Bulletin Daily Paper 11-28-13

Page 1

THURSDAY November28,2013

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Stores open Thanksgiving Day until 4PM.

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ServingCentral Oregon since1903

THURSDAY November28,2013

Roundaboutandscaping

$1.50

IVI BI' I'SVISW SPORTS• 81

LOCAL• C1

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD

BEING THANKFUL

1man,1,000 ours o service

HIV'S reSurgenCe — An increasein unprotected sex among gay men worries public

This is the first in a series about people in Central Oregon for

By Shelby R. King

health officials.A3

whom weshould be very thankful

The Bulletin

this Thanksgiving season.

Tony Montoya wakes up

feeling blessed every day.

Wearable computers-

Today:Tony Montoya, who has given

Test-driving Google Glass in

1,000-plus hours to the local food

the operating room.D3

better off than somebody," he said. "I can always meet a need." Two years ago, Montoya retired from his job so he could start doing what he loves: volunteering. In 2013, Montoya logged more than 1,000 hours volunteering at NeighborImpact's food bank and Head Start programs in

bank and Neighborlmpact. Tony Montoya, who was Neighborlmpact's 2012 volunteer of the year.

Next:A longtime Redmond schools

groundskeeper. Next:A couple in Culver who are integral to the community.

He takes that feeling to the NeighborImpact building in Redmond and pays it forward by helping others less fortunate than him. "No matter what is happening in my life, I know I am

Redmond. Montoya >n 2012 was chosen by NeighborImpact staff as volunteerof the year.The recipient is someone who's gone "above and beyond in giving back to the agency in a voluntary capacity," said Executive Director Scott Cooper. SeeService/A5

THANKSGIVING

Plus: 'New' knee liga-

Pecan short age meanshigh

ment —Study may provide hope for ACLrepairs. D1

Private health exchanges — Businesses provide amarketplace to employeesoutside the federal system.D1

Plus: Morewebsite

ple pl'Ices

weeS —The health care sign-up process for small businesses is delayed.A2

By Kim Severson New York Times News Service

And a Web exclusiveDrug lords' kids on social me-

• Proposed rule change for utilities that cut into pavement could savemoney,too

' ')'P.,'g

dia: Gold-plated assault rifles,

pet lions and tigers and more. bendbulletin.com/extras

EDITOR'5CHOICE

Wheelchairs controlled by tongue piercings

Acceptable

Not acceptable--

• Largerpatches • More regular shapes • Helps prevent potholes

"Narrow patches • Irregular shapes • Loosens soil and encourages pothole formation su

is causing Thanksgiving bakers to think twice about their menus. In 2012, the nation's pecan orchards produced about 302 million pounds of pecans. This year, that number could drop by as much as 35 percent, according to industry officials. In Georgia, the nation's

,o

By Lauran Neergaard The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — An experimental device is letting paralyzed people drive wheelchairs simply by flicking their tongue in the right direction. Key to this wireless system: Users get their tongue pierced with a magnetic stud that resembles jewelry and acts like a joystick, in hopes of offering them more mobility and independence. Researchers reported Wednesday that 11 people paralyzed from the neck down rapidly learned to use the tongue device to pilot their wheelchairs through an obstacle course full of twists and turns, and tooperate a computer, too. "It's really powerful because it's so intuitive," said Jason DiSanto, 39, of Atlanta, who was among the first spinal cord-injured patients to get his tongue piercedforscience and try out the system. "The first time I did it, people thought I was driving for, like, years." The team of researchers in Atlanta and Chicago put the Tongue Drive System to the test against one of the most widely used assistive technologies, called sip-and-puff, thatusers operate by breathing into a straw. Using the tongue, patients operated their wheelchairs a bit faster but just as accurately — and on

OCILLA, Ga. — It is a meager holiday in the pecan groves of the South, and the pain is stretching to kitchens across the country. A rare collision of illtimed rain, marauding animals and a grow>ng love affair between the Chinese middle class and the pecan has resulted in the worst pecan supply in recent memory. As a result, grocery store prices are up by about 30 percent, which

leading pecan-producing

Street patchingprotocol Utility companies often cut into Bend streets and then repair them in ways that cause more damage than necessary. City Street Division

staff recently presented examples of good and bad repairs to the City Council, which is considering new limits on when utilities can cut into streets.

ACCEPTABLE

NOT ACCEPTABLE Existing patch

Newpatch

Source. City of Bend

Greg Cross/The Bulletin

By Hillary Borrud The Bulletin

M any streets across Bend have fallen into disrepair in recent years, as the recession forced the city to cut back on maintenance. There's also another culprit: utility companies that cut into streets to install gas lines, cables and other infrastructure,which permanently degrades the pavement. City officials say it's time to address that problem, and they are drafting new standards for when utility companies can cut into streets, and how they will have to repair them. "It can't just be these narrow little

stripsthat you use because those are not acceptable," said Street Division Manager Hardy Hanson. "The utilities think that they're great because it saves them all kinds of money, but it's destroying the streets." The goal is to produce an illustration of how the city expects construction crews to cut into the asphalt and repair it, something simple enough that a layperson could understand. City Manager Eric King said the City Council will likely consider a specific proposal for new street cutting rules after Jan. 1. The policy proposal that city officials are discussing might include disincen-

tives rather than an absolute moratorium. "Like if it's a brand-new road, they may have to pay twice the paving so you don't accelerate the degradation of the pavement," Hanson said. King said the strategy fits with the City Council goal to invest in constructing streets and maintaining them in ways that minimize long-term costs. The city is rebuilding its street maintenance program after budget cuts due to the recession, and spending has increased from $8.9 million in the 2009 biennial budget to $13.8 million in the 2011 biennial budget. SeePatching /A4

state, the crop is expected to be about half of what it was last year. In South Carolina, some orchards succumbed completely. The problem began last spring and summer with record rainfall. Pollination became difficult, and the moistureencouraged disease. In Texas and Oklahoma, it was a summer drought that hurt the trees. Then, there is China. China now consumes more than a third of the U.S. pecan crop, a development that followed the country's inclusion in the World Trade Organization in 2001. "Before that, they didn't know what a pecan was," said Randy Hudson, the owner of Hudson Pecan Company here in Ocilla and a vice president of the National Pecan Growers Council.

More TurkeyDayand Black Friday news • Cooling temps could slow holiday travel,C1 • Thanksgiving events,C2 • It's also game day,B2 • On the space station, a freeze-dried feast,A3

• Local stores opening for Black Friday — or earlier,B6

• Plan your shopping strategy with parking lot apps,A4

average, they performed about three times better on video game-like computer tests, said lead researcher Maysam Ghovanloo, directorofGeorgia Tech's bionics lab. SeeTongue/A5

INDEX

TODAY'S WEATHER Partlycloudy High 49, Low 24

Page C10

Business Calendar Classified

B5-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Health D1-1 0 Obituaries C 8 B1-4 C2 Crosswords E4 Horoscope D9 Sports E1-6 Dear Abby 09 Local/State C1-1 0 TV/Movies D9

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A2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOV 28, 20'I3

The Bulletin

NATION de%ORI.D

HOW to reaCh US

TURKEY GETS A PARDON

STOP, START OR MISS YOUR PAPER?

Alleged Spy identified —Rising anger over deadly drone attacks spurred aPakistani political party Wednesday to reveal the secret identity of what it said was the top U.S. spy in the country. It demanded he be tried for murder, another blow to already jagged

541-385-5800

relations between thetwo nations. A pair of U.S. missile strikes in re-

o)

Phone hours: 5:30a.m.— 5 p.m. Mon.-Fr i.,6:30a.m .-noonSat.-Sun.

cent weeks — including one that killed the Pakistani Taliban's leader

as the government prepared to invite him to hold peace talks — has increased simmering tensions betweenWashington and Islamabad

GENERAL INFORMATION

after years of public fury over the covert attacks.

541-382-1 811

Navy SCandal —The Navysaid Wednesday that it had suspended a ship-supply company for significantly overcharging on a contract, thesecond suchsuspensionsincemid-September.Thecompany, Inchcape Shipping Services, owned bythe Dubai-based Istithmar

ONLINE

www.bendbulletin.com EMAIL

World, mainly supplies Navy ships in the Mediterranean and the Middle East. The Navy is already grappling with a criminal investigation

bulletin@bendbulletin.com N EW S R O O M AFTER HOURS AND WEEKENDS

of its main ship supplier in the Pacific, Glenn DefenseMarine Asia, whose owner, Leonard GlennFrancis, was arrested in September on charges of conspiring to bribe Navyofficials.

54i-383-0367

SlfrioWoopollS — The Obamaadministration is offering to destroy some of Syria's deadliest chemical weapons in international waters

NEW S R O O M FA X

aboard a nearly 700-foot, U.S. government-owned ship, U.S.officials

54i -385-5804 N EW S R O O M

said Wednesday. The plan, still subject to final approval, would involve destroying the weapons, likely aboard the MV Cape Ray in the Med-

iterranean Sea,with U.S. Navywarships patrolling nearby. This ap-

E M A IL

Business .....business©bendbulletin.com City Desk.......... news©bendbulletin.com Community Life communitylife@bendbulletin.com Sporls..............spolts©bendbulletin.com

OUR ADDRESS Street ...........1777 S.W.Chandler Ave. Bend, OR97702 Mailing......... Po. Box6020 Bend, OR97706

proach would avoid the vexing diplomatic, environmental and security

problems posed bydisposing of the materials on any nation's soil. Carolyn Kaster/The Assoorated Press

President Barack Obama, with daughters Sasha, second from left, and Malia, right, carries on the

After the pardoning, Popcorn will travel to George

Syria talkS —Syria's government and the headof the main Western-backed opposition coalition both confirmed Wednesday that they

Thanksgiving tradition of saving Popcorn the turkey

Washington's Mount VernonEstate andGardensand will be on display for visitors during "Christmas at

from the dinner table with a "presidential pardon" Wednesdayat the White House. John Burkel, current

Mount Vernon." Afterward, the president and his family continued

sides laid out starkly different visions of what talks would bring: the opposition sees a transitional government emerging, while the gov-

chairman of the National TurkeyFederation in Badger,

their tradition of packing bags of food anddistributing

ernment insists it is not going to the conference to handover power.

Minn., stands at left.

them to the needy at the Capital Area Food Bank.

would participate in a U.N.-sponsored peaceconference. But the two

Illinois' first gay marriage —In ashort ceremonyinside their Chicago apartment, two beaming brides madelllinois history dimpsodAvo.

Wednesday as they became the first gay couple to wed under the drsrarrrsPO

ADMINISTRATION Chairwoman Elizabeth C.Mccool..........541-363-0374 Publisher Gordon Black .................... Editor-in-Chief

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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites

POWERBALL The numbers drawn Wednesday night are:

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Q 18Q 25Q 50Q 55Q57

The estimated jackpot is now $70 million.

MEGABUCKS The numbers drawn

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years, Patricia Ewert, were granted an expedited marriage license by a federal judge's order.

dozen municipal buildings across Thailand and forcing the evacuation

of the country's main criminal investigative agency onthe outskirts of By Robert Pear

ness owners across the counNew York Times News Service try are already having health WASHINGTON The care plans for their employees O bama a d ministration o n canceled by this law, and now Wednesday announced a one- they're told they won't have acyear delay in a major element cess to the system the president of the new health care law that promised them to find different would allow small business- coverage. Instead, they'll have es to buy insurance online for to resort to a system you'd extheir employees through the pect to see in the 1950s." new federal marketplace. It was the second delay for It was yet another setback small businesses. The adminisfor the rollout of the health care tration had previously delayed law and resulted, in part, from online enrollment for them to the well-documented problems the end of this month from Oct. of the insurance marketplace 1. w ebsite. Administration o f The date has now b e en ficials said they had to focus pushed backed to November on the basic functions of the 2014 for coverage that takes efwebsite, so that i n dividuals fect in January 2015, according could shop for insurance, be- to the Health and Human Serfore offering online enrollment vices Department. for small businesses. In the The announcement, just bemeantime, businesses and their fore Thanksgiving, was rememployees can apply through iniscent of the way the White brokers. House announced, just before Many employees of small the Fourth of July weekend, a businesses are uninsured, and one-yeardelay in the requirethe businessesthemselves are ment for l a r ger e mployers much less likely than big com- to offer health insurance to panies to provide coverage to employees. workers and their families. The marketplace for small The latest delay, coming just businesses — the Small Busias the White House was boast- ness Health Options Program, ing of major improvements in or SHOP exchange — was one the health insurance website, of the few provisions of the HealthCare.gov, opens the door 2010 law with some Republican to more complaints about the support, and it was originally health care law and could inchampioned by Sen.Olympia crease pressure to delay other Snowe, R-Maine. provisions. John Arensmeyer,the chief "The president bit off more executive of Small Business than he can chew with this Majority, an advocacy group health care law, and small busi- that supports the health care nesses are now forced to bear law, said, "It's disappointing the consequences," said Speak- that the online portion of the er John Boehner of Ohio. "Busi- federal small business mar-

ketplace through Healthcare. gov will be delayed, and it's important it get up and running as soon as possible." The marketplace, he said, "is still the most important provision in the Affordable Care Act for small businesses." The administration said that small businesses and their employees seeking coverage in the federal exchange could still apply and enroll through an agent or broker, as many do now.

steadily picked up. New York City officials have been keeping an eye on that wind, wary that strong breezes may mean that SpongeBob

andSnoopy may notsoar.ButlateWednesdayafternooncame a glimmer of hope: Earlier weather predictions of winds that would exceed the city's limit for balloon flying had been scaled down. The final

decision will be made this morning based on guidelines that were created after a Cat in the Hat balloon hit a lamppost in 1997. — Fromwirereports

a ness.

oonig t

Thursday, November 28 9pm gift card giveavvays begin 10pm select stores" open until 2am 6am — 8pm on Black Friday all stores reopen

harvest season and subsequent grinding of red-hot jalapeno dient, has passed. That suggests that the injunction may not have a major immediate effect on the company's production or the nation's hot sauce supply as Huy Fong keeps up i ts year-round mixing a n d bottling. The judge a cknowledged there was a "lack of credible evidence" linking locals' complaints of breathing trouble and watering eyes to the factory. But he said the odor that could be "reasonablyinferred to be emanating from the facility" is, for residents, "extremely annoying, irritating and offensive to thesenses warranting consideration as a public nuisance." The case could still go to trial, but the city's attorney said it would like to see a settlement outside court, and does not want to shut down Sriracha altogether.

Parade daiioons —Spectators to the inflation of the Macy's Thanksgiving DayParadegiant balloons streamed by, asthe wind

r

judge has given a dose of cold peppers, the sauce's key ingrewater to Sriracha, ruling Tuesday that the factory that manufactures the trendy hot sauce must partially shut down after neighbors complained of the spicy smells it was producing. Judge Robert O'Brien found in favor of the city of Irwindale where Sriracha recently relocated, saying sauce maker Huy Fong Foods must stop any operations that could be causing the odors and make changes to mitigate them. O'Brien's injunction, given in response to a lawsuit filed by the city on Oct. 21, does not specify what types of actions are requiredor force the factory to shut down altogether. Huy Fong Foods did not immediately respond to requests for comment. The company had previously argued thatthere is no reason to close the plant now because

head of the governing party in Thailand.

4II

Judge orderscool-down at smellyhotsauce plant The Associated Press IRWINDALE, Calif. — A

the Thai capital. "These people are trying to portray the country as a failed state," said Charupong Ruangsuwan, the interior minister and

All Bulletin paymentsareaccepted at the drop box atCity Hall. Checkpayments

may beconverted toanelectronic fundstransfer.TheBulletin, USPS P552-520, is publisheddaily byWestern Communications Inc., 1777S.W.Chandler Ave., Bend,OR 97702.Periodicalspostage paid at Bend,OR.Postmaster: Send address changes to TheBulletin circulation depart ment,P.o.Box6020,Bend,OR 97706. TheBulletin retains ownershipand copyright protection ofall staff-prepared news copy,advertising copyandnews or ad illustrations.Theymaynot be reproducedwithout explicit prior approval.

nita Gray — is terminally ill with cancer, so she and her partner of five

Thol prOtOStS —Anti-government demonstrators who are seeking in their own words to "overthrow" the Thai government took their campaignoutsideofBangkokonW ednesday,massing atmorethana

John Costa........................541-363-0337

DEPARTMENT HEADS

state's new law legalizing same-sex marriage. Thelaw approved last week doesn't go into effect until June, but one of thewomen —Ver-

Saturday8am — Spm 8 Sunday 11am — 6pm Starting at Moonlight Madness, the Salvation Army and Toys for Tots will be collecting donations until 12/18! *

Visit our website for more information and extended holiday hours

>v~v'<

Bend

Factory Stores" 61334 South Highway 97, Bend, OR 97702 benclfactorystores.com 541.382.4736 & f

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THURSDAY, NOV 28, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

MART TODAY

A3

TART • Discoveries,breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto knowto start out your day

It's Thursday, Nov. 28, the 332nd day of 2013. There are

33 days left in the year.

TRENDING

SCIENCE

Comet ISON and launch make Thanksgi vingabigdayinspace

HAPPENINGS Thanksgiving —Americans sit down to a feast and

give thanks. Thailand — As protests continue, a vote of noconfidence for Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra is scheduled

By Seth Borenstein

in Parliament, but is expected

WASHINGTON S pace will s e rve u p a banquet of a ctivities on

The Associated Press

to fail. A2

Thanksgiving, featuring

HISTORY

a comet kissing the sun, a zero-gravity f r e eze-dried feast in orbit and a rocket launch attempt:

Highlight: In 1942, nearly 500 people died in a fire that

destroyed the Cocoanut Grove nightclub in Boston. In1520, Portuguese navigator Ferdinand Magellan reached

the Pacific Oceanafter passing through the South American strait that now bears his

name.

First course

A rise in unprotected sex between men has been documentedinthe U.S.and elsewhere, concerning public health officials.

In1861, the Confederate Con-

gress admitted Missouri as the 12th state of the Confederacy after Missouri's disputed

secession from the Union. In1919, American-born Lady Astor was elected the first female member of the British

Parliament. In1922, Captain Cyril Turner

of the Royal Air Force gavethe first public skywriting exhibition, spelling out, "Hello USA. Call Vanderbilt 7200" over

New York's Times Square; about 47,000 calls in less than three hours resulted.

In1943, President Roosevelt, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and Soviet

leader Josef Stalin began conferring in Tehran during World War II. In1961, President John F. Kennedy dedicated the origi-

nal permanent headquarters of the Central lntelligence

Agency in Langley, Va. Ernie Davis of Syracuse University became the first Afri-

can-American tobenamed winner of the Heisman Trophy. In1964, the United States

launched the space probe Mariner 4 on acourse to Mars. In1979, an Air NewZealand DC-10 en route to the South Pole crashed into a mountain in Antarctica, killing all 257

people aboard. In1987, a South African Airways Boeing 747 crashed into the lndian Ocean with the loss

of all159 people aboard. In2001, Officials recovered the body of CIA officer Johnny "Mike" Spann from a prison

compound in Mazar-e-Sharif, Afghanistan, after northern

alliance rebels backed by U.S. airstrikes and special forces quelled an uprising by Taliban and al-Qaida prisoners. Ten years age: President George W. Bush returned to his ranch in Crawford, Texas, after a secret, nearly 36-hour journey that took him to Iraq for a Thanksgiving visit with

U.S. troops. Five years age: Indian forces fired grenades at the landmark Taj Mahal hotel, the last stand of suspected Muslim militants, just hours after

elite commandos stormed a Jewish outreach center and

found six hostages dead. (The 60-hour rampage in Mumbai came to an end the following

day.) Super Bowl hero Plaxico Burress accidentally shot himself in the right thigh with a gun tucked into his waist-

band at a NewYork nightclub (Burress was later sentenced to two years in prison for a weapons conviction). Oneyear ago: Numbers were drawn for a Powerball jackpot totaling $579.9 million, the

largest Powerball prize in history; there were two winning tickets. New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie said his state would need nearly $37 billion to

recover and rebuild from Superstorm Sandy and that the state would seek federal aid to

cover most of the expenses.

BIRTHDAYS Recording executive Berry Gordy Jr. is 84. Singer Randy

Newman is 70. "Late Show" orchestra leader Paul Shaffer is 64. Actor Ed Harris is 63. Movie director Alfonso Cuaron is 52. Comedian Jon Stewart is 51. — From wire reports

By Donald G. McNeil Jr. New York Times News Service

Federal health officials are reporting asharp increase in unprotected sex among gay American men over the last decade, a development that makes it harder to fight the AIDS epidemic. The same trend has recently

been documented among gay men in Canada, Britain, the Netherlands, France and Australia, heightening concerns among public health officials worldwide. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the number of men who told federal health investigators that they had had unprotected anal sex in the last year rose nearly 20 percentfrom 2005 to 2011. In the 2011 survey, unprotected sex was more than twice as common among men who said they did not know whether they were infected with HIV. Being testedeven once for HIV is associated with men taking fewer risks, whether the test is positive or negative, health experts say. But the most recentsurvey found that a third of the men interviewed had not been tested in the past

year.

Higher risk The findings are worrying because "unprotected anal intercourse is in a league of its own as far as risk is concerned," Dr. Thomas Frieden, director of the disease centers, said Wednesday asthe figures were released. The data, published in the agency's Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, do not explain why unprotected sex has risen so rapidly, but a leading hypothesis, Frieden said, is that more men are "sero-sorting" — that is, those who are uninfected ("HIV s eronegative" on lab reports) try to sleep only with other men who are uninfected, or who hope they are, or who merely promise they are. "The p r oblem w ith s e ro-sorting is that it's really easy to get it wrong," Frieden said. "When one-third of men aren't even tested in the last year and a tenth of those who thought they were negative were actually positive, you don't want to riskyour life on a guess." Other hypotheses, say Frieden and Jonathan Mermin, the disease centers' director of HIV prevention, are that many young men have never known anyone dying of AIDS and so do not fear it, or that they believe that they can easily stay on antiretroviral drugs for life.

Explanations Two leading i ndependent AIDS researchers agreed only partly with those explanations.

"Young guys are less wor-

at New York University who has been in the field for 20 years and has repeatedly surveyed a cohort of 600 young gay men forthe lastfive years — all of whom were uninfected when the study began — says young men still fear getting the disease. He attributes the rise of unprotected sex to two factors. First, recent studies have shown that people who take their antiretroviral drugs daily are very unlikely to transmit disease, so u n i nfected men think it is relatively safe to sleep with them. A problem with that line of thinking, however, is that not all men on the drugs take them every day. Second, he said, the collapse of the economy over the last six years has put many young men out of work, "and we see higher risk b ehavior when people have more risk in their lives." The CDC suggests that sexually active gay men be tested at least annually, many doctors treating gay patients suggest intervals as short as three to six months, and many adult film producers now require that actors be tested every two weeks. Since 2005,the disease centershave been conducting the National HIV Behavioral SurveillanceSystem survey every three years in 20 cities, mostly in gay bars, but also in parks and on streets in gay neighborhoods. The agency concedes that it probably undercounts some high-risk groups, including prisoners,teenagers too young or poor to go to bars and men who keep their homosexuality secret. Surveys have consistently found infection rates highest

C omet I S ON , w h i c h w as discovered a y e a r ago, is making its first spin a round the sun and wi ll come the closest to the super-hot solar surface at I:37 p.m. EST. It may take a few hours before astronomers know if the comet survived its brush with the sun. If it survives, and maybe even if it doesn't, people in the Northern Hemisphere will have a g ood c hance of seeing the comet — or its remains — in the first two weeks of December just before sunrise and after sunset. It won't be visible w ith the n aked eye t o day, but NASA has a fleet of telescopes trained on ISON.

Second course For the six people on board t h e I n t ernational Space Station — i n cluding American astronauts Mike Hopkins and Rick Mastracchio — it's time for a traditional T hanksgiving feast. But don't expect them to be carving a succulent bird. In a video from space, the two astronauts showed off their menu, all in small sealed packets: ir-

NASA via The Associated Press

NASA astronauts Rick Mastracchio, left, and Mike Hopkins show some of the turkey and green bean casserole they plan to eat for their Thanksgiving meal aboard the International Space Station. "Though we miss our families, it's great to be in space," Hopkins said from 260 miles above Earth in the taped message. radiated smoked turkey, thermostabilized yams, cornbread dressing, potatoes, freezedried asparagus, baked beans, bread, cobbler and what Hopkins called his favorite: dehydratedgreen bean casserole.It comes with a view from space that is juicier than any turkey on Earth. "Though we miss our families, it's great to be in space," Hopkins said from 260 miles above Earth in a taped

message.

Dessert Residentsof Florida's Space Coast may get to see a rocket thunder through the sky around dinner time if all goes well. Private firm Spacex of H awthorne, Calif., wil l t r y again to launch its Falcon-9 rocket between 5:38 p.m. and 6:44 p.m. EST from Cape Ca-

I

naveral Air Station. The large rocket didn't launch in a first attempt Monday because of a technical glitch. The rocket is carrying a 7,055-pound telecommunications satellite for a Luxembourg firm. This is part of a growing trend of newer rocket firms — Spacex is headed by PayPal founder Elon Musk — launching more

and signing up non-government customers, said H arvard a stronomer J onathan McDowell, wh o c a t alogues launches worldwide. Thanksgiving and November are often a quiet time for space, but not this year, he said. It will be the first Cape Canaveral launch attempt on T hanksgiving since 1959 — that one failed when the rocket exploded seconds after liftoff, according to McDowell.

I •

among young black gay men,

even though they were more likely than their white counterparts to use condoms. The chief reason for that, experts say, is that most people have sex within their own ethnic

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groups and older black gay men have very high rates of undiagnosed and untreated HIV. The survey is the only large national one of its kind, but a similar survey begun in San Francisco in 1997 showed a rise in unprotected sex from 1998 through 2008, Mermin sa>d.

• •

50,000 infections per year The number of new HIV infections in the U.S. has been stuck at roughly 50,000 a year for many years, although public health officials are trying to bring it down. Among the factors working against them: The U.S. population is growing, and infected men are living longer and staying sexually active thanks to antiretroviral

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"It's like what the Red Queen said to Alice: 'You have to run faster and faster to stay in the same place,'"Frieden said.

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ried," said Alex Carballo-Dieguez, a researcher at the HIV Center of the New York State "When you go from I million Psychiatric Institute and Co- infected to 1.2 million, you l umbia University who h a s have to do better and better just studied gay men's behavior to stay steady." since the 1980s. "HIV has beThe goal of t h e n ational come a chronic disease, and AIDS strategy put in place by everyone knows some behav- the Obama administration in iors are bad for you, like smok- 2010 is to have new infections ing and trans fats. But in the down to roughly 38,000 a year moment of excitement, they're by 2015. "Whether that will be going to do what they enjoy." reached, only time will tell," Perry Halkitis, a researcher Frieden said.

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A sarema ar in 's atest rontier

Continued from A1 The current two-year budget calls for the city to spend $14.3 million on street maintenance. However, the c i ty still has a limited amount of money available to pay f or street maintenance and city councilors have given the Police Department and Fire Department top priority in t he allocation of the $82.5 million general fund for the next two years. "By doing this, if we can't get more money for s treet m aintenance, at l e ast t h i s helps us so it doesn't get worse faster," Hanson said. The city already has standards for how u t ility companies and their contractors must repair pavement cuts, but these need improvement, Hanson said. For example, the current standards do not state that when someone makes multiple cuts in a section of pavement, they must cover it with one large patch instead of multiple small ones.

By Jaciyn Trop New York Times News Service

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Phoebe Scott of O r ange County, Calif., has a new routine before heading to the mall. She checks the parking lots on her ParkMe smartphone app "so that I can see what I'm up against or if I need to change my plans." If a lot is less than 90 percent full, the trip is on. Her favorite is a garage at Santa Monica Place mall, where sensors and lights guide her to a specific

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Christopher Berkey/New YorkTimes NewsService

A sign shows how many parking spaces are left in a parking garage at the Mall at Green Hills in Nashville, Tenn. Many malis and shopping areas are using a proliferation of new technoiogies, from apps and sensors to color-coded lights and electronic boards, to make parking easier in an effort to attract customers.

Luring customers The fight for a parking spot at the mall, long a necessary evil of Black Friday, is becoming easier thanks to the proliferation of new technologies, from apps and sensors to color-coded lights and electronic boards. It's one way that malls and shopping districts are trying to lure customers away from their computers, into the realm of t h ei r br i c k-and-mortar stores. When no p a rking spots are available, "people drive around and become frustrated," said Kathy Grannis, a spokeswoman for the National Retail Federation. "Who wants to start their shopping experience frustrated?" ParkMe, which tracks more than 28,000 locations worldwide, has emerged as a mainstay app for mall customers navigating the nation's parking lots. With the app, they can find the closest and least expensive lots, as well as alternative entrances to the garage.

man, ParkMe's co-founder and chief executive. The app's technology is simple enough: A magnetic loop at the garage clocks the number of times the gate lifts to admit or release a car, Friedman said. ParkMe also lets a customer reserve a spot in certain locations. Scott said she used that service during busy summer months. O ther parking apps a r e gaining traction as well. Parkopedia, which is l i nked to 26,000 lots in North America, also allows users to search parking s i tes, a v a ilability and prices using their smartphones. QuickPay plans to start in hundreds of U.S. malls next year to help shoppers pay for garage and metered spots and valet services from their smartphone. "Parking is the gateway to

facility management services, and a past chairman of the International Parking Institute. "They want real-time information, they want price choices, and they want to be directed to an open space," Jones said.

Comparing prices Jessi Molohon, a 23-yearold student at the University of Texas, Austin, is one such customer.She said she used the Parking Whiz app when traveling to stores in downtown Houston or at th e Houston Galleria to help find garages and compare prices. "Parking can be anywhere from $6 to $12 on the same street, so I want to make sure I'm not overspending on parking when I'm going to over-

spend on shopping," Molohon

sald. There is no data available QuickPay's founder, Barney on the number of mall garages Pell. "It can mean the suc- outfitted with sensors to help cess or failure of your whole keep track of vacant spots, but The app's user base surged 97 business." analysts say the rate of adopC ustomers expect m o r e tion is doubling or tripling year percent in the past year as it added hundreds of garages to than they did 10 years ago, over year. its database. said Casey Jones, a vice presTaubman Centers, which "If there's a way to get in off ident for institutional services owns and manages 22 U.S. the beaten path, you can re- at Standard Parking, a Chica- malls, installed sensors in the duce stress," said Sam Fried- go-based provider of parking garages in two of its centers

theshopping experience,"said

to show shoppers on which floors they could find open parking s pots. I n stallation costs $50,000 to $100,000 per location. But parking is only half the battle. When a customer is ready to leave, there is the matter of finding the car. Simon Property Group, the country's largest mall owner and operator with more than 300 properties, said that use of its app, which includes a feature that helps shoppers locate their parked car, had increased eightfold in the past two years. Users can take a picture of where their car is parked,

bore holes for utility lines under county roads because the roads are typically elevated and thereare rarely sidewalks on the shoulders. Doty agreed w ith Hanson that an y c u t in a road causes permanent

damage.

