arkansas (N)(Live) NBA Basketball DenverNuggetsat LosAngelesLakers (N)(Live) sportsCenter(N)(Live) « SportsCenter(N) (Live) « ESPN2 22 24 21 24 College Football: MACChampionship NFL Kickoff (N) cc S portsCenter(N)(Live) cc S portsCenter(N)(Live) cc NBA Tomght (N) NFL Live (N) cc ESPYSpeech ** "Skiing Everest"(2009,Documentary) « EspNC 23 25 123 25 Friday Night Lights 'PG' « Friday Night Lights Kingdom '14' ** "Steep" (2007) A history ofextremeskiing. (8:45) ** "Steep"(2007,Documentary) A history ofextremeskiing. H-LiteEx. H-Li t eEx. H -Li t e Ex. H-Lit eEx. H.Lit eEx. H-Lit eEx. E SPN FC Press H-Lite Ex. ESPNN 24 63 124203S portsCenter(N) (Live) cc S portsCenter(N) (Live) cc S portsCenter(N)(Live) cc "Santa Baby 2:ChristmasMaybe" I2009) JennyMcCarthy. 'PG' ***"TheFamily Man"(2000, Romance-Comedy)Nicolas Cage,Tea Leoni, DonCheadle. FAM 67 29 19 41 (4:00)"SantaBaby"(2006) 'PG' The700Club n 'G' « FNC 57 61 36 50 The O'Reilly Factor (N) cc Hannity(N) On Record, Greta vanSusteren Th e O'Reilly Factor cc Hannity On Record, Greta van Susteren Th e Five *FOOD 177 62 98 44 Best Dishes B est Dishes Din ers, Drive D i ners, Drive Restaurant: Impossible Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Di n ers, Drive Diners, Drive Mystery Diners Health Inspect Diners, Drive Diners, Drive ***%on Man" (2008)Robert DowneyJr. A bilionaire dons anarmored suit to fight criminals. * "The Waterboy"(1998, Comedy)AdamSandler, KathyBates. * "The Waterboy"(1998) FX 131 The Ultimate Fighter (N) n '14' HGTV 176 49 aa 43Property Bro Property Bro Hu n ters Int'I Hun ters Int'I Hun ters Int'I Hun ters Int'I L i g h tmares 'G' « Flea Market Flip Flea Market Flip House Hunters HuntersInt'I Hun ters Int'I Hun ters Int'I *HIST 155 42 41 36 Modern Marvels Distilleries 2 'PG' Modern Marvels Brewing'PG' A m e rican Pickers 'PG' cc American Pickers 'PG' cc American Pickers 'PG' cc InventionUSA Invention USA How the States Cajun Pawn **"TogetherAgainfortheFirst Time"(2008)Julia Duffy.o« "The MarchSisters ai Christmas" (2012)Julie Marie Berman.'PG' ** "Nothing Like the Holidays" (2eee) John LIFE 138 39 20 31 (4:00)**"If You Believe"'pG' Leguizamo.« 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 Hardballwith Chris Matthews MTV 192 22 38 57 Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Totally Clueless pranked (N) '14' JerseyShoren '14' « JerseyShoreShoreShower'14' *" S cary Movie 2"(2001)ShawnWayans, Marlon Wayans. n "AFairly Odd Christmas" I2012)Drake Bell. 'PG' NICK 82 46 24 40 spongeeob s pongeaob s p ongeeob s p ongeeob D r akeJosh & DrakeJosh & seeoadRun The Nanny 'PG' TheNanny'PG' Fri endsn 'PG' lf1:33)Friends OWN 161103 31 103policeWomenof Broward County police Womenof Broward County police Womenof Broward County police Womenof Broward County police Womenof Broward County police Womenof Broward County police Womenof Broward County ROOT 20 45 28* 26 BoxingGol denBoy:FernandoGuerrerovs.J.C.Candelo Seahawks Hi g h School Football WIAA Class 3AChampionship: Bellevuevs. EastsideCatholic (N)(Live) Seahawks C o l lege Football ** "S.W A.T." (2003, Action)SamuelL Jackson,Colin Farrell. n SPIKE 132 31 34 46 (5:03) GanglandHustle orDie'14' (en2) GanglandCapitol Killers n '14' « (7:21) Gangland n '14' « (11de) **"S.WA.T."(2003) n "Dungeons & Dragons: TheBook of VileDarkness" (2011,Fantasy) W WE Friday NightSmackoown! (N) n cc Deal-Dark side Deal.Dark side SYFY 133 35 133 45"DungeonsB Dragons: Wrath" Haven Burned(N) TBN 05 60 130 BehindScenes Hal Lindsey 'G' The Harvest p e r ry Stone pra i se theLord 'Y' « Ever Increasing Israel: Journey of Light « Creflo Dollar F all Praise-A-Thon *TBS 16 27 11 28 Friendsn '14' Friends n 'pG' King of Queens King ofQueens Seinfeld 'pG' Seinfeld 'pG' Be tter worse Better worse Better worse Better worse ** "Talladega Nights: TheBallad of RickyBobby" (2006) **"TheLocket"0946) Laraine Day. Alovely butmen- (6:45) ***"Dractila's Daughter"(1936,Horror) Otto (8:15) ***"Touchez Pas au Gri s bi " 0954) Jean Gabi n , Rene Dary, Jeanne ***"Five Million Years to Earth" 0967, ScienceFiction) (1045) * TCM 101 44 101 29 tally unstablewomanruinsseveral men.« Kruger, GloriaHolden.Premiere. Moreau. Aracketeer tries to save his kidnappedfriend. James DonaldAndrew , Keir. "Twonky" *TLC 178 34 32 34 Four Weddings n 'PG' cc Four Weddings n 'PG' « Four Weddings o 'PG' « Say Yes: Bride Say Yes: Bride Say Yes: Bride Say Yes: Bride Brides-Hills B r i des-Hills S a y Yes: Bride Say Yes: Bride **** "The Dark Knight" (2008)Christian Bale. Batmanbattles a vicious criminal knownas theJoker. *TNT 17 26 15 27 Law & OrderFloater n '14' TheMentalist n '14' c~ The Mentalist n '14' « (11d5)"Warof the Worlds" ©c 'TOON 84 Adventure Time Adventure Time Regular Show Regular Show Regular Show Regular Show Cartoon Planet 'G' King ofthe Hill King of theHill American Dad American Dad Family Guy '14' Family Guy 'PG' 'TRAV 179 51 45 42 Man v. Food'G' Man v. Food 'G' Bizarre Foods/Zimmern GhostAdventures '14' « GhostAdventures 'PG' cc GhostAdventures (N)'PG'r~c Th e Dead Files (N) 'PG' c~ The DeadFiles 'PG' c~ *A*S*H CosbyShow Cosby Show Cosby Show Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond King ofQueens KingofQueens TVLND 65 47 29 35 Bonanza 'PG' « (6:14) M'A'S*H Bug Out'pG' (6:54) M Law &order: svu Law 8 order: svu Law &orden svu Law &order: svu Law 8 order: svu Burn Notice Down & Out 'PG' USA 15 30 23 30 Law &Order: Svu 100GreatestKid Stars n 'PG' VH1 191 48 37 54 (4:50) 40Funniest Fails '14' (5:55) 40Funniest Fails '14' E ven i ng Buzz T.l. and Tiny 1 0 0GreatestKid Stars n 'PG' 1 0 0 GreatestKid Stars (N) 'PG' Couples Therapy n '14' •

* "Zookeeper"2011 KevinJames. n 'PG' cc ENCR 106401 306401(3:50) *"Cold CreekManor" 'R' (5:50) ** "Batman Forever"1995Val Kilmer. n 'pG-13' « (9:45) ** "Godzua"1998,ScienceFiction MatthewBroderick. n 'pG-13' « 2 FXM presents ***"Madagascar:Escape2Africa"2008'pG' FXMpresents ** * "Horton Hears a Who!"2008 'G' acc FXMPresents ** "Daddy Oay Care" 2003, ComedyEddie Murphy. 'PG' « FMC 104204104120Madagascar Motorcycle RacingMonsterEnergy Cup:LasVegas Supercross racing fromSamBoyd Stadium, LasVegas. Moto:In Out AMA SupercrossLites FromRogers Center inToronto, Canada. X-Fighters 2011 Highlights FUEL 34 Golf Central 1 9th Hole (N) Golf World Challenge,SecondRoundFromThousandOaks, Calif. GOLF 28 301 27 301Golf Central (N) Golf WorldChallenge,SecondRoundFromThousand Oaks, Calif. *** "Battle of the Bulbs" (2010) DanielStern. 'pG' « "Lucky Christmas"(2011)Elizabeth Berkley. 'G' « "Hitched for theHolidays" (2012)Joey Lawrence.'PG' « HALL 66 33175 33 (4:ee)"CancefChristmas"'G' **"KnightandDay"2010,Action TomCruise. A womanbecomesthe reluc- *"The Sitter"200 Jonah Hil. Ane'er-do-well watches a *** "Collateral" (4:30) ***"Crazy, Stupi d , Love." 200, Romance-Com24/7 Pacqui a oi REAL Sports With Bryant Gumbel HBO 25501 425501 2004 'R' edySteveCarell. n 'pG-13' cc Marquez 4 'PG' n 'PG' cc tantpartner of a fugitive spy. n 'PG-13' cc brood of rambunctiouschildren. 'R' cc I FC 105 1 0 5 (5:15) ** "Ali GIndahouse"2002Sacha BaronCohen. 'R' Whisker Wars portlandia '14' (8:15) ** "AliGIndahouse"2002SachaBaron Cohen. 'R' Whisker Wars portlandia '14' "SpongeaobSquarepants" (5:15) ** "The Grudge" 2004,HorrorSarahMichelle Gel- (6:45) ***"The Rundown"2003,AdventureThe Rock. Abounty hunter must** "projectX"2012ThomasMann.Threeteensthrowa Hunted Khyber Sammakesastartling Skin tothe Max Hunted Khybern M AX 00508 5 0 8 n 'MA' 'MA' cc find hisboss' sonin theAmazon. n 'PG-13' « revelation. (N) n 'MA' « lar, Jason Behr.n 'PG-13' cc party that spinswildly out of control. 'R' Family Guns(N)'PG' InsidetheAfghanistan War'14' Family Guns 'PG' InsidetheAfghanistan War '14' Grand CanyonSkywalk 'PG' N GC 157 1 5 7 Monsuno 'Y7' Dragonball GT Robot, Monster OddParents NF L Rush Zone: Season,Guard Monsuno 'Y7' Dragonball GT Dragon Ball Z Iron Man: Armor NTOON 89 115189115Wild Grinders Wild Grinders NFL RushZone:Season,Guard Flyrod The Flush Hun tin' World OUTD 37 307 43 307L.L. BeanGuide Fear No Evil O uffitter Boot Sa squatch D riv en TV S ava ge Wild Y o u r Weapon Jimmy Big Time Hunt., CountryBoneCollector profess. * "TheThreeMusketeers"200 Matthew MacFadyen.D'Artagnanandfriends ciaran (5:50) *** "Ransom"1996, Suspense MelGibson, ReneRusso.A wealthy (7:55) ** "The Twilight Saga:Eclipse" 2010Kristen Stewart. Bella must S HO 00 5 0 0 (4:15) *** "The Eclipse" 2009 Hinds.n 'R' « executive turnsthe tables onhis son'sabductor. n 'R' « choose betweenEdwardandJacob. n 'PG-13' « must foil Richelieu's anarchist plot. n 'PG-13' « SPEED 35 303125303NASCARAwards Ceremony(N) (Live) NASCARAwards Ceremony **"TheRecruit"2003,Suspense AlPacino.n 'PG-13'« STARZ 00408 00408(4:10) *** "The Muppets"n Magic city n 'MA' « BossBackflash n 'MA' « Spartacus: Vengeance n 'MA' C a melot ThreeJourneys n 'MA' * "Death Racers" 2008 Violent J. Contestants competein (11 05) ** "Hobo Witha Shotgun"• (440) ** "The Beaver" 2011 Mel (615) ** "The Story of Us"1999 Bruce Wi l i s . A coupl e ' s marri a ge crumbl e s **"Born Ki l lers" 2005 Jake Muxworthy. psychopathi c TMC 2 5 25 Gibson. n 'PG-13' « overthecourseof 15years. o 'R' « siblings leavebehind atrail of corpses. 'R' a cross-country killing race. n 'R' « 2011 RutgerHauer. n 'NR' Game On! N F L Turning Point 'PG' Poker After Dark 'PG'a« NBCSN 27 58 ae 209(4:30) CollegeHockey BostonCollegeatBostonUniversity (N) (Live) C o l l ege Hockey Wisconsi at Denver n (N)(Live) ** "Where the Heart is" 2000, Comedy-DramaNatalie Portman. 'PG-13' *WE 143 41 174118**"Wherethe Heartis" 2000,Comedy-DramaNatalie Portman. 'PG-13' KendraonTop Kendra onTop Kendra onTop Kendra onTop


FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012• THE BULLETIN

ADVICE & ASTROLOGY

Too muchtogethernessmay result in acouple's breakup Dear Abby:I'm engaged to someone I love very much. I am 36 and he is 44. We get along great, but he's in a rush to get married. It will be my first and his second marriage. We got engaged three months ago, and he wants the wedding to be in February. The date he picked is his father's birthday. My other problem is, he is always pawing at me. He always needs to be touching me or calling me his "beautiful angel." It's good to hear that once in a while, but not five times a day. I love being with him, but s ometimes I need my o w n space. If I say no, he gets defensive and worried that I'm going to leave him. We spend practically every waking (and nonwaking) moment together. I am almost at a breaking point. Help! — Overwhelmed in Pennsylvania Dear Overwhelmed: I hope you realize that the behavior you are describing is not an indication of love but of extreme insecurity. His n eed to constantly touch you, his defensiveness if you say you n eed some space and h i s fear that you will leave him WON'T CHANGE if you marry him. I am also concerned about the way your wedding date was chosen, because the d ecision wasn't a r r ived a t mutually. A sk yourself t his: I f h e makes what should be joint decisions, and you have no space for yourself because of his insecurity, is this the way you want to spend a LIFETIME? These could be symptoms of an abuser. Dear Abby:I'm 25, have an associate's degree in health management and have completed a CRMA (Certified Residential Medication Aide) course, and I'm now on my way to obtaining my bachelor of science in health management. It sounds like I'm heading toward a great future, right? My problem is I have zero

DEAR ABBY c onfidence i n m y s elf. I ' m scared to death of m a king m istakes as a C R MA , a n d

equally scared of being successful. Everybody says how "proud" they are of me and that I'm headed toward great things, but I'm not sure I can do this. I am struggling to find self-confidence because if I don't believe in myself, I won't achieve anything. What can I do to put myself out there and take the steps I need to accom-

plish my goals? — Needs a Boost in Maine Dear Needs a Boost: Selfdoubt can be an asset if it causes you to strive harder to master the skills you will need in your profession. However, because you are afraid of both failure AND success, the surest way to conquer your fears would be to talk about them with a counselor at your school or to a psychologist. What you are dealing with is not as unusual as you may think. Dear Abby:My husband insists that wearing a white Tshirt when out and about is the same as wearing a colored one with a design on it. I think he's wearing underwear as outerwear and is being too casual. We do not live in a r ural community. We are in a suburb of San Diego. Life is relaxed here, but not THAT relaxed. Do you have an opinion? — Dressing Up, Not Down

Dear Dressing Up:I do have a thought or two on the subject. If your husband is comfortable this way, leave him alone. Because you are the one concerned with appearances, continue dressing up to create the impression you want and let him dress down and suffer the consequences — ifthere are any, which I doubt. — Write Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069.

Horoscope:HappyBirthday for Friday,Nov.30, 2Q12 By Jacqueline Blgar This yearsuccesscomes from relating on a one-on-one level, both professionally and personally. Others sense your compassion and become more responsive. Your creativity comesinwavesandsome times out of the blue. Youwill have greater insights than ever before. If you are single, you might feel like you're on a dating roller coaster. Let time determine the durability of a connection, ifyou decide to relate. This person will bring excitement into your life. If you areattached, the two of you rediscover the chemistry in your relationship. The Stars Showthe Kind of DayYou'll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult ARIES (March21-April19j ** * * Tap into your imagination and seek out a novel approach to a uniquely different situation. You could be overserious about a financial matter involving a partner. Try to initiate a conversation with this person. Tonight: Headhome first. TAURUS(April 20-May 20)

** * * * You'll open upa

conversation and gain abetter sense of what is going on. Theunexpected plays a role in plans, andyou will gain a sudden insight as a result. Conversations are animated. A creative friend even might offer a new perspective. Tonight: Where your friends are. GEMINI (May 21-June20) ** * * Be aware of the advantages of heading in a certain direction. Confirm that you and aboss areon thesame page,aseasily oneofyou could misread the other. Youmight find that your routine is becoming a bit tiring. Consider making it livelier. Tonight: TGIF! CANCER(June21-July 22) ** * * L i sten to forthcoming news with atouch of cynicism. The unexpected could add anelement of confusion and force you to reviseyour plans. Thinktwice before makingany changes. A lovedoneis morethan ready for a serious talk. Tonight: Beam in what you want. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ** Recognize thatyou can't handle everything in the time frame you would like. Manageyour responsibilities with the knowledge that you are only human. News from afar could jolt you. Doyour best to make sure that you understand the various forces at work. Tonight: Not

to be found. VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) ** * * Do not lose your focus right now. It would not beadvisable, especially with an associate or a loved one experiencing uproar in some form. Meetings add to afeeling of being in control. Think positively, and step back from any negativity. Tonight: Where your friends are. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ** * P ressure builds at work or within your immediate circle. Stay focused in order to discuss what is going on at adeeper level. Youseem oddly off-kilter. Try to worry less about the here-and-now, andyou will gain the ability to seethe big picture. Tonight: In the limelight. SCORPIO(Oct. 23-Nov. 21) ** * * * R ead between the lines with an associate. In fact, just listen to this person as if you were acomplete stranger, and you will understand a lot more about the differences and similarities between you. Think long and hard before giving a reaction. Tonight: Followyour imagination. SAGITTARIUS(Nov. 22-Dec. 21)

*** * Someone approaches

you with a very interesting idea. You might question what is really happening. Wh ynotsim plychoose to experience what this person has inmind? Youmight be making too much of this interaction. Tonight: Deal with a key person directly. CAPRICORN(Dec. 22-Jan.19) ** * You might want to defer to someone and find out what is going on behind the scenes. Howyou visualize whatyou want and what a friend is offering might seemvery different, but they actually are not. Be open to a suggestion. Tonight: You certainly are not alone. AQUARIUS(Jan. 20-Feb.18) ** * * You could be taken aback by all the last-minute errands that fall into your lap. Bewilling to say "no" if you feel as if you havetoo much to handle. Your sense of humor emerges when dealing with a higher-up. Tonight: Go relax with a friend and have some munchies. PISCES (Fed.19-March 20) ** * * * Y ou might notabl be eto restrain yourself asyour moreromantic side emerges. Be careful when handling your finances oranything elsethat demands yourfull attention. Yourability to dream andcomeup with unusual ideas emerges.Tonight: All smiles. © 2012 by King Features Syndicate

F AMIL Y

ALE N D A R

B3

A weekly compilation of family-friendly events throughout Central Oregon.

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.

Find afull community eventscalendar insidetoday's GO!Magazine. TODAY GRIMES'CHRISTMAS SCENE:A display of lighted andmechanical Christmas decorations; through Dec. 24; free; 2-7 p.m.; Crook County Fairgrounds,1280 S. Main St., Prineville; 541-447-5006 or grimes@crestviewcable.com. BEND HOLIDAYTREELIGHTING: Carolers, live music anddance, with Santa Claus; 6 p.m.; corner of Wall Street and Newport Avenue; www.downtownbend.org/ holiday-tree-lighting. "AS YOU LIKEIT": The La Pine High School drama department presents a play byWilliam Shakespeare; $5, $4 students and seniors, $1 off with donations of nonperishable food; 7 p.m.; La Pine High School, 51633 Coach Road; 541-355-8400. FRIDAY NIGHTLIVE:The Crook County High School drama department hosts a variety show featuring improv games, comedy sketches, short films and more; donationsaccepted; 7 p.m.; Crook County High School, Eugene Southwell Auditorium, 1100 S.E. Lynn Blvd., Prineville; 541-416-6900.

SATURDAY VFW BREAKFAST: Com munity Christmas buffet breakfast; $8.50, $7.50 seniors and children ages12 andyounger; 8:30-11 a.m.; VFW Hall, 1503 N.E.Fourth St., Bend;541-389-0775. FESTIVALOFTREES: The 29th annual event showcases decorated Christmas trees; live music, a tree auction, Santa Claus and more; proceeds benefit the Hospice of Redmond; free daytime family festivities, $40 eveningevent;10a.m .-2p.m . family festivities, 5 p.m. evening gala; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 S.W.Airport Way, Redmond; 541-548-7483 or www.redmondhospice.org/ festival-of-trees. HOLIDAYBOOK SALE:The Friends of the BendPublic Libraries hosts a sale of books, CDs, audio books andmore; free admission; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Deschutes Library Administration Building, 507 N.W.Wall St., Bend;

541-389-1622. CROOKEDRIVERRANCH OLDE FASHIONEDCHRISTMAS CELEBRATION: Santa Claus, a parade, an Christmas tree lighting; free;11 a.m., 3:30 p.m. parade;Crooked River Ranch Administration Building, 5195 S.W. Clubhouse Drive; 541-548-8939. JINGLEBELL RUN/WALK FOR ARTHRITIS:Runners and walkers don holiday costumes for these 5K and fun-run races; proceeds benefit the Arthritis Foundation; $25, $15 ages 12 and younger; 9:30 a.m. registration, 11 a.m. awards,11:30 a.m. races start; downtown Bend; 888-845-5695 or www.bend jinglebellrun.kintera.org. BEND CHRISTMASPARADE: Parade theme is "A Picture Perfect Christmas"; free; noon; downtown Bend; 541-388-3879. GRIMES'CHRISTMAS SCENE:See Today's listing; 541-447-5006 or grimes©crestviewcable.com. HOEDOWNFORHUNGER: Featuring performances by more than 20 bands and a chili feed; proceeds benefit the center's Feed the Hungry Program; $20, $10 students, seniors and children ages16 and younger; 1-9 p.m.; Bend's Community Center, 1036 N.E. Fifth St.; 541-312-2069 or www.bendscommunitycenter.org. "THE NUTCRACKER": The Central Oregon School of Ballet performs the classic dance; $17 inadvance or $20 at the door; $6 ages12 andyounger in advance or $7 at the door; 3 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 N.E.Sixth St.; 541-362-6004 or www.central oregonschoolofballet.com. A VERY LAMB CHOP HOLIDAY:A holiday celebration featuring Shari Lewis' daughter, Mallory Lewis, with Charlie Horse, Hush Puppy and Lamb Chop; $12, $8 children 12 and younger, plus fees; 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. POKER TOURNAMENT ANDFAMILY BINGO NIGHT:Proceeds benefit the Sunriver Community Christmas Basket Program; free admission; 6-9 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic 8 Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road; 541-593-1978. "AS YOULIKEIT": SeeToday's listing; 541-355-8400. "THE NUTCRACKER": The Central Oregon School of Ballet performs the classic dance; $17 in advance or $20 at the door; $6 ages12 and younger in advance or $7 at the door; 7 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 N.E. Sixth St.; 541-362-6004 or www.centraloregonschoolof ballet.com. KEITHGREENINGER AND DAYAN KAI:The folk musicians perform; $15-$20 suggested donation; 7 p.m., doors open at 6:30 p.m.;

The Barn in Sisters, 68467 Three Creeks Road; 775-233-1433 or dooleysbarn@gmail.com. THE MEN OF WORTH: The Celtic folk musicians perform; $15-$20 suggested donation;8 p.m.,doors open at 7 p.m.; HarmonyHouse, 17505 Kent Road, Sisters; 541-548-2209.

Beyond Naked Royals, Lindsay's Arrests and Snooki's Baby"; free; 6 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-3121034 or www.deschuteslibrary.org/ calendar.

TUESDAY No Family event listings.

SUNDAY BREAKFAST WITH SANTA:Eat breakfast and visit with Santa; reservations requested; proceeds will provide a meal and Santa visit for area foster families; $12, $8 children10 and younger; 9-11 a.m.; The Pine Tavern, 967 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 541-598-3026. GRIMES' CHRISTMASSCENE:See Today's listing; 541-447-5006 or grimes©crestviewcable.com. HOLIDAYBOOKSALE: The Friends of the Bend Public Libraries hosts a bag sale featuring books, CDs, audio books and more; free admission, $4 per bag; 1-4 p.m.; Deschutes Library Administration Building, 507 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-389-1622. KEITHGREENINGERAND DAYAN KAI:The folk musicians perform; $15-$20 suggested donation; 1 p.m.; Higher Ground,2582 N.E. Dagget Lane,Bend;541-306-0048. NOTABLESSWING BAND:The big band plays swing, blues, Latin, rock 'n' roll and waltzes; $5; 2-4 p m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-639-7734 or www.notablesswingband.com. REDMOND COMMUNITYCONCERT ASSOCIATIONPERFORMANCE: Presidio Brass performs original arrangements for brass, piano and percussion; $50 season ticket, $20 students, $105 family ticket; 2 and 6:30p.m.;Ridgeview High School, 4555 S.W. Elkhorn Ave.; 541-3507222, redmondcca@hotmail.com or www.redmondcca.org. "THE NUTCRACKER":The Central Oregon School of Ballet performs the classic dance; $17 in advance or $20 at the door; $6 ages12 and younger in advance or $7 at the door; 3 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 N.E. Sixth St.; 541-362-6004 or www.centraloregonschoolof ballet.com. KEITHGREENINGERAND DAYAN KAI:The folk musicians perform; RSVP requested, call for location; $15-$20 suggested donation; 5 p.m.; 541-306-0048.

MONDAY THE WRONG HEROES: Dr. Elizabeth Daniels discusses how to teach girls to critique media content, titled "Helping Young People Navigate

WEDNESDAY GRIMES' CHRISTMASSCENE:See Today's listing; 541-447-5006 or grimes©crestviewcable.com. AARONMEYERBAND:The concert rock violinist performs a holiday concert; proceeds benefit Miller Elementary Music/Arts Enrichment and Family Access Network; $12-$35 plus fees; 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 54 I-317-0700 or www.tower theatre.org. WATER TOWER:ThePortlandbased folk band performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www .mcmenamins.com.

THURSDAY GRIMES' CHRISTMASSCENE:See Today's listing; 541-447-5006 or grimes@crestviewcable.com. RUBBISHRENEWED ECO FASHION SHOW:Sustainable fashion show featuring repurposed materials made into clothes; proceeds benefit REALMS Charter School's arts program; $12, $6ages12 and younger; 6 p.m .allages,8:30 p.m . ages 21 and older; Century Center, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; www .rubbishrenewed.com. CXMAS PARTY:Featuring cyclocross photography, a silent auction, a Q&Awith professional cycli stsRyanTrebon and Adam Craig and more; proceeds benefit the CXmas Junior Fund; $5 suggested minimum donation; 6:30 p.m.; Powered by Bowen, 143 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-585-1500. "FLOWERS FORALGERNON": The Crook County High School drama department presents the DavidRogers play aboutam an who participates in anexperiment to enhance his intellect; $5; 7 p.m.; Crook County High School, Eugene Southwell Auditorium,1100 S.E.Lynn Blvd., Prineville; 541-416-6900. THE ACOUSTICCHRISTMAS TOUR: Featuring Sanctus Real, Sidewalk Prophets and Dara Maclean; $20; 7 p.m.; Christian Life Center, 21720 E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-3898241 or www.acousticchristmas tour.com.

S TORY TIMES AND LIBRARY YOUTH EV EN T S For the week ofNov.30 to Dec. 6

Story times are freeunless otherwise noted.

Downtown Bend Public Library 601 N.W.Wall st.; 541-617-7097

C.E. Lovejoy's Brookswood Market

BABYSTEPS:Ages 0-18 months; 11:30 a.m. Wednesday and 1:30 p.m. Thursday. TODDLIN' TALES: Ages 18-36 months; 10:15 a.m. and 11 a.m. Tuesday and10:15 a.m. Wednesday. PRESCHOOL PARADE: Ages 3-5; 10:30 a.m. Friday and 1:30 p.m. Tuesday. KNOWORIGAMI:Ages10-17; 2 p.m. Wednesday.

19530 Amber MeadowDrive, Bend; 54t-888-1188

East Bend Public Library

Barnes & Noble Booksellers 2690 N.E. U.S.Highway 20, Bend; 541-318-7242

ONCE UPONA STORY TIME:AII ages; 11 a.m. Friday.

STORYTIME:All ages; 11 a.m. Thursday. Crook County Public Library 175 S.W. MeadowLakesDrive, Prineville; 541-447-7978

PRESCHOOL STORYTIME:Ages 3 and older; 6:30 p.m. Tuesday and 11 a.m.Thursday. WEE READ: Ages 0-3; 10 a.m. Monday and Wednesday.

Toys

62080 DeanSwift Road; 541-330-3760

TODDLIN'TALES:Ages 0-3; 9:30 a.m. Wednesday. PRESCHOOL PARADE: Ages 3-5; 9:30 a.m. Thursday. SATURDAYSTORIES:Ages 0-5; 10 a.m. Saturday. MUSIC 8 MOVEMENT:Ages 3-5: 9:30 a.m. Friday. ANIMALADVENTURES WITHTHE HIGH DESERTMUSEUM: Ages 3 and older; 9:30 a.m. Tuesday.

are meant to be played with carefully as they are ideal as Continued from B1 collectibles to share with the This 18-inch doll features next generation. light aquamarine eyes and Tester's Tip: Ou r t e sters long blonde hair. Her pe- also included C olonial-era riod dressing includes an toys that encouraged interacempire-waist, li g h t-pink tive play with both male and dress trimmed with ruffles female siblings. Some of our and a woven floral sash, boy testers were excited to lacy pantalettes, ribbed- add in toys to re-create hisknit stockings and p i nk tory. As a teachable moment, shoes. The "Meet Caroline" parents and teachers can use paperback, by K a t h leen this type of play to explain Ernst, is appropriate for what the Colonial period was independent chapter book about. reading. The story is captivating and as interesting AnyBook Reader for adults as it is for chilby Franklin Electronic dren. American Girl dolls Publishers

Hlgh Desert Museum 59800 S. U.S. Highway97,Bend; www. highdesertmuseum.org; 541-382-4754; unless noted, events included with

admission ($15adults, $12ages es and older, $9ages 5-12, freeages4and younger)

WILD WEDNESDAYS: Ages 7-12; treasure hunt;12:30 p.m. to close Wednesday. BACKPACK EXPLORERS: Ages 3-4; explore museum's animal habitat, share stories and songs; 10 to11 a.m. Thursday; $15 perchild nonmembers, $10 per child members. TOTALLY TOUCHABLETALES: Ages 2-5; storytelling about animals and people of the High Desert; 10:30 a.m. Tuesday. Jefferson County Public Library 241 S.w. seventh st., Madras; 541-475-3351

BABIESANDTODDLERSSTORY TIME:10:10a.m. Tuesday. PRESCHOOL ANDOLDER STORY TIME:Ages 3-5; 10:30 a.m. and 6:30 p.m. Tuesday. SPANISH STORYTIME:All ages; 1 p.m. Wednesday.

$39.99 Age 5 and older Toy Tips: A Fun: A Movement: B+ Thinking: A Personality: A Social Interaction: A The AnyBook Reader allows you to record their voice and embed it onto stickers that

can be placed on pages of any book. Activate the recording mode by tapping the tip of the pen toone of the stickers and record yourself reading your child's favorite book aloud. The stickers are removable and re-recordable. The Reader also comes withpre-recorded

La Pine Public Library 16425 First st.; 541-312-1090

FAMILY STORY TIME: All ages; 10:30 a.m. Thursday. TECHLAB: Ages12-17; 3 p.m. Monday. Redmond Public Library 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1 054

BABYSTEPS:Ages 0-18 months; 11 a.m.Thursday. PRESCHOOL PARADE: Ages 3-5; 10:15 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. Wednesday. TODDLIN' TALES: Ages 18-36 months; 10:15 a.m. Thursday. PAJAMAPARTY:Ages 0-6; 6:45 p.m. Tuesday. LABRATS:Bend Research brings science subjects to kids; ages 6-11; 3 p.m. Wednesday. Sisters Public Library 110 N. Cedar St.; 541-312-1070

FAMILY FUN STORYTIME: Ages 05; 10:30 a.m. Thursday. Sunriver Area Public Library 56855 Venture Lane; 541-312-1 080

FAMILY FUN STORYTIME: Ages 0-5; 10:30 a.m. Tuesday.

stickers that sound out animal sounds and noises such as clapping hands and fire truck sirens. Our testers were captivated when using the voice of a teacher, family member or friend. The Reader encouraged word r e cognition, r e ading skills, socialization and assisted in developing attention span. This learning tool worked well with children who have developmental disabilities that could not read or use language. — Recommendationsfrom MarianneM. Szymanski, publisher of www.toytips.com, Toy Tips Magazine and co-author of"Toy Tips: A Parent's Essential Guide to Smart Toy Choices."


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CANDORVILLE The Arab-Israeli Conflict: One Man's Analysis

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B6 THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012

Memories

An old couch, a gigantic hill and a lifetime of memories

Continued from B1 "That's the beautiful thing about storytelling," said Daily. Kila can picture herself in that hallway with the mirrors. "Memories are such a funny thing," said Daily. Many people have strong memories of their grandparents' homes. These memories of physical things, like a hallway of mirrors, are about more than just objects. Remembering a grandparent's favorite reading chair, a coff ee cup ora lamp can conjure up all sorts of connected memories and feelings. As this is a time of year when many families travel to visit grandparents, we asked local residents to share their favorite memories of their grandparents' homes.

he psychiatrist couch in my living room, with its faded orange, red and

I

My grandparents had a large collection

of playing cards; we spent hours playing solitaire or rummy together on the din-

yellow floral print, is one of mymost treasured possessions. I love its retro

longer, though memories of them are implanted deeply in my mind.

Iremembered my Granny and Pop's

vibe, but mostly I love how it reminds me

ing room table. And then there were the cookies. My grandfather, whom we all

house in Klamath Falls as a modest home with a giant yard, including a ca-

of my grandparents' home.

called Twinkle, loved sweets andkept a

The lounge used to sit in my grandparents' third-floor condo in Seattle. It was

large collection of cookies in the pantry. Every time I walked by, I would reach in

nal, cherry trees and a big shed where my cousins and I would play hide-andseek for hours. I remembered anabandoned hilly lot across the street where we dared to sled down dangerously

filled with fine things: antique lamps, china and grab one. tea cups and oil paintings. The psychiatrist couch — a low chaise with no back

My memories of that place are sweet,

was absolutely flat. And the sledding spot across the street wasn't so daring after

all. Everything — the house, the trees, the yard, the canal — was smaller than I

remembered. In many ways, the big hill and vast yard in my memories felt more real than the

actual place. Wedidn't stay long. Now I amwatching my owndaughter, nearly 2, explore her grandparents'

fast slopes. And I remembered their

homes. I wonder which things will embed

— wasthesecond-mostcovetedspot

formany reasons.W henyoudon'tsee something every day —and it only ex-

street climbed up a gigantic hill. I have

for napping, the first being a nearby gold velvet couch. Both sat in close proximity

ists for you during special visits — those objects can become imbued with extra

a visceral memory of the handlebars of my bikeshaking as Icareened down the

themselves into her mind andbecome symbols of her grandparents. Grampy's worn work bench?Grammy's collection of aprons?Baba' shand-builtchickencoop?

to the massive, seemingly ancient wooden meaning. It's not just stuff anymore.

steep incline.

TV cabinet. It didn't have a remote, so as a girl, I liked to lie close enough so I could

The last time I was in Klamath Falls, I drove by their old house for the first time

stretch out my foot and changeoneof the 13 channel buttons with a toe.

grandma's Avon perfume. "To this day, it takes me right to Cookies and carpet being with her," said Chapin, if For Tami Chapin, a Bend she gets a whiff of the scent. mom of four, thinking of her As for what her own children, grandma's house in G i l roy, who range from middle school Calif., makes her think about to college age, best rememcookies. ber about theirgrandfather's "One thing I remember the house, Chapin says it's all about most was my grandma's cook- the carpet. They love to chat ie jar. People don't even have about their grandpa's avocadothem anymore," said Chapin. green carpet, which just got This cookie jar, stationed pulled up a few years ago to renext to the oven, resembled a veal original hardwood floors. very tall, multilayered straw- It was high-low shag carpet in "all shades of avocado, gold and berry shortcake.Itwas always filled with cookies for Chapin green" said Chapin. and her brothers. Sometimes the cookies were homemade, Modest memories sometimes they were storeArt McEldowney, of Bend, bought macaroons. calls his grandparents' home Chapin says you didn't need on the Columbia River Gorge to ask. "If you wanted a cookie, "supremely modest." He reyou went and got it," she said. members gardening and playIt's a powerful memory for ing a lot of checkers with his Chapin, as is the smell of her grandfather. His favorite part

Twinkle died not long after I graduated

from college. Grandmamoved afew years later. She died last year. My grandparents on mymom's sidehavebeengoneeven

may have been "banging on w ood" building nothing i n particular in the little shop on the property. McEldowney i s c r e ating memories with his own grandchildren now. In fact, he was with hi s 4 - year-old granddaughter, McKenzie, at Shevlin Park recently when she caught her first rainbow trout. She caught the fish on the same fishing rod that McEldowney used when he caughthis first rainbow trout in Mill City. Asked how he had managed to hold ontothe fishingrod for so long, McEldowney said, "Well,

in more than adecade. But when wear-

It will be up to her to decide which

things to carry in her memory andclose to her heart. — Alandra Johnson, TheBulletin

rived, there was no hill in sight. The street

some things are important." He is taking after his own grandparents an d p a r ents in one way — hi s home is not child-proofed. The three youngsters (McKenzie is the oldest) have access to everything. "I hope they would think of it as a welcoming place," said McEldowney.

Rocking chair Kay Stein, who lives just outside of Bend, has v ivid memories ofthe house where her grandma, Nana, lived in Little Rock, Ark. One of her favorite items

in the house is now her own. Stein has her grandma's rock-

mother was not very strict, which Stein liked. She used to be a bit of a party-goer and was fun-loving. Stein's grandparents in Missouri were much more strict

ing chair, a stuffed Queen Anne-style. It's small - "My husband can't sit in it, which is good for me," joked Stein. She has a number of items from that house: pieces of Chi-

(no dancing, no playing cards), but Stein was allowed to roller skate in the basement. Stein now has two grandchildren, age 14 and 10, but mostly she travels to see them in Illinois. When they do come to visit, they focus on spending time outside, enjoying the birds and wildlife.

na, a rug, a Chinese-style ginger jar that Stein remembers sitting on her grandma's mantle. Stein also enjoys studying genealogy and history. "I'm interested in history and a family's connection to h i story," said Stein. "When I seethem (the objects), I think of her, of course." She says her grand-

— Reporter: 541-617-7860, ajohnson@bendbulletin.com

Enrollment in senior health plans More than 27,000 Central Oregon seniors were covered by a Medicare Advantage (Part C) or a Prescription Drug (Part D) plan this month. Open enrollment for these plans ends Dec. 7.

Percent of eligible

Medicare Advantage

SeniOr POPulatiOn enralled

Pr escription Orug

Crook Deschutes Jefferson Oregon County C ounty Co unty 43.1%

U.S. /

I

I

I

I I

42.7% 41 5'I

39 6%

39 6% 31.1% 27 80o

27 3%

24.6% 19.8%

ASCADE COTTONS Find the perfect gift for everyone on your list!

Source: U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services

Medicare Continued from B1 These plans, known as Medicare Part D, cover another 16,394 Central Oregon residents, according to CMS. The only times people can change their Medicare options outside of the open enrollment period is if they move where their coverage options may change, when they first become eligible for benefits and when they're current Medicare plans decide to stop offering benefits. "If they just forgot to do it, that's not a good reason," said Lisa Emerson, the state's SHI-

BA program manager. Guzauskis said it's important for Medicare beneficiaries to understand their health care needs, especially when it comes to what drugs they take, and how those needs can change over the coming year. He said it's also important to know what options are out there, even if they are happy with their current health insurance arrangement, because Medicare plans change their prices,benefits and coverage areas each year. Accordingto SHIBA'swebsite, residentsof Crook, Deschutes, and Jefferson counties can receive benefits from seven Medicare Advantage plans — five of which include prescription drug coverage — offered by ODS Health Plan and PacificSource

M edicare. Plans range in price from $19 to $139 a month. They can get also benefits from one of30 Medicare prescription drug plans that range from $15 to $122 a month. The g overment-sponsored Medicare Part B coverage will cost $105 a month for most people in 2013, while Medicare Part Acoverage isfree for any person who has worked and contributed to the M edicare system for at least 10 years. — Reporter: 541- 617-781 6, mmclean@bendbulletin.com

Bendk Mt. Bachelor Logo-Wear and Gifts for the Entire Family!

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• Medicare Advantage (Medicare Part G): A

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• Medicare Prescription Drug Coverage (Medicare Part 0): A program where privately managed companies provide prescription drug coverage to people who receive Part Aand Part B ora Medicare Advantage plan.

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To learn moreabout or to select your Medicare

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News of Record, C2 Obituaries, C5 Editorials, C4 Weather, C6 O www.bendbulletin.com/local

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012

LOCAL BRIEFING Man brandished toy gun, police say A Bend cab driver was threatened with

a realistic toy pistol Wednesday night, brandished by a customer

who used the gunto avoid paying the fare,

according to Bend police.

Mark Farnsworth, 25, of Bend, was arrested

and jailed on charges of second-degree robbery, menacing and theft of services. He isalso being held on a Wyoming warrant for delivery of

controlled substances. Farnsworth took the

cab from a downtown Bend bar to his home on Southwest Garfield

Avenue. Uponarrival, he told the cab driver, 45year-old Mark Dietrich, that he would have to go

inside to get the money to pay the fare. Dietrich held Farnsworth's ID

card, but whenFarnsworth returned, he pointed an Airsoft pistol

in the driver's face. Dietrich complied,

and returned Farnsworth's card.

SOcI 8

c I B I ' B I l BI ' c I IOIl COSIIl '/ ~

By Dylan j. Darling The Bulletin

After more than a 100-year run,the most remote yearround ranger station in the Pacific Northwest will close today. The U.S. Forest Service is closing the Rager Ranger Station, about 70 miles east of Prineville. "It was a financial-driven decision," said Sandy Henning, district ranger for the Paulina District of the Ochoco National Forest. Four Forest Service workers, including a seasonal firefighter, have been assigned to the ranger station since staffing cutbacks in 2010, Henning said. In contrast, she said, up to 40 permanent employees worked there during its heyday in the 1980s. The jobs will be moved to Prineville, where one Forest Service office is home to the Paulinaand Lookout Mountain ranger districts as well as the Ochoco National Forest headquarters. Charles Congleton was the first ranger atR ager,according

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Andy Zeigertr The Bulletin I'

e

"It was an important part of the community for The Bulletin file photo

The Rager Ranger Station, locatedabout 70 miles east of Prineville, is being forced to close for budget reasons. to the Crook County Historical Society. A cabin Congleton built in the Ochoco in 1908 served as the first ranger station, Tory Kurtz, spokeswoman forthe forestservice wrote in an email. While the ranger station has been in the same spot since, it was moved into new buildings at least three times over the past century. In 1939 and 1940, a Civilian

Conservation Corps camp was located at Rager and the ranger station eventually moved into the rec hall at the camp, Kurtz wrote. The current Rager Ranger station was built in 1964 and added onto twice. The ranger station has been a place for hunters and firewood cutters to pick up permits and maps, as well as being a home and workplace for Forest

a long time." — Sandy Henning, district ranger in the Ochoco National Forest

Service workers, Henning said. "It was an important part of the community for a long time," Henning said. She said the Forest Service is working with the store in Paulina to offer permit and map salesthere and a temporary ranger station may be set up during hunting season. Paulina, population about 120, is about 15 miles from the Rager

Ranger Station. As a historian, Steve Lent, assistant director at the A.R. Bowman Memorial Museum in Prineville, said he's sad to see the Rager Ranger Station go. "It changes the whole dynamics quite a bit of that area," said Lent, who retired from the Forest Service in 2002. See Station /C2

Police were called to the area shortly after

11 p.m. anddetermined

Hearing examines wireless spectrum policies

Farnsworth was inside his home. He refused to comply with initial instructions to come outside but eventually surrendered to officers. Farnsworth is being held on $55,000 bail

and is due to appear in court Tuesday.

Seniors legal clinic set in Redmond The Central Oregon

CO

Council on Aging and the Legal Aid Services of Oregon will be provid-

By Andrew Clevenger

ing free legal services to low income senior citizens in Redmond on Dec. 13. Attorney Steve Bryant will be available from 8 a.m. until noon at the Redmond Senior Center, 325 N.W. Dogwood Ave.

The Bulletin

WASHINGTON — More certainty about what constitutes being a good

neighbor in the broadband spectrum will spurinnova-

e tW

tion and effi-

Eligible seniors can

ciency, experts

sign up for a 30-minute

told members I N D .C.

session to discuss income maintenance, health care, food and nutrition, housing and utilities assistance and the preparation of legal documents. Criminal

cases, wills, fee-generating cases or cases that present a conflict of interest cannot be handled through this

Andy Tullier The Bulletin

ocal volunteers, Steve Reber, left, and Dale Martin, build a Christmas

program. To schedule an

Parade float Thursday in Reber's garage in Bend.

appointment or get more information, call

They're working on the float for Christmas of Change, an organiza-

PARADE ROUTE I NewportAve.~

i > AtartIFipis e,Rivor.l

Redmond Senior Center coordinator Sue Barker at 541-548-6325. — From staff reports

tion that collects money for local charities. The float is one of many that will

More briefingand News of Record, C2

to crawl through the streets of downtown to kick off a season of holiday cheer.

line up on Bend's west side Saturday as the Bend Christmas Parade prepares Andy Zeigertr The Bulletin

The parade route will be closed to traffic starting around 11 a.m. Saturday. The parade should cross the Newport Avenue bridge at noon Saturday. Streetswill be reopened as the STATE NEWS

parade passes and should be open to traffic by around 2 p.m.

Oregon City Salem

• Salem:Oregon Supreme Court throws out murder conviction,

changing rules for eyewitness testimony. • Oregon City:Election worker in Clackamas County indicted in ballot-tampering.

• Elsewhere:Suspect in ecoterrorist fires surrenders, to be returned to Oregon for trial. Stories on C3

Jg ~g ~gf

Bank in contempt in couple'sbankruptcy By Sheila G. Miner The Bulletin

A Portland bankruptcy judge found Wells Fargo Bank in contempt and ordered it to pay a Bend couple $4,000 for calling them more than 100 times in an attempt to collect on a home loan that was discharged in bankruptcy. In an opinion filed Nov. 5, U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Randall Dunn found Wells Fargo Bank in contempt of bankruptcy proceedings, ruling the bank knew it wasn't to contact them about the loan but did so

anyway. David and Linda Culpepper filed for bankruptcy in October 2009. The bankruptcy was

discharged in February 2010. Wachovia, now Wells Fargo, held the first mortgage on the Culpeppers' home in Northwest Bend. When the bankruptcy was discharged, an order was issued telling the bank to stop collections and to stop contacting the

Culpeppers. The couplemoved from their home in 2010, but beginning in January 2011 the bank called the Culpeppers nearly every day, sometimes twice a day. In the calls, Dunn wrote, Wells Fargo representatives told Culpepper the house was in foreclosure and asked whether she'd be interested

in fixing the problem. When she spoke to them, Culpepper told bank representatives she consideredthe calls harassing and wanted them to stop. Representatives told her in order for the calls to stop, she needed to fax a cease-and-desist letter. That letter was never faxed, Dunn wrote, but the Culpeppers' attorney did send a letter telling Wells Fargo to stop calling, providing it with the bankruptcy discharge order and warning that if the calls didn't stop the Culpeppers would seek contempt sanctions. The calls stopped Jan. 12, after the Culpeppers filed a

contempt motion. Wells Fargo argued the bank didn't violate bankruptcy law because bank representatives never demanded payment during the phone calls. It also argued the bank had a duty to keep Culpepper up to date on the foreclosure and discuss a loan modification with her. In his opinion, Dunn wrote that Culpepper had "opened the door to further communications with Wells Fargo" when she filed loan modification applications with the bank during the bankruptcy. But he wrote the history and volume of calls was important. See Bank/C2

of House Subcommittee on Communications and Technology Thursday. But when the company — or technology — that might occupy the spectrum adjacent to you in five years may not even exist yet, this makes defining boundaries particularly challenging. "Demand for spectrum

is far outpacing supply, and we need to figure out how to use the room we have as effectively as possible," said committee Chairman Rep. Greg Walden, R-Hood River. Thursday's hearing, part of a series Walden has held that examines America's broadband spectrum policies, focused on the role of receivers, and whether regulations could be imposed on them to facilitate more efficient spectrum use. Physicist Pierre de Vries, a senior adjunct fellow at the Silicon Flatirons Center for Law, Technology and Entrepreneurship at the University of Colorado, said it was important to set a standard "harm claim threshold" for the amount of interference allowable

between neighboring spectrum users. "This gives manufacturers and operators the information they need to figure out the best way to tolerate potentially inte6ering signals in adjacent bands,

including by improving the performance of their receivers," he said. Traditionally, the Federal Communications Commission has used several strategies for monitoring spectrum usage, said Ronald Repasi, deputy chief of the FCC Office of Engineering and Technology. See Spectrum /C2


C2

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012

Spectrum

LOCAL BRIEFING Continued from Ct

Call for artists at Crater Lake Crater Lake National

Park is accepting applications for its 2013 Artist in Residence

program. In a news release, Linda Hilligoss, educa-

tion coordinator for the Science & Learning Center, said the park

is looking for artists to produce "music, dance, drama, photography, art, literature, cinematography, and more," interpreting the beauty

of the Oregon's only national park.

The program will select two artists to

spend up to two weeks living in a fully furnished

residence at the park. Application forms and

more information are available online at www. nps.gov/crla/slc.htm and are due by Feb.1, 2013.

Science lecture at McMenamin's The Oregon State

University-Cascades "Science Pub" lecture

series will resumeDec. 13, with a free talk by OSU medical anthropol-

ogist Melissa Cheyney on the politics and sci-

ence of being born. The Science Pub will be held at McMenamin's Old St. Francis School in Bend.

Cheyney will discuss why the U.S. ranks 28th in the world for maternal health and lags on child mortality

rates, and what can be done to improve care

bandwidth,and the company filed for bankruptcy earlier this Continued from C1 year. First, it has tried to assign Brian Markwalter, the Cons imilar users t o t h e s a me sumer Electronics A ssociabands, so that cellphone carri- tion's vice president of research ers occupyone area while tele- and standards, said that while vision broadcasters operate in multiple users of the same specanother, he said. Second, it has trum, such as cellphone carriimposed limits on transmis- ers,have worked welltogether sions so that they don't create within the same industry to interference outside their desig- develop technology that allows nated frequency bands. Third, them to operate in the same it has assigned "guard bands" area, developers don't typically between adjacent users,to keep pay attentionto how another insignals from creeping into and dustry may plan to use a neighdisrupting t r ansmissions in boring slice of bandwidth. other bandwidths. He encouraged the subcom"There is no question that, mittee members to let induswithout concerted action, the try develop the performance demand for mobile broadband benchmark for receivers rather spectrum would quickly out- than having them imposed by pace the available supply," he the FCC. "Inappropriate r egulations sa>d. By way of analogy: If the reduce flexibility for innovabroadband spectrum was like tion in an area that is inherently your FM radio dial, the FCC vibrant," he said. "The FCC would tell businesses where should encourage i ndustry, they could set up, how powerful through voluntary standardstheir signal could be and how setting organizations, to lead close they could be to another efforts to create voluntary restation. However, if the receiv- ceiver performance guidelines ers (in this example, the radios, based on projectedspectrum but really for any device like a environments." smartphone or tablet) could be Walden learned Wednesimproved to better distinguish day that Rep. Fred Upton, between signals, then the sig- R-Mich., the chairman of the nals could be stronger and clos- House Committee on Energy er together, which would create and Commerce, had tapped more usable space on the dial. him to serve another two-year Where the a nalogy f alls term as chairman of the Comdown is that it assumes that all munications and Technology users of the broadband spec- subcommittee. trum are in the same industry, In his remarks Thursday, or using the same technology, Walden indicated that as subwhich they are not. committee chairman, he plans In a real-life example, a com- to continue to focus on broadpany calledLightSquared re- band spectrum. "Telecommunications is the cently tried to launch a wholesale 4G wireless network in a most vibrant and innovative specific band of the spectrum, (economic) sector in America. only to find that its use was Spectrum is the fuel that it runs disrupting global positioning on, but there's a limit to our supsystems, or GPS, in a nearby ply. As our subcommittee conpart of the spectrum. When tinues to work to free up more the Defense Department and spectrum, weare also focused other government userscomon maximizing use of existing plained about the disruptions, spectrum." the FCC pulled LightSquared's — Reporter: 202-662-7456, permission to use its allocated aclevenger@bendbulletin.com

for mothers and babies. She'll examine the role of traditional medicine in both subjects, as well

as midwiferyand home care. Reservations are required for Science Pub lectures, which are held from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Networking and food

and beverageservice begin at 5:30 p.m., with

the presentations beginning at 6:30 p.m. Participants may RSVP online www.osu

cascades.edu/science pubs by 5 p.m. Dec.12. — From staff reports

Have astoryidea or sudmission? Contactus!

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.

BEND FIRE RUNS Tuesday 7:31 a.m.— Smoke odor reported, 20550 Murphy Road. 8:44a.m.— Smoke odor reported, 1245N.W.GalvestonAvenue.

The Bulletin Call a reporter: Bend................541-617-7829 Redmond ........541-977-7185 Sisters.............541-977-7185 La Pine ........... 541-383-0348 Sunriver ......... 541-383-0348

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Submissions: • Letters and opinions: Mail: My Nickel's Worth or In My View p.o. Box 6020 Bend, OR97708 Detailsonthe Editorials page inside.Contact: 541-383-0358, bulletin©bendbulletin.com

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Details: School coverageruns Wednesdayinthis section. Contact:541-383-0358

• Obituaries, Death Notices: Detailsonthe Obituaries page inside.Contact: 541-617-7825, obits@bendbulletin.com

11:24 a.m.— Authorized controlled burning, 21432 Back Alley St. 4:41 p.m. —Unauthorized burning, 59859 Navajo Road. 27 —Medical aid calls. Wednesday 11:45 a.m. —Gas leak, 61542 Baptist Way. 1:28 p.m.— Smoke odor reported, 501 S.E Second Street. 3:51 p.m.— Gas leak, 61542 Baptist Way. 6:59 p.m.— Chimney or flue fire, 1001 S.E 15th Street. 13 —Medical aid calls.

PUBLIc OFFIcIALs For The Bulletin's full list, including federal, state, county and city levels, visit M/ww.bendbulletirLcom/ojficials.

STATE OF OREGON Gov. John Kitzhaber, Democrat 160 State Capitol, 900 Court St. Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-378-4582 Fax: 503-378-6872 Web: http://governor.oregon.gov

Secretary of StateKateBrown, Democrat 136 State Capitol Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1616 Fax: 503-986-1616 Email: oregon.sos@state.or.us Superintendent of Public Instruction Susan Castillo 255Capitol Street N.E Salem, Oregon97310 Phone: 503-947-5600 Fax: 503-378-5156 Email: sttperintendent.castillo Ostate.or.us Web: www.ode.state.or.us Treasurer TedWheeler, Democrat 159 Oregon State Capitol 900 Court St. N.E. Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-378-4329 Email: oregon.treasurer Ostate.or.us Web: www.ost.state.or.us Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum, Democrat 1162 Court St. N.E. Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-378-4400 Fax: 503-378-4017 Web: www.doj.state.or.us Labor Commissioner Brad Avakian 800 N.E. Oregon St., Suite1045 Portland, OR97232 Phone: 971-673-0761 Fax:971-673-0762 Email: boli.mail©state.or.us Web: www.oregon.gov/boli

LEGISLATURE Senate

Sen. TedFerrioli, R-District 30 (inclttdes Jefferson, portion ofDeschtttes) 900 Court St. N.E., S-323 Salem, OR 97301 Phone:503-986-1950 Email: sen.tedferrioli@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/ferrioli Sen. Chris Telfer, R-District27 (inclttdes portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., S-423 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1727 Email: sen.christelfer©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/telfer Sen. Doug Whitsett, R-District28 (inclttdes Crook, portion of Deschutesl 900 Court St. N.E., S-303 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1728 Email: sen.dougwhitsett@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/whitsett House

Rep. JasonConger, R-District 54 (portion of DeschuIesj 900 Court St. N.E., H-477 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1454 Email: rep.jasonconger@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/conger Rep. John Huffman, R-District 59 (portion of Jefferson) 900 Court St. N.E., H-476 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1459 Email: rep.johnhuffman©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/huffman Rep. Mike McLane, R-District55 (Crook, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., H-385 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1455 Email: rep.mikemclane@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/mclane Rep. GeneWhisnant, R-District 53 (portion of Deschutes County) 900 Court St. N.E., H-471 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1453 Email: rep.genewhisnant@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/whisnant

Station Continued from C1 While never stationed at Rager, he said the ranger station also cut down the amount o f t i m e F o rest Service employees spent traveling to and from their work in the field. Over the years Forest S ervice workers a t t h e Rager Ranger Station often volunteered with the ambulance service in Paulina, regularly filling the critical role of emergency medical technician, said Jodie Fleck, president of R ager E m ergency S e r vices. The service started in 1986, according to its website. The a mbulance even used to be kept at the ranger station, but Fleck said it moved to Paulina a couple of yearsago after the Fore st Service shrunk t h e staff at Rager. Relying on volunteers, the service has

Bank Continued from C1 I n testimony, a b a n k r epresentative s ai d t h e calls were to tell people in foreclosure about options to get them back on the right track. But, Dunn pointed out in his opinion, Wells Fargo wanted to get Culpepper to keep trying to modify her loan. If she did that, Dunn wrote, the bank would be able to "revive all, or at least a portion, of her discharged debt to the bank." In the calls, Culpepper told the bank representatives she didn't want a loan modification and wanted the calls to stop. Dunn found that Wells Fargo knew not to contact Culpepper but continued to call her to try to get her to "reinstate all (or) some of a discharged debt." D unn ruled t hat C u l pepper did n o t d e serve punitive damages, but ordered Wells Fargo to pay her $4,000 for emotional distress. That's $1,000 for each of the transcribed

Crook County Historical Society/Submitted photo

The Rager Ranger Station in the 1920s. The station has been in use for more than 100 years. already braced for the station closure,which the Forest Service announced in April. "It's not going to affect us now," Fleck said. The fate of the buildings at the ranger station is unknown, Henning said. The Forest Service will conduct a historical analysis of the

buildings and some may be sold. A time capsule, filled with photos and other pieces of Rager's history, is planned. "I think it is important that we recognize the history out there," Henning said.

c alls. H e a l s o r u l e d s h e should receiveattorney's fees and costs. "... The calls did not stop, and there is a fundamental problem with a program of calls where intelligent, knowledgeable Wells Fargo employees cannot take the responsibility to cause such calls to stop in the face of clear communications from a former customer that she has no interest in further pursuing a loan modification and wants the calls to cease," Dunn wrote. The Culpeppers' attorney, Michael Fuller of Portland, said money was not the point. "It just says if you press on long enough, and you take it before a judge, justice will be served," Fuller said. "The clients wanted, at the end of the day, to acknowledge that they'd been treated wrongly and unfairly. They got a money award, but that wasn't the

whole point of this." The bank's attorney, Philip Lempriere, did not return a call for comment. Fuller said Wells Fargo has appealed the decision, and has not admit-

— Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarling@bendbulletin.com

ted wrongdoing. "That's all they wanted was an apology, an admission," Fuller said. Culpepper declined to comment Thursday except to say she felt The Bulletin was exploiting her hardships. A l a wsuit f i l e d a g a inst Wells Fargo i n D e s chutes County Circuit Court by the Culpeppers in May has been moved tofederal court. — Reporter: 541-617-783l, smiller@bendbulletin.com

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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012• THE BULLETIN

C3

REGON NEWS

Court throws out murder eonvietion Worker in icte and ehangesrules oneyewitnesses in allot-tampering By Steven DuBois

and was later brought by police to a preliminary hearing P ORTLAND — T h e O r - misidentification because it's the leading cause to view the defendant in peregon Supreme Court revised son, that she was able to idenits standards fo r a l l owing of wrongful convictions, ancf we think that this tify him," De Muniz wrote. eyewitness testimony Thurs- test is going to provide much greater protection He noted the circumstances d ay while ordering a n e w to innocent defendants." in which Sherl Hilde viewed trial for a man whose murder Lawson were "highly sugges— Karen Newirth, the Innocence Project tive of his guilt." conviction was largely based on the account of awoman At the 2005 t r i al, w h en who was critically wounded asked if she had any doubt in the attack and c ouldn't In the most obvious change, and discovered that Lawson's about the identification, Sherl identify him in initial police the initial burden is now on yellow pickup was in t h eir Hilde said: "Absolutely not. interviews. the state to show the evidence parking spot and that he'd I'll never forget his face as In a u n animous opinion, is reliable. The traditional test been staying in t h eir t ent. long as I live." the court said there were "se- puts the burden on the defen- Lawson apologized, gathered Lawson's attorney, Daniel r ious questions" about t h e dant to show the identifica- his gear and moved to a va- Casey, did not return a phone reliability of t h e i d entifica- tion was the product of undu- cant campsite. message seeking comment. tion evidence presented at ly suggestive procedures. That evening, Sherl Hilde Bronson James, a Portland the trial of Samuel Lawson, Another shift is that under was shot in the chest with a defense attorney who f i l ed who was convicted of killing the traditional test, courts hunting rifle. Her husband an amicus brief in the case, Noris Hilde and critically in- could make only one deci- called 911 but was fatally shot said the decision was "huge" juring Hilde's wife, Sherl, at sion: suppress or admit the during the conversation. because courts need to keep an Umpqua National Forest e vidence. Now c o urts w i l l The operator called back, up withthe current research. campground in 2003. have a range of remedies to and Sherl Hilde said she and James said he has a case in Sherl Hilde could not posi- address unreliability, such as her husband had been shot which the victim i dentified tively identify Lawson in the limiting the w i tness's testib ut she d i dn't k n o w w h o the accusednot from a police weeks after the shooting, say- mony and permitting expert fired. F o l lowing s u r g ery, lineup, but by going to a webing she had seen him for only testimony to explain the sci- Sherl Hilde failed at l e ast site and finding a mug shot. a few seconds at most. Two entific research on memory twice to identify Lawson in The state Supreme Court years later, at trial, she was and identification. p hotographs supplied b y d ecision r e c ognizes t h a t "We're very c o n cerned police. certain it was him. The court the science of memory, persays the woman's conflicting about eyewitness misidentiThe court said it was dark ception a n d i d e n tification statements indicate her mem- fication because it's the lead- during the attack, and stress, is "monumentally d i fferent ory was influenced by police ing cause of wrongful convic- fear and physical injury tend than it was 35 years ago," suggestion. tions, and we think that this to impair memory. Moreover, James said. " We can now p u t s o m e The opinion written by Jus- test is going to provide much the suspect covered Sherl tice Paul De Muniz said the g reater protection to i n n o- Hilde's face with a pillow and real guidance on what does standards for the admissibil- cent defendants," said Karen was wearing a h at , w h ich it mean it be suggestive?" he ity of eyewitness testimony, Newirth, eyewitness identifiobscured k e y id e n t i fying said. "The c ourt s p ends 8 0 established in 1979, needed cation litigation fellow at the features. "It was not until after she something pages trying realto be revised in light of devel- Innocence Project. opments in law and scientific The Hildes arrived at their had seen a newspaper article ly hard to track what is close research. campsite on Aug. 21, 2003, with a picture of defendant, to the best science." The Associated Press

"We're very concerned about eyewitness

Suspect in ecoterror firessurrendersto police By jeff Barnard

Rubin was part of a cell of the Earth L i beration Front One of the three remain- known as The Family, based ing fugitives in a s t r ing of in Eugene, authorities said. fires set b y e n v ironmental She was sought on charges radicals in Oregon, Colorado that she took part in setting and California surrendered fires at the Vail ski resort in to authorities Thursday after Colorado, at a timber compaspending years hiding out in ny office in Medford, and at Canada. federal wild horse corrals in The U.S. attorney's office Eastern Oregon and Northin Portland said T h ursday ern California. that Rebecca Jeanette Rubin, Ten others pleaded guilty in 3 9, turned herself in to t h e 2007 to conspiracy and arson FBI at the Canadian border in and were sentenced to prison. Blaine, Wash. Two others remain at large. The Associated Press

Authorities have said the Earth Liberation Front cell was responsible for 2 0 a r s ons around th e I , W est that d i d $ 40 million i n damage, includRubin ing the 1 998 fire that destroyed a restaurant and other facilities at the Vail Ski Resort in Colorado. Other targets included a horse slaughterhouse and U.S. Forest Service ranger stations, research facilities, =

and an SUV dealership, all in

Oregon. The group disbanded in 2001, buta federal taskforce known as Operation Backfire turned an informant and broke open the cell in 2005. The leader, William Rodgers, ran a bookstore in Prescott, Ariz. He committed suicide in jail in 2005 following his arrest. Authorities said Rubin is to appear in federal court in Seattle, then will be sent to Oregon for trial.

By Steven DuBois

this investigation a high priority since the allegation came to

The Associated Press

PORTLAND — A grand jury has indicted a former Clackamas County election worker accused of tampering with ballots before the November election, state officials said Thursday. Deanna Swenson, 55, of Oregon City, has been charged with altering a cast ballot, unlawfully v oting more than once and official misconduct, Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum said. Swenson, who has yet to be taken into custody, is scheduled to be arraigned Dec. 4. She did not return a message lefton her answering machine and it is unknown if she has hired a lawyer. I nvestigators found no evidence that others were involved. Swenson, a temporary employee who had worked for the county in prior elections, is accused of filling in ovals on ballots where preferences had been left empty by voters. The alleged misconduct occurred Oct. 31, less than a week before the general election, when another election worker claimed to see the registered Republican marking a partially complete ballot. It is common for voters to make choices

light." T he i ndictment di d n o t specify the extent of the alleged tampering. Andrea Cantu-Schomus, s p okeswoman for Secretary of State Kate Brown, said election officials identified six suspect ballots. Rosenblum's office, however, declined to say how many ballots were altered, citing the pending trial.

The alleged tampering apparently did not affect any races. All the suspect ballots were reviewed to identify voter intent — or, in this case, lack of intent — and then counted. Brown plans to certify the election results Dec. 7. "Security procedures are in place to detect this kind of conduct," said Brown, w ho responded to the allegation

by assigning two people to monitor ballot processing in Clackamas County. "The system worked and no person's ballot was impacted. Oregonians can be confident in their election results." Altering cast ballots and voting more than once are felonies punishable by up to five years in prison. Official misconduct is a misdemeanor, punishable by up to a year in a jail.

in high-profile races and then skip the local contests in which the names of the candidates are unfamiliar. O regon was t h e f i r st state to conduct elections exclusively by mail, and the November election marked the fourth presidential contest in which the system was used. Never before had an election worker been accused ofmarking choices. "The integrity of the Oregon elections is of paramount importance," Rosenblum said. "The Department of Justice has made

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Crash ot light planethat killed 2 shocks experimental aircraft fans The Politics and

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The Associated Press PORTLAND — The crash of a two-seater experimental airplane this week in the Willamette Valley has shocked people who build their own aircraft from kits or plans. They consider the plane de-

The plane's owner, Timothy Dean Carter, 46, of Portland, and his passenger, Jeff Earl "Tebo" Kropf, 45, of Halsey, dled. "I've never heard of a wing coming off an R V a i rcraft," Dick Knapinski, spokesman signed by an Aurora company, for the Wisconsin-based ExVan's Aircraft, one of the most perimental Aircraft Associapopular experimental aircraft tion, told The Oregonian. in the U.S., saying it's fast, verCarter's plane had passed satile, fuel-efficient and rela- its airworthiness test and was tively easy to build and fly. registered with t h e F ederal "The performance is great in Aviation Administration, reterms of being able to go both cords show. Carter purchased reasonably slow and reason- it fairly recently, perhaps in the ably fast and to land and take past year or two, said his oldest off reasonably short," said Skip daughter, Valerie Tillia. It's not Lawson, former president of clear whom Carter bought the the Experimental Aircraft As- plane from. "The nice thing about exsociation chapter in Eugene. "They're also known as being perimental aircraft is you can over-engineered — they're very modify and change them pretstrong airplanes." ty much at will," said Bob DunW itnesses reported t h a t can, a member of the Experithe plane, known by its model mental Aircraft A ssociation number, RV-6, lost a wing when chapter in Hillsboro. "But if you it plowed into a field south of buy an airplane from someone Scio on M onday afternoon, else, you need to do the due said Linn County Undersheriff diligence." Bruce Riley. Gus Funnell of Van's Air-

craftsaid the crashed plane appeared to be highly modified and built from plans with custom components, not from a company kit, citing differences in fuselage, cowling and canopy. He said the motor was not the one the plane was designed for. "We've never had a structural failure in an RV-6," he told the Albany Democrat-Herald. "This plane is an RV-6 in name only." It's easier to use a kit, but people can save money getting their own raw materials, and builders get the satisfaction of creatingsomethingthemselves, he said. There are about 33,000 homebuilt planes registered under the Federal Aviation Administration's experimental category. The accident rate for amateur-built aircraft is up to three times higher than for l ightweight manufactured planes, said Loren Groff, safety analyst for the National Transportation Safety Board. The fatality rate is four times higher.

No ChargeS in Planned ParenthOOdStabbing The Associated Press GRANTS PASS — Prosecutors have decided an anti-abortion protester was acting in self-defensewhen he stabbed a man who attacked him outside a Planned Parenthood office in Southern Oregon.

The Grants Pass Daily Courier reported Thursday that the Josephine County District Attorney's O f f ic e d e c ided

against bringing c riminal charges against either of the two men. Authorities said 54-year-old

Christopher Tolhurst was picketing outside the Planned Parenthood clinic in Grants Pass last October when a woman kicked over one of his signs, and he pushed her. She came back with her father, who attacked him.

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Science ef Being Bern: Location, location, location. Many are alarmed that the US ranks 28th in the world for maternal health and lags on child mortality rates. What can be done to improve care for mothers and babies? Do midwifery and home care play a role? The answers may surprise you. Come learnwhy Melissa Cheyney's research on homebii-ths has made her an in-demand consultant and an expert in national news outlets including TIME.

Melissa Cheyney, Assistant Professor, Anthropology, School of Language, Culture and Society, OSU College of Liberal Arts

THURSDAY

DEC. 13 5:30 P.M — 7:30 P.M.

McMenamins, Bend Father Luke'SROOm Full menu and no-host bar.Due to space, attendance limited to100. Doors open at 5:30 p.M. presentation starts at 6:30 pM.

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OSUcascades.edu facebook.com/osucascades 541-322-3100 Accommodations for disabilities may be made by calling 541-322-3100, preferably one week ahead.


C4

TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012

The Bulletin

EDITORIALS

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hones have changed. Laws haven't. Teenagers haven't. The law now should. What may seem harmless to teenagers is a felony to prosecutors. In Oregon, when two teenagers "sext" by sharing explicit photos, they could face a felony charge and get a sex offender label. It's that or nothing. There's no middle ground. Two bills proposed during the 2011 Legislature tried to better scale the consequences. Both died in committee. State Rep. Jason Conger, RBend, plans to introduce legislation in 2013 to provide some middle ground. There are no details of the legislation, yet. Oregon's laws are i n p l ace for a very good reason — to stop child pornographers. But l awmakers didn't know that teens would one day be able to easily make and share explicit photos of themselves. The law in O regon became more of a problem in 2010 after the passage of Measure 73. Among other things, that measure increased minimum sen-

tences for certain repeated sex crimes. So if teens exchanged explicit photos at two different times, the punishment goes to 25 years if convicted. Legislators and prosecutors agreethere is a problem. The author of Measure 73, Kevin Mannix, has said so, too. It would be wonderful if teenagers would stop sexting. Because we can't see that happening, it's all the more important for parents to talk to their children about the consequences of shipping sexual images around the Internet. Oregon needs laws that capture perverts. Oregon needs laws that protect teens. We can't imagine, though, the best way to deal with most teen-to-teen sexting is in court.

State should tighten standards for midwives ore than 15 percent of babies born in Oregon arrive courtesy of a midwife, according to a recent story in The Oregonian. Their families choose midwives over doctors for a variety of reasons, not least of which is a more personal relationship than the usual doctor/patient one. In Oregon, though, not all midwives are created equal. And those at the bottom of the educational heap need not even be licensed by the state. The most basic license itself, by the way, was created not to assure that women were cared for by well-educated midwives, but to make that choice eligible for medical insurance reimbursement. It's time the Legislature tightened things up. Midwifery is as old as motherhood, or nearly so. Licensing midwives, at least in Oregon, is far newer, going back only 20 years orso, and because it isn't required, only about half of midwives here actually are licensed. Utah is the only other state that allows midwives to practice without a license. An unlicensed midwife cannot help deliver a baby at the hospital, no matter how high the risk for problems during birth. As a result, some, including one born in Eu-

gene last year, die. Even some licensed "direct entry" midwives — those whose training is more apprenticeship and less academic — cannot work in most hospitals. St. Charles, as an example, requires midwives hoping to deliver babies there to have far more education than the state does and to persuade a physician to agree to back them up, if need be. W e'll a g re e g i v in g b i r t h shouldn't always require either a hospital or a physician to be accomplished safely. But the change from home delivery at the hands of a midwife to birth with, at the least, the assistance of a midwife certified by the American College of Nurse Midwifery, has done more than drive women to the hospital. It's lowered mortality rates substantially. In fact, a woman who delivered her baby in 1900 was 100 times more likely to die in childbirth than she is today. That's reason enough to require licensing and to tighten the standards for that license. A bill that would have done that died in the 2011 Legislature. It should be resurrected and submitted to lawmakers again next year.

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O'L5T SYTRlWNGNl~g gsRIJIC65

M Nickel's Worth Abolish the giveaways

ther changes. It all seems to me to be a decrease in service to the reader. Now The Redmond Spokesman has been reduced to a "social" commentary and its top reporter, who loyallyserved the paper more than 30 years, was laid off. What a sad day for Redmond! What next, Central Oregon? George Endicott Mayor of Redmond

Attention congressmen and senators: I have read that the U.S. is now exporting more petroleum products, oil and gas than it imports. If this is the case, then why are we taxpayers subsidizing the great agricultural conglomerates that grow corn for ethanol? Could it be that these companies and the politicians that they support very much like the risk-free profits they are enjoying? In view of the huge deficits, would it not be prudent to abolish these

Helping the terrorists Is the media siding with terrorists? It was quite disturbing to read the article on the front page of The Bulletin Nov. 15 headlined: "Attack on power grid could cripple U.S." The article goes on to say, "terrorists could black out large segments of the United States for weeks or months by attacking the power grid and damaging hard-to-replacecomponents that are crucial to making it work ..." Why doesn't the media just publish a map of the most vulnerable spots in the U.S. for terrorists to attack and let them know how to go about destroying them? D oesn't anybody think t hi s i s somewhat treasonous? I'm sure The Bulletin isn't the only newspaper that publishes this kind of information, but why?

huge giveaways? Norm Bellino Sisters

No 'hard news' in Redmond Spokesman The Bulletin finally drove a stake through the heart of The Redmond Spokesman as a newspaper. Red-

establish a brand-new American manufacturing industry. A recent editorial in The Bulletin (Nov. 16) misses the target considerably in discussing the PTC's many benefits. The PTC is tax relief — not a handout. It only rewards results, and it doesn't cost taxpayers a dime. A tax reduction is different from government subsidies or loan guarantees — it simply leaves more money in private hands. Equipped with the PTC, the wind industry has been able to lower the cost of wind power by more than 90 percent, power the equivalent of over 12 million American homes, and foster economic development in all 50 states. But unless Congress acts now, the PTC will expire at the end of the year. That will make wind energy the

only form of energy generation

without any federal support. Curr ent estimates show that half mond's local paper is no longer a 37,000 — of wind-related jobs would newspaper. This is a self admission be lost. by the editor and the publisher. It Wind is an economic booster and states so on the front page of the an investment driver. A nnually, Nov. 14 edition. They will no longer wind power attracts over $15 bilreport "hard news." We, of course, lion in private investment. In rural know The Spokesman is owned areas, wind power has brought $400 by the same folks as The Bulletin. million in annual lease payments With The Bulletin suffering hard to farmers, ranchers and other times, they have decided to destroy landowners. In f a ct, l andowners t he news-making ability o f T h e Clarissa Jurgensen can realize lease payments of up to Spokesman. Bend $120,000 over a 20-year period for The Bulletin declared bankruptcy each wind turbine installed on their earlier this year. The editor continSupport tax credit property. ues to try to justify the changes they for wind power We need to tell Congress to extend are making to the paper. They raised the PTC and promote further develsubscription prices and reduced conSmart energy policy in the form opment of American wind power. tent and call it "better value." People of the Production Tax Credit PTPaul Holshouser, finance policy have already complained about the Chas allowed clean, domestic and manager, American Wind Energy TV section being diminished. On renewable American wind power to Association Nov. 18, the editor announced fur- lower consumers'electric rates and Washington, D.C.

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Technological barriers can make society less connected discussion group I belong to has been talking about rituals lately, not the ones you get at church, but the secular things that tie us togetherand, in the process, create a community. They're more important than you might think, and as they changethey help create other changes that we may not recognize at the time. Oregon's vote-by-mail system is one such ritual that may carry with it unintended consequences.Yes, the system has assured that more Oregonians turn out in most elections than had done when wehad togo to a polling place, stand in line and cast our ballots. It'sdone so at a cost, however, as writers like Peter Schrag, former editorial page editor of the Sacramento Bee and author of "Paradise Lost: California's Experience, America's Future" would argue. It works this way:

Back when Oregonians voted the old-fashioned way, they stood in line at the polling place with their friends and neighbors, often with their kids in tow. They had time to chat about the state of the state or whatever else was on their minds. Those polling places were often in schools, city halls and other public buildings, and when a voter actually got inside he (or she) could see for himself what his tax dollars were buying. The resultwas connectedness, not only to our neighbors (we're all in this together) but to the institutions our taxes support (this school may look fancy from the outside, but inside it's pretty basic stuff). So today, you could argue, we have higher turnout at elections. Yes, but we've paid for it with a piece of our sense of community, and the community is fractionally weaker as a result.

JANET STEVENS There are newer rituals that also eat away at that sense of community even as they purport to make it stronger. Take Facebook and other social media. Facebook allows us to make as much of our lives public as we wish. We can gather friends like acorns and keep track of where people live, what they do and the like. But it allows us to do all that from a great distance, with no real connection to those who read our pages or whose pages we read. In fact, there's a voyeuristic quality about such relationships that should trouble us, I think. We peep through windows at

those we know, completely unconnected if we choose to be, in a ritual that too often does nothing to bring us closer to these so-called online "friends." Smart phones have a more direct impact. No doubt you've been at a restaurant recently and seen a table of diners, presumably folks who chose to be together, all busy on their telephones reading texts, playing games, checking email — anything but talking with their dining companions. Government and business are not immune, either. Many government websites seem designed to make it impossible to find anyone in charge and actually call them on the telephone. As forbusiness,some use the combination of a website and an automated telephone system to effectively shield themselves from the people

they supposedly serve. AT&T is an expert at this. It is nearly impossible to connect to a real, live human being at the company these days, and the attempt to do so will lead to a series of long, long waits on hold, accidental disconnects (these from a telephone company!) and, if you're finally successful, a discussion with someone who finds your native tongue foreign, indeed. Governments and businesses may argue thatthe new systems are more efficient, but again, the loss of human contact — the ritual of discussing, in real time, our problems with those who can help us fix them — is the priceforsuch efficiency. Is that good for us? Is it good for society? I don't know, but I don't think so. — Janet Stevens is deputy editor of The Bulletin.


FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012• THE BULLETIN

BITUARIES

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DEATH NOTICES DOrOthy Tuttle

FEATURED OBITUARY

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June 24, 1916 - Nov. 17, 2012

Eldon "Sparky" Loyd Kellas, of Redmond

D orothy Ju ne T utt l e , former Fort Rock resident, Jan. 24, 1920 - Nov. 27, 2012 died in Mi lw aukie, OR, on November 17, 2012, at age Arrangements: 96. She was born in Grand Redmond Memorial Forks, ND, to Theoline and Chapel 541-548-3219 Charles Olsen on June 24, please sign our online 1916. guestbook www.redmondmemorial.com Dorothy graduServices: a ted fr om Memorial services will be hia'h held Dec. 4, 2012 at 1 pm s cFiool i n at Redmond Memorial Manvel, Chapel, and Dec. 6, 2012 N D, a n d at 10:30 am at The attended Church at Rockwood, beauty Portland OR, with school. committal to follow at Dorothy Tuttle D o r o t h Willamette National married Dean A. Norton in Cemetery. South Dakota on J a nuary Contributions may be made 9 , 1937, a n d m o v e d t o to: Partners In Care, 2075 B end, OR , i n 1 9 4 2 . S h e worked a s a be a u t i cian, NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR a nd beauty s h o p o w n e r 97701. operator for over 30 years. LaVere Rodney Dorothy married Robert R. Howard, of Prineville T uttle o n Fe b r u ar y 27 , Dec. 23, 1930 - Nov. 26, 2012 1968, in Reno, NV. She and Robert owned a cattle and Arrangements: hay ranch in Fort Rock unAutumn Funerals of t il t h ei r r e t i r ement, a n d Redmond, 541-504-9485, t hen e n j o y e d sp e n d i n g www.autumnfunerals.net t ime i n B l u e R i v er , O R , Services: a nd at t h eir c abin o n t h e A graveside service at O regon c o a st . D or o t h y Juniper Haven Cemetery moved to Oregon City, OR in Prineville on Friday, in 1999. Nov. 30 at 2:00 PM D orothy w as a p ast followed by a reception at member of th e First Presthe Prineville Eagles b yterian Church i n B e n d , Club, 235 NE 4th St. in w here sh e s a n g i n th e Prineville. c hurch choir . Sh e w a s a m ember of t he L ak e C ounty C o w b e l les, a n d Fort Rock V a l ley H i storic al Society. D o rothy w a s Jan. 27, 1937 - Nov. 27, 2012 proud o f h e r N o r w e g ian heritage and roots in North A theda p a s s e d aw ay D akota, w h er e sh e g r e w N ov. 27, 2 0 12, i n S a l e m up with three brothers, and H ospital at t h e ag e o f 7 5 n ine sisters. D o r othy e n after recently b eing d i a gjoyed gardening, r eading, nosed with Leukemia. a nd staying in t o uch w i t h S he w a s family and friends. b orn in Dorothy was preceded in Escalante, d eath b y h u s b and, D e an Utah t o Norton i n 1 9 62, husband, William J. Robert R. T u t tl e i n 1 9 98, Webster son, John T u t tl e i n 1 9 7 1, I and and all of her siblings. Thelda S urvivors i n c l ud e t h r e e s ons, Dean Norton of O r ""i$ Moyes. egon City, OR, Robert, and Atheda Charles T u t t l e o f Fo r t Atheda g rew u p R ock, O R , a dau g h t e r Husbands in SouthSharon Tuttle o f E u g ene, e rn U t a h OR, f o u r gr a n d c hildren, and moved to Salt Lake D eDe Fu r b ee , Ch a r l e s w here she me t a n d m a r - Norton, John Tuttle, Sean r ied Forest H u sbands o n T uttle, an d s e ve n g r e a t May 4, 1957. She lived in grandchildren. Boise, ID, Salem, Crooked A t he r r e q uest, n o s e r R iver r e c e n tl y Sta y t o n , vices were h e ld. R ememOR. brances may be sent to the Atheda was a member of Fort Rock V a l ley H i storiThe Church of Jesus Christ c al Society, P.O. Bo x 8 4 , of Latter Day S aints. She Fort Rock, OR 97735. loved t o co o k , cr o c h et, g arden, c an , s p en d t i m e with her family and was an avid reader. S he is s u r v ived b y h e r t wo ch i l d r en : D ebb i e M cKay, s o n -in-law, D a r rell McKay, Estacada; son, Death Notices are free and will Tracy H u s b ands, d a u ghbe run for oneday, but specific t er-in-law, S a l l y (K e l l y ) , guidelines must be followed. Aumsville; four gr andchilLocal obituaries are paid dren: Shane, C h r i stopher advertisements submitted by M cKay; Ty l e r , M el i s s a families or funeral homes. H usbands, an d gr eat They maybesubmitted by g randson, Z a k ; b r o t h e r , phone, mail, email or fax. Bill Webster, UT an d s i sThe Bulletin reserves the right t er, L a Gean L e a vitt , S a lem. to editall submissions. Please Services w i l l b e h el d include contact information M onday, D ec e m be r 3, in all correspondence. 11:00 a.m. at the Estacada For information on any of these L DS C h u r ch , 3 0 49 8 S E services or about the obituary Eagle Creek Rd., Estacada, policy, contact 541-617-7825. OR, 97023. She will be laid t o rest at W i l l a mette N a t ional Cemetery w it h F o r Phone: 541-617-7825 est. Email: obits@bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254

Atheda Webster Husbands

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New Yorlz Times News Service

F rank Barsalona, a N e w York talent agent who was a virtual quartermaster for the British Invasion, booking the first American concert tours of the Beatles and the Rolling Stones, and who later created a concert circuit that served as a farm system for a generation of rockers including the Ramones, the Clash, the Pretenders and U2, died Nov. 22 at his home in Manhattan. He was 74. The cause was complications of Alzheimer's disease, his daughter, Nicole, said. Though little known to the general public, Barsalona was revered in the rock business. He was considered the shrewdest rock 'n' roll booking agent in the world in the 1960s and the most dominant one in the decades after. Among his clients were many artists who helped redefine rock 'n' roll, including the Who, the Yardbirds, Led Zeppelin and Jimi Hendrix. T he small c o mpany h e founded in 1964, Premier Talent, was the first established exclusively for rock acts, which previously had been represented mainly by long-established firms catering to traditional entertainers like nightclub singers and comedians. In the uncharted territory that was then the rock business, Barsalona was also the first to draw a map forsuccess. While record companies in the 1950s and '60s rarely booked tours forperformers without a hit record to promote, Barsalona established a different business model, a sort of i ndependent concert system uncoupled from the record companies. He did it by creating a network of young, rock-savvy concert p romoters around the country — Bill Graham in San Francisco, Ron Delsener in New York and Don

Obituary policy

DEATHS

aW

Frank Barsalona was rock promoter for Beatles, others By Paul Vitello

Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noonMonday through Friday for next-day publication and by4:30

p.m. Friday for Sundayand Monday publication. Obituaries

must bereceivedby5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday or Monday publication, and by 9 a.m.

Monday for Tuesdaypublication. Deadlines for displayadsvary; please call for details. Maili Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708

Law in Boston were part of his crew — who could raise the large sums of money necessary to back rock acts' tours, hit or no hit. The tours he scheduled in that network, which proved hugely successful, provided his clients with freelance income (10 percent of which was his); functioned as a farm system for artistsin need of seasoning; and established the basic landscape ofthe rock concert circuit as it now exists in the United States. "You cannot exaggerate the role Frank played in creating the infrastructure of the rock 'n' roll world as we know it today," Steven Van Zandt, the longtime guitarist with Bruce Springsteen's E Street Band, also a Barsalona client, said in an interview on Tuesday. "It was his unique vision that rock 'n' roll was here to stay, and that it wasn't just going to be about records, but about how

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good a band plays live." (In the age of digitized music sharing, many rock artists earn more from concert tours than from record royalties.) In 2005, when Barsalona was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, Van Zandt gave introductory remarks in which he credited Barsalona with seeingbeyond the conventional wisdom in the early-'60s music business, which was that rock 'n' roll had no future (and that Elvis Presley was a fluke). His innovations — financially risky but highly profitablesignaled the music's long-term viability and "created stability, and consistency and longevity" in the industry for the first time, Van Zandt said. Barsalona is the only talent agent to be inducted into the Hall of Fame since the first honorees were named in 1986. Dave Marsh, the rock critic and biographer, called Barsalona a founding father of the rock business. "The most significant entrepreneur of '60s rock was not a record company president like Atlantic's Ahmet Ertegun or CBS' Clive Davis, or even a sharp promoter like Bill Graham," he once wrote. "That title belongs to a balding, rotund booking agent named Frank Barsalona." Barsalona retired in 2002 and sold his company to the William Morris Agency. Frank Samuel B arsalona was born on March 31, 1938, on Staten Island, one of three children of Peter and Mary Barsalona. From early childhood he shared a passion with his father, a bus driver, for Broadway show tunes and country music. While working his way through Wagner College on Staten Island and St. John's University in Queens, he later told his daughter, he yodeled in a country-western band.

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ELSEWHERE 61283 Sarah Dr. Deaths of note from around theworld: Lols Bewley, 78: D a ncer with the New York City Ballet and other companies who expanded into choreography, costume and stage design, opera direction and art. Died on Nov. 21 in Manhattan, N.Y. Bryce Bayer, 83: Retired Eastman K o da k r e s earch scientist wh o i n vented t he checkerboard-like filter that has allowed millions of digital cameras to capture vivid color images. Died Nov. 13 in Bath, Maine.

Bishop Kuang-hsun Ting, 97: One of the most influential Christian figures in China as the longtime leader of the country's g o vernment-sanctioned Protestant church. Died Nov. 22 in Nanjing. Jack Wishna, 54: Las Vegas dealmaker who helped bring Donald Trump to Si n C ity, courted MichaelJackson for a casinoresidency and consulted for Treasure Island owner Phil Ruffin. Died Tuesday at his home in Las Vegas. — From wire reports

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August 23, 1915 — November 24, 2012 ~ Ora Custer was born on August 23, 1915, in Ingram, Pennsylvania, the 3' 4 of 6 children, ro James and Laura Mumper. Ora grew up in Akron, Ohio, graduating from West Akron

Rd. eastbound, righton SE15th St., left on Ferguson Rd., left on SarahDr.

High Schoolin 1933. She was employed by Goodyear Tire and Rubber inAkron. She met William (Bili) Custer while they were both employed by Goodyear. A company transfer took Bill to Texarkana, Arkansas, and Bill and Ora were married there on March 6, 1943. Bill's career took him west; the Custers lived in California, Washington, and Oregon due ro continued company transfers. After Bill's retirement, the couple moved to Portland, Oregon, and then to Bend. The family had vacationed here often and fell in love with the area, especially the Cascades. The Custers raised two sons,James and Kenneth. Kenny lost his life in an automobile accidentjust before Thanksgiving re 1965. Ora and Bill lived in several Bend locations, first in Woodside Ranch, before moving to Bend Villa Retirement Center in 2004. Ora and Bill acquired many friends in their travels and here in Bend.

lots, lots,

lots.

Ora's sense of humor and practical approach to life was enjoyed by her many friends * —visitors were a welcome diversion in Ora s day. Ora was an avid reader; as her eyesight worsened, she enjoyed listening to Books on Tape and having a special friend read to her once a week. She enjoyed gardening, drying flowers, bridge, lunch with friends, and her PEO sisters (Chapter ENh She always looked forward to the monthly church service at the Villa, and rarely missed.

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Ora is survived by her son, Jim (Marilu) of the Philippines and step-grandchildren. She is also survived by one brother, Bill, and several nieces and nephews. Her many friends will miss the sheerjoy of knowing her, the lively conversations had by all, and that marvelous senseof humor.

Ora was preceded in death by her parents, husband, Bill or62 years, her son, Kenny, and several brothers and sisters. Bill and Ora were members of Bend First United Methodist * Church. A celebration of Ora s life will be held at 2 p.m. on December 3'",2012, at the

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Care and her daughrer-in-law, Marilu, for their lovingly care in the last few months. At her request, memorial donations may be made to Partners in Care, Talking Books, Bend First United Methodist Church, or a charity of your choice.

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Niswonger Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. Ora's asheswill be mixed with Bill's and dispersed over the Cascade Mountains, which they both loved.

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Monterrey 808 78/58•

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Juneau 24/14

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FRONTS Cold

IA

<'b t @,> t

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a drier day, partly cloudy to mostly

tbtt ) tt)

return to

the region.

HIGH LOW

HIGH LOW

HIGH LOW skjes

HIGH LOW

49 36

38 29

40 31

44 35

SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE Sunrisetoday......?izoam. MOOn phaSeS Sunsettoday...... 4 28 P.m, Last New F i r st Full Sunrise tomorrow .. 7:21 a.m. unse omorrow B p m • ~ • Moonrisetoday.... 6:29 p.m. Maonsetroday .... 8:55a.m. Dec.6 Dec.13 Dec.19 Dec. 28

TEMPERATURE PRECIPITATION

Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....5:32 a.m...... 3:36 p.m. Venus......4:53 a.m...... 3:10 p.m. Mars.......9:49 a.m...... 6:31 p.m. Jupiter......4 28 p m...... 7:35 a.m. Satum......4:25 a.m...... 2;58 p.m. Uranus.....1:31 p.m...... I:49 a.m.

Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low.............. 48/32 24 hours endmg 4 p.m.*. . 0.00" Recordhigh........68m1929 Monthtodate.......... 0.61" Recordlow.......... 0in1985 Average monthtodate... 1.33" Average high.............. 42 Year to date............ 7.64" Averagelow ..............25 A verageyeartodate.....9.10"

Barometricpressureat 4 p.m29.62 Record24 hours ...0.64in1942 *Melted liquid equivalent

ULTRAVIOLET INDEX

OREGON CITIES Yesterday Hi/Lo/Pcp

PLANET WATCH

SKI REPORT

F r i day S a turdayThe higher the Uy Index number, the greater Ski report from around the state, representing H i / Lo/W H i /Lo/Wthe need for eye and skin protection. Index is conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday:

City Precipitationvaluesare24-hour totals through4 p.m.

for solar at noon.

Astaria ........ 56/49/0.17..... 53/47/r.....53/45/sh Baker City..... 47/34/trace.....47/34/r..... 46/32lrs Brookings...... 59/48/1.37....57/50/sh...... 55/52/r Burns......... 49/30/rrace....46/31/sh..... 47/29lrs Eugene........53/37/0.34.....52/47/r.....55/46/sh Klamath Falls .. 47/38/trace ....46/37/r ...47/36/sh Lakeview...... 48/37/0.00 ...45/38/sh.....46/38/sh La Pine........45/39/0.00....45/30/sh.....40/31/sh Medford.......58/45/1.54.....54/45/r.....53/44/sh Newport....... 57/50/0.43..... 52/48/r.....54/48/sh North Bend..... 54/50/0.67..... 57/49/r.....56/51/sh Dntario........46/27/0.02....50/38/sh.....50/38/sh Pendleton......49/27/0.01 .....52/42/r.....52/39/sh Portland .......46/42/0.11 ..... 52/48/r...... 53/47/r Prineville.......52/43/0.00....45/35/sh.....48/35/sh Redmond....... 50/33/0.00..... 51/37/r.....47/35/sh Roseburg.......60/48/1.16....56/46/sh.....54/47/sh Salem ....... 54/36/014 . . 52/47/r . . .53/46/sh Sisters.........49/41/0.00....46/33/sh.....43/32/sh The Dages...... 39/36/002..... 51/41lr.....49/39/sh

Snow accumulation in inches Ski area Last 24 hours Base Depth Anthony Lakes ...... . . . . . . . . 0 .0 . . .no report Hoodoo..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Mt. Ashland...... . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Mt. Bachelor..... . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . .20-30 Mt. Hood Meadows..... . . . . . 0 .0 . . . . . . . . 26 Mt. Hood Ski Bowl..... . . . . . . 0 .0 . . .no report Timberline...... . . . . . . . . . . . . 0-0. . . . . . . . 36

MEDIUM HIGH 0

2

4

6

8

10

ROAD CONDITIONS Snow level androadconditions representing conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday. Key:TT. = Traction Tires.

Warner Canyon....... . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Wigamette Pass ........ . . . . . 0.0...no report

Pass Conditions 1-5 at Siskiyou Summit........ Carry chains or T. Tires 1-84 at Cabbage Hill....... .. . Carry chains or T. Tires

Aspen, Colorado...... . . . . . . . 0.0. . . . . .19-20 Mammoth Mtn., California....8-10... . . .34-44 Park City, Utah ...... . . . . . . . . 0.0. . . . . . . . 22 Squaw Valley, California..... .. . 6 . . . . . 5-28 Sun Valley, Idaho....... . . . . . . . 2 . . . . . . .8-22 Hwy. 58 at Wigamette Pass.... Carry chains or T.Tires Taos, New Mexico...... . . . . . . 0.0. . . . . .1012 Hwy. 138 at Diamond Lake.... Carry chains or T.Tires Hwy. 242 at McKenzie Pass........ Closed for season Vail, Colorado...... . . . . . . . . . 0.0... . . . . . 18 For up-to-minute conditions turn to: For links to the latest ski conditions visit: www.skicentral.com/oregon.html www.tripcheck.com or call 511 Legend:W-weather, Pcp-precipitation, s-sun,pc-partial clouds,c-clauds, h-haze, sh-shawers,r-rain,t-thunderstarms,sf-snawflurries, sn snow, i-ice, rs-rain-snow mix,w-wind, f-fog,dr-drizzle, tr-trace

Hwy. 20 at Santiam Pass...... Carry chains or T. Tires Hwy. 26 at Government Camp.. Carry chains or T. Tires Hwy. 26 at Ochoco Divide..... Carry chains or T. Tires

TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL

INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS

Yesterday's extremes

I A

Some rain and light snow mix showers.

BEND ALMANAC

,.Astoria 4 d d d d d d 4 4 d d 4 4 4 d d d d 4 4 4 4 d 4 4 4 d d d d d d d d 4 d 4 d ( WEST 4 4 *3/47 4 ( 4 4 4 4 4 2 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 0 atj fla I 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 d d d Rain, with snow 5 easidedd o ' ' ' 4 4 4 4 (HQQQ44 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 o I( ' d d t ' 44 ( 54/49 oga<41<4 ( )eeochd ) 4 4 4 4 ojyel) 4)f)ed d 4 d d 4 4 4 • u 4 4 d d 4 4 T4 4 4 d d d ( d d above 5,500 feet. i o Biggsd 4 . ' a 4 4 H ermiston 59/41 d/() 44444 4 4 (PR' 4 I?rsljgsu49/4H 453/4~ . wajlowa a ow a .d .4 .d ," 4 ua?I4),gd I 4 4Arlingcon a « H'llsbarcoportland 4 4 4 4' astiq~ t ) ~ d i , »« 4 4 zuPendleton'4)I /3 , ' , , ' ' .'> '4CENTRAL ' 4 4,4,4 ~ 4 ? /33 <( 3 Cloudy skies with Tijlamookd,,'f 5?/ ~' )4 • o <ujand)j,d 7/d9d d dRdgdsd 4 d o, u ~ 4Meacham ' ' 1<I4 u4 0 u ' ' < o(5 Z/ ' d 5 /35u 4 d d t u u d z d 55/49

444 a

Off and on showers throughout the day.

34

IFORECAST:5TATE

~5

CONDITIONS

:+t a4 * 4 4 4 , * * * ++++ t 1 4 4 4 '* * * * * t +t l 4 u * +

: +++ +

W ar m Stationary Showers T-storms Rain

.+

+(x+

F l urries Snow

Ice

Yesterday Friday Saturday Yesterday Friday Saturday Yesterday Friday Saturday Yesterday Friday Saturday 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......71/47/000..75/56/pc.. 79/58/s GrandRapids....51/33/0 00..45134lsh. 50/47/sh RapidCity.......47/22/000... 53/37/s.56/36/pc Savannah.......65/34/000..69/51/pc. 72/51/pc Akron..........45/24/000...48/35/c. 53/45/pc GreenBay.......40/28/0.00...36/33/c. 45/43/sh Rena...........60/37/0.00... 57/40/r...57/45/r Seattle..........55/43/0.08... 53/47/r...51/43/r Albany..........46/30/000...37/26/c. 40/35/sn Greensboro......56/25/0 00... 60/38/s. 62/41/pc Richmond.......51/25/000... 58/37/s. 61/44/pc Siovx Falls.......46/15/000... 40/33/f. 51/32/pc Albuquerque.....61/32/000...62/36/s .. 61/37/s Harasbvrg.......45/27/0.00 ..49/32/pc. 48/34/pc Rochester NY....47/26/000..31/30/sn. 46/39/pc Spokane........45/30/012... 43/39/r.. A4/36/r Anchorage.......23/2/000....20/4/s... 15/4/s Hartford,CT.....44/26/000...39/27/c..40/34/rs Sacramento......62/54/0.02... 60I53/r...62/56/r Springfield, MO ..64/37/0.00..64/49/pc. 66/56/dr Atlanta.........60/34/000 ..63/49/pc.66151/pc Helena..........50/30/0.00...48132/c...46/30/r St.Louis.........61/33/000 ..63149/pc.65157lsh Tampa..........78/54/000...80/61/s .. 80/61/s Atlantic City.....47/25/000..52/39/pc. 58145/pc Honolulu........79/65/000...83/66/s .. 84/70/s Salt Lake City....60/36/0.00...58/41/c .. 56143/c Tucson..........75/47/0.00...77148/s .. 77/49/s Austim.........73/331000...79/60/c.8U62/pc Houston........71/39/0 00... 76162/c79/62/pc . SanAntonja.....70/4)/000...77/6)/c.78/63/pc Tvlsa...........69/46/000..65/55/pc.71154lpc Baltimore ......49/26/000...5205/s. 52/37/pc Huntsville.......61/28/000..60/42/pc.66/47/pc SanDiego...... 69/60/trace..67/58/sh. 65/57/sh Washington,DC.50/31/000... 52/38/s. 54/41lpc Bigings.........57/38/002..53/34/pc. 56/34/pc Indianapolis.....49/26/0.00..55/40/pc. 59/51/pc SanFrancisco....6256/001... 63/SIr...64/59/r Wichita.........66/36/Oji..63/47/pc. 66/43/pc Birmingham.....62/31/000..63/47/pc.70/50/pc Jackson,MS.... 64/29/000. 68/51/pc 71/54/pc SaaJose........62I56/001 .. 62/52/r...63/53/r Yakima.........40/31/004... 44/35/r. 45/34/sh Bismarck........24/12/000 ..39/24/pc.. 43/24/c Jacksonvile......67/45/000..72/53/pc.. 73/55/s SantaFe........58I30/0.00... 57/32/s 58/32/s Yuma...........79/54/0.00... 78/57/s .. 79/54/s Boise...........56/37/000... 53/41/r...54/41/r Juneau..........23/19/005 ..24/I4/sn. 22/I5/sn INTERNATIONAL Boston..........43/32/000...37/28/c ..40/38/rs KansasCily......60/33/0 00... 59/49/s. 62/47/pc Bndgeport,CT... 44/30/000..44/34/pc. 45/40/pc Lansing.........48/29/0.00 ..43/32/sh. 53/46/sh Amsterdam......45/32/000 46/37/sh 42/36/sh Mecca.........100/73/000 .87170ls89/71/pc Buffalo........ 44/30/000 ..35/32/sn. 47/41/pc LasVegas.......72/61/0 00..67/50/pc .. 68/52/c Athens..........72/62/031 ..70/64/pc. 65/54/sh MexicoCily .....73/45/000...70/45/s. 70/46/pc Burlington,VT....37/26/010...23/16/c. 34/33/sn Lexington.......51/22/000...58/41/s. 60/49/pc Auckland........64/59/000..65/55/pc. 65/55/pc Montreal........30/18/005..20/12/pc.. 29/26/c Caribou,ME.....23/14/002....17/0/s.. 24/16lc Lincoln..........57/23/000...54/36/s. 59/39/pc Baghdad........68/50/0.00... 68/53/c .. 69/53/s Moscaw........27/21/0.82 .. 34/30/rs. 31/25/sh CharlestonSC...63/31/000...69/51/s.71149lpc LittleRock.......64/31/000..62/48/pc.70/54/pc Bangkak........88/77/318..91/77/sh. 92/78/pc Nairobi.........81/61/015..75/58/sh. 74/55/pc Charlotte........57/24/000...62/41/s.63142/pc LosAngeles......63/57/0.27 ..64/56/sh. 64/58/sh Beiyng..........41/19/000 ..37/21/pc .. 35/21/c Nassau.........79/73/000... 76/71/t...75/71/1 Chattanooga.....60/29/000...61/42/s.65/44/pc Louisville........54/27/000..59/43/pc.61/52/pc Beirvt..........72/57/000...72/62/s.73/64/pc NewDelh<.......81/55/000...78154ls.73/50/pc Cheyenne.......57/27/000..57/36/pc.57/33/pc MadisonWj.....50/29/000...47/35/c. 50/44/sh Berlin...........43/36/000 .. 36/27lsf. 31l23/pc Osaka..........57/39/000 ..55/38/pc .. 51/35/c Chicago.........51/33/000...48/41/c.. 54/50/c Memphis....... 61/36/000 64/48/s 69/57/pc Bogota.........68152/014..68/51/sh.66151/sh Oslo............28/21/000....22/8/c...15/8/sf Cincinnati.......50/1 9/0.00... 56I39/s .. 60/48/s Miami . . . . 80/62/0 00 78/67/ pc 79/69/s Budapest........61/43/008..43/37/sh ..37/33/rs Ottawa.........32/19/000...21/9/pc.. 29/26/c Cleveland.......48/28/000...45/37/c.. 52/46/s Milwaukee......51/32/000...43141/c .. 51/48/c BuenosAires.....77/55/000... 79/58/t. 82/62/pc Paris............45/34/000...44/39/c. 40/34/sh ColoradoSpnngs.62/38/000..63/34/pc.. 63/36/s Minneapolis.....40/23/0 00...37/35/c .. 47/32/c CaboSanLucas ..84/63/000 ..85/61/pc.. 87/63/s Rio deJaneiro....86/72/000... 78/69/t...86I73/t Colvmbia,MO...63/33/000...63/49/s .. 66/54/c Nashvige........59/27/000... 63/43/s. 67/50/pc Cairo...........77/55/000.. 79/64/s.81/65/pc Rame...........59/54/000..54/46lsh.55/44/sh Colvmbia,SC....60/29/000...65/42/s. 68/43/pc New Orleans.....66/46/0.00..72/58/pc. 74/62/pc Calgary..........10/7/006..37/23/pc...22/9/sf Santiago........70/55/000..79/60/pc. 82/61/pc Columbus, GA....63/36/000 ..67/48/pc. 7U50/pc New York.......43/34/0.00 ..46/40/pc. 48/43/pc Cancvn.........81/64/000... 81I70/t...81/71/t Sao Pavlo.......84/66/000..75/61/pc...82/67/1 Columbus, OH....47/251000..53/37/pc. 57/47/pc Newark, NJ......45/29/0.00..46/38/pc. 49/41/sh Dublin..........41/30/0.00...40/33/c ..40134lc Sappara........30/37/0.30..36/17/sn..30/21/sf Concord,NH.....42/20/000...31/20/c. 35/31/sn Norfolk,VA......49/28/000...59/38/s. 62/46/pc Edinburgh.......36/25/000... 37/31/c.34/29/pc Seoul...........39/25/000... 37/28/s.. 38/26/s Corpus Christi....78/56/000... 74/65/c. 8U65/pc OklahomaCity...70/42/0 00 ..66/56/pc. 73/51/pc Geneva.........41/36/051 ..34/22/pc. 29/21/pc Shangha<........59/48/000... 56/47/c. 54/46/sh DallasFtWorth...69/37/000..73/58/pc. 79/60/pc Omaha.........54/29/000...51/37/s. 57/39/pc Harare..........84/54/000..84/59/pc.80/58/pc Singapore.......88/77/000..86/78/sh.88/77/sh Dayton .........46/26/000 ..53/37/pc. 57/48/pc Orjando.........?7/53/000... 78/57/5.. 79I59/s Hong Kong......72/66/0.07..74/62/sh. 75159lsh Stockholm.......32/30/0.00..33/26/sn. 27/24/sn Denver....... 64/29/000 ..58/38/pc.61/35/pc PalmSpriags.... 80/54/0.00. 76/54/pc. 76/55/pc Istanbul.........68/57/0.00... 67/60/r.63158/sh Sydney..........84/68/0.00..88/7ush. 90/71/sh DesMoines......54/31/000...49I36/s .. 56/41/c Peoria..........52/28/0.00..53/40/pc. 58/50/sh lerusalem.......67/53/000..67155lpc.71/57/pc Taipei...........68/64/000..74/66/sh. 74/64/sh Detroit..........48/25/000 ..42/37/sh.. 49/45/s Philadelphia.....47/29/0.00..48/38/pc. 53/39/pc Johannesburg....81/61/0.00... 77/57/t.. 64/55/c TelAviv.........79/55/0.00..75/59/pc. 78/63/pc Duluth..........25/18/000...32/30/c. 41/33/sh Phaenix.........78/53/000...78/54/s.. 78/54/s Lima...........75/64/0.00 ..76/63/pc.75/63/pc Takyo...........57/39/0.00..55/28/sh. 52/39/pc El Paso..........73/39/0.00...73/43/s .. 72/42/s Pittsburgh.......44/24/0.00 ..51/37/pc .. 56/43/s Lisbon..........55/46/000 ..53/41/sh 56/40/pc Toronto.........45/27/000... 29/26/c.. 38/35/c Fairbanks...... -21/-30/000 ..-19/-39/s-23/-34/pc Portland,ME.....41/22/0.00..31/18/pc. 36/34/sn London.........43/32/000..39/31/pc.37/28/pc Vancavver.......52/48/035...52/46/r. 46/42/sh Fargo...........25/15/000...33/28/c.39125/pc Pravidence......42/28/0.00...38/28lc ..44/38/rs Madrid .........48/37/000..44/33/pc. 46/31/pc Vienna..........52/41/002...41/35/c. 36/24/pc Flagstaff........56/23/000 ..54/27/pc.54127/pc Raleigh.........55/25/0.00...61/40ls. 63/41/pc Manila..........90/73/000..89/76/pc.90/76/pc Warsaw.........52/43/003...42/31/c.33/28/pc

OREGON NEWS

Grain terminalcompanies extend deadline for longshoreunion By Steven DuBois

for workplace rulesthat are similar to what longshoremen PORTLAND Pacific agreed to at a competing grain Northwest g r ai n t e r m i nal terminal in Longview, Wash. c ompanies have given t h e The owners say the rules will longshore union extra time to ensure that workers provide accept what they say is their ua full day'S WOrk fOr a full day'S payn and dO nOt engage best and final offer. The owners of a half-dozen in illegal work stoppages. terminals along the Columbia In exchange for rules that River and on Puget Sound ex- are more advantageous for tended the deadline to Dec. 8. them, th e c o mpanies said The longshoremen had been they offered a n i n c reased asked to accept the deal by wage-and-benefit p a ckage midnight Wednesday, but that that will pay l ongshoremen deadline came and went with- who work at their grain elevaout a lockout. tors more money than those No additional talks have who work in Longview. The been scheduled between the companies put the package union and the Pacific North- at $64.75 an hour. They did west GrainHandlers Associa- not break down how much of tion, the consortium of grain- that is wage and how much is s hipping c o m panies t h a t benefits. operate facilities in Portland; Also Thursday, the owners Seattle; Tacoma, Wash., and criticized th e I n t ernational Vancouver, Wash. Longshore and W a rehouse The Grain H andlers As- Union for c omments about sociation, i n a sta t ement the offer it considers misleadThursday, reiterated its need ing and inflammatory, speThe Associated Press

cifically that the terms of the contract would lessen safety standards. "Safety has been and always will be a top priority," the companies said. Union spokeswoman Jennifer Sargent said that the statement from the Grain Handlers Association contained factual errors.She did not elaborate. "Clearly, these multinational corporations are more interested in misrepresenting local workers than in negotiating a fair contract with them," she said. "These grain monopolies are major recipients of American taxpayer subsidies and need to care about our regional economy and not just their own astronomical profits." M ore than a q u a rter o f all U.S. grain exports move through Pacific N o r thwest grain terminals, so the delay is a reprieve for farmers shipping their corn, soybeans and wheat to customers in Asia.

OREcoN IN BRjEF Terror center in Salem Transitional housing m aybe forced to close inmate escapes

Woman pleads guilty to animal neglect

SALEM — O r egon's terMEDFORD — Oregon prisrorism information center in on officials say an inmate reSalem may be drastically cut leased to transitional housing back or closed by a reduction in Jackson County has walked

O REGO N C ITY A Molalla woman who wanted

away.

• •

-

• re r -

e

State-Of-The-Art Care Low "Everyday" Fees Special "Grand-Opening" Fees

to help stray dogs has pleaded

guilty to charges the animals were left outdoors in LInsaniThe state Department of The Department of Correc- tary conditions without adJustice says a n e x p e cted tions said 37-year-old Scott equate food or clean water. $391,000 federal grant has not Bradley Wold checked out Prosecutors say that despite been awarded. Without it the of his c ommunity h ousing advice and w arnings from center can maintain its cur- on Nov. 20 and didn't report the Humane Society, Violet rent level of operation only un- back. Helen Chenoweth still failed til March. He had been serving time to properlycare for the dogs. It's called the Oregon Ter- since March 2011 for dr ug Chenoweth took in more than rorism I n f ormation T h r eat and weapons charges at the 20 dogs as well as cats, ducks A ssessment N e twork a n d Columbia River Correctional and miniature ponies. it serves as a clearinghouse Institution. He was assigned Chenoweth said she suffers for t errorism-related police to the transitional program at from depression and mediinvestigations. the Jackson County Commu- cal problems that limited her The Statesman Journal re- nity Justice Transition Center ability to respond. She was ports it has four employees on Oct. 2. accused of animal neglect. who analyze information and T he department said i n The Oregonian reports she send out alerts. mates who complete a 180-day was sentenced Wednesday The center was opened in program in prison move into to five years on p r obation 2007. It's one of 77 in the coun- the community on transitional and 40 hours of community try funded throughthe Depart- leave and spend 90 days su- service. ment of Homeland Security. pervised by parole officers. — From wire reports

in funding.

Full Details at

www.DrRow.com Qr Ca/I 541-526-0019 850 SW 7th Street, Redmond, Oregon 97756 Located next to Fred Meyerin Redmond


Scoreboard, D2 MLB, D2

Golf, D4

NBA, D3 NHL, D3

NFL, D5

Collegebasketball,D3 Motorsports,D4 AdventureSports,D6

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012

NFL

PREP BOYS BASKETBALL SEASON PREVIEW

Is Viagra used to gain advantage?

Storm's success will rely on a blend of experience andyouth

CHICAGO — The idea that NFL players might

use Viagra to gain an edge on the field left Chicago Bears lineback-

er Lance Briggs practically in tears — from laughing. He wasn't the only

one. Players cracked jokes about it Thursday, a day

after Bears star receiver Brandon Marshall said he had heard that some

players were using Viagra and hoping it would

givethem anadvantage during games. Punch lines aside, experts say it's unlikely the erectile-

dysfunction drug would help. "What would that do? That's the most ridiculous thing I've

ever heard," Minnesota Vikings long snapper Cullen Loeffler said.

By Grant Lucas The Bulletin

Inside

Two s easons a go , S u m m it wrapped up the boys basketball season with a total of seven wins and a 0-6 record in Class 5A Intermountain Conference play. The Storm were then blown away in the play-in round, 66-36, by eventual state champion Corvallis. Now, after an 11-13 season in 2011-12, Summit coach Jon Frazier says the Storm are ready to take another step forward. "For us, we're always just competing against kind of the vision of how good we can be," Frazier says. "We certainly feel like this year, we have the opportunity to be really competitive. Obviously it's a long season, and the kids have to grow, but we have a lot of guys

• A breakdown for all the boys basketball teams competing in Central

Oregon this season,D4 back, and the new guys are really athletic. There's kids that are ready to contribute." Senior AustinPeters,a secondteam all-IMC selection last season,

last season (18), and Cade Cattell. Peters, Moyer and Cattell, Frazier says, were key contributors last season and should have plenty of "big game" this year as the Storm eye their first-ever boys basketball conference title. "Ultimately, that's where we'd like to see ourselves at the end of the season," Frazier says. "You have to compete. You have to bring your 'A' game every single week, or

leads a group of experienced play-

you're going to get knocked off. I

ers coming back for the Storm. Peters returns after scoring 12.5 points per game during the 2011-12 campaign and shooting an impressive 42 percent from three-point

think there are a lot of great teams that have really good talent." To come out on top, Summit will have to contend with Mountain View, the IMC champion three out of the past four years, and Bend High, conferencechamp two sea-

range. Joining him as returning starters are Nick Moyer, who set Summit's

sons ago.

single-game rebounding record

SeeStorm/D4

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

From left, senior Austin Peters, and juniors Cade Cattell and Nick Moyer are looking forward to leading the Summit High boys basketball team to a winning season this year.

Bears defensive back D.J. Moore wondered if Marshall was kidding

and said: "I've never heard of that."

ADVENTURE SPORTS

NFL spokesmanGreg Aiello said Viagra is not

a banned substanceand

Bend's Laurenne Ross skis a downhill training runduring a World Cup event last season. Ross will make her 2012-2013 season debut today in downhill at a World Cup in Lake Louise, Alberta.

declined further com-

ment. Marshall started it all

Wednesday whenasked about a growing number of suspensions tied to amphetamines, including the ADHD drug

Adderall. He said he didn't know much about Adderall, but suggested

Viagra could be viewed by players as awayto boost their energy. "I know guys, it's such

:~p ' ,i j >'jLS,

Malcolm Carmichael /

Alpine Canada

a competitive league,

and guys try anything just to get that edge," he

said. "I've heard ofguys using Viagra, seriously, because theblood, it's

supposed to thin... I don't

know. Somecrazy stuff. It's kind of scary with

some of thesechemicals thatare in some of these

things, so youhaveto be careful." Arizona Cardinals

defensive linemanVonnie Holliday, a15-year NFL veteran, said some

of his teammates were talking about Marshall's Viagra remarks but he

had never heard of such a thing himself. "I don't understand what good it would do," he said. — The Associated Press

• Bend alpine skiers TommyFordand Laurenne Rossare set to start their seasonsthis weekend NFL njuries are commonplace at the highest level of alpine ski racing. Little wonder, then, that Central Oregon's Tommy Ford and Laurenne Ross are both nursing nagging pains as they prepare for their World Cup season debuts this weekend. Ford, ofBend, is expected to race Sunday in giant slalom at a men's World Cup event in Beaver Creek, Colo., after recovering from hip

t

surgery. Ross, also a Bend resident, will race today

MARK MORICAL though Sunday at a women's World Cup in Lake Louise, Alberta, after breaking a thumb in September. Ford, 23and a graduate of Bend's Summit High School, says he hurt his right hip when

he "jammed" it during a turn while training in New Zealand in August. Shortly thereafter he underwent surgery, and he was back on the snow by early this month, in time for the U.S. team training camp in Copper, Colo. The 2010 Olympian says he will race mostly in giant slalom and slalom this season. "I'm just working on consistency and eliminating mistakes," Ford says. "Keeping the speed high at all times." See Kickoff /D6

Atlanta QB Matt Ryan

looks to complete a pass during Thursday night's game.

Defense leads Falcons to victory Atlanta picks off the Saints' Drew Brees five times in a 23-13 win,D5

COLLEGE BASKETBALL

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

Time for co egeath etes

Pac-12 title rem atch

to quit getting rippedoff

will be a 'mindgames'

By Paul Newberry

The Associated Press

Oregon rolls to win over TSA Arsalan Kazemi has 20

points and six rebounds to lead the Ducks,03

GOLF Watney on top at World Challenge Late run on birdies gives

golfer earlyadvantage in California,D4

H

COMMENTARY

By Antonto Gonzalez The Associated Press

ey, major college foot-

ball player. Can you

STANFORD, Calif. This week has been unlike any other in the 20 years Mike Gleeson has been Stanford football's video director. Even though there is a tight turnaround between the Cardinal's 35-17 victory last Saturday at UCLA and the -

give us a few minutes of your time? Don't worry about drawing the attention of your school administrators. They're too

strike'? Really, I'm not kidding. Oh sure, you're getting a college education out of the deal, but that's not even close to being fair. While you're out there busting your butt every

busy scurrying off to a new

day, the guys in suits are pad-

conferenceor lining up some exorbitant television deal to notice what we are about to dlscuss. You're getting ripped off. Big-time. Have you considered a

ding their coffers with your efforts.

What you guys need is someone like Marvin Miller, the late, great baseball union chief who died this week. See Athletes /D5

Alex Gallardo / The Associated Press

UCLA quarterback Brett Hundley (17) congratulates running back Johnathan Franklin, left, after a touchdown against Stanford last Saturday.

Pac-12 championship game

rematch tonight, Gleeson's typical task is simplified. All he has to do is add video from the first game and recalcu-

late statistics to the preparation done last week. After that, things get complicated. "The staff, in a way, they have to shuffle the deck as if it didn't happen. Or did it'?" Gleeson said. "How do you want to look at it? Do you want to change things'? Do you want to keep things? Now we've got the mind games with UCLA. What did they show? What do we think they showed compared to what they'll do this week'? SeePac-12/D5


D2

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012

ON THE AIR

COREBOARD

TELEVISION Today GOLF

6:30 a.m.:Sunshine Tour, Nedbank Challenge,second round, Golf Channel. Noon:PGA Tour, World

Challenge, second round, Golf Channel. BASKETBALL

3:30 p.m.:Men's college, Tennessee atGeorgetown, ESPN. 4:30 p.m.:NBA, Portland Trail Blazers at Boston Celtics, Comcast SportsNet Northwest.

5:30 p.m.:Men's college, Syracuse at Arkansas, ESPN. 7:30p.m.:NBA, Denver Nuggets

Arkansas-Pine Bluff at Oregon, Pac-12 Network.

4 p.m.:Men's college, Pittsburgh at South Florida, ESPN2. 4:30 p.m.: NBA, Portland Trail Blazers at Cleveland Cavaliers, Comcast SportsNet Northwest.

5:30 p.m.:Men's college, Pacific at Gonzaga, Root Sports.

5:30 p.m.:Men's college, Sacramento State at Arizona State, Pac-12 Network.

7:30 p.m.:Men's college, Portland at Washington State, Pac-12 Network.

10:30 p.m.:Men's college, Colorado at Wyoming (sameday tape), Root Sports.

at Los Angeles Lakers, ESPN. FOOTBALL

4 p.m.:College, MAC Championship, Kent State vs. Northern lllinois, ESPN2. 5 p.m.:College, Pac-12 Championship, UCLAat Stanford, Fox. 7:30 p.m.:High school, WIAA

Class 3A final, Bellevue vs. Eastside Catholic, Root Sports. HOCKEY

4:30p.m.:Men'scollege,Boston College at Boston University, NBCSN.

7 p.m.:Men's college, Wisconsin at Denver, NBCSN.

Saturday GOLF 4a.m.:Sunshine Tour, Nedbank Challenge, third round, Golf

Channel. 10a.m.:PGATour, World Challenge, third round, Golf Channel. Noon:PGA Tour, World Challenge, third round, NBC. SOCCER 4:30 a.m.:English Premier League, West Ham United FC vs. Chelsea FC, ESPN2. 1:30p.m.:MLS, MLS Cup,

HoustonDynamo atLosAngeles Galaxy, ESPN. FOOTBALL

Ba.m.:College, Oklahoma at TCU,ESPN.

9 a.m.:College, Conference USA, final, Central Florida at Tulsa, ESPN2. Ba.m.:College, Oklahoma State at Baylor, FX.

11:30 a.m.:College, Nicholls State at Oregon State, Pac-12 Network.

HOCKEY

4:30p.m.:Men's college, Boston University at Boston College, NBCSN.

Sunday FOOTBALL 12:30a.m.:College,South

1 p.m.:College, SEC Championship, Alabama vs.

Georgia, CBS. 5 p.m.:College, Texasat Kansas State, ABC.

5 p.m.:College, ACC Championship, Florida State vs. Georgia Tech, ESPN.

5 p.m.:College, Big 10

10a.m.: NFL, New England Patriots at Miami Dolphins, CBS. 10a.m.: NFL, San Francisco 49ers at St. Louis Rams, Fox. 1 p.m.: NFL, Pittsburgh Steelers at Baltimore Ravens, CBS. 5:20 p.m.:NFL, Philadelphia

Eagles atDallasCowboys,NBC. 5:30 p.m.:College, BCS Selection Show, ESPN. GOLF 4:30a.m.: Sunshine Tour, Nedbank Challenge, final round, Golf Channel. 10a.m.: PGATour, World Challenge, final round, Golf

Channel. Noon:PGA Tour, World Challenge, final round, NBC. SKIING 10a.m.: USSA Birds of Prey

7:30 p.m.:High school, WIAA Class 4A Championship, Skyline vs. Bellarmine Prep, Root

Sports. BASKETBALL

9:30 a.m.:Men's college, Baylor at Kentucky, CBS. Noon:Men's college,Alabama at Cincinnati, ESPN2.

2 p.m.:Men's college, Villanova at Vanderbilt, ESPN2.

3:30 p.m.:Men's college,

SWIMMING 11 a.m.: Winter National

Championships (taped), NBC.

(HoodRiver)6:30p.m

11:30 a.m.: Men's college, George Washingtonvs. Manhattan (same-day tape), Root Sports.

2 p.m.:Men's college, Denverat Stanford, Pac-12 Network.

4p.m.: Men's college, CalState Fullerton at Washington, Pac-12 Network.

RADIO Today BASKETBALL 4:30 p.m.: NBA, Portland Trail Blazers at Boston Celtics, KBNDAM 1110, KRCO-AM 690. FOOTBALL 5 p.m.:College, Pac-12 Championship, UCLA at Stanford, KICE-AM 940.

Saturday FOOTBALL 11:30 a.m.:College, Nichols State at Oregon State, KICE-AM 940, KRCO-AM 690.

5 p.m.:College, ACC Championship, Florida State vs. GeorgiaTech,KICE-AM 940. BASKETBALL 4:30 p.m.: NBA, Portland Trail

Blazers at ClevelandCavaliers, KBND-AM 1110, KRCO-AM 690.