"It's a crack that will begin to deteriorate the pavement structure and so, you know, I think it's best management practice to try to be sensitive to new pavement and not allow that structure to be violated," Doty said. "While it's new, you want to definitely avoid that as much as possible." The problems extend beyond patched pavement. Hanson said when someone digs a trench across a street, "it relaxes the compression of the soil ... It's not as hard so over time, that will give way a little bit." This leads to cracks in the pavement, which fill with water and ice. Part of the problem is that utility companies often use contractors to install equipment acrossstreets,and these "(A large patch) may cost crews might be unaware ofthem a little more money, but or simply ignore — the city's just incrementally more," Han- standards. "All of a sudden we find out, son said. "They're there any'Oh, that's our subcontractor, way, they're doing a patch." One model for the city of you'll have to talk to h im,'" Bend might b e D e schutes Hanson said. "Everybody's County's road-cutting morato- pointing fingers the other way rium rule. The county already around, and so the streets are prohibits anyone cutting into what ultimately suffer." a new road for the first five Hanson said this situation was worse a few years ago, years of its life. "It's very common for agen- but "development has slowed cies to have cutting prohibi- down, so we were able to get tionsor moratoriums fora cer- a handle on it.... I just want tain amount of time, or based to be prepared for another upon the condition (of the road), swing, so we can keep track regardless of age," said De- of it." schutes County Road Depart— Reporter: 541-617-7829, ment Director Chris Doty. hborrudC<bendbulletin.com Doty did not know when the county enacted this policy, but it was before he started working there nearly two years ago. Utility companies can request a variance but Doty only remembered one such request during his time at the Road Department. In that case, the utility attempted to bore a hole under the road but ran into anElevation Capital Strategies other utility line, so Doty said 775 SW BonnetWay Suite 120 Bend he granted the utility's request Main: 541-728-0521 to cut into the road. www.elevationcapital.biz Doty said it's simpler to

drop a pin on a map or send a text message reminding themselves where they parked. "It's a proactive tool to prevent a customer from losing her car," said Les Morris, a spokesman for Simon Property Group. It's not just malls but also downtowns and local shopping districts that are striving to make parking easier. San Francisco, for example, with its notoriously difficult onstreet parking, created its own app that steers drivers to open spots. Automakers are also getting involved, adding features to their dashboard technology to help drivers navigate to a

parking lot. Audi has contracted with ParkMe to provide the app's services in it s d ashboards, while Parkopedia announced last week that it would partner with Volvo. Hyundai introduced its Blue Link app last year that allows users to locate their vehicle within a I-mile radius. "When youthink about how fast this has moved in the last year, that it's become so ubiquitous in such a short period of time, I would say that we're reaching the tipping point," said William Eggers, the public sector research director at Deloitte in Washington.

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Service Continued from A1 "Tony's quiet leadership and unflagging willingness to show up and do what needs to be done with a smile on his face, a friendly wave, and smile to the customers is the dream of every organization which engages volunteer services," Cooper said. Montoya, 67, worked as a meat cutter for various local grocerystores for most of his adult life. He said the long and varied hours he worked made him unable to commit the time to volunteer as often as he'd like, t hough he w o rked w i t h The Gideons International — an organization that gathers and donates Bibles — in his spare time for 40 years. "We donate to h otels, jails, schools and hospitals," he said. "Any place where we might find need." He retired from his job as a meat cutter in June 2011 and began devoting much of his time to volunteering. "I always wanted to be a volunteer," he said. "I don't think there's any reason to be alive if you're not being productive and giving back." Right after r etirement, Montoya attended a volunteer fair to learn what opportunities were available to him. He said he didn't have to do much looking to find organizations and people who needed his help. "I don't have an awful lot, financially, to give. But Ido have time and energy," Montoya said. "It's important for all of us to be able to feel like we've made an impact. You might not be able to do everything, but everybody can do something." H e started o u t w i t h NeighborImpact just volunteering to ride along in the food truck for pickup and delivery of donated food. About six months into it,

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Gary Meek/Georgia Tech via The Associated Press

Jason DiSanto, left, receives a tongue piercing at Georgia Tech in Atlanta. An experimental device is letting paralyzed people drive wheelchairs simply by flicking their tongue in the right direction.

Tongue

the piercing fall out, researchersreported,while others had problems finding t r ansport a t ion to the study site, unrelated medical issues or lost interest. Ghovanloo plans

Continued from A1 The research, reported i n the journal Science Transla tional Medicine, is an early step that allowed use of the peOple device only inside ItlyhO hg17e laboratories. Large r studies i n r e -

to add fu n c tions to the smartphone app to let users turn o n the TV o r t h e lights with a f l ick of the tongue, too. He's also made the d evice l es s v i s i -

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ers acknowledge. B ut the work is attracting attention from spe c i alists

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DiSanto has signed up for that ogies sothey can tHIS t n ext ro u n d of customize care C On f .rol." testing. "Somebody that's for t h e se v erely — Dr. Brsd in a wheelchair aldisabled. Dicianno, a ready has a stigma," "For people who rehabilitation he said. "If there have very l i m ited spec'e 's was something that ability to control a could be developed power wheelchair, t here a r en't t h a t to control my wheelmany options," said Dr. Brad c h ai r a n d t h e e n vironment Dicianno, a reh a b ilitatio n a r o und me, to make me more specialist at t h e U n iversity independent without having to of Pittsburgh Medical Center have medicaldevices coming who wasn't involved with th e o u t of my mouth, it would be a new research. huge benefit." "There is some interesting promise for this tongue control." Here's how t h e s y s t em works: A h e a dset d etects the tongue's position when the user flicks that magnetic stud. Touch a spot on the right bottom tooth to go right, for example. Th e h e adset wirelessly beams that information to a smartphone the u ser carries. An ap p t h en sends the command to move the wheelchair or the computer cursor. DOORBUSTER Why the tongue? "It's unobstrusive, easy to use and LUXURIOUS flexjble," said Ghovanloo, a biomedical engineer who created the system and has start, <, ] p 6 9 9 9 ed a company that is working only at Macy's. with Georgia Tech to com Cha rterClubcrewneck sweaters. Misses. mercialize it. Most peopie wit h s p jnal *w eblD 916937. cord injuries — or neurologDQQRBU$TER assistive

t e c hnol-

ical diseases that also can

paralyze — still ca n m ove the tongue. It doesn't require s pecial concentration. T h e tongue is pretty tireless. And the amount of real estate the brain's motor c ortex d edicates to the tongue and mouth rivals that of the fingers and hand, offering multiple complex movements, Ghovanloo said. He led the team of researchers from Atlanta's S hepherd Center for spina l injuries, the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago and Northwestern University. DiSanto, an electrical engineer who became paralyzed f rom the neck d ow n i n a 2009 diving accident, said the headset is less intrusive than the sip-and-puff device that he normally uses, which requires a straw-like tube to be w orn in front of his face. More important, he said, the tongue drive gave him more control, allowing him to move diago-

supply of everything, especial-

ly at this time of year and with the economy the way it is." "These kids usually come The NeighborImpact food from disadvantaged situations, bank serves up to 21,000 peooften with poverty or abuse," ple per month from Crook, Dehe said. "I am not a teacher, but schutes and Jefferson counties, I'm someone who can show according to warehouse manthem they matter to me. They ager Tony Young. "We're fairly low on food realize I'm there because I want to be." right now," Young said. "We Many of the children Mon- order a truck load from the Ortoya works with come from egon Food Bank (in Portland), families relying on the food but it's gone in a week." bank fo r r e g ular, h ealthy Ridings said it's typical to meals. In fact, according to see a lull in donations before Felicia Ridings, food agen- the holidays. She said Neighcy and data specialist with borImpact has seen an uptick NeighborImpact, 41 p ercent in the number of families needof the people receiving food ing supplemental food because in Crook, Jefferson and Deof the cuts in the amount ofschutes counties are children. fered to families receiving ben"People should come down efits from the Supplemental to the food bank and take a Nutrition Assistance Program.

— Reporter:541-383-0376 sking@bendbulletin.com

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ple who want to donate. The N eighborImpact food b a n k has food drop-off locations in Redmond, Bend, La Pine, Prineville and Madras. Cooper said although they welcome donations, he r e commends people take donations to their local Salvation Army if they can. "We encourage people to support their local food banks first," Cooper said. "But they're certainly welcome to drop it off with us."

M ou n t a i n M e d i c a l I mm e d i a t e C a r e

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"Everybody lost about $11 per person, per month in November," she said. "We always get low on our supplies this time ofyear. We could especially use proteins, like peanut butter and tuna fish, but we'll take anything." Ridings said staple items, such as oats and rice, are al-

look at the empty shelves," Montoya said. "Some people who need food will have to go without because we're in short

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he realized there were kids out there who needed him too. That's when Montoya began working with Head Start. He is fluent in Spanish and works closely with Spanish-speaking

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IN THE BACI4: BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NE%S W Scoreboard, B2 NHL, B3 Sports in brief, B2 College basketball, B3 NBA, B3 O< www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2013

SOCCER

SKIING

2 killed in Brazil stadium collapse

U.. as en 0 et on s ee team

COLLEGE FOOTBALL: 117TH CIVIL WAR

SAO PAULO — Part of the stadium that will host the 2014 World

Cup opener in Brazil collapsed onWednesday, causing significant damage andkilling two people, authorities said. The accident could

delay the delivery of the stadium in Sao Paulo by FIFA's December

deadline to haveall12 venues ready.Workwas immediately halted at the Itaquerao Stadium, which was practically completed before the

By Pat Graham The Associated Press

BEAVER CREEK, Colo. — Lindsey Vonn is banged up and unsure of her plans heading into the Sochi Games. In years past, the very thought might send a very cold shiver through the U.S. speed team. At least this time, the Americans are loaded with depth in downhill and super-G. Julia Mancuso,Stacey Cook, Leanne Smith and Bend's Laurenne Ross are the skiers the Americans could be counting on for medals in Russia if Vonn, the reigning Olympic downhill champion, can't compete after hurting her surgically repaired right knee again. And, guess what? It's actually a talented

collapse. Television images showed a hugemetal structure buckled atop the stadium, destroying part of the stands in the

east side of the venue. A LED panel installed outside the venue also was hit. Firefighter official

Mauro Lopes said in a radio interview that at least three people died in the accident, which

group.

apparently happened when a cranecollapsed on top of the metal structure. The crane was installing what was the last part of the structure.

Some local media quoted authorities

saying two people were killed. The accident happened at lunchtime, so not a lot of workers were on site at the time. The stadium will seat

nearly 70,000 people for the opener onJune 12. The venue is scheduled to host five other

matches, including a

Rob Kerr/The Bulletin

Oregon State's Clayton York pulls his helmet off following a play against the University of Oregon in Corvallis in December, 2010. York spent five years with the program between 2007 and 2012 and never got a victory over the Ducks.

semifinal. It was initially expected to be built for

All of them made the podium at least once last season and all of them were top 16 in the downhill standings. Throw in Alice McKennis, who won a World Cup event last season but is still recovering from a shattered right leg, and it's an even more dynamic mix. This also creates quite a few tough decisions for women's coach Alex Hoedlmoser,since there are only four race spots available in Sochi in the downhill and again in the super-G. That means someone well-deserving could be left out of the starting gate. "One of the best traits of our team is everyone has the understanding that if you get beat out for that spot, it's not somebody else's fault. It's probably something you did or your own fault in some way," said Cook, who had the fastest time in downhill training on Wednesday. "There's not a lot of the blame game that you might see typically." SeeSpeed /B2

the Confederations Cup this year, but delays with financing for the venue

prompted authorities to scrape the stadium from the World Cup warm-up

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tournament.

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Brazilian club Corinthians, which owns the

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statement "lamenting" the accident.

Constructor Odebrecht said it was already investigating what

happened. Brazil is running against time to deliver the last six World Cup stadiums by the end of the year, although work

at the Itaquerao was advanced compared to the other venues. "FIFA and the LOC have learnt of the death of workers at the Co-

rinthian's Arena site in Sao Paulo with great sadness," FIFA said in a statement. "We wish to send our heartfelt condolences to the family of

the workers who tragically died today." — The Associated Press

NBA ec

• With a recentrunof Civil Warlosses,several Central Oregonians with ties tothe OregonState programwould liketo changethe tide By Zack Hall The Bulletin

Clayton York spent his first Civil War associated with the Oregon State football program sitting in the Reser Stadium stands watching the Beavers get blasted. Had the Beavers won, Oregon State would have gone to the Rose Bowl for the first time since 1965. As it turned out that was just the beginning of Civil War disappointments for the Redmond HighSchool

Suns rally to end Blazers' streak Phoenix hands Portland its first loss in11

games,C3.

spending his first fall out of the program and interning at an athletic training facility in Portland to complete his degree in exercise sports science. "The losses are not something I look upon fondly, obvi-

ously," he adds. The Beavers (4-4 Pac-12 Conference, 6-5 overall) will meet the Ducks (6-2, 9-2, No. D BCS) as 22-point underdogs again in this, the 117th version of the Civil War. SeeReversal /B4

Ducks, Beaversstill have pride on the line in '1'17thmeeting By Anne M. Peterson

Portland's Mo Williams (25) drivesto the hoop against Phoenix during Wednesday night's game in Phoenix.

graduate. Oregon State will spend Friday at Autzen Stadium in Eugene trying to do something it has not done since 2007: Beat rival Oregon in the Civil War. For York, a 23-year-old who spent five seasons as a walk-on fullback at OSU, the lack of success in the Civil War is his darkest memory in an otherwise high time in Corvallis, he says. "I was there five years, and we lost five Civil Wars in a row," says York, who is

does mean a lot. It means a lot to the The Associated Press state. It's an honor to play in it." Asked about the significance of No. 12 Oregon (9-2, 6-2) has lost two the Civil War, Oregon's Marcus Mar- of its past three to drop out of the race iota at first gave the stock answer for the national championship, a BCS that it's just another game. But then bowl and the Pac-12 title game. But the sophomore quarterback turned the stunned Ducks are still looking thoughtful. for their sixth straight 10-win season, The annual rivalry game with Ore- as well as their sixth straight victory gon State may not mean as much for over their in-state rivals. the postseason as it has in years past, Oregon State (6-5, 4-4) is looking to but at the very least it means bragging avoid a fifth consecutive loss, which rights for the winner. would be its longest losing streak "I know you're going to hate this an- since the Beavers dropped six straight swer, but we always take it one game to concludethe 1997 season. Oregon at a time. It's a faceless opponent," State is also one of nine Pac-12 teams Mariota said with a l augh, before vying for a spot in the seven conferadding: "In all honesty, just talking ence bowl games. around the community, this game SeeRivalry/B4

Charles Krupa/ rhe Associated Press

Laurenne Ross, of Bend, races down the course during a training run for the women's World Cup on Tuesday in Beaver Creek, Colo.

Atlanta a prime example ofshorter stadium lifespans By Tim Tucker Cox Newspapers

Nextup Civil War,

Oregon State at Oregon When:Friday, 4 p.m. TV: Fox Sports1 Radio:KICEAM 940, KBND-AM 1110, FM 100.1

ATLANTA — I f t h e Georgia Dome and Turner Fieldare discarded as planned in 2017, the doubleheader of demolition will bring to an end two of the shortest-lived major stadiums in modern sports history. The Georgia Dome will be 25 years old. Turner Field will be 20 (21 if you count its origin as Centennial Olympic Stadium). Their joint demise will mark the acceleration of a trend that has turned sports stadiums, once ageless structures, into buildings that sometimes don't last

as long as a home mortgage. The Dome is slated for demolition, at a cost of at least $9 million, when a new Falcons stadium is completed on a site just to its south. And Turner Field will be demolished, too, Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed has vowed, when the Braves' move to suburban Cobb County. "There was a time that a stadium had to be 30 or 40 or 50 years old before anyone would take seriously the claim that 'the old thing is obsolete and we need anew one,'" said Neil deMause, an expert on stadium deals and author of a book on the subject. "But the more new stadiums that are built, the more team owners aregoing to say, 'Our place is still new, but it's not new (enough).' " SeeAtlanta /B4


B2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOV 28, 2013

ON THE AIR

COREBOARD

TODAY GOLF Time European Tour, Alfred Dunhill Championship3:30 a.m. PGATour of Australasia, Australian Open 5 p.m. FOOTBALL

High school, Don BoscoPrep (N.J.) vs. St. Joseph Regional (N.J.) NFL, Green Bay at Detroit College, Stillman at Alabama State NFL, Oakland at Dallas

College, Mississippi at Mississippi State College, TexasTechat Texas NFL, Pittsburgh at Baltimore BASKETBALL

7 a.m.

TV/Radio Golf Golf

9:30 a.m. 1 p.m.

ESPNU 1:30 p.m. CBS 4:30 p.m. ESPN 4:30 p.m. Fox Sports 1 5:30 p.m. NBC

9 a.m.

ESPN2

11 a.m.

ESPN2

11 a.m.

ESPNU

Cal State Fullerton vs. Marquette

1:30 p.m.

ESPN2

Men's college, OldSpice Classic, Memphis vs. Siena

3:30 p.m.

ESPN2

Men's college,W oodenLegacy, George Washington vs. Miami

Men's college,W oodenLegacy,

4 p.m.

NBCSN

LSU vs. Saint Joseph's

5:30 p.m.

ESPN2

Tennessee vs. UTEP

6 :30 p.m.

NBC S N

Men's college, Pepperdine vs. Wisconsin-GreenBay Men's college,W oodenLegacy,

6:30 p.m.

CBSSN

8 p.m.

ESPN2

Men's college, Battle 4 Atlantis,

Class 6A Semifinals Saturday's Games At Jeld-WenField Canby vs.Jesuit, noon CentralCatholicvs.Tigard,4p.m. Class 5A Championship Saturday's Game HiHsboroStadium WestAlbanyvs. Sherwood,5:30 p.m. Class 4A Championship Saturday's Game HiHsboro Stadium Ridgeviewvs. CottageGrove, 11a.m.

Class 3A Championship Saturday's Game Summit HighSchool Nyssa vs.CascadeChristian,2:30pm.

Saturday's Game Summit High School GrantUnionvs. Regis,11 a.m. Class1A Championship Saturday's Game HiHsboroStadium Imblervs.I.owell, 215 p.m.

Tromsx II vs. Tottenham Hotspur FC

10 a.m. Fox Sports1

UEFAEuropa League, Wigan Athletic FC SV Zulte Waregem

noon

Fox Sports1

FRIDAY

NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE AH TimesPST AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA NewEngland 8 3 0 . 727288 230 N.Y.Jets 5 6 0 .455186 287 Miami 5 6 0 .455229 245 Buffalo 4 7 0 . 364236 273

South

Time

European Tour,Alfred Dunhill Championship 3:30 a.m. PGATour of Australasia, Australian Open 5 p.m.

TV/Radio Golf Golf

FOOTBALL College, lowa at Nebraska College, SMU at Houston College, Arkansas at LSU

9 a.m. 9 a.m. 11:30 a.m.

College, Fla. International at Fla. Atlantic

noon

College, Miami at Pittsburgh

12:30 p.m. ABC 12:30 p.m. Fox 1 2:30 p.m. CB S SN 4 p.m. F o x Sports1, 940-AM, 1110-AM, 100.1-FM 5 p.m ESPN

College, Oregon State at Oregon

College, South Florida at Central Florida BASKETBALL

ABC ESPN2 CBS

F o x Sports1

Men's college, OldSpice Classic, consolation semifinal, teams TBD

8 a.m.

Men's college, Fairfield at Providence Men's college, OldSpice Classic,

9:30 a.m. Fox Sports1

semifinal, teams TBD

10:30 a.m.

ESPN

Men's college, Pacific at Oregon noon Men's college, Ark.-Little Rock at Oklahomanoon Men's college, teamsTBD 12:30 p.m.

Pac-12

Men's college, teams TBD

Men's college, Barclays Center Classic, Georgia Techvs. Mississippi Men's college, OldSpice Classic, semifinal, teams TBD Men's college, NITSeasonTip-off, final, teams TBD Men's college, Battle 4 Atlantis,

12:30 p.m.

ESPNU

Root ESPN ESPN2

1:30 p.m.

NBCSN

2:30 p.m.

ESPN2

3 p.m.

ESPN

semifinal, teams TBD

4 p.m.

Men's college, Florida State at Florida Men's college, CorpusChristi Challenge,

4:30 p.m.

NBCSN ESPN2

Virginia vs. SMU

4:30 p.m.

CBSSN

5 p.m.

ESPNU

Men's college, OldSpice Classic, consolation semifinal, teams TBD

Indianapolis

Tennesse e Jacksonvile Houston Cincinnati Pittsburgh Baltimore Cleveland

6:30 p.m.

ESPN2

6 :30 p.m.

NBC S N

Men's college, CorpusChristi Challenge, Texas AB M vs. Missouri State Men's college, LasVegas Invitational,

7 p.m.

CBSSN

Northwestern vs. UCLA

8:30 p.m.

ESPN2

consolation semifinal, teams TBD HOCKEY

9 p.m.

ESPNU

NHL, NewYork Rangers at Boston College, Wisconsin at Minnesota

10 a.m. 2 p.m.

NBC ESPNU

Women's college, OregonState at Oregon

8 p.m.

West

Pct PF PA . 636263 260 .455250 245 . 182 142 324 . 182199 289 Pct PF PA . 636275 206 .455243 256 .455227 215 .364203 265

W L T Pct PF PA 9 2 0 . 818429 289 9 2 0 .81 8 270 179 5 6 0 .455269 260 4 7 0 3 64 213 269 NATIONALCONFERENCE

East

Dallas Philadelphia N.Y.Giants Washington NewOrleans Carolina TampaBay Atlanta Detroit

Chicago GreenBay Minnesota Seattle SanFrancisco Arizona St. Louis

W L T 6 5 0 6 5 0 4 7 0 3 8 0 South W L T 9 2 0 8 3 0 3 8 0 2 9 0 North W L T 6 5 0 6 5 0 5 5 I 2 8 I West W L T 10 I 0 7 4 0 7 4 0 5 6 0

Pct PF PA .545298 279 . 545276 260 .364213 280 .273252 338 Pct PF PA .818305 196 . 727258 151 . 273211 258 . 182227 309 Pct PF PA .545286 277 .545303 309 . 5 00284 265 . 2 27266 346 Pct PF PA .909306 179 . 636274 184 . 636254 223 .455266 255

Today's Games GreenBayat Detroit, 9:30a.m. OaklandatDallas,1:30 pm. PittsburghatBaltimore, 5:30p.m. Sunday's Games Chicago at Minnesota,10a.m. NewEnglandatHouston,10 a.m Tennessee atIndianapois,10 a.m. Jacksonvilleat Cleveland,10am. Tampa Bayat Carolina,10a.m. Arizona at Philadelphia,10 am. Miami atN.Y.Jets, 10a.m. St. LouisatSanFrancisco,1:05 p.m. Atlantavs.Buffaloat Toronto,I:05 p.m. Cincinnati atSanDiego, I:25 p.m. Denver at KansasCity, I:25 p.m. N.Y.GiantsatWashington, 5:30 p.m. Monday's Game NewOrleansatSeatle, 5:40p.m.

College Schedule Today's games

BRDWNS PANTHE RS VIKINGS EAGLES JETS I-BILLS 49ERS Patriots CHARGE RS REDSKINS

7

7

9 PK 3.5 1.5 3.5 9 7.5 PK 15

8.5 I 3.5 1.5 3.5 8.5 7.5 I 15

SEAHAW KS t-Toronto

5.5

55

Jaguars Buccaneers Bears Cardinals Dolphins Falcons Rams TEXANS

Monday

TEXAS

4 3

Mississippi Toledo

Saints

College Today

4.5 TexasTech 4 MISSISSIPPI ST

Friday 3 2.5

NEBRAS KA

Bengals Giants

lowa

75 BALLST 34 C MICHIGAN 1 8.5 OHIOU 16.5 MARSHALL 2.5 BowlingGreen 15 LSU 25.5 TROY 6 FLAATLANTIC 28.5 C. FLORIDA 26.5 FresnoSt 8.5 Miami-Fla 2.5 WASHINGTON 14.5 HOUSTO N 9.5 OREGO N 22

75 AKRON 35 Miami-Ohio 1 85 E. Michigan 17 Massachusetts 3 E. Carolina 2 BUFFALO 25 Arkansas 6.5 TexasSt 28 Fla int'I 27 S. Florida 7.5 SANJOSEST 2.5 PITTSBUR GH 16 WashingtonSt 95 Smu 21 OregonSt

Ohio St 12.5 BostonCollege 2 Maryland 2.5 VANDERB ILT 14 N. CAROLIN A 4.5 W. VIRGINIA 9 Northwestern 3.5 INDIANA 20.5 Rutgers 3.5 Tennessee 4 MICHIGAN ST 145 MEMPHIS 9 UAB 1 4.5 S. Alabama 9.5 UTAHST 1 9.5 UTAH 16.5 14 Byu RICE 13.5 Georgia 3 MISSOUR I 4.5 VirginiaTech 13 Alabama 11 BOISEST 35 Baylor 13 FloridaSt 27 COLORAD OST 1 5 KansasSt 16 WISCONSIN 24 TX-S. ANTO NIO 1 5.5 NEWMEXICOST 4.5 USC 3.5 STANFO RD 14 ARIZONA ST 12 HAWAII 6

15 MICHIGAN 2 SYRACUS E 2.5 NC STA TE 14 WakeForest 5.5 Duke 7.5 lowa St 3.5 ILLINOIS 21 Purdue 3 CONNE CTICUT 4 KENTUCK Y 15 Minnesota 9 Temple 1 45 Minnesota 8 GEORG IA 2 1 . 5 Wyoming 17 Colorado 14 NEVADA 11 Tulane 3 GEORGIA TECH 4.5 TexasA8M 13 VIRGINIA 11 AUBURN 36 NewMexico 13 TCU 27 FLDRDIA 155 Air Force 16. 5 KANSAS 24 PennSt 1 5 . 5Louisiana Tech 3.5 Clemson 3 Ucla 14 NotreDame 13 Arizona 7 Army

Saturday

BASKETBALL Men's college Wednesday'sGames East

Bryant70,Brown67 St. Francis(NY)83, MountSt.Vincent54 South Campbel62,St.Andrews55 JacksonvilleSt.78,FortValleySt.66 Kentucky81,E.Mlchigan63 Louisiana-Lafayette105,NorthwesternSt.74 Mississippi St58,JacksonSt.56 Betting line TennesseeTech98,ETSU83 UAB85, FloridaA8M73 NFL UT-Martin 95Bethel(Tenn.)82 lHome teams inCAPS) Opening Current Underdog William 8Mary97, VMI67 Winth opr69,JamesMadison57 Today Midwest 5.5 6 Packers 9.5 9 Raiders IPFW71, E.Illinois 65 3 3 Steelers KentSt.83 YoungstownSt. 79 Sunday WrightSt. 73,AlcornSt.55 4.5 4.5 Titans Southwest 3.5 5 CHIEFS Texas-Pan American66, Lamar 61

Far West BoiseSt. 98 Idaho89 ColoradoSt. 66,Bethune-Cookman52 NewMexicoSt.91, Prairie View60 Portland86,SanJoseSt. 69 Richmond83,Air Force60 San Francisco 96, SonomaSt. 73 IJtah88, Ball St.69 Tournament CancunChallenge-Mayan Championship Oral Roberts63, Bowling Green56 Third Place GeorgiaSouthern76,Presbyterian 66 CancunChallenge-Riviera Championship Wisconsin 70,West Virginia 63 Third Place Saint Louis62,Old Dominion 52 EA SportsMaui Invitational Championship Syracuse 74, Baylor 67 Third Place Dayton 82, California 64 Fifth Place Gonzaga 91,Arkansas81 Seventh Place Minnesota83, Chaminade68 Gulf CoastShowcase Championship Louis ianaTech76,St Bonaventore72 Third Place III.-Chicago 94,Wagner 76 Fifth Place San Diego 59,S.Illinois 56 Seventh Place UNCGreensboro75,Stetson68 NIT SeasonTipoff Semifinals Arizona66,Drexel62 Duke74,Alabama64

Women's College Wednesday'sGames East Albany(NY)70,Providence60 Buffalo68,Canisius59 McNeese St 69,Fairleigh Dickinson62 South Clemson 41,Radford 39 Furman 66,Yale61 GeorgiaSt.87, Belmont 84 Kentucky117,Bradley77 Louisville 74,W.Kentucky 61 Marshal82, l S.Illinois 59 Richmond64,Virginia Tech56 VCU95, UNC-Greensboro 72 Midwest ClevelandSt.76, MoreheadSt. 67 Northwestern 66, Lafayette64 Oakland71,Niagara57 Ohio St.93, Lehigh63 Southwest AbileneChristian79,Texas-Arlington 72 S. DakotaSt.57, TCU52 Stanford83,Florida GulfCoast59 Texas A8M-CC68,TexasSt. 60 UTEP 63, N.Colorado40

Far West Montana 84, Denver58 Sacramento St.87, UtahValley 84 Tournament Carrs/SafewayGreatAlaska Shootout Championship Georgetown92,Alaska-Anchorage78 Third Place UC Riverside74,Nicholls St.64

souTH

Favorite LIONS COWBO YS RAVENS

COLTS Broncos

Wednesday'sGames Pittsburgh6, Toronto5, SD Montreal 3,Buffalo1 Carolina4, NewJersey3 Winnipeg 3, N.Y.Islanders2 Ottawa 6, Washington 4 Nashville 4,Columbus0 Detroit 6,BostonI Tampa Bay4, Philadelphia 2 N.Y.Rangers 5,Florida 2 Phoenix3, Minnesota1 St. Louis 4,Colorado1 Chicago3, Calgary2 SanJose3, LosAngeles 2 SD Today's Games VancouveratOttawa,730 pm EdmontonatNashvile, 8 p.m.

Friday's Games

DEALS Transactions BASEBALL

American League LDS ANG ELESANGELS— Agreedto terms with RHPJoeSmith on athree-year contract. Deslgnated RHPJuanGutierrezforassignment. TEXAS RANGERS—ClaimedDFRafael Ortegaoff waiversfromColorado

BASKETB ALL National Basketball Association SACRAM ENTOKINGS Recalled G RayMcCallum from Reno(NBADLl FOOTBALL National Football League DENVER BRONCOS — PlacedDT KevinVickerson on theinjuredreservelist. SignedDTSioneFua. DETROIT LIONS—SignedGRodneyAustin from thepracticesquad.ReleasedDEAustenLane. GREENBAY PACKERS— SignedLBVictorAiyewa from thepracticesquad PlacedRBJohnathanFranklin on theinjuredreservelist. NEW ENGLANDPATRIOTS — Signed DT Sealver Siliga fromthe practicesquad.SignedTE D.J. Williams SignedDTPatrick Fordto thepracticesquad. NEWYORKGIANTS—SignedDBRossWeaverto

the practicsqu e ad. NEW YORKJETS—SignedTEChris Pantale from the practicesquad.SignedWRMichael Campbell to the practice squad.