No spendingspree for Marlins this winter MLB

Central ChristianatGilchrist JVTournament, TBD;

Trinity Lutheranat HorizonChristian Tournament, TBD; Summiat t AlohaTip-Off Tournament, TBD; La Pine,Ridgeviewat La PineTournament, TBD, Culver atShermanCounty Tournament,TBD Swimming: Bend,Summit, Redmond, Ridgeviewat MadrasRelays, I p.m.;; Sistersat KRO CCenter in Salem,2 p.m. Wrestling: Bend, Mountain View, Redmond, Madras, Ridgeview, Crook County, Culver, Gilchrist atC.O.Oficials Tournamentat Mountain View, 10 a.m.

at the meetings that begin Monday. "We'd like to do some more things," president of baseball operations Larry B e infest O said Thursday. We're going to explore some things in Nashville. If something makes sense, we'll m o ve ahead. But are we talking about huge free agents'? I'm not sure that's the m ode we're in right now." The Marlins made a big splash at the meetings in weeks ago. Dallas a year ago, when they The trade left Miami with signed shortstop Jose Reyes, a projected payroll of about left-hander M ar k B u ehrle $43 million, which m eets a nd closer Heath Bell t o owner JeffreyLoria's budget deals totaling $191 million. for 2013. So the team is un- All three players have since likely to swing any big deals been traded.

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f linois 95,WakeForest82 flinois St.75, Milwaukee54 IndianaSt.48, SaintLouis 46 Missouri80,SEMissouri 51 MissouriSt. 73,Oral Roberts 72,OT NotreDame72,Cent. Michigan63 UMass 65, Ohio61 Virginia90,Minnesota68 SOUTHWES T Arkansas72,TexasSouthem50 Oklahoma 96,Northwestern St.35 Tu sa80, UtahValey 53 UALR75,Troy52 FAR WEST CS Northridge 70, Santa Ciara67 Denver57, N.Colorado46 Montana 76 Idaho65 MontanaSt.81, Montana-Westem49 Oregon St.71, CSBakersfield 48 Saint Mary's(Cal)70, CalPoly67 Washington64, Portland44

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GOLF

PREP SPORTS Football

"A real man would turn around and tell him

PGA Tour

to sit down and shut up ... Just sayin'."

World Challenge Thursday At SherwoodCountry Club ThousandOaks, Calif. Purse: $4million Yardage:7,023; Par:72 (36-36) First Round NickWatney 35-32 — 67 Keegan Bradley 34-35 — 69 Graeme McDoweff 36-33 — 69 Jim Furyk 37-32 — 69 36-34 — 70 Bo VanPelt 36-34 — 70 TigerWoods 34-36—70 WebbSimpson JasonDay 35-36—71 HunterMahan 34-37 — 71 BubbaWatson 37-34 — 71 Matt Kuchar 38-35 — 73 JasonDufner 39 34 73 RickieFowler 38-35 — 73 39-34 — 73 SteveStricker lan Poulter 38 35 73 39-35—74 DustinJohnson ZachJohnson 37-37 — 74 BrandtSnedeker 36-39 — 75

OSAASTATEPLAYOFFS CLASS6A

Semifinals At Jeld-WenField, Porgand Saturday's Games LakeOswegovs. Tigard, noon Jesui tvs.Sheldon,4p.m. CLASS5A Final At Hiffsboro Stadium

Saturday'sGame Marist vs.Sherwood,7:30p.m. CLASS4A

Final At HiffsboroStadium Saturday's Game NorthBend/OR CoastTechvs. Baker,1 p.m. CLASS3A Final At CottageGroveHighSchool Saturday's Game Daytonvs. CascadeChristian, 4p.m. CLASS2A Final

Time ofPossession

CLASS1A Final At CottageGroveHighSchool

Saturday's Game Camas Valey vs. St.Paul, noon

FOOTBALL NFL NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE AU TimesPST AMERICANCONFERENCE East W L T P ct PF PA N ew England 8 3 0 .7 2 7407 244 Miami 5 6 0 . 4 55211 226 N.Y.Jets 4 7 0 . 364221 290 Buffalo 4 7 0 . 3 64243 319 South W L T P ct PF PA Houston 10 1 0 .909327 211 Indianapolis 7 4 0 . 636230 273 Tennessee 4 7 0 . 3 64238 335 Jacksonvile 2 9 0 . 182188 308 North W L T P ct PF PA Baltimore 9 2 0 . 8 18283 219 Pittsburgh 6 5 0 . 545231 210 Cincinnati 6 5 0 5 4 5282 247 Cleveland 3 8 0 . 2 73209 248 West W L T P ct PF PA Denver 8 3 0 . 727318 221 San Diego 4 7 0 . 3 64245 237 Oakland 3 8 0 . 2 73218 356 Kansas Cit y 1 10 0 . 0 91161 301 NATIONALCONFERENCE East W L T P ct PF PA 7 4 0 . 6 36305 226 5 6 0 . 455295 285 5 6 0 . 455242 262 3 8 0 . 2 73184 282 South W L T P ct PF PA 1 1 1 0 9 1 7317 229 6 5 0 . 545310 254 5 7 0 . 4 17321 327 3 8 0 . 2 73214 265 North W L T P ct PF PA 8 3 0 . 727277 175 7 4 0 . 636273 245 6 5 0 5 4 5248 249 4 7 0 . 3 64267 280 West W L T P ct PF PA 8 2 1 . 7 73276 155 6 5 0 . 545219 185 4 6 I . 4 09 205 254 4 7 0 . 364180 227

Thursday'sGame Atlanta23, NewOrleans13 Sunday's Games Seattle at Chicago,10a.m. Minnesota atGreenBay,10 a.m. San Franciscoat St.Louis, 10a.m. CarolinaatKansasCity,10 a.m. HoustonatTennessee,10 a.m. Arizona at NYJets,10 a.m. Indianapois at Detroit, 10 a.m. Jacksonville atBuffalo,10a.m. NewEnglandatMiami,10a.m. Tampa Bayat Denver,1:05 p.m. ClevelandatDakland,1:25 p.m. Cincinnati atSanDiego, I:25 p.m. PittsburghatBaltimore,1:25 p.m. Philadelphia at Dalas, 5:20p.m. Monday'sGame N.Y.GiantsatWashington, 5:30 p.m. Thursday's Summary

Falcons 23, Saints 13 New Orleans Atlanta

0 7 6 0 — 13 7 10 0 6 — 2 3

First Quarter Atl — Turner 3 run(Bryant kick),11:09. SecondQuarter Atl — Gonzalez17 passfrom Ryan(Bryant kick), 14:08. Atl FG Bryant45, 8:53. NO — Ingram1run (Hartley kick), 3:18. Third Quarter NO — FGHartley 21,8:24. NO FG Hartley52,3:53. Fourth Quarter Atl —FGBryant 29, 14:48 Atl — FGBryant55, 4:25. A—70,514. First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-Yards Lost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards

NO AU 24 15 4 36 283 23-101 23-124 3 35 15 9 4 -62 1 - 13 4 -94 1 - 22 0 -0 5- 2 0 28-50-5 18-33-0 1-6 1-6 4-45.3 6-53.2 00 11 5 -30 5 - 25

33:44 26:16

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —New Orleans: PThomas14-84, Ingram6-13,Ivory3-4. Atlanta: Turner12-83,Rodgers 8-43, Ryan 3-(minus 2). PASSING —New Orleans: Brees 28-50-5-341. Atlanta: Ryan18330 165 RECEIVING —New Orleans: Moore 7-123, Colston6-71,Sproles5-47,Graham4-59, Collins 22, Morgan1-38, PThomas1-5 Ingram1-(minus 1), Higgins1-(minus3). Atlanta: Jones5-48, Gonzalez 4-58, Sneffing4-28, Rodgers 2-(minus4), White120, Cox1 8,Turner1-7. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None

College EAST Louisville 20,RutgersI7

Schedule AU TimesPST

(Subject tochange) Today'sGame MIDWEST MACChampionship, N.Illinois vs.KentSt.at Detroit,

4 p.m.

FAR WEST Pac-12Championship, UCLAat Stanford, 5 pm.

Saturday's Games EAST San Diego at Marist, 9 a.m. Kansas at West Virginia,11:30a.m. 0incinnati atUconn,12:30a.m. SOUTH Louisiana-Lafayette at FAU, noon SECChampionship, Alabamavs. Georgia at Atlanta, 1 p.m. Pittsburghat SouthFlorida, 4p.m. ACCChampionship, Georgia Techvs. Florida Stateat Charlotte,N.C.,5 pm MIDWEST C-USAChampionship, UCFatTulsa, 9a.m. TexasatKansasSt., 5p.m. Big TenChampionship, Nebraskavs. Wisconsin at Indianapolis,5:15p.m. SOUTHWES T OklahomaSt. atBaylor, 9a.m. Oklahoma atTCU,9a.m. MiddleTennesseeatArkansas StU noon NewMexicoSt.atTexasStU 1 p.m. FAR WEST NichoffsSt.at DregonSt.,11:30 am. BoiseSt.at Nevada, 12:30p.m. SouthAlabamaat Hawaii, 8p.m. FCS Playoffs

SecondRound

NewHampshireat Wofford,11a.m. CentralArkansasatGeorgia Southem,11 am. CoastalCarolinaatOld Dominion, 11a.m. f linois St. atAppalachianStU 11 a.m. Cal PolyatSamHouston St.,1 p.m. SouthDakotaSt.at North DakotaSt.,1 p.m. WagneratEWashington,3p.m. StonyBrookatMontanaSt., 4p.m.

Bowl Glance Subject to Change AU TimesPST Saturday, Oec. 16 New MexicoBowl At Albupuerpue MWCvs. Pac-12,10 a.m.(ESPN) FamousIdahoPotato Bowl At Boise, Idaho MAC vs .WAC,I:30p.m.(ESPN) Thursday, Dec. 20 Poinsettia Bowl At San Diego San DiegoSt. (93)vs BYU(75),5pm. (ESPN) Friday, Oec.21 St. Petersburg (Fla.) Bowl Big Eastvs. C-USA,4:30 p.m.(ESPN) Saturday, Dec. 22 New OrleansBowl C-USAvs. SunBelt,9 a.m.(ESPN) Las VegasBowl MWCvs. Pac-12,12:30 p.m.(ESPN) Monday, Dec. 24 Hawaii Bowl At Honolulu SMU(6-6)vs.MWC,5 p.m. (ESPN) Wednesday,Oec.26 Little CaesarsPizzaBowl At Detroit

Big Ten vs. MAC,4.30p.m. (ESPN) Thursday, Dec.27 Military Bowl At Washington ACCvs.At-large, noon(ESPN) Belk Bowl At Charlotte, N.c. ACCvs.BigEast,3:30p.m. (ESPN) Holiday Bowl At San Diego Big 12vs.Pac-12, 6:45 p.m.(ESPN) Pac-12 Standings AU TimesPST

Oregon OregonState Washington California WashingtonState UCLA USC

South

Conf. 8-1 8-1 6-3

Today's Game Pac-12Championship, UCLAat Stanford,5 p.m.

Saturday'sGame

x-NichoffsStateatOregonState, 11.30a.m.

Betting line NFL

(Hometeams in Caps) Favorite Open Current Underdog Sunday BEARS 4 4 Seahawsk PACKE RS

9

9

7

7

JETS Panthers LIONS BILLS Patriots

3.5 5 3 3 4 4. 5 6 6 7 7 5 6 6.5 7 NL N l. PK PK

Texans BRONC OS RAVEN S RAIDER S

Bengals COWB OYS

1 (SD) 1.5

Vikings

RAMS Cardinals CHIEFS Colts

Jaguars

DOLPHINS TITANS

Buccanee rs Steelers Browns

CHARG ERS

DEALS Transactions BASEBALL

AmericanLeague CLEVELANDINDI ANS— Named Tom Wiedenbauer minor leaguefield coordinator; Ruben Nie-

bla minor leaguepitching coordinator; Luis Ortiz lower-level hitting coordinator/cultural developmen t coordinator;AdamEverett minor eagueinfield coordinator; Travis Frymanspecial assistant; Chris TremiemanagerandTony Amold pitching coach College of Columbus(IL); Edwin Rodriguezmanager, Jim Today Rickon hitting coachand GregHibbard pitching MACChampionship coach ofAkron (EL);DavidWallace manager, Roug5 7 KentState las Ddorhitting coachandJeff Harris pitchingcoach Pac-12Championship of Carolina(Carolina);ScooterTucker manager, Tony STANFORD 1 0 9 Ucla Mansolino hitting coach and SteveKarsay pitching Saturday coach olLakeCounty(MWL); ShaunLarkin hitting Cincinnati 5.5 5 CON NECTICUTcoach of MahoningValley (NYP); Scott Erickson Pittsburg 6 7 S.FL ORIDA pitching coachof theArizona LeagueIndians; and Oklahoma 7 6 TCU Joel Mejiafield coordinatorof theDominican SumKANSAS ST 10 5 1 1.5 Texas mer League Indians. Oklahoma St 4.5 4.5 BAYLOR KANSAS CITYRO YALS—Agreed to terms with BoiseSt 8.5 9 NEVADA RHPFelipePaulino onaone-yearcontract. W.VIRGINIA 2 0 20 Kansas LOS ANGELESANGELS— Claimed SS Tommy TEXAS ST 12.5 1 3.5 New Mexico St Field offwaiversfromMinnesota ARKANSA SST 10 10 MidTenn St MINNESOTA TWINS— Traded OF DenardSpanto UL-Lafayette 9. 5 9 FLA ATI.ANTICWashingtonforRHPAlexMeyer. HAWAII 4 6 S.Al abama DAKLAND ATHLETICS Agreed to terms with 38 Confer enceUSAChampionship Scott Mooreonaminor leaguecontract. TULSA PK 2 C.Fl orida TAMPA BAYRAYS—Agreedtoterms with 28 Mike SECChampionship Fontenot,OFRich Thompson, RH PMatt Buschmann, Alabama 75 7,5 Georgia RHPWill Inman, 18 NickWeglarzand INFShawn ACCChampionship O'Malleyonminor leaguecontracts. FloridaSt 1 3 . 5 14 Geo rgia Tech National League Big 10 Championship ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS—Released RHPBrad Nebraska 3 3 Wisc onsin Bergesen. ATLANTA BRAVES Agreedto termswith OFB.J. Upton on ative-year contract. SOCCER CHICAGO CUBS—Named Scot Harris director of basebaloperati l ons. MLS 9

10

Monday

Giants 2 .5 2 . 5 SD-SanDiegoopened asthefavorite

Eagles

REDSKIS N

SAN DIEGO PADRES—Agreed to termswith RHP

Today No. 8 Stanfordvs. No.17 UCLA, Pac-12 championship, 5p.m. No. 18KentStatevs. No.19 Northernllinois, MAC championshipatDetroit, 4 p.m. Saturday No. 2Alabam avs. No.3Georgia, SECchampionship at Atlanta,1p.m No. 7KansasStatevs. No23Texas, 5p.m. No. 12Oklahomaat TCU, 9a.m. No.13 FloridaStatevs.Georgia Tech,ACCchampionship atCharlotte,N.CU 5 p.m. No.14Nebraskavs. Wisconsin,BigTenchampionship at Indianapolis,5:15p.m. No. 16OregonState vs. NichoffsState,11 30a.m. No. 24OklahomaStateatBaylor, 9am. No. 25BoiseStateat Nevada,12:30 p.m.

North

ulaf Colorado

7-5 7-5 5-7 1-11

MAJOR LEAGUESOCCER Time PST MLS CUP Saturday,Dec.1:Houstonat LosAngeles,1 30p.m

Top 26 Schedule AU TimesPST

Stanford

5-4 4-5 3-6 1-8

Arizona State Arizona

49ers

Thursday'sGame

At HiffsboroStadium Saturday's Game Oaklandvs. PortlandChristian,4:15p.m.

The Associated Press

MIAMI — A year ago, the Miami Marlins went on a shopping spree at the winter meetings and came home with three All-Stars. Next week in Nashville, Tenn., they'll be in the market for bench help. The Marlins' brief era as big spenders ended when the team with the biggest payroll in franchise history flopped. That prompted the Marlins' latest dismantling, w h i ch included a blockbuster selloff trade with Toronto two

Princeton71,Rutgers 55 Syracuse91,Dartmouth 64 Viff anova66,Lehigh49 SOUTH ArkansasSt.60, FIU57 Chattanooga 68, Wofford 54 Miami 69,PennSt. 65 Michigan St. 68,NCState51 Mississippi68,Lipscomb46 MurraySt.63,Ball St.53 SE Louisiana76,NewOreans64 W.Kentucky65,Louisiana-Monroe57 MIDWEST E. Rlinois71, IUPUI60, OT

IN THE BLEACHERS

Ol

Saturday Boys basketball: Sistersat CrookCounty, 7 p.mz CentralChristianatGichrist JVTournament, TBD; Ridgewew,LaPineat La PineTournament, TBD; Culver atShermanCounty Tournament,TBD Girls basketball: CrookCountyat Sisters, 7 p.m.,

BASKETBALL

Listings are the mostaccurate available. The Bulletinis not responsible for late changes made byTll or radio stations.

BTr Steven Wine

Christian atGilchrist JV,8p.m. Girls basketball: Springfield at Bend, 7 p.m.; Redmond atEstacada,7p.m.;Summitvs.Reynolds at AlohaTip-OffTournament, 3 p.m.;Ridgeviewvs. BurnsatLa Pine Toumament,3 p.m.;Lakeview at La Pine,6:45p.mz Madras at CrookCounty, 7 p.m.; Culverat ShermanCounty, 3 p.m.; Central Christianvs.ChiloquinatGilchrist JVTournament, 3:30 p.m.; Trinity Lutheran at HorizonChristian

(taped), NBC.

Championship, Nebraska vs.

Wisconsin, Fox.

Today Boys basketball: Wiffametteat Summ it, 7 p.mz Esta cadaatRedmond,7 p.m.;CrookCountyat Madras7,p.m.;Lakeview atLa Pine,8:15 p.mz Ridgeview vs. Burnsat La PineTournament, 4:45 p.m.;CulveratShermanCounty,4:30 p.m.;Central

Alabama atHawaii (same-day tape), Root Sports.

11:30 a.m.: College, Kansasat West Virginia, Root Sports. 12:30p.m.:College, Boise State at Nevada, ABC.

ON DECK

Overall

5-4 2-7 1-8

10-2 11-1 8-3 7-5 3-9 3-9

Conf. 6-3

Overall 9-3

5-4

7-5

SamHoland,I.HPJeremyGould, SSLuis Uguetoand OF Euri Minayaonminorleaguecontracts. WASHINGTONNATIONALS— Acquired OF Denard Spanfrom the Minnesota Twinsfor RHPAlex Meyer.

BASKETBALL National Basketball Association NBA—Suspended Boston G Rajon Rondotwo Men's college gamesandfinedBrooklyn FGerald Wallace$35,000 and BostonF Kevin Garnett$25,000lor their actions Thursday'sGames duringWednesday's game. EAST CLEVEL ANDCAVALIERS—Wawed F Luke HaranBrown69, SacredHeart 56 gody.SignedFKevin Jones. Canisius83, UMBC65 DALLASMAVERICKS—Signed G Derek Fisher. Harfford60,Yale51 WaivedFTroyMurphy. La Salle63,Rider52 OKLAHO MACITYTHUNDER—AssignedGJeremy Manhat tan65,Fordham 58 Lambto Tulsa (NBADL). St. John's89,SouthCarolina 65 PHOENIS XUNS—AssignedGKendaff Marshall to Uconn61,NewHampshire 53 Bakersfield(NBADL). SOUTH FOOTBALL Campbel91, l Newberry 78 National Football League ETSU 94, Miligan46 NFL —Fined Dallas CBMikeJenkins $7,875for FIU 80,ArkansasSt.61 Florida82,Marquette49 pushingWashington WRPierre Garcontothe ground well afterGarconcrossed thegoal line ona59-yard LSU72,SetonHall 67 touchdown lastweek.Reducedthe $21000 fine of Memphis93, UT -Martin 65 Houston DEAntonio Smith to $11,000 for kickMiddleTennessee72,Louisiana-Lafayette 58 Morgan St. 67,Liberty 62 ing Miami OLRichie Incognito duringthe season opener. NorfolkSt. 85,St. Francis(NY)79 North Florida72, FloridaASM47 ARIZONA CARDINALS—SignedCScott Wedige. SC-Upstate 73, UNCAshevile 71 CAROLINAPANTHERS—Signed DT Frank Kearse SE Missouri83,NewOrleans 67 from thepracticesquadandCBNick Hixsonto the SouthAlabama77,FAU66 practicesquad. W.Kentucky65,Louisiana-Monroe54 CHICAGOBEARS— Signed G Andre Gurode. MIDWEST Signed WRDale Moss andGDerek Dennis to the N. DakotaSt.95,Nebraska Omaha 51 practicesquad. NotreDame64, Kentucky 50 JACKSONVI LLEJAGUARS— Placed DTD'Anthony UMKC79, IUPUI65 Smith oninjuredreserve. W. Illinois 73,SouthDakota71 KANSASCITYCHIEFS Claimed G Hayworth W. Michigan 54,HighPoint 53 Hicksoff waiversfromthe N.Y. Jets. ReleasedPKMatt SOUTHWES T Szymanskifromthepractice squad. SignedLBQuan TCU61,S.Utah52 Sturdivantto thepracticesquad. UALR58,Troy56 PITTSBU RGH STEELERS—Released DB Josh FAR WEST Victorian fromthe practicesquad. SignedWRBert Gonzaga104, Lewis-Clark St.57 Reed, TJoeLongandOLJustinCheadletothepracIdahoSt. 70,Montana-Western 52 tice squad. LongBeachSt.73,LoyolaMarymount70 SAN DIEGOCHARGERS— Released RB Curtis Oregon95, UTSA78 Brinkley. PlacedS Atari Bigby on injured reserve. Pepperdine 76, MontanaSt. 66 Signed LB Bront Bird. ClaimedWRMicheal Spurlock off waiversfromJacksonvile. SignedDBSeanCatThursday'sSummary touse to thepractice squad. SEATTLESEAHAWKS— Signed WR PhilBatesto t h e practice squad. Oregon 95, TENNESSEETITANS— Named Tom Moore asan Texas-SanAntonio 78 assistant tooffensivecoordinator DoweffLoggains. WASHING TON REDSKINS Released LBMario TEXAS-SAN ANTONIO(3-3) Addison. ClaimedLB BryanKehl off waivers from Wilkins 3-50-06, Hiii 7-115-619,HaleIII 6-92-2 Kansas City. 18 Burrage8-140-1 17, Sims2-6 0-06, Price0-0 SOCCER 0-0 0, Thomas1-30-03, McGregor1-2 2-24,Wood U.S. SOCCE R—Named Cheryl Baileyexecutive 2-3 0-0 5.Totals 30-53 9-11 78. directorforthewomen'ssoccer leaguethat wi I begin OREGON (6-1) play inthespringof2013. Kazemi8-94-4 20,Singler 3-101-1 8, Austin4-6 Major League Soccer 2-210, Artis 7-80-016, Dotson2-42-28, RichardPHILADE LPHIA UNION—Named Jim Curtin asson 1111-20 02, Loyd1-21-23, Carter2 40-04, sistantcoach.Signedassistant coachBrendanBurke Emory4-51-29, Woods6-103-415. Totals 38-60 to a new contract. 14-1796. CHICAGO (Nov. 29,2012)—US Soccer president Hafftime—Oregon51-40. 3-Point Goals—Texas- Sunil Gulati announced today that Cheryl Baileyhas San Antonio9-16(Hale gl4-5, Sims2-5, Wood1-2, been namedthe Executive Director for the newU.S. Thomas1-2, Burrage1-2), Oregon5-11 (Artis 2-3, Soccer-ledwomen'ssoccer leaguethat wil beginplay Dotson 2-3, Singler 1-3, Richardson ffl 01, Loyd in thespringol 2013. 0-1). Foued Out —None. Rebounds —Texas-San COLLEGE Antonio 19 (Hill 6), Oregon31(Carter7). AssistsRENCEUSA AnnouncedMiddle TennesTexas-San Antonio 14(Burrage6), Oregon20 (Loyd seeCONFE StateandFlorida Atlantic will join theconference 5). Total Foul— s Texas-SanAntonio 15, Oregon17. by July I, 2014. A—5,204. SOUTHER N CALIFORNIA Announcedthr resignation of assistantheadfootball coach MonteKiffin after theTrojans' bowlgamenext month to pursuea Wom en's college return totheNFL. Wednesday'sGames ST. JOHN'— S Named Alfred Caronia strength and EAST conditioningcoach.

BASKETBALL


FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012• THE BULLETIN D3

COLLEGE BASKETBALL ROUNDUP

SPORTS IN BRIEF

re on es

Football • Bridgewater leads Lou-

NHL

win over

isville to BCS: Banged-up

Teddy Bridgewater cameoff the bench to throw two-second half touchdown passes,and John Wall ace kicked a 29-yard field goal with 1:41 left to send Louisville to the BCS with a 20-

17 victory against Rutgers on Thursday night in Piscataway, N.J. In a gamebetween one team headedtothe Big Tenand another bound for the Atlantic Coast Conference, the Big East handed out its second-to-last bid to a school that entered the

league during its last massive rebuild in 2005 and watched its

athletic program blossom. The Cardinals will be going to the BCS for the second time, first since 2006. Louisville (10-2, 5-2) will share this Big East title with Rutgers (9-3, 5-2),

Syracuse andpossibly even Cincinnati, but the BCS bid will be all theirs. The BCS standings will be used to break the tie and there is no doubt Louisville, with the best overall record in

the conference, will be ontop. • Monte Kiffinresigns from son's JJSC coaching staff: Southern California assistant head coach Monte Kiffin will

resign from his son's coaching staff after a miserable season for the Trojans' defense. Monte

Kiffin announced in anews release Thursday night that he will leave USC after the Trojans' bowl game next month to pursue a return to the NFL. "I wantedto make this announce-

ment now so that our players who are preparing for the bowl game and our recruits who will be visiting campus areaware," Monte Kiffin said in a statement. "The chance to work for

my son, Lane,was uniqueand memorable, but wealways treated each other professionally onacoach-to-coach basis. Although things didn't always

go as well as wewould have liked this year from a defensive and win-loss standpoint ... I see great things ahead for the

USC football program."

Baseball • Rivera, Yankees agree to $10 million deal: Mariano Rivera and the New York Yan-

kees agreedThursday to a$10 million, one-year contract, a

The Associated Press EUGENE — Arsalan Kazemi had his best game of the season with 20 points and six rebounds to lead Oregon past Texas-San Antonio 95-78 Thursday night. Dominic Artis also scored 16 and center Tony Woods, who didn't start for the first time this season, came off the bench

Arizona

and scored 15 points for the Ducks (6-1),

The Associated Press

who shot 63 percent from the field. Woods' replacement, Waverly Austin, had 10 points. Edrico McGregor scored 19 to lead the Roadrunners (3-3), who also shot 56 percent from the field. Michael Hale III added 18 points and Kannon Burrage had 17. Kazemi, a one-year senior forward from Rice who had to sit out the Ducks' first two games of the season waiting for the NCAA to clear his transfer, made eight of nine from the field. He also had five steals, four assists and three blocks. His previous season-best was nine points against Cincinnati last Saturday. "Every game that goes by I get better, and I feel more comfortable with my new teammates," said Kazemi, who averaged 12.6 points and 10.1 rebounds in his three years with the Owls. Kazemi's dunk with 16:23 to play started an 8-0 run for Oregon after the Roadrunners had trimmed a 53-40 second-half deficitto 60-55. The Roadrunners never got closer than 10 points after that. "Arsalan created a lot of havoc," Oregon coach Dana Altman said. "I was really pleased with his effort." The 6-foot-7 Kazemi, 6-11 Woods and 6-11 Austin led the Ducks' efforts to score inside where they had a noticeable size advantage on UTSA, which didn't play anyone taller than 6-8 forward Jeromie Hill. Oregon outscored the Roadrunners 6232 in the paint. "They were a little bit smaller in size," Woods said, adding that they put emphasis on getting the ball in the paint. Woods, sidelined by foul trouble, had just nine points in 16 minutes combined against UNLV and Cincinnati last weekend. He gave a more composed effort Thursday. He shot six for 10 from the floor and had a pair of blocks and only three fouls. "My mentality is still to do whatever I can to help my team win the game," Woods said. "I just tried to stay conscious of keeping my hands up because I want to

S COTTSDALE, A r i z . — Phoenix Coyotes goalie Mike Smith lowered into a crouch as the odd-man rush developed in front of him. T he puck went to t h e left wing and he followed,

play."

Artis, a freshman point guard, also had his best game of the season, making seven of eight from the field with a pair of

this week By John Marshall

lodging his skate against the post. A one-touch pass sent the puck across the front of Smith's crease and he slid over in a flash, whipping his right leg out for a

sprawling pad save, setting i~

irr'I ',- /

I

Joe Raymond /The Associated Press

Notre Dame guard Eric Atkins works against Kentucky guard Jarrod Poison during the second half of Thursday night's game in South Bend, Ind. Notre Dame won 64-50. 3-pointers.He also had four assists and three steals. The Roadrunners got off to a hot start, scoring on nine of their first 11 shots to lead 21-18 with 13:45 to play in the first half. But the Ducks followed with a 15-0 run to jump in front 33-21 by the 9:26 mark and they led 51-40 at halftime. Also on Thursday: N o. 7 Florida ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 82 M arquette..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49 GAINESVILLE, Fla. — Michael Frazier II scored 17 points, one of six Florida players in double figures, and the Gators routed Marquette in the SECBig East Challenge. Florida took control midway through the first half, building a double-digit lead thanks to Frazier's hot hand and solid defense, and never let up.

N otre Dame..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64 N o. 8 Kentucky.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50 SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Eric Atkins scored 16 points and Notre Dame beat Kentucky for its 41st victory in the past 42 home games.Jack Cooley and Jerian Grant each had D points for the Fighting

Irish (7-1). No. 12 Gonzaga.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104 L ewis-Clark State...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57 SPOKANE, Wash. — Redshirt freshman Kyle Dranginis scored a seasonhigh 30 points, and five other Gonzaga players scored in double figures as the Bulldogs coasted to a victory over LewisClark State College. Przemek Karnowski scored 16 points, Sam Dower and David Stockton had 13 each and Kelly Olynk added 11 points and 10 rebounds for his firstcareer double-double for Gonzaga

(7-0).

person familiar with the negotiations told The Associated

Press. Theperson spoke on

NBA ROUNDUP

condition of anonymity becausethedealhad notyetbeen

announced. Theperson saidthe deal includesadditional bonus opportunities, as did the team's agreement with Andy Pettitte earlier in the week. After miss-

ingmostoftheseasonbecause of a kneeinjury, Rivera accepted a cut in guaranteedmoney from his $30 million, two-year deal that had covered the last two years. Rivera, who turned 43 on Thursday, was limited to nine games this year after tearing the anterior cruciate ligament in his right knee while

tracking down afly ball during batting practice in KansasCity on May3.Heisbaseball'scareer leader with 608 saves.

Olympics • McKee to help lead JJ.S. Olympic sailing team: Two-time Olympic medalist

Charlie McKeehas beenappointed high-performance director of the U.S. Olympic

sailing program. Thursday's announcement came three months after the United States' embarrassing flop at the London Olympics, when it failed to win a medal for the first time since the1936 Berlin Games.

McKee's responsibilities will include managing all on-the-water elements of the U.S. sailing team, including the coaching

program, technical development and youth development.

Miami tops short-handed San Antonio The Associated Press MIAMI — The NBA plans to make San Antonio pay for resting four stars. The Miami H eat a l most could not. Ray Allen's 3-pointer with 22.6 seconds left gave the Heat the lead, LeBron James finished with 23 points and the Heat rallied late to beat the Spurs 105-100 on Thursday

xE

0,'Iiio

night — needing to dig deep

despite San Antonio's decision to have four standouts resting at home in a move that irked NBA C o mmissioner D avid Stern. Allen scored 2 0 p o i nts, Dwyane Wade added 19 and Chris Bosh finished with 18 points and 12 rebounds for Miami, now 7-0 at home. Gary Neal had 20 points for the Spurs, who p layed without Tim D u ncan, Tony Parker, Manu Ginobili and Danny Green. The Spurs' top foursome was sent back to

V

'A3 ' «4(I .;r, Pedro Portal I The Associated Press

Miami Heat's Dwyane Wade, right, shoots against San Antonio Spurs' DeJuan Blair, top left,and Nando De Colo, bottom, during Thursday's game in Miami. The Heat won 105-100.

forthcoming. T iago Splitter scored 18 points, Nando De Colo added 15, Boris Diaw scored 12 and San Antonio by coach Gregg Matt Bonner had a 10-point, 10-rebound night for San AnPopovich, who said the move was in his team's best interest. tonio, which finished a sixStern wasn't happy about it, g ames-in-nine-nights r oa d calling the move "unaccept- trip with a 5-1 record. able" and saying that sancThe Spurs led by seven with tions against the Spurs will be about 5 minutes left and were

up 98-93 after Neal made a 3pointer with 2:14 remaining. The Heat finished on a 12-2 run, needing yet another late-

game rally. But all anyone will likely remember from this one is Popovich's decision — and whatever Stern does as a result. "I apologize to all NBA fans," Stern said. "This was an unac-

players' association and now even federal mediators agree on one thing: Thebickering sides are nowherenear adeal

people watching.

the game averaging acom-

good.

bined 23.6 points, or 1.6 points less than James averaged entering Thursday night. In another Thursday game: Warriors.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 106

The Coyotes have had g ood t u rnout f o r t h e i r

Nuggets......... . . . . . . . ..105

gone to play overseas or for

OAKLAND, Calif. — Andre Iguodala's 3-pointer as the buzzer sounded was waived off, and Golden State held on for a wild win over Denver after four replay reviews over the final 3.4 seconds. Iguodala received a c ross-court inbounds pass and connected from the left wing with a hand in his face, and Denver players celebrated by running off the court toward their locker room. But the Warriors stayed put and waited on yet another review by officials at the scorer's table — then began their own cheers at raucous Oracle Arena when officials ruled the shot came just an instant after time expired.

that would put hockey back on the ice. The league and the union wrapped up two days of talks Thursday in New Jersey, with help from mediators, but moved no closer to

a solution to savetheseason that has already beendelayed and shortened. Two members from the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service joined the

discussions onWednesday and Thursday but couldn't

bring the sides anycloser. — From wire reports

NBA SCOREBOARD Standings NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION

ConferenceGlance All TimesPST

EASTERNCONFERENCE W L Pct d-Miami 11 3 .78 6 d-Brooklyn 10 4 .71 4 NewYork 10 4 .71 4 d-Milwaukee 7 6 .53 8 Atlanta 9 4 .692 Philadelphia 9 6 .60 0 Boston 8 7 .53 3 Charlotte 7 7 .500 Chicago 7 7 .500 Indiana 7 8 .467 Orlando 5 9 .357 Detroit 5 11 .3 1 3 Cleveland 3 12 .2 0 0 Toronto 3 1 3 .1 8 8 Washington 3 2 .077 WESTERNCONFERENCE W L Pct d-Memphis 11 2 .84 6 SanAntonio 13 4 .76 5

d-Oklahoma City 12 4 d-GoldenState 9 6 LA. Clippers 9 6 Utah 9 7 Denver 8 8 LA. Lakers 7 8 Houston 7 8 GB Phoenix 7 9 Dallas 7 9 1 Minnesota 6 8 1 Portland 6 9 3 ~/~ Sacramen to 4 10 t'/ z NewOreans 4 10 2 ~/~ d-divisionleader 3 '/~ 4 Thursday'sGames 4 Miami105,SanAntonio100 4' / ~ GoldenState106,Denver 105 6 Today'sGames 7 philadelphia at charlotte, 4 p.m. 8 ' i z PhoenixatToronto, 4p.m. 9 BrooklynatOrlando,4 p.m. 9 '/z PortlandatBoston,4:30p.m. ClevelandatAtlanta, 4:30p.m. GB Washingtonat NewYork, 4:30p.m. Milwaukee atMinnesota, 5p.m. Detro>tatMemphis, 5p.m.

.75 0 I/2 .60 0 3 .60 0 .56 3 3'/z .50 0 41/2 .467 .46 7 5 .438 51/2 .438 51/2 .42 9 51/2 .40 0 6 .2 8 6 71/2 .2 8 6 71/2

Utah atOklahomaCity, 5p.m. IndianaatSacramento, 7p.m. Denverat LA. Lakers,7:30p.m. Saturday's Games Portlandat Cleveland,4.30p.m. Brooklynat Miami,4:30 p.m. PhiladelphiaatChicago,5 p.m. Utah atHouston,5 p.m. OklahomaCity atNewOrleans, 5p.m.

Memphisat sanAntonio,5:30p.m. Bostonat Milwaukee5:30 p.m. Detroitat Dallas,6p.m. IndianaatGoldenState, 7:30p.m. SacramentoatLA. Clippers,7:30 p.m.

Summaries Thursday's Games

Heat105, Spurs100 SAN ANTONIO (100) Diaw5-71-212, Bonner4-70-010, Spitter 7-12 4-618, Mills 3-110-0 7, DeColo 4-85-615, Neal 7-204-420,elair3-70-16,Anderson2-24-59,Joseph1-e0-0a Totals 36-8018-24 100.

off a collective 'Oh!' from fans lining the glass behind him. N HL p l ayers o n t h e ice, competing hard, fans cheering them on — it almost felt like a real game. Of course, it was only a scrimmage in front of a couple hundred people at the Coyotes' practice facility, but as the NHL lockout drags on, fans — and the players — will take anything they can get. "This is awesome," said Jane Pittet of Scottsdale, who left w or k t o c a t ch Thursday's workout at the Ice Den. "I wish it were the real thing, but this is fun to watch." The Phoenix C o yotes have been holding informal workouts at their practice rink since the NHL lockout started and this week were joined by more than a dozen players from around the league for what amounts to a lockout minicamp. Pittsburgh star Sidney Crosby, San Jose forward Patrick Marleau, Buffalo goalie Ryan Miller and Dallas forward Brendan Morrow are among the players who have made the desert the hockey destination this week by skating with the Coyotes. P layers f r o m tea m s across the country have gotten together for workouts in their home cities, but this week is a chance to face a step up in competition and play against someone other than their teammates, not to mention feel at least a little pressure playing with

ceptable decision by the San Antonio Spurs and substantial sanctions will be forthcoming." Stern's statement was released roughly the same time as tip-off in Miami for the nationally televised game. The Spurs' five starters came into

Hockey • Mediators fail to help in NHL lahor fight: The NHL, the

Players skating in

MIAMI (105) James 9-163-e 23, Lewis1-1 0-03, Bosh8-14 2-218, Chalmers 3-81-1 8, Wade7-175-519, Cole 49e-0 8, Allen7-155-520, Haslem2-4 e-0 4,Miler 1-2 0-0 2,Anthonye-00-00 Totals 42-86 16-19 105. sanAntonio 27 17 32 24 — 100 Miami 22 25 26 32 — 105

Warriors106, Nuggets105 DENVER (105) Gall>nas 6-12 5-e 20, Faried3-e 4-410, Kouios 3-3 0-0 6 Lawson7-18 1-1 17,Iguodala8-174-5 22,Brewer4-12 2-4 12,A.Miler 1-3 0-0 2, McGee 4-8 3-4 11,Randolph 0-10-00, Hamilton 2-4 e-0 5. Totals 38-84 19-24105. GQLDEN sTATE(106) Bames1-7 0-0 2, Lee13-15 5-7 31, Ezeli 1-1 e-0 2, Curry7-172-2 20, Thompson 10-19 e-e21, Biedrins1-1 e-02, Green1-30-0 2, Jack7-141-1 18, Landry2-72-36,Jenkins1-20-0z Totals4486 10-13 106. Denver Golden State

" It was fun t o b e o u t there and, OK, I've actually go to stop this puck," Miller sa>d. "I kmd of tr>ed to pretend I was back in front of the home crowd and had to make a stop, so it was

player-organized w o r kouts, skating with a dozen or so players who haven't minor league teams, while a handful of players from other teams have occasionally loined in. Crosby, trying to work his way back from a series of concussions, helped organize a couple of gatherings in D allas and Vail, Colo., and the group headed to Arizona this week to join the Coyotes. Phoenix captain Shane Doan sent word that there would be a mini camp of sorts this week, luring more players to Scottsdale. About 30 players have participated in the workouts this week, separating onto two rinks for d r ills before coming together for 40 minutes to an hour of scrimmaging. There isn't any hard checking or an overwhelming int e nsity to the workouts, but it is a chance for the players to get out and play at close to

game speed.

" We've had a pr e t t y good group here the whole time and we added about 15 guys, so that made it to where you can play a full game," Doan said. "That makes it so it's 5-on-5 and there's a little bit of a break, not every other shift. Gives you a chance to really play. It just picks up the competitiveness and everyone wants to prove that they're capable of playing and it's a lot of fun."


D4

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012

Earn ar ta ainmostpopuar i

NASCAR

By jenna Fryer

The Associated Press

LAS VEGAS — Dale Earnhardt Jr. tied Bill Elliott's record of 10 consecutive wins as NASCAR's most popular driver, and was just as nervous accepting it Thursday as he was when he received his first honor. "It's real hard to get up there and express your emotions and express to people how much it means to you," Earnhardt said. "When you win it repeatedly, it gets tougher to show people and tell people how much it means to you because each time you win it, it means a little bit more. Words do an injustice to spelling out what it really means to you."

Summit Continued from D1 The Cougars lost 10 seniors after placing fourth in the 5A tournament last season, but M ountain View coach Craig Reid says a productive offseason and experienced personnel make the Cougars optimistic about the coming season. "We definitely have more weapons," Reid says. "The last two years, we didn't have the variety of basketball-skilled kids. We had a couple good ballplayers and then a bunch of really, good, tough athletes, but not basketball kids. This year, we've got quite a depth of basketball talent." Senior Mitch Modin, a first-team all-IMC player last season, who averaged more than 15 points per game inthe regular season, seniors Matt Logan, Erik Siefken and John Carroll and junior Grant Lannin make up the core ofthe Cougars. Reid believes this Mountain View team has the potential to return to Matthew Knight Arena in Eugene for the eight-team championship tournament. "They're all very skilled kids, and I've got confidence in them," Reid says."We're deep. ... I like the mix of what we've got. We've got some skilled kids, we've got some quickness in the backcourt,we've got some size up front." Bend coach Don Hayes, who enters his 23rd season at the helm for the Lava Bears, expects the IMC to be a "dogfight," but Bend returns three all-league selections in senior David Larson and juniors Connor Scott and W y att B eaumarchais. Along with senior Cody Connell, having that experience, Hayes says, is a strength for the Lava Bears. "Get down to crunch time in the fourth quarter, you expect those kids to make plays, to do the right thing because they have that experience," Hayes says. "They're going to make that key play at the end of the game and get that key stop. They're going to find a way to win. I think that's what they bring to the table." Bend looks to return to the state postseason for the third straight year, and to do that, Hayes says the Lava Bears will have to play both ends of the floor, making defensive stops while also executing

offensively. Redmond High makes its 5A debut after spending the past five seasons in 6A, and with all-league players Matt Dahlen and Trevor Genz coming back, Panthers coach Jon Corbett has high expectations. "We should be much improved," says Corbett, in his second year as Redmond head coach. "Last year was very much a l earning year with a bunch of seniors. A lot of the

guys we have coming back now have been in the system for a couple years, somy expectations are not only are we better, but we can start adding into the system now." At th e 4 A l e v el, Sisters and Madras look to repeat as champions of their respective conferences. The Outlaws r eturn S k y -Em

League co-player of the year and f irst-team all-state selection E l i Harrison, whose 17.6 points and six rebounds per game led Sistersto its first state semifinal appearance since the 1998-99 season. For the White Buffaloes, all-TriValley Conference playerJhaylen Yeahquo leads a group of seniors w ho hope t o c l ai m t h eir t h i r d straight conference title. Those seniors, Madras coach Allen H air says, have got to be the leaders and possiblytake on the primary scoring roles. If that happens, Hair believes this team's potential is limitless. "I don't know that there is a ceiling (for Madras)," Hair says. "I think that we have the potential to be very, very good. I think we could go seven or eight deep on any given night and maybe even nine deep. I really think that this group is a pretty solid group, and I really like our chances." La Pine brings back two starters from last season's squad in Gaven Boen and Tyler Parsons. With Josh Ramirez as another scoring option, Hawks coach Kyle Kalmbach thinks La Pine could be in the thick of things for potentially its f irst state playoff appearance in school history. Last season, unlike p r evious

Earnhardt won the award Thursday at the Myers Brothers Luncheon at The Encore at Wynn. The award is presented annually by the National Motorsports Press Association, and Earnhardt has won it every year since 2003. He thanked his enormous fan base for sticking with him during his acceptance speech. "Aside from honesty, one of the qualities I admire most in a person is loyalty," he said. "Loyalty is a word that I use quite often to describe our fans, and as I stand here

to accept this award for a 10th time, I think it's a great example of loyalty in its truest form. I thank the fans, all the fans who support this sport, and I ampleased and humbled and honored to accept this." Fans vote from February through September on 10 most popular drivers. The field was then reset and fans voted again through the final 10 weeks of the season. More than934,000 votes were cast and Earnhardt beatJeff Gordon, Kasey Kahne and Tony Stewart. Rounding out the top 10 were Jimmie Johnson, Kevin Harvick, Kyle Busch, Carl Edwards, Matt Kenseth and Bobby Labonte.

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Boysbasketball outlook Class SA BEND

e

Head coach:DonHayes(23rd season) 2011-12 record:14-9 overall, 3-3 intermountain Conference (2nd); lost in first round of Class 5Astate playoffs Season opener:Bendat Grants Pass, Dec. 4

i'

MOUNTAINVIEW

Head coach:Craig Reid (13th season) 2011-12record:22-6 overall,5-1 intermountain Conference (1stj; won fourthplace game in Class 5A state tournament Seasonopener:M ountainView atM adras,Dec.4

Bret Hartman/ rhe Associated press

Nick Watney walks to the 18th greenduring the first round of the World Challenge at Sherwood Country Club in Thousand Oaks, Calif., Thursday.

REDMOND

Head coach:Jon Corbett (second season) 2011-12record:11-15overall, 2-5 Southwest Conference (4thj; lost in first

round of Class 6Aplayoffs Seasonopener:EstacadaatRedmond,today

Watney takes two-stroke

lead at WorldChallenge

SUMMIT

Head coach:Jon Frazier (second season) 2011-12 record:11-13 overall, 1-51ntermountain Conference (3rdj; lost in

Class 5A play-in round

The Associated Press THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. — Sure enough, putting was all th e r age Thursday in the World Challenge.

Season opener:Willamette at Summit, today Class 4A CROOKCOUNTY

knows better not to take seriously

One day after golf's governing bod- a comment from people he either

Head coach:Jeff Lowenbach (ninth season) 2011-12record:3-21overall, 0-2 Special District1 (2ndj; lost in Class 4A playinround

Seasonopener:CrookCountyatMadras,today LA PINE

Headcoach:KyleKalmbach(seventhseason) 2011-12record:7-17overall, 2-8 Sky-Em League(5thj Season opener:LaPineat La PineTournament, today MADRAS

Head coach:Allen Hair (sixth season) 2011-12 record:18-7 overall, 8-2 Tri-Valley Conference (1stj; lost in first round of Class 4A playoffs

Seasonopener:CrookCountyatMadras,today RIDGEVIEW

Head coach:Nathan Covill (first season) 2011-12record:First-year program Season opener:Ridgeview at La PineTournament, today SISTERS

Head coach:RandRunco (15th season) 2011-12record:24-5 overall,10-0 Sky-Em League (1st); lost in third-place game of Class 4A tournament

Season opener:Sisters at Crook County, Dec. 1 Class 2A CULVER

Head coach:BrennanWhitaker (second season) 2011-12 record:8-16 overall, 2-12 Tri-River Conference (7thj

Season opener:Culver at Sherman County Invitational, today Class1A CENTRALCHRISTIAN

Head coach:DanPoet (second season) 2011-12 record:1-20 overall, 0-15 Big Sky League (11thj

Season opener:Central Christian at Gilchrist JV Tournament, today GILCHRIST

Head coach:ToddWhite (first season) 2011-12 record:4-16 overall, 2-12 Mountain Valley League (7th) Season opener:Gilchrist 65, Culver JV 24, Nov. 28

Next game:Gilchrist at Chiloquin, Dec. 4 TRINITY LUTHERAN

Head coach:Mark Clemo(first season) 2011-12 record:First-year program

Season opener:Trinity Lutheran at Gilchrist JV Tournament, Today years, "instead of getting blown out by 30 (points) in the first quarter, we're competing with teams in every aspect," Kalmbach says. "We're not big, but we do have a lot more experiencecoming back thisyear." At Crook County, Jacob Mahurin returns as part of what Cowboys coach Jeff Lowenbach callsa seniorheavy roster. Lowenbach says his team is fairly athletic and has size as well as familiarity, as many of the Cowboys, he notes, have played together since fifth grade. "Once we start p laying some games, we'll really figure out where we are, but I feel like our preparation for the season has gone well," Lowenbach says. "Hopefully, with our experience and some of our athleticism, we'll have a good showing (tonight against Madras) and get off to a good start." Two schools make their boys bas-

GOLF ROUNDUP

ketball debuts this season in 4A Ridgeview of Redmond and lA Trinity Lutheran of Bend. Trinity Lutheran coach Mark Clemo says his goal is just for his kids to get playing time, have fun and improve. At R i dgeview, coach N athan Covill, who joins the Ravens after spending three seasons leading the girls basketball program at Redmond High, is not so much aiming for immediate success. Instead, he says he wants to establish a basis for what the Ridgeview program will be for years to come. "My philosophy this year is to build a foundation so that we do

things right in our program," Covill says. "We want to build what kind of program we're going to be, and I have good assistant coaches who are helping establish that foundation." — Reporter: 541-383-0305; glucas@bendbulletin.com.

ies proposed a new rule that will ban the anchored stroke used for long putters, Keegan Bradley talked about someone on Twitter telling the PGA champion to send in his resume to Burger King in 2016, when the rule goes into effect. Bradley got so fed up with the teasing over his belly putter this week that he grabbed Tiger Woods' putter and made three out of fourfrom 10 feet. The rule doesn't affect Nick Watney, though he couldn't say enough about his putting. He made five birdies on his last 10 holes — including his first birdie ever on the 14th hole at Sherwood — for a 5-under 67 that gave him a two-shot lead. Woods' putting saved his round, even though most of them were for par. That included a 12-foot putt on the 15th and an 8-footer to avoid bogey on the par-5 16th. It added up to a 70, which left him very much in the hunt at an 18-man event where he is more than just a tournament host. Without a title sponsor, Woods is underwriting most of the cost. And yes, even Steve Stricker made news Thursday with his putter. He tried a new one. "Mid-life crisis," he said. The World Challenge is not a hitand-giggle at the end of the year, even with a short field, no cut and lots of holiday cash for all involved. The field is stronger than ever, with 13 players from the Ryder Cup, and it showed in the scores. On a cool, overcast day in the Conejo Valley, only eight shots separated the top ( Watney) from B randt Snedeker, bringing up t he rear with a 75. Snedeker drilled a fairway metal into 8 feet and made eagle on the 11th hole, only for his round to fall apart. He hit two provisional tee shots on the par-3 12th, didn't have to use them but still made bogey, and then he snap-hooked his next tee shot and

doesn't know or who don't use their real names in social media. That would include one tweet telling him to send in an application to Burger King for 2016. "I've been doing a better job lately of not reading them, but I'm going to make a switch when I feel it's best for me," Bradley said. "And whether that's tomorrow or in t hree years, we'll see." The switch earlier this week to Woods' putter was only temporary, and it was a joke.

"I give him grief every day," Woods

sald. T oo bad B r adley d i dn't m a k e Woods try a few putts with the belly. "You don't want to see Tiger with that putter," Bradley said. 'If it was up to me, I'd film him and send that to Mike Davis. I think he would take the ban off." Bradley did a little more experimenting after his round Thursday. He gripped his putter a little lower so that the end wasn't anchored to his belly. He ran the putter up his left arm for a few putts, the style used by Matt Kuchar that would remain legal. But as he tinkered around, he noticed a TV camera filming him and stopped. It's still a sensitive subject for Bradley, and he wants everyone to know he's a pretty good golfer with any putter in his bag. "I feel like the USGA has really put an 'X' on our back and really shined a light on us, and I don't know if that's exactly fair," Bradley said. "I just hope that people look at us for the type of players that we are and the accomplishments that we've had, and not because we use a belly putter, and now the USGA says it's going to be illegal. When we started putting with it, they were legal. And they still are. "It's a sticky situation, and I hope made double bogey. they can see through that." Bradley and a pair of past champiAlso on Thursday: ons at this tournament — Jim Furyk Hass, Coisaerts tied for Nedbank lead and Graeme McDowell — were two SUN CITY, South Africa — Bill shots out of the lead at 69. Woods Haas bogeyed two of the last three was in the group at 70 that included holes in the Nedbank Golf Challenge Bo Van Pelt, whom Woods beat this to slip back into a share of the firstyear at Congressional, and U.S. Open round lead with Nicolas Colsaerts. Two shots ahead after the 15th hole, champion Webb Simpson. But the buzz remained over the the American dropped strokes on 16 belly. and 18 to match Colsaerts at 2-unBradley was the first player to win der 70 in the 12-player event at Gary a major using the belly putter at the Player Country Club. Two-time de2011 PGA Championship, and then fending champion Lee Westwood Simpson and Ernie Els followed this was a stroke back along with Paul year. Bradley is not happy about the Lawrie and South African star Louis rule,though he has been respectful Oosthuizen. toward the U.S. Golf Association and Golfer shoots 9-under to top qualifying Royal 8 Ancient in their right to set LA QUINTA, Calif. — Meen Whee Kim shot a 9-under 63 on PGA West's the rules. But this is a guy who plays with a Stadium Course to take a one-stroke chip on his shoulder, and this chip lead after the second round of the PGA Tour qualifying tournament. could be a big one. Kim had a 13-under 131 total in the He described his round as awesome, aside from a bad break on the six-round event. The top 25 and ties 18th that led to bogey, the only green will receive 2013 PGA Tour cards and the next 50 and ties will earn Web. he missed all day. "If I could have made a few more com Tour cards. Two-time tour winputts, I probably could have been a ner Vaughn Taylor was second after a lot lower," he said, pausing before he 64 on the Jack Nicklaus Tournament added, "I know people probably don't Course. Sweden's Robert Karlsson, an 11-time winner on the European want to hear that." He then revealed how much abuse Tour, was tied for fifth at 10 under afhe was taking on Twitter, though he ter a 68 on the Stadium Course.


FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012• THE BULLETIN

Pac-12

NFL

Seattle hopesto solve road struggles quickly in Chicago By Tim Booth

The Associated Press

RENTON, Wash. — Unbeatable at home. Undeniably bad on the road. The Seattle Seahawks (6-5) play in one of the NFL's most remote outposts. It's partly why they are so dominant at home, going 5-0 with three victories by at least 10 or more points this season while playing beforeone of the rowdiest fan bases in football. But on the road, the Seahawks are a woeful 1-5 this season and need to solve the problem fast if they want to consider themselves a playoff contender. Seattle goes to Chicago on Sunday for its nextto-last road game and a victory over the Bears would go a long way toward helping the

Seahawks keep a grip on the final playoff spot in the NFC. "It's a mystery I wish I could figure out. At home I know the '12th Man' we love them, it's like our comfort zone. Anywhere else just feels like it's out of our comfort zone," said Seattle linebacker Leroy Hill, one of two Seahawks players remaining from the 2005 NFC championship team. "We tend to make it a struggle. Even the games we win we tend to make it a closer game. But I wish I could figure it out." The road problems aren't new. Seattle's struggles outside the Northwest are a longstanding issue that is a mix of having to travel more than any other team in the NFL and often playing what feels like a morning start when going to the Eastern or Central time zones. And those issues become

more glaring because of how good the Seahawks are at home. Since Seattle opened its new stadium before the start of the 2002 season, the Seahawks are 56-29 at home, including an 8-0 mark in2005 on their way to the Super Bowl and a 7-1 home record in 2007. On the flip side, Seattle is just 31-55 on the road during the same time span and 12-34 since 2007. In the Eastern time zone alone, Seattle is 7-20 over the last 10 years. "We just have to learn how to get over that hump, know that we're a good team and finish games no matter whether home or on the road. We have to figure out how to win those games and until then we'll just be middle of the pack," Hill said. The bottom of Seattle's road swoon seemed to come during the 2009 season when the Seahawks lost four of t heir

final five road games in their only season under Jim Mora. T he Seahawks w er e o u t scored 148-46 in losses at Arizona, Minnesota, Houston and Green Bay. Pete Carroll arrived, but success on the road didn't immediately follow. In 2010, Seattle made the playoffs, but was 2-6 and outscored by 100 points as the visiting team. Last season, the Seahawks were 3-5 on the road but far more competitive, including a win over the eventual Super Bowl c hampion Giants. This season, being competitive isn't enough. The Seahawks have been in every game to the final moments, yet their only win was a 16-12 victory at Carolina. T here w a s a dro p p ed fourth-down pass at the goal line in the final seconds of the season opener at Arizona. There was Russell Wilson's intended receiver falling down, which turned into an interception late at St. Louis. Against San Francisco, the Seahawks defense was gashed by inside runs. In Detroit, the Seahawks defense couldn't stop the Lions on third down and Matthew Stafford's TD pass with 20 seconds left had Seattle smarting after a 28-24 loss. Then came last week in Miami, where the Seahawks defense gave up 17 fourth-quarter points, capped by rookie Ryan Tannehill leading the Dolphins 65 yards in the final 92 seconds and Dan Carpenter's game-winning field goal at the gun. Five losses by a combined 24 points that could be the reason Seattle doesn't reach the postseason. "I can't imagine if anybody has been in more close games on the road than we've been in," Carroll said. "... We're close enough and we know the thingsare there for us,and we have tomake ithappen." Seattle is one of three teams in playoff contention in t he NFC with a losing record on the road, and along with Minnesota the only one with just one road victory. The flip side is Seattle is one of three teams undefeated at home, joining Baltimore and Atlanta. If Seattle stumbles in Chicago the Seahawks will get one more shot at road success in two weeks against Buffalo in Toronto. Getting one of the two road games seems like a must if the Seahawks are go-

ing to make the playoffs.

"We're so close in every game, it comes down to one or two plays basically," Wilson sald.

Athletes Continued from D1 Someone who can drop some knowledge about just how badly you're getting hosed. Someone to get you organized. Someone with the guts to say, "Play fair, or we're walking." Yep, walk. While the last thing we need is another labor dispute in sports, there may be no greatermiscarriage of economic fairness than what's going on amid the ivy-covered columns of higher education. " There's a reason we call i t higher education," said Ellen Staurowsky, a professor in the Department of Sport M anagement at Drexel University in Philadelphia. "It's supposed to aspire to higher ideals, to try to do what's best from a social justice point of view. It's such a shame for higher education to have a system in place that has really exploited the athletes in a way that is not defensible." Think that college degree makes it defensible? Not even close. Oh sure, a school such as Georgia might fork over about $40,000 a year to pay for your room, board and tuition, but let's do some quick math and seehow you're making out. Say a football program provides 85 scholarships a year. Multiply that by what they're spending on each of you, and it comes out to $3.4 million. So, what does the school get out of this'? Well, let's look again at how the Bulldogs are making out. According to Forbes, which does

David Goldman /The Associated Press

Atlanta Falcons strong safety William Moore(25) returns an interception during the second half of Thursday night's game against the New Orleans Saints in Atlanta. It was one of five interceptions for Atlanta on the night.

amns ic o r ive times in victor By Paul Newberry The Associated Press

ATLANTA — The Atlanta Falcons moved to the brink of clinching a division championship. Drew Brees and the New Orleans Saints wound up with egg on their faces. After racing to a 17-0 lead, the Falcons turned to their defense to make it stand up, picking off five of Brees' passes and ending his NFL-record touchdown streak in a 23-13 victory over the Saints on Thursday night. The Falcons (11-1) will clinch the NFC South with a month to go if Tampa Bay loses at Denver on Sunday. They also dealt a big blow to the Saints

(5-7) and their fading playoff hopes. William Moore had two of the five interceptions, which were the most of Brees' career and came four days after he had two passes picked off and returned for touchdowns in a loss to San Francisco. "That's the first time that's ever happened to me, so that's extremely disappointing," Brees said. "I pride myself on being a good decisionmaker and not someone who will be a detriment to the game." Brees had thrown a t ouchdown pass in54 consecutive games, breaking Johnny Unitas' long-standing record earlier this season. There was an apparent scoring pass to Darren Sproles late in the first half, but it was

an annual ranking of the nation's most valuable programs, Georgia turned a nifty little profit of $53 million on football last year. That figure will only rise as leagues expand intosuper conferences, television deals keep hurtling toward the stratosphere, and the suits figure outhow much more they can

make off a playoff system. A four-team postseason starts in 2014, and ESPN has already signed on for a dozen years. You know it's just a matter of time before the four-team playoff becomes an eight-team affair, then an eightteam endeavor morphs into a 16team version. Why not? With labor costs so low, schools would be foolish not to add a few more playoff rounds and cram a few more millions into their already bloated accounts. If that cuts into your time for classwork and taking final exams, so be it. Maybe you haven't gotten the memo yet, but our colleges and universities are not all that concerned about providing an education that will actually enhance your life after football. They tout tougher academic standards and improved graduation rates, but they're mainly concerned about keeping you eligible to take the field. That's where your real value lies. When you look around the classroom, you're likely to see many of your teammates. That's not mere coincidence. Last year,The Associated Press found that schools continue to be adept at a tactic known as "clustering," by which they put a bunch of you in the same class, one

DS

nullified by a penalty. " I didn't r ealize that u n til w e walked off the field," Falcons coach Mike Smith said. "That's an unbelievable streak. Drew Brees is an outstanding quarterback. The way the defense played tonight speaks volumes. The guys had gone out there and thrown touchdown after touchdown game aftergame aftergame." After the Sproles TD was wiped off the board, Brees made another huge mistake with New Orleans inside the Atlanta 10, allowing the clock to run out without at least attempting a field

goal. When the Saints arrived in Atlanta, their bus was pelted by eggs at the airport, epitomizing the long rivalry between the teams. New Orleans had dominated in recent years, winning four in a row and 11 of 13. This time, Michael Turner scored on Atlanta's opening possession, Tony Gonzalez hauled in atouchdown pass from Matt Ryan, and Matt Bryant booted three field goals, including a 55-yarder. The defense did the rest. Thomas DeCoud, Sean Weatherspoon and Jonathan Babineaux also had interceptions for Atlanta, and another pick by Corey Peters didn't count because of a penalty. Brees had a couple of games with four picks, but nothing like this. He finished 28 of 50 for 341 yards.

they figure will make it easier for you to pass. They probably didn't bother asking if you were actually interested in that field of study. Even with clustering and all the extra tutoring they provide, three out of 10 football players still fail to earn a degree. Better hope you're g ood enough to make it to t h e NFL. And if you are, you'll be in for areal eye-opening experience. While the stadiums and media

coverage might seem largely on par with what you just left behind, there is one big difference.