OAKLAND RAIDERS— Activated DTJared Veldheer fromtheiniured reserve-return list. WaivedQB TylerWilson. SEATTLESE AHAWKS — Released CB Perrish Cox. SignedCBDeshawnShead Fromthe practice squad. Signed CBAkeemAuguste to thepractice squad. TENNNESSEETITANS Signed S ShannSchillinger. SignedDL Tyler Hornto the practicesquad. WaivedDLOscar Johnsonfromthepractice squad. TAMPABAYBUCCANEERS — Signed TEKyle Adams.PlacedTETomCrabtreeontheinjured reserve list. HOCKEY

National HockeyLeague

BUFFALO SABRES— Ciaimed FMatt D'Agostini

off waiversfromPittsburgh. PlacedRWCoreyTropp on waiversforassignmentto Rochester (AHL). DETRDITRE DWINGS Signed DJonathanEricsson to asix-year contract extension. MONTR EALCANADIENS—Agreed totermswith assistantgeneralmanagerRickDudleyona multiyear contractextension.Reassigned DMagnus Nygrento FarjestadBK(Swedish Hockey League). NEWJERSEY DEVILS— Placed0 StephenGionta on iniuredreserve,retroactiveto Nov.23. RecaledD SethHelgesonfromAlbany(AHL), then returnedhim to Albany. PHOENIXCOYOTES— Recalled F Chris Brown and D ConnorMurphyfrom Portland(AHL). Announced DRostislav Kleslaclearedwaivers andwil report toPortland(AHL). TAMPA BAYLIGHTNING—RecalledFDanaTyrell from Syracuse (AHL). Gauthierto athree-year entry levelcontract. WASHINGTONCAPITALS — Recalled D Tyson StrachanfromHershey(AHL).

NHL

COLLEGE

AH TimesPST

BIG EAST CONFERENCE— Named Jackie Finn interimprojectmanager for social media.

EasternConference Atlantic Division

EASTERNCOLLEGE ATHLETIC CONFERENCE NamedJi m Huetter,JonLevinson,KathyLynch and TomReinisch basketball officiating coordina-

NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE

Boston Tampa Bay Detroit Montreal Toronto Ottawa Florida

Winnipeg at Philadelphia, 11:30a.m. N.Y.Rangers atBoston, I p.m. PittsburghatTampaBay, 4p.m. Detroit atN.Y.Islanders,4 p.m. Calgaryat Anaheim,4p.m. St. Louisat SanJose,4p.m. MontrealatWashington, 5 p.m. ColoradoatMinnesota6pm NewJerseyatCarolina, 7p.m. EdmontonatColumbus, 7p.m. Torontoat Buffalo, 730p.m ChicagoatDallas,8:30 p.m

TORONTOMAPLE LEAFS — Signed F Frederik

HOCKEY

Stillman atAlabamaSt., I p.m. Mississippi atMississippi St., 4:30p.m. SOUTHWEST TexasTechat Texas, 4:30p.m.

Men's college,W oodenLegacy,

VOLLEYBALL Women's college, Arizona State at Arizona 4 p.m. Women's college, California at Stanford 6 p.m.

W L T 7 4 0 5 6 0 2 9 0 2 9 0 North W L T 7 4 0 5 6 0 5 6 0 4 7 0

Denver Kansas C ity San Digo e Oakland

Men's college,W oodenLegacy, semifinal, teams TBD Men's college, Battle 4 Atlantis, semifinal, teams TBD

"Remember, son. All of my vicarious hopes and dreams are riding on your shoulders ... Now get out there and have fun!"

FOOTBALL NFL

5 20 I 11 45 82 Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Pittsburgh 26 16 9 I 33 78 63 N .Y. Rangers 25 13 12 0 2 6 53 61 W ashington 25 12 11 2 2 6 76 74 Carolina 25 1 0 10 5 2 5 53 70 NewJersey 25 9 1 1 5 23 53 62 P hiladelphia 24 10 12 2 2 2 52 60 Columbus 25 9 1 3 3 21 62 75 N.Y.Islanders 25 8 14 3 19 70 85 Western Conference Central Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Chicago 26 18 4 4 40 95 73 St. Louis 24 18 3 3 39 86 51 Colorado 23 17 6 0 34 70 49 Minnesota 26 15 7 4 34 65 61 Nashvile 25 13 10 2 28 60 69 Winnipeg 27 12 11 4 2 8 72 78 Dallas 23 12 9 2 26 67 68 Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Anaheim 27 1 7 7 3 37 83 71 SanJose 23 15 3 5 35 79 52 LosAngees 25 16 6 3 35 67 53 Phoenix 2 5 1 5 6 4 34 83 79 Vancouver 26 12 9 5 29 67 68 Calgary 2 4 8 1 2 4 20 66 87 Edmonton 25 7 I6 2 I6 65 89 NOTE:Twopoints for a win, onepoint for overtime

loss.

Class 2A Championship

UEFAEuropa League,

College, Washington State atWashington College, FresnoState at SanJose State

II/'Ls

m vtcx

lowa vs. Xavier Men's college, OldSpice Classic,

GOLF

In the Bleachers © 2013 Steve Moore. Dist by Universal Ucrick www.gocomtcs.comnnthebreachers

Football

Men's college, Battle 4 Atlantis,

Arizona State vs. Creighton SOCCER

Buffalo 2 6

IN THE BLEACHERS

PREP SPORTS

Fox

Men's college, OldSpice Classic, Butler vs. Washington State

Saturday Football: 4Astatechampionship, Ridgeviewvs. CottageGrove,Hilsboro Stadium,11a.m.

Fox Sports 1

Men's college, OldSpice Classic, Oklahoma State vs. Purdue

ON DECK

GP W L OT Pts GF GA 2 5 16 7 2 34 69 5 2 25 16 8 I 33 76 6 3 2 6 12 7 7 31 6 9 7 1 25 14 9 2 30 67 52 25 14 9 2 30 71 66 2 5 10 11 4 2 4 7 4 8 1 2 6 7 1 4 5 19 5 8 8 6

tors. MONTAN A—Signedfootball coachMickDelaney to a contract extensionthroughthe2014season. OREGO N—Signedmens' basketball coachDana Altmanto athree-year contract extensionthroughthe 2019-20season. UNLV—Agreedtotermswithfootball coachBobby Haucktoathree-year contract.

Pac-12 Pac-12 Pac-12

Listings are themostaccurateavailable. TheBulletinis not responsible for late changes made by TV or radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF BASKETBALL DOCkSgiVe Coach Altman 3-year eXtenSiOn — Oregon head coach DanaAltman hasreceived athree-year contract extension that will keep him in charge of the Ducks through the 2019-20 season. The Ducks finished 28-9 while advancing to the Sweet16

in the NCAAtournament last season. Altman was namedthe Pac-12 coach of the year. In Altman's fourth season ascoach, Oregon is currently 4-0 and ranked No. 14.

MIXED MARTIAL ARTS UFC's Del Rosario suffers heart attack — UFC fighter Shane del Rosario suffered a heart attack and is in critical condition

at a Southern California hospital. ManagerJason Housereleased a statement Wednesdaysaying Del Rosario had acatastrophic cardiovascular collapse at his home in Newport, Calif., on Tuesday morning and was taken to the local Hoag Hospital in full cardiac arrest. — From wire reports

Speed Continued from B1 Vonn remains unsure just how much her latest knee injury w il l a f fect her Sochi hopes. In an interview on NBC's "Today" show Wednesday, the four-time overall World Cup champion was asked whether her knee can w i thstand the pressure of training for the Olympics. "To be honest, I don't know," Vonn replied. Vonn crashed during a d o w n h i ll training run in Copper Mountain last week and partially tore a reconstructed ligament in her knee. She skipped the events in Beaver Creek, but is hoping to be ready for the upcoming races in Lake Louise, Alberta. Her teammates almost expect that, too. "I don't know exactly where she's at (in her recovery), but she doesn't sit still easiiy," Cook said. Then there's this thought: If Vonn is, say, only 50 percent healed by the time Sochi rolls around, and someone else is completely healthy, just who gets to race? "We're still going to bring the potential

medalists down to Sochi," Hoedlmoser said. "We can put more people in training runs and then make a decision before

race day." There areplenty of chances between now and Sochi to stand out, beginning this weekend on the new course at Beaver Creek created ahead of the 2015 world championships. "You are in control of your results," said Smith, who was 14th in training on Wednesday, 1.21 seconds behind Cook's top time. "If you're skiing well and have the right mentality, it's going to work out just fine." The recent success in speed events has a iot to do with the presence of Vonn and Mancuso. Training alongside those two icons over the years has elevated everyone's performance. At least, that's Smith's take. "To see them get on the podium, week in and week out, was obviously very inspirational for someone like me, who was justscrapping down these courses to try and get World Cup points," said Smith, who had two downhill podium finishes last season. "You learn and you figure out what it takes. You com-

pete with your teammates. Aii of a sudden, you are in a situation that we're in, where everyoneissuper competitive and you still have those two girls that are leading the pack. "It's just fun, good pressure for everyone else. It's something to aspire to.n For years, Cook didn't believe she had the ability to keep up with Vonn in a race. But last season in Lake Louise, the 29-year-old had a breakthrough, finishing runner-up to Vonn in two races. It showed Cook she was on the right path. "It's really become a challenge to myself, to believe that I can compete with her," Cook said. "I've really accepted that over the last few years instead of hid behind it. "It takes perfection for me to beat her. That is the absolute challenge, to reach

perfection going 80 mph on two planks." Mancuso seesa renewed confidence in the speed team, a definite camaraderie, too. "We're aii l e aning o n e ach o t her. That's nice," said Mancuso, a three-time Olympic medalist. "Just aii of Us together trying to go fast. Everyone is cheering for each other and that's always fun."


THURSDAY, NOV 28, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

NHL ROUNDUP

B3

NBA ROUNDUP

Penguins azers'wins rea comes oanen Goran Dragic get past •scores 31points to Phoenix to a Leafs in lead 120-106 victory shootout

The Associated Press P ITTSBURGH — T h e P ittsburgh Pengu i n s spent the first 25 minutes against the Toronto Maple L eafs showcasing all o f their flaws, from defensive breakdowns to spotty goaltending t o q u e stionable decision-making. Then they spent the next 40 providing a r eminder why they remain one of the most potent teams in the NHL. Evgeni Malkin p i cked up his first two-goal game in more than 18 months and added the game-winner in th e shootout and P ittsburgh rallied by t h e stunned Maple Leafs 6-5 on Wednesday night. " That g am e w a s a l l over the place," Pittsburgh coach Dan Bylsma said. So was Bylsma's team, which fell behind 4-1 and 5-3 — looking comical at times in the process — before getting its act together in the third period. Malkin and James Neal both scored in the third to tie it up, with Malkin and Sidney Crosby beating Toronto's Jonathan Bernier in the shootout as Pittsburgh narrowly avoided its third three-game losing streak of the season. Also on Wednesday: Lightning 4, Flyers 2: TAMPA, Fla. — Victor Hedman had t w o g o als and an assist to help Tampa Bay beat Philadelphia, spoiling Vincent Lecavalier's homecoming. Red Wings 6, Bruins 1: DETROIT — Niklas Kronwall, Henrik Zetterberg, Gustav Nyquist and Tomas Tatar each a goal and an assist in Detroit's victory over Boston.

Rangers 5, Panthers 2: SUNRISE, Fla. — Rick Nash scored his second goal of the season and Henrik Lundqvist rebounded from a poor game with 31 saves to lift New York over Florida.

Canadiens 3, Sabres 1: BUFFALO, N.Y. — Alex G alchenyuk a n d D a v i d Desharnais scored, Carey Price made 24 saves and Montreal extended its winning streak to four games with a victory over Buffalo. Hurricanes 4, Devils 3: NEWARK, N.J. — Patrick Dwyer scored short-handed to cap a three-goal burst in the second period, and Carolina snapped its sixgame road losing streak by beating New Jersey. J ets 3 , I s l anders 2 : U NIONDALE, N . Y . M ark S t u a rt , A nd r e w Ladd and Devin Setoguchi scored in the second period and Al Montoya made 28 saves to help Winnipeg defeat New York.

Senators 6, Capitals 4: W ASHINGTON — B o b by Ryan scored twice and Zack Smith netted the goahead goal with 2:23 remaining in Ottawa's win over Washington. Predators 4, Blue Jackets 0: COLUMBUS, Ohio — Rookie goalie Marek Mazanec made 19 saves for his second shutout, and Matt Cullen and Nick Spal-

ing each had a goal and an assist as Nashville blanked Columbus. Coyotes 3, Wild 1: ST. PAUL, Minn. — Radim Vrbata scored two goals and Thomas Greiss made 28 saves to lead Phoenix over Minnesota. Blues 4, Avalanche 1: DENVER — Jaroslav Halak made 24 saves, David Backes had a goal and an assist and streaking St. Louis beat Colorado. Blackhawks 3, Flames 2: CALGARY, AlbertaPatrick Kane scored twice, including t h e ti e b reaking goal with 18 seconds left, and Chicago rallied for three straight goals in the third period to b eat

Calgary.

P ortland looked p oised t o match the third-longest win streak in franchise history. Then Dragic took over. Playing without backcourt mate Eric Bledsoe (bruised shin) for th e sixth straight

game, Dragic fueled a 40-point The Associated Press PHOENIX — Th e good news for the Portland Trail Blazers is they only face Goran Dragic and the Phoenix S uns one more t i me. A n d that's not until spring. Dragic scored 31 p oints, Channing Frye added 25 and the Suns used their up-tempo styleto recover from a poor start and beat Portland 1201 06 Wednesday night a n d snap the B l azers' l l - game winning streak. Markieff Morris scored 19 and twin Marcus Morris 15 for the Suns, who wiped out a 16-point second-quarter deficit to hand the Blazers their first loss since Nov. 5 against Houston. Two of P ortland's three defeats have come to the Suns, who shot 52 percent from the field behind the speedy Dragic, who was one point shy of his career-high and added 10 assists. "I'm glad we don't have to play Phoenix until April," said Blazers coach Terry Stotts, whose team is 1-2 against the Suns and 12-1 against the rest of the league. "After we got a l ead they completely outplayed us. They ran, they rebounded, they played an excellent game. They have played us very well and we will see April 4 i f a nything

s econd-quarter with a v a r i ety of 3-pointers, midrange

jumpers and nifty passes for

Matt York / The Associated Press

Portland Trail Blazers' Damian Lillard (0) loses the ball as Phoenix Suns' Channing Frye, left, and Goran Dragic defend during the first half of Wednesday night's game in Phoenix.

Blazers, who had also won six straight on the road but couldn't keep up with the newlook Suns, who moved a game over.500. "We already played those guys three times and in all changes." those games, we were better L aMarcus A l d ridge h a d or we were close," said Drag24 points and Damian Li lic, who hit 4 of 5 3-pointers. "I don't know why. I t h i nk lard scored 16 points for the

they're a good matchup for us. They want to play slow in the half court and we want t o run. A n d t h at's t o o u r advantage." Suns coach Jeff Hornacek said before the game that he wanted to push the pace, adding, "We're not good when we hold the ball." But the Suns l ooked sluggish early a n d

made the tiebreaking basket on a steal and dunk with 1:35 left, and Los Angeles blew a 27-point lead before beating New Jersey. Wizards 100, Bucks 92: MILWAUKEE Marcin Gortatscored 25 points, John Wall added 19 p oints and W ashington extended M i l waukee's losing streak to 10

bucketson the fastbreak. Frye helped by heating up from the outside. Portland turned a 3923 deficit into a 61-58 halftime lead. "Goran has just been on a tear," Frye said. "When he is feeling it like that you just give it to him and get the hell out of the way." Also on Wednesday: T hunder 94, S p urs 8 8 : OKLAHOMA CITY — Kevin Durant had 24 points and 13 rebounds, Serge Ibaka added 17 points and 11 rebounds and Oklahoma City snapped San Antonio's 11-game winning streak. Pacers 99, Bobcats 74: C.J. Watson knocked down five 3-pointers in the fourth quarter and finished with 18 points to send Indiana past Charlotte for its fifth straight victory. H eat 95 , C a valiers 8 4 : CLEVELAND LeBron James scored 28 points and seemed more relaxed than in previous games back in Clevel and, leading Miami t o i t s eighth straight win. Grizzlies 100, Celtics 93: BOSTON — Jerryd Bayless scored 22 points and Mike Conley had 14 with nine assists to propel Memphis past Boston for its f i fth straight road win. Lakers 99, Nets 94: NEW YORK — W e sley Johnson

games.

Cleveland

Ij-0 8, Carter-Williams 9 212-2 23, Anderson 29 0-0 4, Young9-156-1126, Davies1-21-2 3, Brown Ij-4 0-0 0,Thompson3-6 0-Ij 7. Totals 38-85 111794.

Magic 105, 76ers 94: Nik Vucevic had 21 points and 16 rebounds as Orlando beat Philadelphia to post back-toback wins for the first time since early this month. Bulls 99, Pistons 79: AUBURN HILLS, Mich. — Taj Gibson had a career-high 23 points and C h icago pulled away in the fourth quarter to beat Detroit. Nuggets 117, Timberwolves 1 10: MINNEAPOLIS — Ty Lawson scored 2 3 p o i nts, reserve Nate Robinson added 15 and Denver held off Minnesota. Rockets 113, Hawks 84: HOUSTON — Francisco Garcia scored a season-high 21 points, Aaron Brooks also had 21 and Houston cruised to its third straight win. Mavericks 103, Warriors 99: DALLAS — D ir k N o witzki scored 22 points to offset a

rough night for playmaking partner Monta Ellis, and Dallas held off a late charge from Golden State. Clippers 93, Knicks 80: LOS A NGELES — B l a k e G r i f fin had 15 points and 13 rebounds, and Chris Paul had 15 points and seven assists before leaving with a strained right hamstring in Los Angeles' victory over plummeting New York.

NBA SCOREBOARD Standings All TimesPDT NATIONA L BASKETB ALLASSOCIATION

Eastern Conference d-Indiana d-Miami Chicago d-Toronto Atlanta Washington Charlotte Detroit Orlando Philadelphia Boston Cleveland Brooklyn NewYork Milwaukee

W

L

14 1

12 3 7

7

6 8 7 7 6 6 6 6 4 4 3 2

8 8 8 9 9 9 10 11 11 0 11 12

Pct GB 933 800 2 500 6'/z 429 7'/z 500 6'/z 467 7 438 7'/~ 400 8 400 8 375 8'/z

L.A. Lakers at Detroit, 4:30p.m. BrooklynatHouston,5 p.m. GoldenStateatOklahomaCity, 5p.m. NewOrleansatPhiladelphia, 5p.m. Washington at Indiana,5 p.m. NewYorkatDenver, 6p.m. PhoenixatUtah,6p m. L.A. ClippersatSacramento, 7p.m.

7-14 0-0 14,Teague0-5 4-44, Martin 5-100-0 14, Jenkins5-120-013,Ayon230 04, Scott3 83-49, Schroder2-52-2 6, Brand0-Ij 0-0 0.Totals 32-75 12-15 84.

Summaries Wednesday'sGames

Thunder94, Spurs88

Suns 120, Blazers 106

PORTLAND (106) 353 9 Batum5-134-515, Aldridge10-184-5 24,Lopez 4-9 2-210, Lillard5-12 3-316, Matthews3-6 0-08, 267 10 267 10 Freeland2-52-2 6, Wiliams 1-8 0-0 3, Wright 1-4 214 1Qi/p 0-0 z Robinson5-80-010, Crabbe1-12-3 4, Wat143 11'/~ son 0-00-0 0,Leonard1-12-2 4, Barton1-12-2 4. Western Conference Totals39-86 21-24 106. W L Pct GB PHOENIX (120) d-SanAntonio Tucker1-30-02, Frye10-12 2-225, Plumlee3-6 13 2 867 d-Portland 813 '/z 2-48, Dragi c 10-1B7-831, Green 3-142-210, Mark. 13 3 Morris 7-135-519, Christmas0-10-0 0, Smith2-5 Oklahoma City 10 3 769 2 d-L.A. Clippers 688 2'/z 0-0 4, Marc.Morris4-76-615, Goodwin1-11-2 3, 11 5 688 2'/z Kravtsov1-11-23. Totals 42-t1 26-31120. Houston 11 5 625 3'/z Portland 32 26 18 30 — 106 Dallas 10 6 21 40 29 30 — 120 Denver 8 6 571 4'/z Phoenix 3-Point Goal— s Portland 7-19 (Lillard 3-5, MatGoldenState 9 7 563 4'i~ thews 2-4, WIIIams1-Z Batum1-6, Wright 0-2), Phoenix 8 7 533 5 Phoenix 10-24 IDragic 4-5, Frye3-5, Green2-9, Memphis 8 7 533 5 LA Lakers 8 8 500 51/2 Marc.Morris 1-4, Mark.Morris 0-1). FouledoutNone.Rebounds—Portland44 (Lopez10), Phoenix Minnesota 8 9 471 6 NewOrleans 6 8 429 6'/z 50 (Plumlee10i. Assists—Portland 21 (Batum5), Phoenix 22(Dragic 10). Total Fouls—Portland 20, Sacramen to 4 9 308 8 s phoemx defensive three Utah 2 1 4 125 0'/z phoenix 2z Technical— second.A—12 731 (18422). d-divisionleader

Wednesday'sGames

Orlando105,Philadelphia94 Indiana99,Charlotte 74 L.A. Lakers99, Brooklyn94 Memphis100 ,Boston93 Miami95,Cleveland84 Chicago99,Detroit 79 Denver07, Mmnesota110 Houston113,Atlanta84 Oklahoma City 94,SanAntonio 88 Washington100,Milwaukee92,OT Dallas103,GoldenState99 Phoenix120,Portland106 L.A. Clippers93, NewYork 80

Today'sGames No games scheduled Friday'sGames SanAntonioat Drlando,4p m. Milwaukee atCharlotte, 4p.m. Miami atToronto,4 p.m. Cleve andatBoston,4;30p.m. Dallas atAtlanta,4:30 p.m.

Grizzlies100, Celtics 93

HovsTDN I113)

Parsons6-110-014, Jones6-10 0-014, Howard 4-6 3-8 11,Beverley2-8 2-3 7, Lin 0-10-0 0, Garcia 9-140-021, Casspi3-5 2-29, Asik4-7 2-3 10, Brooks7-123-321, Brewer1-1 0-03,Motiejunas1-3 1-2 3.Totals43-78 13-21 113. Atlanta 19 26 22 17 — 84 Houston 30 26 21 36 — 113

Nuggets117, Timberwolves110 DENvER I117)

Chandler6-102-214, Faried6-71-1 13,Hickson 5-9 0-0 10,Lawson 7-158-10 23, Foye4-7 0-0 10, Mozgov1-21-2 3, Arthur3-71-2 7, Robinson5-0 2-215, Hamilton 4 81-211, Fournier Ij 21-21, A Miller 4-102-210.TotaIs 45-88 19-25 117. MINNESOTA (110) Brewer5-92-314, Love7 192 219, Pekovic 8 14 5-621, Rubio6-12 5-617, Martin 9-21 u-u 29,

cunni ngham2-40-04,Barea3-50-06,Hummel0-1 0-00, Shved0-10-00,MuhammadIj-20-00.Totals 40-88 25-28110. Denver 28 36 26 27 — 117 Minnesota 27 28 28 27 — 110

Rockets113, Hawks84 ATLANTA (84) Carroll 2-8 0-0 4, Millsap 6-103-5 16, Horford

SANANTO NIO(88)

Leonard6-181-214,Duncan5-141-211, Splitter 3-8 0-0 6,Parker6-164-6 16, Green2-7 0-0 4, Ginobili 5-101-212, Diaw3 62-2 1II, AyresIj 0 0 0 0, Belinelli3-80-06, Mills3-50-09,Bonner0-00-00, Joseph 0-00-0 0 Totals 36-92 9-14 88 OKLAHOMA CITY (94) Durant 10-233-3 24, Ibaka7-15 3-417, Perkins 0-22-2 2,Westbrook2-162-4 6 Sefolosha3-4 0-0 6, Adams1-10-02, Lamb5-7 0-0 12,Collison 0-1 Ij-0II,JaI:kson10-142-2 23,Fisher 1-10-0 z Totals 39-84 12-15 94. SanAntonio 21 25 15 27 — 88 OklahomaCity 19 2 4 25 26 — 94

Lakers 99, Nets 94 LA. LAKERS (99) W.Johnson 2-6 0-Ij 4, Hill 1-9 Ij-0 2, Gasol9-17 3-4 21, Blake 3-8 1-2 9, Meeks3-10 4-4 u, S.WIliams1-71-2 4,Young8-16 6-626, Farmar5-9 0-0 15, Henry1-13-45, sacre1-2 0 Ij z Totals 34-85 18-22 99.

BR00KLYN I94)

28 14 18 24 — 84

ORLANDO (105)

MEMPHIS (100)

Prince4-10 1-29,Randolph5-16 3-413, Koufos 3-11 1-2 7, Conley6-14 2-2 14, Allen5-8 2-2 12, Bayless6-10 9-11 22, Davis3-5 5-6 11,Calathes 1-1 2-2 4, Miller 3-5 0-0 8. Totals 36-8025-31 100. BOSTON(93) Green 9-19 i-8 26,Bass2-6 2-2 6, Sullinger10181-1 23,Crawford2-80-05, Bradley 7-130-016, Faverani3-8 0-0 7, Wallace1-5 0-2 2, Humphries 4-10 0-0 8,Pressey0-10-00, Lee0-10-00. Totals 38-89 10-1393. Memphis 27 22 20 31 — 100 Boston 13 23 23 34 — 93

Afflalo 6 156-8 18, Davis9-15 1-2 19, Vucevic 10-131-1 21,Nelson1-50-03, Oladipo7-113-418, Nicholson5-7 0-0 0, Moore2-82-2 7, Maxiel 0-0 1-2 1, Harkless2-3 1-2 5 Lamb0-2 0-00, Price1-3 Ij-0 2.Totals43-82 15-21 105. Philadelphia 27 2 3 23 21 — 94 Orlando 33 22 22 28 — 105

Wizards100, Bucks92 (OT)

WASHINGTON (100) Webster7-160-118,Nene2-6 5-6 9, Gortat11-12 3-5 25, Wall 7-182-219, Ariza 5-0 2-414, Vesely 1-3 2-2 4,Temple2 22-2 6, Maynor 1 40-03, Seraphin1-20-0 z Totals 37-7416-22100. Bulls 99, Pistons79 MILWAUKEE (92) Middleton6-11 0-013, Ilyasova6-7 0-01z PaCHICAGO (99) chulia 1-2 1-2 3,Knight 2-122-2 7, Mayo9-23 0-0 Deng11-174-427, Boozer3-u 0-06, Noah6-11 21, Henson 2-61-2 5 Butler 2-70-0 5, Ridnour3 5 1-313, Hinrich4-103-313, Snell 5-90-013, Gibson Ij-08 Udoh3-32-28, Neal3-92-210Totals3711-13 1-223,Dunleavy1-4 0-0 2, Teague0-3 0-0 85 8-10 92. 0, Mohammed 1-1 0-0 2, Murphy0-0Ij 0 0. Totals Washington 25 2 4 22 16 13 —100 42-79 9-12 99. Milwaukee 23 2 5 20 19 5 — 92

DETROIT (79)

Smith 6-120-413, Monroe2-51-2 5, Drummond 5-10 0-2 10, Jennings5-13 1-1 12, Caldwell-Pope 0-4 0-0 0, Singler1-1 Ij-0 2, Stuckey9-167-8 25,

Harrellson2-30-04, Bynum1-70-02,Vilanuevao-1

0-0 0, Jerebko1-3 0-02, Mitchell 0-0 0-2 0,Datome 2-2 0-0 4 Totals34-77 9-19 79. Chicago 25 26 25 23 — 99 Detroit 29 24 15 11 — 79

Pacers 99,Bodcats74

Pierce4-172-312,Garnett2-50-04, Blatche4-10 INDIANA(99) 6-714, Livingston2-51-2 5, J.Johnson6-19 4-418, George 6-152-315, West3-95-80, Hibbert 4-14 Anderson5-13 1-214, Plumlee2-3 2 26, Teletovic 485-617, Evans 0 00 00, Taylor2-30-04. Totals 6-7 14, G.Hill 2-102-2 7, Stephenson5-10 5-715, 31-83 21-26 94. Johnson0-10-00, Scoia3-62-28, Watson6-90-0 LA. Lakers 34 20 23 22 — 99 18,Copeland 0-3 0-00,Mahinmi0-4 3-3 3 Sloan 2-2 0-05, S.Hill 0-0 0-0 0,Butler1-1 0-0 3. Totals Brooklyn 18 22 28 26 — 94 32-84 25-32 99. GHARL0TTE (74I Heat 95, Cavaliers 84 Kidd-Gilchrist 2-4 1-1 5, McRoberts2-4 0-4 4, Jefferson7-15 2-416, Walker3-17 7-7 15, HenderMIAMI (95) son 3-154-410, Taylor2-7 0-04, Adrien0-10-0 0, James9-19 9-0 28, Lewis 1-3 2-3 4, Bosh3-9 Zeller 2-73-47, Sessions2-50-04, Tolliver 0-40-0 0-0 6, Chaimers1-41-2 3,Wade10-14 2-222,Allen 0, Biyombo1-1 2-44, Pargo2-30-05. Totals 26-83 3-9 0-0 7,Andersen1-1 0-0 2, Beasley5-10 7-717, 19-2874. Cole 2-30-06. Totals35-72 21-25 95. Indiana 22 21 17 39 — 99 CLEVELAND (84) Charlotte 11 27 14 22 — 74 Gee1-20-0 2, Thompson1-6 2-44, Bynum2-10 0-04, Irving6-194-416, Dellavedova0-20-00, Jack 3-6 0-0 8,Varejao3-10 4-510, Waiters7-146-1124, Magic 105, 76ers 94 Clark 5-110-013, Karasev1-30-0 3. Totals 29-83 16-24 84. PHILADELPHIA (94) Miami Allen 3-8 0-0 6, Turner7-14 2-2 17, Orton4-6

Mavericks103, Warriors 99 GQLDEN sTATEI99) Barnes3-113-49, Lee7-146-820,Bogut4-60-2 8, Curry9-195-529,Thompson5-16 7-B2II, O'Neal 2-4 2-3 6,Green0-31-21, Nedovic1-2 2-24, Speights1-1 0-02 Totals32-7626-3499 DALLAS(103) Marion 4-10 2-2 11, Nowitzki 11-19 0-0 22, Dalembert4-6 3-3 11,Calderon5-10 0-0 12,Ellis 2-16 0-0 4, Carter 3-100-0 7, Blair 5-10 1-2 11, Crowder4-71-1 12, Larkin3-81-2 7, Ellington 3-3 Ij-06 Totals 44-99 8-10103. GoldenState 22 24 25 28 — 99 Dallas 28 27 27 21 — 103

Clippers93, Knicks80 NEWYORK(80)

Anthony923 91027, Martin 3 30 06, Bargnani 8-184-4 20, Felton 5 90-012, Shumpert1-5 0-0 2, Stoudemire2-5 0-1 4, J.smith 3-9 0-0 7,Udrih Ij-0 0-0 0,WorldPeace0-6 0-00, Prigioni 0-2 0-0 Ij, Hardaway Jr.1-30-02 Totals32-8313-1580.

LA. CLIPPERS (93)

Dudley 2 80-0 5, Griffin 6 133 615, Jordan3 6 3 69, Paul 4 96715, Redick5-102215, Jamison 3-B 0-0 6,Crawford3-106-613, Hollins1-1 2-24,

collison4-71-29, Bullock1-2 0-0 z Totals 32-74 23-31 93. New York LA. Clippers

27 18 23 12 — 80 29 2 0 25 19 — 93

No. 8 Syracusehangsonto beat N0.18 Baylor for Maui title The Associated Press

MEN'5 COLLEGE BASKETBALL ROUNDUP

L AHAINA, H awaii — C . J F a i r scored 14 of his 24 points in the second Baylor's 11-game winning streak half and No. 8 Syracuse beat No. 18 longest in the nation — dating back to Baylor 74-67 on Wednesday night for last season's NIT championship run. the Maui Invitational title. Baylor had a 10-2 run to make it 68The Orange (7-0) delivered three 62 with Cory Jefferson dunking an alley-oop pass, but Fair responded imwins in t h ree days, taking control against Baylor midway through the mediately with a jumper with just over first half and limiting the Bears' hopes two minutes left. of a comeback. Syracuse improved to E arlier, Baylor p ulled t o w i t h i n 9-0 all-time at Maui — it also won the 4 points when Jefferson tipped in a tournament in 1990 and 1998. missed shot by Kenny Chery, but Syr"And guess what — I'm never comacuse answered with a 10-point run ing back," said Syracuse coach Jim capped by a steal by Trevor Cooney Boeheim jokingly after the game in a that led to a fast break and a layup for television interview. Tyler Ennis to make it 66-52 with just Fair won the tournament's MVP, over five minutes left. taking home a wooden trophy shaped Jerami Grant scored 19 points and like a basketball. After the game, he also made the event's all-tournament posed for photos with several fans with team. Cooney and Ennis scored 11 the hardware before walking off the points each. floor. Syracuse shot just under 51 percent, Syracuse stopped would-be runs by hanging on in the second half after Baylorseveral times. The loss snapped shooting 57.1 percent before halftime.

Baylor outscored Syracuse by 1 point in the second half. Jefferson led Baylor (6-1) with 15 points. Also on Wednesday: No. 3 Kentucky 81, Eastern Michigan 63: LEXINGTON, Ky. — Aaron Harrison scored 22 points, Willie Cauley-Stein added 15, and Kentucky earned its 500th Rupp Arena win by beating Eastern Michigan. No. 4 Arizona 66, Drexel 62: NEW YORK — Nick Johnson scored 20 points and freshman Aaron Gordon had 10 points and 13 rebounds and Arizona rallied from a terrible first half to beat Drexel in the semifinals of the NIT Season Tip-Off. No. 6 Duke 74, Alabama 64: NEW YORK — Jabari Parker matched his season-high with 27 points, setting the Duke recordfor consecutive 20-point games to start a career and the Blue

Devils beat Alabama in the semifinals of the NIT Season Tip-Off. No. 10 Wisconsin 70, West Virginia 63: CANCUN, Mexico — Sam Dekker scored a career-high 21 points and grabbed 12 rebounds and Wisconsin beat West Virginia to remain unbeaten and win the Cancun Challenge championship.

No. 11 Gonzaga 91, Arkansas 81: LAHAINA, Hawaii — Kevin Pangos scored 32 points and Gonzaga easily beat Arkansas in the Maui Invitational. Dayton 82, California 64:LAHAINA, Hawaii — Devin Oliver had 21 points and Dayton halted a n e a rly s econd-half surge by California to win in the Maui Invitational. Utah 88, Ball State 69: SALT LAKE CITY — Delon Wright put his stamp on both ends ofthe court, scoring 23 points on 9-of-11 shooting, dishing out seven assists and grabbing five steals to lead Utah to a victory over Ball State.


B4 T H E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, NOV 28, 2013

Atlanta

OSU's Clayton York puts his mouthpiece in prior to a play against the University of Oregon Ducks during the 2010 Civil War in Corvallis. Rob Kerr/ The Bulletin

Reversal Continued from B1 And it will come on the heals of a rough five years, a run in which the only game in the instate showdown that was settled by less than 17 points was the Beavers' painful 37-33 loss in 2009. "It was frustrating," York says. "You play, you want to win. Especially with a rivalry." Regardless of the recent run of misfortune, for those Central Oregonians within the Beaver program (including sophomore middle linebacker Joel Skotte, who is expected to play Friday) there is a special significance to the Civil War. That is certainly the case for Beau Walker, a 24-year-old former Bend High School football standout who has worked as a sort of coach in training since he was a freshman at OSU in 2008. "Because I lived in Oregon my whole life, it's always been a pretty important game and it has always been kind of the focus at the end of the year for me," says Walker, who is now an "off-the-field" graduate assistant most visible on game days signaling in the offensive play calls. "I think I have watched every game with my dad (former Bend High football coach Craig Walker)." Before2008, Walker had never attended a Civil War in person. Since, he has been a fixture on the Beavers' offensive coaching staff. "Working here,there is obviously more of an impact on how important or how great the experience is of being part of a Civil War," Walker says. "That's pretty cool." Walker has gained rare insight into the program in his years in Corvallis. And with that experience comes perspective. Like most at OSU, Walker says, he does not concern himself too much with losing streaks. And he scoffs at the notion that OSU is falling behind its in-state nemesis. "I don't think that affects the kids who play

here," Walker says. "At the end of the day, it's always just about football. Throw all the other stuff out the window, you still have to play the

game."

Does that mean the Beavers have a chance Friday? Both teams appear to be backing into the annualrivalry game. The Beavers are coming off a brutal 69-27 home loss to Washington. Oregon was embarrassed, 42-16, by Arizona last week. Those resultshave provided a level of uncertainty to this year's game for many observers. In his best coach speak, Walker says in the end it will come down to what most football games come down to: turnovers, good decisions, third-down conversions and solid defense. "In the past they've had some really good teams," Walker says. "So have we, but every game is anew game. You have to come play with that kind of mindset that you can play with any team if you focus on those things and do a good job on those three or four things." York shares that optimism. The fullback made the second start of his career in the 2011 Civil War. Last year he caught a pass for six yards, but was stopped short on a crucial fourth-down run in his only carry of the game, which ended with a 48-24 UO win. After all those frustrations, York figures it is about time for the Beavers to flip the script. "We are kind of overdue for a win in the Civil War," says York, who will watch the game on television this year. "We've been an underdog the whole time I was there, and we still expected to win the Civil War, just like you do every game. It doesn't matter if you're the underdog, you don't go into a game thinking, 'Oh, well we're not (favorites) on paper so let's hope for a win.' You never hope for a win. You plan on winning."

Rivalry

q uarterback T err y B a k e r trailed 17-6 at halftime but Continued from B1 dominated the second half. Last season, the fifth- Baker's 13-yard touchdown ranked Ducks defeated the pass to Danny Espalin in the No. 16 Beavers 48-24. Kenjon fourth quarter sealed a 20-17 Barner ran for 198 yards and victory. two scores. Oregon went on to A week after defeating topbeat Kansas State in the Fies- ranked USC and O.J. Simpta Bowl, and Oregon State fell son 3-0 on a muddy Novemto Texas in the Alamo Bowl. ber day in 1967,the Beavers' It was the fourth time in the famous "Giant Killers" came series history that both teams back from a 10-0 deficit to were ranked for the game. win the first Civil War at the The Civil War is the seventh new Autzen Stadium, 14-10. most-contested rivalry in footThe Toilet Bowl, a 0-0 tie ball, starting in 1894, when on a blustery and wet day in Oregon State — then Oregon November 1983, featured 11 Agricultural College — won fumbles, five i n terceptions 16-0. In 1916, Oregon defeated and four missed field goals. OAC 27-0, giving the Ducks a It would go down as the last 6-0-1 regular-season record scoreless Division I college and their first-ever appear- football game. ance in the Rose Bowl, where J erry Pettibone got h i s they defeated Penn 14-0. first victory as the Beavers' The 1933 game was nota- coach, ending a string of 10 ble because of the so-called straight losses, in the 1991 "pyramid play." Oregon's C ivil Wa r . Quarterback extra-point a t t empt wa s Ian Shields, playing with a blocked by C l yde D evine, broken big toe, scored on a who was lifted in the air by 6-yard bootleg for the gohis teammates. The Ducks ahead touchdown. Oregon still defeated Oregon State State won 14-3, its first victo13-3, and the play was later ry in Eugene in 18 years. banned by the NCAA. The Ducks entered the In 1962, the Beavers and 1 994 Civil Wa r t i e d w i t h Heisman Tr o p hy-winning Southern Cal for the Pac-10

— Reporter: 541-617-7868, zhall@bendbulletin.com.

c hampionship a n d ne e d ed a win to clinch their first Rose Bowl berth since 1957. Trailing 13-10, Danny O'Neil drove the team 70 yards, hitting Dino Philyaw for a 19yard touchdown with 3:47 to

factors contribute to dumping stadiums with such haste. Continued from B1 Teams yearn for a new stadiWhat's happening in Atlan- um's "honeymoon effect," he ta is extreme, though, partly said, referring to a multi-year because it's happening twice period in w hich attendance at once and partly because spikes even t h ough t i cket both existing stadiums still prices rise. And stadiums bestrike many fans as nice and come economically outdated relatively new. before they become funcIf Turner Field is i n f a ct tionally or even aesthetically reduced to rubble in 2017, it obsolescent. "At any point in time, there will be the youngest stadium abandoned by a Major League is an optimal revenue model Baseball team since Houston's for your stadium," Bradbury Colt Stadium in the 1960s and said. "The Braves and FalMontreal's Jarry Park Stadicons had buildings built for um in the 1970s. And both of the revenue streams of the those wereintended as tempo1990s. Those revenue streams rary homes for the teams. are not the same as the ones Built fo r t h e e x p ansion today." Today's new stadiums are Houston Colt .45s, later renamed the Astros, Colt Sta- designed to increase revenue dium was used from 1962-64 by packing in more amenities w hile th e A s t rodome w a s to lure fans from their bigunder construction next door. screen HDTVs at home and Then, after being vacant for more sponsorship opportuniseveralyears, 33,000-seat Colt ties to wrest marketing money Stadium wa s d i sassembled from corporations. and shipped to M exico for The new F a lcons stadiuse by a minor-league team. um will h ave more premiSimilarly, the Montreal Expos u m-seating areas than t h e (now Washington Nationals) Georgia D o me , i n c l uding built Jarry Park Stadium and field-level suites behind the played there from 1969-1976 end zones and l ower-bowl until the city's Olympic Stadi- club seats with access to exum became available. clusive f i eld-level l o unges/ Sixteen MLB teams have restaurants. And although the opened new ballparks since Braves stadium hasn't been the Braves moved into Turndesigned, Bradbury expects er Field in 1997, with three of it to have fewer suites than them — the Seattle Mariners, Turner Field but perhaps 10 Miami Marlins and Minneso- times as many premium seats ta Twins — leaving multi-use — seats with food and presstadiums that were between tige included, along the lines 23 and 28 yearsold.Most of of the SunTrust Club behind the vacated stadiums, though, Turner's home plate. were in their 30s and 40s. All N one of t ha t w i l l c o m e were showing more wear than cheap for ticket buyers. Turner Field. A big driverof the Braves In the NFL, 21 stadiums deal with Cobb County is outare newer than the Georgia side the ballpark. The team Dome. Of the nine that aren't, plans a major new revenue two will be replaced in the stream from a mixed-use next three years. development of r estaurants, The trend o f s h o rt-lived retail shops, hotels and apartstadiums is most pronounced m ents on 45 acres adjacent to among domed NFL facilities. the stadium. The Indianapolis Colts and The Braves' desire for such Seattle Seahawks abandoned a development — and frusdomed stadiums after 24 sea- tration over stalled efforts to sons (one fewer than the Fal- achieve something similar on cons will play in the Georgia publicly owned property surDome), the Detroit Lions after 27 seasons and the Houston Oilers (now Tennessee Titans) after 29. J.C. Bradbury, a Kennesaw EVERGREEN State University economist In-Home Care Servlces who has written two books Care for loved ones. Comfort for all. 541-389-0006 on baseball, believes several www.evergreeninhome.com

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rounding Turner Field — prodded negotiations with Cobb. One w a y or ano t h er, Bradbury said, "you always make more money in a new stadium." Another reason new stadiums are lucrative for teams is that they almost always are paid for partly with tax-

payer money, which again is the case in the Falcons and Braves deals. Also driving the trend toward disposable stadiums is that facilities tend to needat least in teams' estimation — expensive renovations at around age 20 or 25. That invites consideration of other options. The Braves contend Turner Field would need $100 million to $250 million in work. Even higher figures were floated early this year for the costs of renovating the Georgia Dome. "I think no matter what we spent, if you go out another 10 years, there would be another huge tranche of money needed to keep it going," Braves chairman an d C E O T e r ry McGuirk said of Turner Field. "It turned out in my mind that there wasn't an awful lot of space between keeping the old one alive and building a new one." That calculus was reached after the Braves found an offer of $300 million in public funding in Cobb. Colin Lord 29 a Braves and Falcons fan with many fond memories in Turner Field and the Georgia Dome, doesn't begrudge the business reasons behind the teams' planned moves. "I'm sure the new stadiums will be great, and I look forward to going to both," he said. "But the day the Georgia Dome and Turner Field come down, I'll be bummed out."

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play, giving Oregon a 17-13 victory. In 2000, the No. 8 Beavers denied the fifth-ranked Ducks a t ri p t o P asadena with a 23-13 victory. The Beavers snapped a 10-game winning streak for the home team in 2007 when James Rodgers scored on a fly sweep in overtime for a 38-31 victory, Oregon State's last in the series to date. The next year the Beavers were looking toward their first Rose Bowl in 44 years with a victory in the final game when the Ducks romped to a 65-38 win in Corvallis. In 2009, the game was dubbed the "War of the Roses" because the winner was guaranteed a Rose Bowl berth. Oregon won 37-33. Oregon was ranked No. 2 in the BCS standings going into the 2010 game and a 3720 victory sent the Ducks to the national championship against Auburn.

HRISTMAS PARAD BEND, OREGON

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The Christmas Parade will be on Saturday, December 7, 2013 at noon in Downtown Bend

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Without your dedication and support, we could not provide the services needed by so many that have so little. We are so grateful for...

www.bendchristmasparade.com

— the thousands of volunteers, families, church members and organizations, who prepare and serve meals, staff our front desk and donate food and other needed supplies. I n Partnership w i t h

- the many individuals and foundations that invest in our program to help us provide a safeplace to sleep, food on the table and services to those less fortunate. — the many partner agencies throughout Central Oregon that help us meet the critical needs of the adults and children helping them reconnect with family, friends, schools, employers and housing. — our residents, who work so hard to find positive ways to help themselves and their families to make a positive difference in our community.

For all that you do, we are so very thankful for helping us Transform Lives with Shelter, Help and Hope!

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THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2013 DOW 16,097.33I

4,044.75

Toda+ Thursday, November 28, 2013

Thanksgiving holiday The major L.S. stock exchanges will be closed today for Thanksgiving. The New York Stock Exchange, Nasdaq market and NYSE MKT will reopen for business on Friday. However, trading will close at 1 p.m. EST.

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+28.11% +34.38%

Alaska Air Group ALK 41,44 — 0 78,19 78 .19 +1.21 +1,6 L L L + 81,5 + 82.2 508 1 3 0 . 80 Avista Corp AVA 23.10 ~ 29.26 27.20 + .02 +0 .1 Y V L +12.8 $.22.0 245 1 7 1. 2 2 Bank ofAmerica BAC 9 , 38 — 0 15,98 15.83 -.05 -0.3 L L L + 36.3 +61.8 74076 21 0 . 04 Shopping on Thanksgiving? Barrett Business BBSI 29 63 — 0 90 70 85.18 -.82 -1.0 L V L + 123. 6 +185.1 2 9 35 0 . 72f Retailers are hoping that many BA 7 2 ,68 — $$- 142,00 134.72 -.06 . . . V L L +78.8 +84.1 3341 24 1 . 94 consumers will not wait until Friday Boeing Co Cascade Bancorp CACB 4.80 7.18 5.07 -19.0 -1.7 11 5 to start shopping for the holidays. ColumbiaBukg COLB 16.85 27.57 27.77 +.28 $-1.0 L L L +54.8 $- 5 9.7 10 4 2 4 0 . 4 4f An increasing number of retailers Columbia Sportswear COLM 47.72 69.97 69.09 +41 +06 L L L +29 5 +22.5 6 5 25 1 . 00f are opening their doors on Costco Wbolesale COST 95.77 —0 126 ,12 125.38 +20 +02 L L L +27 0 +38.6 8 2 9 2 7 1. 2 4 Thanksgiving, offering myriad deals Craft Brew Alliance BREW 6.03 — 0 1870 17.78 +.87 +5.1 L $-174.4 + 166.3 10 4 c c in hopes of getting people to spend. FLIR Systems FLIR 19.70 33.82 29.77 -.09 -0.3 +33.4 +52.1 4 4 6 1 9 0. 3 6 After all, the holiday season is Hewlett Packard HPQ 12.22 — 0 27.78 27.36 +2.27 +9.0 L L +92 0 + 101.3 50727 9 0. 5 8 critical to them. It can account for Home FederalBucpID HOME 10.71 16.03 15.30 L 7 L +23 1 + 44.9 4 4 90 0. 2 4 anywhere from 20 percent to 40 Intel Corp INTC 19.42 25.98 23.90 +.25 $.1.1 L V L +15.9 +23.5 26981 13 0. 9 0 percent of their annual revenue. Keycorp KEY 7 . 81 — 0 13,10 12.85 -.03 -0.2 V L L +52.6 +53.9 8159 14 0. 2 2 Kroger Co KR 2 4 .50 43.85 41.88 -.07 -0.2 V V L +61. 0 +73.0 2716 14 0. 66f Lattice Semi LSCC 3.71 5.77 5.55 +.05 +0.9 L L +39 . 1 $ -35.3 57 1 7 9 LA Pacific LPX 14.51 22.55 16.61 +17 +10 L V V -140 -6.6 1569 10 MDU Resources MDU 20.30 — $$- 30.97 29.72 -.10 -0.3 V V L +39.9 $-49 3 370 4 5 0 71f Mentor Graphics MENT 13.21 23.77 22.58 L L 7 +32.7 + 56.1 67 1 2 5 0 . 1 8 Microsofl Corp MSFT 26.26 — 0 3822 37.60 +.25 +0.7 +40.8 +39.9 25410 14 1 .12 Nike Iuc 8 NKE 47.69 — 0 79.87 79.33 -.27 -0.3 L L +53 . 7 +64.7 1863 27 0 . 96f NordstromIuc JWN 50.94 — 0 63,72 62.71 +.11 +0.2 L L L +17.2 +18.1 1173 17 1 . 20 Nwst Nat Gas NWN 39.96 46.55 42.59 + 12 $.0 3 Y V L -3 6 +2.5 5 8 20 1 . 84f PaccarInc PCAR 42.84 60.00 57.28 +33 +06 L L L +26 7 +35.3 62 6 1 9 0 .80a Planar Systms PLNR 1.15 2.75 2.43 +.02 +0.8 L L L +69.9 +99 2 5 3 dd Plum Creek PCL 41.28 54.62 44.36 + 1.35 +3.1 L V V +6.5 1348 2 8 1 . 76 Prec Castparts PCP 177.59 270.00 259.96 + 1.01 +0.4 L L L +37.2 + 45.2 34 7 2 4 0 . 1 2 Safeway Iuc SWY 16.30 36.90 35.06 +.53 $-1.5 L V L +93.8 +115.0 2740 19 0 . 8 0 Scbuitzer Steel SCHN 23.07 32.99 30.50 +38 $.13 Y L L $.0 6 + 9 9 193 d d 07 5 Sherwin Wms SHW 146.49 195.32 183.54 -.76 -0.4 V V L + 19.3 + 17 9 203 2 5 2 0 0 Staucorp Fucl SFG 33.25 — 0 64.80 64.22 -.01 L L +75. 1 + 93.3 1 2 7 14 1.101 StarbucksCp SBUX 49.56 — 0 8250 81.62 +.11 +0.1 L L L +52 2 $-61.9 2308 36 1.041 Triquint Semi TQNT 4.31 8.98 7.88 +.08 +1.0 L L 7 +63.1 +69.0 1080 dd UmpquaHoldings UMPQ 11.43 — 0 18,18 18.29 +.13 +0.7 L L L +55.1 +57.1 1070 19 0.60a US Baucorp USB 31.28 — 0 39.48 39.35 +.08 +0.2 L L L +23.2 +23.9 5104 13 0.92 WashingtonFedl WAFD 15.64 — 0 23,48 23.62 +.19 +0.8 L L L +40.0 +46.0 207 16 0.401 Black Friday Wells Fargo & Co WFC 32.12 — 0 44.79 44.27 -.04 -0.1 L L +29. 5 +38.2 13497 12 1.20 A weak back-to-school shopping Weyerhaeuser WY 2 6 .18 33.24 3059 + 1.00 +3.4 +10.0 +14.5 3740 27 0.88 season this year has many experts projecting sluggish holiday sales. The retail industry will get a better OividendFootnotes: a -Extra dividends werepaid, but are not included b - Annual rate prusstock c - uqumatmgdividend. e - Amount declared or paid m last12 months. f - Current annual rate, which was mcreased bymost recent dividend announcement i - Sum of dividends paid after stock split, no regular rate ] - Sum of dividends paid this year Most recent idea of how this season will unfold dividend was omitted or deferred k - Declared or paid this year, a cumulative issue with dividends marrears m - Current annual rate, which was decreased bymost recent dividend announcement. p - Imtial &voend, annual rate not known, yield not shown r - Declared or paid m precedmg 12months plus stock dividend t - Paid m stock, approximate cash as shoppers hit stores on Slack value on ex-d<stnbut>on date PE Footnotes:q - Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc - P/E exceeds 99. du - Loss in last12 months Friday, which traditionally sets the tone for the rest of the holiday shopping season. This year, consumers have fewer days to shop,with 25 days between Black Apple stock is starting to emerge The techcompany hasn'tcome Friday and Christmas. Last year, from a trough it has been mired in up with another breakthrough there were 32 days. this year. The tech stock moved out product in a new category since the of the red Tuesday when a close of introduction of the iPad in 2010, $533.40 pushed Apple to a rise of raising questions about the 0.2 percent so far this year. company's ability to innovate Apple's slide in early January following the death of co-founder was part of a larger decline from an Steve Jobs two years ago. all-time high of $705 in September Apple remains the world's most 2012, to its current 52-week low of valuable company, at $471 billion, despite the downturn. $385 in April of this year.

: ": Apple:upin2013?

52-WEEK RANGE

Wednesd a y's close: $545.96 $385

Price-earnings ratio (Based on trailing 12 month results):14

*: 42.8% Price change YTD: 2.6% To tal return YTD: 5.2% 5-YR AP

Total returns through Nov. 27

FundFocus Management of the fund was reconfigured in May. This fund Marketsummary has underperformed most of its Most Active peers over the last 3- and 5- year NAME VOL (Ogs) LAST CHG periods, but the last 12 months -.05 show promise. BkofAm 740755 15.83 A. Veiga, J. Sohn • AP

Penney

S&P500ETF HewlettP Facebook SiriusXM AriadP iShEMkts MicronT Cisco

561033 524670 507266 444234 429947 418976 417735 403012 390392

10.08 + . 72 181.12 +.44 Cohen 8 Steers IntRltyA m IR F AX 27.36 +2.27 46.49 + . 60 VALUE BLE N D GR OWTH 3.69 + . 01 $L —.14 4.54 42 89 41.92 + . 27 Dodge 8 Cox 5o 21.17 + . 86 CO «C 21.27 + . 06 Fidelity CL

Gainers NAME Aetrium rs JetPay EltekLtd WPCS rs

L AST 1 2.40 2.67 3 .19 2.94 OxygnB rs 6 .50 GenieEn n 1 7.36 BioScrip 6 .92 Frontline 2.73 Prosensa n 4.84 AehrTest 2.85

LAST 32.08 12.00 29.55 2.75 3.41

CHG %CHG -12.88 -28.6 -3.88 -24.4 -8.18 -21.7 —.60 -17.9 —.72 -17.4

Foreign Markets LAST CHG %CHG 4,293.06 + 15.49 + . 3 6 London 6,649.47 + 13.25 + . 2 0 Frankfurt 9,351.13 + 61.06 + . 6 6 Hong Kong 23,806.35 $ 125.07 $ . 5 3 Mexico 41,872.59 +869.91 +2.12 Milan 18,924.79 + 150.52 + . 8 0 -65.61 -.42 Tokyo 15,449.63 Stockholm 1,310.13 + 4.35 + . 3 3 -25.70 —.48 Sydney 5,324.90 Zurich 8,245.68 + 6.76 + . 0 8 NAME Paris

83 CI

CH G %CHG +7 . 5 6 +156.2 +.96 +56.1 «2 +1. 0 6 +49.8 23 +.58 +24.6 42 +1 . 1 1 +20.6 +2 . 8 8 +19.9 Morningstar OwnershipZone™ +1. 0 2 +17.3 +.38 +16.2 Q o Fund target represents weighted +.65 +15.5 average of stock holdings +.38 +15.4 • Represents 75% offund'sstock holdings

Losers NAME Infoblox Tillys BioRefLab InterCld wt Mediabist

American Funds

1.3572+

-.0002

StoryStocks

HPQ Valero VLO Close:$27.36L2.27 or 9.0% Close:$45.97L1.62 or 3.7% The second-largest maker of PCs Refiners may be more relieved than topped Wall Street'3 quarterly expec- anyone to see the falling price of tations for revenue and posted a crude, which can erase margins $1.4 billion profit. when trading higher. $30 $50 25

40

S 0 52-week range $12.22~

N $27.78

S 0 52-week range $39.56 ~

$48.97

Vol.:52.0m (3.3x avg.) P E: . . . Vol.:8.5m (1.1x avg.) P E: 10 . 4 Mkt. Cap:$52.58 b Yiel d : 2. 1% Mkt. Cap:$24.8 b Yield : 2. 0 %

Ann . dividend: $12.20

*Annualized

TLYS Barnes & Noble BKS Close:$12.00 V-3.88 or -24.4% Close: $16.69L1.24 or 8.0% The retailer issued an extremely The bookseller returned to a profit in weak profit forecast after posting a the fiscal second quarter as cost 34 percent profit slide and falling cuts offset lower sales and a new esame-store sales. book reader. $16 $18 14

16

12

14

S 0 52-week range $11.63 ~ Vol.:1.2m (19.5x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$133.67 m

Di v. yield: 2.2% Source: FactSet

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1Y R 3 Y R 5YR 1 3 5 BalA m 24.1 3 + .04+19.8 +22.1 +13.9+14.8 A A A CaplncBuA m 58.09 +.07 +13.0 +14.9 +10.2+12.4 C A C CpWldGrlA m 44.62 +.12 +22.2 +26.3 +12.0+15.2 C C D EurPacGrA m 48.23 +.08 +17.0 +21.9 +8.1 +14.6 C C 8 FnlnvA m 51. 5 8 + .12+27.5 +31.2 +15.8 +18.1 C C 8 GrthAmA m 44.63 +.09 +29.9 +33.7 +16.2+18.2 8 8 C IncAmerA m 20.48 +.03+16.3 +18.2 +12.5+15.0 C A A InvCoAmA m 38.35 +.12 +28.7 +31.5 +15.6+16.2 C C D NewPerspA m 38.67 +.13 +23.7 +28.0 +13.2+17.9 C 8 8 WAMutlnvA m39.66 +.07 +29.0 +31.6 +17.9+16.5 C A C Income 13.64 - . 0 1 + 0.6 + 0 . 8 + 4 .4 +8.5 A 8 8 IntlStk 42.73 +.12 + 23.4 +32.0 +9.9+17.7 A A A Stock 164.7 2 + . 78+ 36.7 +42.9 +19.5+20.0 A A A Contra 100.5 5 + .23+30.8 +33.0 +16.0+18.7 C B C GrowCo 124. 59 +.52+33.6 +35.4 +18.2+23.1 B A A LowPriStk d 49 .62 +.14+ 31.9 +37.5 +18.2+23.5 8 A A 500 l dxAdvtg64.26 +.17+29.1 +32.0 +17.4+17.8 C B B

Fidelity Spartan FrankTemp-Fraukliu Income C m 2. 42 .. . + 12.2 +15.8 +10.2+16.2 A A A IncomeA m 2.3 9 ... + 12.3 +16.0 +10.7+16.7 A A A FrankTemp-TempletooGIBondAdv 13 . 02 -.01 +1.1 + 3 .0 + 5.5+10.6 A A A Oakmark 26.79 +.04 +28.0 +37.8 +14.6 +22.2 A A A Oppeubeimer RisDivA m 2 1.34 +.03 +23.6 +26.0 +14.5+14.3 E D E R isDivB m 1 9.30 +.03 +22.6 +24.9 +13.5+13.3 E E E R isDivC m 1 9.20 +.03 +22.7 +25.1 +13.6+13.5 E E E SmMidValA m43.46 +.10 +34.1 +38.7 +13.2+20.2 8 E D SmMidValBm 36.42 +.09 +33.1 +37.4 +12.2+19.3 B E D CATEGORY Global Real Estate PIMCO TotRetA m 10 . 89 -.01 -1.2 - 0.8 +3.8 +7.5 C B C MORNINGSTAR T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 33.21 +.04 +27.2 +31.0 +16.9 +17.1 D B 8 RATING™ * A A A A GrowStk 50.72 +.20 +34.3 +36.7 +17.8 +22.3 A A A ASSETS $173 million HealthSci 61.18 +.06 +48.4 +51.7 +32.2 +29.8 8 A A EXP RATIO 1.35% Vanguard 500Adml 167.20 +.45 +29.2 +32.0 +17.4+17.9 C B 8 500lnv 167.17 +.45 +29.0 +31.9 + 17.3+17.7 C 8 8 MANAGER William Leung CapOp 47.14 +.24 +40.2 +45.1 $ -17.7+22.1 A A A SINCE 2012-10-01 Eqlnc 30.15 +.03 +27.3 +29.5 + 19.2+17.1 D A B RETURNS3-MO +6.9 StratgcEq 29.49 +.10 $.37.5 +43.0 + 20.2+23.1 A A 8 YTD +3.6 TgtRe2020 27.28 +.04 $-14.5 +17.0 + 10.3+13.4 8 A C 1- YR +10.5 Tgtet2025 15.83 +.02 +16.5 +19.3 + 11.1+14.2 8 B C 3-YR ANNL +6.9 TotBdAdml 10.66 -.01 -1.5 -1.6 + 3.0 +5.3 D D E 5-YR-ANNL +13.9 Totlntl 16.62 +.04 $-13.2 +19.8 + 67+135 D D C TotStlAdm 45.75 +.13 $-30.2 +33.5 + 17.5+18.9 8 A A TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT TotStldx 45.73 +.13 +30.0 +33.4 + 17.4+18.8 8 B A Mitsubishi Estate 7.83 USGro 27.84 +.07 +31.0 +33.6 + 17.2+18.6 8 A C Suu Hung Kai Properties, Ltd. 4.73 Welltn 39.18 +.03 +18.0 +19.9 + 12.8+14.4 8 A B Land Securities Group PLC 4.69 Fund Footnotes b - ree coveong market costs 1$paid trom tund assets d - Deterred sales charge, or redemption Mitsui Fudosan Co., Ltd. 3.96 fee f - front load (sales charges). m - Multiple fees are charged, usually a marketmg fee arrd either a sales or Unibail-Rodamco SE 3.77 redempao14tee Source: Mom1ngstar

S 0 52-week range

N

$17.35 $12.59 ~ PE: 1 2 . 9 Vol.:3.2m (2.7x avg.) Yield :... Mkt. Cap:$998.86 m

Infoblox

BLOX Close:$32.08 V-12.88 or -28.6% Despite better-than-expected quarterly net income and revenue, shares of the network equipment maker plunged on its outlook. $50 40

N $23.71 P E: .. . Yield :...

Crocs CROX Close:$1 3.84 %0.30 or 2.2% The shoe company is reportedly in discussions with buyout firms to sell a minority stake and turn the company around. $14 13

S 0 52-week range

52-week range

N

$13.82~

$48.97

$11.96 ~

$17.95

Vol.:10.5m(10.6x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$1.7 b

PE: . . . Vol.:2.7m (1.8x avg.) Yield:... Mkt. Cap:$1.22 b

PE: 16.7 Yield: ...