The paycheck. Yep, in the NFL, they actually

pay you to play. At that point, it might occur to

you, "Hey, why didn't I get a paycheck for the last four years?" Good question. A few folks are on your side. South Carolina's Steve Spurrier suggested that he and his coaching colleagues, who also make millions off you, reach into their own wallets to provide a l i ttle something, something for the help. His plan was derided as folly, the

players a cut. As it stands now, the NCAA won't even allow schools to provide a little financial assistance to help your family travel to a bowl game, the bowl game you made possible. "It would be great to be able to take care of their families or guardian, to be able to help them fly to a bowl game," Northwestern's Pat Fitzgerald said. "And take some of the money and allow them to get more money from bowl gifts and things of that nature that they've earned." A nice gesture, but that's only the tip of this dollar-shaped iceberg. The NCAA, which senses that you might be getting a little upset with th e c u rrent a r rangement, is considering whether to allow $2,000 stipends for athletes. Don't be fooled. They're just try-

ing to buy you off.

"It's notable that while coaches have accessto representatives who negotiate those multiyear contracts, the athletes are expressly denied that same kind of repreramblings of an aging coach who sentation," Staurowsky said. "It doesn't really understand how the speaks to just how big of a conflict system works. there is." Actually, he knows exactly how So, let's try this. Hit up Twitter. And Facebook. it works. But you're young, so we'll let you in on a little secret: People And any of those other websites in power are real reluctant to give you kids hang out on. up their loot, and they'll go to great Start talking about this issue. lengths to tell others why they Who knows'? If social media can don't deserve any of it. help overturn entire governments, Just last week, after Maryland maybe it can b r ing about real was lured away from its historic change in college athletics. We've even got a hash tag for association with the Atlantic Coast Conference by the promise of your cause: "treatusfair." more riches in the Big Ten, another If they won't, tell them you're coach floated the idea of giving the walking.

Continued from D1 "Well, we have 11 other games. So we kind of know what they're about, just like they know what we're about. But did they show everything that they could against us? Maybe. Maybe not. That's the mind game." Call last week a dress rehearsal, although even that may be in question. Stanford will wear its black uniforms, helmets and shoes for only the fourth time. UCLA is expected to swap out those dark blue "L.A. Night" jerseys for its traditional white tops, gold pants and gold helmets on the road. With the league title at stake, what else the eighth-ranked Cardinal (10-2, 8-1) and the No. 17 Bruins (9-3, 6-3) bring out of the closet for what could be a rain-soaked sequel at Stanford Stadium might not be so obvious. They will be the first opponents in major college football ever matched against each other for a r e g ular-season finale and conference title game in consecutive weeks. After the opener at the Rose Bowl, booking a return trip to Pasadena for the Rose Bowl Game on Jan. I could be tricky. Both coaching staffs lost a day of game planning and practice, and the preparation has everybody involved contemplating how to approach Part II. "I cannot recall ever being in this situation before," UCLA coach Jim Mora said. "I don't know that it benefits either team, or is hard on any team. It just comes down to going out on Friday night and executing. Any familiarity we have with them, they'll have with us." Stanford's video staff usually compiles highlights of about four games from when its opponent faced a team that mirrored what the Cardinal does, including last season's meet-

ing if the opponent has NeXt uP the same coaching staff or style. In this case, last week's game stands for last season's game. Then Producers send the videos and analytical reports to coaches and players through an application on their iPad

Qbam jppshj Stanford

'TV:Fox • Radio:KICEOur challengersto m ake AM 940 sure that we don't outsmart ourselves," said Stanford coach David Shaw, who won his second straight Pac-12 Coach of the Year award this week. "But at the same time, that we are as diverse as we can be, to make sure that the things that we did positively, we've got to know that UCLA is going to come back and have answers for it. The things that they did positively, we've got to make sure that we fix those things that hurt us." The Cardinal controlled the first matchup in familiar, physical fashion. Stepfan Taylor rushed for 142 yards and two touchdowns and is 35 yards shy of Darrin Nelson's school rushing record of 4,169

playbooks.

yards. Kevin Hogan beat his third ranked opponent in his third straight start since replacing Josh Nunes at quarterback, passing for 160 yards and another score to help Stanford run away with its fourth victory in a row over the Bruins. UCLA's Brett Hundley completed 20 of 38 passes for 261 yards and a touchdown with one interception while getting sacked seven times. Stanford, which leads the nation in

rushing defense (71.3 yards), sacks (4.4) and tackles for loss (9.2) per game, held Johnathan Franklin — the Bruins' career rushing leader — to 73 yards on the ground. "Both teams sort of see what the other teams are capable of doing and their tendencies, stuff like that." Hundley said. "Both teams have that advantage." Things will not get any easier as the Bruins go for their first conference championship since 1998. Stanford has won eight straight and 19 of its past 20 home games, with the lone loss coming to Oregon last season, then avenging that defeat with defensive domination in a 17-14 overtime win over the Ducks (11-1, 8-1) two weeks ago to secure the North Division tiebreaker. The Cardinal are riding a six-game winning streak and are looking to win the league title for the first time since 1999 while advancing to their third different BCS bowl in as many seasons. Rain started falling Thursday evening when the Bruins arrived on the quant Silicon Valley campus. A tarp covered the field at Stanford Stadium, and Mora and Shaw shook hands before posing for a ceremonial photo with the silver league title trophy inside the Cardinal athletic offices. "I think the rain favors the team that executes the best," Mora said. UCLA's repeat trip to the second annual Pac-12 championship game does come with at least one other noticeable difference. Last year, UCLA lost 49-31 at Oregon in lame duck coach Rick Neuheisel's weird finale — the Bruins had a 6-6 record and advanced out of the South Division only because crosstown rival Southern California was finishing a two-year postseason ban for NCAA violations. This time, Mora had to face questions after the regular-season finale about whether he limited his game plan knowing the possibility of f acing Stanford loomed. Both he and Shaw, who took Taylor out during the fourth quarter with the score lopsided against UCLA, said neither side seemed to withhold anything.

Of course,all agree each game is different. "They've probably got some tricks up their sleeve that we didn't see," Cardinal outside linebacker Trent Murphy said. "Everybody always says, 'It's really tough to beat a team twice.' But as far as the positives go, every week you look on the tape, you see the mistakes you made and the things you wish you could've done better. The kind of moves that you see that were there after watching the film. You get an opportunity to correct those mistakes the next weekend."


D6

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012

SKIING

Kickoff Continued from D1 The 2011-2012 World Cup season fell short ofFord's expectations. He posted several top-25 finishes, but he failed to qualify for World Cup Finals. Later in the season, he claimed the slalom and combined titles at the U.S. Championships in Winter Park, Colo., to raise his career total of national titles to eight. Now, Ford is dealing with his hip injury and adjusting to a new style of skis. "It's going to be different because of the

' kt.

injury," Ford says of the upcoming season. (aftAuc )H n

I•

• II

0

© Levt. IIWCH

Gtovannt Aoletta/The Associated Press file

Austria's Marcel Hirscher celebrating aftertaking second place in an alpine ski men's World Cup slalom in Levi, Finland in early November. The reigning overall World Cup champion was driving about 50 mph near Salzburg last May when another driver cut in front of him to make a turn. He avoided the car and hit a tree such that he suffered only minor bruises and a stiff neck. But the accident changed Hirscher.

Austrian as new ers ective on

i e a ter carcras By Pat Graham

lom competition in Soelden, Austria, last month, Ligety BEAVER CREEK, Colo. won by 2.75 seconds, with — In one horrifying instant Hirscher more than t hree while driving on a road in seconds behind in third. "Ted is incre d i ble," Austria, Marcel Hirscher had to pick between ramming an Hirscher said. "It's always oncoming car or a tree. really amazing to ski with The r e i g nin g ov e r a ll him." World Cup champion was B ut that time gap — a going about 50 mph near concern? "He made no mistakes," Salzburg last May when a woman cut in front of him to Hirscher said. "When you make a turn. w atch the v i deo head t o Trees to the right or the head, I'm pretty close to Ted, vehicle — one was about to but in the flat part, three be hit. gates before the finish line, I n At the moment before im- lost (time). pact, the Austrian skier noAny thought it was due ticed a person sitting in the to some sort of hesitation passenger's seat. was quickly dismissed by So he treated the situation Hirscher's teammate, Klaus like a giant slalom course. Kroell. "Marcel looksthe same," He veered around the car like he would a gate and the downhiller said. "He's struck the tree in such a way the same guy. He takes all that he suffered only minor the risks that are possible. I bruises and a stiff neck. think Marcel is just like last Still, the accident changed year. He's good. If you're not Hirscher. good, you're not the overall He's now more calculated winner. He's a good guy and about taking risks — even one of the best technician on the race hill. guys. Yeah, he likes to risk "I was so lucky," said it all." Hirscher, who plans to comBeing from Austria, where pete in the super-G and giant skiers are revered, Hirscher slalom this weekend at Bea- became an instant celebrity ver Creek. "I'm totally recov- after last season's success. ered, but now I'm thinking He just had no i dea how more about my whole life, fame would affect his life. like, 'What does it mean'?' H irscher can't g o a n y "I was just driving to a w here w ith o u t b ei n g press conference that day, mobbed f o r aut o g raphs with no thinking about my or photos. Even when he life. Maybe it's over there? goes shopping, he's quickly N ot maybe, normally it i s recognized. " They catch an d w a n t over there. I really think different now." to hold me, n Hirscher said For instance, the 23-year- with a look of astonishment. old used to give no thought "This is a point where I have to jumping off a boulder and to say, 'I'm a normal person. into a lake. And now, before I'm only on television. I'm he leaps into the unknown normal. Let me be a normal depths, he will swim into the person.' Sometimes, it can water wearing goggles and get a bit too much. All in all, it's good to be an alpine rock inspect the bottom, just to see if it's safe. star." He also double- and tripleHe is at that, too. That's why hi s accident checks the knots on the rope when he goes rock climbing drew such bi g h e adlines and makes sure the tires are around his nation. in fine working order before He was driving his Audi to going dirt biking. an event for the 2013 world Overly cautious? Perhaps. championships in S c hladIt's just that the car crash ming. He had plenty of time provided a stark reminder to get there, so he kept the f or Hirscher not t o t a k e speedometer ata reasonable things too lightly. rate,as evidenced by the fact " Look, s omething c a n there was a trail of cars beh appen anytime. I d o n ' t hind him. know if the lamps are safe," The police told him that said Hirscher, staring u p had he not swerved to avoid at the lights as he sat on a the collision, the passenger couch in a hotel lobby. "May- in the other vehicle might be it falls on my head and it have been severely injured will be over for me. These — or worse. are things that can happen That rattled Hirscher. "It wouldn't h ave been every day. "But I'm not doing stupid good," said Hirscher, who things. Maybe risky things, was briefly hospitalized. "I but no stupid things." just decided to make a right He won't be holding back turn, where there were trees. on the slopes. That's not I was really shocked." When he hit the tree, he what he means. After all, his risk-taking is said the air bag deployed, why he won the overall title leaving him with bruises on last season. Hirscher was so his chest and face. fluid in the technical events Soon after, Hirscher let all season, winning five sla- his fans know he was all lom events and four more in right: "I am glad I reacted giant slalom. He also took this way and didn't risk a the GS discipline title away frontal crash. It all hurts a from Ted Ligety of the Unit- bit but nothing too serious ed States. happened apart from some In the opening giant sla- bruises and a headache." The Associated Press

"But it will also be different because of the change in ski rules." The International Ski Federation (FIS) changed the regulations for ski dimensions starting this season, increasing the minimum length and minimum turn radius on all skis except slalom. In short, the skis are longer with less side-cut, meaning skiers must exert more force on their turns. Ford — like most of his teammates, including decorated World Cup veterans Bode Miller and Ted Ligety — has been a vocal opponent of the changes, which FIS has claimed will make the sport safer. "That was their reasoning, but it definitely does not do that," Ford insists.

TS

"There's more ski, so you're going faster.

And if you get any sort of lateral force, it's more, because it's a longer ski. That doesn't make it safer." Ford saysthe racers will be forced to change the way they ski, which could affect results. "We'll see how that affects me, n he says. "I've been skiing well on them (the new skis). I hope to get back strong so I can show people how I've been doing on them." Ross, meanwhile, is returning to race this weekend at Lake Louise, where one year ago a violent crash left her with severe facial lacerations. After a month off, Ross rebounded to earn a trip to the World Cup Finals in downhill and finished the season ranked 22nd in the discipline. Ross, who was raised in Klamath Falls and grew up skiing for the Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation along with Ford, moved to Bend last year. Now 24, she isexpected to race in downhill at Lake Louise today and Saturday, and in super-G on Sunday. Ross broke her thumb while training in Chile in September, but she says it is heal-

ing nicely. She will focus on super-G and downhill thisseason, but Ross hopes to race a few World Cup giant slalom events as well. She is working on some technical aspects of her skiing, as well as adjusting to the new skis, although the changes are not as

Nathan Bttow/The Associated Press file

Tommy Ford, of Bend, raises his armin the finish arena after crossing the finish line in the men's giant slalom at the U.S. Alpine National Championships in Winter Park, Colo., last year. Ford is expected to make his 2012-2013 World Cup debut this Sunday in giant slalom at Beaver Creek, Colo. dramatic for downhill and super-G skis. "I am working to calm my transitions, to keep my

upper body square, and to Ford

push onto the new ski early," Ross explains. "As far as tactics go, I am working on trying to take my turn deeper and to get a bit more aggressive with my line." Ross says she improves Ross e very season, an d s h e hopes to return to the World Championships, scheduled for February 2013 in Schladming, Austria. She finished 10th in the downhill at the 2011 World Championships i n Ga r m i sch-Parten-

kirchen, Germany. As for goals this season, she is aiming for a podium finish (top three) at the World Championships — and in all of her World Cup speed races (downhill and

super-G). "But I'm mostly just thrilled to get out there and go fast again," Ross says. "We get to ski on some new course venues this year on the women's speed circuit,so I am psyched to learn some new mountains and see what I can do on those new courses. Mostly, I can't wait to get back on the snow, travel, and partake in this crazy life I work so hard to lead. I'm thrilled to begin the racing season!" — Reporter: 541-383-0318, mmorical@bendbulletin.com

ADvENTURE SP0RTs CALENDAR Pleaseemail Adventure Sports event information to sports@ bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" on our tA/ebsite at bendbulletin.com. Items are published on a spaceavailability basis, and should be submitted at least 10days before the event.

CLIMBING BEND ENDURANCE ACADEMY COMPETITIONTEAM: Mondays, WednesdaysandThursdays, 4 to 6 p.m., through June 27, 2013; ages10-18; focuses on bouldering with opportunities to compete in USAClimbing's Bouldering Series; contact mike© bendenduranceacademy.org or www.BendEnduranceAcademy.org. BEND ENDURANCEACADEMY DEVELOPMENTTEAM: Mondays and Wednesdays,4 to 6 p.m., through Jan. 30, 2013; ages10-18; for the climber looking to develop a solid foundation of movement and technical climbing skills; contact mike@bendenduranceacademy.or g or www.BendEnduranceAcademy.

Swim & Fitness Center in Bend; every Sundayafternoonfrom 4:15 to 6 p.m, through the end of May; fee is $12 per boat for in-district residents and $16 for out-of-district residents; pre-registration is available beginning the Monday prior to each roll session and can be done online at register.bendparksandrec.org; contact www.bendparksaftdrec.org or call 541-389-7665.

SNOW SPORTS

DIRKSENDERBY SNOWBOARD RALLYRACE:Dec. 14-16 at Mt. Bachelor's Sunrise Lodge; fundraiser for Tyler Eklund, snowboarder who was paralyzed in an accident; format is snowboard parallel banked slalom; seven OI'Q. divisions offered to all ages; Friday will be a practice day and racing will be held Saturday and Sunday from 10a.m. to 2 p.m. each day; entryfee MULTISPORT is $35; online registration at www. mtbachelor.com; contact: www. THE URBANGPSECO-CHALLENGE: Trips on paths and trails along facebook.com/dirksen.derby. Deschutes River through Old Mill BEND ENDURANCE ACADEMY District shops and Farewell Bend NORDICCOMPETITION PROGRAM: Parkdaily at 9 a.m. and 1:30 p.m.; Tuesdays throtfgh Sundays like a scavenger hunt with clues through May1, 2013, times andcheckpoints;$65,includes vary; ages14-23; athletes are guide, GPSand instruction, water, instructed in varying activities to materials; 541-389-8359, 800-962- improve their strength, technique, 2862; www.wanderlusttours.com. coordination, agility, aerobic and anaerobic capacities with the end goal being to successfully apply these skills to ski racing; PADDLING transportation provided; contact KAYAKING CLASSES: Sundays, 4-6 ben©bendenduranceacademy.org, p.m.; for all ages; weekly classes www.BendEnduranceAcademy.org and open pool; equipment provided or 541-678-3864. to those who preregister, first-come, BEND ENDURANCE ACADEMY first served otherwise; Cascade NORDICYOUTHCLUB:Ages 7Swim Center, Redmond; $3; 54111;Saturdays and/or Sundays 548-7275; www.raprd.org for10 weekends, Dec. 8 through KAYAK ROLLSESSIONS: At Juniper Fed.24;includesa cam p during

winter break; introduces basic skate and classic techniques through games and adventures; transportation provided; contact ben©bendenduranceacademy.org, www.BendEnduranceAcademy.org or 541-678-3864. BEND ENDURANCE ACADEMY MIDDLESCHOOL NORDIC DEVELOPMENTTEAM:Form iddle schoolers ages11-14;Wednesday/ Saturday/Sunday,through March 10; allows participants to ski in small groups based on ability and improve their classic and skate techniques; includes camps during Thanksgiving and winter break; transportation provided; contact ben©bendenduranceacademy.org, www.BendEnduranceAcademy.org or 541-678-3864. BEND ENDURANCE ACADEMY HIGH SCHOOL NORDICDEVELOPMENT TEAM: For high schoolers ages 14-18; weekdays or weekend enrollment options; through March 10; participants improve skiing efficiency by working with coaches and teammates in small groups; includes camps during Thanksgiving and winter break; transportation provided; contact ben@bendenduranceacademy.org, www.BendEnduranceAcademy.org or 541-678-3864. BEND ENDURANCE ACADEMY NORDIC MASTERS:For adults; Tuesday, Thursday or Sunday morningenrollment options; Dec. 11-Feb. 17; skate technique; improves skiing efficiency through successful technique progressions; contact ben© bendenduranceacademy.org, www. BendEnduranceAcademy.org or 541-678-3864. DAWN PATROLNORDIC SKIING

FOR WORKING PARENTS:Join local nordic ski meister Dave Cieslowski for this popular morning ritual on the trails of Mt. Bachelor Nordic Center; sessions offer adaily technique theme; 10-week program; limited to 10 advanced skiers; Wednesdaysfrom 10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m., Dec. 5 through Feb. 14; www. mtbachelor.com. SHE'S ONSKIS: For women who want to nordic ski one day per week with an experienced and cheerful coach; open to beginner level skate skiers and above; at Mt. Bachelor Nordic Center; Wednesdays or Saturdays, throughFeb. 9;www. mtbachelor.com. INTRO TO SKATESKIING/INTRO TO CLASSICSKIING: Ideal for beginner skiers, these programs offer a fourweek progressive introduction to the sport of skate and classic skiing; new sessions begin the first week of each month throughout the winter at the Mt. Bachelor Nordic Center; www.mtbachelor.com. BABES IN SNOWLAND NORDIC SKIING:Eight-week series of onehour classes for tots ages 4-5; at Mt. Bachelor Nordic Center; classes are designed to introduce youngsters to nordic skiing through creative learning in a ftfft, safe environment; Sundaysfrom 11:30 a.m. t012:30 p.m, Dec.16to Fed.24;www. mtbachelor.com. K'S FORKIDSNORDICSKIING: Eight-week series of one-hour classes for youth ages 6 to 8; clinics will focus on exploration of the Mt. Bachelor trail system and logging K's; skiers should be able to ski 5 kilometers in one hour;Sundays from 10:15 a.m. to 11:15 a.m.,Dec. 16 to Feb. 24;www.mtbachelor. com.

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THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012

NASD <QCHANGE'+20.25+.68% IN BRIEF GDP grew 2.7% in third quarter Even as the government said that the U.S.

economy grew faster than first estimated in the third quarter, economists warned that the

rate of expansion could slow sharply before the end of the yearas worries mount about

the fiscal impasse in Washington. The CommerceDepartment said Thursday

that gross domestic productexpanded at an annual rate of 2.7 percent in the three m onths ending Sept.30, well above the 2 percent estimate it initially made in late October. But the

revision was driven by increased inventory accumulation and ajump in federal spending — factors unlikely to be

DOIIVjOE NS CHANGE+36.71+.28%

Sttl'MII CHANGE+6.02+.43%

T BONDS Tress"~ CHANGE-.61%

4 GOLDCHANGE+slo.7o 4 SILVE RCHANGE+So.664

Deve0 er ans Ben su ivision By Eloa Glucklich

firm associated with Redmond

The Bulletin

building company Hayden

A local development company has filed preliminary paperwork to construct a 30-lot subdivision at Southeast 27th Street and Southeast Reed Market Road in Bend. If it moves through the city's review process and gets approved, the project could also lead to an extension of Reed Market Road east of 27th Street, the first east-west expansion of the arterial road in nearly 10 years. Watson Development, a

Homes, filed what the Bend Community Development Department calls a pre-application earlier this month. A pre-application starts a back-and-forth process between developers and city officials, who bring up any infrastructureor other concerns a proposal might raise. It also gives developers a chance to ask questions before submitting their formal application. See Subdivision /E3

New subdivisionproposed Developers have filed preliminary paperwork to build a 30-lot subdivision near the intersection of Southeast Reed Market Road

and Southeast 26th Street. The proposal could also include extending Reed Market Road further east, if it is approved. I ~

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Crews with Adroit Construction Co. of Ashland gutted the old Chevrolet Cadillac of Bend building on Northeast Third Street Wednesday. Lithia Motors is building a new showroom and service center on the site. The roughly $2 million renovation project could be done by the end of the year.

CentralOregon fuel prices Price per gallon for regular unleaded gas and diesel, as

Group seeks $'l98 fromChevronfor Amazonoil pollution

posted Thursday at AAA Fuel Price Finder

By joe Carroll

Grandview Drive, Bend........ . . . . $3.22 • Ron's Oii,62980 U.S.

Highway 97, Bend............ $3.31 • Chevron,61 160 U.S.

PALO ALTO, Calif. — Last Friday morning, I woke up with a single abiding need: I had to have a new Xbox 360. My old one died a few weeks ago — well out of warranty, it came down with the dreaded "Red Ring of Death" technical failure. This wasn't a big deal, because I never have time to play games, but this weekend my parents were in town and were happy to

take care of my pesky

LivingSocial cuts 400 jobs

(www.aaaorid.com). GASOLINE • Space Age,20635

Wal-Mart could learn a thing or two from Amazon By Farhad Manjoo

M/LE

fourth quarter, economists said.

as ratings for its U.S. network, CNN/U.S., hit record lows. The network announced in July that Walton would step down at the end of the year. — From wire reports

COMMENTARY

Bloomberg News

CALGARY, Canada — Chevron is facing its first test of whether farmers and fishermen from the Amazon rainforest will collect $19 billion in environmental damages

from the world's fourth-largest oil company. A group of 47 Ecuadoreans have asked Ontario's Superior Court of Justice to seize Chevron assets in Canada, ranging from an oil sands project to offshore wells, to satisfy a

2011 court ruling in the Latin American nation that ordered the company to pay for oil pollution dating to the 1960s. Chevron said the Ecuadorean judgment is outside Ontario's jurisdiction and that the ruling resulted from brib-

ery and fraud. A hearing in Toronto Thursday marks the Ecuadoreans' inaugural step in a global collection effort that includes seizure attempts in Argentina and Brazil. See Chevron /E3

toddler. I had a free day. And for me, on a day off, there's nothing more relaxing than a few hours with the new "Call of Duty." So, you see, I was desperate. Not long ago, I would have ordered my console — and every other big-ticket item — from Amazon toavoid paying sales tax. (Yes, I know about use taxes.) But in September Amazon began collecting sales tax in my home state of California, so now it doesn't cost me any more to buy from local stores. Fortunately, I'm surrounded by big boxes that supposedly carry the Xbox 360: Within a five-minute drive from my house, there's a Target, Wal-Mart, Best Buy, GameStop and Fry's (a California-based electronics chain). Yes, it was Black Friday, so I knew the stores would be a little nuts. But I wasn't plan-

ning to go shopping right when the doors opened, and Iwasn't looking for a heavily discounted item. I just wanted a plain- Jane, full-priced model of a console that first went on sale in 2005. How hard could that be? Very, very hard, it turned out. My terrible experience on Black Friday confirmed what I've long suspected about brick-and-mortarstores: They're inherently, perhaps unfixably less consumer-friendly than online retailers. See Wal-Mart/E3

Highway 97,

Bend............ $3.36

AUTO NEWS

• Texaco,2409 Butler

Market Road, Bend............ $3.44 • Chevron,2005 U.S. Highway 97, Redmond ....... $3.44 • Texaco,539 N.W.Sixth

St., Redmond.... $3.49 • Chevron,1001

Railway, Sisters .. $3.49 • La Pine Mini Mart, 52530 U.S. Highway 97, La Pine.......... $3.49

• Chevron,1210U.S. Highway 97,

Madras ......... $3.57 • Texaco,178 Fourth St.,

Madras ......... $3.58 DIESEL • Fred Meyer,61535 U.S. Highway 97,

Bend ........... $3.91 • Chevron,3405 N. U.S. Highway97, Bend $3.99 • Chevron,1210 U.S. Highway 97,

Madras ......... $4.06 Ashley Brothers /The Bulletin

Hot cars at the L.A. Auto Show By Dee-Ann Durbin and Tom Krisher

The new Porsche Caymans were introduced at the Los Angeles Auto Show Wednesday.

The Associated Press

The Los Angeles Auto Show opens to the public today.Here are some ofthe most talked-about vehicles that will be making their world debuts at the event: • Jaguar XFR-S: It's the second model in Jag's ultra-

/se C. Hong The Associated Press

high performance lineup, with only 100 being offered for sale in the U.S. during the 2014 model year. It has a 550horsepower supercharged V-8 engine that takes it from zero to 60 in 4.4 seconds, yet it avoids a gas-guzzler tax by getting 23 mpg on the highway. The car starts at $99,000 and goes on sale early in the summer.

• Porsche Cayman: The third generation of the two-

seatmid-engine sports coupe is lower, longer, lighter and faster than the old model, yet more efficient, Porsche says. The base model has a 2.7liter, 275 horsepower engine, while the sportier Cayman S has a 3.4-1iter motor with 325 horsepower. The S can hit 60 mph from a standing start in 4.4 seconds. The Cayman goes on sale in the spring

and starts at $52,600. • Honda Civic: Honda is showing off a new Civic compact car, revamped just 19 months after the company introduced the last one. Honda did a lightning-quick revision of the popular car after realizing that compacts from other automakers had caught and passed the top-selling Civic. See Auto show /E4

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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012• THE BULLETIN

Subdivision

27th Street, further south by about one block. Darla Place, Continued from E1 a nearby road, would also be Many details of the pro- extended, and a new, curposal, including atimeline for rently unnamed street would development, aren't known. c onnect Darla P l ace a n d A Watson Development em- Vega Street. ployee r eferred q u estions But the development could to Hayden Homes. Officials hinge on whether Reed Marwith Hayden Homes did not ket Road gets extended east. respond to multiple messages The blueprint shows plans for a "future Reed Market seeking comment. The first meeting between Road Extension," east of 27th developers and the city was Street and crossing a nearby scheduled for Thursday, said canal to meet up with SteAmy Barry, associate plan- vens Road. ner with the city of Bend. Developers typically pay Barry said she didn't know for street extensions. It isn't what issues, if any, would be certain whether developers brought up at the meeting. would finance the extension O ne issue likely t o b e of Reed Market Road, likely raised was the cost ofex- to be far more expensive than tending s e v era l st r e ets residential streets. "It's a m a jo r a r t e rial and creating a new one. A blueprint filed with the city street," Barry said of Reed shows plans to push Vega Market Road. "At some point Street, adjacent to Southwest it is going to be constructed,

most likely as development occurs." Much of southeast Bend is a patchwork of partially developed subdivisions. Neighborhoods near the proposed development, like G a rdenside, Pettigrew Highlands and Westbrook Village contain finished homes next to empty fields, some with water and sewage connections already

inplace. The intersection of Reed Market Road and 27th Street had been targeted for commercial development in the early and mid-2000s. Bend r esident Mat t S t eele h a d hoped to b uild a g r o cery store on land adjacent to the current subdivision proposal, according to The Bulletin's archives. That plan stalled in 2007.

Wal-Mart

online, andthephysical stores," Duke told me. "Ultimately, that Continued from E1 will give us an edge over any It also called into question competitor." the grand plans that Wal-Mart That, anyway, is the dream, and its big-box cohort have for and I still believe Wal-Mart fighting Amazon. can achieve it someday. But in I'm v ery f a m iliar w i t h tryingto buy one measly Xbox, thoseplans.Over the past few I came face to face with two months, I've spent many hours daunting problems for the bigi nterviewing e x ecutives a t box stores that want to take on Wal-Mart — including Mike Amazon. The first is logistics. Duke, the company's CEO The second is people. — about how the firm aims to So here's what happened. rehabilitate its digital opera- I began my search at about tions. In my article published 11 a.m. at Target, which I'd in the new issue of Fast Com- guessed wouldn't be as crowdpany, I argue that the world's ed as Wal-Mart. Target's webbiggest retailer has several site has a feature that lets you potential a d v antages o v er track inventory at your local Amazon. In particular, Wal- store, but when I tried to look Mart has stores. By making its up whether my store had any 4,000 physical locations more consoles left, the system didn't friendly to smartphones and work. So I w a lked into the more plugged-in to the Web, store to look for myself — and, Wal-Mart is planning to do in the electronics department, amazing things, including let- I found a disaster zone. There ting you order something and were shoppers and carts and get it delivered that same day merchandise eve r y w here, from your local store; pick up and the only two staffers in your online order in a store on the area were trying to keep the day you order it (a feature up with the lengthy checkout that's already available); and line. I couldn't find any Xboxes pay for your in-store purchases on the shelves; eventually I loon your smartphone, skipping cated a cabinet with a locked the checkout lines entirely. glass door that looked like it "We are uniquely positioned had once contained game conto give customers anytime, soles, but it was empty. anywhere accessto Wal-Mart I faced a similar situation at by combining the smartphone, GameStop — too many cus-

— Reporter: 541-617-7820 eglucklich@bendbuiletin.com

Chevron Continued from E1 The Ecuadoreans estimated Chevron has $12 billion in Canadian assets, a figure that equates to almost half of the company's 2011 profit. An adverse Ontario r u ling for Chevron would put at risk f uel-manufacturing and o i l production operations across Canada. "It's a cause for concern and it probably means this isn't going to go away," Robert Sweet, who helps manage $150 million at H o rizon Investment Services in Hammond, Ind., said in a telephone interview. "As with all ecological disasters, this is going to take a long, long time to resolve."

The company's presence in Canada dates back to the 1930s and includes an oil-refining complex in British Co-

tomers, too few employees, and (asIlearned from one harried, seemingly 15-year-old staffer) no more Xboxes. My Wal-Mart e xperience

7. People would always come over and ask for it. But we didn't have any." He paused for a beat before letting me in on a grand truth about the unibegan more p r omisingly. verse: "Sometimes the Web is Checking Walmart.com on wrong." "OK, but are you really sure my phone, I discovered that my local store did have Xboxes the Xbox is gone?" "We don't have any." in stock. Like Target, the store was pretty messy, but I did find Not surprisingly, I d i dn't one blue-vestedworker in the trust Mr. Blue Vest. So, back video game section. It began in my car, I logged back in to to look like I was home free Walmart's site and ordered the — I would just ask him where Xbox, electing for same-day, the Xboxes were and be on my in-store pickup. The purchase way. instantly went through; within But when I told him what I four hours, the site promised, was looking for, he eyed me I'd get a message telling me suspiciously. "Are you sure you to pick up my order. I was checked this store'?" ecstatic. "Yes, this store." But an hour and a half later, "Really'? You typed in this I received a horrible email: ztp code? Wal-Mart had canceled my or"Yes. Let me show you right der. Despite what the site had here." I began to pull out my promised, the Xbox was inphone, but he would have none deed soldout."We're sorry for of it. any inconvenience this may "You know, I wouldn't drive cause you," the email offered. all the way over just because Late that afternoon, I did get of something I saw online," he my Xbox at Fry's. (The store didn't allow me to check invenadvised. "So you don't have any left'?" tory online or on the phone, but I asked, crestfallen. the salespeoplewere very nice "It's better to call and ask if and knowledgeable.) Given we have something." that I wasn't injured in a stam"OK — so the Xboxes are pede and I was eventually able sold out?" I pleaded. to escape into "Call of Duty," "Like, for months, the web- you could argue that I'm maksite said that we had the Nexus ing too much of my Black Fri-

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pain-free shopping experience

Wal-Mart isn't any less technically capable of providing that level of service. It's got lots of smart executives and engineers working to make its digital services flawless. The difference is that Amazon's ecommerce business consists of a single service — shipping stuff to your house from its many warehouses — that it has optimized to amazing ends. W al-Mart, o n t h e o t h er hand, aims to do lots of different things. It wants to improve its in-store experience so it pairs better with your smartphone. It wants to ship stuff to

loyalty by delivering more than they were expecting. What I love about Amazon is that it consistently does so. I'll often select two-day shipping and get my item in one day. I'll return something and get the money credited to my account immediately. Once, I called Amazon to complain that I hadn't received a Kindle I'd ordered. The customer service rep arranged to send me a new one immediately — even though, as I later called back to explain sheepishly, the Kindle box had arrived and had simply been buried in a pile of un-

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sible. It wants to let you order stuff and pick it up in the store without any hassle. If all these things worked, Black Friday would be a breeze: You'd walk

in, be guided by your phone to all the stuff on your list, and pay for your purchase with a click of a button. But doing all that is a logistical nightmare.

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your house as quickly as pos-

Iivnfehl 541-382-4171 541-548-7707

get a lot of packages.)

on the busiest day of the year? I don't think so. Almost a week later, I'm still annoyed at how terribly things went at Target, GameStop and WalMart. Black Friday is the retailers' showcase, a time when they should d o e v erything they possibly can to ensure they perform flawlessly — to inspire customers' long-term

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YTD Div PE Last Chg%Chg

.36 14 .78 12 .32 12 .88 10 .20 13 .681 46

azon River basin, are seeking enforcement of the judgment outside their home country because Chevron has no refineries, oil wells, storage terminals or other properties in the nation. In a Nov. 23 filing, Chevron argued the Ontario court has no jurisdiction to grant the Ecuadorean judgment because the company's Canadian units are indirect subsidiaries with independent boards separated from the U.S. parent by several levels of ownership. The Ecuadoreans face an "uphill battle" because they must convince the court that Chevron and its Canadian operations should be treated as one entity rather than separate companies, said Barry Leon, a partner and head of the international arbitration group at Perley-Robertson, Hill 8r McDougall in Ottawa.

2 121 NE Division

856 NW Bond• Downtown Bend• 541-330-5999 www.havenhomestyle.com

Northwest stoeks

lumbia, an Alberta oil-sands venture, offshore wells in the Atlantic Ocean, and cash held in Canadian bank accounts. San Ramon, Calif.-based Chevron was on the losing side of last year's ruling by a provincial Ecuadorean court that blamed decades of toxic soil and w a ter c ontamination on Texaco, which Chevron acquired in 2001. Texaco was found to have discharged saltwater and other byproducts of oil d r i lling into the environment. The $19 billion ruling handed down last year by a court in Lago Agrio, a town near Ecuador's border with Colombia,held Chevron accountable for health and environmental damages resulting from chemical-laden wastewater dumped from 1964 to 1992. The Ecuadorean plaintiffs, from the remote northern Am-

7:30 AM — 5:30 PM MON-FRI 8 AM - 3 PM SAT.

Furnifure nnZGerijn

Warehouse Pr i ces

www.northwestmedispa.com

Name

s

E3

CheniereEn 61565 16.41 +.37 Facebook n 867133 27.32 +.96 NAPallg 2 7535 154 +04 Rschuotn 796120 u 54 e44 NwGoldg 25755 10.75 +.35 Microsofl 685508 26.95 -.41 Rentech 23333 z90 +.04 Intel 634 31 6 19.53 -.56 Vringo 2 1 140 3.45 -.09 SiriusXM 526802 2.74 +.04

Gainers (S2ormore) Gelllers (S2 ormore) Gainers 1$2or more) Name L a s t Chg %ChgName L a s t Chg %ChgName L a s t Chg %Chg

52.Week High Lo w

Net Last Chg

N ame

13,661.7211,23z16 Dow Jones Industrials

5,390.u 4,533.98 DowJonesTransportation 499.82 426.30 DowJonesUtilties 8,515.60 6,898.18 NYSE Composite 2,509.57 2,I50.17 AmexIndex 3,196.93 2,507.72 Nasdaq Composite

1,474.51 1,158.67 S&P 500 15,432.5412,158.94 Wilshire5000 868.50 677.82 Russell2000

World markets

Infobloxn 18.07 +4.12 +29.5 PacBkrug 8.41 +z48 +4t8 Inteliquent z86 +.64 +28.8 Amrep 8. 9 4 +1.59 +21.7 Aerosonic 3.40 +.32 +10.4 ColdwCr rs 5.73 +.86 +17.7 CSGlobWm 8.32 +1.01 +13.8 Meetue 3 . 5 9+ .28 +8.5 Rdiff.cm 3 . u + . 43 +16.0 Hereis how keyinternational stockmarkets CSVlnvNG 16.61 +1.86 +12.6 MastechH 5.50 +.37 +7.2 ChinBAK rs 2.56 +.35 +15.8

Fordu wt z55 +.26 +0.4 Novacpp n z1 2 +.1 4 +7.1 Clovisonc 15.12 +z02 +15.4 performed Thursday. Market Close Losers (S2ormore) LOSerS (S2or more) Losers (S2or more) Name L a s t Chg %ChgName L a s t Chg %ChgName L a s t Chg %Chg Amsterdam 338.10 2,451.50 Supvalu z28 -.52 -18.6 SwGAFn 8.52 -.54 -5.9 Liquidity 37.83 -5.90 43.5 Brussels Paris 3,568.88 CSVLgNGs 29.82 -4.23 -12.4 MGTCap rs 4.52 -.18 -3.8 Supernusn 9.83 -1.13 40.3 5,870.30 Kohls 45.02 -6.13 -12.0 SCE[Ip1B 22.50 -.87 -3.7 IxysCp 8.21 -.92 -10.1 London 7,400.96 BarnesNob 1426 -1.79 -112 KeeganR g 3 88 -.14 -3 5 MeruNetw 217 -.22 -9 2 Frankfurt 21,92z89 BarcShtC 16.56 -1.86 -10.1 AdcareHlt 4.52 -.16 -3.4 TASER 8.28 -.74 -8.2 HongKong Mexico 42,090.69 Diary Diary Diary Milan 15,887.99 4,016.77 Advanced 2,161 Advanced 253 Advanced 1,781 NewZealand Tokyo 9,400.88 Declined 862 Declined 166 Declined 667 1,934.85 Unchanged u 3 Unchanged 38 Unchanged u8 Seoul 3,045.90 Totalissues 3,136 Totalissues 457 Total issues 2,566 Singapore 14 New Highs Sydney 4,490.06 NewHighs 164 New Highs 81 Zurich NewLows 8 New Lows 6 New Lows 23 6,273.78

13,021.82 5,145.35 449.93 8,256.07

+36.71 +30.49

+z26

+48.71 z406.14 +8.75 3,01 z03 +20.25 1,415.95 +6.02 14,839.99 +77.29 823.20 +9.70

i8.33

+.60 +z50 +.50 -3.17 +.59 +1 0.42

+4.81

+.36 +5.61 +.68 +1 5.62

+.43 +1 z59 +.52 +1 z51 t1.19 t11. l1

t.42

t10.81 +6.21

+u.69 +13.77 t13.53 t1z65

KeycurrencyexchangeratesThursday compared withlate Wednesday in NewYork.

+1.14 s +1.96 s +1.53 s +1.15 s +.78 s +.99 s +.42 s

AustraliaDollar BritainPound CanadaDollar ChilePeso ChinaYuan EuroEuro HongKongDollar

+z81 s

Japan Yen MexicoPeso RussiaRuble So. KoreaWon SwedenKrona SwitzerlndFranc TaiwanDollar

+.99 s +t15 s +t13 s +.62 s +1.00 s

+.28 +6.58

Currencies

%Change Dollarvs:

+u s

YTD 52-wk % Chg %Chg % Chg

E x changeRate Pvsoay 1.0432 1.6038 1.0077 .002085 .1605 1.2972 .1290 .012173 .077285 .0324 .000923 .1499 1.0775 .0344

1.0476 1.6015 1.0074 .002074 .1605 1.2932 .1290 .01220 .076985 .0321 .000919 .1504 1.0745 .0342

Selected mutual funds HiYldBd 7.99 t0.02 +14.6 Lgcap p 16.99 +0.04+13.6 Fidel 35.84 +0.22 +15.8 TotMktAdr41.38 i022 +149 CapApp 42.72 +0.33 44.9 Lord Abbelt C: RisingDivA17.38+0.07 +11.9 EmMktS 32.61+0.27 +14.4 Cohen &Steers: FPA Funds: R tRateHi r 9.93 + 6 . 1U SBondI 1t94 +4. 3 IVA Funds: S hDurlncct4.67 + 5 . 4S&MdcpVI31.78+0.19 +7.3 Eqlnc 26.11+0.07 +15.0 Rltyshrs 6666 +029 +113 Newlnco 10.62 +0.01 +2.0 G NMA u.78 +2. 9 First Eagle: Wldwide ln634+007 +64 Lord Abbelt F: Oppenheimer8: Eqlndex 38.29i0.17 +14.6 ColumbiaClassZ: FPACres 28.74 +0.13 +8.3 G ovtlnc 10.64 +2 9 GlblA 49.48 +0.22 +9 7 InvescoFundsA: S htDurlnco 4 64 + 6 . 1RisingavB1570 +0 07+110 Groe(h 37.76+0.30 +1 8.6 2244 +0.11 +10.2 CmstkA 17.39 +0.08 +15.6 MFS FundsA: S&MdcpVI2684+016 +6.5 HlthSci 42.75+0.50 +31.1 Gro|Nthl 27.93 +0.15 +137 Acom Z 31.32 +019 +'l50 Farholme 30.02+0.28 +29.7 Groco 96 13 +075 +188 OverseasA FederatedInsll: AcomlntZ 40.47 +0.23 +18.6 Grolnc 21 04 +010 +170 Forum Funds: EqlncA 9.16 +0.02 +11.6 TotRA 15.15 >0.03 +10.2 Oppenhei m er C&M: HiYield 6.89 +0.01 +13.1 Ultra 26.21 i0.17 +14.4 Credit SuisseComm: T otRetBd 11.63 +6. 5 GrowCOF9619+0.76+190 Absstrlr 1t16 -0.03 +1.0 GrlncAp 20.77+006 +129 ValueA 25.38 i0.10 +14.8 RisingDvcp15.64+0.07 +11.2 InstlcpG 18.78i0.16 +16.5 American FundsA: S + 7 . 3GrovrthCO Frnk k OppenheimerRoch: AmcpAp 21.40+0.08 +14.1 comReu 8.28 +0.02 +1.2 S trValDvlx5.03 K9616 +0.75 +19 0 Frank/Temp HYMuA 10.28 + 1 5 .2MFS FundsI: IntlBond 10.13+0.02 +6.2 DFA Funds: Fidelity Advisor A: Valuel 25 50 +0 09 +15.0 RcNtMuA 7.76 +0.01 +20.3 Intl G&l 12.80+0.12 +11.1 AMutlAp 28.30 +0.10 +u.3 aghlnc r 9.27 +0.02+12.9 FedTFAp 13.00 + 1 06 Ivy Funds: +5. 0 GrwlhAp 50.19 +0.28 +12.4 AssetSCt 2501 +0.20 +15.6 M FS FundsI nslt oppenheimerY: BalAp 2031 +0.07 +132 IntlcorEq 1026+010 +'l34 Nwlnsgh p22.79 +0.14 +15.6 IntBd 11.17 IntlStk 14.15+0.12 +15.'I 1223+007 +149 StrlnA 12.79 +0.03 +9.5 I ntmMu 10.78 +5. 9 HYTFA p 11.1 6 +1 2.9 AssetStAp25.90 +0.20 +16.4 IntlEq 18.67 +0.16 +17.3 DevMktY 3398+037+173 Midcap 5900+030 +n 9 BondAp 1298 +0.01 +59 USCorEq1 12.10 +0.08 +15.5 Fidelity Advisor I: IntlDisc 32.61 +0.38+18.1 IncomA p 2.20 i0.01 +11.1 AssetStrl r 26.18+0.21 n6.6 MainStay Fundsk IntlBdY 6.57 +0.01 +10.0 McapVal 2503+015 +170 CaplBAp 5319+0.25 +11.1 USCorEq2 Nwlnsgtl 23 12 +0.14 +158 I nvGrBd u.70 +5. 7 R>sDvAp 3801 +015 +92 JPMorgan AClass: avldBA 611 +002 +11.7 IntGrowY 3035 +031 +189 NAsia l664 +016 +196 CapWGA p36.71 +0.20 +16.7 Davis FundsA: 0.3 Fidelity Freedom: I nvGB 8 02 +6 3 stratlncp 10.75+002+u 2 C oreBdA 1216 +5. 0 ManagersFunds: PIMCOAdminPIMS: CapWAp 21.58+0.02 +7.2 NYVen A 35.86 +0.16 +1 NewEra 42 64 +018 +1.4 FF2010 1434 +005 +98 LgcapVal 11.27+005 +119 USGovAp 683 +14 JP MorganInsll: Yacktmanp19.12+0.06 +10.6 TotRtAd 11.61 +0.01 +9.7 N Horiz 3552+040 +14.5 EupacA p 40.77+0.32 n6.0 Davis FundsY: FF2010K 1314+005 +9.9 LowPr 3923+021 +149 Frank/TmpFrnk Adv: MdcpVal 28.35 +0.01+19.4 YacktFoc 20.55 i0.06 no.o PIMCOInstl PIMS: N Inc 9 9 6 +58 FdinvAp 4045+0.21 +15.4 NYVenY 3631 +016 +10.6 FF2015 u 99 +005 +10.0 LowPnK r 3922 +022 +15.1 GlbBdAdv13.56 <0.03 +14.4 JPMorgan RCl: Manning&Napier Fds: AIASetAutr1133 +004 +156 OverSSF 839+007+146 G ovtA p 14 59 +22 Delaware InvestA: +6 . 7 FF2015K 1321 +005 +10.1 Magelln 73.56 +0.38 +17.0 IncmeAd 2.19 +0.01 +11.8 C oreBond 12.16 +5 . 4 WldoppA 763 +007 +15.2 AIIAsset 1279+005+13.3 R2010 1669 +006 +11 'I GwthAp 3414 +019 +188 a verlncp 9.45 FF2020 14.51 +0.06 +10.9 Midcap 29.48 +0.25 +12.9 Frank/Temp 90 + 2 .0 Frnk C: ShtourBd 1102+0.01 +1.9 M ergerFd 15 ComodRR 694+0.03 +8.6 R201 5 12 99+005 +122 HlTrAp 1125 +0.01 +12.6 Dimensional Fds: Metro WeslFds: Divlnc 12 29 +0.02 +13.7 R2020 18 01+009 +132 +9. 2 Incomct 2.22 +0.01+10.4 JPMorganSelCls: IncoA p 18.09 +0.05 +11.0 EmMCrEq1926+015 +132 FF2020K 13 63 +0.05 +11.0 M unilnc 13.78 EmMktV 2849+025 +11.1 FF2025 12 09 +0.06 +12.1 TotRetBd 11.11 +0.01 +10.9 NwMktr 17.94+0.04+18.5 Frank/Temp Ml l A&B: C oreBd 12.15 +5. 2 EmgMkcurl0.52 +0.03 +7.5 R2025 13.20+008+140 IntBdAp 13.79+0.01 +2.8 + 1 1 .1EmMkBd 1245 +0.03 +153 R2030 18 96+011 +146 ICAA p 30.62 +0.14 +145 IntSmVa 15.39+014 +152 FF2025K 1379+007 +122 OTC 60.41 +0.55 +10.4 SharesA 22.17 +0.1 0 +12.7 HighYld 8.15+002 +129 totRtBdl 11.10 S htourBd 11.01 + 1 . 6Mutual Sesies: HiYld 9 .58 +0.03 +12.8 R2035 13.41+008+150 NEcoAp 28.82 +0.17+21.2 USLgVa 22.37+0.12 +184 FF2030 1440+007+124 100lndex 10.19 +005 +15.5 Frank/Temp Tempk NPerAp 3098+0.18 +184 US Small 23.42 +0.25+14.9 FF2030K 13.93 +0.07 +12.6 Puritn 19 51 +0 07 +131 GIBdAp 13.60 +003 +140 USLCCrPls23.17+0.12 +174 GblD>scA 2966+016 +11.0 InvGrCp 11.38 +0.01 +14.3 R2040 19 08+012 +151 GlbDiscZ 3010 +016 +11.2 Lowou 10.65 +0.01 +5.9 ShtB[I 4 85 NwWrldA 5320+0.28 +154 US SmVa27.02 +0.29 +17.2 FF2035 11.92 +0.07 +13.2 PuritanK 1951 +008+133 GrwthAp 19.06 +0.21 +17.0 Janus TShm: +27 F1305 +008 +162 WorldAp 15.81 i0.17 +15.1 PrkMCVal T2180+007 +80 SharesZ 22 39 +010 +13.0 RealRtnl 1269+0.03 +9.5 SmcpStk 3591+037 +149 SmcpAp 3924+0.25 +183 IntlSmco 15.41 +0.13 +13.3 FF2035K 14.01 +0.07 +13.3 SAIISeCqE +0. 9 FF2040 8.32 +0.05 +13.2 SCmdtyStrl 909+002 +1.5 Frank/TempTmp8&C: John HancockCI1: Neuberger&BermFds: ShortT 991 +0.01 +3.3 SmcapVal3915 +035 +135 TxExAp 1337+0.01 +10.3 n xd 1 0 .3 5 Geneslnst 50.92 +0.43 +9.7 TotRt 1161 +001 +10.0 Specln 1299+001 +93 WshAp 31.19 +010 +11.6 IntVa 15.94 +0.17 +110 FF2040K 14.05 +0.08 +13.3 SCmdtystrF9.12 +0.02 +1.7 GIBdC p 1363 +0.03 +13.7 LSBalanc 13.49 Glb5FXlnc u 31 +47 Fidelity Invest: SrslntGrw 11.79 +0.11 +16.6 GMOTrusl III: LSGrwth 13.41 Northern Funds: PIMCOFundsA: Arlisan Funds: Value 26 24 +0.12 +16.4 HiYFxlnc 747+002 +132 AIIAstAut t 11.26+0.05 +15.2 Principal Inv: 2 YGIFxd 1014 +1. 0 AIISectEq 13 03 +0.08 +16.0 SerlntlGrF 11.83 +0.11 +16.9 Quahty 23.39 +0.12 +12.2 Lamrd Instl: Intl 24 . 24 +0.17 +22.2 AMgr50 16.38 +0.06 +10.4 OakmarkFundsl: SrslntVal 938 +0.10 +161 GMO TmslIV: EmgMktl 1917 +0.12 +141 RealRtAp 12.69+0.03 +9.1 LgGGlln 10.25+007 +154 IntlVal r 29.92 +0.1 9 +19.3 Dodge&cox: Eqtylnc r 29.32 +0.15 +8.4 TotRtA 11.61 +0.01 +9.6 Putnam FundsA Midcap 38.64 +0.25+17.3 Balanced 76.78 i0.37 +15.8 AMgr20r 13.38 +0.02 +6.4 SerlntlValF 941 +0.10 +16.3 IntllntrVI 2052 +023 +98 Longleaf Partners: MidcapVal2t50+O.n +91 Income 13.95 i0.01 +7.8 Balanc 20.20 +0.09 +12.5 SrlnvGrdF'I'l.71 +58 GMO Trusl Vl: partners 26.20 +0.14 44.5 Intl I r 20.09 +0.27 +21.4 PIMCOFundsC: GrlnA p 14.53+008+156 Oakmark 4935+015+18.4 TotRtC t 11 61 +0.01 +88 RoyceFunds: Bernstein Fds: Intlstk 33.51 +0.33 +14.6 BalancedK20.20+0.09 +12.6 STBF 8 6 0 +2 3 EmgMkts r11.20 +0.08 +8.9 Loomis Sayles: BluechGr 49.96 +0.30 +17.8 LSBondl 1507+0.02 +132 Old Weslbury Fds: Intour 14 27 Stock u 9 08 +0 79 +18 8 Stratlnc 11.45 +002 +98 GoldmanSachsInsl: PIMCOFunds0: pennMul r u 91 +009 +10.7 CapAp 29.83 +0.16 +2t2 TOtalBd 11.05 +001 +65 H>Yield 7.35 +0.01 +13.7 Strlncc 1541 +0.02 +105 Glob0pp 7 61 +0.03 +13.2 TRtn p 11 61 +0.01 +9.7 Premierl r 2034+0.15 +98 DivMu 15 01 Doubleune Funds: LSBondR 1501 +002 +129 GlbSMdcap14.99+0.10+13.3 PIMCOFunds P: BlackRockA: TRB(I I 11.40 NA Cplnc r 9.41 +0.03 +14.2 USBI 11 94 +4 2 HarborFunds: SchwabFunds: NA StrlncA 15.32 +0.02 +11.3 Lgcapstrat 9.88 i0.09 +12.7 AstAIIAuthP11.32+0.04 +15.5 1000lnvr 40 50+019 +145 EqtyDiv 1983 +0.07 +108 TRBd N p 11.40 NA Contra 78.24 +0.50 +16.0 Value 74.92 +0.42 +18.0 Bond 13 07 ContraK 78.27 +0.50 +16.1 Fidelity Sparlan: CapAplnst 42.55+0.28 +15.3 Loomis Sayles Inv: Oppenheimerk TotRtnP 11.61 +0.01 +9.9 S&P Sel 2248+0.10 +14.9 GIAIA r 1954 +0.06 +8.3 Dreyfus: BlackRock 8&C: Aprec 44.31 +0.20 +10.6 avlntl 29.78 +0.28 +16.7 500ldxlnv 50.36 +0.22+14.9 Intllnvt 60.47 +0.51 +16.3 InvGrBdY 12.83+0.01 +11.6 DvMktAp 3428+037 +16.9 Perm PortFunds: ScoutFunds: GIAICt 18.15 +0.06 +7.6 Eaton Vance I: DivrslntKr 29.78+0.29 +16.9 500ldx I 50.37 +0.22 +14.9 Intlr 6t 2 1 +0.52 +16.7Lord AbbetlA: GlobAp 6304 +054 +16.7 Permannt 4934+023 +7.1 Intl 32 . 57 +0.18 +17.3 BlackROckInsll: FltgRt 9 1 0 +00'I +7.6 DivGth 30.03 +0.23 +16.9 Fidelily Sparl Adv: Harllord FdsA: AffilAp u 82 +0.05 +13.4 GblQrlncA 4.33 +0.0I +122 Price Funds: Sequoia 165.13+0.65 +13.5 EquityDv 19.88 +0.08 n1.1 GblMacAbR918+004 +32 Eq Inc 46.86 +0.24 +15.7 ExMktAdr 40.29 +0.36 +14.9 CpAppAp 3346 +031 +161 BdDebAp 8.06+0.02 +11.5 IntBdAp 6.57+0.01 +9.6 BIChip 45.83 +0.37 +18.6 TCW Funds: GlbAlloc r 19.65 +0.07 +8.6 FMI Funds: EQII 1 9.52 +0.09 +14.1 500ldxAdv 50.37 +0.22+14.9 Harllord HLSIA: ShDurlncA p4.64 i6.0 MnstFdA 37.29 i0.30 +16.0 CapApp 23.40 +0.08+13.5 EmMktln 9.42+0.04 +19.9

YTD Name NAV Chg%Ret Amer Centuy Inv: Eqlnc 7 .89 +0.03 +10.5

TotRetBdl 10.32+0.01 +12.2 Windsor 50.19 +0.24+17.7 TotlntAdmr2434+020 +13 3 Templeton Inslit: WdsrllAd 51.93 +0.18 +14.8 Totlntllnst r9737 +083 +134 ForEqs 19.34 i0.23 +13.7 VanguardFds: Thornburg Fds: Capopp 34.29 +0.20+16.2 TotlntllP r 97.39 +083 +13.4 IntValAp 2678 i020 n25 DivdGro 167'I +006 +96 500 1 31.07 t0.58 +14.8 IncBuildC p18.65 i0.09 +9.1 Energy 5959+0.16 +11 TotBnd 11.19 +0.01 +4.2 IntValue I 27.39 +0.20 +13.0 Eqlnc 2418+005 +128 Tweedy Browne: Explr 8018 +0.78 +122 Totllntl 1455 +0 GblValue 25.46 +0.19 +16.5 G NMA u.oo +2 . 1 VanguardAdmiral: HYCorp 6.05 +0.01 +12.6 BalAdml 23.76 +0.08 +10.8 Hlthcre 147.46+t19 +147 CAITAdm 11.92 i0.01 +8.0 InflaPro 14.99 +0.03 +7.2 Cp0pAdl 79.24 +0.46 +16.3 IntlGr 18.89 +0.17 +15.5 EMAdmr 35.04 r +0.29 +12.1 IntlVal 30.54 +0.29 +14.7 Energy 11t93 +0.30 +1.1 ITIGrade 10.50+0.01 +9.1 Eql~Admn5068+0.11 +12,8 Lifecon 1730+004 +84 ExtdAdm 45.32+0.42 +152 LifeGro 2356+0.12 +125 500Adml131.10 +058 +149 LifeMod 2098+0.07 +104 GNMAAd 11.00 +22 LTIGrade u.07 + 1 2.6 GrwAdm 3684 +0.22 +170 Morg 20.01 +0.13 +14.5 Hlthcr 62.24 +0.50 +1 47 Mulnt 14.59 +0.02 +7.0 H>Yldcp 605 +0.01 +127 Prmcpcor 15.23+0.09 +12.9 InfProAd 2945 +0.06 +7.3 Prmcpr 70.10 +0.44 +13.5 ITBdAdml 12.23 +0.01 +7.3 SelValur 21.25+0.11 +14.3 I TsryAdml 1t83 +3. 1 STAR 2083 +009 +'l2.2 IntGrAdm 60.16 i0.56 +15.7 STIGrade 1087 +43 ITAdml 14.59 i0.02 +7.0 StratEq 21 26 +015 +159 ITGrAdm 10.50 +0.01 +9.2 TgtRetlnc 1227+003 +78 L tdTrAd 11.20 +2. 1 TgRe2010 24.51 +007 +93 LTGrAdml11.07 +1 2.7 TgtRe201513.56+0.05 +10.2 LTAdml 12.01 +0.01 +9.7 tgRe202024.06 +009 +109 MCpAdml100.76+0.47 +13.0 TgtRe202513.70+0.06 +11.7 MUHYAdm11.47+0.01 +108 TgRe2030 23.52 +0.12 +124 Prmcap r 72.78+0.46+136 TgtRe203514.15+0.08 +13.1 ReitAdm r 90.74 +0.44 +1 32 TgtRe204023.25 +013 +134 S TsyAdml 10.79 + 07 TgtRe204514 60 +0.08 +134 STBdAdml1067 +0.01 +20 USGro 2132 +015 +18 1 S htTrAd 1594 +1. 2 Wellsl y 2459+003 +98 S TIGrAd 1087 +4. 4 Welltn 34 28 +010 +11.7 SmCAdm 38.34 +0.40 +14.8 Wndsr 14.87 +0.07 +17.5 TtlBAdml 1t19+001 +4.3 Wndsll 29.25 +0.10 +14.7 TStkAdm 35.47 +0.18 +14.9 Vanguard IdxFds: WellslAdm59.59 +0.09 +9.9 ExtMkt I 111.87 +t04 +15.2 WelltnAdm59.22+0.19 +11.8 MidcplstPI1 09.81+052 +1 3.1


E4

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012

If 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. Pleaseallow at least 10days before the desired date of publication.

MARI<ETPLACE DISPATCHES Brasada Ranch in P owell Butte was named Oregon's best destination resort in The Oregonian's "Best of 2012." To learn more contact 866-373-4882 or visit www.brasada.com. Pinnacle Architecture Inc. in Bend has been awarded best new construction, best remodel and best overall grand prize at the 2012 High Desert Design Council Design Awards. The H ig h D e s ert D e sign

Council was established by the local design community to bring together professionals in interiors, landscape, architecture, building and more. To learn moreabout Pinnacle Architecture contact 541-3889897 or visit w w w.pinnacle a rchitecture.com. T o l e a r n more about HDDC visit www .thehddc.com. Wanderlust Tours plans to open a reservation office and

retail store in early December at the Fred Meyer shopping complex at 61535 South U.S. Highway 97 in Bend. Along with making t our r e servations, participants will a l so be able meet guides and start tours at this location. Wanderlust gear, gift certificates and outdoor apparel will also be available. To learn more contact 541-389-8359 or visit wwwwanderlusttours.com.

BUSINESS CALENDAR

TODAY COFFEECLATTER: 8:30-9:30 a.m.; The Plaza, 446 S.W. SeventhSt., Redmond. EDWARDJONES COFFEECLUB: Current market and economic update including current rates; free; 9 a.m.; Starbucks, 61470 U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-617-8861. CENTRALOREGONREALESTATE INVESTMENTCLUB:Free; 11 a.m.; ServiceMaster Clean, 20806 Sockeye Place, Bend; 541-610-4006 or bobbleile©windermere.com. KNOW INTERNETSEARCHING: Reservations recommended; free; 12:30 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-6177050 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. KNOW FACEBOOK:Reservations recommended;free;3-4:30 p.m .; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-617-7050 or www.deschuteslibrary.org.

SATURDAY MID-CONSTRUCTION REMODELINGOPEN HOUSE AND WORKSHOP: Tour the worksite at No. 14 McNary Lane in Sunriver and learn about Neil Kelly's services; noon-2 p.m.; Neil Kelly, 190 N.E. Irving Ave., Bend; 541-382-7580.

TUESDAY BUSINESS NETWORK 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. OPEN COMPUTERLAB:3-4:30 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050. SMALL BUSINESSCOUNSELING: SCORE business counselors will be available every Tuesday for 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.; 541-617-7080 or www. scorecentraloregon.org.

WEDNESDAY BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONALBENDCHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING:Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 7 a.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. ReedMarket Road; 541749-0789.

the public; 5:30-7 p.m.; City of Redmond Public Works Training Room, 243 East Antler Avenue; 541548-9521.