Analog Devices

ADI

Close:$48.54 V-1.38 or -2.8% Aseasonal slowdown could cut into revenue, the chipmaker warned, sending shares down despite a surprisingly strong quarter. $55

TiVo

that profit fell 79 percent in the latest

quarter, prompting a downgrade from Evercore. $16 14

45

12

S 0 52-week range $38.82~

S 0 52-week range

N $56.79

TIVO

Close: $12.66 V-0.58 or -4.4% The digital recording service said

50

$16.19 ~

N $14.25

Vol.:7.8m (4.1x avg.) P E: 23 .2 Vol.:8 .0m (3.0x avg.) P Mkt. Cap:$15.08 b Yie l d : 2.8% Mkt. Cap:$1.54 b

E: 5 . 8 Yield: ...

SOURCE: Sungard

InterestRates

[]

mi 8

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note rose to 2.73 percent Wednesday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.

595

SelectedMutualFunds FAMILY

+ -1.38 '

Tiiiy's

52-WK RANGE oCLOSE YTD 1 YR V OL TICKER LO Hl CLOSE CHG %CHG WK MO OTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV

Apple (AAPL)

$92.30

Stocks finished higher on Wednesday, as investors responded to positive news on the economy. The Labor Department reported that fewer Americans sought unemployment benefits last week, a sign that workers are in less danger of being laid off. A separate survey of consumer confidence also gave investors reason for encouragement. Gains in the broader market were led by technology stocks. The stock market is trading at record levels on a combination of solid corporate earnings, a slowly recovering economy and policies from the Federal Reserve that have kept long-term interest rates low, making bonds less attractive than stocks for investors.

$-33.95% +26.72% $-28.25%

NorthwestStocks NAME

$1 9.63

Hewlett-Packard

.

14,400

S

+

SILVER

Dow Jones industrials . s" "

15,760 '

1,600

6prriy

GOLD ~ $123780 ~

10 YR T NOTE 2.73% ~

AP NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO OTR AGO 3-month T-bill 6 -month T-bill 5 2-wk T-bill

. 06 .07 . 1 0 .10 .11 .11

-0.01 V ... L ...

L L L

L L V

2 -year T-note . 29 .29 ... L 5-year T-note 1 .36 1 .30 + 0.06 v 10-year T-note 2.73 2.71 + 0.02 V 30-year T-bor$d 3.82 3.80 + 0.02 w

V L L L

Y .26 V .65 T 1.64 L 2.78

BONDS

NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MO OTR AGO

Barclays LongT-Bdldx 3.60 3.57 +0.03 V L Bond Buyer Muni Idx 5.16 5.08 +0.08 L L

L T

Barclays USAggregate 2.30 2.32 -0.02 v L

v 1 73 . T 6 .63 L 3.5 7

PRIME FED Barcl ays US High Yield 5.62 5.64 -0.02 V RATE FUNDS Moodys AAACorp Idx 4.59 4.65 -0.06 e YEST 3.25 .13 B arclays CompT-Bdldx 1.59 1.59 . . . V 6 MO AGO 3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 3 .13 3.17 -0.04 e 1 YR AGO3.25 .13

Commodities Oil prices fell Wednesday to their lowest level in nearly six months amid rising U.S. crude supplies. Metals were mostly lower, led by platinum. Among crops, corn and oats posted gains.

Foreign Exchange The dollar fell against the euro and British pound ahead of the Thanksgiving holiday on Thursday. It advanced versus the Japanese yen and Canadian dollar, among other major currencies.

h5I4 QG

.08 .14 .17

T L L L

T T

2.4 8 3 97 .

.94 2.71

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD Crude Oil (bbl) 92.30 93.68 - 1.47 + 0 . 5 -7.5 Ethanol (gal) 2.03 1.93 +0.57 Heating Oil (gal) 3.05 3.04 + 0.08 + 0 . 1 Natural Gas (mm btu) 3.90 3.82 +0.81 +16.2 Unleaded Gas(gal) 2.70 2.69 +0.42 -4.0 FUELS

METALS

Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz)

CLOSE PVS. 1237.80 1241.40 19.63 19.85 1352.70 1371.90 3.20 3.23 714.50 716.20

%CH. %YTD -0.29 -26.1 -1.08 -34.9 -1.40 -12.1 -0.42 -12.1 - 0.24 + 1 . 7

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.33 1.32 + 0.87 + 2 . 5 1.08 1.08 -0.51 -25.2 Corn (bu) 4.17 4.18 -0.30 -40.2 Cotton (Ib) 0.77 0.78 - 1.41 + 2 . 1 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 361.20 361.40 -0.06 -3.4 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.39 1.39 +0.11 +19.8 Soybeans (bu) 13.20 13.29 -0.70 -7.0 Wheat(bu) 6.51 6.47 +0.73 -16.3 AGRICULTURE

Cattle (Ib) Coffee (Ib)

1YR. MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.6276 +.0059 +.36% 1.6018 Canadian Dollar 1.0598 +.0052 +.49% .9943 USD per Euro 1.3572 —.0002 —.01% 1.2934 Japanese Yen 1 02.13 + . 8 9 + . 87% 82 . 17 Mexican Peso 13. 1 165 +.0746 +.57% 13.0156 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.5443 +.0021 +.06% 3.8589 Norwegian Krone 6 . 1 033 +.0049 +.08%5.6940 South African Rand 10.2363 +.1051 +1.03% 8.8377 Swedish Krona 6.57 6 7 + . 0032 +.05% 6.6930 Swiss Franc .9081 +.0016 +.18% .9309 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.1016 + .0069 +.63% .9 5 71 Chinese Yuan 6.0930 +.0008 +.01% 6 .2274 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7530 +.0007 +.01% 7 .7501 Indian Rupee 62.531 +.011 +.02% 5 5.465 Singapore Dollar 1.2548 +.0032 +.26% 1 .2232 South Korean Won 1063.59 +1.82 +.17% 1087.95 Taiwan Dollar 29.66 + .06 +.20% 29 . 12


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2013

BRIEFING

Bend competing in best placespoll With nearly 41percent of the vote, Bend had the

lead Wednesdayevening in Sunset magazine's competition for best place in the West to re-

boot your life andcareer. That lead had slipped

since Tuesdaymorning, however, whenBendhad nearly 64 percent of the vote over the other three

cities nominated —Chico, Calif.; Bellingham,

Wash.; andBozeman, Mont. Voting continues until Dec. 6, according to

a news releasefrom the magazine. The re-boot your life

category is one ofsix in Sunset's BestPlaces to Live and Work in the West competition. The

magazine's editors nom-

BLACK FRIDAY

BRIEFING

e rea By Rachael Rees The Bulletin

Many retailers in Central Oregon plan to open their doors today for Black Friday shoppers, following the trend of businesses across the country. "Eventually, there may not be a day off for the Thanksgiving holiday in retail," Noelle Fredland, marketing director of the Old Mill District, wrote in an emaiL "Every year, we see retailers opening earlier on Black Friday, and this year is no exception." Best Buy and Wal-Mart Stores Inc. will start the shop-

ping frenzy. Walmart stores in Bend and Redmond will start Black Friday deals at 6 p.m. today, with

o s o in en

anotherround at8 p.m. Prior to those times, customers will be able to get wristbands for certain hot items. Best Buy will open the doors at 6p.m., six hours earlier than last year, and Old Navy is scheduled to open at 7p.m. "The retail environment is incredibly competitive," Fredland wrote. "As the holidays

approach, aggressive pricing strategies and the battle for top of mind awareness is at its zenith.

"If people are going to spend

a set amount of money, everyone wants to be the first to tempt the consumer with their wares." At 8 p.m., many national retailers plan to open, including

Kohl's, Target and Macy's. Some retailers in the Bend FactoryStores are scheduled to open for four hours starting at 10 p.m. They plan to reopen at 6 a.m., according to the outlet center's website. Six stores in the Old Mill District will open at midnight, with more storesopening there and throughout Bend nearly hourly into the early morning. David Myers, general manager of the Buckle store in Bend, said about 40 hours have gone into preparing for Black Friday. "We did a lot of prep to make sure everything is in place," he saidWednesday. "We made sureevery jean in the store was sized and stickered." Beyond the jeans, he said,

mannequins have been dressed, tables and racks organizedand salesmerchandise has been marked down and separated. "We did $17,000 in sales last Black Friday, and we are going to tryand do over $20,000 this year," he said. He said Old Mill store ownersand managers met to decide opening times. And while Buckle opened at 2 a.m. last year, it will open at midnight tonight. "I bet you in two years, there will no longer be a Black Friday. We're just going to stay open through Thanksgiving," he said. — Reporter: 541-617-7818, rreeslbendbulletin.com

inated four cities in each

Jobless claims unexpectedly fall WASHINGTONFewer Americans than

projected filed applications for unemployment benefits last week, a sign that the labor market is

showing resilience. Jobless claims in the week ended Nov. 23 declined10,000 to 316,000, the fewest in two months, the Labor De-

partment said Wednesday in Washington.The median forecast of 44

economists surveyedby Bloomberg called for an increase to 330,000. The data are difficult to adjust

for seasonal variations around holidays, a Labor

Department spokesman said as the report was

released to thepress. Companies have kept workforces lean

category, andreadersget

since the recessionand

to vote for their favorites. Two other Oregon

are waiting for more

evidence of sustained improvement in demand before they resume

locations alsomadethe semifinals. Portland's Richmond neighborhood

hiring. A pickup in con-

appears in thebest urban neighborhood category

accounts for about 70

and Corvallis in the best

percent of the economy,

post-career locale.

is needed to help drive growth and boost em-

Results from the vote, along with the editors'

choices, arescheduled to appear in theFebruary issue, according to the news release. For more information or to vote, visit the West-

phoria blog atSunset. com. — Bulletin staff

BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR MONDAY • AffordableHousing InformationSession: Applyforthe BendArea Habitat for Humanity homeownership program; registration suggested; 5:30 p.m.; CrookCounty Library, 175 N.W.Meadow Lakes Drive, Prineville; 541-3855387, ext. 103, djohnson@ bendhabitat.org or www. bendhabitat.org. TUESDAY • Is It Better toRentorto Buy?:Presented by Jim Mazziotti of Exit Realty; free; 6 p.m.;webinar; www. spreecas t.com/evenIsl should-i-rent-or-shouldi-buy. • Holiday Marketing SuccessSeries: Learn about successful holiday marketing campaigns; 10 a.m.-noon;Redmond Chamber ofCommerce, 446 S.W. Seventh St.; 541-3351846, hollysaid@gmail.com or www.7-touchmarketing. com. DEC. 6 • Business Hop: Networking event hosted by the RedmondChamber of CommerceandCVB; free admission; 8-10a.m.; Juniper Golf Course, 1938 S.W.Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; 541-923-5191or www.visitredmondoregon. coml DEC. 9 • Introduction toFinding Funding:Learn about funding for nonprofits using "Foundation Directory Online"; led bycommunity librarian NatePedersen; free; registration required; 9-11 a.m.; DowntownBend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7050 or www.deschuteslibrary.orgl nonprofits. DEC. 10 • OregonAlcohol Server Permit Training:Meets Oregon LiquorControl Commission minimum requirements to obtain an alcohol server permit; registration required; $35; 9a.m.-1 p.m.;RoundTable Pizza, 'l552 N.E.Third St., Bend; 541-447-6384 or www.happyhourtraining. com. • What Should BeIn Your New HomeWarranty? Home warranty issuesfor contractors, subcontractors and homeowners; registration required; $20 for nonmembers, freefor Central OregonBuilders Association members;10 a.m.-noon; COBA,1051N.E Fourth St., Bend; 541-3891058, gretchenp©coba.org or www.coba.org.

• For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visitbenddulletin.com/dizcal

sumer spending, which

• For small businesses,moving forward requires forethought andcare

ployment.

Xbox, PlayStation tackle glitches Move over,zombies. Step aside, terrorists.

Aliens, out of theway. There areafew new foes affecting gamers that are proving to befar

By Virginia Bridges The NewsE Observer (Raleigh, N.C.)

more destructive than

After brothers Prentiss and Frank Baker started working in the family business, they realized they would need to increase Baker Roofing's revenue if they wanted a salary. It was 1969 and the company, which was founded by the Baker brothers' grandfather, had about 17 employees and

any on-screenvillain. With nicknameslike "the blue light of death" and "the disc drive

of doom," they're the game-ending glitches

causing headaches for a few gamerswhopicked up the next-generation Xbox One and PlayStation 4 consoles at launch. Microsoft Corp. said

nearly $1 million in revenue. The brothers, however, needed to do more. Over the years, the brothers built partnerships and expanded the company's

geographic reach and its offerings. Now the Raleigh, N.C.based company has 12 satellite offices across the Southeast and employs about 1,250. Constructionresource Engineering News-Record ranked the company's nearly $160 million in revenue in 2012 as the third-largest roofing firm in the nation. Frank Baker, 66, now serves as vice chairman on the company's board and Prentiss Baker, 70, serves as chairman. Baker, which offers services such as new roofing, masonry restorations, roof replacement, repairs and maintenance, has built and restored roofs at universities, institutions and homes across the state and country.Their projectshave included the Grove Park Inn in Asheville, N.C., and the Nashville Music City Center. Growth in a labor-intensive business requires management, supervision and skilled people familiar with the company's standards and expectations, Frank and Prentiss Baker said. "You need to grow from

Chns Seward / Raleigh News &Observer / MCT

Workers for Baker Roofing Co. put down an ice and water shield as they install the roof on the Citrix building in downtown Raleigh, N.C. The company, which has been providing services for nearly100 years, is the third largest roofing contractor in the nation that installs roofing systems for businesses and homes.

• Arthur A. Pozzi, 20720 Brinson Blvd., 8180,000 • Long Term BendInvestors LLC, 21375 N.E Nolan Court, $222,273 • Nils Kristiansen, 21160 ReedMarket Road, 3414,455 • DKS LLC, 3803 N.E Purcell Blvd., $205,842 • ML Bend U.S.A. Limited Partnership, 20783 N.E Smoke Stack Lane,

users who havereported systems that won't read

discs, an issuedubbed "the disc drive of doom."

strength, and not just say, 'I am going to be a $10 million company,'" said Prentiss Baker. The company also needs to be profitable, have processes in place that reflect its culture, and have access to capital, including cash, debt or equity capital, he said. Lewis Sheats, entrepreneurship instructor at North Carolina State University's Poole College of Management, said there is no magic road map to increase revenue and the path is different for each business. A general strategy, however, can be broken into a three-step

process. First, identify a specific target market, Sheats said. "What does the customer look like to them, who are they, where are they and what is unique about them?" Second, owners have to persuade their market to buy their product or services. "It's now on your shoulders to tell them what you have and how you are going to deliver it

Movingforward

The companysaid the

Continued success comesfrom planning and forecasting. Here

very small number" of

are criteria recommended by the U.S. Small Business Administra-

tion to help owners define andachieve positive growth outcomes through strategic thinking: Organization:What will the company look like? What structure,

people and resources will be needed to reachthe ideal outcome? Observation:Increase observation to find out what motivates

people, decide how to solve problems andmakedecisions. Driving forces:Set the foundation for what you want people to focus on in your business. Ideal position:Necessary conditions neededfor the plan to succeed. Source: U.S. Small Business Administration

to them," Sheats said. Owners also have to determine whether they will reach customers through social media, traditional media or relationship-building sales. Third, owners need to executethe promised product or service. "It is that execution piece that most businesses fail at, and that is what leads to stagnation," Sheats said. To scale a business, small-businessowners have to

PERMITS City of Bend • Hasenoehrl Custom Homes lnc., 62772 N.W. IdanhaCourt, $319,997 • Awbrey Woods Limited Partnership, 2341 N.W. Debron Lane, $214,413 • Lands Bend LLC, 21363 N.E. Nolan Court, $233,682 • Aaron Alway, 61268 Gorge View St., $216,547 • Doug Kogan,2843 N.W. Perlette Lane, $366,530

Monday it's replacing the Xbox One units of

$193,737 • Long Term BendInvestors LLC, 61213 S.E Geary Drive, $206,210 Deschutes County • Bella Villa Homes, 10219 N.E. Vineyard Way,Terrebonne $440,745 • Wyakin Walsworth, 53425 Hafdahl Lane, La Pine$121,860 • Jerry and Louise Pascoe, 22099 Nelson Road,Bend,no valueavailable •KentW.Phippen,58021Tokatee Lane, Sunriver $150,000 • Jason Lee andVictoria L. Curr, 22179 Calgary Drive, Bend $144,000 • Kathleen G. Bellairs, 56844 Dancing Rock Loop, Bend $398,253 • Greg Welch, 61463 Hackleman Court, Bend $348,519 • Timothy L. Roth, 14987 Saddlebag, Sisters, no value available • Michael W. Massey, 16183 North

Drive, La Pine, $217,284 • Craig Zimprich and Kimberly Gossen, 20945Arid Ave., Bend $154,409 • Aero Facilities, 632 Gibson Air Road, Bend $349,600 • Ski Pond Ranch LLC,16615 Jordan Road, Sisters $128,496 • Marjorie S. Cook Trust,16827 Delicious St., Bend $423,391 • PWD Associates LLC, 60426 Snap Shot Loop, Bend$381,322 • PWD Associates LLC, 60422 Snap Shot Loop, Bend $430,186 •Johnand TeriL. Hoehn,10247 Sundance Ridge Loop, Redmond $284,402 • Lighthouse Construction LLC, 63700 Crooked RocksRoad, Bend $100,000 • Heather M. Mcllhinney, 61451 Hackleman Court, Bend$455,856

establishsystems and processes that can be replicated and identify new target markets, which allows them to sell to

a larger pool of people. The options include expanding the geographic reach through acquisition, franchising, or building another location or satellite office from the

ground up; adding products, services, or market segments; and working with partners to cross-market using existing resources and relationships.

problemis affecting "a customers, who will also

receive onefreedownloadable gamefrom Microsoft Game Studios.

Sony Corp.announced after the debut of the PS4 earlier this month that it was replacing the units for "less than1 percent"

of users whosenew consoles malfunctioned and displayed apulsating blue light. Theproblem was given the moniker "the blue light of death "

Both glitches recall Microsoft's "red ring of death," when production

problems causedseveral predecessors of the Xbox Oneto lock upand display three flashing red lights. Ultimately, the technology giant extend-

ed customers' warranties to three years and said in 2007 that it had spent

morethan $1 billion to repair the problems. — From wire reports

Airline mergerset to begin By Jad Mouawad New Yorlz Times News Service

With American Airlines' exit from bankruptcy Wednesday, the grunt work of merging the airline with US Airways can begin and it will most likely be a long-haul affair, analysts said. It has already been a bumpy two years at American Airlines, which filed for bankruptcy protection in November 2011 and expected at the time to speed through its reorganization and emerge as a leaner, independent carrier. But a far different airline

is coming out of the process now, and if history is any guide it will face a difficult transition as the two companies tie the knot, analysts said. "Of course it is very good news that new American now can finally proceed with the merger, but life is short and so are honeymoons," said Vicki Bryan, an analyst at Gimme Credit. A federal court cleared the way for American's exit from bankruptcy Wednesday, giving the go-ahead for the formation of the world's largest airline


Calendar, C2 Obituaries, C8 Weather, C10

© www.bendbulletin.com/local

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2013

BRIEFING

Assault suspect subdued, arrested Law enforcement used a Taser to subdue and arrest a 31-year-old

man Wednesdayafter he allegedly assaulted his girlfriend in the

Spring River Road area near Sunriver, according to a news release from Sgt. Vance Lawrence with

the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office. Timothy Dort is charged with first-de-

gree criminal mischief, fourth-degree assault,

reckless endangering and resisting arrest. He is being held at the Deschutes County Jail in

lieu of $12,500 bail. Sheriff's deputies, Oregon State Police

en o an sca eroun a outs • Beautification returns to thecity's agenda nowthat the recession isover By Hillary Borrud The Bulletin

The city of Bend plans to ramp up landscaping next year in an effort to keep roundabouts and other areas attractive. Officials cut back on landscapingduringthe recession, but early next year they expect to increase the budget for landscaping and sign a new contract to guarantee maintenance of the vegetation in them. "We are now finally starting to kind of build that back up," City Manager Eric King said on

Tuesday. King said he did notyet know how much the city will increase its landscapingbudget. Special Projects Director Brad Emerson said the city also reduced its spending on landscaping in recentyears in order to redirect some of that Street Division moneyto projects to make sidew alks and curb ramps accessible so they meet the requirements of the Americans with Disabilities Act. Emerson said the city is working on a new agreement with the nonprofit Art in Public Places, which purchases art in roundabouts and on other public property. King said representatives of Art in Public Places told the city they wanted a guarantee that if they continue to donate works, the city would maintain

the landscaping so that it would not detract from the art. "Withthis agteement, we're saying we agree to maintain them to a certain level and if the volunteer group of people isn't able to do that, then we'll figure out another way," Emerson said. During the recession and slow economy that followed, the city received help from two companies — Millsite LandscapeServicesand Botanical Developments — that performed landscapemaintenance across the city. The city also recruited volunteers to help maintain landscaping in roundabouts and along some roadsides, and hired inmate crews from the Deschutes County jail. "We'vegot so many volunteers helping us," King said. "We're doing as much as we can

to minimize costs." In recent years, the citybegan to hire contractors to overhaul landscaping on some medians that King described as " not sustainable." The city plans to complete more of these projects to install low-maintenance land-

scaping in the spring. "We takepride in ourcommunity here in Bend," King said. "People want to be here, and part of that is our Bend beautification program.... It's part of what makes Bend attractive, and that does have implications for economic development. If someone wants to move their business here and they see signs of disrepair, of a town that's not implications." — Reporter:541-617-7829, hborrud@bendbulletin.com

from the Sunriver Police

Department responded

icin

Wednesday, according to Lawrence.

Witnesses reported hearing Dort say he'd

o

anu

a

harmed his girlfriend, 35-year-old Jennifer

Koenig. He also reportedly made alarming statements about harming himself.

Dort was uncooperative when contacted

by law enforcement and exhibited "threat-

ening behavior" before attempting to flee on foot, according to the

news release. Following a foot chase, Dort was

subdued by aTaser. He was then taken into custody. The reports of a

stabbing were incorrect, though the news

release states Koenig was assaulted. Shewas checked by medical personnel on scene and released. Dort also caused significant dam-

age to Koenig's vehicle, according to the news release. Dort was taken to St.

Charles Bend, where he was checked for injuries and put in contact with

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

a counselor. Hewas then transported to the jail.

OSU-Cascades testing ground Beginning Dec. 2,

A large crowd watches as Rabbi Yitzchok Feldman lights the first torch on a giant Menorah at Center Plaza in the Old Mill District in Bend on Wednesday night. The event, hosted by Chabad of Central Oregon, was in honor of the start of Hanukkah. "The holiday of Chanukah is a festival of a historic

Oregon State University-Cascades Campus

victory and celebration for all times, highlighted by the kindling of menorahs each night of the holiday.

will be conducting geotechnical surveys of the

Yet it also contains a universal message for people of all faiths; that ultimately, good will triumph over

two properties where

evil, freedom over oppression, and light over darkness," said Rabbi Yitzchok Feldman.

the university hopes to locate its four-year

campus. One of the parcels is a 10.44-acre wooded lot at1500 S.W. Chandler Ave. The other parcel, 46.29 acres at1707 S.W. Chandler, contains an inactive pumice

mine. The surveys are part of the university's

due diligence process.

Dropping tempscould Jail commanderquits complicateholidaytravel amid investigation DESCHUTES COUNTY

By Elon Glucklich The Bulletin

Administrators say that the surveys, which

By Shelby R. King

require holes to be

• We want to see your

A former Deschutes County Sheriff's captain has resigned and an internal investigation is underway regarding his conduct and the conduct of another employee, according to Sheriff Larry Blanton. Capt. Mike Espinoza, 45, formerly a captain at the Deschutes County jail, resigned from the Sheriff's Office effective Monday, Nov. 25, according to an email Blanton sent to

themed photos for

all Sheriff's Office employees.

drilled into the ground, will not cause signifi-

cant noise. — Bulletin staff reports

Well shot! Reader photos

another special version of Well shot! that will run in the

Outdoors section. Submit your best work

atdenddulfetin.com lhofidaylightsand we'll pick the best for publication. Submission requirements: Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.

The Bulletin

Blanton said Espinoza's resignation was voluntary and added that it is normal for agencies to have personnel changes. "We do have an internal investigation in relation to potential policy violation either on, or off, duty," Blanton said. "We have not yet concluded anything and it is not uncommon for us to remind people of correct policies or procedures." Blanton's email also indicates another Sheriff's

Office employee, Jennifer Lawrence, has been placed on "paid administrative leave pending an internal affairs investigation relating to alleged on-duty and off-duty conduct." Espinoza was employed by the Sheriff's Office for more than 20 years prior to his resignation. Most recently, Espinoza held the position of jail commander. Department of Public Safety Standards and Training Director Eriks Gabliks said his agency isn't aware of the nature of the investigation concerning Espinoza. "If the investigation isn't complete we wouldn't know anything about it," he said. Espinoza could not be reached forcomment. Sheriff's Lt. Tracy Jones and Capt. Shane Nelson will fill in for Espinoza regarding jail operations and the jail upgrade construction project that is underway. — Reporter: 541-383-0376, shing@bendbulfetin.com

The Thanksgiving holiday is a time for family, friends and plenty of food. But it's also a time for heavy traffic and winter weather conditions on highways across Central Oregon, and this year is no exception. The National Weather Serviceforecasts dropping temperatures across the region this weekend, and rain that could fall as snow in higher elevations, including highway passes around the state. That could mean a potentially hazardous drive Sunday for families heading backto Central Oregon from their Thanksgiving celebrations. Conditions should be decent in Bend and surrounding areas today through Saturday, with some cloud cover and temperaturesin the upper 40s, said Ann Adams, an assistant forecaster with the weather service's Pendleton office. But a storm system will bring wind and a 20-to-30 percent chance of rain to Bend late Saturday and into Sunday. A

victim is

identified By Shelby R. King The Bulletin

The 31-year-old man shot and killed by police Friday night has been identified as Tyler Keinonen, according to Deschutes County District Attorney Patrick Flaherty. Keinonenwas shot after

being con-

beingkeptup,therearebigger

troopers and officers to a 911 call of a possible stabbing that came in around 7:30 a.m.

Shooting

cool-down is expected to start Sunday, Adams said, with temperatures dropping into the low 20s by the middle of next week. Cold morning temperatures also mean drivers should expect ice on the highway passes connecting Bend to Portland, Salem and Klamath Falls.

"If people are going to be

starting their drives (back home) early in the morning, they need to be aware that the

road surfaces are probably going to be slick in some areas," Adams said. Transportation officials are urging caution for drivers throughout the weekend, but especially on Sunday. Of the more than 7 million people traveling across Western states for the holiday, one-third of them areexpected to be on the road Sunday, said AAA OregonJIdaho spokeswoman Marie Dodds. Oregon Department of Transportationcrews "are in winter mode" across the state, spokesman Peter Murphy said. ODOT drivers are patrolling state highways, with snow plows on standby. SeeTravel /C7

Keinonen

fronted by a Bend Poli c e officer

responding to a report of a possible burglary at a home on Northeast Jackdaw Drive. Keinonen was reportedly leaving through the back door of the home when the officer confronted him. The officer fired one round at Keinonen, according to Flaherty, and was struck in the chest. He was transported to St. Charles Bend, where he was pronounced dead. The officer has not been identified and is currently on paid administrative leave while the incident is investigated. Keinonen had been in trouble with the law several times this year. In April, he was arrested and charged with possession, delivery and manufacture of both methamphetamine and heroin, and being a felon in possession of a firearm. In July, he was arrested and charged with three counts of unauthorized use of a vehicle and one count each of first-degree theft and second-degree burglary. He had pleaded not guilty to all charges in both cases. In September, he was charged with possession and delivery of methamphetamine but hadn't yet entered a plea. And earlier this month he was arrested for not registering as a sex offender. Keinonen did not live at the home but was acquainted with the residents, Flaherty said. Sharon Ruis, 52, and her two sons, Christopher Edlefsen, 26, and Mitchell Harpole, 22, live at the Jackdaw home. Neither of the men were home at the time of the shooting. It is unclear if Ruis was present when the shooting occurred. Bend Police had executed a search warrant at the s am e a d dress Friday morning, during which time they confiscated f o u r il l e g al f irearms, h eroin a n d methamphetamine. A s e c on d s e a r ch warrant w a s e x e cuted at Edlefsen'srented shop on Northeast First Street, where officers recovered one gun and documents relating to a stolen cargo trailer. Ruis was home during the Friday morning raid. She was arrested on an outstanding w a r r a nt, b ooked into t h e D e schutes County jail and released after p osting baiL Edlefsen was arrested on suspicion of four counts of being a felon in possessionof a firearm, unauthorized use of a motor vehicle, unlawful entry into a motor vehicle and possession of a controlled substance. Harpole was arrested on suspicion of possession of heroin. — Reporter: 541-383-0376, shing@bendbulletin.com


C2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOV 28, 2013

E vENT

ENDA R

Center Drive; 541-593-4405 or www. wonderlandexpress.com. CARRIAGERIDES IN THEOLD CENTRAL OREGONTHANKSGIVING MILL DISTRICT:Ridein the Cowboy CLASSIC:Featuring a 5K and10K Carriage, located between Ben& run; race starts and finishes behind Jerry's and Francesca's; tips and the amphitheater stage; proceeds donations benefit the Kids Center; benefit Girls on the Run, anaffiliate weather dependent; donations program of Boys 8 Girls Clubs of Central Oregon; $25 for the10K, $20 accepted; 2-5 p.m.; Ben &Jerry's, for the 5K, $10for the Gobbler's Walk; 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. 9 a.m.; Les SchwabAmphitheater, 344 S.W. Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; CIVILWAR FOOTBALL www.deschutescountygotr.org. FUNDRAISER: Watch the University of Oregon andOregon State play on I LIKE PIE THANKSGIVING DAYFUN WALK/RUN:Runor walk 2K, 5K, 10K three big-screen TVs, with a silent auction; proceeds benefit Chimps or10 miles andeat pie; with a baking Inc; $55, $650 for corporate table, contest; online registration closed reservations requested; 4 p.m., gates Nov. 25; $5 donation and five cansof food for Neighborlmpact, registration open at 3 p.m.; Hooker CreekRanch, Chimps Inc. Sanctuary, 5525 Gerking requested; 9 a.m., shirt pickup and registration at 8 a.m.; Riverfront Plaza, Market Road, Bend; 541-410-4122 or www.chimps-inc.org. 875 N.W. Brooks St., Bend;541-7490540 or www.footzonebend.com. CIVIL WARFUNDRAISER:Watch Oregon State University and the THANKSGIVINGDINNER: A University of Oregon football teams traditional Thanksgiving dinner play; playroom for youngsters; will be served; $10 per person, $5 proceeds benefit NewGenerations for children ages10and younger, Early Childhood Development Center; reservations requested; 3 p.m.; $10, $7 children ages7-17, free VFW Hall, 1836 S.W.Veterans Way, children ages 6andyounger; 4 p.m.; Redmond; 541-548-4108. Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road; 541-585-3147. FRIDAY FOR FEET'SSAKEBOOT AND SOCKCOLLECTION:Bring in new or RAKU POTTERYSHOWANDSALE: gently used boots or socks, discount Featuring works by local potters of beverage with donation; donations the Raku artists of Central Oregon; benefit Bethlehem Inn; free; 6:30-10 free admission; 10 a.m.-6 p.m.; p.m.; Broken TopBottle Shop & Ale The Environmental Center, 16N.W. Cafe,1740 N.W.Pence Lane, Suite1, KansasAve.,Bend;541-610-5684. Bend;541-678-3556. HOLIDAYVILLAGE MARKET: BEND IMPROV GROUP:The comedy Featuring crafters, artists and group performs in the style of Who's nonprofit organizations; free admission;11 a.m.-5 p.m.; Centennial Line Is It Anyway; $8 in advance, $10 at the door; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Park, Seventh Street andEvergreen Theater, 220 N.E.Lafayette Ave.; 541Avenue, Redmond; 541-923-5191. 312-9626 or www.2ndstreettheater. SANTALANDATTHEOLDMILL com. DISTRICT: Takea photo with Santa, HOPELESSJACK 8[THEHANDSOME children's activities, Tree of Joy DEVIL:The Portland blues-punk band and more; free, additional cost for performs, with Silvero; $5; doors take-home photos, $5 donation for open 8 p.m.; Pakit Liquidators, 903 children's activities; 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; S.E.ArmourRoad,Bend;541-389SantaLand, 330 S.W.Powerhouse 7047 or www.j.mp/hopelessinfo. Drive in the Old Mill District, Bend; 541-312-0 I31. DJ WICKED: Featuring the Portland DJ, with The HardChords; free; SCIENCEPARTY: ELECTRICITY!: Learn entertaining information about 10 p.m.; Dojo, 852 N.W.Brooks St., Bend; 541-706-9091 or www. electricity; $3 for members, $5 for dojobend.com. nonmembers; 11 a.m. and1:30 p.m.; HighDesertMuseum, 59800 S.U.S. Highway 97, Bend;541-382-4754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org. SATURDAY WONDERLAND EXPRESSAUCTION: A silent auction of unique creations; WONDERLAND EXPRESSAUCTION: proceeds benefit Wonderland A silent auction of unique creations; Express' annual event; free proceeds benefit Wonderland admission;11:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m.; Express'annual event; free Sunriver Resort Great Hall, 17600 admission; 9 a.m.-2 p.m.; Sunriver

TODAY

tj [ I[

e( ,

IIII I ll' J [e -

Email events at least 10days before publication date to communitylife@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event"at v[[v[[tvbendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.

I H ~

local choirs, watch Santa light the Christmas tree andmore; free; 6 p.m., tree lighting at 6:45 p.m.; Drake Park, 777 N.W.Riverside Blvd.; www.downtownbend.org/ christmas-tree-lighting-2013. LAST SATURDAY: Event includes art exhibit openings, live music, food and drinks and apatio and fire pit; free; 6-10 p.m.; TheOld Ironworks Arts District, 50 S.E.Scott St., Bend; www.j.mp/lastsat. PAUL RENNA: The Austin, Texasbased singer-songwriter performs, with Peter Rodocker; $5; 7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70S.W.Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. volcanictheatrepub.com. SATURDAYNIGHT DANCE: Ballroom dancing for all ages; $5; 7-9 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E.Reed Market Road; 541-388-1133 or www. bendseniorcenter.org. DJ BARISONE:Featuring the Bend native and Portland-based DJ, with PRSN; free; 10 p.m.; Dojo, 852 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 541-706-9091 or www.dojobend.com.

R

RFI I

'

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin file photo

The ILike Pie Thanksgiving Day Fun Walk/Run, an out-and-back jaunt along the First Street river trail, is one of two holiday footraces scheduled today in Bend. The Central Oregon Thanksgiving Classic starts and finishes behind the Les Schwab Amphitheater stage. Resort Great Hall, 17600 Center Drive; 541-593-4405 or www. wonderlandexpress.com. INDIES FIRST:Multiple authors will be on hand recommending favorite reads and signing books; part of a nationwide event; free; 9:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m.; PaulinaSpringsBooks,252 W . Hood Ave., Sisters; 541-549-0866. INDIES FIRST:Multiple authors will be on hand recommending favorite reads and signing books; part of a nationwide event; free; 9:30 a.m.-6 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 422 S.W .Sixth St.,Redmond; 541-526-1491. CENTRAL OREGONMETAL ARTS GUILD SHOWAND SALE:Featuring metal artists from a wide rangeof styles and techniques; free admission; 10a.m.-10 p.m.; TheWorkhouse at Old Ironworks, 50 S.E.Scott St., Bend; bethyoe[Nbendbroadband.com or www.cometalartsguild.wordpress. com. NATIVEAMERICAN ART MARKET: Featuring Native American arts and crafts, including beadwork, jewelry, weaving and miniatures; admission is one can or package of food;10 a.m.-4 p.m.; The Museum AtWarm Springs, 2189 U.S.Highway 26; 541-553-3331. RAKU POTTERYSHOWAND SALE: Featuring works by local potters of the Raku artists of Central Oregon; free admission; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; The Environmental Center, 16N.W. Kansas Ave., Bend; 541-610-5684. FATHERCHRISTMAS VISITSTHE HIGH DESERT MUSEUM: Children can have aphoto taken with Father Christmas in Silver City, the1880s

town and decorate sugar cookies; $3 per child;11 a.m.-3 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S.Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www. highdesertmuseum.org. HOLIDAYVILLAGE MARKET: Featuring crafters, artists and nonprofit organizations; free admission; 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; Centennial Park, Seventh Street and Evergreen Avenue, Redmond; 541-923-5191. SANTALANDATTHEOLD MILL DISTRICT:Takeaphoto with Santa, children's activities, Tree of Joy and more; free, additional cost for take-home photos, $5 donation for children's activities;11 a.m.-5 p.m.; SantaLand, 330 S.W.Powerhouse Drive in the Old Mill District, Bend; 541-312-0131. SCIENCEPARTY:ELECTRICITY!: Learn entertaining information about electricity; $3 for members, $5 for nonmembers; 11 a.m.and1:30 p.m.; HighDesertM useum,59800 S.U.S. Highway 97, Bend;541-382-4754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org. CARRIAGERIDES IN THEOLD MILL DISTRICT:Ride in the Cowboy Carriage, locatedbetween Ben& Jerry's and Francesca's; tips and donations benefit the Kids Center; weather dependent; donations accepted; 2-5 p.m.; Ben &Jerry's, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. ST. CHARLESREDMOND STARLIGHTHOLIDAYPARADE:This yearstheme is"Run,RunRudolph"; free; 5 p.m.; downtown Redmond; 541-923-5191. BENDCHRISTMASTREE LIGHTING:Sing carols, listen to

SUNDAY CENTRAL OREGONMETAL ARTS GUILDSHOW AND SALE:Featuring metal artists from a wide range of styles and techniques; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; The Workhouse at Old Ironworks, 50 S.E. Scott St., Bend; bethyoe@ bendbroadband.com or www. cometalartsguild.wordpress.com. SANTALAND ATTHEOLDMILL DISTRICT:Takeaphoto with Santa, children's activities Tree of Joy and more; free, additional costfor take-home photos, $5 donation for children's activities; 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; SantaLand, 330 S.W.Powerhouse Drive in the Old Mill District, Bend; 541-312-0131. CARRIAGERIDES IN THE OLD MILL DISTRICT:Ride in the Cowboy Carriage, located between Ben& Jerry's and Francesca's; tips and donations benefit the Kids Center; weather dependent; donations accepted; 2-5 p.m.; Ben &Jerry's, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. WORLDAIDS DAY:The evening includes short HIVfilms, educational materials, refreshments and speakers followed by a brief candlelight vigil; free; 5 p.m.; Central Oregon Social Justice Center,155 N.W. Irving Ave., Bend; 541-322-7402 ol www.cdc.gov.

MONDAY NO EVENTSLISTED

TUESDAY GREEN TEAMMOVIENIGHT: A screening of the film "The Big Fix" about an investigation of the 2010 BP oil spill; free; 6:30-8 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 N.E.Ninth St., Bend; 541-815-6504. A CHARLIEBROWN CHRISTMAS WITH DAVIDBENOIT:The acclaimed pianist and his quartet perform in a tribute to Charles Schulz; SOLD OUT; 7:30 p.m., doors open at 6:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org.

WEDNESDAY EMPOWERINGFAMILIES BREAKFAST: A breakfast fundraiser for the Latino Community Association; free, donations accepted; 7:15-8:30 a.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E.ReedMarket Road; 541-382-4366. CAROL WITHTHE BELLS: Featuring an ensemble from TheBells of Sunriver; free; 1 p.m.; Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Lane; 541-593-1635. ROSELAND HUNTERS:The Portland funk-rock band performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W.BondSt., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.mcmenamins. com.

THURSDAY BENEFIT DINNER: Featuring dinner, auction, drinks and live music; proceeds benefit the Residential Assistance Programs'alternative to work program; $30 per person, $50 per couple; 6-8 p.m.; Aspen Hall, 18920 N.W.Shevlin Park Road, Bend; 541-385-9902 or www. residentialassistanceprogram.org. AUTHORPRESENTATION:John O'Sullivan presents his book "Changing the Game:The Parents Guide to Raising Happy, High Performing Athletes, and Giving Youth Sports Back to Our Kids"; free; 7 p.m.; Barnes & Noble Booksellers, 2690 E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-318-7242.

PUBLIC OFFICIALS STATE OF OREGON •GOV.JOHN KITZHABER, D 160 STATECAPITOL, 900 COURT ST. SALEM, OR97301 PHONE: 503-378-4582 FAX:503-378-6872 WEB:http://governor.oregon.gov • SECRETARY OFSTATEKATEBROWN, D 136 STATECAPITOL SALEM, OR97301 PHONE: 503-986-1616 FAX:503-986-1616 EMAIL:oregon.sos©state.or.us • TREASURER TEDWHEELER,D 159OREGON STATE CAPITOL 900 COURTST.N.E. SALEM, OR 97301 PHONE: 503-378-4329 EMAIL:oregon.treasurer@state.or.us WEB:www.ost.state.or.us • ATTORNEY GENERALELLEN ROSENBLUM,D 1162 COURTST.N.E. SALEM, OR97301 PHONE: 503-378-4400 FAX:503-378-4017 WEB:www.doj.state.or.us •LABOR COMMISSIONER BRAD AVAKIAN

800N.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. TED FERRIOLI, R-DISTRICT 30(JEFFERSON,PORTION OF DESCHUTES) 900 COURTST. N.E., S-323 SALEM, OR97301 PHONE: 503-986-1950 EMAIL:sen.tedferrioli©state.or.us WEB:www.leg.state.or.us/ferrioli •SEN.TIMKNOPP, R-DISTRICT27 (PORTIONOF DESCHUTES) 900 COURTST. N.E., S-423 SALEM, OR97301 PHONE: 503-986-1727 EMAIL:sen.timknopp@state.or.us WEB:www.leg.state.or.us/knopp •SEN.DOUG WHITSETT, R-DISTRICT 28 (CROOK,PORTION OF DESCHUTES) 900 COURTST. N.E., S-303 SALEM, OR97301 PHONE: 503-986-1728 EMAIL:sen.dougwhitsett©state.or.us

WEB:www.leg.state.or.us/whitsett HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES •REP.JASON CONGER, R-DISTRICT54 (PORTIONOF DESCHUTES) 900 COURTST.N.E., H-477 SALEM, OR97301 PHONE:503-986- I454 EMAIL:rep.jasonconger©state.or.us WEB:www.leg.state.or.us/conger •REP.JOHN HUFFMAN, R-DISTRICT59 (PORTIONOFJEFFERSON) 900 COURTST.N.E., H-476 SALEM, OR 97301 PHONE:503-986-1459 EMAIL:rep.johnhuffman[ostate. of'.Us

WEB:www.leg.state.or.us/huffman •REP.MIKEMCLANE,R-DISTRICT55 (CROOK,PORTION OF DESCHUTES) 900 COURTST.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-DISTRICT53 (PORTIONOF DESCHUTES) 900 COURTST.N.E., H-471 SALEM, OR 97301 PHONE:503-986- I453 EMAIL:rep.genewhisnant@state.or.us WEB:www.leg.state.or.us/whisnant

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THURSDAY, NOV 28, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

C3

REGON

ou esentence a ervioation o U..tra eem ar owit Iran By Nigel Duara The Associated Press

PORTLAND — A f ederal judge in Portland has sentenced a Texas urologist and his attorney wife to a y ear and a day in prison after they were convicted of defrauding the government in a scheme prosecutors said also violated the U.S. trade embargo with Iran. In addition, U.S. District Court Judge Garr King ordered the couple to pay $1.1 million, including $200,000 in restitution. They also were

told to s u r render $600,000 that authorities said was involved in money laundering. Dr. Hossein Lahiji and his wife, Najmeh Vahid, w ere convicted by a jury in June of conspiracy to defraud the IRS and conspiracy to t r ansfer funds overseas in violation of the Iranian embargo. The McAllen, Texas, couple gave more than $1.8 million to the Oregon branch of an Iranian children's charity that sent the money to Iran. The donations were used to make investments in Iran that the

couple controlled, according to an indictment. The couple's attorneys argued that the donations had no commercialpurpose. The indictment described a scheme in which the Texas couple got tax exemptions for their donations to the Portland-based Child Foundation charity, including backdating some of their donations to reduce their tax burden for years in w h ich they didn't contribute money. The C h i l d Fou n dation did not i mmediately return

a call seeking comment on Wednesday afternoon. The charity was reorganized after the allegations surfaced and now operates under the supervision of U.S. probation officers. Authorities said some of the funds were used to purchase a building in Tehran in the name of Lahiji's sister and invested in an Iranian bank account. They said other money was given as a religious tax to Ayatollah Makarem Shirazi and as salary for Vahid's mother, both in Iran.

AROUND THE STATE POrtland POliCe COntraCt —Members of the Portland police union have approved a four-year contract with the city. The contract

was approved by amargin of 77 percent to 23 percent. Eachmember of the union that includes officers, sergeants and detectives will re-

ceive a cost-of-living wageincrease of 0.9 percent. Patrol sergeants, however, aregetting an extra 5 percent, andthe contract includes a6 percent hazard premiumpayfor police canine handlers. Union president Daryl Turner declined comment Wednesday. The deal is expected

to go before theCity Council for its approval by theendof the year. Odell fruitdiu fire — Damage is estimated at nearly $2 million from a fire that burned astack of fruit bins at Diamond Fruit Growers in Odell. KPTV reports more than10,000 bins burned and each was worth $150. The Monday night fire left a charred mess of plastic. The

state fire marshal, HoodRiver detectives andOregon State Police are investigating the cause. Diamond Fruit Growers is a cooperative of pear and cherry orchardists in the Hood River Valley.

Penitentiary COllege PrOgram — Theanonymous donor who has beenpaying for college classes inside the Oregon State Penitentiary in Salemsays he's nolonger able to fund the program, and it's looking for new funding. Since 2007, the private donor has contributed more than half a million dollars to help pay tuition for

short-time inmates. TheStatesman Journal reports110 inmates are earning associate's degrees in the College Inside Program taught by

ChemeketaCommunity College instructors. The program recently received a$143,000 grant so that current students can graduate. But

Sentencing canceled Umatilla tribal members in bomb plot case vote for housing project PENDLETON

The Associated Press

The Associated Press PENDLETON — A decade after the discovery of human r emains halted work o n a housing development on the Umatilla Indian Reservation in northeastern Oregon, tribal members havevoted to restart it. The two sets of human remains were found at the site in 2003. They are believed to be those of Native Americans who died in middle age more than 200 years ago. Utilities and a road base had been installed, but work in the 32-lot subdivision came to a halt as tribal members wrestled with the implications, the East Oregonian reports. Building so close to a burial site could compromise tribal beliefs, some said, while others held that the tribe could continue construction while honoring the remains if a buffer zone was left around the

Croswell, 54 percent of tribal members voted to revive development. The B oard o f Tr u s tees placed the referendum on the ballot and its approval is needed for the project to go forward,she said.The project also needs financing. Tribal members are interested i n mo d e rate-income housing for people working and living in th e Pendleton area, Croswell said. "We now have a p r etty healthy economy," she said. "Most people are employed. ...Many people want to move home to the reservation." The development will likely be scaled back to 15 to 20 homes, to allow room around the burial grounds, she said. The remains were reburied, with a memorial nearby bearing wordsofremembrance: "For as long as we remain upon this temporal world/Our graves. footsteps cannot fade away In 2004, tr ibal m embers / We can never forget our voted 217-181 to stop devel- ancestors. "From the uncounted days opment. Th e C o n federated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian of the past and continuing on Reservation repaid more than into the future / Our sacred $1 million in federal grants. blood sanctifies our M o t hBut on Nov. 19, said Depu- er Earth / As did these two ty Executive Director Debra ancestors."

WoundedBentonCounty officer returning to duty The Associated Press C ORVALLIS — A Ben ton County officer seriously wounded in a gunfight with a car theft suspect in 2012 is returning to duty. Sheriff Scott Jackson says Sgt. David Peterson will be on the same night shift Monday that he was on when he and other offi cers responded to a reportof a trespasser who fled in a stolen car.

filed and will reset the senPORTLAND — A f eder- tencing hearing if it remains al judge has suspended the appropriate. sentencing date of a young Prosecutors disclosed last Somali-American man con- week that at Mohamud's trial victed of plotting to bomb a in January they offered evi2010 Christmas tree-lighting dence that was derived from ceremony in Portland's town warrantless surveillance of square. a foreign target outside the The Oregonian r eports United States. U.S. District J udge G arr Mohamud was a r rested King canceled the date after Nov. 26, 2010, after pressing the government's admission a button on a cellphone that last week that warrantless he believed would detonate a overseas wiretaps h elped 1,800-pound diesel-and-fermake it s c ase M o hamed tilizer bomb near thousands Mohamud. of people at the annual holiA notation in th e court day gathering. He had been docket says the court ex- scheduled to be sentenced p ects new motions to b e Dec. 18.

it needs about $300,000 over the next three years to enroll about 40

new students ayear.

Pendletan Ruund-Up exeCutive — ThePendleton Round-Up, now103 years old, plans to hire its first paid executive. The rodeo is

Oregon's largest. It's organized as a nonprofit and managed by17 directors, with more than1,400 community volunteers. The East Ore-

gonian reported Tuesdaythat the Round-Up association plans to hire a full-time, year-round general managerwho would alsowork with the Happy Canyon, the stage show put on in conjunction with the rodeo. Round-Up President Tim Hawkins said both organizations have grown

more complex, running the professional rodeoevents andtheWild West show, as well as hosting two Professional Bull Riding competi-

tions and anoutdoor concert. POrtland dank ruddery — Police saydetectives investigating a string of bank robberies last weekend in the Portland metro area were

at a bankTuesdaynight when two suspects held up thebank in their presence. Robbery detectives arrested two men as they attempted to escape from the bank inside the Fred Meyer store at Wood Village in

Portland. A 20-year-old and a29-year-old are held in the Multnomah County Jail. — From wire reports

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C4 TH E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, NOV 28, 2013

THE %7EsT COLORADO

WASHINGTON

Floo e townthan ul orweeklyreunions

Pot party planned for legalization anniversary

By Colleen Slevin The Associated Press

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JAMESTOWN, Colo.— For a few precious hours every Saturday night, Jamestown, in the foothills of the Rockies, looks more like it did before the floods. Those who stayed after September's devastation and those who had to leave for rental homes in nearby Boulder return once a week to the Jamestown Mercantile — the town's meeting place for over 100 years — to eat together. Then, they push back the tables to dance to live music. And this fall, as the cleanup and rebuilding continue, the gatherings have been a place to give thanks. " Everybody j u s t wa l k s through there with the biggest smile on their face," owner Rainbow Shultz said of "the Brennan Linsley/The Associated Press Merc," which boasts of having Children dance along with adults inside The Merc, a popular bar and restaurant which remains open served miners, painted ladies on Saturday nights despite September's destructive flood in the Rocky Mountain town of Jamesand horse thieves in its early town, Colo. For a few hours every Saturday night, Jamestown looks more like it did before floods days. and mudslides destroyed a fifth of its homes. The storm destroyed a fifth of the former mining town's homes and both bridges over of herhouse to the waters, said Jamestown together. said she used to socialize in Little James Creek. During parties started easily. WhenevFor several weeks, 15 stu- Bouldermore before the flood the week, federal aid workers er she and her neighbor pulled dents studied in the living and but now feels more like stayoutnumber residents and lines up chairs to a bridge over the dining room of one student's ing with people who survived of trucks hauling away tons creek with some cheese, crack- home, then moved to a Chris- together. of debris pass down the main ers and something to drink, tian retreat center. A holiday N owadays, residents d o street. o thers were bound to j o in play uniting all the students what they did back when Joe Before the flood, finding them. is one of several programs Howlett owned the Merc. community was easy in the Jamestown'schildren were planned tokeep them connectHowlett w a s c o n sidered town of 300, something people tight too, attending classes in a ed in the coming weeks. the patriarch of Jamestown, "I feel like they're growing p layed Santa Claus at t h e say made the town more than small schoolhouse. just another scenic spot. ResThe flood cut off access to up with a family of 300 people Merc and leda marching kaidents never hesitated to ask the school and split those chil- watching them," said Shultz, zoo band at the town's annual their neighbors for help, and dren up. Six students now at- who has lived in town for 12 Fourth of July parade. He died it wasn't hard to run across tend classesin Boulder, where years and has two children, when a m udslide slammed someone telling an interesting their parents moved. But the ages 3 and 6. into his home during the flood, story. community worked to keep Oak Chezar, a writer, teach- and his death has left a big hole Karen Zupko, who lost most the remaining students in er and p erformance artist, in the community.

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S hultz, who b o ught t h e store from him in 2010, is trying to keep the same spirit he brought to the gatherings at the Merc.She only accepts donations, saying it wasn't fair to

charge people when they've lost so much. She's taken in enough to keep the place open once a week. Last S a t urday, p e o ple crowded at the tiny bar and around wooden tables — some pushed together — to eat large plates of Indian food cooked by Shultz. People, including the town's mayor, talked, laughed and ate as about a half dozen kids ran around, some of them playing with takeout boxes. Shultz and her h usband, Adam Burrell, served the food and drinks. Chezar,a former employee who volunteered to bus tables, is organizing a Thanksgiving dinnerformore than 30 people at the Merc with food provided by a church. She also hopes she and the residents of about 20 homes staying through the winter will create a musical about the town and the flood. Michael Brotherton, a woodworker and musician who has lived in town for 27 years, said lots of places try but fail to be the authentic gathering place that the Merc is. "The Merc nevertried to be anything other than a service to this community," he said. Someone clinked on their glass and then everyone lifted their glasses to toast Shultz shortly before an indie rock band, squeezed into a spot by the storefront, started to play. The kids were the first to start dancing.

By Bob Young The Seattle Times

SEATTLE — On the first anniversary of legal weed in Washington state, the city of Seattle will permit a big pot party on the site of Seattle Center's old Fun Forest amusement park. Pot activist Be n L i v i ngston has the contract to prove it, a city document that says "Licensee is permitted to host a private outdoor marijuana smoking area." L ivingston f o r ke d ov e r $1,900, which he got from a local law firm, to use part of the 74-acre Seattle Center for about eight hours on Dec. 6, the anniversary of the day Washington's recreational pot law took effect. It's a free, adults-only event, open to the public, at which Livingston plans to have light music, light catering and outdoor pot smoking by up to 500 people behind a double fence, or smoking "moat," as the permit says. Livingston said Seattle Center officials initially rejected the ideabecause marijuana re-

mains federally illegaL "No matter how often you might have smoked weed at Folklife or Bumbershoot, you were civilly disobedient," Livingston said. "This is the first time ever on-site cannabis consumption is permitted at Seattle Center."

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hanksgiving is a uniquely American holiday with deep roots in the nation's pioneer heritage. The first Thanksgiving was celebrated under harsh conditions by a group of people who had fled persecution in England. "... And amongst the rest, their America has changed in m a ny ways in the 350 years since then, but g r eatest King, Massasoit, with some the purpose of Thanksgiving remains n i n ety men, whom, for three days, we the same: to provide a special day of e n t ertained and feasted. "... And they went out and killed five thanks. The following selected documents, which trace the development d e er, which they brought to the Planof the Thanksgiving holiday, were t a t i on andbestowedonourGovernor compiled by the editors of The Regis- a n d upon the Captaine and others." ter-GuardinEugene. Therefore, through colonial days The first Thanksgiving, in the au- a n d in the early days of the Republic, tumn of 1621, was a recognition by the T h a nksgiving was observed in New Pilgrim Fathers of the providence that E n gland as a local holiday. Harriet had seen them through a hard winter, B eecher Stowe (author of "Uncle Tom's into a tense spring and then to a harvest Cabin") wrote this description of the season in which fortune smiled. The r e gionalfestival: "... The king and high priest of all story of the first year is told, in part, by the Pilgrims themselves. William Brad- f e stivals was the autumn Thanksgivford, their governor, tells about the "new i ng. When the apples were all gathered life" in his "History of Massachusetts". a n dt h e cider was all made and the "... The spring now approaching, it y e l low pumpkins were rolled in from pleased God the mortalitie began to m a n y a hill in billows of gold, and the cease amongst them. And ye sick and c o rn was husked, and the labors of the lame recovered apace, which put, as it s eason were done, and the warm late were, a new life into them, days of I n dian Summer though they had borne their came in,dreamy, and calm, sad affliction with as much The firSt and still, with just enough

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"... But it was ye Lord Of I6 2 1, Wcls whichupheldthem and had g feCOgfljtjofl beforehand prepared them, t tj p l~ +~1™ m ay having long borne y ye yoake, yea, from their Fa t herS Of the youth... pfoyjCjefloe "... Afterwards, they (as th t t manyaswereable)beganto

plant their corne, in which th em thrOugh service Squanto stood them g jlgfg yyjfit ef

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Sun d ay, I suppose it's about

time for the Thanksgiving ' pro c l amation." in great stead showing them both ye manner how it T hanksgiving was n ot set it and, after, how to dress SPfifl g Bfl Ct obser v ed as a national holi& tend it. Also, he told them t j l efl to g day until 1863. And then the excepte they got fish & set purpose of the observance with it (in those grounds), it was less to perpetuate the would come to nothing. S BBSO f l i fl old New England custom "... And he showed them IfIfjljojl foftUfle than to observethe turning tide of the Civil War. in ye middle of April they should have store enough Six weeks before he went (of fish) come up ye brooke to Gettysburg to deliver his ... and taught them how famous address, President to take it, and where to get other pro- A b r aham Lincoln issued a proclamavisions necessarie for them, all which t i on, and presidents ever since have folthey found true by trial & experience. lo w ed his example. Few, however, could "... Some English seed they sowed, e qual the style of Lincoln's designation as wheat and pease. But it came not to o f a day of Thanksgiving: "... The year that is drawing toward good. Edward Winslow, whose wife died that first winter and who married i t s close has been filled with the blessagain in the spring, was of stout heart. i n g s of f ruitful fields and healthful He wrote, as follows, to a friend in En- s k ies. "...To these bounties, which are so gland, telling him of the efforts of the Pilgrims to raise food enough for the c o nstantly enjoyed that we are prone next winter. to forget the source from which they "... You will understand that in this c o me, others have been added which little time that a few of us have been a r e of so extraordinary a nature that here, we have builte seven dwelling t h ey cannot fail to penetrate and softhouses, and four for the use of the e n even the heart which is habitually Plantation, and have made prepara- i n sensible to the everwatchful Provition for divers others. dence of Almighty God. "... We set last spring some twentie "... In the midst of a civil war of unacres of Indian corne and sowed some paralleled magnitude and severity, sixacres ofbarley and pease. And ac- which has sometimes seemed to invite cording to ye manner of ye Indians we and provoke the aggressions of foreign manured our ground with herrings, states,peace has been preserved with or rather shads (or rather, alewives), al l nations, order has been maintained, which we have ingreat abundance the laws have been respected and and take with great ease to our door." ob e yed, and harmony has prevailed Governor Bradford, in his history, e v erywhere except in the theater of military conflict, while that theater has wrote as follows of the harvest: "... They began to gather in ye small b een greatly contractingbythe advancharvest they had, and fit up their hous- i n g armies and navies of the Union... "... It has seemed to me fit and propes and dwellings against winter, being all well recovered in health 8 strength, e r that they should be solemnly, reverand had all things in good plenty. For e n tly, and gratefully acknowledged, as as some were thus employed in affairs w i t h one heart and voice, by the whole abroad, others were exercised in fish- A m e rican people. I do, therefore, invite ing aboute codd & bass 8 other fish, of m y fellow-citizens in every part of the which they tooke good store, of which U n i ted States, and also those who are every family had their portion. at sea, and those who are sojourning in "... All ye summer there was no f o r eign lands, to set apart and observe wante. And now began to come in store the last Thursday of November next as of foule, as winter approached. And a d a y of Thanksgiving and prayer to besides waterfoule, there was a great o u r beneficent Father, who dwelleth in store of wild Turkies, of which they took t h e heavens; and I recommend to them many, besides venison, etc. Besides t h at while offering up the ascriptions they had about a peck of meal to a per- j u stly due to Him, for such singular son ornow, since harvest,Indian corne deliverances and blessings, they do to that proportion, which made many a l so,withhumblepenitenceforournaafterwards write to largely of their t i o n al perversenessanddisobedience, plenty here to their friends in England, c o mmend to His tender care all those which were not fained but true reports." w h o have become widows, orphans, When the harvest was in, the Pil- m o u rners, or sufferers in the lamentagrims could relax briefly to be thank- b l e civil strife in which we are unavoidful for what the first year in the new a b l y engaged, and fervently implore world had brought them. Winslow, t h e interposition of the Almighty hand again writing to a friend in England, t o heal the wounds of the nation, and to restore it, as soon as may be consistent tells about it. .. Our harvest being gotten in, our w i t h the Divine purposes, to the full Governor sente four men out fowling e n j oyment of peace, harmony, tranthat so we might, after a more special q u i l ity and union. "... In testimony whereof, I have manner,rejoycetogetherafterwehad gathered the fruit of our labours. These hereunto set my hand, and caused the four, in one day, killed as many fowl s e a l of theUnited Statestobeaffixed. "... Done at the City of Washington, as, with a little help besides, served the company almost a week, at which t h i s third day of October, in the year time, amongst other recreations, we o f our Lord eighteen hundred and sixexercised our armes, many of the Indi- t y - three, and of the independence of the United States the eighty-eighth." ans coming amongst us. .