FRIDAY Dec. 7 OREGON CATTLEMEN'S ASSOCIATIONCONVENTION:The Convention will feature information and updates on production, conservation and sustainability practices, regulation challenges and new information on animal nutrition and health for higher profit margins; registration required; $15-155;; The Riverhouse Hotel8 Convention Center, 3075 N. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 503-361-8941 or www. orcattle.com. 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. CENTRALOREGONREALESTATE INVESTMENTCLUB:Free; 11 a.m.; ServiceMaster Clean, 20806 Sockeye Place, Bend; 541-610-4006 or bobbleile©windermere.com. KNOW EMAILFOR BEGINNERS: 12:30 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312I050. 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. KNOW EXCELFOR BEGINNERS: 34:30 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312I050.

INTERNATIONALBENDCHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING:Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 7a.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541749-0789. KNOW DIGITALBOOKS: 9:30 a.m.; Sisters Public Library,110 N. Cedar St.; 541-312-1070. KNOW DIGITALDOWNLOADS: 11 a.m.; La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St.; 541-536-0515.

THURSDAY Dec. 13 BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONALDESCHUTES BUSINESSNETWORKERSCHAPTER WEEKLY MEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 7 a.m.; BendSenior Center,1600 S.E. Reed Market Road;541-610-9125. KNOW EXCELFOR BEGINNERS: 1:30 p.m.; La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St.; 541-536-0515. OPEN COMPUTERLAB:2-3:30 p.m .; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7080. BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONALWILDFIRE CHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 3:30 p.m.; Bend Honda, 2225 N.E. U.S. Highway 20; 54 I-480-1765. HOT MARKET,SELLER'S MARKET: An overview of selling your home in Central Oregon's real estate market, with speaker Peggi Schoning; RSVP requested; two cans of food per person; 6-7 p.m.; Deschutes County Title Co., 397 Upper Terrace Drive, Bend; 541-788-4100.

of the tiny 500. The 500e will go on sale in California in the Continued from E1 second quarter of 2013, while Honda is expected to ad- the elongated 500 will hit dealdress cri ticism that the 2012 erships all over the country in model was noisy, cheap-look- the middle of next year. • BMW i3: Th e b a t terying and didn't handle or perform as well as older Civics. powered concept car, which • Toyota RAV4:The fourthswaps the traditional steel generation of Toyota's RAV4, body forlighter carbon fiber, which practically i nvented givessome cluesabout where the crossover segment when BMW is going with its first it first went on sale nearly 20 electric car. BMW says the years ago. The latest RAV4 concept car can go 80 to 100 has sharper, more aggressive miles on a battery charge. It styling, better fuel economy has a 170 horsepower electric (up to 31 mpg on the highway), motor andisrear-wheel drive. a new six-speedtransmission Battery cells are under the and other features to help it floor, lowering the car's center compete against its archrival, of gravity for better handling. the Honda CR-V. The V6 en- The cell around the passengine option, side-hinged liftgers is made of carbon fiber gate and optional third-row reinforced plastic. No word seat will no longer be offered. on when the car will come to • Fiat 500e: The Fiat 500 showrooms. mini-car is bulking up and • Acura RLX:It's a new vergoing electric. The I t alian sion of the aging big Acura, automaker is showing two the RL. The 2014 RLX will new versions of the 500 at the have an all-wheel steering show: An all-electric model system that controls the steerthat Fiat says will go 80 miles ing angles for better handling, when fully charged and a lon- a new communications setup ger, four-door model that seats and LED headlamps. It's also five and offers twice the room 275 pounds lighter and has a

new 310-horsepower V-6 that gets 31 miles per gallon on the highway. The Honda luxury brand says it will deliver a new levelof performance, sophistication and comfort. • Chevrolet Spark EV: An all-electric mini-car that will

go on sale in Oregon, California, Canada and South Korea next summer. Other markets are expected to follow. General Motors won't release many details, but says the Spark EV will cost less than $25,000 with a federal tax credit and will go at least as far on a charge as rivals like the Nissan Leaf and Ford Focus EV, which can go more than 70 miles. • Ford Transit Connect Wagon: After a six-year hiatus, Ford gets back into the minivan business with the Transit Connect Wagon. It seats up to seven, has dual sliding doors and will be instantly recognizable thanks to its short size and high roofline. It will get 30-plus miles to the gallon and start around $20,000. The Transit Connect Wagon goes on sale in the fall.

Dec. 14

OREGON CATTLEMEN'S ASSOCIATIONCONVENTION:The Convention will feature information and updates on production, conservation and sustainability practices, regulation challenges and new information on animal nutrition and health for higher profit margins; registration required; $15-155;; The Riverhouse Hotel & Convention Center, 3075 N. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 503-361-8941 or www. orcattle.com.

MONDAY

MONDAY

Dec. 10

Dec. 17

Dec. 8

Auto show

FRIDAY CENTRALOREGONREAL ESTATE INVESTMENTCLUB:Free; 11 a.m.; ServiceMaster Clean, 20806 Sockeye Place, Bend; 541-610-4006 or bobbleile©windermere.com. KNOW MORE EMAIL: 1-2:30 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050. 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. KNOW EXCELBUDGETS: 3-4:30 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050.

SATURDAY

Chris Carlsoa/The Associated Press

The Chevrolet Spark EV Is debutedat the Los Angeles Auto Show Wednesday. The all-electric Spark will go on sale in Oregon, California, Canada and South Korea next summer.

TECHNOLOGY PETTING100:noon; OREGON ALCOHOLSERVER PERMIT TRAINING:Meets the Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. minimum requirements by the Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050. Oregon Liquor Control Commission to obtain an alcohol server permit; THURSDAY registration required; $35; 9 a.m.; TUESDAY Round Table Pizza, 1552 N.E.Third OREGON CATTLEMEN'S St., Bend; 541-447-6384 or www. Dec. 11 ASSOCIATION CONVENTION:The happyhourtraining.com. Convention will feature information BUSINESSNETWORK OPEN COMPUTER LAB: 10:30a.m.; and updates on production, INTERNATIONALHIGH DESERT La Pine Public Library,16425 First conservation and sustainability CHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING: St.; 541-536-05 I5. practices, regulation challenges and Visitors are welcome and first two new information on animal nutrition visits are free; 7:15 a.m.; Bend FORECLOSURE PREVENTION and health for higher profit margins; Honda, 2225 N.E. U.S. Highway 20; CLASS:Learn about registration required; $15-155;; Neighborlmpact's Housing Center 54 I-420-7377. The Riverhouse Hotel & Convention tools and services which can assist VISITBEND BOARD MEETING: Center, 3075 N. U.S. Highway 97, individuals struggling to pay their Open to the public; email Valerie@ Bend; 503-361-8941 or www. mortgages; free; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; visitbend.com to reserve a seat; 8 orcattle.com. a.m.; Bend Visitor Center, 750 N.W. Neighborlmpact, 20310 Empire Ave., Suite A110, Bend; 541-318-7506, ext. BUSINESSNETWORK Lava Road; 541-382-8048. INTERNATIONALDESCHUTES 309, karenb@neighborimpact.org or GETTING THE MOST OUTOF www.homeownershipcenter.org. BUSINESSNETWORKERS SCHWAB.COM:Free;noon-1 p.m.; CHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING: Charles Schwab & Co.,777 N.W.Wall Visitors are welcome and first two St., Suite 201, Bend; 541-318-1794. visits are free; 7 a.m.; Bend Senior TUESDAY KNOW DIGITALDOWNLOADS: 1:30 Center, 1600 S.E. ReedMarket p.m.; Sunriver Area Public Library, Dec. 18 Road; 541-610-9125. OPEN COMPUTERLAB:2-3:30 p.m.; 56855 Venture Lane; 541-312-1080. BUSINESSNETWORK OPEN COMPUTERLAB:2-3:30 p.m.; INTERNATIONALHIGH DESERT Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 East Bend Public Library, 62080 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7080. CHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING: Dean Swift Road; 541-330-3760. Visitors are welcome and first two BUSINESSNETWORK OPEN COMPUTER LAB: 3-4:30 visits are free; 7:15 a.m.; Bend INTERNATIONALWILDFIRE p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 Honda, 2225 N.E. U.S. Highway 20; CHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING: S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050. 541-420-7377. Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 3:30 p.m.; Bend SMALL BUSINESSCOUNSELING: HOW TO STARTA BUSINESS: Honda, 2225 N.E. U.S. Highway 20; SCORE business counselors will be COCCaE™s Small Business 541-480- I765. available every Tuesday for free one- Development Center workshops on-one small business counseling; for people contemplating business BEND CHAMBERMEMBER no appointment necessary; ownership; registration required; HOLIDAYPARTY:Mix and mingle free; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Downtown in a relaxed, festive atmosphere $15; 11 a.m.-1 p.m.; Central Oregon Bend Public Library,601 N.W. with fellow members and celebrate Community College, Redmond Wall St.; 541-617-7080 or www. the successes of 2012; registration campus, 2030 S.E. College Loop, scorecentraloregon.org. required; $10 for members; 5 p.m.; Redmond; 541-383-7290. HighDesertM useum, 59800 S.U.S. WHAT ARETHE LEGALITIES Highway 97; 541-382-3221 or www. INVOLVED?:Registration required; bendchamber.org. WEDNESDAY $15; 11 a.m.-1 p.m.; Central Oregon CENTRALOREGON Community College, Redmond INTERGOVERNMENTAL COUNCIL Dec. 12 campus, 2030 S.E. College Loop, BOARD MEETING:Opento BUSINESSNETWORK Redmond; 541-383-7290.

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Double or singleedged, straight razors, shaving pups, purebred, great Check out the brushes, mugs & Call Classifieds at dogs, $350 e a ch, Aussie Mini/Toy AKC, scuttles, strops, 541-546-6171. classifieds online 541-385-5809 shaving accessories all colors, $200-$250. www.bendbulletin.com www.bendbnlletinrcom POODLE PUPS, AKC Parents on site. Call & memorabilia. Updated daily toys. Small, friendly, & 541-598-5314, Fair prices paid. loving! 541-475-3889 Call 541-390-7029 541-788-7799 Find exactly what Two recliners: willing to between 10 am-3 pm. TOY PUPPIES trade for a l oveseat you are looking for in the POODLE Parents on site, sofa. 541-241-4296. WANT TO BUY: Trager CLASSIFIEDS $300 ea. 541-520-7259 smoker/ BBQ made in Aussies, Mini & Toy Washer & dryer, GE, Mt. An g el , OR. sizes, all colors, 9 Queensland Heelers white, stainless tub. 541-536-1572. standard & mini,$150 & $185. 541-410-5457 weeks $250 cash. up. 541-280-1537 or 541-678-7599 Just bought a new boat? http://rightwayranch. Sell your old one in the wordpress.com classifieds! Ask about our BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS Search the area's most Wolf-Husky Pups,$400! Super Seller rates! comPrehensive listing of ErigllSh BUlldOg 35 years exper. Can text 541-385-5809 classified advertising... Pups ready for Christ- pics Call 541-977-7019 real estate to automotive, masl 2 femaies Yorkie AKC 2 male pups, merchandise to sPorting incredible Holiday Bazaar b i o odiines. small parents, health goods. BulletinClassifieds Being raised with iots of 8 Craft Shows 8-wks, adorable! aPPear every day in the love & attention. Takintt uar., 650 8 up. 541-316-0005 Print or on line. deposits now; come pi c k Holiday Craft Bazaar g Call 541-385-5809 out y our favorite! Willing Sat Dec 1st np op to work with you on paye oe www.bendbulletin.com 10am-2pm ment option. Call Denise, Yorkie/Chihuahua Awbrey House 5«-740-3515 The Bulletin tiny female, $220 2825 Neff Rd Bend gernng Cenlral Ongnn gnre a03 cash. 541-678-7599 541-317-8464 English Spri n ger Live Music and Crafts of Border Collie/New Zeal- Spaniel pups, AKC 210 and Huntaways, 2 male all kinds! Multiple ready to go, wormed 8 Furniture & Appliances Raffles. Receive addi- PUPS, wondefful dogs dew claws,' great for tional raffle ticket by working Parents, $300 famiiy and/or hunting, n n bringing a New Per- each. 541-546-6171 priceless companions. 44 x64 ornately framed beveled mirror, $100. sonal Hygiene prod'N $250 . 541-548-1409 541-388-5696 uct benefiting German Shorthair AKC COCOA Seniors Pups, bred to hunt! $550. A1 Washers&Dryers each. 541-598-6988 HOLIDAY WISHES! $150 ea. Full warFind the perfect gift: ranty. Free Del. Also Golden Silpada jewelry, Boxer Pups, AKC / CKC, g l i sh Retrievers, Cream 4MEn'4F wanted, used W/D's Christmas crafts, 541-280-7355 1st shots, very social $700 $750 stockings, vintage $700. 541-325-3376 541 279 6820 scarves, local artist Arkenstone Crystals, People Lookfor Information and more! Sun., Dec About Products and High Q uality, Afford2, 12-4. at Bend Envi- ServicesEveryDaythrough able Spay & Neuter ronmental Center. for your Pets! Pets The Bulletin Classltfeds Call The Bulletin ClasBring in canned food who are fixed live 2 sifieds today and have items to receive a free C hocolate Lab 6 mo . ye a r s longer! C a l l attention getter in Cocoa 8 free craft for male, good tempera- t o day 541-617-1010 this P your classified ad. kids! 541-420-4770 ment, good with kids. w w w.bendsnip.org! 541-385-5809. $200. 541-280-0955 T hree Sisters Lions Dinette set, solid cherry, Club Holiday Faire! BEND'S HOMELESS NEED OUR HELP! 12 piece, beautiful, Tel Open Nov. 17-Dec. 16, The cold weather is upon us and sadly there are City, Indiana, $1300 Mon-Fri 10-2 8 Sat-Sun, still over 2,000 folks in our community without offer; R a nc h oa k 10-5 - 445 W. Hwy 20, 3 permanent shelter, living in cars, makeshift kitchen set, 13 piece, Wind Shopping Plaza (by camps, getting by as best they can. $600 offer. Must sell. Bimart) in Sisters. Unique The following items are badly needed to Local. 503-806-9564. handmade items by local help them get through the winter: artisans. CallHelen for Fridge '18+ cu. ft., $75. gkCAMPING GEAR of any sort: @ freezer 19.3 cu. New or used tents, sleeping bags, tarps, blankets. upright ff. $75. 541-388-3886 @ WARM CLOTHING: Rain Gear, Boots, Gloves. GENERATE SOME exPLEASE DROP OFF YOUR DONATIONS AT citement i n your Saturday Market THE BEND COMMUNITY CENTER 4 p.m. neighborhood! Plan a 10 a.m. 1036 NE 5thSt.,Bend, Mon.-Sat.9 a.m.-5 p.m. garage sale and don't Mason's Building, beFor Special pick up please call forget to advertise in hind 7-11 at 8th 8 Ken @ 541-389-3296 classified! Greenwood. Crafts, PLEASE HELP, YOU CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE. 541-385-5809. Antiques & More!

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Guns, Hunting 8 Fishing 1901 Winchester model 1894 32-40, full octagon barrel, $ 3195. Bend, 503-329-6239

1950 Winchester modl 70 30-06 w/Bushnell scope. $1295. Bend, 503-329-6239.

3 80 Cobra, copy o f Taurus, SS. Two clips and h o l ster and ammo, $220. 209-985-7015 Berretta AL391 Tenkys, 12 ga., mint c ond. $1250 obo. T/C Pro Hunter, SS 223 custom b a rrel, $ 1 000 obo. 541-383-3029

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Whirlpool microwave Rockhound Equipment2009 range hood, 32" Elvis dolls in box, num- saw, grind, sand 8 1000W, complete with bered. $ 5 0 ea. p olish. L o rtone & all mounted hardware 541-504-4252. Highland Park Bend. and mounting instrucInfo 541 280-5574 tions, like new condiH & H FIREARMS tion, $125. In RedAntique Pocket mond 541-526-0687 Stamp Collector Watches, Chains 8 Fobs. 541-382-9352 Retired gent pays cash for stamps, new or used, old or new, alThe Bulletin Call The Bulletin At recommends extra bums or loose. just in time for Christmas. n. — I 548 -385-5809 541-279-0336 chasing products or, Place Your Ad Or E-Mail services from out of I At: www.bendbulletin.com the area. Sending tI Rare copper steamer c ash, checks,, o r n n p ot, 1 1 Hx8 D, $60 credit i n f o rmation Bicycles & 541-388-7568 may be subjected to Accessories FRAUD. For more The Bulletin reserves information about an g right to publish all advertiser, you may I the ads from The Bulletin l call t h e Ore g ont newspaper onto The ' State Attor n ey ' Bulletin Internet webI General's O f fi ce Consumer Protec- • site. t ion ho t l in e at I Women's 3-spd bike, 26" genng Central 0 egonr nre aggk whitewalls, new chrome I 1-877-877-9392. fenders, gel seat, basket, Vintage cupboard, an like new> $400 OBO. t ique w hite, $ 1 5 9 541-549-1 1 57 H541-390-5986

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Lab Pups AKC, black L ooking for free b e d 8 y ellow, Mas t e r f rames. Call i f y o u Hunter sired, perfor- have. 541-241-4296. mance pedigree, OFA cert hips 8 e l bows, NEED TO CANCEL YOUR AD? Call 541-771-2330 www.kinnamanretrievara.com The Bulletin Classifieds has an Labradoodles - Mini 8 "Alter Hours" Line med size, several colors Call 541-383-2371 541-504-2662 24 hrs. to cancel www.alpen-ridge.com your ad! LABRADORS: beaut iful p uppies, b o rn Small dorm-size 2 cu. ft. $25. 9/11, ready for loving refrigerator, 541-388-3886. families. Shots current, vet checked. 4 Twin poster head / footblack males, left! $250 board 8 mattress set, + I each. 541-610-2270 dresser w/mirror, nice! Maremma Guard Dog $400. 541-549-2253 I

DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL FOR $500 OR LESS? Non-commercial

area. Sending cash, checks, or credit inadvertisers may f ormation may b e place an ad with oui' subjected to fraud. For more i nforma"QUICK CASH tion about an adverSPECIAL" tiser, you may call 1 week 3 lines 12 the O r egon State ~ g k 2 0! Attorney General's Ad must include Office C o n sumer price of single item Protection hotline at of $500 or less, or 1-877-877-9392. multiple items whose total does The Bulletin notexceed $500. gen ng CentralOregon nnre ag03

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F2 FRIDAY NOVEMBER 30 2012 •THE BULLETIN

541 e385-5809

THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD No. 1026

Edited by Will Shortz ACROSS 1 Potential misfit 10 Darken 15 Iranian export 16 Actress Hubbard of "Akeelah and the Bee" 17 Abbot's attribute 18 Goliath's master of old TV 19 Showiness 20 Private chat 22 Ref's call 23 Secret rival 24 Santa Maria's chain 25 Number retired for Steve Largent and Jerry Rice 28 One hanging in una iglesia 30 Truncated parlor piece? 31 Some costume cutouts 33 Figure in red 35 Sitcom mom of Cheyenne and Kyra

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40 Kewpie doll DOWN features 1 Home to 44 What a brat Tropicana Field, might throw familiarly 45 Display some 2 Rush job guns 3 Detrol 47 Fen frequenters prescriber's field 49 Painting the 4 Relative of cerulean town red 5 Body shop 51 Crack at a concern contract 6 Big stretch 53 It can be felt on 7 Passion felt portrayal 54 Things placed during a political 8 Spirit 9 Tale of derringcampaign do 56 Two-time Italian 10 Really brilliant prime minister 11 Lyre holder of Giuliano myth 58 Filler of some 12 Shifts cavities 13 Lemons are often squeezed TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE into them A B B U T G P S 14 Shakespearean might RE A S H O R T de L ourdes T L E T T H E N O M 21 S I S T E R E T A 23 Abbr. often

N O T E D DN O T A I R F A L L I F I GA R O I L L B E GLI S S A TM S E N

R OT ER E EE N

36 There's nothing in it 38 "I have had a perfectly wonderful evening, but this wasn't it"

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CASH!! For Guns, Ammo 8 Reloading Supplies.

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Starting at 3 lines

55 Green org. for women?

44 Left behind 46 N.Y.C. luggage tag letters 48 Thing placed

56 Out of harm's during a political way, in a way campaign 57 Jou r nal 50 Work measure 52 ". .. despise (magazine)

Ph o tography

Misc. Items •

Konica Minolta Dimage GET FREE OF CREDIT Z10 3 . 2megapixels, CARD DEBT N OW! $30. 541-548-3604 Cut payments by up Loss! Do you? If So Minolta auto-focus to half. Stop creditors calling. We Have a Solution! 38mm 1 . 2 8 $30 from 866-775-9621. K E R ANIQUE 541-548-3604

(PNDC)

877-475-2521.

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Est ate Sales

Estate Sale, indoors, Fri. 11/30 only! 55386 Big River Dr., off Vandevert Rd., Bend. Great stuff!

(See craigslist for details) Look What I Found! You'll find a little bit of everything in The Bulletin's daily

garage and yard sale section. From clothes to collectibles, from housewares to hardware, classified is always the first stop for cost-conscious consumers. And if you're planning your own garage or yard sale, look to the classifieds to bring in the buyers. You won't find a better place for bargains! Call Classifieds:

Sales Northeast Bend

** FREE ** Garage Sale Klt Place an ad in The Bulletin for your ga-

rage sale and receive a Garage Sale Kit FREE! KIT INCLUDES:

• 4 Garage Sale Signs • $2.00 Off Coupon To use Toward Your Next Ad

• 10 Tips For "Garage Sale Success!" PICK UP YOUR GARAGE SALE KIT at

1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702

The Bulletin

541-385-5809 or

email

classified@bendbutletin.com

284

Sales Southwest Bend

* MOVED TO * RETIREMENT HOME

SUPER SALE! Christmas items, clothes, books, frames, dishware, misc. at. 8-4, 2556 NE Lynda lane 290

Garage Sale Special 4 lines for 4 days..................................

(caii for commercial line ad rates)

CC lX

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.

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Heating & Stoves

Gardening Supplies & Equipment

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

NOTICE TO ADVERTISER

Polaroid Minolta 38mm Highspeed Internet EV12005-300 digital $30 (PNDC) ERYWHERE By Sat541-548-3604 ellite! Speeds up to DII'T MISSTHIS 251 Polaroid Sun 600, 12mbps! (200x faster $25 or offer. than dial-up.) Starting Hot Tubs & Spas 541-548-3604 at $49.95/mo. CALL DO YOU HAVE & G O F A ST! Costco Hot tub, 6-per- Sony NEX-7, 24.3mp NOW SOMETHING TO son, like new, $2500 digital camera w/4 lenses 1-888-718-2162. SELL obo. 541-389-9268 + many other extras, call (PNDC) FOR $500 OR for info. Sacrifice, $1500. Ice bucket silver plate LESS? 541-410-3702 253 Non-commercial vintage 9.5" high, $39. 541-388-7568 advertisers may TV, Stereo 8 Video 257 place an ad M ichelin X - I c e (4) with our DIRECTV for Musical Instruments 205/55/16 s t u d less "QUICK CASH $29.99/mo f o r 24 tires, approx. Sk mi. SPECIAL" m onths. Ove r 1 4 0 $650 new, sell $450 1 week3lines 12 channels. FREE obo. 541-312-4250 OI' HD-DVR U p g rade! The Bulletin Offers k zul ~z FREE NFL S u nday Free Private Party Ads Ad must Ticket w/C H OICE include price of P ackage! Call T O - Piano, Steinway Model • 3 lines - 3 days Private Party Only f $500 D AY f or deta i ls 0 Baby Grand 1911, •• Total of items adveror less, or multiple 1-888-721-7801. gorgeous, artist qual- tised must equal $200 items whosetotal (PNDC) ity instrument w/great or Less does notexceed action & S teinway's ' 0 4 1 d a th $500. 255 warm, rich sound. Will • 3-ad limit for s a m e Computers adorn any living room, item advertised within Call Classifieds at church or music stu- 3 months 541-385-5809 T HE B U LLETIN r e - dio perfectly. New reCall 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com quires computer adtail $ 6 9,000. Sacri- Fax 541-385-5802 vertisers with multiple fice at $26,000 OBO, THOMAS KIN K A DE H & H FIREARMS ad schedules or those call 541-383-3150. Bridge of Faith $100. Buy, Sell, Trade, selling multiple sys541-51 6-8225. Consign. Across From tems/ software, to disPilot Butte Drive-In close the name of the Wanted- paying cash 541-382-9352 business or the term for Hi-fi audio & stu"dealer" in their ads. 300+ romance books. dio equip. Mclntosh, Wanted: Collector Private party advertisreas. prices not over J BL, Marantz, D y seeks high quality ers are defined as $1. 541-382-3039 naco, Heathkit, Sanfishing items. those who sell one sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Bend's Indoor Swap Call 541-678-5753, or computer. Call 541-261-1808 503-351-2746 Meet - A Mini-Mall full of Treasures! 261 3rd St. & Wilson Ave. Medical Equipment 10-5 Thurs-Fri-Sat. 541-408-6900.

OVER '500in total merchandise 4 days .................................................. $18.50 7 days .................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50

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 bendbunerin.com any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702

TO FIND OUT MORE

'UNDER '500in total merchandise 7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days ................................................ $16.00 *Must state prices in ad

Puzzle by Peter A. Collins

approximately

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Looking for Employment CAREGIVER - Christian woman w il l work for room & board in Bend/ Redmond. 541-598-4114

Farm Equipment & Machinery

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Powder River cattle guard like new, never used, 8'x14' heavy duty, $2000. Can deliver in Central OR. 541-421-3222

Make yourad Stand OIlt alId Iet greater

1-888-387-9252

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TRUCK SCHOOL www. IITR.net Redmond Campus Student Loans/Job Waiting Toll Free

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medicaltrainin .com 541-343-3100

541-788-1258.

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Come join our Team! Since September 29, For newspaper CAUTION READERS: H igh Energy T a x , 1991, advertising for delivery, call the P ayroll an d B o o kused woodstoves has Circulation Dept. at Ads published in "Em- keeping Company in been limited to mod541-385-5800 ployment Opportuni- La Pine, OR, seeks a els which have been To place an ad, call t ies" i n c lude e m - part-time person for c ertified by the O r 541-385-5809 ployee and bookkeeping, payroll, 421 egon Department of or email i ndependent po s i - inputting data and occlaeened@bendbulletin com Schools 8 Training Environmental Qualtions. Ads for posi- casional cross-over to ity (DEQ) and the fed- The Bulletin tions that require a fee front reception. Tax A IRLINES AR E H I R eral E n v i ronmental Sewing Central Oregon s>nce 1903 or upfront investment office exp. preferred, ING Train for hands Protection Ag e n cy licensed to prepare in must be stated. With on Aviation Mainte(EPA) as having met any independent job Oregon a huge PLUS! Compensation DOE. smoke emission stan- USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! nance Career. FAA p l e ase approved p r ogram. opportunity, dards. A cer t ified NO phone calls or investigate thorDoor-to-door selling with Financial aid if qualidrop-ins. Email your w oodstove may b e oughly. identified by its certifi- fast results! It's the easiest fied - Housing availcover letter and reable. Call Aviation Insume to infoocencation label, which is way in the world to sell. Use extra caution when stitute of permanently attached applying for jobs on- traloregontax.com. Maintenance. to the stove. The BulThe Bulletin Classified line and never pro- Closes 12/10/12 1-877-804-5293. letin will no t k n owvide personal infor- Dog groomer needed 541-385-5809 (PNDC) ingly accept advertismation to any source w/experience. Willing i ng for the s ale o f MTD 22" 2-stage yard COL L E GE you may not have re- to train someone who uncertified machine snowblower ATTEND ONLINE 100% . searched and deemed has experience with woodstoves. 179cc OHV, $ 1 25. "Medical, 'Business, to be reputable. Use dogs. Leave m e s541-923-8271. "Criminal Jus t ice, extreme caution when sage at 541-325-2946 267 r esponding to A N Y *Hospitality, *Web. SUPER TOP SOIL Fuel 8 Wood www.herehe eoilandbariccom Job placement assis- online e m p loyment Screened, soil & com- tance. DO YOU NEED Comp u ter ad from out-of-state. post mi x ed , no available. F i nancial A GREAT WHEN BUYING We suggest you call rocks/clods. High hu- Aid EMPLOYEE if qual i fied. the State of Oregon FIREWOOD... mus level, exc. for SCHEV a u thorized. RIGHT NOW? flower beds, lawns, Call 866 - 688-7078 Consumer Hotline at Call The Bulletin To avoid fraud, 1-503-378-4320 gardens, straight www.CenturaOnline.c before 11 a.m. and The Bulletin s creened to p s o i l . om (PNDC) get an ad in to pubrecommends payFor Equal Opportunity Bark. Clean fill. Delish the next day! ment for Firewood L aws: Oregon B uliver/you haul. only upon delivery 541-385-5809. Need to get an reau of Labor 8 In541-548-3949. VIEW the and inspection. dustry, C i vil Rights ad in ASAP? • A cord is 128 cu. ft. Classifieds at: 270 Division, 4' x 4' x 8' You can place it www.bendbulletin.com 971-673-0764 Lost & Found • Receipts should online at: include name, Cardboard taped pack- www.bendbulletin.com If you have any ques- O ffice m anager f o r phone, price and tions, concerns or lass shop. 2 yrs exp., a ge found o n M t . kind of wood purcomments, contact: roficient in Q u ickW ashington Dr i v e. 541-385-5809 chased. Classified Department books including payCall to iden t ify. • Firewood ads roll, MS Word and ExThe Bulletin 541-382-7044. MUST include speOregon Medical Train541-385-5809 cel, quote & schedule cies and cost per Lost black & white feing PCS Ph lebotomy customers. $15/hour. cord to better serve male Rat Terrier pink classes begin Jan. 7, Bring resume and apour customers. collar in Tumalo area, 2013. Registration now The Bulletin ply in person, 20584 Sewng Central Oregonstncel941 P ": north Gerking Market Painters Street, Bend.

The Bulletin Buying Diamonds Medical Alert for Seservingcentral oregon since1901 niors - 24/7 monitorLost HP laptop, light blue /Gold for Cash case, in Redmond area. ing. FREE Equipment. Saxon's Fine Jewelers 1 cord dry, split Juniper, Reward! 541-420-5283 FREE Shipping. Na541-389-6655 tionwide Ser v i ce. $200/cord. Multi-cord REMEMBER: Ifyou BUYING t/2 cords discounts, & $29.95/Month CALL have lost an animal, Lionel/American Flyer available. Immediate Medical Guardian Todon't forget to check trains, accessories. delivery! 541-408-6193 day 8 8 8 -842-0760. The Humane Society 541-408-2191. (PNDC) in Bend 541-382-3537 All Year Dependable BUYING & S E LLING Redmond, Firewood: Sp lit, Del. All gold jewelry, silver 541-923-0882 Bend. Lod g epole, Tools and gold coins, bars, Prineville, Pine: 1 for $180 or 2 rounds, wedding sets, 541 -447-71 78; class rings, sterling sil- 8" wood band saw, runs for $350. Cash, check OR Craft Cats, o r credit card O K . ver, coin collect, vinwell, $100. 541-420-3484. 541-389-8420. H541-410-3218. tage watches, dental gold. Bill Fl e ming,Lincoln 225 amp arc 275 DRY JUNIPER $190/ 541-382-9419. welder on cart, $200. split, or $170 rounds Auction Sales 541-410-3218. per cord. Delivered. Rockwell 10" contractors Call 541-977-4500 or PUBLIC AUCTION The Estate of Mike saw w/mag starter, good 541-678-1590 c ondition, $175. C a l l Konovalov, Carson Call The Bulletin Clas- 541-389-2600 269 Paving, Douglas sifieds today and have County and More! Gardening Supplies this attention getter in Victor Acetylene torch Sunday, Dec. 9, at 10 mid-size tanks on cart 8 Equipment your classified ad. a.m., 121 Deady $225. 541-410-3218. 541-385-5809. Crossing in Sutherlin. BarkTurfSoll.com Heavy equip., tracTURN THE PAGE Building Materials5 tors, trucks, trailers, For More Ads farm equip., guns, PROMPT D E LIVERY The Bulletin La Pine Habitat vehicles, automotive 541-389-9663 RESTORE shop, and more! Four orig. equip. Hyun- Building Supply Resale For details see dai tires, 205/55/R16 Look at: Quality at www.l-5auctions.com approx. 12k mi. $300 LOW PRICES Bendhomes.com obo. 541-312-4250 52684 Hwy 97 for Complete Listings of 541-536-3234 GENERATE SOME Area Real Estate for Sale Open to the public . EXCITEMENT Have Gravel, will Travel! IN YOUR Prineville Habitat Cinders, topsoil, fill mateNEIGBORHOOD. ReStore Plan a garage sale and Building Supply Resale rial, etc. Excavation 8 septicsystems. Abbas don't forget to adver1427 NW Murphy Ct. Construction 008878840 tise in classified! 541-447-6934 CalEI541-548-6812 541-385-5809. Open to the public.

Vermont hardwood Sales Redmond Area twin poster beds 8 dresser, Queen Ann E STATE S AL E S a t . sideboard, oak desk, Dec. 1, 9-5, 2138 SW antiques include small P umice A v e. , b e furniture pieces, den- tween 21st & 23rd St. tal cabinet, pictures, Low prices. Cash only! trunk, cedar c hest, INDOOR moving multiFrancoma P o t tery, sale. 3027 SW Royal Copley pottery family Pumice Ave. 1300 sq. ducks, glassware 8 china, quality stem- ft. of treasures! Fri., ware, oil lamp collec- Sat. Sun., 9 a.m. tion, two full beds, one Winter Wonderland Craft/ TempurPedic, dishes, Garage Sale! 12/1-2, 9-2, Kitchenaid, k i t chen-3717 SW Cascade Vista ware, lots misc. and Dr. Handmade wooden garage full! toys & jewelry, winter Take Brooksvvood to clothing, vintage items, River Rim Drive to new still-in-pkg gift items. 19504 Fishhawk Loop Fri. & Sat.,9to 4 Crowd control Sales Other Areas numbers Fri. at 8 a.m. Attic Estates & Household,shop items, tools, electronics. Sat. Appraisals -Sun. 7-4, 807 NE Hillwww.atticestatesandappraisals.com side Ct., P r ineville. 541-350-6822 541-280-61 75.

Place a photoin your private partyad for only $15.00 perweek.

PRIVATE PARTY RATES

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34 Radon's lack 37 Let pass 38 Mahon is its largest city 39 When it's

Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. Fr i d ay. . . .. . • • • • • • . • • • • • • . • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri. Saturday • • • •. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3: 0 0 pm FrI • Sunday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5500 pm FrI •

57

41 Dark reddish brown 42 Some bridge not thy mother preceding 60 E. Germany, holdings 29-Down when she Proverbs 23:22 before 1990 26 Many a Berliner 43 Reputation 27 Competition For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.49 a minute; or, with a credit TV series with card, 1-800-814-5554. versions in over Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. 30 countries ATtkT users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visit 29 Abbr. often nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information. following Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past 23-Down puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. 32 Fashionable, Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords. some say

Health 8 Beauty Items

CALL

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Buy/Sell/Tradeall fire- Over 30 Million Women arms. Bend local pays S uffer F r o m Ha i r cash! 541-526-0617

a

34

248

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

Monday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5 5:00 pm Fris

30 33

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AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES

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Tuesday•••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Mons Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5 Noon Tuess

29

32

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24

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or go to www.bendbuiletin.com

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Call a Pro Whether you need a fence fixed,hedges trimmed or a house built, you'll find professional help in The Bulletin's "Call a Service Professional" Directory 541-385-5809

Press Supervisor The Bulletin is seeking a night time press supervisor. We are part of Western Communications, Inc., which is a small, family-owned group consisting of seven newspapers, five in Oregon and two in California. Our ideal candidate will manage a small crew of three and must be able to learn our equipment/processes quickly. A hands-on style is a requirement for our 3 1/2 tower KBA press. Prior management/leadership experience preferred. In addition to our 7-day a week newspaper, we have numerous commercial print clients as well. In addition to a competitive wage and benefit program, we also provide potential opportunity for advancement. If you provide dependability combined with a positive attitude, are able to manage people and schedules and are a team player, we would like to hear from you. If you seek a stable work environment that provides a great place to live and raise a family, let us hear from you. Contact either; Keith Foutz, Corporate Circulation 8 Operations Director at kfoutz©wescompapers.com or anelson@wescompapers.com with your complete resume, references and s a lary history/requirements. Prior press room experience required. No phone calls please. Drug test is required prior to employment. EOE

The Bulletin

Serving Cenrral Oregon since 1903

Independent Contractor

*Supplement Your Income* Operate Your Own Business

++++++++++++++++++

Newspaper Delivery Independent Contractor

© Call Today ® We are looking for independent contractors to service home delivery routes in:

Hay, Grain & Feed

Cftjfttr<h uahualLft asa 080

Pi/

Reatfy forffte Flrsf 8

$2507 ea. Pgp p 0000

Wanted: Irrigated farm ground, under pivot irrigation, i n C e n tral OR. 541-419-2713 Wheat Straw: Certified & Beddinq Straw 8 Garden Straw;Compost.546-6171

* 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

Class™tfteds

358

during business hours

Farmers Column

apply via email at online©bendbulletin.com

Call TheBulletin Classified DepartmentaI 541-385-5809 or541-382-1811 forrates today!

Wanted: Irrigated farm ground, under pivot irrigation, i n C e n tral OR. 541-419-2713

ewe.iu zulbuii«tinu om

The Bulletin


TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

PEST CONTROL

RN

TERMINIX Service Technician

~ /~j '

Competitive pay, medical & retirement program. Must h a v e: clean driving record; ability to pass drug test, bac k g round check, and state censing exams. Will train right candidate. Drop off resume or pickup application at 40 SE Bridgeford Blvd, Bend. 541-382-8252

The Bulletin To Subscribe call 541-385-5800 or go to www.bendbulletin.com PROPERTY MGMT.

ON-SITE MOBILE HOME PARK MANAGER needed to provide on-site management and sales of a v ailable m o bile homes for 2 m o b ile home parks (75-space 8 46-space) in Madras.

Aspen Ridge Retirement Community is seeking an experienced RN to lead & oversee the daily resident care program. Responsibilities include staff training & s upervision, i m plementation of services 8 p rograms, d o cum entation 8 c o m munication, medication mg m t 8 delegation, regulatory co m p liance, c are plans 8 a s sessments. Desire to work with seniors is a must, ALF/RCF exp. with nurse delegation, staffing, 8 t eam b u ilding a plus. We are pleased to offer an excellent compensation pac k a ge along with a s upportive environment. Please send cover l etter 8 res u m e w/salary required to: Executive Director, 7 025NE Purcell Blvd., Bend, OR

-5809

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOV EMBER 30 2012 F3 476

745

870

Employment Opportunities

Homes for Sale

Boats & Accessories

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

ESMEss

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NOTICE

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541-480-8009

Share 3 bedroom home, 558 older,

750

Redmond Homes

Motorhomes

4

Ads published in "Watercraft" include Kay aks, rafts and motortzed personal watercrafts. For " boats" please s e e Class 870. Immaculate! 541-385-5809 Beaver Coach Marquis 40' 1987. New cover, new paint (2004), new Servng cential oiegon smce r903 inverter (2007). Onan 6300 watt gen, 111K mi, parked covered $35,000 Motorhomes • obo. 541-419-9859 or

asp

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All real estate advertised here in is subject to t h e F e deral F air H o using A c t , which makes it illegal to advertise any pref850 605 erence, limitation or Roommate Wanted Snowmobiles discrimination based on race, color, reliSharecozy mobile home gion, sex, handicap, in Terrebonne, $275+ t/g familial status or nautils. 503-679-7496 tional origin, or intention to make any such Arctic Cat (2) 2005 F7 630 Firecats: EFI Snowpreferences, l i mitaRooms for Rent tions or discrimination. pro & EFI EXT, exlnt cond, $3700 ea; We will not knowingly $7000 both. Room for rent, Just bring accept any advertis541-410-2186 your toothbrush, one 1 ing for r eal e state bdrm, full bath, office, which is in violation of k itchen u s e , fu l l y this law. All persons stocked with utensils. are hereby informed Beautiful home at The that all dwellings adGreens Golf Course in vertised are available Snowmobile trailer Redmond. $500/mo. + on an equal opportu2002, 25-ft Intersmall utility bill. Ownstate & 3 sleds, basis. The Bulleers are absent often. nity tin Classified $10,900. 541-279-9538.

880

Watercraft

20.5' 2004 Bayliner 205 Run About, 220 HP, V8, open bow, exc. cond., very fast w/very low hours, lots of extras incl. tower, Bimini & custom trailer, $19,500. 541-389-1413

The Bulletin

541-280-2014

OOO

20.5' Seaswirl Spyder 1989 H.O. 302, 285 hrs., exc. cond., stored indoors for life $11,900 OBO. 541-379-3530

Country Coach Intrigue Monaco Dynasty 2004 2002, 40' Tag axle. loaded, 3 slides, die400hp Cummins Diesel, Reduced - now sel. two slide-outs. $119,000, 5 4 1-92341,000 miles, new 8572 or 541-749-0037I tires 8 batteries. Most Find It in options. $95,000 OBO The Bulletin Classifieds! Just too many 541-678-5712 541-385-5809 collectibles?

Advertise your car! ~OO Add A Picture! Ads published in the Sell them in M ore Pi x a t Bendbuletin,com The Bulletin Gorgeous home 8 Reach thousands of readers~ "Boats" classification Studios & Kitchenettes Classifieds Call 541-385-5809 landscaping, large lot, Furnished room, TV w/ include: Speed, fish528 cable, micro & fridge. 3 car garage. 2 Bdrm The Bulletin Classifieds ing, drift, canoe, w/den, 1758 sq.ft. Loans & Mortgages Utils & l inens. New Snowmobile trailer fits house and sail boats. 541-385-5809 owners. $145-$165/wk $199,900. Call t wo s leds o r tw o For all other types of 541-382-1885 Virginia at RE/MAX WARNING 4-wheelers, has new atercraft, please see 541-350-3418 W e ar e s e eking a The Bulletin recombearings, tires, hitch, Class 875. nn, i634 r esults-oriented in d i mends you use cauand complete re-wire. 541-385-5809 Econoline RV 1 989, vidual, who is adept at tion when you pro- Apt./Multiplex NE Bend Looking for your next $800. 541-382-3409 fully loaded, exc. cond, multi-talking; self-motivide personal 35K m i. , R e duced emp/oyee? YAMAHA 500 VMAX, Serving Centrai Oregon since 1903 vated and possesses information to compa- $299 1st mo. rent!! * $17,950. 541-546-6133 Place a Bulletin help 2043 mi, 1'/~" track, strong leasing and marSouthwind 35.5' Triton, nies offering loans or GET THEM BEFORE wanted ad today and $1500. 541-419-2268 keting skills. 97701; 2008,V10, 2slides, Ducredit, especially THEY ARE GONE! reach over 60,000 I FL O AT CAN'T BEAT THIS! fax 541-330-6687; 2 bdrm, 1 bath pont UV coat, 7500 mi. those asking for ad860 readers each week. C andidate must a l s o email: Aspenridge@ Look before you i YOURBOAT... i Bought new at vance loan fees or $530 & $540 Your classified ad Motorcycles 8 Accessories have at least 2-years of buy, below market Frontiermgmt.com with o u r sp e c ial $132 913 companies from out of Carports & A/C included! will also appear on prior management expevarue! Size 8 mileEqual Opportunity asking $93,500, Fox Hollow Apts. rates for se/hng your I state. If you have + bendbulletin.com • CRAMPED FOR rience in apartments or Employer/Drug Free age DOES matter! Call 541-419-4212 (541) 383-31 52 i boat or watercraft! concerns or queswhich currently reCASH? mobile home p a rks; Class A 32' HurriWorkplace Rental Mgmt. Co tions, we suggest you Cascade ceives over have qeneral computer Use classified to sell ! Place an ad in The cane by Four Winds, consult your attorney *Upstairs only with lease skills (MS Word, Excel, 1.5 million page those items you no 2007. 12,500 mi, all B ulletin w it h ou r or call CONSUMER 648 Email, etc.) have excel- SALES views every month longer need. amenities, Ford V10, ! 3-month p ackage HOTLINE, lent organizational and Growing dealership seekIthr, cherry, slides, at no extra cost. Call 541-385-5809 Houses for 1-877-877-9392. l which includes: like new! New low customer service skills; ing salespeople looking Bulletin Classifieds Rent General Winnebaqo Suncruiser34' and be able to under- for a performance-based BANK TURNED YOU price, $54,900. Get Results! I *5 lines of text and 2004, only 34K, loaded, stand basic m a inte- pay p l an , 541-548-5216 po t ential DOWN? Private party Call 385-5809 or P U BLI SHER'S a photo or up to 10 too much to list, ext'd nance issues and com- c ommissions of up to will loan on real esplace your ad on-line Harley Davidson Soft- ines with no photo. NOTICE warr. thru 2014, $54,900 plete minor r e pairs/35% equaling $100,000 tate equity. Credit, no at Tail Deluxe 20 0 7, l l*Free online ad at G ulfsfream Sce n i c All real estate adverDennis, 541-589-3243 maintenance quickly in plus, Retirement Plan, problem, good equity bendbulletin.com white/cobalt, w / pasCruiser 36 ft. 1999, tising in this newspaI bendbulletin.com areas not requiring spe- Paid Vacation, and a senger kit, Vance 8 is all you need. Call Cummins 330 hp dieper is subject to the *Free pick up into cialized knowledge or competitive med i cal Oregon Land Hines muffler system l The sel, 42K, 1 owner, 13 tools. Bi-Lingual (En- benefit package. Look- now. F air H o using A c t FIND IT! Central Oregon Travel Trailers Mortgage 388-4200. & kit, 1045 mi., exc. in. kitchen slide out, which makes it illegal glish/ Spanish) is a plus. ing for a team player l Nickel ads. BUY IT! cond, $19,9 9 9, "any new tires, under cover, with a positive attitude, to a d vertise Good classified ads tell SELL IT! 541-389-91 88. 1979 Compensation includes to operate with energy the essential facts in an preference, limitation I Rates start at $46. I hwy. miles only,4 door COACHMAN 23' trailer housing/space rental in and to be customer ser- interesting Manner. Write fridge/freezer ice or disc r iminationThe Bulletin Classifieds Harley Heritage Call for details! a n e wly r e modeledvice oriented. Will pro- from the readers view - not maker, W/D combo, Fully equipped. based on race, color, Softail, 2003 541-385-5809 773 d ouble-wide mob i l e vide training. $5,000+ in extras, Interbath t ub 8 $2000. religion, sex, handithe seller's. Convert the home, plus $1,906 salSend resume' to: Acreages $2000 paint job, shower, 50 amp procap, familial status, 541-312-8879 facts into benefits. Show ary per month. 30K mi. 1 owner, bcrvhireO mail.com gThe Bulle<ing pane gen 8 m o r e! or 541-350-4622. marital status or nathe reader how the item will tional origin, or an inFor more information $55,000. F orward resume v i a SERVICE help them in someway. please call 541-948-2310 TECH. tention to make any CHECK YOUR AD email and in the subject W ysup Hyundai i n This 541-385-8090 GENERATE SOME exsuch pre f erence, Please check your ad "Madras line indicate: or 209-605-5537 advertising tip citement in your neig- Just bought a new boat? L ewiston, Idah o . limitation or discrimi- on the first day it runs Mobile Home P a rks Great pay and benbrought to you by borhood. Plan a ga- Sell your old one in the nation." Familial sta- to make sure it is cor- HD Screaming Eagle Manager" to: rage sale and don't classifieds! Ask about our e fits. DOE. ASE o r tus includes children rect. Sometimes inElectra Glide 2005, burken@can on m.com The Bulletin Super Seller rates! forget to advertise in Factory Certification. under the age of 18 s tructions over t h e 103" motor, two tone 541-385-5809 m classified! 385-5809. Call Bra d y at living with parents or phone are misundercandy teal, new tires, Pioneer Spirit 1 8CK, Ever Consider a Re208-743-2700. legal cust o dians, stood and a n e r ror 23K miles, CD player Ranch Hand 2007, used only 4x, AC, verse Mortgage? At (PNDC) pregnant women, and can occur in your ad. Progressive C attle hydraulic clutch, exSergmg Central Oregon since 1903 electric tongue j ack, least 62 years old? people securing cus- If this happens to your cellent condition. Ranch - Opportunity $8995. 541-389-7669 Stay in your home & tody of children under for Long-Term emad, please contact us Highest offer takes it. Hunter's Delightt PackThe Bulletin increase cash flow! Used out-drive 18. This newspaper the first day your ad 541-480-8080. ployment Team age deal! 1988 Winparts - Mercury I Recommends extra ~ Safe & Effective! Call will not knowingly ac- appears and we will Environment. W i l lnebago Super Chief, Now for your FREE cept any advertising be happy to fix it as caution when purOMC rebuilt maing to work all as3 8K m i l es , gr e a t DVD! Ca l l Now chasing products or Softail Deluxe e for real estate which is s oon as w e c a n . rine motors: 151 pects of ranch workshape; 1988 Bronco II services from out of ~ 888-785-5938. 2010, 805 miles, in violation of the law. Deadlines are: Week$1595; 3.0 $1895; wash trucks, move 4 x4 t o t o w , 1 3 0 K area. Sending (PNDC) Black Chameleon. I the O ur r e aders ar e days 11:00 noon for mostly towed miles, pipe, process and 4.3 (1993), $1995. c ash, checks, o r 2005 27', 4' hereby informed that $17,000 next day, Sat. 11:00 feed cattle, c lean I credit i n f o rmation LOCAL MONEyrWebuy 541-389-0435 nice rig! $15,000 both. Springdale all dwellings advera.m. for Sunday and CallDon @ water troughs, etc. secured trust deeds 8 541-382-3964, leave slide in dining/living area, sleeps 6, low mi,$15,000 be subjected to note, some hard money tised in this newspa- Monday. Must have positive I may 541-410-3823 msg. obo. 541-408-3811 FRAUD. loans. Call Pat Kelley per are available on 541-385-5809 attitude - CompetiFor more informa541-382-3099 ext.13. an equal opportunity Thank you! tive wages and 401K • Wate r craft tion about an adver865 basis. To complain of The Bulletin Classified benefits. 573 I tiser, you may call discrimination cal l 541-475-6681. ATVs the Oregon State Business Opportunities HUD t o l l -free at 2007 SeaDoo I Attorney General's 1-800-877-0246. The 776 5-ft wide f r ont-mount 2004 Waverunner, Office C o n sumer A ~ Classified ad is an Remember.... excellent condition, toll f re e t e l ephone Manufactured/ angled blade for ATV, EASY W A Y TO A dd your we b a d - Protection hotline at I number for the hearLOW hours. Double Jayco Seneca 2007, Springdale 29' 2 0 07, $135. 541-410-3425 Mobile Homes dress to your ad and I 1-877-877-9392. REACH over 3 million ing trailer, lots of extras. 17K mi., 35ft., Chevy im p aired is slide,Bunkhouse style, Pacific Northwestern- 1-800-927-9275. 870 5500 d i e sel , t oy sleeps 7-8, excellent readers on The $10,000 gThe Bulletin g FACTORY SPECIAL ers. $5 2 5 /25-word hauler $130 , 000. condition, 541-719-8444 Bulletin' s web site Boats & Accessories $1 6 ,900, New Home, 3 bdrm, c lassified ad i n 3 0 Rented your prop541-389-2636. will be able to click 541-390-2504 erty? The Bulletin $46,900 finished daily newspapers for through automatically Classifieds on you site,541.548.5511 13' Smokercraft '85, l y % g ' ~ 1& J . A t k • • Q 3-days. Call the Pato your site. Get your cific Northwest Daily has an "After Hours" www.JandMHomes.com good cond., 15HP Line. Call gas Evinrude + business Connection (916) NEW HOME BUILT 541-383-2371 24 2 88-6019 o r e m a i l Minnkota 44 elec. $87,450! hours to elizabeth@cnpa.com motor, fish finder, 2 Includes, garage, founa cel o a d . ' c~ a ROWI N G for more info (PNDC) dation, a p p liances, extra seats, trailer, Meet singles right now! 658 Advertise V A CATION central heating, heat extra equip. $3200. No paid o perators, with an ad in 'Oo SPECIALS to 3 m i lpump ready. call to- 541-388-9270 1 Houses for Rent I just real people like Oo' lion P acific N o rthday to schedule your The Bulletin's you. Browse greetRedmond westerners! 30 daily personal appointment. 17' 1984 Chris Craft ings, exchange mes"Call A Service ff newspapers, six 541-548-5511, - Scorpion, 140 HP sages and connect Professional" states. 25-word clas- Newer 2326 sq.ft. deluxe 541-350-1782 inboard/outboard, 2 live. Try it free. Call 3/3, gas fire- www.JandMHomes.com sified $525 for a 3-day home, Directory depth finders, trollnow: 8 7 7 -955-5505. 7500' lot, fenced a d. Cal l (916) place, ing motor, full cover, (PNDC) yard, 1655 SW Sara2 88-6019 o r vis i t soda Ct. $ 1195/mo. Own your own home for EZ - L oad t railer, less t ha n r e n ting. $3500 www.pnna.com/advert 541-350-2206 OBO. Centrally located in ising pndc.cfm for the 541-382-3728. Call theBulletin ClassifiedDept. Madras. In- h ouse Pacific Nor t hwest 693 financing opt i o ns Daily Con n ection. Office/Retail Space 541-385-5809or541-382-1811 available. Call now at (PNDC) for Rent 541-475-2291 Extreme Value Adverforratestoday! C all 54/ - 3 85-5809 tising! 30 Daily news- 150 to 900 sq. ft. upRent /Own to r omote our service papers $525/25-word stairs office at 63356 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes classified, 3-d a ys. Nels Anderson Road, $2500 down, $750 mo. 18.5' '05 Reinell 185, V-6 Reach 3 million Paall utilities paid, priOAC. 541-548-5511, Building/Contracting House Sitting Volvo Penta, 270HP, cific Northwesterners. vate bath and confer541-350-1782 low hrs., must see, For more information ence room, $150 to www.jandmhomes.com NOTICE: Oregon state I Do House Sitting and $15,000, 541-330-3939 call (916) 288-6019 or $900 per month. law req u ires any- Animal Care. Good email: 541.480.4744, J im one who c o n tracts references. Call Car elizabeth@cnpa.com for construction work rie at 541-526-5854. for the Pacific Northto be licensed with the west Daily Connec- Garage Sales C onstruction Con - Home Improvement tion. (PNDC) Garage Sales tractors Board (CCB). A n active lice n se Kelly Kerfoot Const. Looking for your 28 yrs exp in Central OR! Garage Sales means the contractor next employee? i s bonded and i n - Quality & honesty, from Place a Bulletin help Find them s ured. Ver if y t h e carpentry & handyman jobs, to expert wall cov- wanted ad today and contractor's CCB in reach over 60,000 c ense through t h e ering install / removal. The Bulletin CCB Cons u mer Sr. discounts CCB¹47120 readers each week. Your classified ad Licensed/bonded/insured Website Classifieds will also appear on www.hireahcensedcontractor. 541-389-1413 / 410-2422 com bendbulletin.com 541-385-5809 ll or call 503-378-4621. Autumnridge Const. which currently reQuality custom home The Bulletin recomceives over 1.5 milNo job mends checking with tooimprovements. lion page views big or small. Vet & Sr. the CCB prior to con- Discounts! CCB¹198284 every month at tracting with anyone. no extra cost. Call 541-300-0042 Some other t r ades Bulletin Classifieds also req u ire addi- Landscaping/Yard Care Get Results! Call tional licenses and 385-5809 or place Now you can add a full-color Photo to your Bulletin classified ad starting certifications. your ad on-line at N OTICE: OREGON bendbulletin.com Landscape Contracat only $15.00 per week, when you order your ad online. tors Law (ORS 671) Debris Removal r equires a l l bu s i - FIND YOUR FUTURE 745 nesses that advertise HOME INTHE BULLETIN JUNK BE GONE Homes for Sale to p e r form L a n dTO PlaCe yOur Bulletin CId With CI PhOtO, ViSit WWW.bendbulletin.COm, I Haul Away FREE scape C o n struction Your future is just a page click on "Place an ad" and follow these easy steps: BANK OWNED HOMES! which incl u des:away. Whether you're looking For Salvage. Also FREE List w/Pics! Cleanups & Cleanouts p lanting, deck s , for a hat or a place to hangit, fences, arbors, Mel, 541-389-8107 The Bulletin Classified is www.BendRepos.com bend and beyond real estate w ater-features, a n d your best source. 20967 yeoman, bend or Pick a category (for example — pets or transportation) installation, repair of Every day thousandsof irrigation systems to Cascade mou n tain and choose your ad package. Handyman be licensed with the buyers and sellers of goods views in R e dmond, and services do busi n ess in Landscape Contracwith quality construcERIC REEVE HANDY Write yOur ad and uPIOad yOur digital Photo. t ors B o a rd . Th i s these pages.Theyknow tion, near Golf course. SERVICES. Home & 4-digit number is to be you can't beat The Bul l etin M ove-in Read y ! Commercial Repairs, Classified Section for included in all adver$287,000. Carpentry-Painting, tisements which indi- selection and convenience MLS ¹201 205860. Create your account with any major credit card, Pressure-washing, cate the business has - every item isjust a phone Cec DeClerck, Princ. Honey Do's. On-time call away. a bond, insurance and Broker, Coldwell promise. Senior All ads appear in both print and online. Banker Mayfield Discount. Work guar- workers c ompensaThe Classified Section is Realty anteed. 541-389-3361 tion for their employeasy to use. Every item Please allow 24 hours for photo processing before your ad appears in print and online. ees. For your protec- is categorized andevery 541-420-0548 or 541-771-4463 tion call 503-378-5909 cartegory is indexed onthe Bonded 8 Insured Where can you find a or use our website: CCB¹t 81595 section's front page. www.lcb.state.or.us to helping hand? To place your photo ad, visit us online at check license status Whether youare lookingfor From contractors to I DO THAT! before co n t racting a home orneed aservice, www.bendbulletin.com yard care, it's all here Home/Rental repairs with th e b u s iness.your future is in the pagesof The Bulletin Classified. Small jobs to remodels Persons doing landin The Bulletin's or call with questions, 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com Honest, guaranteed scape maintenance "Call A Service work. CCB¹151573 do not require a LCB The Bulletin Professional" Directory Dennis 541-317-9768 license. 541-382-4464