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When data trumps doctoring By Michael P. Jones Los Angeles Times

t'

m a stomach doc. I've seen thousands of patients, inside and out, for 25 years. I've done research, I've taught, I've been an administrator. And as the years rolled by, I've watched the health care industry begin to undo health care itself. It's complex,cumbersome and bureaucratic, and the bigger the practice or the clinic or the hospital and research facilities — like the universities I used to work at — the worse the problem. For a physician and his patient, the exam room visit is everything. Healing begins right then and there. The process of telling your story, being heard,being touched and feeling connected to your doctor is an incredibly powerful element of healing. While we're bombarded with the latest and greatest discoveries and inventions of medical science, the fact of the matter is that most people who walk into a doctor's office don't have some horrible disease. They simply don't feel well. My job is to listen and observe, to figure out who really does have

somethingbad going on and who may simply be feeling the effects of life's wear and tear. There's a huge difference between that and the health care industry, which is more about industry than health or care. Third-party payors don't really care what happens in an exam room. The visit thatyou, as apatient, have been anxiously waiting for couldjustas easily be shoes ororanges or porkbellies to these folks. It's just a commodity. It's just data. And now the industry wants it documented in a format that works for billers and statisticians but not so much for doctors: the electronic medical record. That's the note your doctor is prob-

ably busy pecking away at while you're trying to explain what ails you. In theory, an EMR should make care better and more efficient. It's falling pretty far short of that goal. For starters, a lotofthe software is clunky and the way it asks for information is unnatural. It can take more

For a physician and his patient, the exam room visit

js everything. Healing begins right then and there. The process of telling your story, being heard, being touched

and feeling connectedto your doctor js an incredibly powerful element of healing. time to complete the "necessary" documentation for a colonoscopy or other endoscopicprocedure than ittook to do the procedure itself. Doctors and nurses and lab techs suddenly have to be data-entry clerks, filling in multiple "fields" and negotiating drop-down menus. I've seen nurses get so busy typing what they do, they can't do it. I've watched when an alarm sounded, indicating that a patient was breathing inadequately — the sensor had simply fallen off the patient's finger. The nurse, back to the patient and typing furiously, shouts "Breathe!" without ever looking around. These aren't bad nurses; they're good nurses in bad situations. I had my first encounter with an electronic medical record as a patient at my internist's office. I consider him to be a model physician: smart, conversational, part friend and part counselor. I was pretty stunned, then, when I mostly saw he back of his head as he asked me questions and

typed, badly. Whatever the EMR may become, right now it's mostly a receipt for a transaction, a bill of sale. We all want to be sure we're getting what we pay for. The government and insurance companies are no different — they require lots of documentation. What gets entered into the "elements of the encounter" field on the EMR determines how much the insurance company will pay, which only makes the unholy mess of electronic medical

records worse. With doctorseverywhere working more for less,the pressure is on to perform lots of "elements" and to treat these notes like an old Chinese restaurant menu: "One from column n A, two from column B. It used to be that a physician's note contained dubious penmanship but concise, insightful information that guided the evaluation and treatment of the patient. Now notes are pages long, often containing verbiage simply cut and pasted from previous notesso asto speed the awful process or maybe to fulfill the requirements for "billing at a higher level." I may have to dig through scads of detailed "data" that justify payment but don't necessarily result in better care. This system clearly needs some work. Or a boycott. When I chose to leave the world of academic medicinefor private practice, I went back in time. I joined a small practice that prides itself on service. I write, by hand, notes that contain the information I need to help you feel better. When I finish our visit, I dictate a letter and often call or text your referring physician to let them know what's going on. I bill based on the notes, but no one's costing out the "elements of the encounter." So old school. So unacceptable. So effective. I feel as if I've stumbled into a medical oasis. Mytime is spent being a doc rather than a scribe or grocery clerk ringing up a sale. My time is spent interacting with a person who wants myhelp; it isn't diluted with aperverse treasure hunt for clinically irrelevant but EMR-encouraged information. I have no doubt that my little oasis will come under the thumb of the new era of health care. And when that happens, we'll do our best to make it work for our patients. But for now, while it lasts, I'm going to enjoy being the kind of doc that I always wanted to be. — Michael P. Jones is a gastroenterologist in Virginia. He wrote this for the Los Angeles Times.

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THURSDAY, NOV 28, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN C 7

ROSEBURG

-unitcom ex rovi esreu e or omeessveterans By Carlsa Cegavske

dishwasher and a w a shing machine. ROSEBURG — Ten-yearDow went over the lease old Dylan Wood confesses he with the Krauses in their new hopes to have his own room kitchen Monday morning. "It's a w o nderful f eeling someday. But on Monday, he saw the room he will share to be able to get these guys with two brothers and quietly in here," Dow said. "We're expressed thanks. That room so grateful to be able to offer will end si x m o nths spent them this opportunity." homeless. NeighborWorks U m p qua "It's awesome that we get to oversaw E a gl e L a n d i ng's have a home again," he said. development. Th e g r o unds Ten of Eagle Landing's 54 include a community buildunits — i n c luding D y lan's i ng, where volunteers will new home — were expect- serve a Thanksgiving dinner ed to be filled by the end of T hursday, a l aundry r o om Monday, according to Neigh- and com m unity garden. borWorks Umpqua Property Most units are one-bedroom Management Director Lynn apartments. T h e K ra u ses Dow. have one of the project's two Monday was the first day three-bedroom homes. There veterans such as Dylan's fa- are also eight two-bedroom ther, Ken Krause, could move homes. into the complex on the RoseA case manager from Unitburg Veterans Affairs Medi- ed Community Action Netcal Center campus. work will help residents set Dow said six more veter- goals to improve their lives. ans who were homeless or in Ken Krause said he hopes danger of becoming home- to gain employment with a less will move to Eagle Land- nonprofit agency that hires ing today and that the units people with disabilities and should be filled in December. ultimately to be able to buy Ken Krause, his wife Me- a piece of property forhis lissa and their five children family. lost their Coos Bay home in H is Army c a reer was a the spring. They camped in a short one. He entered the miltent through the summer and itary in 1976 and said he was spent two months at a motel h onorably d i s charged t h e before finding a permanent same year after a sergeant home atEagle Landing. physically a t t a cked hi m The Krauses said they sus- during boot camp. tained the family on his disKrause said he was disapability income, food stamps pointed because he had hoped and c o m m unit y k it c h en to follow in the footsteps of meals. his father, a World War II and They tried to make the situ- Korean War veteran, and his ation seem like an adventure brother, a Vietnam veteran. for the kids. For the parents, After that he went into conthough, it was six months of struction and then, in his own uncertainty. words, "chose a path in my With their move to Eagle life that was not pleasing to Landing,they exchanged tent my family." walls and motel beds for a He spent 16 years in prison spacious kitchen, three bed- for burglary and kidnapping rooms and a bath. Its perma- c harges stemming f ro m a nent housing and rent will be 1982 incident he described as 30 percent of their income. an attempted jewelry theft, in "It's awesome. I love it. It's which he and two other men hard to explain. It's just very held the owner hostage for exciting, and I feel a sense of four hours. relief. We don't have to be in K rause returned to c o nmotels and cars any more. struction work after being reThings are looking up," Me- leased and has since become lissa Krause said. a born-again Christian. He She said she is especially met Melissa Krause 10 years looking forward to having a ago, and they married and

"It's awesome. I love it. It's hard to explain. It's just very exciting, and I feel a sense of relief. We don't have to be in motels and cars any

Roseburg News-Review

more. Things are looking up." — Mellssa Krause

money.

popped bubble wrap as he talked about how much he was looking forward to making use of the Eagle Landing

playground.

"I'm excited. I'm really excitedabout my new home," he sa>d. So are his parents. "We're just excited about g etting settled i n t o b r i n g some normality to this family, to sit at a table and eat together, to not forget some of the blessings we have in this community, to be thankful," Ken Krause said. "We're so very thankful to the community and what they have given us."

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water and food in case of an emergency. An accident inContinued from C1 volving just one or two vehiMurphy s a i d mo t o r ists cles can cause delays for evshould look out fo r h i gher eryone on the roadway, she traffic than usual this week- sald. end and give themselves more And at a time when more time to reach their destination people are relying on smartto avoid driving in a hurry. phones and GPS devices, it's "We've had a c o uple of still a good idea to print out a (snow) dustings and some travel map so motorists won't c older t e m peratures t h a t have to tinker with devices have helped people get ready" while driving, Dodds said. for winter conditions, he said. Electronic devices aren't to"We all have to sort of men- tally reliable and may not altally switch to driving in that ways work in rural areas. "Every year, we hear horenvironment." Keeping o n t o p o f th e ror stories about people who weather m e an s p l a n n ing depended on their GPS deahead, Dodds said. People vice and got lost," Dodds said. hitting the road this weekend People on the road should can ensure a safe trip by tak- share their t r avel itinerary ing care of small things, like with a friend or family memchecking their car batteries ber and get at l east seven and tire p ressure, packing hours of sleep the night bea flashlight w it h b a tteries, fore heading out on the road, a fully c h a rged c ellphone Dodds said. — Reporter: 541-617-7820, and an icescraper. Motorists should also bring a blanket, eglucklich@bendbulletin.com

bekah, 2, crawled into a linen closet to personally inspect the storage space. Kody, 8, e n thusiastically

Ken Krause said t h i ngs started to turn around when they m oved t o R o s eburg, where other veterans reached out to help them and they were accepted as Eagle LandNicholas Johnson /The News-Review ing residents. " This c i t y has rea l l y Melissa Krause oversees her excited children as they lay claim to one of three bedrooms in their new home on the Roseburg Veteropened its arms to us,"he ans Affairs Medical Center campus on Monday. The Krause family said. moved into one of the housing project's 54 units. He said it c o uldn't have c ome at a b e tter t ime f o r the kids, who will get a real started a family. the rent on his Social Secu- C hristmas this year and a Krause said he was injured rity d i sability i n come and place to put the tree. in 2003 when construction because the home had black Monday morning, the boys equipment fell on him, break- mold that was causing some carefully laid out bedding to ing his collarbone. He said he of the children's respiratory claim the spots where their also suffersfrom Gorham's problems. beds will be. disease,a rare disorder that A fter t h at , t h e y s t r u gThe younger k id s r aced causes bone loss. He said gled to get by, moving from back and forth through the they left their Coos Bay home campground to campground, house's 1,200 square f e et because they couldn't afford sometimes panhandling for of space. The smallest, Re-

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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOV 28, 2013

BITUARIES FEATURED OBITUARY

DEATH NOTICES Virginia B. Storts, of La Pine

Antonio "Tony" Argento, of Bend April 28, 1928 - Nov. 21, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A private gathering of family and friends will be held at Mt. Bachelor at a later date. Contributions may be made to:

Partners In Care 2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, Oregon 97701 www.partnersbend.org

Betty Jane Carroll, of Bend Dec. 23, 1941 - Nov. 19, 2013 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds is honored to serve the family. Please visit the online registry at www.niswonger-reynolds. com 541-382-2471. Services: A memorial service will be held Saturday, November 30, 2013 at 1:00 P.M. at Niswonger-Reynolds Chapel, 105 NW Irving, Bend, OR 97701.

Bonnie C. Smith, of La Pine July 10, 1940 - Nov. 23, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel, La Pine www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A private family gathering will take place in the Summer of 2014. Contributions may be made to:

Heart n' Home Hospice and Palliative Care PO Box 3540 La Pine, OR 97739 www.gohospice.com (541) 536-7399

Obituary policy Death Notices are free and will be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeralhomes. They may be submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825. Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9 a.m. Monday for Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; please call for details. Phone: 541-617-7825 Email: obits©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254 Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708

May1, 1929- Nov. 24, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel, La Pine www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Memorial Service will be held on Saturday, November 30, 2013, at 1:00pm, at Baird Memorial Chapel, located at 16468 Finley Butte Rd. in La Pine.

Hathaway wasCIAchief of counterintelligence By Steve Vogel

who had been selling secrets to the Soviets. Gardner Hathaway, a former By then, Hathaway had reCIA chief of counterintelligence tired, but he and others who whose nearly four-decade cahad served in s enior posireer with the agency took him tions "caught the brunt of the to Cold War focal points rangfirestorm" that followed, said ing from Berlin to M oscow Sandra Grimes, a former CIA and placed him at the center of officer who was part of the many espionage episodes, died team that caught Ames. Nov. 20 at the Vitas hospice in Yet it had been Hathaway's Contributions may be made Vienna, Va. He was 88. early suspicion that the agency to: The cause was complicahad been penetrated and his Partners In Care Hospice tions from cancer, said his determination to find the mole 2075 NE Wyatt Court wife, Karin Hathaway. that made him "one of the real Bend, OR 97701 Taciturn but courtly, "Gus" heroes"ofthe episode, Grimes (541) 382-5882 www.partnersbend.org Hathaway was an undercover Hathaway familyphoto via The Washington Post added. officer known for his mastery Gardner Hathaway, right, stands inside the CIA station at what At Hathaway's retirement Lavelle lone Steiger, of of espionagetradecraft and his was thenthe U.S. embassy in Moscow in1977.Hathaway, the CIA's ceremony in 1990, CIA DirecBend aggressive efforts to best the chief of counterintelligence whose four-decade career with the tor William Webster called him Aug. 29, 1932 - Nov. 23, 2013 "a consummate operations ofSoviet KGB. agency took him to Cold War focal points ranging from Berlin to Arrangements: "Gus was a risk-taker," said Moscow and placed him at the center of many espionage epificer." He was presented with Niswonger-Reynolds is Jack Downing, a former CIA sodes, died Nov. 20 at age 88. the Distinguished Intelligence honored to serve the deputy director of operations Medal, which noted in part family. Please visit the his "willingness to challenge who served with Hathaway. online registry at "We needed good intelligence, that could flush out American Aleksey Kulak, a d ecorated the c o nventional w i s dom, www.niswonger-reynolds. and we needed to be aggres- agents and sabotage hopes for KGB officer who had fed valu- inspiring leadership ... penecom 541-382-2471. sive to get it. He was canny and improving bilateral relations able information to the FBI for trating intellect and profound Services: smart about how to do it." between the United States and years, Hathaway was deter- compassion." Memorial Service 2:00 PM Saturday, November Hathaway convinced skit- the Soviet Union. mined to warn the mole. Hathaway's first marriage, 30, 2013 at Silverton tishsuperiors at agency headH athaway, who w a s a p To avert KGB surveillance, to Marjorie Charlton, ended in Friends Church, 229 quarters in Langley to approve proached by Tolkachev on a Hathaway donned a female divorce. Survivors include his Eureka Ave., Silverton, an operation in 1978 involving Moscow street, argued it was disguise kept in the station and wife of 42 years, Karin KadeOregon. a Russian engineer named worth the risk. headed into the Moscow night reit Hathaway of Falls Church, Contributions may be made Adolf Tolkachev. The episode He won approval, and the to telephone Kulak. The KGB three sons from his first marto: provided the CIA with a huge result was "one of the most officer declined Hathaway's riage, Gardner Hathaway of Silverton Christian School, 229 Eureka Ave., amount of s ensitive intelli- p roductive o p erations w e offer of being spirited from the Asheville, N.C., and W. CharlSilverton, Oregon. gence on the Soviet military for ever had," said Downing. The country and was left unmolest- ton Hathaway and Taylor Haa nearly a decade. stream of information contin- ed by the Soviets. thaway, both of Charlottesville; Mildred Irene One celebrated incident in ued until 1985, when rogue In 1985, after a stint as chief a stepdaughter he adopted, Holcomb, ofRedmond Hathaway's career took place officer Edward Lee Howard of the CIA station in Bonn, Ger- Sandra B. Hathaway of New Nov. 18, 1935 - Nov. 22, 2013 soon after he arrived in Mos- informed the Soviets about the many, Hathaway was appoint- York City; a brother; and six Services: cow as the CIA station chief in breach. Tolkachev was arrest- ed chief of counterintelligence. grandchildren. Services are pending. 1977. When a fire broke out on ed and executed the following He became alarmed aftera the U.S. embassy's eighth floor, year. number of Soviet agents workHathaway barred arriving fireHathaway was determined ing for the Americans were DEATHS lES SCHNAB fighters from entering the CIA to protect such agents, believ- taken into custody or disapstation — located the floor be- ing none should ever be caught peared during the last eight ELSEWHERE low the blaze. because of mistakes by Amer- months of 1985. He suspectHe suspected some of the ican handlers. "Gus never had ed a mole had penetrated the Deaths of note from around firemen were KGB agents, and an operation rolled up 'comagency. theworld: he refused to evacuate until the promised' because of bad traIn 1986, Hathaway assemNilton Santos, 88: Two-time fire was contained. decraft," said Barry Royden, bled a team of t r usted colWorld Cup winner Nilton SanHathaway was awarded the a former senior counterintellileagues to investigate and look tos was regarded as one of the prestigious Intelligence Star for gence officer. for common threads. The hunt most talented left-backs in the his actions, with a citation notWhen the agency feared a would culminate in 1994 with •) g• history of soccer. Santos won ing that he had protected sensi- published book in 1978 would the arrest of Aldrich Ames, a ' ~ I I i I the 1958 and 1962 World Cup tive areas from penetration "at c ompromise the identity of CIA counterintelligence officer with Brazil. Died Wednesday great personal risk." from a lung infection in a Rio Hathaway was born in Norde Janeiro hospitaL folk on March 13, 1925. He was Merrell Williams Jr., 72: A 2 when his father died, and he former paralegalwho leaked grew up in Danville, Va., with mountains of internal docu- his mother and stepfather. m ents of the Brown & W i l He served in the Army in liamson Tobacco Co. in 1994, Europe during World War II fueling lawsuits that resulted in and was wounded in the leg by an industry payout of billions mortar shrapneL After his disCLOS of dollars to pay smokers' med- charge, he enrolled at the UniOFF ical bills. Died Nov. 18 in Ocean versity of Virginia and joined Springs, Miss. the CIA a year after graduation Lou Brissie, 89: Baseball in 1950. player who suffered devastatHe worked i n F r ankfurt, ing leg wounds in World War II Germany, and then Berlin as a but went on to become an All- case offi cer.He later served in Star pitcher with the Philadel- South America before arriving gLACK FR IDAY phia Athletics and a symbol of in Moscow as chief of station in 6 LOCATIONS perseverancefor the disabled. 1977. Died Monday in Augusta, Ga. At the time, the CIA was retIN CENTRAL OREGON Florence Sando Manson, icent about running operations BEND -REDMOND - PRINEVILLE 95: A pioneering newscaster in the Soviet capital. Two CIA in radio and the early years of operationsin Moscow recenttelevision journalism. Manson ly had been discovered by the was a popular on-air person- KGB, and the new CIA direcality in Pittsburgh from 1941 tor, Adm. Stansfield Turner, orto 1959, when the industry was dered the station not to underdominated by men. She inter- take any operations. NORTH / SOUTH LOCATIONS viewed well-known public figTolkachev, a military elecures such as Eleanor Roosevelt tronics expert, had approached and Louis Armstrong. Died the Americans several times, Monday from complications leaving notes trying to estabrelated to dementia at her home lish contact. Senior CIA ofin New York. ficials were wary, fearing it — From wire reports was a KGB-run provocation The Washington Post

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THURSDAY, NOV 28, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN C 9

WEST NEWS

Ha e n

OREGON NEWS

Affidavit: Bombsuspect confesses toscheme

i n i n anun i e

By John M. Glionna Los Angeles Times

SWEETWATER STATION,

By Steven Dubois

Wyo. — In the fading after-

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noon light, the barnyard is turningraucous: the chickens are clucking, peacocks are

PORTLAND — Authorities have obtained recordings showing a M edford bomb suspect hoped that something, like an earthquake, would get him out of a sentencing hearing on

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his gums as though chawing on a plug of tobacco. Polly Hinds and Lynda German stand beaming amid the chaos, their old blue tractor in the background, framed by an endless expanse of prairie sky. For the two literary outliers, it is the end of another precious day on their unlikely experiment in the middle of Wyoming's nowhere. T heir hands f i lthy f r o m chores, the two veteran booksellerscarry armloads ofhardbound volumes, careful not to dirty the historical tomes and two Zane Grey works of fiction, "The Last Ranger" and "Last of the Great Scouts." The words scrawled in red on a storage shed explain the contrast: "BOOKS FOR SALE."

Doing what they want Thirteen years ago, the pair fled Denver following a bizarre altercation with police, looking for a quieterlife. They found it here on a deserted ranch 40 miles from the nearest store, where theonly violence comes from two marauding moose that sometimes break their windows in search of food. Since then, t hey've perfected the art of doing what they want, where they want to do it — running a thriving scholarly oasis with a touch of oddball rural charm. Their eccentric Mad Dog and the Pilgrim bookstore offers 70,000 used and antiquarian textsmore books than the average Barnes and Noble — from a lonelywind-swept crossroads with a p o pulation between three and five, depending on the season. On Highway 287, a weathered sign a d vertises "Old Books. Fresh Eggs. For Sale." At age 66, German is the Mad Dog, aself-professed curmudgeon. Hinds, 58, who dates her ancestry back to the Mayflower and has a penchant for pistols, is the Pilgrim. Inside their two-story, clim ate-controlled book b a r n , volumes costing between $10 and $4,000 draw orders from the U.S. and Europe, including, they say, Buckingham Palace. A fourth of their $1,500 monthly profit comes from online sales. Buyers wander a store crammed with farm shears, pith helmets, fertility statues and a stuffed Syrian lion, taxidermied in 1900. The couple are also trying to find room for an 1850s child's coffin.

case called McVay from behind bars in the days before the bombing, and McVay talked of "maybe a miracle"and said it "could probably get rid

The Associated Press

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of all kinds of paper." After the arrest, the affidavit says, McVay admitted the scheme.

a burglary charge. The day before the hear-

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tank device exploded at the countyprosecutor'soffice in Medford. It did little

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Mel Melcon/Los Angeles Times

Polly (Pilgrim) Hinds, 58, left, and Lynda (Mad Dog) German, 66, owners of Mad Dog and The Pilgrim Booksellers in Sweetwater Station, Wyo., inside their bookstore, which houses 70,000 antiquarian and out-of-print books. They moved from Denver to Sweetwater Station, one of the most unique locations for a bookstore in the nation. Plains life remains harsh, the work never-ending. The worst times are when the winter w i nds blow, or when they dig a hole in the yard to bury a beloved sheep. "On those nights, I go to bed and immediately fall asleep," Hinds says. eYou feel like a pioneer, so triumphant that you survived another day."

Abandoning the big city They arrived in Wyoming following a particularly bad night in Colorado. In 1997, they ran three bookstores in the Denver area and at night operated a cleaning service called W omen in N ee d o f G o o d Skills, or WINGS. They were emptying trash in a back alley at 2 a.m. when a figure bolted past and threw a gun into the bed of their pickup. Pursuing police mistook the janitorial truck for the man's getaway car. The women w ere h andcuffed face-down on the pavement. An officer gestured at German: "She's got a gun!" "No!" Hinds shouted. "It's her feather duster!" The police eventually sorted things out, but the bruises were slow to heal. "Have you ever been handcuffed?" Hinds asks. "It hurts." They abandoned the city and, after driving 3,000 miles of high-plains back roads, they found their dream in Sweetwater Station. "We wanted the kind of place you remember as a kid," says German, an Iowa native, "where people have time to read and neighbors get together to play cards. That's

vor once they settled in, they went to a bar to "hear the spurs

jingle," Hinds says. Ranchers in thearea were curious about them as well. One stopped by to ask about their barn project. "What are you putting in there?" "Books." "What a waste. Barns are for cows." Not everyone gets the pair. "People scratch their heads about what they're doing out here. This is no country for old men or old people," said rancher Rob Crofts. "I'm surprised

they've made it work." Partners for 35 years, the pair are content to sell their books and be themselves. One day their store will be packed, then there'll be nobody for three weeks. They don't advertise, knowing real book lovers will find them. "I wake up and think, 'Is

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my life really just a dream'?' I'm so afraid it's not real. And then I realize it is, it is, it is," Hinds says. "We both love who we've become. I'm a bookselling shepherdess, and I'm just amazed."

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A week later, authorities announced the arrest of 46-year-old Alan Leroy McVay on federal arson and other charges. He's being held with bail set at $5 million. An FBI affidavit says an accomplice in the burglary

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They bought an o ld, deserted homestead and quickly discovered that moving a life's collection of books isn't The menagerie easy: It took 1,200 Office Depot Their menagerie includes boxes and a dozen 750-mile 62 chickens, 41 sheep, three round trips in a 20-foot Penpeacocks and six guinea fowl. ske truck to move the books, There's the donkey named Ru- ranging from military history cio, after Sancho Panza's furry to children's titles and Western sidekick, and the feisty llama Americana. Jose Habanero, who t a kes To soak in local cowboy flahis sheep-guardian's duties seriously. Fugitive sheep often wander the bookstore, particularly the oldewe Mona Moon. The littlest lambs are often dressed indiapers, prompting baffled book browsers to ask: "Are they, um, like, allowed in here?" That's when Hinds says: "Allowed in here? Heck, they own the place!" If she gets any guff, German might add:"You can leave.The sheep stay." The only animals not at the farm arepigs,bu tone getsthe sense that could change. "I love pigs," German says. Customers calling the store are often greeted by a recorded message with the barnyard joke of the day: "Talk after the beep, or baaaa, as it were. So what did the ram say to the ewe? Wool ewe marry me?" T heir t r ansition t o a n i mal caretakers came when a rancher's wife dropped off a box with two infant lambs whose mother had no milk to keep them alive. "They're real?" Hinds asked. "Yes," the wife replied, hay in hand. "Here's what they eat." Since then, they've adopted all kinds of animals, referred by ranchers and veterinarians. L ocal r a nchers a t fi r s t thought two women by themselves would be needy, but they've endured, even though

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CONDITIONS

FRONTS Cold

*Melted liquid equivalent

ULTRAVIOLET INDEX

SKI REPORT

Yesterday Thursday Friday Yesterday Thursday Friday Yesterday Thursday Friday Yesterday Thursday Friday 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......49/25/0.00... 57/32/s.. 60/43/s GrandRapids....32/20/0.00..30/21Isn . 34/23/pc RapidCity.......59/I5/0 00..39/23/pc. 49/27/pc Savannah.......71/56/I.29...51/31/s. 59/42/pc Akron..........32/23/0 09 .. 29/I 8/sn. 32/I9/pc GreenBay.......29/I 3/0.00..27/16/ss . 31/23/pc Reno...........54/28/0.00...53/30/c.. 54/25/c Seattle.........58/44/trace...51/39/c. 50/44/sh Albany..........39/33/0 90 .. 29/I 5/pc.. 2514/I Greensboro......45/29/0.58... 41/25/s ..48/26/s R/chmond.......45/37/1.28... 39/25/s .. 45/27/s Sioux Falls........30/4/0.00... 29/11/s.35/20/pc NY....35/27/024 .. 27/19/sn. 28/I5/ss Spokane........36/22/000..41/26/pc. 42/30/sn Albuquerque.....45/25/0.00 ..50/31/pc. 53/32/pc Harrisburg.......40/33/024..33/21/pc .. 33/19/s Rochester Anchorage... 30/27/008...14/4/sn.... 8/4/s Hartford,CT.... 64/36/2 04 32/21/s .. 33/17/s Sacramento......63/41/0.00...63/44/c .. 64/44/s Springfield, MO ..33/15/0.00...46/24/s.. 49/28/s Atlanta.........48/33/0.96... 46/34/s .. 55/32/s Helena..........44/24/0.00...46/27/c .. 47/29/c St.Louis.........30/18/000..45/24/pc.. 43/31/s Tamps..........72/52/003...65/52/s. 75/59/pc AtlanticCity.....62/36/1.14...37/2is.. 38/31/s Honolulu........84/71/000..80/73/pc. 80/74/sh Salt Lake City....52/29/000... 50/33/c .. 50/33/c Tucson..........63/54/000 ..71/44/pc. 71/45/pc Austin..........52/33/0.00... 57/35/s. 61/45/pc Houston........50/35/0.00... 58/40/s ..62/44/s SsnAntonio.....55/35/000... 56/36/s.63/48/pc Tulsa...........39/18/000... 51/25/s.. 53/36/s Baltimore .......43/35/0.67... 34/23/s .. 37/23/s Hustsville.......37/28/0.00...43/25/s .. 51/28/s Ssn Diego.......72/57/0.00...66/55/c .. 69/56/c Washingtos,DC..43/37/0.75...35/25/s .. 37/26/s Billings .........52/34/0.00...45/31/c. 52/30/pc Indianapolis.....29/I8/0.00 ..34/22/pc .. 39/26/s SanFranosco....62/48/0.00... 63/50/c. 63/49/pc Wichits.........38/14/0.01... 46/25/s.. 49/32/s 8/rm/sgham.....40/31/0.00...46/27/5 .. 54/32/s Jackson,MS.....41/32/0.00...49/25/s .. 57/29/s SanJose........65/43/0.00... 65/46/c .. 66/45/c Yakima.........42/19/0.00 ..43/24/pc. 42/32/pc Bismarck........38/10/0.00 ..24/13/pc. 34/22/pc Jacksonvile......70/40/0.07..55/40/pc. 64/52/pc SantaFe........38/19/000... 44/26/s. 47/27/pc Yuma...........72/56/000 ..70/53/pc. 71/53/pc Boise...........44/27/000... 48/32/c. 47/34/pc Juneau..........39/33/0.25 ..40/35/sh..36/29/rs INTERNATIONAL Boston..........63/45/1.79... 34/23/s .. 33/21/s Kansas City......32/13/0.01...42/23/s .. 44730/s BridgepoitCT....63/39/l 43... 35/24/5.. 36/23/s Lansing.........29/1 6/0.01 ..29/20/ss . 32/22/pc Amsterdam......48/48/001 ..49/41/pc. 46/43/sh Mecca..........81/79/000...90/69/c. 88/69/pc Buffalo.........32/23/0.16 ..28/21/sn. 30/18/sn LasVegas.......63/47/0.00...59/46lc.. 61/45/c Athens..........62/44/0.53 ..59/48/pc. 56/46/pc Mexico City......68/48/000..67/46/pc.. 68/38/s Burlington, V1....37/33/1.07...23/11/c .. 22/7/pc Lexington.......32/23/0.01..35/21/pc.. 44/26/s Auckland........72/61/000... 72/61/t .. 71/61/c Montreal........34/32/096 ..19/I2/pc .. 19/I0/s Caribou,ME.....53/27/1.43...29/8/pc .. 19/9/pc Lincoln...........35/6/0.00... 38/18/s.42/25/pc Baghdad........66/50/000... 80/63/c. 77/62/pc Moscow........27/25/007 ..37/32/sn ..36/28/si Charleston, SC...70/43/0.09... 50/32/s. 57/40/pc Little Rock...... 42/26/0.00...47/27/s .. 52/30/s Bangkok........84/81/0.00... 88/70/t. 82/69/pc Nairobi.........61/59/0.10... 76/55/t...71/55/t Charlotte........47/32/0.36...44/25/s .. 52/28/s LosAngeles......75/56/000... 68/53/c .. 71/54/c Beijing..........32/25/0.00...39/25/s .. 52/31/s Nassau.........81/72/0.19...71/69/c...76/72/t Chattanooga.....39/29/0.00...43/25/s .. 52/29/s Louisville........36/23/0 00 ..37/24/pc .. 45/29/s Beirut..........72/70/0.00..70/56/pc.. 66/55/6 New Delhi.......61/57/0.00...82/60/s .. 81/56/s Cheyenne.......57/22/0.00 ..47/25/pc. 50/29/pc Madison,WI......26/9/000..28/12/pc.31/22/pc Berlis...........39/39/000..46/37/sh. 45/34/sh Osska..........48/46/011..49/37/sh.49/36/sh Chicag0.........29/I 3/0 00 .. 32/20/pc. 35/27/pc Memphis........34/25/0.00...46/29/s .. 54/33/s Bogota .......68/48/0.00 .. 66/48/I 68/51/t Oslo............45/4570.00 ..37/28/pc. 31/27/sn Cinonnati.......34/26/0.01 ..34/20/pc .. 40/23/s Miami..........79/70/1.18..74/65/pc. 79/66/pc Budapest .... 21/19/0.00 .. 33/31/rs .. 35/2Ic Ottawa.........34/23/0.66... 23/9/pc... 19/5/s Cleveland.......36/27/006 ..30/21/sn.32/23/pc Milwaukee......28/13/0 00..30/20/ss . 33/27/pc BuenosAires.....64/57/253...81/57/s. 84/62/pc Pans............36/34/000..45/39/sh.47/36/sh Colorado Spnsgs.55/22/0.00..44/24/pc. 51/26/pc Miuneapolis......25/9/0.00..26/11/pc. 32/24/pc CsboSanLucss ..82/66/000...81/64/c.. 82/64/c Rio de Janeiro....90/70/000...87/72/s...86/70/t ColumbiaM0...30/I5/0.00...46/21/s , .. 43/27/s Nashville........35/25/0.00...43/23/s .. 49/27/s Cairo...........68/68/0.00...77/57/c.. 72/53/c Rome...........36/36/0.00 ..50/41/pc.. 52/43/s Columbia,SC....51/38/014...46/27/s .. 54/28/s New Orleans.....49/39/0.00... 52/35/s .. 59/42/s Calgary.........37/19/0.00..48/23/pc. 34/28/pc Santiago........77/45/0.00...79/48/s.. 79/48/s Columbus, GA....52/37/I.02...49/33/s .. 57/33/s NewYork.......62/37/2.00... 34/26/s .. 38/27/5 Csncun.........77/66/2.15..75/67/sh .. 76/72/c Sso Paulo.......82/66/0.00... 83/67/t...72/65/t Columbus, OH....32/26/0 00.. 33/18/pc .. 37/23/s Newark,NJ......63/36/1.93... 34/23/s. 40/25/pc Dublin..........46/46/000 ..47/44/sh.. 43/39/c Sspporo ........34/32/001 ..36/21/sn..36/25/sf Concord,NH.....53/32/1.89... 32/16/s.. 30/11/s Norfolk,VA......69/39/1.01...40/27/s .. 46/32/s Edinburgh.......52/48/000...42/41/c. 39/33/pc Seoul...........27/23/000 ..34/31/pc. 37/30/pc City .. 42/20/0 00 54/28/s 55/3is Genevs.........25/23/000...35/24/c.. 33/27/c Shanghai........41/34/000...44/34/s.. 50/39/s Corpus Christi 54/38/000...61/47/s 65/56/pc Oklahoma Dallas Ft Worth...47/29/0.00... 55/35/s .. 60/42/s Omaha.........32/11/000... 36/17/s. 40/25/pc Harare..........61/61/0.00... 81/56/t..82/55/s Singapore.......81/77/0.86... 88/77/t...88/76/t Dayton .........31/24/0 00 .. 33/19/pc .. 38/23/s Orlando.........74/52/0.06..68/52/pc. 75/57/pc HongKong......59/55/003 ..68/51/pc. 67/55/pc Stockholm.,,,,,.43/41/000...45/30/s .. 36/30/c Denver..........65/29/0.00 ..47/27/pc. 55/29/pc PalmSpnngs.....73/53/0.00..69/51/pc.. 72/53/c Istanbul.........52/50/0 25 ..50/44/sh .. 50/43/s Sydney..........79/63/000... 88/68/t .. 68/55/t DesMoines......2II I/0.00... 32/I4/s. 35/25/pc Peoria ..........29/13/0.00..35/I9/pc.. 36/26/s Jerusslem.......84/67/000 68/52/pc 62/48/c Taipei...........59/55/0.00 ..61/51/sh.. 59/54/s Detroit..........30/21/000 ..30/23/sn. 35/24/pc Philadelphia.....64/37/1.59... 37/26/s .. 37/27/5 Johsnnesburg....80/56/0 85 .. 66/53/I 66/57/t Tel Aviv.........72/70/0.00 .. 75/58/pc.. 70/56/c Duluth...........20/6/0 07... 24/9/sn. 26/I9/pc Phoesix.........71/55/0.00..74/53/pc. 73/54/pc Lima...........70/63/0.00 ..70/62/pc.68/61/pc Tokyo...........61/57/0.00... 58/43/s .. 53/42/s ElPaso..........50/24/0.00...59/34/s..64/41/s Pittsburgh.......33/23/001...29/I9/c. 33/I9/pc Lisbon..........45/45/0.00 ..54/39/pc. 57/42/pc Toronto.........32/23/0.13.. 28/I 6/sf. 27/I 8/pc Fairbanks.........4/-470.00.:5/-I5/ss -I5/-21/sn Portland,ME.....58/33/234... 35/16/s .. 30/14/s London.........52/43/000..46/40/sh.44/36/pc Vancouver.......48/36/000..46/39/sh.45/41/sh Fargo............25/3/0.00...20/8/pc.29/I8/pc Providence......63/43/3.09... 34/20/s .. 34/19/s Madi/d.........37/37/0.00 .. 45/27/rs .. 49/32/s Viesna..........28/28/0.00 .. 36/32/rs .. 35/30/c Flagstaff ........40/23/0.00..47/23/pc.46/21/pc Raleigh.........47/34/0.71...42/25/s .. 49/27/5 Mas/la..........82/77/0.07 ..89/75/pc. 88/75/pc Warsam........34/34/0.00 .. 45/32/rs.. 41/32/c