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L e g al Notices

LEGAL NOTICE ADOPT-Abundance of love to offer a Nissan Sentra, 2012child in stable, se12,610 mi, full warranty, cure 8 nu r t uring PS, PB, AC, & more! home. Contact Jen $16,000. 541-788-0427 (800) 571-4136. LEGAL NOTICE Bonneville Power $4750. 541-362-5559 or next employee? Administration 541-663-6046 1/3 interest i n w e l lPlace a Bulletin help FY13 Wood Pole equipped IFR Beech Bowanted ad today and Replacement Project nanza A36, new 10-550/ FIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, Chevy Astro reach over 60,000 for the Big Eddyprop, located KBDN. Porsche 911 1974, low Cargo Van 2001, readers each week. door panels w/flowers Buick Enclave 2008 CXL Redmond No. 1 $65,000. 541-419-9510 mi., complete motor/ & hummingbirds, pw, pdl, great cond., Your classified ad Transmission Line AWD, V-6, black, clean, trans. rebuild, tuned business car, well will also appear on white soft top & hard USDA - Forest Service mechanicall y sound, 82k Executive Hangar suspension, int. 8 ext. Crooked River National maint'd, regular oil top. Just reduced to miles. $21,995. bendbulletin.com at Bend Airport refurb., oi l c o o ling, changes, $4500. which currently re$3,750. 541-317-9319 Grassland Call 541-815-1216 (KBDN) shows new in 8 out, Jefferson Please call or 541-647-8483 ceives over 1.5 mil60' wide x 50' deep, County, OR Chevy Suburban LTZ p erf. m e ch. c o n d. 541-633-5149 lion page views ev30-day Comment w/55' wide x 17' high 2007, 4x 4 , l e ather, Much more! ery month at no Period bi-fold door. Natural m oonroof, bac k u p 1994 Chev full size van, $28,000 541-420-2715 extra cost. Bulletin gas heat, office, bathsensors, 3rd row seat, seats 7, sleeps 2. SuPORSCHE 914 1974, Classifieds Get ReThe Lookout Mounroom. Parking for 6 running boards, low per condition, 128K, Roller (no engine), tain Ranger District, sults! Call 385-5809 c ars. A d jacent t o mi., Vin ¹ 22 8 9 19 famous 35 0 m o tor, lowered, full roll cage, or place your ad Ochoco National ForFrontage Rd; g reat Was $30,999. Now runs & looks like a mil- 5-pt harnesses, racon-line at est, is proposing to visibility for a v iation Ford Galaxie500 1963, $28,788. lion! Ready for fun & ing seats, 911 dash 8 allow bendbulletin.com Bonn e ville bus. 1jetjockoq.com 2 dr. hardtop,fastback, travel. Limit 1! $4000. instruments, d e cent Power Administration B A R U. 541-948-2126 390 v8,auto, pwr. steer 8 /Q®s UFUllARIFBIIFFF DON Bob, 541-318-9999 shape, v e r y c o ol! to replace twelve deradio (orig),541-419-4989 2060 NE Hwy 20• Bend Chevy Lumina 1 9 95 $1699. 541-678-3249 teriorating wood poles Ford Mustang Coupe 877-266-3821 Fifth Wheels 7 -pass. v a n wit h on its Bi g E d dy 1966, original owner, Dlr ¹0354 Redmond No . 1 Toyota Camrys: V8, automatic, great Chevy Tahoe LS 2001 p ower c h a i r lif t , 5th wheel tailgate, fits Transmission Line on $1500; 1989 Dodge 19S4, $1200 obo; shape, $9000 OBO. Chevy 8 GMC, like new, 4x4. 120K mi, Power Turbo Van 7 - pass. the Crooked R iver i: F'++N¹EF 530-515-8199 1985 SOLD; $99. 541-548-8415 seats, Tow Pkg, 3rd has new motor and National Grassland. ONLY 1 OWNERSHIP 1986 parts car, row s eating, e x tra t rans., $1500. I f i n People Look for Information SHARELEFT! Ford Ranchero $500. tires, CD, pnvacy tint- terested c a l l Jay The proposed action About Products and Economical flying in ing, upgraded rims. 503-269-1 057. 1979 Call for details, description and other Services Every Daythrough your ow n C e ssna with 351 Cleveland Fantastic cond. $7995 541-548-6592 information are avail172/180 HP for only 975 The Bulletin Classifieds Contact Tim m at modified engine. able for review at the $ 10,000! Based a t 541-408-2393 for info Body is in Automobiles Toyota Corolla 2004, Ochoco National ForBDN. Call Gabe af or to view vehicle. excellent condition, est office in Prineville, auto., loaded, 204k Professional Air! $2500 obo. Audi A4 2011 Quattro miles. orig. owner, non Oregon or on the In541-388-0019 541-420-4677 Ford Explorer 4x4, at P remium, 31 k mi . smoker, exc. c ond. ternet 1991 - 154K miles, ¹132011. $32,995 $6500 Prin e ville http://data.ecosystemrare 5-speed tranny management.org/ne503-358-8241 Trucks & & manual hubs, paweb/project list.php Carri-Lite Luxury 2009 Heavy Equipment clean, straight, evVW Beetle, 2002 ?forest = 110607. A d by Carriage, 4 slideOregon Ford T-Bird 1966 eryday driver. Bring 5-spd, silver-gray, black ditional i n f ormation AutoSnuree outs, inverter, satel390 engine, power 2200 dollar bills! leather, moonroof, CD, regarding this action lite sys, fireplace, 2 everything, new paint, 541-598-3750 Bob, 541-318-9999 loaded, 115K miles, can b e obt a i ned flat screen TVs. 54K original miles, IA I aaaoregonautosource.com well-maintained f romHeidi Scott , —i runs great, excellent $60,000. (have records) Buick Lucerne CXL Ochoco National For541-480-3923 cond. in 8 out. Asking GMC Envoy 2002 4x4, extremely clean, 2009, $12,500, low est, 3160 NE T hird $8,500. 541-480-3179 Loaded,144K, $6,450 $4850 obo. CHECK YOUR AD low miles; 2000 Buick Street, Prineville, OR (218) 478-4469, Matt 541-546-6920 Diamond Reo Dump Century $2900. You'll 97754, or v i a t e l eTruck 19 7 4, 12 -14 GMC yukon Denali not find nicer Buicks phone at yard box, runs good, 2003, leather, moonOne look's worth a Say Fgoodbuy 541-416-6500. $6900, 541-548-6812 roof, premium wheels, thousand words. Call to that unused 3rd row. Very nice. Bob, 541-318-9999. This comment period Vin ¹128449. for an appt. and take a item by placing it in G K E A T is being provided purPlease check your ad GMC rrEfon 1971, Only Was $15,999. drive in a 30 mpg. car The Bulletin Classifieds suant to the March 19, on the first day it runs $19,700! Original low Now $13,799. * * * 2012, judicial ruling in to make sure it is cormile, exceptional, 3rd S equoia Fore s t Hysfer H25E, runs ©+ s U SUBhRUOPBFFD BARU. rect. Sometimes inowner. 951-699-7171 CHECK YOURAD CON 5 41 -385-580 9 well, 2982 Hours, Keeper v. Tidwell (orPlease check your ad structions over the 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend on the first day it runs der issued by the U. $3500, call phone are mis877-266-3821 541-749-0724 S. District Court for to make sure it is corunderstood and an error Dlr ¹0354 Looking for your the Eastern District of rect. Sometimes incan occurin your ad. next employee'? California in Case Civ. If this happens to your GMC yukon XL 1500 s tructions over t h e Place Bulletin help No. CV F 11-679 LJO ad, please contact us 2007, l eat h e r, 4 phone are misunder- wanteda ad today and DLB) and i s b e ing bucket seats, 3rd row stood and an e rror the first day your ad Plymouth B a r racuda reach over 60,000 conducted s i m ultacan occur in your ad. appears and we will seat, moonroof. 1966, original car! 300 readers each week. neously w i t h the Vin ¹305958. If this happens to your be happy to fix it 360 V8, centerYour classified ad scoping period for this as soon as we can. Peterbilt 359 p o table hp, Was $29,999. ad, please contact us lines, (Original 273 will also appear on proposed action. The water t ruck, 1 9 90, eng the first day your ad If we can assist you, Now $26,888. 8 wheels incl.) bendbulletin.com opportunity to c o m3200 gal. tank, 5hp 541-593-2597 appears and we will please call us: r©~S U BARU. which currently rement ends 30 days pump, 4-3" h oses, be happy to fix it as 541-385-5809 over 1.5 milfollowing the date of The Bulletin Classified camlocks, $ 2 5,000. PROJECT CARS: Chevy 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend s oon as w e c a n . ceives lion page views 541-820-3724 publication of the le2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) 8 877-266-3821 Deadlines are: Weekevery month at gal notice in The BulChevy Coupe 1950 days 12:00 noon for Dlr ¹0354 925 no extra cost. Bulleletin, Bend, Oregon. rolling chassis's $1750 next day, Sat. 11:00 Honda CRY 2005, tin Classifieds Utility Trailers This decision is subea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, a.m. for Sunday; Sat. 4WD, moonroof, alloy 12:00 for Monday. If Get Results! Call ject to appeal pursucomplete car, $ 1949; wheels, very clean. 385-5809 or place ant to Forest Service Cadillac Series 61 1950, we can assist you, Vin ¹027942. your ad on-line at 2 dr. hard top, complete regulations at 36 CFR please call us: Fleetwood Wilderness Was $12,799. bendbullefin.com 215. Appeals must w/spare f r on t cl i p ., 541-385-5809 36', 2005, 4 s l ides, Big Tex LandscapNow $10,988 $3950, 541-382-7391 meet the content reThe Bulletin Classified rear bdrm, fireplace, ing/ ATV Trailer, quirements of 36 CFR dual axle flatbed, ©s UB A R U. AC, W/D hkup beauDON'T IISS IHI S HefCZCar Sal e s 215.14. Only individuChevrolet Lumina O F BE N D 7'x16', 7000 lb. tiful u n it ! $ 3 0 ,500. als or o rganizations 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend 1997 4-door, 541-815-2380 GVW, all steel, VW Karman Ghia who submitted com877-266-3821 One owner, low mile$1400. ments or expressed 1970, good cond., Dlr ¹0354 age, clean interior. 541-382-4115, or new upholstery and a n interest i n t h e Tires, body, paint in 541-280-7024. Jeep Li berty 2 0 07, convertible top. p roject d uring t h e good condition. Nav., 4x4, l e ather, 2011 Ford FocusSE comment period may $10,000. $3050. loaded. Moonroof. Auto, FWD, Clean 931 541-389-2636 appeal. C o m ments 541-350-3109 Vin ¹646827. ¹198308.................$11,777 s ubmitted ano n y K omfort 25' 2 0 06, 1 Automotive Parts, 2007 Mitsiibishi Was $16,999. m ously will b e a c slide, AC, TV, awning. Service 8 Accessories Endeavor LS — AW D, 3.8L Now $13,488. Chrysler PT Cr u iser cepted and c o nsidNEW: tires, converter, nice & affordable 2006, au to, pw, pl, V6, ered; however, those batteries. Hardly used. ¹072795A..............$1 2,259 4j@sU B A R U. (4) 195/65R-15 crus, tilt, tinted win- 2011 SuzukiSX4 who o n l y sub m it $15,500. 541-923-2595 used tires, $50. dows, Vin ¹ 2 24778. a nonymous com 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend 4 Dr Sedan, auto, low miles, 541-388-5696 W as $ 7,999. N o w great fuel saver! 877-266-3821 ments will not have $5,999. VW Thing 1974, good standing to appeal the 4 M i chelin s t udless Dlr ¹0354 ¹302264.................$1 2,777 snow tires. 175/70/13. cond. Extremely Rare! 2010 ChevyCodalt 1U' subsequent decision Jeep Wrangler X S UBA R U . 4-Dr Sedan, AT, PL, PW, CD, Only built in 1973 & under 36 CFR Part d: $125. 541-420-9989 1 974. $8,000 . 2008, 4x4, auto, hard 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend Skip the Pumps 215. NEED HOLIDAY $$$? 541-389-2636 top, nice! ¹224786...........$12,895 877-266-3821 MONTANA 3585 2008, We pay CASH for Vin ¹616638 2011 Kia Rio LX Written, fac s imile, Dlr ¹0354 exc. cond., 3 slides, Junk Cars & Trucks! 4-Dr Sedan, AT,Super Fuel $23,259 hand-delivered, oral, king bed, Irg LR, Arc- Also buying batteries 8 SaverandPRICEDTON/OVE! Pickups and electronic com¹960522 ............ $1 3,235 tic insulation, all opcatalytic converters. • m ents will b e a c 2011 SuzukiSX4 tions $37,500. Serving all of C.O.! OF BEND cepted. Written com4-Dr Sedan, AT,LowMiles, 541-420-3250 ~ Call 541-408-1090 541-647-2822 ments m u s t be Great Fuel Saver! HertzBend.com submitted to the Re¹302264 ............ $1 3,259 NuWa 297LK H i tchDLR4821 2005 HondaCR-V sponsible Off i c ial, Hiker 2007, 3 slides, Antique & Chrysler Sebring2006 4x4 Mid-Sized SUV,AT, Ranger Slater Turner, 32' touring coach, left Jeep Wrangler X 2008, Fully loaded, exc.cond, 4-Dr Classic Autos Nicely Equipped at the Ochoco Nakitchen, rear lounge, unlimited, 4 dr., runvery low miles (38k), ¹010903 ............ $1 3,495 Ford 250 XLT 1990, tional Forest address. many extras, beautiful ning boards, premium always garaged, 6 yd. dump bed, 2011 Hyundai Accent GLS Comments submitted c ond. inside 8 o u t , wheels, hard top, very transferable warranty 4-Or Sedan,AT,Super FuelSaver 139k, Auto, $5500. $32,900 OBO, Prinevvia fax should be sent clean. Vin ¹ 5 72535. 541-410-9997 incl. $8300 ¹615414 ............$13,995 ille. 541-447-5502 days to541-416-6695. Was $25,999. Now 541-330-4087 2011 Mazda 3 ISport & 541-447-1641 eves. 1921 Model T C omments ca n b e $22,999. 4 Cyl, auto Delivery Truck filed electronically at: ¹422170.................$14,259 Take care of ~©~sU BARU. comments-pacificRestored & Runs 2012 Nissan Versa 4-er northwest-ochocoOfs Sedan, AT,CVTTransmission, $9000. your investments 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend 1.6 ii, Super Fuel Saver! .fed.us. Ele c tronic 541-389-8963 877-266-3821 with the help from ¹816523 ............$14,259 c omments must b e Dlr ¹0354 Ford F150 Lariat 4x4 2011 Dodge Caliber Sport submitted as part of The Bulletin's AT, PW, PL, CD, Alloys 2010, tow pkg, chrome Mercedes Benz C230 the e-mail message or Pilgrim 27', 2007 5th "Call A Service ¹173075 ............ $14,595 pkg + run brds, Ithr, ga- 2005, Auto, l eather, as an attachment in wheel, 1 s lide, AC, raged,1 owner,35,600 mi, tinted windows, RWD, Professional" Directory 2009 Kia Sorrento LX plain text (.txt), MiTV,full awning, excell lr SUV, AT, 4x4, Ni c el y Equi p ped $25,500 firm. Call after 6 Vin ¹656660. Call for crosoft Word (.doc), lent shape, $23,900. if878422A ............ $14,995 pm,541-546-9821 Culver. rich text format (.rtf), .~ - ' *N f Price. 2011Toyota Corolla LE Ford Crown V!c. or portable document Chevy C-20 Pickup 4-Dr Sedan, AT,Power Options, S UBA R U . 1997 4 door, 127k, format (.pdf). E-mails Ford F250 2002 Great on Fuel, Solid, Reliable 1969, all orig. Turbo 44; FUBhRUOPBFND CON d rives, runs a n d Supercab 7.3 diesel, 2060 NE Hwy s ubmitted t o ad¹606419 .............. $14,995 auto 4-spd, 396, model 20 • Bend looks great, extra dresses other than the 130,000 miles, great 2009 ChevyHHR CST /all options, orig. 877-266-3821 set of winter tires on shape with accesso4-0r, AT,VeryLowMiles one listed above, or in owner, $22,000, Dlr ¹0354 rims, only $3000. ¹51 7726 ............. $14,995 f ormats other t h a n 541-923-6049 ries. $13,900. 541-771-6500. 2010 Kia Sedorta LX 541-923-0231 day or Mitsubishi Endeaver those listed, or conPilgrim In t e rnational j Auto, nice Ean, sporty taining viruses, will be 541-923-2582 eves. LS 2007, AWD, 3.8L ¹51 33401...............$1 8,495 2005, 36' 5th Wheel, rejected. Th e office V6, nice and afford2012 Mitsubishi Eclipse Model¹M-349 RLDS-5 90II'I IISS THIS hours for those subable. Vin ¹72795A GS Sport - Auto,convertible, Fall price $ 2 1,865. mitting han d -deliv$12,259 fuelefficient 2.4 4 cyl. 541-312-4466 ered comments are Ford Crown V i ctoria ¹002210..............E.$17,995 Ford F250 XLT 4x4 am - 430 p m Chevy Wagon 1957, 1995, LX sedan, 4 dr., 2008 Subaru Tribeca LTD 800 Need help fixing stuff? L ariat, 1990, r e d , Monday through FriOF BEND 4-dr., complete, V8, o r ig . ow n e r, AWD, Auto, Fully loaded Call A Service Professional 80K original miles, day, excluding holi.. $19,495 541-647-2822 $7,000 OBO, trades, 70,300 mi., studs on, ¹412244 .. find the help you need. 4" lift with 39's, well d ays. Or a l c o m please call HertzBend.com reat condition. 2008 Jeep Wrangler X www.bendbulletin.com maintained, $4000 ments m u s t be 541-389-6998 DLR4821 3000. 541-549-0058. 4x4, auto, hard top, nice obo. 541-419-5495 ¹61 6638.................$23,259 provided at the ReNissan Ar mada S E Hyundai Sonata 2012, 2006 DodgeRam1500 sponsible Official's ofonda Civic I X 2006 2007, 4WD , a u t o , Sedan, 4 dr., auto, Mega Cab - 4x4Hemi, fice during n ormal FORD RANGER X LT -dr sedan, exc. cond, lifted, great eyeball b usiness h ours i n 1995 Ext. cab 2WD 5 l eather, D VD , C D . CD, bluetooth, pw, pl, ¹261874.................$24,995 1K miles, AC, p.s, dr Was crus, tilt, low mi. Must 2009 Lincoln MKF person or vi a t e lespeed, with car alarm, Vin¹700432. & windows, prei In 12 DAYS! ocks 99 9 . Now See! Vi n ¹ 3 2 2715. V6 DuratBDEngine, beautiful phone at CD player, extra tires $16, ium wheels, new "The Bulletin Was $19,999. Now car, super clean, low miles 541-416-6500. tudded tires, chains, on rims. Runs good. $14,788. I Clas s ifieds M/FM -CD, all records I Clean. 92,000 miles © s ¹633946.................$25,189 UBA R U . $17,988. 2009, 24-40 mpg,• It is the responsibility o n m o t or . $2 6 0 0 2011Toyota TacomaTRD got it done!" rom © s UBA R U . ust sell! $12,500/offer. 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend OOBbleCab,4X4,Only17km ileS of persons providing OBO. 541-771-6511. s41-xxx-xxxx iJeffL. comments to submit 877-266-3821 2060 NE Hwy 20• Bend ¹078811.................$29,947 Dlr ¹0354 them by the close of 877-266-3821 Through t 2/06/1 2 the comment period. Allvehiclessubject io prior sale,does Dlr ¹0354 I

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What are you looking for? You'ii find it in

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541-385-5809

Legal Notices • LEGAL NOTICE

IN

THE

CIR C U IT

C OURT FOR T H E STATE OF OREGON I N AND FO R T H E C OUNTY OF D E SC HUTES, WE L L S FARGO BANK, NA, its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff, v. DEANNA SILSBEE; NEWPORT HILLS HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIAT ION, I N C. , A N D OCCUPANTS OF THE PRE M ISES, Defendants. Case No. 1 1CV0901. SUM MONS BY PUBLICATION. TO THE DE-

Legal Notices LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING

CM/GC FINDINGS

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pursuant to ORS 279C.335 that a public hearing for the purpose o f ta k i ng comments on the draft f indings for a n e x e mption f ro m th e competitive b i d ding r equirement will b e held on the 18th day of December 2012 at 5 30 p m . in the C onference Ro o m 116 of the Campus FENDANTS: C enter, 2 60 0 N W DEANNA SILSBEE; College Way, Bend, AND O C C UPANTS O regon. Th e p roOF THE PREMISES: p osed bidding e x In the name of t he emption i s for a State of Oregon, you CM/GC (Construction are hereby required to Manager/General appear and answer Contractor) contractthe c omplaint f i led i ng method for t h e a gainst you i n t h e C entral Orego n above-entitled C ourt Community C o llege and cause on or be- Residence Hall buildfore the expiration of ing currently in de30 days from the date sign. of the first publication of this summons. The This is a public meetdate of first publica- ing and any person tion in this matter is may appear and disNovember 16, 2012. cuss th e p r oposed If you fail timely to ap- findings with College pear an d a n swer, officials at that time. Plaintiff will apply to Copies of the findings the abo v e -entitled are available in adcourt for t h e r e lief vance of the meeting prayed for in its com- by contacting Pat Nelplaint. This is a judi- son at 541-330-4363 cial foreclosure of a or by emailing pneldeed of trust in which son Ococc.edu the Plaintiff requests that the Plaintiff be P ublished i n B end allowed to foreclose B ulletin an d D a i ly y our interest in t he Journal of Commerce following d e s cribed on Friday, November real property: LOT 83 30 and Tuesday, DeOF FOREST HILLS cember 11, 2012. PHASE I , DESLEGAL NOTICE CHUTES C O UNTY, Notice of Public Hearing O REGON . C om - Meeting Type: Public monly known as: 1234 Hearing by Northwest 18th Street, Police Chief Jeff Bend, Oregon Sale as the Justice 97701-0000. NOTICE Assistance Grant TO D E F ENDANTS: manager. R EAD THESE P A Meeting Date: PERS CAREFULLY! Wednesday A lawsuit has been December 5, 2012. started against you in Meeting Time 9am. the abo v e-entitled Bend Police court by Wells Fargo Location: Department 555 NE Bank, NA , P l aintiff. 15th Street, Plaintiff's claims are Bend, Oregon. stated in the written Purpose: Public hear complaint, a copy of ing for written and oral which was filed with views to the City of the abo v e -entitled B end for t h e p r o F Court. You must ap- posed use of the 2012 pear" in this case or Justice A s s istance the other side will win Grant for the City of automatically. To Bend Police Depart"appear" you must file ment. You can with the court a legal q uestions or direct c o mpaper called a "mo- ments on the above tion" or "answer." The d ate by call i n g "motion" or "answer" 5 41.322.2992 fr o m must be given to the 9am to 9:30am. Concourt clerk or admin- tact f o r ad d i tional istrator within 30 days prior to this of the date of f i rst questions please call publication specified meeting Kim Morse herein along with the 541.322.2974. Accesrequired filing fee. It sible meeting informust be i n p r oper mation — this meeting form and have proof event/location is aco f service o n t h e cessible. Sign L anPlaintiff's attorney or, guage, int e rpreter if the Plaintiff does not service, assistive lishave a n at t orney, tening devises, mateproof of service on the rials in alternate forPlaintiff. If you have mat, such as Braille, any questions, you large print, electronic should see an attor- formats and any other n ey immediately. I f are y ou need h el p i n accommodations a vailable upon a d finding an a ttorney, vance request. Please you may contact the contact Kim Morse no Oregon State Bar's later than 12/4/12 at Lawyer Referral Ser- 541.322.2974 vice onl i n e at kmorse©ci.bend.or.us www.oregonstatebar. providing at least 3 org or by calling (503) days notice prior to 684-3763 ( in t h e the event will help enPortland metropolitan sure availability. area) or toll-free elseLEGAL NOTICE where in Oregon at NOTICE TO (800) 452-7636. This INTERESTED summons is issued PERSONS pursuant to ORCP 7. ROUTH CRABTREE The undersigned has been appointed PerO LSEN, P .C . E r i k sonal Representative Wilson, O SB ¹ E s t at e o f 095507, Attorneys for o f t h e Plaintiff, 511 SW 10th Wanda Eva Savage, Deceased, by the CirAve., Ste. 400, Portland, OR 97205, (503) cuit Court, State of 459-0140; Fax O regon, County o f 425-974-8190, e w ilDeschutes, P r obate No. 12-PB-0114. All son@rcolegal.com persons having claims LEGAL NOTICE against the estate are NOTICE IS HEREBY required to p r esent GIVEN that BRENDA t heir c l a im s wit h J. OWEN has been proper vouchers a ppointed a s P e r - within four m o nths sonal Representative from this date, to the of t h e es t at e of undersigned, or they R ONALD RAY D e may be barred. LEON, deceased, De- tional informationAddimay schutes County Cirbe obtained from the cuit Court Case No. court records, the un1 2PB0111. All p e r or the atsons having claims dersigned named below. against the estate are torneys and first pubrequired to p r esent Dated lished: November 30, the same within four 2012. IOLA JOLLEY, months from the first PERSONAL REPREdate of publication of SENTATIVE c/o t his notice a t 1 0 1 1 S TEVEN H . LEV Harlow Road, Suite ENTHAL, OSB 300, Springfield, Lane ¹023653, ATTORC ounty, Oreg o n NEY-AT-LAW, 855 97477, or they may be SW YATES DRIVE, barred. Any person SUITE ¹104, Bend, whose rights may be OR 97702. affected by these proLEGAL NOTICE ceedings may obtain Public Auction additional information Public Auction to be from the records of held on Saturday, Dethe abo v e-entitled Court or from the Per- cember 8th, 2012 at sonal Representative 11:30am at A-1 Westor from the Personal side Storage, 317 SW Columbia St., Bend, Representative's attorneys, Thorp, Purdy, Oregon 97702. (Units J ewett, U r ness 8 A-019 & E-074). Wilkinson, P.C. DATED and first pubTake care of lished: November 16, 2012. /s/ BRENDA J. your investments OWEN, Per s o nal with the help from Representative. The Buiietin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory


YOUR WEEICLY GUIDE TO CENTRAL OREGON EVENTS, ARTS AND ENTERTW

11

ET

EVERY FRIDAY IN THE BULLETIN NOVEMBER 30, 2012

MAG)~ IN C,, U

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Avariety of concerts, plays,ballets andparadesare headedyour way in the daysahead, PAGE10


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C ON T A C T

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012

insi e

US

EDITOR

Coverdesign by Greg Cross/The Bulletin

Ben Salmon, 541-383-0377 bsalmon@bendbulletin.com

HOLIDAY BAZAARS • 9

RESTAURANTS • 20

• Opportunities to shop for seasonal stuff

• A review of Alpenglow Cafe in Bend

C

COVER STORY • 10

OUT OF TOWN • 22

MUSIC • 3

ARTS • 12

REPORTERS Elise Gross, 541-383-0351 egross@bendbulletin.com David Jasper, 541-383-0349 djasper ts'bendbulletin.com Jenny Wasson, 541-383-0350 jwasson@bendbulletin.com

DESIGNER Althea Borck, 541-383-0331 aborck© bendbulletin.com

SUBMIT AN EVENT

• Saturday's Hoedown for Hunger will benefit Bend's Community Center • Feedback sees Jeremy Pelt play jazz • Keith Greeninger and Dayan Kai return to Sisters to play TheBarn • Four local bands play a warehouse show • Steven Roth comes to Astro Lounge

GO! MAGAZINE is published each Friday in The Bulletin. Please submit information at least 10 days before the edition in which it is printed, including the event name, brief description, date, time, location, cost, contact number and a website, if appropriate. Email to: events@bendbulletin.com Fax to: 541-385-5804, Attn: Community Life LLS. Mail or hand delivery: Community Life, The Bulletin 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, OR 97702

• McMenamins hosts Water Tower • A listing of live music, DJs,karaoke, open mics and more

541-382-1811

MUSIC RELEASES • 8

Take advantage of the full line of Bulletin products. Call 541-385-5800. ull

• Soundgarden, Ne-Yo,TheCoup, Christina Aguilera and Aerosmith

• mapping contemporary, an art gallery, pops up in Bend's Old Mill District • Pole Pedal Paddle logo contest opens • Redmond library seeks photos • 2nd Street holds "Working" auditions • Art Exhibits lists current exhibits

7

GAMING • 25 • A review of "Lego TheLord of the Rings" • What's hot on the gaming scene

OUTDOORS • 15

GOING OUT • 7

ADVERTISING

• "Singin' in the Rain" opens in Eugene • A guide to out of town events

• A roundup of holiday-themed stuff happening over the next few weeks

MOVIES • 26

• Great ways to enjoy the outdoors

• "Anna Karenina,""Killing Them Softly," "Wuthering Heights" and "The Collection" open in Central Oregon • "Sparkle,""Men in Black 3,""Lawless," "ParaNorman" and "Step UpRevolution" are out on Blu-ray and DVD • Brief reviews of movies showing in Central Oregon

CALENDAR • 16 • A week full of Central Oregon events

PLANNING AHEAD • 18 • A listing of upcoming events • Talks and classes listing

I •

entral Oregon communities continue to grow

Through the publication of Connections, The Bulletin

due to a nationally-recognized appreciation for wilL both define and profile the organizations the region's quality of life. From providing the most that make up this network. Connections basic needs of food, shelter and security, to creating

and maintaining positive social, educational, recreational and professional environments, Central

Oregon's nonprofit community is a foundation for our area'ssuccess and sustainability. Hundreds of organizationsand thousands of volunteers make up

this nonprofit network.

wilL provide readers with a thorough Look at nonprofitorganizations in Deschutes, Jefferson, and Crook Counties.

SALES DEADLINE: DECEMBER 7 CALL 5z'I1.382.1811 TO RESERVE YOUR SPACE TODAY.

ATTENTION CENTRAL OREGON NONPROFITGROUPS . I .

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• I

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The Bulletin is in the process of verifying and compiling a comprehensive list of nonprofit entities in Central Oregon. Please fill out this form to verify information in order to be considered for publication in Connections. Mail back to: The Bulletin, Attn: Chris Ingersoll, P.O. Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708.

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E-mailinformation to cingersoLLgbendbuLLetin.com or call 541-382-1811 ext. 404

Name ofNonprofi tGroup Contact Person Phone

E-mail

Nonprofi t Mission Statement/Purpose


GO! MAGAZINE PAGE 3

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012

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Submitted photos

• Annual roots-musicconcert to benefit Bend's Community Centeris setfor Saturday

If yougo What:Hoedown for Hunger

By David jasper The Bulletin

oedown for Hunger is a go. Slated for Saturday (see "If you go"), the annual concert benefits Bend's Community Center and features a bevy of bands of the Americana, folk and bluegrass persuasion.

Acts scheduled to play t hi s y ear's event include Back from the Dead, Bare Roots, Bend'N Strings, Bitterbrush, Felly Smith, Quincy Street, Bobby Lindstrom, Wild Rye, The Bluestarz, Joe Stevens, Nancy Stevens, Loren & Jay, Runway Ranch Band, Banjo Gallimaufrey, Uke U. Players, Greg & Glenn Topliff, Code 7,

Dry County Drifters and Riley's Range Benders. Also, if you're not sold on it yet: There's beer and chili. The benefit show helps raise funds for BCC's Feed the Hungry program, which providesmore than 2,000 meals forhomeless and low-income individuals each week.

When:1-9p.m.Saturday;seeschedule,Page5 Where:Bend's Community Center,1036 N.E. Fifth St.

Cost:$20 peradult, $10 for seniors and children ages 16 and under. Tickets available in advance. Contact:www.bendscommunitycenter.org or 541312-2069

Continued Page 5

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• New York City trumpeter JeremyPelt plays a dazzlingshow at Bend'sOxford Hotel

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012

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eoplekeep coming up to me and saying 'Thank you, thank you, thank you for coming to Bend, Oregon,'" trumpeter Jeremy Pelt said (OK, I'm paraphrasing him) shortly into his matinee show Saturday at the Oxford Hotel. "Like this is some terrible place to be." He laughed. And so did I and 110-ish other folks in the sold-out room. Because we knew what

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those people were really saying to him. Something along the lines of: "Thank you, thank you, thank

7

you for bringing righteous, superskilled, real-deal jazz all the way from the dimly lit clubs of New York City to our little burg." We get live jazz here in Central Oregon, but not a ton of it. And what we do get is almost always provided by fine players with a passion for the genre and enough skill to pull it off in front of an audience. But it's not often we get a player in town at the level of Pelt, a Berklee College of Music grad and celebrated contemporary trumpet player whose 2012 album "Soul" is already appearing near the top of critics' lists of the year's best jazz recordings. Indeed, in my mind, this was t he marquee headliner on t h e 2012-13 schedule for Jazz at the Oxford, a3-year-old concert series that endeavors to bring bigtime regional and national jazz artists to a basement hotel ballroom in downtown Bend. It seems to be working. As of last weekend, the series had sold out all of its shows. S o the local j azz f an s a r e happy, and the artists appear to be happy, too. During one of his booming between-song soliloquies Saturday night, Pelt talked of the pressure of performing in New York, where lovers of live jazz have solid options every night and you "have to work hard" to win 'em over. And he talked of the warm, fuzzy feeling he got from Bend, where it was clear that our jazz fans hunger for world-class entertainment.

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Joe KlineiThe Bulletin

The band for last weekend's Jazz at the Oxfordshows in Bend. From left are Tony Pacini, Jeremy Pelt, Ed Bennett and Mel Brown.

FEEDBACIC BY BEN SALMON .„~if, It sounded like a backhanded compliment, and it was. Pelt recognized that i mmediately. But it's also true. We're not the Big

Apple. It kind of felt that way Saturday, though. Backed by the Portland-based Mel Brown Trio (with whom the star of the show had only a day or two to rehearse), Pelt moseyed through around 90 minutes of music, clearly investing himself in his work, but in an

enjoyable, easygoing way. He closed his eyes while playing, but rarely furrowed his brow. When he sauntered off stage to let another guy solo, he did so at a snail's pace. And once, when

ic instrument, and (2) he alone is worth the price of admission. But the highlight of the night WWW.BENDBULLETIN.COM/FREQUENCY came midway through that first set, when Pelt stepped off the gas and took center stage for an achhe returned to his spot to rejoin warming it up for a stint on the i ngly beautiful version of " W e the fray only to find pianist Tony pitcher's mound. Kiss in a Shadow," a ballad from Pacini extending his solo, he just Later, Pelt led the group back the musical "The King and I." smiled and watched his band i nto world-beat territory w i t h It was here that the nuances mate's fingers fly. Dizzy Gillespie and Chano Pozo's of his playing really stood out. "Tin Tin Deo," a slinky Afro-Cu- Against the gentle sibilance of I n other words, this was a working vacation for Pelt, one ban jazz standard that sounds Brown's brushwork, the timbre of without a plan in advance or the like it could be the theme song Pelt's trumpet seemed to light up stress of an East Coast gig. for the coolest spy show on Tel- the dark room, and the silence of The night's two sets jumped emundo. Under Pelt's guidance, the audience provided ample oparound the jazz songbook. The it crescendoed into afrenzy of portunity to watch a master blow band — which also included its high-flying jazz acrobatics. and breathe and bend notes in a namesake Brown on drums and After an intermission, Pelt and way that left even the more seaEd Bennett on bass — began the band played more Dizzyand soned jazz fans around me shakwith the Latin-tinged hard bop some George and Ira Gershwin. ing their heads in awe. of Cedar Walton's "Bolivia," fea- They rollicked through a samba It was a sight to see, and so, so turing a Pacini solo filled with and closed with a C h r i stmas easy on the ears. Just as worldr hythmic e c centricities. J u st song. Brown took a couple of eye- class jazz is supposed to be. — Reporter: 541-383-0377, before he attacked the keys, the popping solos, proving once again pianist shook his arm a bit, as if that (1) the drums can be a melodbsalmon@bendbulletin.com

FIND MORE PHOTOS OFJEREMY PELT IN BEND AT


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FREQUENCY ISYOUR BEST BET FOR KEEPING UP WITH CENTRALOREGON'S MUSIC SCENE.

Point your favorite onlineportal to TheBulletin's music blog to find local musicnewsandconcert announcements, photos andvideos of shows, MP3sto downloadandother fun stuff! Follow along inthewaythat best suits your style:

g

wwwfacebook. com/frequencybiog Q wwwyoutube.com/frequencybiog

t wwwtwittercom/frequencybiog H www.bendbuiietin.com/frequency •

From Page 3 And if you're not sold now, you may want to see a doctor about your heartless condition. In recent months, as Bend's Community Center's fate hung in the balance due to some $110,000 in debts, so too did the future of Hoedown for Hunger. "When the (center) went through that upheaval period, there was a lot of uncertainty about whether the Hoedown would take place," said Jay Bowerman, a member of Quincy Street who helps organize acts participating in the event. Now, BCC is working toward financial stability, says interim executive director Linda Heatley. "Things are settling down. We're sticking to our core programs, like Feed the Hungry, our senior meal program, and Keep Them Warm," she said. To participants, feeding those who are hungry is of great importance, regardless of who's doing it, Bowerman said. "When (BCC) said, 'We're going to try to keep this thing going,' we communicated with the bands and let everybody tell us whether, in light of what had happened, they were still interested," he said. "The feeling was pretty much unanimous: that the cause is the right cause. Despite the issues that had gone on at the community center, they did want to continue to support feeding those

who really needed (it)." In previous years, the event had been held the first Saturday in October. This year, it was mid-October when Bowerman and other organizers got the word the center would

"We put the call out, and the bands say, Yeah, let's do it.' Everybody pretty much said, 'We'd love to keep doing this. If it's not (Bend's Community Center), the need is still there — we'll find a way.'" — Jay Bowerman, Quincy Street

continue operating. "We put the call out, and the bands say, 'Yeah, let's do it.' Everybody pretty much said, 'We'd love to keep doing this. If it's not (Bend's Community Center), the need is still there — we'll find a way,'" Bowerman said. The event functions a lot like a festival, he said. Bands rotate every 25 minutes (see schedule at right), "so there are people who will come for two orthree sets,because there's one band they really love. Other people will come and spend the whole time. There's just a constant ebb and flow in there." Heatley asks that those heading to the Hoedown consider bringing donations of warm clothing, survival gear and sleeping bags for the Keep

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Hoedownfor Hunger

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1 p.m. —UkeU. Players 1:25 p.m. —NancyStevens 1:50 p.m.— Banjo Gallimaufrey 2:15p.m.— Loren 8 Jay 2:40p.m.— Greg 8 Glenn Topliff 3:05 p.m. —Felly Smith

3:30p.m.— Backfrom theDead 3:55p.m.— Bobby Lindstrom 4:20 p.m.— Code 7 4:45 p.m.— Wild Rye 5:10 p.m.— Joe Stevens

5:35 p.m. —Bend'N Strings 6 p.m. —RunwayRanch Band 6:25 p.m. —Riley's Range Benders 6:50 p.m. —intermission 7:15 p.m. —Bitterbrush 7:40 p.m.— The Bluestarz 8:05 p.m.— Bare Roots 8:30 p.m.— Quincy Street

8:55p.m. — Dry County Drifters Them Warm program, to keep homeless in the area warm this winter. — Reporter: 541-383-0349, djasper@bendbulletin.com

"A VERY LAM8 CHOP HOLIDAY" Must-see for YoungKids!

DECEMBER 1 5

Lamb Chop Holiday Aaro n Meyer

7

Brand i Carlile

8-9 14 17

Mas tersingers' Ring Noel Tod d Haaby Mos c ow Boys Choir

21-23 A Christmas Carol

JANUARY 6-7

Cir q ue Ziva

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"Fargo"

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Find It All Online bendbulletin.com

T 0 Lou d on Wainwright III 8 Dar Williams

Tickets 8 Information ® 541-317-0700 g "The TowerTheatre" gP'www.towertheatre.org

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Keith Greeninger and Dayan Kai are familiar faces around Sisters' fertile folk scene. The two singer-songwrite rs have played i n t o w n many times, both as part of the Sisters Folk Festival and at other venues. They're longtime NorCal associates, too, whose warm, soulful styles and well-crafted songs about life mesh nicely together. And so , Satu r d ay's Greeninger/Kai show at The Barn in Sisters will be a special opportunity to watch a pair of musical kindred spirits do what they do best in a cool, intimate environment. It'll also be an increasingly rare opportunity, as Kai is moving to Hawaii next year. The two will play new material as well as old favorites, according to organizers. The Barn i s a l o w -key house-concert-style venue, so feel free to bring a beverage and snack if you'd like. Also, dress warmly, because, while The Barn is heated, it's also a 100-year-old barn.

Keith Greeninger and Dayan

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Kai; 7 p.m. Saturday, doors

found some minor success with a b and you've never gested donation; The Barn in heard of (Redstone Hall) beSisters, 68467 Three Creeks fore striking out on his own. Road; doo l eysbarn®gmail N ow, he's on a t ou r o f .com. the West, playing his classic brand of rock 'n' roll for Astro Lounge hosts potential converts. He's got a good pitch, too; Roth's murocker Steven Roth sic is clearly composed and This may be th e supercreated with a sharp eye for secretbargain show of the quality, but it's draped in a week. Steven Roth is an L.A.slightly gritty layer of organbased singer-songwriter who ic soul that keeps things from

open 6:30 p.m.; $15-$20 sug-

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Bunch of local bands at a warehouse!

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getting too shiny. It kinda reminds me of The Band if they came up soaking in some S outhern C a l ifornia s u n rather than huddling in coats in the Great White North. Speaking of which, this'll be a fine soundtrack to a night of staying warm inside the bar. Find more at www .stevenrothmusic.com. S teven Roth; 1 0 p . m . W ednesday; f r ee ; A s t r o Lounge, 939 N.W. Bond St., Bend; www.astroloungebend .com.

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Warehouse party! Warehouse party! P arty i n a warehouse! Four local bands are gathering at a warehouse in an industrial section of Bend tonight for an evening of music, beers and good times. Those bands are bouncy pop-punk combo Tuck and Roll, punchy reggae-rockers Strive Roots, swaggering altcountry band Harley Bourbon, and Central Oregon ska kingpins Necktie Killer, who appear to be somehow tied to said warehouse, if Facebook is to be believed. Maybe that's where they store their horn section when it's not in use. Four solid local bands in one spot with no neighbors nearby to complain about the noise. Be there! Necktie K i ller, H a r ley B ourbon, S t r ive Ro o t s and Tuck and Roll; 8 t o night; $7; NTK warehouse, 1330 N.E. First St., Bend; http://f.mp/warehouseshow. — Ben Salmon

Dec. 7 —The Hoot Hoots (power pop),The Horned Hand, Bend, www.reverbnation. com/venue/thehornedhand. Dec. 7 —Brandi Carlile (lovable roots),Tower Theatre, Bend, www. towertheatre.org. Dec. 7 —Huckle (rootsrock),Broken Top Bottle Shop 8 Ale Cafe, Bend, www. btbsbend.com. Dec. 8 —DJZ-Trip (mashup master),Domino Room, Bend, www.slipmatscience. com. Dec. 8 —Lost Bayou Ramblers (Cajun),The Horned Hand, Bend, www.reverbnation. com/venue/thehornedhand. Dec. 8 —Smagtown Poets (Christian),The Kilns Bookstore, Bend, www. thekilns.com. Dec. 12 —RainbowGirls (psychedelic stomp-folk), McMenamins Old St. Francis School, Bend, www. mcmenamins.com. Dec. 13 —Current Swell (roots-rock),The Horned Hand, Bend, www.reverbnation. com/venue/thehornedhand. Dec. 14 —Blackalicious (hip-hop),Liquid Lounge, Bend, www.liquidclub.net. Dec. 14 —The Lacs(cowboy hip-hop),The Annex, Bend, www.midtownbend.com. Dec. 15 —The Autonomics (blues-rock),The Old Stone, Bend, www.bendticket.com. Dec. 18 —SnoopDogg(hiphop),Midtown Ballroom, Bend, www.bendticket.com. Dec. 22-23 —Patrick lamb's Holiday Soul(jazz), The Oxford Hotel, Bend, www.jazzattheoxford.com. Jan. 18-19 —Karrin Agyson (jazz),The Oxford Hotel, Bend, www.jazzattheoxford. com. Jan.23— RedW antingBlue (indie rock),McMenamins Old St. Francis School, Bend, www.mcmenamins.com. Jan. 24 —Hot Buttered Rum (bluegrass),Domino Room, Bend, www.randompresents. com. Jan. 25 —Slightly Stoopid (reggae-rock),Midtown Ballroom, Bend, www. randompresents.com.


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THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012

going out Looking for something to do? Check out our listing of live music, DJs, karaoke, open mics and more happening at local nightspots. Find lots more at www.bendbulletin.com/events.

UWATER TOWERCOMESTO MCMENAMINS The hottest thing on the planet right now — next to the untouchable DJ/dubstep/dance-music bros, of

course — is old-timey, bluegrassy American roots music, which has suddenly found itself featured

on Grammy award shows andcar commercials. With down-homey names like TheAvett Brothers CL 0 13

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TODAY JAZCRU:Jazz; 5-8 p.m.; Faith, Hope and Charity Vineyards, 70455 N.W. Lower Bridge Way, Terrebonne. BROKENDOWNGUITARS: Rock 'n' soul, with Avery James & The Hillandales; proceeds benefit the Ronald McDonald House; $4; 7 p.m., doors open 6 p.m.; The Sound Garden,1279 N.E. Second St., Bend; 541-633-6804. TEXAS HOLD'EM:$40; 6 p.m.; Rivals Sports Bar, Grill 8 Poker, 2650 N.E. Division St., Bend; 541-550-7771. MARK &RON:Rock; 6:30 p.m.; Cross CreekCafe,507 SW 8th St.,Redmond; 541-548-2883. RUSSELLNUTE:Americana; 6:30 p.m.; River Rim Coffeehouse, 19570 Amber Meadow Drive, Bend; 541-728-0095. OUT OFTHEBLUE:Rock; 7:30 p.m.; Checkers Pub, 329 S.W. 6th St., Redmond; 541-548-3731. KARAOKE: 8 p.m.; Sandbagger Dinner House, 5165 Clubhouse Drive, Crooked River Ranch; 541-923-8655. WAREHOUSE SHOW:withNecktie Killer, Tuck and Roll, Harley Bourbon and Strive Roots; 8 p.m.; $7; NTK warehouse,1330 N.E. First St., Bend; http://j.mp/warehouseshow. (Pg. 6) OUT OFHAND BAND: Classicrock;8:30 p.m.; Northside Bar & Grill,62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; 541-383-0889. JACCUZI:Rock; 9:30 p.m.; $5; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-8331. DJ CODICARROLL:10p.m.; Astro Lounge, 939 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-388-0116. DJ STEELE:10p.m.; The Summit Saloon & Stage, 125 N.W. Oregon Ave., Bend; 541-749-2440.

SATURDAY HOEDOWN FORHUNGER: Local

bands and chili to benefit the center; $20, $10 students, seniors and children ages 16 and younger; 1-9 p.m.; Bend's Community Center, 1036 N.E. Fifth St.; 541-312-2069 or www. bendscommunitycenter.org. (Pg. 3) BOBBY LINDSTROM:Acoustic rock 'n' blues; noon-2 p.m.; Strictly Organic Coffee Co.,6 S.W .Bond St.,Bend; 541-330-6061. FREE POKERTOURNAMENT: 1 p.m.; Rivals Sports Bar, Grill & Poker,2650 N.E. Division St., Bend; 541-550-7771. ALLAN BYER: Folk; 6 p.m.; Cork Cellars Wine Bar & Bottle Shop,160 S. Fir St., Sisters; 541-549-2675. BOBBY LINDSTROM:Acoustic rock 'n' blues; 6 p.m.; Taylor's Sausage Deli 8 Pub,913 N.E.3rd St., Bend; 541-383-1694. MAI HYMANANDDAVEEHLE: Acoustic roots; 6 p.m.; Scanlon's, 61615 Athletic Club Drive, Bend; 541-382-8769. TEXAS HOLD'EMTOURNAMENT: 6:30 p.m.; Rivals Sports Bar, Grill 8 Poker, 2650 N.E. Division St., Bend; 541-550-7771. VALORI FARRELL: Acoustic guitar; 6:30 p.m.; River Rim Coffeehouse,19570 Amber Meadow Drive, Suite190, Bend; 541-728-0095. KEITHGREENINGER AND DAYAN KAI: Folk; $15-$20 suggested donation; 7 p.m.; The Barn in Sisters, 68467 Three Creeks Road; 775-233-1433 or dooleysbarn©gmail.com. (Pg. 6) MARK RANSOM &FRIENDS:Jams;7 p.m.; Parrilla Grill, 635 N.W. 14th St., Bend; 541-617-9600. R & R:Eclectic pop; 7 p.m.; portello winecafe, 2754 N.W. Crossing Drive, Bend; 541-385-1777. OUTOFTHEBLUE:Rock; 7:30 p.m.; Checkers Pub, 329 S.W. 6th St., Redmond; 541-548-3731. DON WE NOW OURGAY APPAREL PARTY:With live music, food and drinks, costume contests and

and Old Crow Medicine Show, modern-day string bands have captured the attention of folks

who might've cringed at the sound of abanjo two years ago. This is good newsfor acts like

prizes; proceeds benefit the Human Dignity Coalition; $5; 7:30 p.m.; SevenNightclub,1033 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-385-3320 or www. humandignitycoalition.org. THE MEN OF WORTH: Celtic folk; $15-$20suggesteddonation;8 p.m.; HarmonyHouse, 17505 Kent Road, Sisters; 541-548-2209. COMEDYSHOW:with Jim Mortenson, Doug Morgan and Stan Whitton; $6-$8; 8 p.m.; Hardtails Bar and Grill,175 N. Larch St., Sisters; 541-549-6114. GREGBOTSFORDTRIO: Jam-rock, with Travis Ehrenstrom; $5; 8 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing 8 Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-8331. STEADYRIOT: Hawaiian and reggae, with Positive Vibrations; 8 p.m.; Liquid Lounge, 70 N.W. Newport Ave., Bend; www.liquidclub.net. KARAOKE: 8 p.m.; Sandbagger Dinner House, 5165 Clubhouse Drive, Crooked River Ranch; 541-923-8655. KARAOKE WITH BIGJOHN: 8 p.m.; Rivals Sports Bar, Grill & Poker, 2650 N.E. Division St., Bend; 541-550-7771. OUTOF HANDBAND:Classicrock;8:30 p.m.; Northside Bar & Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; 541-383-0889. DJATL:10p.m.; Astro Lounge,939 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-388-0116. DJ STEELE: 10 p.m.; The Summit Saloon 8 Stage, 125 N.W. Oregon Ave., Bend; 54 I-749-2440.

SUNDAY POKER TOURNAMENT: 1 p.m.; Rivals Sports Bar, Grill & Poker, 2650 N.E. Division St., Bend; 541-550-7771. PAUL EDDY: Twang-pop; 3 p.m.; Strictly Organic Coffee Bar, 450 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Suite 400, Bend; 541-647-1402. LISADAE AND ROBERT LEETRIO:Jazz; 5 p.m.; Northside Bar & Grill,62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; 541-383-0889.

Portland's Water Tower, whose bio claims anarray of influences — punk, blues andCajunamong them — but whose sound, really, is old-timey,

bluegrassy American roots music. I mean, there are hints of that other stuff in there, but for the most part, Water Tower's irresistibly melodic

songs were madefor a front-porch pickin' session. Or, if you don't have one of those planned, adance party at McMenamins Old St. Francis School would

probably do. Thebandwill be there Wednesday evening. Details below.

TEXAS HOLD'EMTOURNAMENT: 5 p.l71.; Rivals Sports Bar, Grill 8 Poker, 2650 N.E. Division St., Bend; 541-550-7771. BILLKEALE:Popand folk;6 p.m.;5 Fusion 8 Sushi Bar, 821 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-323-2328. HILST & COFFEY: Chamber-folk; 7 p.m.; Broken Top Bottle Shop 8 Ale Cafe,1740 N.W. Pence Lane, Bend;541-728-0703.

MONDAY TEXAS HOLD'EMOR OMAHA: 4 p.m .; Rivals Sports Bar, Grill 8 Poker, 2650 N.E. Division St., Bend; 541-550-7771. KARAOKE: 6:30 p.m.; Northside Bar & Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; 54 I-383-0889. SONGS OF SUFFRAGE:Live folk music from the women's suffrage movement; proceeds benefit the Deschutes County Historical Society; $5; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-389-1813 or www.mcmenamins.com.

— Ben Salmon

TEXAS HOLD'EMOR OMAHA: 6 p.m .; Rivals Sports Bar, Grill 8 Poker, 2650 N.E. Division St., Bend; 541-550-7771. OPENMIC:6:30p.m.; M & JTavern,102 N.W. Greenwood,Bend;541-389-1410. DJ ANDKARAOKE:7 p.m.; Sandbagger Dinner House,5165 Clubhouse Drive, Crooked River Ranch; 541-923-8655. JEFF LESLIEBAND:Classic rock and blues; 7 p.m.; Northside Bar & Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; 541-383-0889. WATERTOWER: Newgrass; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; www. mcmenamins.com. KARAOKE: 9 p.m.; Liquid Lounge, 70 N.W. Newport Ave., Bend; 541-389-6999. STEVENROTH:Rock; 10 p.m.; Astro Lounge, 939 N.W. Bond St., Bend; www. astroloungebend.com. (Pg. 6)

THURSDAY

TEXAS HOLD'EMBOUNTY TOURNAMENT:6 p.m.;RivalsSports Bar, Grill 8 Poker, 2650 N.E. Division St., LIVETEXAS HOLD'EM OR OMAHA: 3 Bend; 541-550-7771. p.m.; Millennium Cafe, 445 S.W. Sixth LEROY NEWPORT'SBANJO JAM: St., Redmond; 541-350-0441. Bluegrass; 7 p.m.; River Rim TEXAS HOLD'EMBOUNTY Coffeehouse, 19570 Amber Meadow TOURNAMENT: 6 p.m.;RivalsSports Drive, Suite190, Bend; 541-728-0095. Bar, Grill & Poker, 2650 N.E. Division St., THE ROCKHOUNDS:Acoustic; 7 p.m.; Bend; 541-550-7771. Kelly D's, 1012 S.E. Cleveland Ave., UKULELEJAM:6:30 p.m .;Kelly D's, Bend; 541-389-5625. 1012 S.E. Cleveland Ave., Bend; OPEN MIC:8 p.m.; Northside Bar & 541-389-5625. Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; THE JZBAND: Rock;7 p.m .;GoodLife 541-383-0889. Brewing Co., 70 S.W.Century Drive, DISCOTHEQUE NOUVEAU: Alt100-464, Bend; 541-728-0749. electronica, house music, dubstep and more; 9 p.m.; The Blacksmith WEDNESDAY Restaurant, 211 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-318-0588. ACOUSTICOPENMIC: with Bobby Lindstrom; 6 p.m.; Taylor's Sausage • TO sUBMIT:Email events@bendbullevn.com. Deadline is 10 days before publication. Please Deli & Pub, 913 N.E. 3rd St., Bend; include date, venue, time and cost. 541-383-1694.

TUESDAY


PAGE 8 • GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012

musie releases Aerosmith

The Coup

" MUSIC FRO M ANO T H E R DIMENSION" Columbia Records If Aerosmith's definition of the sound of "another dimension" is indeed true, the world is a much less mystical place than we would like to believe. Rather than of-

"SORRY TO BOTHER YOU" ANTI- Records Oakland rapper Boots Riley doesn't have all that much competition when it comes to being the sharpest, wittiest, must musically expansive Marxist social critic on the block. But that doesn't mean the Coup's commander-in-chief is easing up on his band's sixth album and first since 2006's "Pick a

fering previously unimaginable

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o tones and visions, "Music From as SIIIIIf IBI fNIII illMII siie Another D i m ension" d e l ivers riffs, cliches, solos, yowls and a virtual banquet of the same oneBut there are only so many dimensional tropes A erosmith original combinations of blues has been offering for years. riffs and sexual boasts one can Mixed in, however, are a few deliver in a single lifetime. "Out gems that might be considered Go the Lights" features Tyler refworthy additions to the band's erencing the tired novelty shirt catalog were they offered without joke about "liquor in the front," such grand promises. and the same song includes the It's not that Aerosmith's first line,"roses are red," which Tyler studio album of all-new material follows with "my l ips on you." in 11 years doesn't rock. It's loud, And "Another L ast G oodbye" brash and proves that vocalist sounds like a "Weird Al" YankovSteven Tyler can still yelp (and oc- ic parody of i t s p ower ballad casionally sing), the dueling gui- "Dream On." tars of Joe Perry and Brad WhitWhatever dimension A erosford can still find big blues-based mith has claimed to visit, it cerriffs, and drummer Joey Kramer tainly wasn't a new one. — Randall Roberts, still hits hard, keeping pace with bassist Tom Hamilton. Los Angeles Times

Ne-Yo "R.E.D." Motown Records Ne-Yo has said that the followup to his coolly received 2010 concept album "Libra Scale" representsa kind of creative retrenchment — an effort "to just get back to the basics," as the R&B star recently told Vibe Vixen magazine. You get some of that from the first two songs on "R.E.D.," both of which Ne-Yo co-wrote with Shea Taylor, who also produced. " Cracks i n M r . P e r fect" a n d "Lazy Love" share an up-close

intimacy with tunes Taylor has made with Beyonce and Frank Ocean, and the album's third cut, "Let Me Love You (Until You Love Yourself), " seems designed to remind us of simpler times by recycling a portion of its title from the 2004 Mario hit that was one of Ne-Yo's first big songwriting successes. After that, though, "R.E.D." doesn't really stick to the idea of less is more. In "Don't Make 'Em Like You" the singer teams with Wiz Khalifa for a relatively bumptious hip-hop track, while " Forever Now" an d " Shut M e Down" extend Ne-Yo's flirtation with pulsating dance music. Tim M cGraw even joins him for a lightly country-fried duet in "She Is," repaying a favor Ne-Yo did McGraw on the latter's "Emotional Traffic." The sound narrows again in "Stress Reliever," another lovely Taylor production built atop a minimal deep-space drum beat. But it only cleanses your palate for more flavors to come. —Mikael Wood, Los Angeles Times

\L

Bigger Weapon." The Coup s t il l t e chnically consist of Riley and DJ Pam the Funkstress, but they stretch out further than ever into Sly StoneGeorge Clinton psychedelic-funk

Soundgarden

territory here. Riley raps over a lovely string arrangement in "Violet" and to the accompaniment of washboards and accordions on"We've Got a Lot to Teach You,

Here and there

— Dan DeLuca, The Philadelphia Inquirer

"KING ANIMAL" Feb. 6 —Arlene Schnitzer UniversalRepublic Records Concert Hall, Portland; www Soundgarden deftly acknowl.pcpa.com or 800-273-1530. edges its long absence — 16 years between studio albums — with the title of "Been Away stop-staN riff, both slow and fast Too Long," the opening track and first single from its new al- ones, is back in force with the bum, "King Animal." Later, in coiling, leaping, warped bluesthe glum and stately "Bones of rock of "Non-State Actor," the Birds," Chris Cornell, the band's getting-nowhere grind of "Blood singer, main lyricist and rhythm on the Valley Floor" and the zigguitarist, intones, "Time is my zagging rise and fall of "Worse friend till it ain't and runs out." Dreams." So are its moments But time has stood still, right- of quasi-Indian, quasi-Beatles f ully a n d t r i u mphantly, f o r drone, in "A Thousand Days Before" and "Black Saturday," and Soundgarden's music, which is still the moody, heaving, asym- the occasional spacey psychemetrical hard rock that made the delic interlude. band a trailblazer of grunge. And the band's morbid pesS oundgarden's gift f o r t h e simism has not been leavened

Christina Aguilera "LOTUS" RCA Records Maybe Christina Aguilera just needed something to overcome. Just when everythingseemed to be going right, Aguilera faced a series of high-profile stumbles, including a divorce, the movie clunker "Burlesque," a national anthem fiasco at the 2011 Super Bowl and her disappointing "Bionic" album. Of course, we all know "The Voice" judge is a fighter, and she ain't gonna stop. Her new album "Lotus" proves it. For "Lotus," Aguilera pulls to-

Cassius Green," and roots chanteuse Jolie Holland sings on "This Year." Riley sets his sights on trustfund kids in "Your Parents' Cocaine" and art-world faux rebels in "You Are Not a Riot." He's joined b y y o u nger-generation agitators Das Racist and Killer Mike on the populist closer "Wavip," an acronym for the kind-ofcorny sentiment that "we're all VIP." Not the strongest of Coup albums — 2001's "Party Music" still gets my vote — but a further step forward for a major artist.

CIIHISIIIIAAliUlsAli

lllil gether her strengths — the sass, the raw emotion, the big ballads and, most of all, her incredible voice — in a single stylish package for her most focused artistic

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by the years; the lyrics are full of referencesto blood, drowning and war. S oundgarden does not a d v ance beyond r eclaiming i t s proven strengths on "King Animal," but those strengths are substantial. — Jon Pareles, The New York Times

effort yet. The up-tempo dance stuff is fun, especially the updated disco of "Red Hot Kinda Love" and the playful "Make the World Move," which features "Voice" pal Cee Lo Green. Aguilera is at her best, though, when she gets to really belt a ballad she emotionally connects with, like "Blank Page" and the album's crowning achievement "Just a Fool," where she and fellow "Voice" judge Blake Shelton empty their broken hearts in a magnificentlysungbreakup song that should stand next to "Beautiful" as her career signature. — Glenn Gamboa, Newsday


GO! MAGAZINE + PAGE 9

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012

holi ay a zaars ONGOING HUMANE SOCIETYCHRISTMAS BOUTIQUE: Decorations, holiday clothing, ornaments and more; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.Monday-SaturdaythroughDec. 24; Humane Society of Redmond Thrift and Gifts, 1568 S. U.S. Highway 97, Redmond; 541-823-0882. SATURDAY MARKET:Handcrafted gift items, antiques, art and more; 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturday through Dec. 24; Bend Masonic Center,1036 N.E. 8th St.; 541-977-1737. ST. VINCENT DEPAULCHRISTMAS BAZAAR: Trees, ornaments, books, clothing and more: 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Monday-Saturday through Dec. 24; St. Vincent de Paul Thrift Store, 1616 S.W. Veterans Way, Redmond; 541-504-9840. HOLIDAYFAIRE:Local handcrafted gift items; 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Monday-Friday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday through Dec.16; Three Wind Shopping Center,445W. U.S. Highway20, Sisters; 54 I-595-6967. CHRISTMAS IN THECOUNTRY: Fresh Christmas trees, wreaths, a holiday market and more; 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday through Dec. 16; Smith Rock Ranch,1250 N.E. Wilcox Road, Terrebonne; www.pumpkinco.com or 541-504-1414. REDMOND'SBAZAAR: Handcrafted items, pet items, car items, home decor and more; 11 a.m.-6 p.m. TuesdaySundaythrough Dec.23;531N.W .Elm Ave.; 541-604-1367. HOLIDAYQUILTBAZAAR: Handcrafted quilts and quilted gifts by local artisans, wall hangings and more; proceeds benefit Quilts for Kids; 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Wednesday-Thursday, Nov. 28 through Dec. 22; The Porch, 243 ElmSt., Sisters; 541-410-4273. ART SALE: Works of student art; 1-4 p.m.Wednesday-Saturdaythrough Dec. 14; Central Oregon Community College, Pence Gallery, 2600 N.W.College Way, Bend; 541-383-7511. EVERGREEN BOUTIQUE: Food, art, handcrafted items and more; 10a.m.-5 p.m.Monday-SaturdaythroughDec.8; La Pine Square, 54538 N. U.S. Highway 97; 541-536-2170.

TODAY THE BESTLITTLE CHRISTMAS BAZAAR IN MADRAS: Personal, pet, home decor, baked items, Mary Kay and gourmetsalsa;9 a.m .-5 p.m .; 686 S.E. Tumbleweed Lane, Madras; 541-475-6746. COUNTRYCHRISTMASBAZAAR: Ornaments, metal art, Western decor, antiquesand more;9 a.m .-7 p.m.; First Baptist Church, 450 S.E. Fairview St., Prineville; 541-419-8637 or

541-480-8469. METOLIUSDEPOT HOLIDAY BAZAAR: Handcrafte d itemsand baked goods:9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Metolius Train Depot, 599 Washington Ave.; 541-279-0604. CHRISTMASBAZAARATTHEGREENS OF REDMOND:Holiday decor, trees, wreaths, florals, antiques, gifts, baked breads and more; 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; 4460 Trevino Court, Redmond; 541-548-7919. AWALKTOBETHLEHEMBAZAAR: Wreaths, apples, handmade crafts and a chili supper; 4-8 p.m.; Madras United Methodist Church, 49 N.E. 12th St.; 541-475-2150.

Submityourbazaar This is a list of holiday bazaars submitted to The Bulletin. A

list of each week's bazaars will appear in Friday's GO!

Magazine. • To submit a bazaar that

does not already appear, send information to communitylife© bendbulletin.com or mail it to The Bulletin, Holiday Bazaars, RO. Box6020, Bend, OR 97708.1nformation must be received no later than a week

before eachFriday's list.

SATURDAY AWALKTOBETHLEHEMBAZAAR: Wreaths, apples, handmade crafts and more; 9a.m.-noon; Madras United Methodist Church, 49 N.E.12th St.; 541-475-2150. THE BESTLITTLE CHRISTMASBAZAAR INMADRAS:Personal, pet, home decor, baked items and Mary Kay; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; 686 S.E. Tumbleweed Lane, Madras; 541-475-6746. CHRISTMASFOODFAIR: Traditional Scandinavian breads anddesserts, handcrafted items, chocolate and more, with lunch and pie; 9 a.m.-2 p.m.; Our Savior's Lutheran Church, 695 N.W.3rd St., Prineville; 541-447-1741. COUNTRYCHRISTMASBAZAAR: Ornaments, metal art, Western decor, antiques and more;9a.m .-4 p.m.; First Baptist Church, 450 S.E.Fairview St., Prineville; 541-419-8637 or 541-480-8469. CULVERTOPS COMMUNITY BAZAAR: Handcrafted items, jewelry and more; 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; Culver City Hall, 200 W. First Ave.; 541-546-4502. METOLIUSDEPOT HOLIDAY BAZAAR: Handcraf ted itemsand baked goods:9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Metolius Train Depot, 599 Washington Ave.; 541-279-0604. PRINEVILLE HOLIDAY BAZAAR: Handcrafted items with a $5 soupand breadlunch:9a.m .-4 p.m.;CrookCounty Christian School, 839 S. Main St., Prineville; 541-416-0114. SISTERSART WORKS HOLIDAY OPEN HOUSE: Wreaths, ornaments, wooden boxes, pet photos with Santa and more, proceeds benefit the pet food bank in Sisters; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Sisters Art Works, 204 W. AdamsAve.; 541-420-9695. ST. PATRICKCATHOLIC CHURCH CHRISTMASBAZAAR:Handcrafted items, furniture, decorations, baked goodsand more;9a.m .-4 p.m.;St. Patrick Catholic Church, 341 S.W. JSt., Madras; 541-420-4888. BAZAARAND FOODDRIVE:Local vendors, a raffle and acannedfood drive; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Smith Rock Community

Church, 834411th St., Terrebonne; 541-548-6933. WINTERBAZAAR:Handcrafted items, bakedgoods andm ore,proceeds benefit Girls Helping Girls; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Westside Village Magnet School, 1101 N.W. 12th St., Bend; 541-355-2000. CHRISTMASBAZAARATTHEGREENS OF REDMOND: Holiday decor, trees, wreaths, florals, antiques, gifts, baked breads and more;11 a.m.-5 p.m.; 4460 Trevino Court, Redmond; 541-548-7919. OLDE FASHIONEDCHRISTMAS BAZAAR: Handmade crafts and more; 11a.m.-5 p.m.; Crooked River Ranch, 5195 S.W. Clubhouse Road; 541-504-9158. HOLIDAYVILLAGE MARKET: Holiday crafts and food; noon-6 p.m.; Centennial Park, Seventh Street and Evergreen Avenue, Redmond;541-923-5191. CHRISTMASBAZAAR:Freegift wrap for children's $1 boutique, raffles and a silent auction; 3-8 p.m.; St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church 8 School, 2450 N.E.27th St., Bend; 541-382-3631.

SUNDAY HOLIDAYVILLAGE MARKET: Holiday crafts and food; noon-6 p.m.; Centennial Park, Seventh Street and Evergreen Avenue, Redmond;541-923-5191.

MADRASHOLIDAYMARKET: Produce, meats and cheeses, baked goods and handcrafted items; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Jefferson County Fair Complex, 430 S.W. Fairgrounds Road, Madras; 541-489-3239. SCANDINAVIANCHRISTMAS BAZAAR: Lefse, jams, special cookies and Scandia items; 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; Sons of Norway Hall, 549 N.W. Harmon Blvd., Bend; 541-447-3816. VINTAGEAT BENDBAZAAR: Handcrafted items, baked goods and more; 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; 611 N.E. Bellevue Drive, Bend; 541-389-0952. ZIONHOLIDAY BAZAAR: Homemade Thinkstock crafts and gifts, baked goods and more; NW CROSSINGHOLIDAY BOUTIQUE: proceeds benefit community projects; Handcrafted items, jewelry, fine leather 9 a.m.-3p.m.;ZionLutheranChurch, goods, gluten-free treats and more; 1113 S.W. Black Butte Blvd., Redmond; noon-4p.m.;2863 N.W. Crossing Drive, 541-306-9957. Suite 101, Bend; 541-408-6820. CENTRAL OREGONLOCAVORE GIFT FAIRE:Handcrafted items from local DEC. 7 artisans and more; 10 a.m.-6 p.m.; East Bend Plaza, 910 S.E. Wilson Ave.; CHRISTMASBAZAAR:Jewelry, 541-633-0674. stitchings, decorations and more; 9 POWELL BUTTEART SHOW AND SALE: a.m.-5 p.m.; Westside Church, 2051 Handcrafted items, art and more; 10 Shevlin Park Road, Bend; 541-382-7504. a.m.-4 p.m.; Powell Butte Community HOLIDAYBAZAAR: Decorations, Charter School, 13650 S.W. Highway wreaths, pottery, candles, scarves, 126; 541-419-9252. baked goods, hats, jewelry and more; SWEETGRASS LANEHOLIDAYART 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; 2632 N.W. Ordway Ave., SHOW:Jewelry, art, journals and more; Bend; 541-598-4617. 10 a.m.-2 p.m.; 60121 Sweetgrass Lane, Bend; 541-536-5682.

DEC. 8

A BIG DEAL CRAFT FAIR: Handcrafted items, childcare available; proceeds benefit the Deschutes County 4-H Program; admission $1 or one can of food;9 a.m.-7 p.m.;DeschutesCounty Fair & Expo Center, North and South Sister buildings, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541-548-6088. HOLIDAYBAZAAR: Decorations, wreaths, pottery, candles, scarves, baked goods, hats, jewelry and more; 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; 2632 N.W. Ordway Ave., Bend; 541-598-4617.

DEC. 9 A BIG DEAL CRAFT FAIR: Handcrafted items, childcare available; proceeds benefit the Deschutes County 4-H Program; admission $1 or one can of food;10a.m.-3 p.m.;DeschutesCounty Fair & Expo Center, North and South Sister buildings, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541-548-6088. SWEETGRASS LANEHOLIDAY ART SHOW:10a.m.-2 p.m.; Jewelry, art, journals and more; 60121 Sweetgrass Lane, Bend;541-536-5682.


PAGE 10 • GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012

eover story

Central Oregonspills overwith holiday-themed stuff to do By Ben Salmon • The Bulletin

n Central Oregon, the turn of the calendar from November to

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snow-riding implements tuned up. On the local arts-and-culture scene, it means it's time for the deluge of holiday-themed events. And this year is no different. Take a quickpeek at our event calendar on Pages 16-17 — go ahead, we'll wait — and let the growing list of Christmas-y d a nces, c o ncerts, theater productions, parades and more dazzle and/or frighten you, depending on your perspective. Here at GO! Magazine, we're ready tocelebrate the season by going out and feasting our eyes, ears and taste buds on all this area has to offer. So below is a roundup of holiday events happening between now and Christmas, and on Page 11 you'll find a little more info about some of the best stuff coming up in the next couple of weeks. Want more details'? Hit the aforementioned calendar and our Planning Ahead pages (18-19) and, of course, be sure to grab GO! Magazine each Friday between now and the big day, aka the end of all of this for another 11 months.

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< vem Greg Crossi The Bulletin

December is more than just a signal that you ought to get those This week • Grimes' Christmas Scene, a

huge display oflighted and mechanical Christmas decorations, runs daily (except Mondays and Tuesdays) through Dec. 24 at the Crook County Fairgrounds in Prineville. See the calendar for hours. • This weekend, the Central Oregon School of Ballet will put on three performances of the classic dance "The Nutcracker" at Bend High School. There are two shows on Saturday and one on Sunday. (And be sure to read Bulletin reporterDavid Jasper's story on the massive volunteer effort behind the production in Saturday's Community Life section.) •On Saturday, the 29th annual Festival of Trees will showcase decorated Christmas trees, which wil l b e a u ctioned, with proceeds benefitting the Hospice of Redmond. Also planned: live music, visits with Santa and an evening gala, all at the Deschutes County Fair & E x p o Center in Redmond. • Crooked River Ranch will kick off the season Saturday with its Olde Fashioned Christmas Celebration, which includes a parade, the lighting of the Christmas tree and a visit from Santa. • Sunday morning, you can continue the festivities at The Pine Tavern, which will host a breakfast with Santa Claus. Proceeds from the event will provide a meal and visit from Santa for foster families in the area. Reservations are requested.

Continued next page


eover story

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012

GO! MAGAZINE PAGE 11

From previous page • On Wednesday, Aaron Meyer — the energetic "concert rock" violinist — will perform holiday favorites and songs from his two Christmas albums at the Tower Theatre. Proceeds from the concert benefit M i ller Elementary Music/Arts Enrichment and the Family Access Network. • If you're a strong believer that Jesus is the reason forthe season, you might attend the Acoustic Christmas Tour o n T h u r sday night at the Christian Life Center in Bend. The tour features Christian acts Dara Maclean, Sidewalk Prophets and Sanctus Real playing unplugged holiday tunes.

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And beyond • Rootsy s i nge r -songwriter B randi C arlile p e rforms t w o Christmas concerts at the Tower Theatre on Dec. 7. • Bend Experimental Art Theatre puts on "It's A Wonderful Life," Dec. 7-9 and 13-16 at 2nd Street Theater. • The Cascade Brass Quintet and jazz singer Michelle Van Handel will do two holiday concerts in Bend and Redmond on Dec. 8-9. • T he Redmond S c h ool o f Dance presents "High Desert Nutcracker," Dec. 8-9 at Ridgeview High Schoolin Redmond. • Central Oregon Mastersingers and the Bells of Sunriver present their "Ring Noel" concert at the Tower Theatre, Dec. 8-9. • Cascade Horizon Band performs its annual Christmas concert Dec. 11 at the Bend Senior Center. • Operation Elf Bash, a holiday party, will go down Dec. 12 at Century Center in Bend. • The Sunriver Music Festival's Christmas Concert featuring the Chuck IsraelsJazz Orchestra is at Sunriver Resort on Dec. 14. • Bend Festival Noel brings live music, arts, crafts and more to the Athletic Club of Bend, Dec. 15-16. • The Moscow Boys Choir will sing a Christmas concert Dec. 17 at the Tower Theatre. • A production of D a vid S edaris' "The Santaland Diaries" will run Dec. 19-23 at 2nd Street Theater. • Cascades Theatrical Company presents "A Christmas Carol," Dec. 21-23 at the Tower Theatre. • Portland jazz musician Patrick Lamb will headline three holiday concerts at the Oxford Hotel on Dec. 22-23. • The Tower Theatre will host a Community Christmas Eve Service on Dec. 24. — Reporter: 541-383-0377, bsalmon@bendbulletin.com

Submitted photo

The Bells ofSunriver staydusy et's be honest:i ~ If you don't spend much time in a church or it's not !

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Christmas, ! you don't get a lot of opportunities to hear handbells. !

Which is too bad. Handbell music has a bit of a staid image, but when done well, it's beautiful and buoyant stuff, and not always of the formal, !

white-gloved variety. Just for fun, seekout handbell groups onYouTube and you'll find some pretty nontraditional stuff, including covers of Journey's "Don't Stop Believin'" and Blue Oyster Cult's "Don't Fear the Reaper." Submitted photo

he LITE 95.7 FM radio station just converted its format to all holiday

music all the time. Big-box stores havehadtheir seasonal decor out for weeks already. Christmas continues its creep ever forward.

But don't despair, becausethe true beginning of Central Oregon's festive seasonhappens this weekend in downtown Bend. At 6 tonight, revelers will gather at the corner of Wall Street and Newport

Avenue to watch the lighting of our town's official holiday tree. Therewill be live music, carolers, dance, andall-around good spirits. And Saturday at noon, the party will fan out across downtown for the

Bend Christmas Parade.This year's theme is "APicture Perfect Christmas." Bundle up.Buysomecocoa.WaveatSanta.Avoidthehorsepoopon the streets. Fun!

Anyway, one ofCentral Oregon's handbell groups — theBells of Sunriver — will be out and about over the next couple weeks, playing a handful of shows both on their own and with others. I wouldn't expect "Don't Fear

the Reaper," but chancesareyou'll hear lots of favorite holiday songs in a new way. On Dec. 7 at1 p.m., the group will perform at the Sunriver Area Public

Library, and then at11 a.m. Dec.10, they'll play the LaPine Public Library. Both concerts are free. Next weekend, the Bells will join the Central Oregon Mastersingers for

their "Ring Noel" concert at the TowerTheatre. Theshows are at7:30 p.m. Dec. 8 and 2 p.m. Dec. 9, and tickets are available through the venue. Finally, the group will be part of the "Bells & Bellows" Christmas con-

certs, along with organist Mark Oglesby. Thoseconcerts are scheduled for Dec. 14 at St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church in Bend and Dec. 15 at Zion Lutheran Church in Redmond. Both shows are at 7 p.m. and are free.

Mallory lewis and 'A VeryLamdChopHoliday' or years, Shari Lewis was known asthe voice behind (and the hand inside) the lovable puppet LambChop. But Shari passed away in1998, and these days, her

daughter Mallory continues her mother's legacy by keeping Lamb Chop"alive." On Saturday night, Lewis will bring to the Tower Theatre her "A Very Lamb Chop Holiday" show, starring Hush Puppy,

Charlie Horse and, of course, LambChop.Theshow includes Christmas and Hanukkah singalongs, the story of Kwanza in

rhyme and avideo messagefrom Shari Lewis. It begins at 6 p.m. andlasts an hour, giving families time 'I

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to get home and get little ones to bed, which is good because the Tower Theatre recommends the show for kids ages 5-10.

Tickets cost $12 for adults and $8 for children ages12 and younger, plus a $1fee for the Tower's historic restoration fund. Pick 'em up at the theater or at www.towertheatre.org. Submitted photo


PAGE 12 • GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3D, 2012

arts

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Sculpture, ceramics, mixed-media works and paintingscan be seen at mapping contemporary, a temporary gallery in the Old Mill District put together by Art in the High Desert, Atelier 6000 and High Desert Journal.

• The pop-up gallery in Bend'sOld Mill District is a collaborative effort By David Jasper The Bulletin

hree Bend arts organizations have pooled their energies and resources to curate a new, temporary — or, in re-

T

tail parlance, "pop-up" — gallery in the Old Mill District: mapping contemporary, a sort of art-love child of Art in the High Desert,

High Desert Journal and Atelier 6000 Printmaking Studio and Gallery, three outfits that know their contemporary art. Dave Fox, along with his wife, Carla, runs Art in the High Desert, an annual art festival held on the banks of the Deschutes River, just a j e weler's stone's throw from the space — former home

of Lahaina Galleries' Bend location — now occupiedby mapping contemporary. "The Old Mill came to us because they know we have a lot of connections with artists because of the (Art in the High Desert) festival," Fox said. "The space was going to be available and vacant for a while, and they wondered if

we wanted to put something together that was creative and fun for the holidays. "It's a huge project, obviously," Fox said, with a slight chuckle. By working with Elizabeth Quinn, managing editor of H igh D esert Journal, and Pat Clark, of Atelier 6000, the problem of putting together a gallery quickly, from scratch, became a little less daunting.

Continued next page

If yougo What:mapping contemporary When:11a.m. to 6 p.m.

Wednesdaysthrough Sundays, through Dec.30 Where:520 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Old Mill District, Bend

Cost:Free; prices of works vary Contact:541-419-9836


THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012

arts

GO! MAGAZINE PAGE 13

From previous page "We thought, 'You know, t his could be good for t h e whole c o nversation a b out creative things in our community.' It's something we're, of course, talking about all the time," Fox said. "I thinkpartnerships are just so key," he continued. "Plus, it lightens the load for everyone when you join together and clarify what we're trying to do, in the bigger sense. I think that's something the four of us — Carla, myself, Elizabeth and Pat, and others — (are) always looking at ways we can create a ... community feeling, and more ways to help creative people be known and to be involved in other things, other than being isolated in their studios." There's an almost staggering amount of artwork on display in the large, two-story space, open Wednesdays through Sundays till Dec. 30. Each of the organizations brought artists into the fold. "We started brainstorming artists that we knew that were local and regional, and then reaching a bit beyond that and into the Northwest," Fox said.

Are you a PPP logo designer? Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation and the sponsors of the Pole Pedal Paddle seek submissions from artists of all ages for the Pole Pedal Paddle Logo Contest. The Pole Pedal Paddle is a multisport event involving teams, pairs and individuals who alpine ski, cross-country ski, bike, run, kayak/canoe and sprint to the finish. The race will be held May 18. The logo design contest winner will receive $500, a commemorative plate from Earhart Studios and logo wear featuring the winning design. Deadline is5 p.m. Dec. 20. All art submissions will be displayed at th e d owntown branch of U.S. Bank from Dec. 21 through Jan. 2. The public will vote on the winning design, which will be announced in early January. Entrants should submit an electronic version of their submission, if available. Measurements must be no larger than 12-by-12 inches and must be

what the response might be for this kind of endeavor in Central Oregon," Quinn said. "Certainly this is just a little toe in the water of what Central Oregon could hold and appreciate." Since mapping contem-

0

porary popped up Nov. 15, the galleryhas seen a steady stream ofcustomers and several sales. "This has been unbelievably well accepted," Quinn said. "People are just coming in and (saying), 'Oh my God,'" Fox said. "It's just the kind of

SATURDAY DEC. 1 DOWNTOWN BEND

thing you'd hope they'd say." Fox encourages visitors to ask questions and take the opportunity to learn about the works. "A lot of folks think, 'It's a Submitted photo Pop-up gallery mapping contemporary,a collaborative effort by three Bend arts organizations, museum, and it's quiet, and will remain open through Dec. 30 in the Old Mill District of Bend. this isn't stuff we can buy. We just look at it.' We really want ... the public to feel like they're really a welcome part Artists from as far away Locals displaying at the gal- h as been described by t h e as Seattle, Fresno, Calif., and lery include Alan Brandt, Pat group behind it as "setting the of this," he said. "It's a way to Bozeman, Mont.,have joined Clark, Chris Cole, Nancy Das- coordinates for contemporary just keep elevating the conabout 25 Central Oregon art- en, Rachel Fox, Terry Gloeck- art." versation about c ontempoists, contributing to the gal- ler, Bill Hoppe, Ingrid Lustig, Quinn and Fox hint that rary art, and what it does for lery their ceramics, paintings, Peter Meyer, Randy Redfield, there could b e s o mething communities and people. It's textiles, jewelry, photography, Amy Royce and Beth Yoe. more on the horizon. "That a fun conversation." — Reporter: 541-383-0349, sculpture, book art and mixedThe mapping contemporary coordinate-setting i s s o memedia works. effort, as its name suggests, what out of wanting to know djasper@bendbulletinicom uu

the artist's original work. The design must include "U.S. Bank Pole Pedal Paddle," "Bend, Oregon" and "2013." The winning artist must be willing to work with the race director to render a final form for production use. Deliver entries to Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation, 563 S.W. 13th St., Suite 201, Bend, OR 97701. Contact: molly@mbsef.org or 541-388-0002.

Redmond library wants your photos The Friends of the Library Art Committee seeks submissions for the annual photography exhibition at Redmond Public Library. Central Oregon photographers may submit two photographs. They don't have to be framed, but photos must be matted and double-sided taped to heavy cardstock backing or mounted onfoamcore. The show will hang Jan. 5 through Feb. 2. Exhibiting photographers contribute20 percent of the sale price of their artwork in support of the

Friends of the Library, which sponsors the Art Committee and library art exhibits. Redmond Public Library,827 S.W. Deschutes Ave., will accept submissions from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Jan. 5. The Redmond branch's current show, "Winter 2012 Art Exhibition," features works by 40 painters and photographers aswell as several metal sculptures. Contact: lindab@dpls.us or 541-526-5073.

Auditions next week for 'Working' musical 2nd Street Theater (220 N.E. L afayette Ave., Bend) w i l l hold auditions for "Working," the Stephen Schwartz musical based on a novel by Studs Terkel, at 7 p.m. Dec. 3 and 4. The production will run Feb. 15 through March 2 and requires a minimum of six males and six females, any age or ethnic background. Those auditioning should be prepared with monologue and song. Contact: 2ndstreettheater@ gmail.com or 541-312-9626. — David Jasper

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KAREN BANDY DESIGN JEWELER 25 NW MINNESOTA AVE. ¹5 • 541-388-0155

www.karendandy.com SAGE CUSTOM FRAMING 8 GALLERY 834 NW BROOKS ST. • 541-382-5884

www.sageframing-gallery.com PAUL SCOTT GALLERY 869 NW WALL ST. • 541-330-6000

www.paillscottfineart.com RED CHAIR GALLERY 103 NW OREGON AVE. • 541-306-3176

www.redchairgallerydend.com MOCKINGBIRD GALLERY 869 NW WALL ST. • 541-388-2107

www.mockingdird-gallery.com

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arts

PAGE 14 • GO!MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012

ART E XHI B I T S

ALLEDAREALESTATE:Featuring works by Pam Jersey Bird; through December; 25 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Suite 1, Bend; 541-633-7590. AMBIANCEART CO-OP: Featuring gallery artists; 435 S.W. Evergreen Ave., Redmond; 541-548-8115. ARTISTS' GALLERYSUNRIVER: Featuring local artists; 57100 Beaver Drive, Building 19; www. artistsgallerysunriver.com or 541-593-4382. ATELIER6000: Featuring "Broadsides: A Juried Exhibition"; through today; 389 S.W. Scalehouse Court, Suite120, Bend; www.atelier6000.org or 541-330-8759. BEND CITYHALL:Featuring "UNSEEN::WORLD," works exploring how Bend's unseen world inspires community; through March 29; 710 N.W.Wall St.; 541-388-5505. CAFE SINTRA:Featuring "3 Points of View," a continually changing exhibit of photographs by Diane Reed, Ric Ergenbright and John Vito; 1024 N.W. Bond St.,Bend; 541-382-8004. CANYONCREEKPOTTERY: Featuring pottery by Kenneth Merrill; 310 N. Cedar St., Sisters; www.canyoncreekpotteryllc.com or 541-549-0366. DON TERRAARTWORKS: Featuring more than 200 artists; 222 W. Hood Ave., Sisters; 541549-1299 or www.donterra.com. DOWNTOWN BENDPUBLIC LIBRARY:Featuring "Art of Photography"; through Feb. 4; 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-312-1037. FRANKLINCROSSING:Featuring "Abstraction," works by Sandy Brooke, Erin Kay, Pat Oertley,

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"Searching for Balance," by Renne Brock,will be part of the new "Adventures in Change" exhibit that opens Tuesday at Sage Custom Framing and Gallery in Bend. RandyRedfield and Galen Rudd; through today; 550 N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend; 541-382-9398. FURNISH.:Featuring works by Sue Smith; 761 N.W. Arizona Ave., Bend; 541-617-8911. GHIGLIERIGALLERY:Featuring original Western-themed and African-inspired paintings and sculptures by Lorenzo Ghiglieri; 200 W. Cascade Ave., Sisters; www.art-lorenzo.com or 541-549-8683.

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HELPINGYOUTAX& ACCOUNTING:Featuring paintings by Carol Armstrong; 632 S.W. Sixth St., Suite 2, Redmond; 541-504-5422. JENNIFERLAKEGALLERY: Featuring paintings by Jennifer Lake; 220 W. CascadeAve., Sisters; www.jenniferlakegallery.com or 541-549-7200. JILL'S WILD (TASTEFUL) WOMEN WAREHOUSE: Featuring works by Jill Haney-Neal; Tuesdays and Wednesdays only; 601 North Larch St, Suite B, Sisters; www.jillnealgallery.com or 541-617-6078. JOHN PAUL DESIGNS: Featuring custom jewelry and signature series;1006 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-318-5645. JUDI'S ARTGALLERY: Featuring works by Judi Meusborn Williamson; 336 N.E. Hemlock St., Suite 13, Redmond; 360-325-6230. KARENBANDYDESIGNJEWELER: Featuring fine custom jewelry and abstract paintings by Karen Bandy; 25 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Suite 5,

College Way, Bend; 541-383-7564. RUUD GALLERY:Featuring works by local and regional contemporary artists; 50 S.E. Scott St., Suite 2, Bend; www.ruudgallery.com or 541-323-3231. SAGEBRUSHERSART SOCIETY:Featuring "Small Art Works," works by art society members; through Sunday; 117 S.W. Roosevelt Ave., Bend; 541-617-0900. SAGE CUSTOM FRAMINGAND GALLERY:Featuring landscape and wildlife paintings by Barbara Higgins; through Saturday; new exhibit, "Adventures in Change," featuring works by Renne Brock, opens Tuesday; 834 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 541-382-5884. SISTERSAREACHAMBEROF COMMERCE:Featuring fiber art by Rosalyn Kliot; 291 E. Main Ave.; 541-549-0251. SISTERSARTWORKS: Featuring "Humble Healing," photography by Loraine Albertson; through today; 204 W. Adams St.; 541-420-9695. SISTERSGALLERY& FRAME SHOP:Featuring landscape photography by Gary Albertson; 252 W. Hood Ave.; www.garyalbertson.com or 541-549-9552. SISTERS PUBLICLIBRARY: Featuring works by Ethan Erickson and Annie Painter; through today; 110 N. Cedar Ave.; 541-312-1070. ST. CHARLESBEND: Featuring "Arts in the Hospital"; through December; 2500 N.E. Neff Road; 541-382-4321. SUNRIVERAREAPUBLIC LIBRARY:Featuring works by Nancy Becker and Cheryl Griffiths; through Jan. 26; 56855 Venture Lane; 541-312-1080. SUNRIVERLODGE BETTY GRAY GALLERY:Featuring "Two Rivers, Three Sisters," a quilt by local artists, through December; and "Going to the Dogs," works by Kathy Deggendorfer and Tonye Belinda Phillips, through Jan. 5; 17600 Center Drive; 541-382-9398. THUMP COFFEE: Featuring "Rooted and Grateful," by Nancie Zivetz-Gertler; through today; 25 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-388-0226. TUMALO ARTCO.:Featuring "Earthly Delights," works by Helen Brown and Marty Stewart; through today; 450 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Suite 407, Bend; www.tumaloartco. com or 541-385-9144.

Where Buyers And Sellers Meet

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Bend; www.karenbandy.com or 541-388-0155. LUBBESMEYERFIBERSTUDIO: Featuring fiber art by Lori and Lisa Lubbesmeyer; 450 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Suite 423, Old Mill District, Bend; www. lubbesmeyerstudio.com or 541-330-0840. MAPPINGCONTEMPORARY: An Old Mill pop-up gallery featuring works by regional artists; through Dec. 30; 425 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-330-8759. MARCELLO'SITALIANCUISINE AND PIZZERIA:Featuring several local artists; 4 Ponderosa Road, Sunriver; 541-593-8300. MOCKINGBIRDGALLERY: Featuring "Western Culture and Landscape";throughtoday; 869 N.W. Wall St., Bend; www. mockingbird-gallery.com or 541-388-2107. MOSAIC MEDICAL:Featuring mixed-media collage paintings by Rosalyn Kliot; 910 S. U.S. Highway 97, Suite101, Madras; 54 I-475-7800. MOTHER'SJUICECAFE:"Journey of the Soul Through Artistic Expression," featuring art by Waldorf School students; $10; 6 p.m. reception tonight; 62090 Dean Swift Road, Bend; 541-330-8841. PATAGONIA@BEND: Featuring photography by Mike Putnam; 1000 N.W. Wall St., Suite 140; 541-382-6694. PAUL SCOTTGALLERY: Featuring patinaed steel and reclaimed wood art by Mytchell Mead; 869 N.W.Wall St., Bend; www.paulscottfineart.com or 541-330-6000. QUILTWORKS: Featuring "Journey in Quilting" and "Paintchip Challenge"; throughWednesday; 926 N.E. Greenwood Ave., Suite B, Bend; 541-728-0527. RED CHAIR GALLERY:Featuring "Cool Art," works by Chris Eckberg, Suzy Williamson and Denise Mahoney; through Sunday; 103 N.W. Oregon Ave., Bend; www. redchairgallerybend.com or 541-306-3176. REDMOND PUBLICLIBRARY: Featuring fine art by Linda Shelton; throughtoday;827S.W. Deschutes Ave.: 541-526-5073. ROTUNDA GALLERY: Featuring "Celebration of Seasonal Variations in Central Oregon," landscapephotographs by M ike Putnam; through today; Robert L. Barber Library, Central Oregon Community College; 2600 N.W.

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GO! MAGAZINE PAGE 15

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012

out oorS Outing shorts are trimmed versions of stories published in The Bulletinin the past several weeks. For the complete stories, plus more photos, visit www.bendbulletin.com/outing.

I

I I

4

I

T

4

he knee-jerk reaction during this time of year is to look to the east. But Whychus Canyon

Preserve, a 450-acre parcel along Whychus Creek, provides near year-round access, not to mention mountain vistas and rimrock canyon views. The Deschutes Land Trust recently completed a 5-mile loop there into the canyon and back up, which provides the best of all the preserve has to offer. — Bulletin staff

Ifyou go

road, following it for about1.3

Getting there:From Bend,drive

where a sign says "Turin." Keep going straight north for another

northwest on U.S. Highway 20 for about13 miles. Turn north on

Fryrear Roadand continue 5.5 David Jasper/The Bulletin file photo

Peterson Ridge Trail West, south of Sisters, offers a distant view of Black Butte

p

eterson Ridge Trail begins just a few blocks south of downtown Sisters,

si

Five Pin ilhead

Peterson Ridge trailhead

miles to the intersection with state Highway126. Turn left on Highway 126, travel1 mile, then turn right on Goodrich Road. Follow Goodrich Road for about 1.5 miles

until the paved roadturns sharply To Redmond

right. Instead of following the curve, go straight onto the gravel

miles. Continue going straight 0.4 mile to the trailhead. Difficulty:Easy if you stay on the canyon rim, intermediate to difficult if you follow the 5-mile loop down into the canyon.

Cost:Free Contact:www.deschuteslandtrust .org or 541-330-0017

and offers miles of well-maintained singletrack and several trail and loop

To Bend

16

options, allowing riders to adjust their ride distance accordingly. Watch for runners, walkers and dogs sharing the trail. — Bulletin staff

Ifyou go Getting there:From Bend, take U.S. Highway 20 to Sisters. Turn left at Elm Street/Forest Road16 and proceed two blocks to Village

East Tyee Drive, but parking is limited to eight vehicles. Difficulty: Moderate, with

rocky technical sections and increasing difficulty as trail climbs to higher elevation

Green Park.There's also

Cost:Free

a small, informal trailhead farther south, at the corner of

.com

Peterson Ridge Trail East Eagle ock

PetersonRidge

Whychus Canyon Preserve I/t/hychus ~ Creek

Cyrus Rd

Far overlook

Trails

Spirit Circle

Private land

terson Ridge Trail West

16

BLM land

George

— Featured ride — Mountain bike trails

gnSo

Viewpoint

Goodrich Rd.-

Mountain Bike Trail

Peterson Ridge Overlook

Whychus

Ditch Connector

Canyon Preserve

Deschutes National Forest

Trailhead

Hawk' Fli ht

Goodrich Rd.

Contact:www.sisterstrails Source: Deschutes Land Trust

To Forest Rd 16 Greg Cross/The Bulletin

Cascade military wagon road MILES 0

0.5 Andy Zeigert/The Bulletin


PAGE 16 • GO! MAGAZINE

TODAY GRIMES'CHRISTMAS SCENE:A display of lighted and mechanical Christmas decorations; open through Dec. 24; free; 2-7 p.m.; Crook County Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main St., Prineville; 541-447-5006 or grimes©crestviewcable.com. BENDHOLIDAYTREELIGHTING:With carolers, live music and dance, with Santa; 6 p.m.; corner of Wall Street and Newport Avenue; www.downtownbend.org/holidaytree-lighting. (Story, Page11) "HOW DIDWE GET HERE?" LECTURE: Dennis Jenkins on "Oregon's Earliest Inhabitants; Archaeological Investigations at the Paisley Caves"; $10, $8 Sunriver Nature Center members, $3 students; 6:30 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Hitchcock Auditorium, 2600 N.W.College Way, Bend; 541-593-4394. "AS YOU LIKEIT": The LaPine High School drama department presents a play by William Shakespeare; $5, $4 students and seniors, $1 off with donations of nonperishable food; 7 p.m.; La Pine High School, 51633 CoachRoad; 541-355-8400. FRIDAYNIGHTLIVE:The Crook County High School drama department hosts a variety show featuring improv games, comedy sketches, short films and more; donations accepted;7 p.m.;CrookCounty High School, 1100 S.E.Lynn Blvd., Prineville; 541-416-6900.

SATURDAY Dec. 1 VFW BREAKFAST:Community Christmas buffet breakfast; $8.50, $7.50 seniors and children ages12 and younger; 8:30-11 a.m.; VFW Hall,1503 N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 54 I-389-0775. "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: LA CLEMENZA Dl TITO": A presentation of Mozart's masterpiece; $24, $22 seniors, $18 children; 9:55 a.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16, 680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-382-6347. (Story, Page28) FESTIVAL OF TREES:The 29th annual event showcases decorated Christmas trees; with live music, a tree auction, Santa and more; proceeds benefit Hospice of Redmond; free daytime family festivities, $40 evenin g event;10 a.m.-2 p.m . family festivities, 5 p.m. evening gala; Deschutes County Fair & ExpoCenter, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541548-7483 or www.redmondhospice. org/festival-of-trees. HOLIDAYBOOKSALE:The Friends of the Bend Public Libraries hosts a sale featuring books, CDs, audio books and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Deschutes

THE BULLETIN • FRIDA'

Library Administration Building, 507 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-389-1622. CROOKED RIVERRANCH OLDE FASHIONEDCHRISTMAS CELEBRATION: Includes visits with Santa, a parade, tree lighting and more; free; 11a.m., 3:30 p.m. parade; Crooked River Ranch Administration Building, 5195 S.W. Clubhouse Drive; 541-548-8939. JINGLEBELL RUN/WALK FOR ARTHRITIS: Runners and walkers don costumes for 5K and fun-run races; proceeds benefit the Arthritis Foundation; $25, $15 ages 12 and younger; 9:30 a.m. registration, 11 a.m. awards, 11:30 a.m. races start; downtown Bend; 888-845-5695 or www. bendjinglebellrun.kintera.org. BEND CHRISTMASPARADE:Paradetheme is "A Picture Perfect Christmas"; free; noon; downtown Bend; 541-388-3879. (Story, Page 11) GRIMES'CHRISTMAS SCENE:1-7p.m. at Crook County Fairgrounds; see Today's listing for details. HOEDOWNFORHUNGER:Featuring local bands and a chili feed; proceeds benefit the center's Feed the Hungry Program; $20, $10 students, seniors and children ages16 andyounger;1-9 p.m .;Bend'sCommunity Center, 1036 N.E. Fifth St.; 541-312-2069 or www.bendscommunitycenter.org. (Story, Page 3) "THE NUTCRACKER": The Central Oregon School of Ballet performs the classic dance; $17 in advance or $20 at the door; $6ages12 and younger in advance or $7atthedoor;3and 7p.m.;Bend High School, 230 N.E. Sixth St.; 541-362-6004 or www.centraloregonschoolofballet.com. A NOVEL IDEAUNVEILED: Learn the book for this year's A Novel Idea; free; 6-7:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7080 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. "A VERYLAMB CHOP HOLIDAY":A holiday celebration featuring the beloved puppet and more; $12, $8 children 12 and younger, plus fees; 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. (Story, Page11) HOSPICECHRISTMASAUCTION: An auction with dinner and a raffle; proceeds benefit Pioneer Memorial Hospice; $5; 6 p.m.; Crook County Fairgrounds, Carey Foster Hall, 1280 S. Main St., Prineville; 541-447-2510. POKER TOURNAMENTAND FAMILY BINGONIGHT: Proceeds benefit the Sunriver Community Christmas Basket Program; free admission; 6-9 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic 8 Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road; 541-593-1978. "AS YOULIKEIT": 7 p.m. at La Pine High School; see Today's listing for details.

KEITHGREENINGER AND DAYAN KAI: The folk musicians perform; $15-$20 suggesteddonation;7 p.m .,doors open at 6:30 p.m.; The Barn in Sisters, 68467 Three Creeks Road; 775-233-1433 or dooleysbarn@gmail.com. (Story, Page 6) DON WE NOW OURGAY APPAREL PARTY:With live music, food and drinks, various holiday costume contests and prizes; proceeds benefit the Human Dignity Coalition; $5; 7:30 p.m.; Seven Nightclub, 1033 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541385-3320 or www.humandignitycoalition. org. THE MEN OF WORTH:The Celtic folk musicians perform; $15-$20 suggested donation; 8 p.m.,doorsopen at7 p.m .; HarmonyHouse, 17505 Kent Road, Sisters; 541-548-2209.

SUNDAY Dec. 2 BREAKFAST WITH SANTA:Eat breakfast and visit with Santa; reservations requested; proceeds will provide a meal and Santa visit for area foster families; $12, $8children10and younger; 9-11 a.m.; The Pine Tavern, 967 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 541-598-3026. GRIMES'CHRISTMAS SCENE:1-7 p.m . at Crook County Fairgrounds; see Today's listing for details. HOLIDAYBOOK SALE:TheFriends of the Bend Public Libraries hosts a bag sale; free admission, $4 per bag; 1-4 p.m.; Deschutes Library Administration

Building, 507 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 54 I-389- I622. KEITHGREENINGER AND DAYAN KAI: The folk musicians perform; $15-$20 suggested donation;1 p.m.; Higher Ground,2582 N.E. Dagget Lane,Bend; 541-306-0048. NOTABLESSWING BAND: The big band plays swing, blues, Latin, rock 'n' roll and waltzes; $5; 2-4 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-6397734 or www.notablesswingband.com. REDMOND COMMUNITY CONCERT ASSOCIATIONPERFORMANCE: Presidio Brass performs; $50 season ticket, $20 students, $105 family ticket; 2 and 6:30 p.m.; Ridgeview High School, 4555 S.W. Elkhorn Ave.; 541-


GO! MAGAZINE PAGE 17

(, NOVEMBER 30, 2012

i

I Network; $12-$35 plus fees; 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. WATERTOWER:The Portland-based folk band performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com. STEVENROTH:The Los Angeles-based pop-rock and soul artist performs; free; 10 p.m.; Astro Lounge, 939 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-388-0116 or www. astroloungebend.com. (Story, Page 6)

I• TODAY sr SATURDAY Bend TreeLighting andParade: Now the season canofficially begin!

THURSDAY

•5

Dec. 6

SATURDAY Hoedown for Hunger: Help the hungry and work up asweat. Yeehaw!

SATURDAY A Novel IdeaUnveiled:Discover the book librarians are whispering about.

350-7222 or www.redmondcca.org. "THE NUTCRACKER": 3 p.m. at Bend High School; see Saturday's listing for details. KEITHGREENINGER AND DAYAN KAI: The folk musicians perform; RSVP requested, call for location; $15-$20suggested donation;5 p.m .; 541-306-0048.

MONDAY Dec. 3 "THE NUTCRACKER MARUNSKY BALLET": A 3Dscreening of the 2011 performance of theclassic dance bythe Mariinsky Ballet in St. Petersburg, Russia; $15; 2 p.m. and7:30 p.m.; Regal OldMill

Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-382-6347 or www. fathomevents.com. (Story, Page28) THE WRONG HEROES: Dr. Elizabeth Daniels discusses how to teach girls to critique media content, titled "Helping Young People Navigate Beyond Naked Royals, Lindsay's Arrests and Snooki's Baby"; free; 6 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W.Wall St.; 541-312-1034 or www.deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. SONGS OFSUFFRAGE: A HistoryPub fundraiser featuring live folk music from the women's suffrage movement in the early 1900s; proceeds benefit the Deschutes County Historical Society; $5; 7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 N.W .BondSt.,Bend; 541-389-1813 or www.mcmenamins.com.

TUESDAY Dec. 4 KNOWHEROES:Learn how to cook the perfect muffuletta sandwich from Chef Bette Fraser in aclass titled, "The 'Hero' of New Orleans"; free; 6 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, Brooks Room,601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-312-1032 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. GREEN TEAMMOVIENIGHT: Featuring a screening of "Cave of Forgotten Dreams," about filmmaker Warren Herzog's exploration of Chauvet Cave inFrance; free; 6:30-8:15 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 N.E. Ninth St., Bend; 541-815-6504. TARANTINOXX:"RESERVOIR DOGS":

A screening of the1992 R-rated crime film directed by Quentin Tarantino, with a special feature covering Tarantino's 20year career; $12.50; 7 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium168 IMAX, 680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-382-6347 or www. fathomevents.com. (Story, Page 28)

WEDNESDAY Dec. 5 GRIMES'CHRISTMAS SCENE: 2-6 p.m. at Crook County Fairgrounds; see Today's listing for details. AARON MEYERBAND: The concert rock violinist performs a holiday concert; proceeds benefit Miller Elementary Music/Arts Enrichment and Family Access

GRIMES' CHRISTMAS SCENE:2-6 p.m. at Crook County Fairgrounds; seeToday's listing for details. RUBBISHRENEWED ECO FASHION SHOW: Sustainable fashion show featuring repurposed materials made into clothes; proceeds benefit REALMSCharter School's arts program; $12, $6ages12 and younger; 6 p.m .allages,8:30 p.m.ages21 and older; Century Center, 70 S.W.Century Drive, Bend; www.rubbishrenewed.com. CXMAS PARTY:Featuring cyclocross photography, a silent auction, a Q&Awith professional cyclists Ryan Trebon and Adam Craig and more; proceeds benefit theCXmas JuniorFund;$5 suggested minimum donation; 6:30 p.m.; Powered by Bowen, 143 S.W.Century Drive, Bend; 541-585-1500. "FLOWERS FORALGERNON": The Crook County High School drama department presents the play about a manwho participates in anexperiment to enhance his intellect; $5; 7 p.m.; Crook County High School, EugeneSouthwell Auditorium,1100 S.E. Lynn Blvd., Prineville; 541-416-6900. BINGOFUNDRAISER: Proceeds benefit the Bethlehem Inn; free admission; 7 p.m.; Lava Lanes Bowling Center, 1555 N.E. Forbes Road, Bend; 541-322-8768 or www.bethleheminn.org. TARANTINOXX: "PULP FICTION":A screening of the1994 R-rated crime film directed by Quentin Tarantino, with a special feature covering Tarantino's 20year career; $12.50; 7 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-382-6347 or www. fathomevents.com. (Story, Page28) THE ACOUSTICCHRISTMAS TOUR: Featuring Sanctus Real, Sidewalk Prophets and Dara Maclean; $20; 7 p.m.; Christian Life Center, 21720 E.U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-389-8241 or www. acousticchristmastour.com. • SU6MIT AN EVENTat www.bendbullebn. com/submitinfo or email events@bendbulletin.com.

Deadline is 10 days before publication. Questions? Contact 541-383-0351.


PAGE 18 • GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012

planning ahea DEC.9 — FOUNTAINVIEW ACADEMY ORCHESTRAAND SINGERS: The group from British Columbia performs, "0 Holy Night"; free; 7 p.m.; Bend Seventh-day Adventist Church, 21610 N.E.Butler Market Road; 541-647-1726 or www. fountainofmusic.com. DEC.10— BELLS OF SUNRIVER: Ring in the season with handbell choir the Bells of Sunriver, as they play familiar holiday tunes; free; 11 a.m.; La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St.; 541-312-1034 or www.deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. DEC. 11 —CASCADEHORIZONBAND: The senior band performs their annual Christmas concert with popular holiday music; free; 11:30 a.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. ReedMarket Road; 541-639-7734, cascadehorizonband© aol.com or www.cascadehorizonband.

DEC. 7-13 DEC.7-9, 12-13 — GRIMES' CHRISTMASSCENE:A display of lighted and mechanical Christmas decorations; open through Dec. 24; free; 2-7 p.m. Dec. 7, 1-7 p.m. Dec. 8-9 and 2-6 p.m. Dec. 12-13; Crook County Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main St., Prineville; 541-4475006 or grimes©crestviewcable.com. DEC.7-8 — "FLOWERSFOR ALGERNON":The Crook County High School drama department presents the David Rogers play about a man who participates in an experiment to enhance his intellect; $5; 7 p.m.; Crook County High School, Eugene Southwell Auditorium,1100 S.E. Lynn Blvd., Prineville; 541-416-6900. DEC.7-9, 13 — "IT'S A WONDERFUL LIFE":The Bend Experimental Art Theatre presents the classic holiday tale about George Bailey and his guardian angel; $15, $10 students ages 5-18; 7 p.m. Dec. 7-8,13and 2 p.m. Dec. 9; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-419-5558 or www. beattickets.org. DEC. 8-9 — "HIGHDESERT NUTCRACKER":Redmond School of Dance presents the classic holiday ballet, in a style inspired by present day Central Oregon; $11, $5 ages10 and younger;7 p.m. Dec. 8and 2 p.m. Dec. 9; Ridgevie w High School,4555 S.W. Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; 541-548-6957 or www.redmondschoolofdance.com. DEC. 8-9 — CENTRAL OREGON MASTERSINGERS: The47-voicechoir presents "Ring Noel" under the direction of Clyde Thompson, with the Bells of Sunriver; $16 plus fees; 7:30 p.m. Dec. 8and 2 p.m. Dec. 9; Tower Theatre,835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. DEC.7 — BELLSOFSUNRIVER: Ring in the season with handbell choir the Bells of Sunriver, as they play familiar holiday tunes; free; 1 p.m.; Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Lane; 541-312-1034 or www.deschuteslibrary. org/calendar. DEC.7 — BRANDICARLILE:The rootsy singer-songwriter performs a Christmas show; $43 in advance, $48 at the door, plus fees; 6and 9:30p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. DEC.8— "THE METROPOLITAN OPERA: UNBALLO IN MASCHERA": Starring Karita Mattila, Kathleen Kim and Stephanie Blythe in presentation of Verdi's masterpiece; opera performance transmitted live in high definition; $24, $22 seniors, $18 children; 9:55 a.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-382-6347. DEC.8— MOTORCYCLISTS OF

Ol'g.

Courtesy John Meloy

The Chuck Israels Jazz Orchestrawill perform classical and Christmas music at the Sunriver Resort on Dec. 14. CENTRAL OREGONTOY RUN:Toy drive featuring a chili contest, live music, a raffle, games, a motorcycle ride through Bend and more; donations benefit the Bend Elks' Christmas charity food baskets; donation of new unwrapped toy requested; 11 a.m.-4 p.m.; Cascade Harley-Davidson of Bend, 63028 Sherman Road; 541-280-0478. DEC.8— THE WRONG HEROES: Dr.

Elizabeth Daniels discusses how to teach girls to critique media content, titled "Helping Young People Navigate Beyond Naked Royals, Lindsay's Arrests and Snooki' sBaby";free;2 p.m.;Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1034 or www.deschuteslibrary. org/calendar. DEC. 8 — DJZ-TRIP: The DJ performs at the Slipmat Science RoboLiquidPop

party, with DJ Wicked, Woody McBride, Mosley Wottaand more;$20;9 p.m ., doors open at 8 p.m.; Domino Room, 51 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-7882989 or www.slipmatscience.com. DEC.9 — OREGON OLD TIME FIDDLERS:Fiddle music and dancing; donations accepted;1-3:30 p.m.;VFW Hall, 1836 S.W.Veterans Way, Redmond; 541-647-4789.

DEC. 12 —OPERATIONELFBASH: A holiday party with food, live music, a DJ and a raffle and a toy drive; new, unwrapped toy donations benefit Operation Elf Box; $15 in advance, $20 at the door; 5-10 p.m.; Century Center, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-383-3300 or www.bendradiogroup.com. DEC. 12 —KNOWHEROES:Wiliam Akin discusses, "From 4-Color to 3D: A History of the American Superhero"; free; 6 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W.Wall St.; 541-312-1034 or www.deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. DEC.12— STORIES FROM TERRA MADREANDPOTLUCK:Hear stories from delegates who recently returned from Italy, with a potluck; free; 6:30 p.m.; Cascade Culinary Institute, 2555 N.W. Campus Village Way, Bend; 541-279-0841. DEC.13— GRADUATION AUCTION: Silent auction to benefit Summit High School's graduation party; free admission; 8 a.m.-8 p.m.; Athletic Club of Bend, 61615 Athletic Club Drive; 541-408-0344 or www. summitstormboosters.com. DEC. 13 —AUTHORPRESENTATION: Michael Stevens talks about his book, "Being an Ordinary Buddha: Practicing the Natural Mind"; with an art sale benefiting the TenFriends Relief Center and the Natural Dharma Center; free; 7-9 p.m.; The Old Stone,157 N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend; 541-388-3352 or www. naturalminddharma.org.

DEC. 14-20 DEC. 14-16, 19-20 — GRIMES' CHRISTMAS SCENE: A display of lighted and mechanical Christmas decorations; open through Dec. 24; free; 2-7p.m. Dec.14,1-7 p.m. Dec. 15-16 and 2-6 p.m. Dec. 19-20; Crook County Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main St., Prineville; 541-447-5006 or grimes@ crestviewcable.com.


planning ahead

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012

DEC. 14, 16 — HOLIDAY MAGIC CONCERT: The Central Oregon Community College Cascade Chorale performs holiday songs under the direction of James Knox; with soloist Lindy Gravelle; proceeds benefit Abilitree; $17; 7 p.m. Dec.14and 4 p.m. Dec.16; Summit High School, 2855 N.W. Clearwater Drive, Bend; 541-7716184 or www.bendticket.com. DEC. 14-16 — "IT'S A WONDERFUL LIFE": The Bend Experimental Art Theatre presents the classic holiday tale about George Bailey and his guardian angel; $15, $10 students ages 5-18; 7 p.m. Dec. 14-15 and 2 p.m. Dec. 16; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E.

Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-4195558 or www.beattickets.org. DEC. 14 — SUNRIVERMUSIC FESTIVALCHRISTMAS CONCERT: The Chuck Israels Jazz Orchestra performs classical and Christmas music; $30, $10 ages 18 and younger; 7 p.m.; Homestead Room, Sunriver Resort, 57081 Meadow Road, Sunriver; 541593-9310 or www.sunrivermusic. Ol'g.

DEC. 14 — BLACKALICIOUS:The California hip-hop duo performs; $10; 9 p.m.; Liquid Lounge, 70 N.W. Newport Ave., Bend; 541389-6999 or www.liquidclub.net. DEC. 16 — "THE METROPOLITAN

OPERA: AIDA":Starring Liudmyla Monastyrska, Dlga Borodina and Roberto Alagna in a presentation of Verdi's masterpiece; $24, $22 seniors, $18 children; 9:55 a.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-382-6347. DEC. 15 — ACROVISION HOLIDAY SHOW:Featuring skits from Acrovision's preschool, recreational and competitive programs; $9, $7 children, plus fees; 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-3170700 or www.towertheatre.org. DEC. 16 — THE AUTONOMICS: The Portland-based rock 'n' roll

GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 19

act performs, with A Happy Death and The Rum and the Sea; $5 plus fees in advance, $10 at the door; 8 p.m.; The Old Stone, 157 N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend; www. bendticket.com. DEC. 17 — THE MOSCOW BOYS CHOIR:The 25-voice choir presents a blend of Christmas standards and Russian folk songs; $25-$45 plus fees; 7:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. DEC. 18 — SNOOP DOGG:The hip-hop icon performs; $42.50

in advance, plus fees, $45 at the door; 8 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; Midtown Ballroom, 51 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; www. randompresents.com. DEC. 19 — "THE METROPOLITAN OPERA: LACLEMENZA DI TITO": Starring Lucy Crowe, Barbara Frittoli and Elina Garanca in an encore performance of Mozart's masterpiece; opera performance transmitted in high definition; $18; 6:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-382-6347.

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p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays, Tuesday through Dec. 13; Atelier 6000, 389 S.W. Scalehouse NEEDLEWEAVING CLASS: Court, Suite120, Bend; www. Create woven art with Marlene atelier6000.org or 541-330-8759. Hasler, bring a sack lunch; $35; 10:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m. Saturday; MIXED MEDIAACCORDIONBOOK Sagebrushers Art Society, 117 CLASS:Incorporate text and S.W. Roosevelt Ave., Bend; www. image ina handmade accordion sagebrushersartofbend.com or book; $50; 10 a.m.-12:30 p.m. 541-350-4159. Monday, Wednesday and Dec. 10; Atelier 6000, 389 S.W. BEGINNINGACRYLIC CLASS: Scalehouse Court, Suite120, Learn the basics of acrylic art Bend; www.atelier6000.org or with Carol Picknell; $25; 2-5 541-330-8759. p.m. Sunday; Sagebrushers Art Society, 117 S.W. ARTTALK: View print collections Roosevelt Ave., Bend; www. and learn about the process and sagebrushersartofbend.com or techniques of printmaking; free; 360-880-5088. 6-8 p.m. Wednesday; Atelier 6000, 389 S.W. Scalehouse INTRO TOLETTERPRESS Court, Suite120, Bend; www. PRINTINGWORKSHOP:Learn atelier6000.org or 541-330-8759. about letterpress printing, including typesetting and COOKINGCLASS WITH CHEF presswork; $95; 9:30 a.m.-12:30 BETTEFRASER:Learn how to

make pizzas with a wood fired oven; registration required; 6-9 p.m. Wednesday; $65; register for Bend location; www. welltraveledfork.com, chefbette@ welltraveledfork.com or 541-312-0097. SARA BELLAUPCYCLED CLASS:Learn to make fabric out of discarded plastic bags; registration requested; $39; noon2p.m. Thursdayand10a.m.-noon Dec. 8; Sara Bella Upcycled, 2748 N.W. Crossing Drive, Suite100, Bend;541-420-4961. CLAY CANDELARIAWORKSHOP: Create a candelaria to hold candles; registration required; $80;1-5p.m. Dec.8and Dec. 15; Art Station, 313 S.W. Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; www.artscentraloregon.org or 541-617-1317.

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Saturday, December 1, 2012 atSP.M.R7P.M. Sunday, December 2, 2012 at 3 P.M. B end Senior H igh S c h ool Au d i t o r i u m

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PAGE 20 • GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012

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Server Thanittha Green helps a couple of patronsrecently during breakfast service at the Alpenglow Cafe in Bend.

• Downtown Bend institution still pleasesthe taste budsin its 2nd home By John Gottberg Anderson For The Bulletin

S

ince moving to new digs in 2007, Alpenglow Cafe hasn't missed a step. OK, prices have gone up about $1 across the board since the cafe vacated its longtime Bond Street premises — where the newly expanded Deschutes Brewery Public House now stands — for the Columbia River Bank Building, on the former site of the historic Pilot Butte Inn, which was demolished in 1973. But whereas buildings may be temporary, the quality of Alpen-

glow's fresh, tasty breakfasts and lunches has remained constant. Service here is reliable if casual. It sometimes takes a little longer than one might like to get a morning coffee cup refilled, but the staff is gracious and attentive, quick to take and deliver orders from the spacious kitchen. Decor is simple, with large windows facing a patio area on Newport Avenue. Local photographer Bruce Jackson's panoramic photo of the Three Sisters during alpenglow — the pinkish-toned first light of morning — is showcased on the cafe's west wall.

Small regional scenic photos by John Hart hang on the facing wall. But the room, which seats 44, lacks the sense of ski-lodge coziness that its name might suggest. Instead, there are stainless-steel overhead fans and ceiling ducts.

AlpenglowCafe Location:1133N.W. Wall St., Bend

Hours:7 a.m.-2 p.m. every day (lunch from 11:30a.m.) Price range:Breakfast $7.50 to

$14.95; lunch $6.50 to $12.75 Credit cards:Discover, MasterCard, Visa

Breakfasts My dining companion and I have enjoyed four separate morning meals at Alpenglow in the past couple of weeks, and while I wouldn't call any of them spectacular, they offered solid, tasty fare with high-quality ingredients.

Continued next page

Kids' menu:Yes Vegetarianmenu:Options include sandwiches, salads and the Half

Pipe scramble Alcoholic beverages:No Outdoorseating: Seasonal patio Reservations:Notaccepted

Contact:www.alpenglowcafe.com or 541-383-7676

Scorecard OVERALL:B+ Food:B.Thefresh,healthy menu has hits and misses, but everything is better with bacon. Service:A-. Gracious and attentive, although patrons sometimes wait for coffee refills. Atmosphere:B+. Simple, pleasant, but without ski-lodge coziness that

its name suggests. Value:A-. Prices are just a notch below major competitors in downtown Bend area.


restaurants

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012

GO! MAGAZINE PAGE 21

From previous page

$1,000 reward is offered to anyone who can find a can opener in the cafe — "no fair bringing in your own!" That in itself, coupled with prices that are kept below most other popular casual cafes in Central Oregon, will keep me coming back.

Our f a v orite w a s my friend's smoked salmon omelet, which sh e r e quested with egg whites. Smoked inhouse, the salmon was neither too salty nor too fishy in flavor,as the fish can sometimes be. Dil l a n d c r eam cheese wereperfect complements. Hollandaise sauce (made with butter and lemon

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juice) came on the side, again as per her request. I first opted for Mexicanstyle h u e vo s ra n c heros, which my friend liked better than I did. A lightly toasted, plate-sized tortilla — I would have preferred it ungrilledwas topped with black beans and two eggs, fried over easy. It was finished with shredded cheddar, a sliced half avocado, pico de gallo and tangy cilantro pesto sauce. O n our n ex t v i s it , m y friend opted for eggs Benedict. While we d idn't considerthem "Bend's best," as the menu had promised, they were presented on a housemade English muffin, which immediately won points for the dish. She found it a little doughy but still w ith good flavor. Poached eggs were presented atop Deschutes bacon, custom-smoked locally in the manner of Canadian back bacon, and topped with hollandaise. I t wa s t h e b a con t h a t made the dish, but coarsely chopped, pan-fried " h ome f ries" were a w o r th y a c companiment. So, too, was a wedge of moist and delicious coffee cake, made with fresh apples and a toasted oat crumble, that might have been a breakfast in itself. I broke from the pattern of eggs to try A l penglow's Cascading Grains pancakes, made with a variety of grains — including wheat, rye, barley and rolled oats — plus large chunks o f wa l n uts mixed into the batter. I was presented three large cakes, thicker and heavier than I had expected but not at all yeasty. Despite a h e avy-handed sprinkle of what appeared to be allspice, they were tasty

— Reporter: janderson@ bendbulletin.corn

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SMALL BITES Redmond's OneStreet Down Cafeis closed through the holidays for a major remodel that will see it expand its kitchen and dining areas. The restaurant has a strong local following for its daily breakfasts and lunches. 124 S.W. Seventh St., Redmond; www.onestreet downcafe.com, 541-647-2341. Regular patrons can detour two blocks north to Coho Coffee. Breakfasts, including quiche, and lunches, including sandwiches and homemade

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The Smoked Salmon Benedict, left, and the Zeus's Favorite Frittata at Alpenglow Cafe in Bend.

soups, are priced no higher

Next week: Redmond's Clock TowerPud Visit www.dendbullatin

.cnm/restaurantsfor readers' ratings of more than150 Central Oregon

restaurants.

enough, although I could only eat one. It took in moisture like a sponge. I found myself requesting extra butter and

wheat bun, spread with pesto mayonnaise and topped w ith l e ttuce, tomato a n d red onion. Discovering that a feta cheese topping was not equally distributed on the chicken, she did a little handiwork by taking off the top half of bun and redistributing the cheese. I found my Summit burger to be a little overcooked for my taste and its lightly grilled white-bread bun too

big.

But a couple of slices of Deschutes bacon, along with sauteed fresh mushrooms syrup — real maple syrup, and T i l l amook c h e ddar, from Vermont, according to made it all better. The burger the menu — to get through it. was also topped with avocado, tomato and red onion. Lunchtime The bun was undressed, We began a midday meal but plenty of options — muswith a hearty soup of the day. tards, ketchup and mayonMy c o mpanion d escribed naise — were offered. And skin-on French fries were the bacon-potato chowder as "like potato salad in a bowl." some of the best I've had in Peppery and cream based, it Bend. was mixed with minced carOne of the most impressive rots and green onion, and things about Alpenglow is its "freshness pledge," posted in was delicious. Her c h icken s a ndwich, the cafe by owners Daniel d ubbed t h e 1 0 4 0 B o n d and Kimberly Gregg and reStreet, featured a b r o i led printed on menus: Nothing is breast o n a ho u s e-made frozen.All breads are made

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f resh daily. Al l m eat a n d dairy products come from Central Oregon purveyors. Maple syrup arrives directly from Vermont. No canned products are used. In fact, a

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than $7.25. Open 7 a .m.-4 p.m. Monday to Saturday,9 a.m.-2 p.m. Sunday. 623 NW. Cedar Ave., Redmond; www .cohocoffeecompany.com, 541-526-0368.

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PAGE 22 • GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012

outo town The following is a list of other events "Out of Town."

CONCERTS

Courtesy The Shedd lnstitute

Bill Hulings (as Don Lockwood), Evynne Hollens (as Kathy Selden)and Chas King (as Cosmo Brown) star in the Shedd Theatricals' production of "Singin' in the Rain." Opening tonight, the musical runs through Dec. 16 at The Shedd Institute in Eugene.

• Shedd TheatricalscelebratesGeneI(elly with 'Singin' in the Rain' By Jenny Wasson The Bulletin

ith his unique blend of athleticism and classical ballet style, the late American dancer Gene Kelly captivated audiences on the silver screen. His iconic dance sequences — like the ones seen in"Singin' in the Rain" and "An American in Paris" — changed the look of dance on film. A man of many hats, Kelly starred and directed in and choreographed the 1952 musical comedy, "Singin' in the Rain." It is considered the "Greatest Movie Musical" of all time, according to a 2006 survey by the American Film Institute. In celebration of the centennial of Kelly's birth, the Shedd Theatricals will present the 1983 stage musical adaptation of "Singin' in the Rain" as its 2012 season closer. Opening tonight, the musical runs through Dec. 16 at The Shedd Institute in Eugene. Written by Betty Comden and Adolph Green,

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"Singin' in the Rain" is set in the late 1920s Hollywood at the early days of sound in film. It features songs written by Arthur Freed and Nacio Herb Brown, including "Moses Supposes," "Make 'Em Laugh" and "Good Morning." The 1983 stage adaptation was "faithfully adapted by Comden and Green from their original award-winning screenplay," according to a news release. The Eugene production features Bill Hulings as Don Lockwood and Chas King as Cosmo Brown. Evynne Hollens and Janet Whitlow star as the two women in Don's life, Kathy Selden and Lina Lamont, respectively. The fully staged production features a live orchestra conducted by Robert Ashens. Ticketprices range from $20 to $44,depending on seat location. To purchase tickets, visit www.theshedd.org or call 541-434-7000. — Reporter: 541-383-0350, jwasson@bendbulletin.com

Nov. 30 —Loch Lomond/Black Prairie, Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Nov. 30 —The BeGoodTanyas, Cozmic Pizza, Eugene; www. cozmicpresents.com or 541-338-9333. Nov.30 — The M otet,Wo nder * Ballroom, Portland; TF Dec. 1 —Andre Nickatina, Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* Dec. 1 —Cherry Poppin' Daddies, Dante's, Portland; TW* Dec. 1 —Jefferson State Choral Coalition,Southern Oregon University, Ashland; 541-552-6899. Dec. 1 —Julianne Johnson, Dolores Winningstad Theatre, Portland; www. pcpa.com or 503-946-7272. Dec. I —The Motet/Eleven Eyes, WOW Hall, Eugene; www.wowhall.org or 541-687-2746. Dec. 1-2 —The BeGoodTanyas, Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Dec.2— The Lumineers,McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; SOLDOUT;

Dec. 7 —Sara Watkins/Aoife O'Donovan,WOWHall, Eugene; www. wowhall.org or 541-687-2746. Dec. 7-9 —Holidays with the Trail * Band,Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF Dec. 8 —Atlas Genius, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT* Dec. 8 —Kix Brooks,Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* Dec. 8 —Sara Watkins/Aoife O'Donovan,Mississippi Studios, Portland; www.mississippistudios.com or503-288-3895. Dec. 8 —The Tragically Hip, Wonder * Ballroom, Portland; TF Dec. 10 —The Shins, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; SOLDOUT; *

CT

Dec. 12 —fun., McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; NEWDATE;SOLD * OUT; CT Dec. 13 —BoysNoize/American Girls,McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, * Portland; CT Dec. 13 —Kreayshawn, Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* Dec. 13-14 —Portland Cello Project Beck the Halls Holiday Spectacular, * Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* CT Dec. 2 —Simian Mobile Disco, Wonder Dec. 14 —Horse Feathers/Frank * Fairfield,WOW Hall, Eugene; www. Ballroom, Portland; TF wowhall.org or 541-687-2746. Dec. 3 —Metric, Roseland Theater, Dec. 14 —Sunn0))), Roseland Theater, Portland; SOLDOUT;TW* Portland; TW* Dec. 3 —Passion Pit, McMenamins * Dec. 15 —Horse Feathers/Frank Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT Fairfield,Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Dec.4— BlueScholars/The Physics/ Brothers FromAnother, WOW Dec. 15 —The Mother Hips/The Parson RedHeads, Doug Fir Lounge, Hall, Eugene; www.wowhall.org or * 541-687-2746. Portland; TF Dec. 5 —Charles Bradley 8 The Dec. 16 —Blind Pilot, Roseland Menahan Street Band,Aladdin Theater, Theater, Portland; TW* Portland; TF* Dec. 16 —The DandyWarhols, Doug Dec. 5 —The Killers, Theater of the Fir Lounge, Portland; TF* Clouds, Portland; www.rosequarter.com Dec. 16 —The Mountain Goats, or 877-789-7673. Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Dec.5— OfMonstersand M en, Dec. 18 —Pentatonix, Aladdin Theater, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; SOLDOUT;TF* * Portland; SOLDOUT;CT Dec. 19 —Kinky Friedman, Aladdin Dec.6— Grouplove,Mc Menamins * Theater, Portland; TF Crystal Ballroom, Portland; SOLDOUT; Dec. 20 —2 Chainz, Roseland Theater, CT* Portland; TW* Dec. 6 —Mercy Me, Craterian Theater Dec.20— Kinky Friedman,WOW at The Collier Center for the Performing Hall, Eugene; www.wowhall.org or Arts, Medford; www.craterian.org or 541-687-2746. 541-779-3000. Dec. 22 —ConBro Chill, Wonder Dec. 6 —Sufjan Stevens,Aladdin * * Ballroom, Portland; TF Theater, Portland; SOLDOUT;TF Dec. 27-28 —Beats Antique, Dec. 6, 9 —"Let it Snow": Presented McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, by A Jazz Kings Christmas; The Shedd * Institute, Eugene; www.theshedd.org or Portland; CT 541-434-7000. Dec. 28 —Cherry Poppin' Daddies, Dec. 7 —Blood on theDance Floor, WOW Hall, Eugene; www.wowhall.org or 54 I-687-2746. Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* Dec. 7 —Marv Ellis/Shook Twins, Dec. 29 —Supersuckers, Doug Fir McDonald Theatre, Eugene; TW* Lounge, Portland; TF*


THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012

out of town

Dec. 29-31 —Railroad Earth, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, * Portland; CT Dec. 30-31 —Storm Large,Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Dec. 31 —Floydian Slips, McDonald Theatre, Eugene; TW* Dec. 31 —NewYears Evewith Pink Martini,Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.pcpa.com or 503-946-7272. Jan. 4 —Jenny Scheinman, Bill Frisell & Brian Blade,The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www.theshedd.org or 541-434-7000. Jan. 5 —The JennyScheinman Trio, McMenamins Mission Theater, Portland;

*Tickets TM: Ticketmaster, www.ticket

master.com or 800-745-3000 TW:TicketsWest, www.tickets west.com or 800-992-8499 TF:Ticketfly, www.ticket fly.com or 877-435-9849 CT:Cascade Tickets, www

.cascadetickets.com or 800514-3849

*

CT

Jan. 8 —KEANE/Youngdlood Hawke, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT* Jan. 11 —Floater, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT* Jan. 11 —Monterey Jazz Festival 55th Anniversary Tour,Hult Center, Eugene; www.hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. Jan. 12 —Hell's Belles/ZeppareHa, McDonald Theatre, Eugene; TW* Jan. 13 —LoudonWainwright HI/Dar Williams,Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Jan. 13 —Tridal Seeds, Wonder * Ballroom, Portland; TF Jan. 15 —Lady Gaga, Rose Garden, Portland; www.rosequarter.com or 877-789-7673. Jan. 16 —Chris Botti, Craterian Theater at The Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www.craterian.org or 541-779-3000. Jan. 16 —Dar WiHiams/Loudon Wainwright HI,The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www.theshedd.org or 541-434-7000. Jan. 18 —Sum41, Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* Jan. 19 —Jackson Browne, Keller Auditorium, Portland; www.pcpa.com or 800-273-1530. Jan. 19 —Quicksand, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* Jan. 19 —Slightly Stoopid/Karl Denson,McDonald Theatre, Eugene; TW

*

Jan. 20 —Slightly Stoopid/Karl Denson,McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT* Jan. 23 —Down,Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* Jan. 23 —TommyEmmanuel, Newmark Theatre, Portland; TW* Jan. 24 —Pinhack, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* Jan. 24 —Solas, The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www.theshedd.org or 541-434-7000. Jan.25—PortlandSoundcheck, Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Jan. 25 —School of Rock — Portland, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT*

GO! MAGAZINE PAGE 23

Submitted photo

Singer-songwriter and violinist Sara Watkins(of Nickel Creek fame) is currently on tour promoting her second solo album, "Sun Midnight Sun." With special guest Aoife O'Donovan, Watkins will perform Dec. 7 at Eugene's WOW Hall and Dec. 8 at Portland's Mississippi Studios. Jan. 26 —Hot Buttered Rum/Fruition, WOW Hall, Eugene; www.wowhall.org or 541-687-2746. Jan. 26 —Marc CohnTrio, Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Jan. 26 —The Walkmen, Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* Feb. 1 —Black Prairie, The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www.theshedd.org or 541-434-7000. Feb.6— EHieGoulding,Mc Menamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT* Feb. 6 —Soundgarden,Arlene * Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; TW Feb.7— The Wood Brothers,WO W Hall, Eugene; www.wowhall.org or 541-687-2746. Feb.8— SuperDiamond,McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT* Feb. 8 —The WoodBrothers, Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Feb. 9 —Mark Kozelek, Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Feb. 9 —RaRa Riot, Wonder Ballroom, * Portland; TF Feb. 11 —Shawn MuHins, Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Feb. 12 —Graveyard, Wonder * Ballroom, Portland; TF Feb. 16 —Afro-Cuhan All Stars, The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www.theshedd. org or 541-434-7000. Feb. 16 —Leftover Salmon, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, * Portland; CT Feb. 16 —Victor Wooten, Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF*

LECTURES 5 COMEDY Dec. 11 —Popovich ComedyPet Theater,Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Jan. 11 —"An Evening of Sit Down

Comedy with RobinWilliams andDavid Steinberg,"Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.pcpa.com or 503-248-4335. Jan. 12 —"An Evening of Sit Down Comedy with RobinWilliams andDavid Steinberg,"Hult Center, Eugene; www. theshedd.org or541-434-7000. Jan. 18 —Paula Poundstone, * McDonald Theatre, Eugene; TW Feb. 2 —Lewis Black, Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.pcpa.com or503-248-4335. Feb. 5 —The Moth, Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.pcpa.com or503-946-7272. April 21 —DougBenson, WOWHall, Eugene; TM*

SYMPHONY 5 OPERA Dec. 1-3 —"Shostakovich Violin No. 2": Featuring violinist Mikhail Simonyan; music by Berlioz, Shostakovich and Franck; Oregon Symphony; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www. orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343. Dec. 2 —Valentina Lisitsa: Presented by Portland Piano International; Newmark Theatre, Portland; www.pcpa. com or 503-946-7272. Dec. 6 —"Swan Lake":Featuring music by Copland, Bruch and Tchaikovsky; EugeneSymphony;Hult Center, Eugene; www.hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. Dec. 7-9 —"Gospel Christmas": Featuring the Northwest Community Gospel Choir and the Oregon Symphony; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343. Dec. 15 —"Fiesta Navidad": Featuring Mariachi Los Camperos de Nati Cano; Oregon Symphony; Arlene

Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www. orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343. Dec. 16 —"Cirque de Noel": Combines aerial feats, mind-boggling contortionists and juggling acts with holiday favorites performed by the EugeneSymphony; HultCenter,Eugene; www.hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. Dec. 22 —"Christmas with Johnny Mathis":Oregon Symphony; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www. orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343. Dec. 23 —"Comfort & Joy":The Oregon Symphony and Pacific Youth Choir perform holiday favorites; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www. orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343. Dec. 28-31 —"The Pirates of Penzance":Eugene Opera; Hult Center, Eugene; www.hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. Jan.6 —"Inspector Crescendo":Kids Series Concert; Oregon Symphony; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343. Jan. 12-14 —"Andre Watts & Beethoven's Emperor":Featuring pianist Andre Watts; music by Hindemith, Schumann and Beethoven; Oregon Symphony; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www. orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343. Jan. 17 —"Mozart's Piano Concerto": Featuring Alessio Bax; music by Mozart, Rossini and Prokofiev; Eugene Symphony; Hult Center, Eugene; www. hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000.

THEATER

L DANCE Through Dec. 1 —"Next Fall": Tony Award-winning play by Geoffrey Nauffts; Lord LeebrickTheatre, Eugene; www. lordleebrick.org or 541-465-1506. Through Dec. 8 —skinner/kirk DANCE ENSEMBLE,The BodyVox Dance Center, Portland; www.bodyvox.com or 503-229-0627. Through Dec. 16 —"Singin' in the Rain":1983stage adaptation of the beloved1952 MGM musical comedy; 2012 Shedd Theatricals; The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www.theshedd.org or 541-434-7000. Through Dec. 23 —"A Midsummer Night's Dream":Play by William Shakespeare; Portland Center Stage;

Gerding Theater at the Armory; Portland; www.pcs.org or 503-445-3700. Through Dec. 23 —"Sherlock Holmes and the Case of the Christmas Carol": Artist Repertory Theatre; Alder Stage; www.artistsrep.org or 503-241-1278. Through Dec. 30 —"The Santaland Diaries":Play by David Sedaris; Portland Center Stage; Gerding Theater at the Armory, Portland; www.pcs.org or 503-445-3700. Dec. 6-8 —Camille A. Brown & Dancers:Part of the White Bird Dance Series; Portland State University, Portland; www.whitebird.org or 503-245-1600. Dec. 7-9 —"It's a Wonderful Life": Featuring vintage radio scripts performed in the manner of a live radio broadcast from a1940s network studio sound stage; Fred Crafts' Radio Redux; Wildish Theater, Springfield; www. wildishtheater.com or 541-868-0689. Dec. 8-23 —"George Balanchine's The Nutcracker":Oregon Ballet Theatre Company; Keller Auditorium, Portland; www.obt.org or 888-922-5538. Dec. 13-23 —"A TunaChristmas": Oregon Repertory Theatre; Winningstad Theatre, Portland; www.oregonrep.org or 503-946-7272. Dec. 21-23 —"The Nutcracker": Eugene Ballet Company; Hult Center for the Performing Arts, Eugene; www. hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. Jan. 1-6 —"The Bookof Mormon": Tony Award-winning play by Trey Parker, Robert Lopez and Matt Stone; Keller Auditorium, Portland; www.pcpa.com or 503-946-7272. Jan. 3-5 —"AH in the Timing":A collection of one-act plays by David Ives; Next Stage Repertory Company; Craterian Theater at The Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www. craterian.org or 541-779-3000. Jan. 8-Feb. 3 —"I Love to Eat": New play celebrates the life and talent of chef James Beard; Portland Center Stage; Gerding Theater at the Armory, Portland; www.pcs.org or 503-445-3700. Jan. 8-Feb. 10 —"The Lost Boy": World premiere; play by Susan Mach; Artist Repertory Theatre; Morrison Stage; www.artistsrep.org or 503-241-1278. Jan. 12 —"Neil Berg's1D1 Years of Broadway Song 8 Dance,"Craterian Theater at The Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www. craterian.org or 541-779-3000. Jan. 24 —"Nunset Blvd.": Starring Cindy Williams; Craterian Theater at The Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www.craterian.org or 541-779-3000. Jan. 24-Feb. 3 —Fertile Ground Festival:Featuring world premiere projects, staged readings, developing works and other arts events; various locations in Portland; www. fertilegroundpdx.org.

Continued next page


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THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012

From previous page Jan. 29-March10 —"Venus in Fur": Play by David Ives; 2012 Tony Award nominee for Best Play; Portland Center Stage; Gerding Theater at the Armory, Portland; www. pcs.org or 503-445-3700. Feb. 15-Nov. 3 —"The Taming of the Shrew": This production of Shakespeare's play is part of "Shakespeare for a New Generation"; Oregon Shakespeare Festival; Angus Bowmer Theatre, Ashland; www.osfashland.org or 800-219-8161. Feb. 16-July 7 —"Two Trains Running":August Wilson's searing portrait of African-American life in the 1960s; Oregon Shakespeare Festival; Angus Bowmer Theatre, Ashland; www.osfashland.org or 800-219-8161.

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EXHIBITS

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Through Dec. 9 —Jordan Schnitzer Museum ofArt: The following exhibits are currently on display: "Lesley Dill: Poetic Visions: From Shimmer to Sister Gertrude Morgan" (through Dec. 9), "Good Grief! A Selection from 50 Years of Original Art from Charles M. Schulz's Peanuts" (through Dec. 31) and "The History of Photography" (through Jan. 10); Eugene; jsma.uoregon. edu or 541-346-3027. Through Dec. 16 —Portland Art Museum:Thefollowing exhibits are currently on display: "APEX: Anna Fidler" (through Dec. 16), "Cindy Sherman" (through Dec. 30), "The Body Beautiful in Ancient Greek" (through Jan. 6), "Flesh& Bone:Photographyand theBody"(through Jan. 6), "Mythologia: Gods, Heroes and Monsters" (through Jan. 27) and "NOH: Dance Drama of the Samurai" (through Feb. 24); Portland; www.portlandartmuseum. org or 503-226-2811. Through Dec. 31 —"Timderrr! A Nostalgic Look Back at Working in the Woods":Featuring vintage photographs and rare motion picture films; World Forestry Center Discovery Museum, Portland; www. worldforestry.org or 503-228-1367. Through Dec. 31 —ZooLights, Oregon Zoo, Portland; www.oregonzoo.org or 503-226-1561. ThroughJan.1— Oregon M useum ofScienceand Industry:The following exhibits are currently on display "RACE:Are We SoDifferent" (through Jan. 1), "Grossology: The (Impolite) Science of the Human Body" (through Jan. 6) and "Simply Beautiful: Photographs from National Geographic" (through Feb. 10); Portland; www.omsi.edu or 800-955-6674. Through Jan. 5 —Museumof Contemporary Crafts: The following exhibits are currently on display: "Design with the Other 90% Cities" (through Jan. 5) and "Reflecting on Erik Gronborg" (through Feb.16); Portland; www. museumofcontemporarycraft.org or 503-223-2654. Through May —"Noise!": Featuring interactive stations on sound, music and hearing; Science Factory Children's Museum& Exploration Dome, Eugene; www. sciencefactory.org or 541-682-7888.

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21ST

SOME PEOPLE DEFINE A DAY BY ITS HOURS,

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WE DEFINE A DAY BY ITS

STORIES AND THEIR IMPACT I

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SAN FRANCISCO PASSES BAN ON PLIBLICNUDITY; READYTO GOBBLE; LPGATOURAHEAD OF CURVEON GLOBALTRAVEL; DANGEROUSTOYS STILL OUTTHERE, GROUP WARNS; UNDERDOG BEAVERS BELIEVETHEYCAN TAKECIVIL WAR AGAINST DUCKS; TRUCE IN GAZA IS CLOSE, EGYPTIAN OFFICIALS SAY; A RISING STAR IN SCIENCE AND AGRICULTLIRE;THERE'S STILL A LOTTO BE THANKFUL FOR IN SPORTS;RANKING HIGH IN RECYCLING; PHOTOS BY' I JEFF CHIU/THEASSOCIATED PRESS;2 DEAN GUERNSEY/THEBULLETIN; 3 COREY PERRINE/THEASSOCIATED PRESS;4. ROB KERR/THEBULLETIN; 5.

GREG WAHL-STEPHE NS/THE ASSOCIATEDPRESS,6. HATEM MOUSSA/THEASSOCIATED PRESS;7. ROBKERR/THE BULLETIN: 8. WILFREDOLEE/THEASSOCIATEDPRESS;9 ROBKERR/THE BULLETIN

Through Dec. 24 —HoodRiver Holidays: Featuring holidaytrees, decorated storefronts, unique shopping options and wine-tasting rooms; Kick-off Party Nov. 30 features tree lighting and parade; Hood River; www. hoodriver.org or 800-366-3530. Dec. 6-10 —RogueWinterfest, Evergreen Federal Bank's Bear Hotel, Grants Pass; www.roguewinterfest. ol'g. Jan. 18-20 —ChocolateFest, Oregon Convention Center, Portland; www.chocolatefest.org or 503-228-1367. Jan. 25-27 —Oregon Truffle Festival, The Hilton Eugene, Eugene; www.oregontrufflefestival.com.


GO! MAGAZINE PAGE 25

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012

gaming TOP 10 ACROSSTHEBOARD The editors of Game Informer

Magazine rank the top gamesfor the month of December: 1. "Far Cry 3" (PS3, X360, PC) 2. "New Super Mario Bros. U"

(Wii U) 3. "Halo 4" (X360)

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4. "Need For Speed: Most

ra

Wanted" (PS3, X360, PC) 5. "XCOM: Enemy Unknown"

(PS3, X360, PC) 6. "Dishonored" (PS3, X360, PC) 7. "Borderlands 2" (PS3,X360, PC) 8. "Hitman: Absolution" (PS3, X360, PC) 9. "Paper Mario: Sticker Star" (3DS) McClatcby-Tribune News Service

The wizard Gandaif, in Lego form, embarks on a journey in the new game "Lego The Lord of the Rings."

10. "Call of Duty: Black Ops II"

(PS3, X360, PC) Game lnformer Magazine

ne ame oru

In thenews COMIC BOOKS GODIGITAL While print comic books aren't going away, yet, the industry is

•'LegoThe LordoftheRings'mayhaveafew glitches, but theoverall gameplay isthe best yet By joe juba Game rnformer Magazine

t

f you've played one Lego game, you haven't played

them all. That may seem obvious, but I've encountered too many people who dismiss new "Lego" titles based on the faulty assumption that they are all the same. "Lego The Lord of the Rings" is the perfect opportunity to see how far this series has come since its inception; Traveller's Tales has crafted a wonderful plat-

d own. Epic moments like t h e swarming mass of orcs at Helm's Deep, the fall of the Witch King at Pelennor Fields, and Gandalf's battle with th e Balrog are all w onderfully executed and f u n to play. The mix of faithfulness and playfulness with the source material makes "Lego The Lord of the Rings" the best video game adaptation of Tolkien's universe, hands down. You don't need to be a diehard fan to have a good time here. The

'LEGO THELORD OF THE RINGS' 8.5 (out of 10) PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment ESRB rating: Ef 0+

tions to puzzles. Combat is still important, but it tends to happen in more impressive ways than enemies mindlessly pouring out of doors. Stomping around as Treebeard, riding into battle as King Theoden, and taking down gameplay supporting the O liphaunts are just a f e w e x former that stands on its R E VIEW s t ory (which follows the amples of how Traveller's Tales own — though the Lego three movies) is fun re- keeps the action fresh. charm and agreat license gardless of your level of Once the War of the Ring is make it even better. Middle-earth expertise. Whether won, your time with "Lego The "Lego The Lord of the Rings" you're playing in single-player or Lord of the Rings" is just beginis a broad fusion of many ele- with a local co-op buddy, the va- ning. The (fairly linear) core ments — exploration, collection, riety is astounding. You still beat campaign is an easily digestible c ombat, puzzle-solving — a n d up bad guys and collect studs, eight hours, but the wealth of Middle-earth is the ideal envibut that kind of activity occu- open-world, post-game content is ronment for these things to come pies a much smaller percentage staggering. together. Despite the kid-friendly of theexperience. Most of your With all of Middle-earth availexterior, the i mportant events time is spent exploring the iconic able to explore, the most powerfrom the story have not been sub- environments, hunting down col- ful items, best puzzles and coolstantially changed or w a tered lectibles, and searching for solu- est charactersare yours to find

— including a bonus level where y ou control tw o p owerful v i l lains.Obsessive players can expect to spend 30 hours or more to hit 100 percent. As fun as this game can be, some technical issues get in the way. Character selection bugs, chugging frame ratesand screen tearing provide occasional ann oyances. Th e i r r e gular a u dio quality (the voices are all sampled directly from the films) sometimes makes it seem like the main characters' dialogue is provided by an Internet soundboard, which deflates some otherwise cool moments. A handful of technical stumbles can't keep "Lego The Lord of the Rings" from b eing the best "Lego" game so far. Finding a great compromise between the linear installments and the

sprawling open world of "Lego Batman 2," Traveller's Tales hits sweet spots in the structure and

gameplay, constantly giving players new goals and new places to explore. The steady stream of goofball humor keeps the mood light, but almost every part of the game is entertaining in its own

way.

embracing the burgeoning digital world that's been fueled by iOS and Android tablets. DC Entertainment has launched

its entire line of comic books for download from the top three e-book stores including Kindle

Store, iBookstore andNOOKBook Store. The precedent-setting deal

brings best-selling DCComics and Vertigo periodical titles, including "Batman," "Superman," "Detective

Comics," "Action Comics," "Batgirl," "Wonder Woman," "Green Lantern," "Fables" and "American

Vampire," among manyothers, to an even broader audience of digital readers. DC Entertainment is now the

only comic book publisher to offer its periodical lineup across all major e-bookstore platforms. The deals reinforce a long track record of digital comics industry

leadership and innovation from DC Entertainment that dates back to its game-changing decision to make its entire line available in

September 2011.That launch is widely seen as reinvigorating the comic book industry and has led to

increased sales of both digital and print comics. — John Gaudiosi, GamerHub.tv


PAGE 26 • GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012

movies

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Laurie Sparham /Focus Features via The Associated Press

Jude Law and Kelra Knlghtley star in the drama "Anna Karenina," based on Leo Tolstoy's novel of the same name.

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• Leo Tolstoy's famous story is unfortunately upstaged bythe production nna Karenina and Madame Bovary are two of the most notorious fallen women in literature. Karenina is prepared to lose all the advantages of high society in favor of the man she loves. Bovary abandons the man who loves her in an attempt to social climb. As portrayed by Leo Tolstoy and Gustave Flaubert, both are devastated by the prices they pay. These are two of the great roles

for many actresses, and irresistible challenges for many filmmakers. There have been 25 film versions of Karenina, most famously by Greta Garbo (1927 and 1935) and Vivien Leigh, and nine of Bovary, notably by Isabelle Huppert, Jennifer Jones and Pola Negri; Mia Wasikowska will play her next year. I mention these details to ask myself: What makes the two roles so enticingevery good actressmust

sooner orlaterread the novels and start to daydream? Both are mothers who essentially choose to abandon their single children. Both are the center of attention and gossip within their own circles. Both use opera houses as a stage for their affairs. Both pay dearly for their adulteries. The big difference is that Karenina is driven by sincere passion, and Bovary by selfishness and greed. Karenina inspires pity;

Bovary gets what she deserves. In Joe Wright's daringly stylized new version of "Anna Karenina," he returns for the third time to use Keira Knightley as his heroine. She is almost distractingly beautiful here,and elegantly gowned to an improbable degree. One practical reason for that: As much as half of Wright's film is staged within an actual theater, and uses not only the stage but the boxes and even the main floor — with seats removed — to present the action.

Continued next page

ROGER EBERT

"Anna Karenina" 129 minutes R, for some sexuality and violence


THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012

T em isa t, u it's over one

movies

GO! MAGAZINE PAGE 27

'Ki in

illing T he m S o f tly" begins with a George V. Higgins novel set in Boston in 1974 and moves its story to post-Katrina New Orleans in 2008, in order to allow televised speeches by Barack Obama, John McCain and George W. Bush to run frequently in the background. The facile point, I think, is that organized crime in A merica is troubled like the rest of the economy with a business slowdown and growing recession. It's a good thing these crooks are in a lot of bars where the TV sets are tuned to C-SPAN. The plot centers on a deadly catch-22. A genial guy named Markie Trattman (Ray Liotta) operates high-stakespoker games for the mob. One night the game is hit by two hooded stickup men, who make off with a big pile of mob money. This in itself is suspicious because it looks like an inside job: What outsider, even knowing about the secret game, would be crazy enough to steal from the mob? Talk about crazy. Some time later, Markie, feeling in a good mood, tells the players he arranged the j ob himself, robbing hi s o w n game. He finds this so funny that tears run down his cheeks. The job was pulled off by insignificant goombahs Johnny Amato (Vincent Curatola) and Russell (Ben Mendelsohn), and since it happens

K

From previous page We see the actors in the wings, the stage machinery, the trickery with backdrops, horses galloping across in a steeplechase. All the world's a stage, and we but players on it. Yes, and particularlyin Karenina's case because she fails to realize how true that is. She makes choices that are unacceptable in the high society of St. Petersburg and Moscow, and behaves as if they were invisible. She doesn't seem to realize the audience is right there and paying close attention. She believes she can flaunt the rules and get

/~ gg a

ROGER EBERT

"Killing Them Softly" 97 minutes

R, for violence, sexual references, pervasive languageand drug use near the beginning of the film, we know instinctively that Russell and Johnny aren't going to be around at the end. A high-level mob boss named Mickey (James Gandolfini) arrives in town, hauling his in-flight luggage through the airport like a traveling businessman. He orders the executions of Russell and Johnny by a silky hit man named Jackie (Brad Pitt), who likes to kill softly, as explained by one of the many aging classic songs on the soundtrack. These are the first two of many, many mob-on-mob killings in the film, as the syndicate administers its own version of a bailout. "Killing Them Softly" continues as a dismal,dreary series of cruel and p ainful murders, mostly by men who know one another, in a barren city where it's usually night, often rainy, and is

never identifiable as New Orleans — not even by the restaurants. I recall only one female character in the film, a hooker employed by Mickey, who is the only mobster not exclusively obsessed with crime, money andpecking order. As the body count grows, we meet Driver (Richard Jenkins), a gravel-voiced chief executive who appears often behind the wheel of a car parked in the wastelands beneath bridges. Here is w here th e c atch-22 comes in: Now that Markie has claimed credit for knocking off his own game, another one of his games is stuck up. Does it now seem inevitable that he, too, becomes a marked man? Not to me. Who with any common sense

would think he was that dumb? There's some of the Higgins brand of humor in a conversation about how badly he should be beaten Up. It seems as if I've been seeing versions of this story since forever.A cast is assembled from various flavors of tough guys, they're placed in a dreary and joyless cityscape, they hold a series of fraught conversations, there is a great deal of suffering and blood and most of them are required to die by the end. Ideally, the plot also involves romance, humor and suspense, and tense scenes involving exact timing. Not here. All "Killing Them Softly" takes from the limitless universe of film noir is the night and the city.

Here's a good question: How does this mob support itself? The movie contains not a single crime involving civilians. No heists, hijackings or frauds, and drug deals only among themselves. Like a trapped animal struggling to free itself, they seem reduced to gnawing off their own legs. The charisma of such as Gandolfini, Pitt, Liotta and Jenkins depends largely on their screen presences and our memories of them in better roles. This one, written and directed by Andrew Dominik, for example recalls Brad Pitt's strong work in the director's "The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford" (2007).

away with it. W hen we meet her she isthe pretty young wife of the important government minister Karenin (Jude Law). He is affectionate, but dry and remote. The love she lacks for him she lavishes on their 8-year-old son. At the train station to meet Dolly, the wife of her brother, Count Oblonsky (Matthew Macfadyen),she sees the dashing young officer Vronsky (Aaron Taylor- Johnson). For both of them it's love at first sight. He seems very young, and perhaps not schooled in society's rules. She should know better.

All society appears in public at the opera and grand balls (both staged by Wright in the theater), and after Anna and Vronsky meet at a ball, the die is cast. In this film Wright and his screenwriter, Tom Stoppard, make adequate room for a l andowner named Levin (Domhnall Gleeson), who for Tolstoy was the third major character and certainly the most attractive. Levin represents Tolstoy's ideas in the novel: He is for abolishing serfdom and liberating his own serfs and has a n e ar-mystical bond with the land and its cultivation. He hopes to marry Kitty (Ali-

cia Vikander), who has a crush on Vronsky, but at the ball Vronsky has eyes only for Anna, and the outcome is happiness for Kitty and Levin. Anna's husband is not blind, and soon knows about her affair. He is very firm. If they continue (affairs are not unknown in their circle), she must be discreet and s ecretive. Anna's heart i s t o o aflame to conceal her love with Vronsky, and pays the price of separation from her husband and her beloved son. Society is satisfied. She has sinned, and she has been punished. Her punishment

is far from over, and the lesson she dearly learns is that passion may be temporary, but scandal is permanent. This is a sumptuous film, extravagantly staged and photographed, perhaps too much so for its own good. There are times when it is not quite clear if we are looking at characters in a story or players on a stage. Productions can sometimes upstage a story, but when the story is as considerable as "Anna Karenina," that can be a miscalculation.

Melinda Sue Gordon /Cogans Productions via Mcclatchy-Tribune News Service

Brad Pitt portrays hit manJackie Cogan in "Killing Them Softly."

— Roger Ebert is afilm critic for The Chicago Sun-Times.

— Roger Ebert is afilm critic for The Chicago Sun-Times.


movies

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THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012

S

eBU1 U uthering remains

Here's what's showing on Central

Oregon moviescreens. For showtimes, seelistings on Page31.

Reviews by RogerEbelt unless otherwise noted.

HEADS UP

H e i ghts" pop u l ar

among young women forsome of the same reasons the "Twilight" novels do: It shows the heroine powerfully attracted to apossiblydangerous hero. Beneath all the period trappings of Emily Bronte's 1847 novel, beneath the brooding atmosphere of the Yorkshire moors, beneath the book's associations with classroom assignments lurks ... sex. This is the same sort of sex found in bodice-ripping romantic novels, in which young virgins grow close but not too close to dark,ominous young men who threaten to sweep them off their feet. They're never quite swept, but the foreplay is tantalizing. In this rough-hewn new film version by the British director Andrea Arnold, gone is the stylized elegance of William Wyler's 1939 version, with its eight Academy Award nominations and an Oscar for cinematographer Gregg Toland ("Citizen Kane"). Gone are the polished performances of Laurence Olivier as Heathcliff, the servant from the Caribbean, and Merle Oberon as his young mistress, Cathy Earnshaw. Gone, too, is Heathcliff's greater age and height than Cathy. Instead, this adaptation for the first time makes something evident that is strongly implied in the novel: Heathcliff, born as a slave, is Afro-Caribbean. He's played here by Solomon Glaveas a youth and by James Howson after he returns to the Earnshaw family manor, having become in the meantime a wealthy man. Cathy(Shannon Beer when young, Kaya Scodelario when grown) grows from a freerunning semi-wild child to a poised young lady whose transformation positions the two for what, at the time, would have been a transgressive relationship. We're accustomed to imagining "Wuthering Heights" as a "Masterpiece Theater"-style production, but Arnold probably correctly depicts Yorkshire in the late 1700s as a brutal and savage society, especially among such as the struggling Earnshaws. Animals are mistreated, human niceties forsworn, and if Cathy's father (Paul Hilton) is kind

O N LOCA L S CRE E N S

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Courtesy Agatha Nitecka

Solomon Glaveand Shannon Beer star in "Wuthering Heights." riage with a feckless neighbor, Ed-

ROGER EBERT

gar (Jonathan Powell when young, h

James Northcote when grown). Nobody has ever stirred her as Heathcliff did. When Heathcliff returns, it is for the purpose of reclaiming the only love of his life. Arnold uses hardly any dialogue to relate these "Wuthering Heights" events, and her film is set close to the earth, with beautiful but often 128 minutes grubby shots of the animals, birds No MPAA rating. and insects who inhabit the land along with its humans. enough to adopt the young orphan, This is a more compact, tougher her brother, Hindley (Lee Shaw), is "Wuthering Heights" than we've cruel and jealous after he becomes seen before, lacking the refined the Earnshaw heir. Hebeats Heath- pleasures of most versions. Is it cliff, works him mercilessly, and is possible Arnold's vision is closer to overtly racist (surely this is the first the fantasies Bronte experienced adaptation using the N-word). while writing her novel but was The story opens with Heathcliff reluctant to make more explicit? returning (during one of the film's (As it is, she felt enough ambiguity wild and stormy nights) to Earnabout it to conceal herself behind a shaw. Then sequences show young male pseudonym, Ellis BelL) Heathcliff and Cathy as affectionA rnold has been successful in ate quasi-siblings, sneaking away re-imagining the archetypal emofrom the stern discipline of the tions in the story, bringing it closer farm to explore the untamed maj- to its passionate elements. What esty of the moors. she hasn't done is make a terrifiAs they approach puberty,they cally entertaining film. Although become affectionate and enjoy this version dumps many of the chaste tumbles in th e h eather. novel's passages, particularly from Hindley's dislike of this may inthe later chapters, it's dreary and cludesubterranean levelsof inces- slow-paced, heavy on atmosphere, tuous feelings. introverted. I suppose life on an Finally Heathcliff has no other isolated moor was like that at the resource than to run away. In his time, but do we need this much absence he earns a considerable atmosphere'? — Roger Ebert isa film critic fortune by undetermined means. Meanwhile, Cathy makes a marfor The Chicago Sun-Times.

"The Metropolitan Opera: La Clemeaza di Tita" —The virtuosic Elina Garanca sings Sesto in Mozart's drama set in ancient Rome. Giuseppe Filianoti is the noble Tito and Barbara Frittoli is Vitellia, in this handsome revival of one of the composer's final masterpieces. Harry Bicket conducts. "The Metropolitan Opera: Live in HighDefinition" series features12 opera performances transmitted live in highdefinition to movie theaters around the world. The event screens at 9:55 a.m. Saturday at the Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 8 IMAX in Bend. Tickets are $24 for adults, $22 for seniors and $18 for children.195 minutes. (no MPAA rating) — Synopsis from National CineMedia "The Nutcracker Mariinsky Ballet" — Mariinsky Theatre, located in St. Petersberg, brings Tchaikovsky's beloved holiday ballet, "The Nutcracker" to the silver screen. Filmed in 3-D, the production was recorded at the historic Mariinsky Theatre in December 2011 where the original "Nutcracker" first made its debut120years ago in1892. This special cinematic holiday event will draw audiences into the performance on stage, taking them on a magical journey with Clara, her Nutcracker, exquisite dancers and toy soldiers. This production showcases the impeccable virtuosity of two of the Mariinsky Theatre's rising stars -Alina Somova as Clara (Masha in the original Russian ballet) and Vladimir Shklyarov as the Nutcracker. "Nutcracker" screens at 2 and 7:30 p.m. Monday at the Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 8 IMAX in Bend. Cost is $15. This film will be shown locally in 3-D. 105 minutes. (no MPAA rating) — Synopsis from National CineMedia "Tarantino XX: 'Reservoir Dogs' and 'Pulp Fiction"' —In celebration of his 20th anniversary as a filmmaker, Quentin Tarantino's "Reservoir Dogs" and "Pulp Fiction" return to the silver screen. "Reservoir Dogs" screens at 7 p.m. Tuesday and "Pulp Fiction" screens at 7 p.m. Thursday at the Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 8 IMAX in Bend. Each cinema event will include a special feature showcasing Tarantino's 20-year career and a selection of hand-picked movie trailers from films that inspired him as a filmmaker. Cost is $12.50. (R) — Synopsis from National CineMedia

WHAT'S NEW "Anna Kareniaa" —Joe Wright's daringly stylized new version of "Anna Karenina" is staged largely within an actual theater, and uses not only the stagebutthe boxes andeventhem ain floor — with seats removed — to present the action. Keira Knightly, almost distractingly beautiful here, stars as Tolstoy's heroine. Jude Law is her dry and proper husband, a government minister, and Aaron Taylor-Johnson plays Vronsky, the young military officer with whom she begins a disastrous affair. A sumptuous film, extravagantly staged and photographed, perhaps too much so for its own good. There are times when it is not quite clear if we are looking at characters in a story or players on a stage. Rating: Two and a half stars. 129 minutes. (R) "The Collection" —"The Collection" is bloody, disgusting and ridiculous, but the one thing it's not is horror, not real horror, not in the sense of tense or scary. It's not cinema, either. It's not even fun. In "The Collection" — from director Marcus Dunstan (he wrote "Saw IV") — there is a serial killer in a blackmask who has been staging mass murders but also abducting individuals to add to his collection. One day Elena (EmmaFitzpatrick) and her friends go off to an underground dance club and the night takes an unfortunate turn. Most of her friends are liquefied. The rest are rendered two dimensional. But Elena, the lucky one, ends up in a trunk in the maniac's house. The rest of the movie is about a rescue team's misguided attempt to rescue the young woman from this horrible nest of death and doom. It's just a small handful of people, because a SWAT team or the National Guard would just get in the way, what with all their guns and all. And that's the whole movie: People in a house coming across disgusting things while trying to avoid booby traps. About an hour of screen time is spent in that house, and the effect isn't terrifying or claustrophobic, just numbing and disheartening. In "The Collection," modern horror comes to the end of a decade-long dead end. Rating: A half of star. 83 minutes. (R) — Mike LaSalle, SanFrancisco Chronicle "Killing ThemSoftly" — Set in a dreary and barren post-Katrina New Orleans, a cruel drama about organized crime with a cast much better than it deserves. After an ill-advised stickup of a high-stakes mob-organized poker game, a series of mob executions threatens to pretty much wipe out the local syndicate. OK. But no suspense, romance or humor? Only dry, weary dialogue, suffering and blood? Afraid so. Starring Brad Pitt, Ray Liotta, James Gandolfini, Richard Jenkins. Rating: Two stars. 97 minutes. (R)

Continued next page


movies

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012

From previous page nWuthering Heights" —In this rough-hewn new film version by the British director Andrea Arnold, gone is the stylized elegance of William Wyler's1939 version. This adaptation for the first time makes something evident that is strongly implied in the novel: Heathcliff, born as a slave, is anAfro-Caribbean. Arnold probably correctly depicts Yorkshire in the late1700s as amore brutal and savagesociety, especially among suchasthestruggling Earnshawfamily. A more compact, tougher "Wuthering Heights" than we've seenbefore, slow-paced, heavy on atmosphere, introverted. This film opens at Tin PanTheater in Bend. Rating: Three stars. 128 minutes. (no MPAArating)

STILL SHOWING "Argo" —Ben Affleck directs and stars in the incredible true story of how, at the height of the Iranian hostage crisis, a CIA agent and a couple of Hollywood professionals dreamedup acockamamie scheme to free six Americans who were not being held in the American Embassy but had found refuge with theCanadianEmbassy. Kepttop secret for18 years, the operation created a fake sci-fi production named "Argo," convinced the Iranians it was real and used it to spirit the Americans out of the country. With lots of tension andalso some humor from John Goodmanand Alan Arkin asthe Hollywood pros involved. Rating: Four stars. 120 minutes. (R) "Cloud Atlas" —One of the most ambitious films ever made. Over a period of centuries, six stories wend their way toward visionary truths. The sameactors appear in different roles, playing characters of different races, genders and ages. Some are not even human, but fabricants. The acting and makeup were so effective that often I had no idea if I was looking at Tom Hanks, Halle Berry or Jim Broadbent. It's probably futile to try to extract a logical meaning from the film, written and directed by Lana Wachowski, Tom Tykwer and Andy Wachowski. Allow your imagination to play. Rating: Four stars. 172 minutes. (R) "Flight" —After opening with one of the most terrifying flying scenes I've witnessed, in which an airplane is saved by being flown upside-down, RobertZemeckis' "Flight" segues into a brave and tortured performance by Denzel Washington — one of his very best. Not often does a movie character make such a harrowing personal journey that keeps us in deep sympathy all of the way. Washington plays a veteran

fought high school football game before the next day in Spokane, Wash., is interrupted by the thud of bombs. The young gridiron stars of the Wolverines race outside to see enemy aircraft flying overhead in formation, dropping paratroopers from the skies. An alarming sight, but the movie reassures us that an invasion by communist North Korea can be vanquished by the members of the team and their girlfriends, using mostly automatic weapons stolen from the North Koreans themselves. They're all instinctive combat fighters, even a cheerleader. Light on dialogue, heavy on mindless action. Rating: One and a half stars. 93 minutes. (PG-13) "Rise of the Guardians" — Hyperactive 3-D animated fantasy regarding the plight of Jack Frost, who nobody seems ableto see. Called upon in a crisis to help the Guardians (Santa, the Easter

Dreamworks Animation, Paramount Pictures via AP

Bunnymund (voiced by Hugh Jackman)and North (voiced by Alec Baldwin) join forces in "Rise of the Guardians." commercial pilot who has built up a tolerance for quantities of alcohol and cocaine that would be lethal for most people. Rating: Four stars. 138 minutes. (R) "Frankenweenie" —Young Victor Frankenstein loves his dog, Sparky, and when the mutt runs into traffic and is blindsided, Victor takes inspiration from a science class and re-animates his pet using lightning bolts. Tim Burton's stop-acti on b8w comedy takes its inspiration from "The Bride of Frankenstein" and other horror movies, and the character of Mr. Rzykruski, the science teacher, is certainly modeled on Vincent Price. With the voices of Martin Landau, Catherine O'Hara, Martin Short, Charlie Tahan and Winona Ryder. Rating: Three stars. 87 minutes.

(PG) "life of Pi" —A miraculous achievement of storytelling and a landmark of visual mastery. Inspired by a worldwide bestseller that seemed unfilmable, it is a triumph over its difficulties. It is also a moving spiritual achievement, a movie whose title could have been shortened to "Life." The story involves the 227 days that its teenage hero (Suraj Sharma) spends drifting across the Pacific in the same lifeboat as a Bengal tiger. The movie quietly combines various religious traditions to enfold its story in the wonder of life. How remarkable that these two mammals, and the fish beneath them and birds above them, are all here. One of the year's best. This film is available locally in 3-D. Rating: Four stars. 125 minutes. (PG) "Lincoln" —Steven Spielberg's new film focuses on only a few months of Lincoln's life, including the passage of the13th Amendment ending slavery, the surrender of the Confederacy and his assassination. Rarely has a film attended more carefullyto the details of politics. Daniel Day-

GO! MAGAZINE PAGE 29

Lewis creates a Lincoln who is calmly self-confident, patient and willing to play politics in a realistic way. Not about an icon of history, but about a president who was scornedbysome ofhisopponents as a hayseed from the backwoods. He understood them better than they did him. Sure to win many Academy Award nominations. Rating: Four stars. 149 minutes. (PG-13) "Looper" —A smart and tricky sci-fi story that sidesteps the paradoxes of time travel by embracing them. The movie takes placein 2044and 2074.Although time travel is declared illegal once it has been discovered, a crime syndicate cheats and uses it as a method for disposing of its enemies. Joseph GordonLevitt plays Joe, the triggerman in 2044. Bruce Willis plays Old Joe, sent back from the future. Emily Blunt lives on the Kansas farm where they coincide in time. "Looper" weaves between past and present in a way that gives writer-director Rian Johnson and his actors opportunities to create a surprisingly involving narrative. Rating: Three and a half stars. 119 minutes. (R) "Red Dawn" —Opens with a hard-

Bunny, the Tooth Fairy, etc.), he saves the day. Younger children like the breakneck action, magical ability to fly, and the young hero who has tired of being overlooked. Their parents and older siblings may find the 97-minute running time quite long enough. This film is available locally in 3-D. Rating: Three stars. 97 minutes. (PG) "The Sessions" —Mark (John Hawkes) is 38 years old and after contracting polio, he has spent most of those years in an iron lung. He believes his time is running out. He would like to experience sexual intercourse with a woman at least once before he dies. He contacts Cheryl (Helen Hunt), a sex surrogate who explains the ground rules to Mark: They will have six meetings, no more. They are not working together in order to fall in love, but to achieve a specific physical purpose.

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PAGE 30. GO! MAGAZINE

From previous page

N EW D V D B LU - R A Y R EL E A S E S The following movies were released the week ofNov. 27.

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"Lawless" —Based on a reallife, blood-soaked war between moonshiners and the law in Franklin County, Va., in1931. The three Bondurant brothers (Shia LaBeouf, Tom Hardyand Jason Clarke) fearlessly rule their turf, until a foppish federal agent (Guy Pearce) arrives from Chicago. A well-made film about ignorant and violent people. It's not so much that the movie is too long, asthat too many people must be killed before it can end. DVDand Blu-ray Extras: Two featurettes, deleted scenes, a music video and audio commentary. Rating: Two and ahalf stars. 115 minutes. (R) uMen in Black 3" —Fifteen years after the original and adecade after the blah sequel, this third installment is the best in the series. Tommy Lee Jones andWill Smith are back as anti-alien Agents Kand J, and Josh Brolin has amovie-stealing role as the young Agent K, looking and sounding uncannily like Jones. Rick Baker, Hollywood's top-ranking creature creator, creates agob-

Courtesy Columbia Pictures

Josh Brolin, left, and Will Smithstar in "Men in Black 3." smacking gallery of aliens, and the time travel plot even works in the Apollo11 moon launch. DVDExtras: One featurette and music video; Blu-ray Extras: Sevenadditional featurettes. Rating: Three stars. 103 minutes. (PG-13) "ParaNorman" —This animated film comes from writer/co-director Chris Butler, a storyboard artist who honed his skills on Tim Burton's "Corpse Bride" and Henry Selick's "Coraline." Butler's own movie is a spooky, creatureinfested campfire story laced with valuable lessons about teamwork, responsibility, courage and the

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YO!I haVearight tOknOW What yOur gO Vernment iSdOing. Current Oregon law requires public notices to be printed io a newspaper whosereadersareaffectedbythenotice.Butfederal,state,andlocalgovernment agencies erroneously believe they can save money by posting public notices on their web sites instead of in the local newspaper.

Iftheydidthat,you'd have to know fn advance where, when, and how to look, and what to look for, in order to be informed about government actions that could affect you directly.

Less than 10% of the U.S. population currently visits a government web site

daily,* but 80% of ail Oregon adults read a newspaper at least once during an ** average week, and 54% read public notices printed there.

Keeppublic noticesinthenewspaper! 'US Census Brrrerrrr rrtay 2Crr9"AmenrarrOpinion Reser x ereerorNi tepremrrer20r0

celebration of our inner outcast. That last trait is personified by Norman,aquietand unassuming middle-schooler who can converse with the dead. Restless spirits are far kinder to Norman than the school bullies who ostracize our hero simply because he's different. For years, Norman's crazy uncle has kepta centuries-old curse cast by a disgruntled witch namedAggieatbay.Butwhen his uncle mysteriously dies, it's up to Norman, his perturbed older sister and his mild-mannered bestfriend to quell a zombie uprising and grant Aggie her final wish. After a creaky start, "ParaNorman" comes to life once the dead rise. DVD and Blu-ray Extras: Featurettes, preliminary animatic sequencesand audio commentary This film was not given a star rating. 92 minutes. (PG) — The Washington Post "Sparkle" —A full-bodied musical melodrama that acquires a melanchol y undertonebecause it features the last performance by Whitney Houston. She stars as the strict, churchgoing mom of three girls who are gifted singers: sexy Carmen Ejogo, studious Tika Sumpter and lovable Jordin Sparks (from "American Idol"), who has the title role and writes songs she's at first too shy to perform. With scene-stealing work by Mike Epps as a snaky comedian and Derek Luke as Sparkle's big-hearted boyfriend. DVDExtras: Two featurettes and audio commentary; Blu-ray Extras: Two additional featurettes, extended scenes nad music video. Rating: Three stars. 116 minutes. (PG-13) ALSO:"Step Up Revolution" COMING UP:Movies scheduled for national release Dec. 4 include "Butter," "Wild Horse, Wild Ride," "Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry," "Beasts of the Southern Wild," "Last Ounce of Courage," "Hope Springs," "The Odd Life of Timothy Green" and "The Dark Knight Rises." — "OVOand i3lu-ray Extras" from wire and online sources

She is kind and tactful, and so is Mark's parish priest (William H. Macy), who guides him with compassion through this process. Astonishing performances, and notwithout humor. Rating: Three and a half stars. 95 minutes. (R) "Skyfaii" —"Skyfall" triumphantly reinvents 007 in one of the bestBondsevermade. This is a full-blooded, joyous, intelligent celebration of a beloved cultural icon, with Daniel Craig taking full possession of a role he earlier played unconvincingly. The film at last provides a role worthy of Judi Dench, returning as M, who is one of the best actors of her generation. She is all but the co-star, with a lot of screen time, poignant dialogue, and a character who is far more complex and sympathetic than we expect. In this 50th year of the James Bond series, with the dismal "Quantum of Solace" (2008) still in our minds, I don't know what I expected in Bond No. 23, but certainly not an experience this invigorating. This film is available locally in IMAX. Rating: Four stars. 143 minutes. (PG-13) "Starlet" —A mismatched-friends drama whose overall sensitivity is belied by acouple of clumsily contrived plot points, SeanBaker's "Starlet" pairs story and setting perfectly. Set in California's San Fernando Valley where, according to production designer Mari Yui and high-def director of photography Radium Cheung, primary colors simply do not exist, the film is as pale as its protagonist's blonde hair. Dree Hemingway plays Jane, a frighteningly skinny 21-year-old whofinds $10,000 rolled up in a Thermos bought at ayard sale. This film was not given astar rating. "Starlet" screens at Tin PanTheater in Bend.107 minutes. (no MPAA rating) — John OeFore, The Hollywood Reporter "Tai Chi Zero" —Thefirst in a trilogy, this droll, enjoyable, if not altogether successful, stylized comic book fantasy set in19th century China stars Wushu champion JaydenYuan as akung fu prodigy in search of anelusive tai chi teacher. His search ends at a secluded village which is besieged by a heavily armedWesterneducated radical who wants to bring the railroad to town. Made in the spirit of "Kung FuHustle," the pic mashes together elements from manga, steampunk animes andthe Western. Rating: Twoand ahalf stars. The film screens at Tin Pan Theater in Bend. 100 minutes. (no MPAA rating) — Tirdad Oerakhshani, The Philadelphia Inquirer

Disney via AP

Ralph (voiced by John C. Reilly) wants to be a hero in "Wreck-It Ralph." "Taken 2" —They say that the family that's kidnapped together, stays together, and Liam Neeson, MaggieGraceand Famke Janssen are back in a pumped-up sequel to "Taken" (2008). This time the whole family is kidnapped by the vengeance-minded Krasniqi (Rade Sherbedgia), whose son was killed by Neeson in the earlier film (after the son attempted to turn the girl into a sex slave, to be sure). First-rate chases tear through (and up) Istanbul. Rating: Three stars. 91 minutes. (PG-13) "The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn — Part 2" —Fifth and final installment of the "Twilight" series, beginning where the previous one ended, as Bella Cullen (Kristen Stewart) gives birth to little Renesmee, and is introduced by her husband, Edward Cullen (Robert Pattinson), to her new life with vampire powers. In the process Bella has also been miraculously transformed into a much more interesting character, physically superb and emotionally uninhibited. The birth of the infant leads to a sensational climax involving the Washington state vampires and the Volturi of Italy, self-appointed rulers of vampiredom. Rating: Two and a half stars. 115 minutes. (PG-13) "Wreck-It Ralph" —The new Disney animated feature for families takes place inside several arcade-style video games, providing an excuse for the backgrounds, ground rules and characters to constantly reinvent themselves. Its hero is one of those clumsy, misunderstood big guys who dream only of being loved. Ralph (voice by John C. Reilly) spends every day knocking down an apartment building, which is constantly repaired by Fix-It Felix Jr. (Jack McBrayer). Lively, endlessly colorful nonstop action, also with Jane Lynch and Sarah Silverman. Rating: Three stars. 101 minutes. (PG)


movies

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012

MO V I E

GO! MAGAZINE PAGE 31

T I M E S • For th e Toeeko fNov.30

EDITOR'S NOTES: • Accessibility devices areavailableforsome

BEND

movies at Regal Old Mill Stadium 162I /MAX.

Regal Pilot Butte 6 2717 N.E. U.S.Highway20, Bend, 541-382-6347

ANNA KARENINA (R) Fri-Sat: 12:30, 3:30, 6:15, 9:20 Sun-Thu: 12:30, 3:30, 6:15 ARGO (R) Fri-Sat: 1, 4, 7, 9:40 Sun-Thu: 1, 4, 7 LINCOLN (PG-13) Fri-Sat: Noon, 3:15, 6:30, 9:35 Sun-Thu: Noon, 3:15, 6:30 THE SESSIONS(R) Fri-Sat: 1:15, 4:15, 7:15, 9:25 Sun-Thu: 1:15, 4:15, 7:15 SKYFALL (PG-13) Fri-Sat: 12:45, 3:45, 6:45, 9:45 Sun-Thu: 12:45, 3:45, 6:45 THE TWILIGHTSAGA: BREAKINGDAWN— PART2 (PG-13) Fri-Sat: 12:15, 3, 6, 9:30 Sun-Thu: 12:15, 3, 6

Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend, 541-382-6347

CLOUD ATLAS (R) Fri-Thu: 12:30, 4:15, 8 THE COLLECTION(R) Fri-Thu: 2, 4:55, 7:55, 10:15 FLIGHT(R) Fri-Thu: 12:35, 3:45, 6:55, 10:05 KILLING THEM SOFTLY(R) Fri-Thu:1:40, 4:40, 7: IO, 9:50 LIFE OF PI(PG) Fri-Thu: 1:25, 7:25 LIFE OF PI 3-D (PG) Fri-Thu: 12:10, 3:10, 4:30, 6:10, 9:25, 10:20 LINCOLN (PG-13) Fri, Sun-Mon, Wed: Noon,1, 3:20,4:20,6:40,7:45, IO Sat: Noon, 3:20, 4:20, 6:40, 7:45, 10 Tue: Noon, 1, 3:20, 6:40, 10 Thu: Noon, 3:20, 6:40, 10 THE METROPOLITANOPERA: LA CLEMENZA Dl TITO (no MPAA rating) Sat: 9:55 a.m. THE NUTCRACKER MARIINSKY BALLET3-D(no MPAA rating) Mon: 2, 7:30 RED DAWN (PG- I3) Fri-Thu: 1:50, 4:50, 7:30, 10:10 RISE OF THEGUARDIANS (PG) Fri-Thu: 12:55, 3:50, 6:20, 9:05 RISEOF THE GUARDIANS 3-D

(PG)

Fri-Thu: 1:05, 3:55, 6:30, 9:15 SKYFALL (PG-13) Fri-Thu: 12:05, 3:15, 6:25, 9:35 SKYFALL IMAX (PG-13) Fri-Thu: 12: l5, 3:30, 6:45, 9:55

aeemCt a Asstt COVERINGS Also see usfor

• There maybean additional fee for 3-D and lMAX films. • Movie times are

Awnings, Solar Screens 8 Custom Draperies

subject tochangeafter press time.

MADRAS Madras Cinema 5 1101 S.W. U.S.Highway 97, Madras, 541-475-3505

Disney via The Associated Press

Victor Frankenstein (voiced by Charlie Tahan) greets his resurrected dog Sparky in "Frankenweenie." TARANTINOXX:PULP FICTION EVENT(no MPAA rating) Thu: 7 TARANTINOXX:RESERVOIR DOGS 20THANNIVERSARY EVENT(no MPAA rating) Tue: 7 THETWILIGHTSAGA:BREAKING DAWN —PART2 (PG-13) Fri-Sun, Tue-Wed:12:20, 1:15, 3:05, 4:05, 6, 7, 9,9:45 Mon: 1:15, 4:05, 7, 9:45 Thu: 12:20, 1:15, 3:05, 4:05, 7, 9:45 WRECK-IT RALPH (PG) Fri-Thu: 12:45, 3:35, 6:15, 9:10

McMenamins Old St. Francis School

TAI CHI ZERO (PG-13) Fri-Sun: 6 WUTHERING HEIGHTS(no MPAA rating) Fri: 8:30 Sat-Sun: 1, 8:30 Thu: 6 Tin Pan Theater will host "Spaghetti Western Wednesdays"this Wednesday. Theeventbeginsat6 p.m .and includes an all-you-can-eat spaghetti dinner. As of press time, the Western film has not been selected.

REDMOND Redmond Cinemas

700 N.W. BondSt., Bend, 541-330-8562

1535 S.W.DdemMedoRoad, Redmond, 541-548-8777

FRANKENWEENIE(PG) Sat, Wed:3 Sun: Noon,3 LOOPER(R) Fri-Sun, Tue-Thu: 9 TAKEN 2(PG-13) Fri-Sun, Tue-Thu: 6 Due to Monday Night Football, no movies will be shown Monday. After 7 p.m., shows are 21and older only.Youngerthan 21may attend screenings before 7p.m. if accompanied by alegalguardian.

ARGO(R) Fri: 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 Sat-Sun: 11:15 a.m., 1:45, 4:15, 6:45, 9: I5 Mon-Thu: 4:15, 6:45 RISE OF THE GUARDIANS (PG) Fri: 4:45, 7, 9:15 Sat-Sun: 12:15, 2:30, 4:45, 7, 9:15 Mon-Thu: 4:45, 7 SKYFALL (PG-13) Fri: 5:45, 9 Sat-Sun: 11:15 a.m., 2:30, 5:45, 9 Mon-Thu: 3:45, 7

THE TWILIGHTSAGA: BREAKINGDAWN— PART2

(PG-13)

Fri: 4, 6:45, 9:30 Sat-Sun: 11:15 a.m., 1:45, 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 Mon-Thu: 4:15, 6:45

SISTERS Sisters Movie House 720 Desperado Court, Sisters,541-549-8800

LINCOLN (PG-13) Fri: 3:45,7 Sat: 3, 6:30 Sun: 2, 5:30 Mon-Thu: 6 RISE OF THEGUARDIANS (PG) Fri: 4:45, 7:15 Sat: 3:45, 6:15 Sun: 2:45, 5:15 Mon-Thu: 6 SKYFALL(PG-13) Fri: 4, 7:15 Sat: 3:30, 6:45 Sun: 2:30, 5:45 Mon-Thu: 6:15 THE TWILIGHTSAGA: BREAKINGDAWN— PART2

(PG-13)

Fri: 5, 7:30 Sat:4,7 Sun:3,6 Mon-Thu: 6:30

RED DAWN (PG-13) Fri: 5:15, 7:20, 9:35 Sat:1:05, 3:10, 5:15, 7:20, 9:35 Sun: 1:05, 3:10, 5:15, 7:20 Mon-Thu: 7:20 RISEOF THE GUARDIANS 3-D

(PG)

Fri: 5, 7:10, 9:25 Sat:12:20, 2:40, 5,7:10, 9:25 Sun: 12:20, 2:40, 5, 7:10 Mon-Thu: 7:10 SKYFALL (PG-13) Fri: 3:40, 6:30, 9:20 Sat: 12:50, 3:40, 6:30, 9:20 Sun: 12:50, 3:40, 6:30 Mon-Thu: 6:30 THETWILIGHTSAGA:BREAKING DAWN —PART2 (PG-13) Fri: 4:35, 7, 9:30 Sat: 2:10, 4:35, 7, 9:30 Sun:2:10,4:35,7 Mon-Thu:7 WRECK-ITRALPH(PG) Fri: 4:30, 6:50, 9:10 Sat: Noon, 2:15, 4:30, 6:50, 9:10 Sun: Noon, 2:15, 4:30, 6:50 Mon-Thu: 6:50

PRINEVILLE Pine Theater 214 N. Main St., Prineville,54t-416-tot4

RISE OFTHEGUARDIANS (PG) Fri (UP): 4:10, 7:10 Sat-Sun (UP): 1:10, 4:10, 7:10 Mon-Thu: 6:30 THETWILIGHTSAGA:BREAKING DAWN —PART2 (PG-13) Fri:4,7 Sat-Sun: 1, 4, 7 Mon-Thu (UP): 6:15 Pine Theater's upstairs screening room (marked as VP) has limited accessibility.

(541) 388-441 8 5

I All

WILSONS ofRedmond 541-548-2066 Adjustable Beds

MXf TRESS

G allery- B e n d 541-330-5084

Q NORTHWEST CROSSING

A44tard-tdrinning

neighborhood on Bend's tdrestside. www.northwestcrossing.com

AAAAutoSource Certified UsedGars '09 Ford F350Super Duty CrewCab,FX4, EXL,4X4, DIESEL 38,995miles¹EA79900.... $34,764 '11 Toyota 4RunnerSR5 29,553miles¹5042626 .... $33,995

'10 LexusRX350 All WheelDrive¹027076... $34,995

'10 Ford F250SuperDuty Crew Cab,XLT,4X4, DIESEL Dnly29,000miles¹A84931. $37,995

Oregon AutoSource

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

STARLET(no MPAArating) Fri-Sun: 3:30 Thu: 8:30

Where BuyersAndSellers Meet eee • o

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Sells Cars • Takes Trades Financing Available 20350 Empire Blvd. Suite 5 Bend, OR 97701

541-598-3750

aaaoregonautosource.com


PAGE 32 • GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012

OPEN SATURDAY 12-3

We never stop moving. •

OPENFRI2-5, SAT&SUN 11-3

'. UWafI AWBREYBUTTE5 bedroom, 3 bath, 4288 sq.ft. home. Flat .82 acre lot on cul-de-sac. Master on main. Shop with concrete floor.

MLS¹201206297 $625,000

MORRIS REAL ESTATE Independently Owned and Operated

DIRECTIONS: Summit Dr. to south on NW Promontory Ct. 1053 NW Promontory Court.

SE Bend-New 1500 sq.ft, single level model home on large lot. Gourmet kitchen, stainless appliances open to great room. Cozy floor to ceiling rock fireplace. Prices starting at $199,900. 20959 Miles Ct. DIRECTIONS:South3rd St toeast onMurphy Rd,southonParrell Rd, right on GrandTarghee,left onMilesCt. 1sthouseonthe right. 20959 MilesCt.

JEN BOWEN, BROKER

VIRGINIA ROSS, BROKER, ABR, CRS, GRI

••

e

541-480-7501

541-280-2147

OPEN SAT S SUN 11-4

OPEN SUNDAY 12-4

c. • o

n

NORTHCREST-New Construction in NE Bend. 2 story, 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath, 1708 sq.ft. Professional landscaping 8 2/10 Homebuyer's Warranty.

Below appraisal - $79,000 price reduction! 1200' deck overlooking Deschutes River in gated Sunrise Village. 4 bedroom, 4 bath, 4173 sq. ft.

MLS¹201206008 $209,947 Directions: North on BoydAcres Rd, left on Tango Creek Ave, right on Lamoine Lane. 63383 NE Lamoine Lane.

DON KELLEHER, BROKER • •

I'

\

l l

I I

541-480-1911

OPEN SATURDAY 11-2

I

I

I •

BONNIE SAVICKAS, BROKER 541-408-7537

OPEN MON S WED 11-4

NORTHCRESTNew Construction in NE Bend. 2 story,

Great family house with private back yard. Solar panels, bonus den, master on mainl

3 bedroom, 2.5 bath, 1708 sq.ft. Professional landscaping 8 2/10 Homebuyer's Warranty.

MLS¹201208561 $560,000 DIRECTIONS: Mt. Washington Dr, west on Champion Dr,

MLS¹201206008 $209,947 DIRECTIONS: North onBoydAcres Rd, left on TangoCreek Ave, right on Lamoine Lane. 63383 NE Lamoine Lane.

south on Collett 2714 Collelt Way

MATT ROBINSON, BROKER

DAVID GILMORE, BROKER 541-312-7271

OPEN SAT St SUN 11-3

MLS¹201009509 $745,000 DIRECTIONS: Century Dr. to left into Sunrise Village on Mammoth Dr, left on Sunshine Way. 19713 Sunshine Way.

e•

e

541-977-5811

OPEN SUNDAY 1-3

OPEN SUNDAY 1-4 •e'

3 brand new homes in South Deerfield Park! Starting under $200,000. Fenced 8 landscaped front 8 backyards.

SE BEND - beautiful 3389 sq.ft. quality home and huge barn,

MLS¹s 201206872,201206885,201207630 DIRECTIONS:South3rd St. to east on Murphy Rd, south on Parrell Rd, right on Grand Targhee.

RV barn/4+ car/shop/guest room.

DARRIN KELLEHER, BROKER •

541-788-002 9

on 4.2 acres. 3-car attached garage+

MLS¹201207123 $795,000 DIRECTIONS: east on Knott Rd, dight on Woodside Road. 60535 Woodside Rd.

MICHELLE TISDEL, PC, BROKER 5 41-390-349 0

AWBREYBUTTE5 bedroom, 3 bath, 4288 sq.ft. home, Flat.82 acre loton cul-de-sac. Master on main. Shop with concrete floor.

MLS¹201206297 $625,000 DIRECTIONS: Summit Dr. to south on NW Promontory Ct. 1053 NW Promontory Court.

ROSEMARY GOODWIN, BROKER, CERTIFIED NEGOTIATOR

541-706-1897


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