IR.

Vahcouvei' 46/39

Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. in Bend High/Low.............. 41/25 24 hours ending 4p.m.*. . 0.00" Record high ...... 67 in1929 Month to date . . 0.2 8 " Recordlow......... -I in1993 Average month todate... 1.20" Average high.............. 42 Year to date............ 4.58" Average low............... 25 Average yearto date..... 8.97" Barometric pressureat 4 p.m.30.02 Record 24 hours ...0.42 in 1945

JRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL

-20I glo~gO I $105( /205f (3OS/ (4OS/ So~ 605 70s / BOS( /gos(f10ogQOI

Yesterday's extremes

TEMPERATURE PRECIPITATION

Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....5.54 a.m......3.45 p.m. Venus.....10;44 a.m...... 7:18 p.m. Mars.......1:02 a.m...... I:33 p.m. Jupiter......7:18 pm.....1031 a.m. Satum......5:28 a.m...... 3:34 p.m. Uranus.....1:49 p.m...... 2:19 a.m.

WOAD CONDITIONS

46/26

Silv e r

r•

PLANET WATCH

Yesterday Thursday F r iday The higher the UV Index number, the greater Ski report from around the state, representing City Hi/Lo/Pcp H i / Lo/W Hi / Lo/W the need for eye and skin protection. Index is conditions at S p.m. yesterday: Precipitationvaluesare24-hour totals through4 p.m. for solar at noon. Snow accumulation in inches Astoria ........59/39/001 ...51/40/pc.....50/46/sh Ski area Last 24 hours Base Depth Baker City......48/15/0.00.....48/25/c.....46/27/pc Anthony Lakes ....... . . . . . . . 0.0. . .no report MEDIUM HIGH Brookings......66/40/0.00....59/41/pc.....55/43/pc Hoodoo....... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Burns..........50/I7/0.00.....49/23/c.....48/26/pc 0 2 4 6 8 10 Mt.Ashland...... . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0., no report Eugene........ 48/28/0.01 ....50/34/pc..... 52/36/sh M t. Bachelor..... . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0 .. 18 - 1 9 Klamath Falls ...50/23/0.00.....53/24/c......51/22/s Mt. Hood Meadows...... . . . .0.0...no report Lakeview....... 54/I 6/0.00....52/20/pc.....51/25/pc Mt. Hood Ski Bowl..... . . . . . . 0.0. ..no report La Pine ......... 50/21/NA....48/23/pc.....47/24/pc Snow levelandroadconditions representing condiTimberkne...... . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0. . . . . . . . 21 atSp.m.yesterday.Key:TT.= Traction Tires. Warner Canyon...... . . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Medford.......49/30/0.00.....56/33/c.....55/36/pc tions Newport.......59/45/0.00....54/44/pc.....52/46/sh Pass Conditions Willamette Pass ...... . . . . . . . 0 .0 . . .no report North Bend......63/39/NA....58/40/pc.....55/42/pc 1-5 at Siskiyou Summit....... . Carry chains or T.Tires Ontario........45/23/0.00....47/30/pc.....46/31/pc 1-84 at Cabbage Hill...... . . . . Carry chains or T.Tires Aspen, Colorado....... . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . .21-23 Pendleton......38/20/0.00....42/26/pc.....45/33/pc Hwy. 20 at Santiam Pass...... Carry chains or T.Tires Mammoth Mtn., California..... 0.0... . . .16-20 Portland .......51/30/0.00....50/38/pc......51/41/c Hwy. 26 at Government Camp.. Carry chains or T.Tires Park City, Utah ..... . . . . . . . . . 0 .0 . . . . . . . . 18 Prineville.......43/24/0.00....46/25/pc.....49/31/pc Hwy. 26 at Ochoco Divide..... Carry chains or T.Tires Squaw Valley, California....... 0.0... . . . . .1-8 Redmond....... 42/I 7/0.00....49/23/pc.....49/30/pc Hwy. 58 at Willamette Pass.... Carry chains or T.Tires SunValley, Idaho...... . . . . . . . 0.0. . .no report Roseburg.......47/33/0.00....52/37/pc.....54/41/pc Hwy.138 at Diamond Lake.... Carrychains or T.Tires Taos, New Mexico...... . . . . . . 0 .0 . . .no report Salem.........51/30/0.00....50/34/pc.....51/40/sh Hwy. 242 at McKenzie Pass........ Closed for season Vail, Colorado...... . . . . . . . . . 0.0... . . . . . 22 Sisters.........42/22/0.00....47/25/pc.....48/28/pc For up-to-minute conditions turn to: For links to the latest ski conditions visit: The Dalles......43/25/0.00....43/30/pc.....44/36/pc www.tnpcheck.com or call 511 www.skicentral.com/oregon.html Legend:Wi weather,Pcp-precipitation,s-sun,pc-partisl clouds,c-clouds, h-haze, sh-showers,r-rain, t-thunderstorms,sf-snowflurnes, sn snow, i-ice, rs-rsm-snowmix,w-wind, f-fog,dr-dnzzle,tr-trace

Nyssa 49/29

49/23

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47/30

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IN THE BACI4: ADVICE 4 ENTERTAINMENT W Medicine, D2-3 Fitness, D4-5 Nutrition, D6 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2013

O www.bendbulletin.com/health

Getting ' ew' nee i amen no exa

into yoga • But a Bendsurgeonsaysa recent study mayhelp in ACLrepair can be a

challenge for men

By Tara Bannow The Bulletin

When a JournalofAnat-

you see this'?'" said Bollom, a knee and shoulder specialist with

omy article began making

MEDICINE The Center:

headlines recently that exclaimed researchers had unearthed a new ligament in the human knee, Tim Bollom's phone started ringing. "When I first pulled it up, I had like 10 people call me that morning, 'Hey, Tim, did

Orthopedic & Neurosurgical Care & Research in Bend. His reply: "Have you read our papers that we did 10

years ago'?" Though the countless claims that the study "dis-

covered" a new ligament are dramatically overblown, Bollom said the research out of Belgium does hold promise for the future of repairing torn anterior cruciate ligaments, or ACLs, a common injury among basketball, football and soccer players as well as skiers — sports that require jumping, landing or twisting.

The researchers, led by Steven Claes at University Hospitals Leuven, dissected 41 human cadaver knees, 97 percentofwhich had a clearly-defined structure involved in the pivot shift of the knee. Though studies as far back as the late-1800s have unofficially referenced the structure using complicated descriptions, these researchers went a step further: They named it. It's now the anterolateral

new ligament, or the ALL. The research also provides more information about the anatomy and function of the ligament than was previously understood, including that damage to the ALL could play a role in ACL reconstructions. But a new ligament? Not so much. "It's been around forever," Bollom said. See Ligament/D2

By Meiissa Dribben The Philadelphia Inquirer

PHILADELPHIA — On a perfect November Saturday afternoon, when they could have been pumping iron at the gym or hanging out with friends over a

FITNESS couple of pale ales, half a dozen men slipped through the back entrance to a Spartan yoga studio on the main drag of Westmont, N.J. They were there, bravely and voluntarily, to spend two

r

i

hours doing yoga. Never mind that the ancient Indian practice linking breath, body, and spirit was developed andtaught by men. In America, yoga is a woman's domain. A 2012 study by the Yoga Journal found that 82 percent of yoga practitioners were women. Walk into most classes and if any men can be found, they are in the back corners, where they can fumble through poses without attracting much notice. Anatomically, women are no better equipped than men to do yoga, said Larry Chou, a physiatrist at Premier Orthopaedic 8 Sports Medicine in Havertown, Pa. "The resistance has been psychosocial. There was this perception that yoga was less manly," said Chou, who has consulted with professional sports teams and was a faculty member at the University of Pennsylvania's Sports Medicine Center. Furthermore, because men in America tend not to stretch as much as women do, they are not as flexible, Chou said. "People like to do what they are good at," he said. "And they're not so fond of doing what they're not good at." SeeYoga /D4

.s

-?

((((

((t ' tttl <t(

I.' r

(

-

lllustration by Wesley Bedrosian i New York Times News Service

)I I" ' Ihl .

"

.

. w/

p

i

• Hoping to control costs, many employers areshifting benefits to marketplaces that offer moreflexibility By Ann Carrns New York Times News Service April Saul i PhiladelphiaInquirer

Brad Oister takes part in a yoga class for men at Anjali Yoga inWestmont, N.J.Some studios are offering classes exclusively for men because the female-dominated culture of yoga can be intimidating or off-putting to men.

The troubled rollout of the federal health insurance marketplace this fall has given the word "health exchange" a bad name. Nonetheless, some companies are choosing to offer their employees health benefits via private exchanges — online insurance marketplacesthat are separate from the federal system. This month, for instance, about

180,000 workers eligible for health benefits at Walgreens are choosing theirplansonaprivateexchangefor the first time. And workers at

p l a n s for the coming year. Other t r e nds this year include plans with h i g her deductibles, sometimes accompanied by a t a x-advan-

employers seek to control costs amid a roiling health care system. New rulesunder the Affordable Care Act require companies with 50 or more Sears Holdings just completed MO N EY ta g ed health-savings account; workers to offer affordable health their second enrollment peria shift away from employer coverage or pay a penalty. This "covod using an exchange. coverage of spouses who could get erage mandate" was delayed a year, Private exchanges are just one of i n s urance through their own jobs; however, so workers — especially the changes employees are seeing a n d p r ogramsthatofferfinancialin- those at small companies, close to this year during open enrollment c e n tivesforemployeestotakesteps the law's threshold — may see more season, when employees with work- t o i mprove their health. changes next year. place health coverage choose their Th e c h a nges are happening as See Exchanges/D8

Correction A story headlined "Coverageof diabetes test strips is debated,"

which published Thursday, Nov. 21, on PageD1,contained inaccu-

Lakers get a diet makeover geared toward performance

rate information about the number of test strips proposed to be paid

By Janis Carr

for my Medicaid. A proposal being considered by Oregon's Health Ev-

SANTA ANA, Calif. — The smell hit first, causing many on the Los Angeles Lakers squad to turn up their offended noses. There, on the table in the locker room, were slices of organic Genoa salami piled

idence Review Commission would bring the recommended number

of test strips for someType 2 diabetics from about eight per week

to about one perweek. The Bulletin regrets the error.

The Orange County Register

next to a stack of pepperoni and deli meats, including

grass-fed

NUTRITION turkey and beef. The sight of the platter was as un-

appealing as it was appalling. But it wasn't just meat; there was more. Raw sharp cheddar cheese. Raw al-

monds and cashews. Naturally fermented pickles. That's right, pickles. And the briny green spears were the last thing these elite athletes considered eating before tipoff. Where were the more traditional fruit and peanut butter and jelly'? "I didn't quite do a dou-

ble-take, but it was a little bit interesting," said veteran Lakers guard Steve Blake of his first glimpse of the new pregame fare. Blake said that w hile he used to preferhispepperoni on a pizza, the change was "definitely for the best." The healthy platter of foods was the first step in the Lak-

ers'redo ofthe players' eating habits. Inspired by Dr. Cate Shanahan, a Napa-based, board-certified physician specializing in health, the Lakers have transformed their plates and palates, moving to a healthier, more scientific cuisine. SeeLakers /D6


D2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOV 28, 2013

HEALTH EVENTS NORDICSKISTRENGTH CLASS AT REPLAB:A conditioning class to build strength; Tuesdays Dec. 3-17 and Jan. 7-Feb. 4; $98 for eight classes; registration requested; 6 p.m.; Rebound Physical Therapy and Biomechanics Lab,1160 S.W . SimpsonAve.,Suite200,Bend;541419-8208 or www.reporegon.com.

ALPINE SKISTRENGTHCLASSAT REP LAB:Learn how to minimize your injury risk for skiing; Tuesdays Dec. 3-17 and Jan. 7-Feb. 4; $98 for eight classes; registration requested; 7 p.m .;Rebound Physical Therapy and Biomechanics Lab, 1160 S.W. Simpson Ave., Suite 200, Bend; 541-419-8208 or www. reporegon.com.

How to submit Health Events:Email event information to healthevents@ bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bend

bulletin.com. Allow at least10 days before thedesired date of publication. Ongoing class listings must be updated monthly and will appear atbendbulletin.com/healthclasses. Contact: 541-383-0358. People:Email information about local people involved in health issues to healthevents©bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358.

MEDICINE STUDY

Women'smercurylevels drop,suggestingsafer fishchoices LOS ANGELES — Mercury levels in

women's blood aredropping,and notbecause they're eating less fish, a newstudy says. Instead, womenappear to beeating smarter and choosing less contaminated varieties of seafood, according to a study

food web, building up in the tissue of large, old, predatory fish.

Mercury can harm the brain andner-

ments of blood mercury levels taken as part of nationwide health surveys by the

vous system, particularly of children and fetuses, who are more susceptible to the

Centers for DiseaseControl and Prevention.Thedropwasmostpronounced be-

poison becausethey arestill developing. The federal government says people

tween 2001 and 2004, the study says. The

should not eat shark, swordfish, king

changes weresmall after that, with a slight

mackerel or tilefish because of high levels

dropped by about one-third between 2001

increase in the last few years. Exposure to mercury in the United

of mercury. Instead, they should limit their intake to about12 ounces a week of

and 2010 comparedwith1999 and 2000.

States comesalmost exclusively from

"There was very little change in the

eating contaminated fish and shellfish, though most of it contains only trace

shrimp, salmon, pollock andcatfish, which are low in mercury. The government also suggests opting for canned light tuna, which has less mercury than albacore.

released this week by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

The analysis showed that blood mercury levels in women of childbearing age

amounts. Whenthe metal is released

Betsy Southerland, director of the Office of Science and Technology in the EPA's water

• High Grade Organics, a medical cannabis resource center, recently opened at 804 N.E. Third St. in Bend. Thedispensary offers qualifying Oregon Medical Marijuana Programpatients local and organic products created by hand. HGOis fully integrated organic, from the seeds in the soil to the wood in the shop, and its priority is building relationships with patients. For more information, visit www .thehighgradeorganics.com.

methylmercury andaccumulates in the

have shifted to eating types of fish with

lower mercury concentrations." Agency scientists analyzed measure-

amount of fish consumedand mercury levels in fish tissue did not decline," said

DISPATCH

division. "This suggests that womenmay

into the environment — often from coal combustion or mining — it converts into

— Tony Barboza, LosAngeles Times

Ligament

By Mike Stobbe

The formalin used to preserve the cadavers in Claes' reContinued from 01 search tends to make the knee Bollom himself has writa lot stiffer, LaPrade said. In ten two articles focused on LaPrade's dissections, which didn't i nvolve f ormalin-prethis very ligament, although iqLFE LFE he and his co-author, reserved cadavers, he said the nowned orthopedic surgeon ALL looked like a tiny, flimsy Robert LaPrade, called it, structure. PT "We have to define if it 's as othersbefore them had, PT L the "mid-third lateral capimportant in a real-live living ~pp sular ligament" — not experson," LaPrade said, "or if it actly opening the floodgates really only looks important in for making it a household a formalin cadaver specimen." name. For their first article, Christine Pollard, director published in 2000, the team of the Functional Orthopedic took an MRI image of the Research Center of Excellence ligament. Then in 2004, they (FORCE) Laboratory on t he studied its strength. ©Steven Claes Oregon State University-CasLaPrade, currently of The The anterolateral ligament, labeled here as "ALL," was formerly cades Campus in Bend, said Steadman Clinic in V a il, known to many as the "mid-third lateral capsular ligament." the research, while potentially Colo., called Bollom when important for surgeons, probathe ALL headlines started bly won't change anything that cropping up. she and her team do. That's be"He was just laughing," happy with the outcome, which own research is r eferenced cause they're focused on rehaBollom said. "We've been demonstrates room for im- a handful of times in Claes' bilitating athletes post-ACL rethere. We've all been there provement in the field, Bollom study, said it's important to be construction — studying their and done this many an af- said. reminded of the ALL's poten- low-extremity b i o mechanics "Probably 20 y ears f r om ternoon in the laboratory." tial, which he said might even- and strengthening their musT he c o n fusion o v e r now, what we're doing today tually provide rotational sta- culature from the hip down. "As far as our end of it, we're whether the ALL is a "new" will be absolutely archaic," he bility for people who have had ligament could stem from said. ACL reconstruction but still going to work with what the the fact that today's knee U nderstanding t h e to t a l experience pivoting in the joint. surgeon has done to make that surgeons, given the new anatomy of the knee helps docBut more research is need- knee the strongest and the technology at their disposal, tors further their understand- ed, including biomechanical most stable that we can," she don't have to dig as far into ing of how to repair it after inju- studies using a robot and using sald. the knee as they did in the ries, Bollom said. people rather than cadavers, he — Reporter: 541-383-0304, past, LaPrade said. Likewise, LaPrade, whose sard. tbannow@bendbulletin.com A generation ago, doctors learned to repair torn ACLs

The Associated Press

by opening up the knee

'BilF I

The Associated Press file photo

Nurses Fatima Guillen, left, and Fran Wendt give Kimberly Magdeleno, 4,a w hooping cough booster shot, as she is held by her mother, Claudia Solorio, at a health clinic in Tacoma, Wash.

Whooping coughshot prevents illnessbut may not stop spread ver. The newer vaccine is part of routine childhood vaccinaATLANTA — A g o v ern- tions as well as adult booster ment study offers a new theory shots. on why the whooping cough But cases have reboundvaccine doesn'tseem to be ed. Last year was the nation's working as well as expected. worst y ea r f o r wh o o ping The research suggests that cough in six decades — U.S. while the vaccine may keep health officials received repeople from getting sick, it portsof more than 48,000 casd oesn't prevent them f r o m es, including 18 deaths. spreading whooping coughSome studies have concludalso known as pertussis — to ed the newer vaccine doesn't others. last as long as the old one. " It could explain th e i n But the study by Merkel and crease in pertussis that we're his colleagues offers a new seeing i n t h e U . S .," s a id wrinkle. one of the researchers, Tod T heir research used b aMerkel of the Food and Drug boons, considered the most Administration. human-like model for studying Whooping cough is a high- whooping cough. Baboons at ly contagious disease that can ages 2, 4 and 6 months were strike people of any age but is vaccinated and then exposed most dangerous to children. to whooping cough at 7 months It was once common, caus- — when vaccine protection ing hundreds of thousands of would be new and strong. illnesses annually and thouThe baboons didn't get sick, sands of deaths. But after a but they had high levels of bacvaccine was introduced in the teria in their respiratory sys1940s, cases dropped to fewer tem for five weeks — which than 5,000 a year. suggeststhey were contagious The vaccine was replaced for about that long. Some bain the 1990s because of side boons given the old vaccine effects that included pain and had low levels after only two swelling from the shot and fe- weeks.

completely and sliding the knee cap over, he said. "It was heavy duty, but those guys knew the structures more because they used to open it up before every surgery," he said. Nowadays, knee surger-

ies are performed using arthroscopy, a p r ocedure that involves making only a small incision and inserting a narrow tube with a camera on it. Getting to the tiny ALL requires a large incision on the outside of the knee and a good deal of dissection. People like LaPrade, who routinely perform complex surgeries, can find it. Younger doctors, however, have no clue, he said. "There's a learning curve involved with being able to do this type of surgery, too, which I think will be a problem" LaPrade said. Even today, though, some recent research has shown that between 20 and 30 percent of athletes who have ACL reconstructions aren't

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THURSDAY, NOV 28, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN D 3

M EDI C I N E

ur eon es- rives oo e assin e • Wearable device could be avaluable tool when adoctor's hands areoccupied

Google Glass in themedical world Surgeons areamong those experimenting with Google Glass, an lnternet-connected device worn like eyeglasses. Some see its potential in the operating room — for example, to instantly call up a

patient's chart or transmit live video of an unforeseen circumstance to get help from aworld expert.

Battery

The Seattle Times

S EATTLE — W h e n D r . Heather Evans, a trauma surgeon at Seattle's Harborview Medical Center, stepped into the operating r oo m w e a ring an eyeglasses-like, Internet-connected device known

Early model used a bone-conduction speaker to send audio signals through the skull directlyto the inner ear; newer version has an earbud

Microphone

Camera

Verbal commands Photo/video, activate camera, 12 gigabytes phone" and Web ofmemory searches

c

realized its potential and its pitfalls. With Glass, if she was in the middle of surgery and encountered an unexpected or unfamiliar condition — a rare tumor, say — she could use real-time video to show it to the world's expert and receive

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rl

Ken Lambert/ Seattle Times

Dr. Heather Evans, of Seattle, tested Google Glass during surgery. She found benefits, such as quick access to the patient's medical records, and downsides: Interacting with the device took her concentration away from the patient.

Cornea

smartphone. So far, the medical professional societies haven't issued guidelines for using the device, which is still experimental. Companies are working on add-ons and apps to make Glass useful i n t h e m e d ical world, although Google spokeswoman Anna Richardson White said her company is "trying to build Glass so that

Surgeon's view

Visual overlay

Surgeon's view can betransmitted to a mobile platform such as atablet in another room, building or state where a specialist or another surgeon cangive real-time advice while the procedure is underway

Google Glass has amini projector that projects data (text, photo or video) received through the phoneonto a prism that directs the information onto the retina of the eye; data areseen asa transparent, floating overlay

l

Len s

Mini projector Data

Real-time information

I

Eye

M icrophone Camera

What the doctor sees

Having the camera positioned just abovethe eye gives the most accurate view of what the doctor or surgeon is seeing

help.

Optic nerve Retina

Computer

Projector Prism

as Google Glass, she quickly

With Glass' eye-level screen, which p rojects i n formation right onto the wearer's retina, she could instantly see relevant parts of a patient's chart or get lab results. And she would never have to put down her surgical instruments or turn away from her patient on the operating table. As a t e acher, she could have herstudents wear Glass and see through their eyes just where they were having trouble as they learned a difficult procedure — putting in a large, intravenous catheter known as a "central line," for example. Evans is one of about 8,000 people around th e c ountry selectedby Google as "explorers," testing and experimenting with uses for Glass, expected to be available for sale next year. Like her fellow surgeon-explorers, Evans won the chance to spend $1,500 on the device by penning a winning tweet early this year, finishing the

Audio

45 minutes recording time;an external battery pack can be used

By Carol M. Ostrom

~ Data Overlay

*Glass uses Bluetooth to make phone calls and grab texts

it satisfies the needs of general consumers,rather than focusing in on specific industry use cases." But there's work to be done, particularly on privacy issues. "I'm sure if I w ere sitting in the same room as the IT people here, they would have a heart attack about this device," Evans said recently at Harborview.

Source: google.com, CNN, BBC, geek.com, insidehighered.com, rgrosssz.wordpress.com, webwsion.med.utah.edu Graphic: Mark Nowlin, The Seattle Times

R ED m O f l o

© 2013 MCT

spaces such as restrooms or instruct the device — "OK, Glass, take a video" — in public. Despite such concerns, Evans had some specific tasks for Glass in mind when she applied to be an early explorer. To win her spot, she linked to a YouTube video showing an eventrarely caught on camera: a man's heart attack and resuscitation. A B B C c r ew, shooting a documentary on an emergency helicopterservice, had just arrived at its office when the dispatcher suddenly slumped. phrase: ¹ifihadglass ... The crew kept the cameras W ith a c o mputer i n t h e rolling as emergency workearpiece, and a tiny, eye-lev- ers gave the man CPR and el rectangle that can project shocked him with a defibrillatext, maps and other informa- tor, saving his life. "¹ifihadglass," Evans tweettion to the wearer's eye, Glass responds to voice commands ed, "I would capture more and can takepictures,stream events like this to learn how videos, make phone calls and we can take better care of do other tasks. patients." Think of it as a smartphone, Like some of h e r f e llow wearable video camera and surgeon-explorers — a small computer rolled into one, with percentage ofthe explorersthe ability to "see" — and in- Evans can't say enough, fast stantly tr ansmit — a l m o st enough, about the potential of precisely what the wearer is Glass. "If you talk honestly to any seeing. Like other surgeons, Evans surgeon, they will admit they is excited about the potential encounter things all the time of this new device. But she they've never seen before, with also has learned that Glass has varying levels of comfort," she technical issues that, for now, said. "Immediately, you could make it less than ideal in the have somebody else's eyes on operating room, as well as dif- this problem." ficult privacy concerns. An illuminating experience Some arisebecause of complex federal p r ivacy l a ws, Long before Evans took which govern the transmission Glass into the OR, she began of patient information, includ- wearing the device outside the ing photographs or videos. hospital — at dinner, on public Other privacyissues come up transportation, walking or ridjust from wearing Glass. ing her bike. If she wore Glass down the She wore itto become fahospital hallway, Evans said, miliar with it, she said, and she could be accused of violat- because she enjoyed the reacing privacy. tion from people. "I would say Glass has particularly prick- it's probably the single most led privacy advocates, even illuminating thing that's hapearning its own Urban Dictio- pened to me since I became a nary epithet — "Glasshole"surgeon, outside of learning for those who flaunt their early a specific procedure, because access, wear Glass into private it brings out t h i s w o nder-

ment," she said. Even so, it was months before she finally wore Glass into the OR — with the patient's permission, she notes, and restrictions on the video. "With any new technology, you don't bring it into a patient-care setting immediately upon seeing it for the first time," she says. "I needed to have a real comfort level with them" In the OR, where she wore the device only briefly, she found technical challenges. To turn the device on, she had to look up, taking her eyes away from the patient, and pay attention to the video recorder. "I think interacting with the device when you're concentrating on the patient is almost impossible," Evans says. The technology is in its infancy, she says, and will doubtless improve. Demonstrating it r e cently at a national meeting of the A merican College o f S u r geons, she was instantly surrounded by colleagues. "You need to know what this is and what this does, and decide how you want to incorporate it into your practice," she told them. "Because whether you like it or not, it's coming."

Glass evangelist Dr. R a f ael Gr o ssmann says he'sthe first surgeon in the world to have used Goo-

gle Glass during a surgery — live-streaming to a Google Glass Hang-out, an i n v itation-only video chat. He believes technical problems will get worked out. Grossmann, a surgeon at Eastern Maine Medical Center,has become a sort of Glass e vangelist in h i s b lo g a n d speaking venues. "I always bring Glass up to the forefront in those talks, because I think it's what's hap-

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comes our way and goes away in a few years." Recently, h e p ar t i cipated in what he believes is the first G lass-to-Glass consultation. A surgeon in Amsterdam streamed her operation via Glass to Grossmann in a different city; he asked her questions and projected the live stream to a bi g screen where 400 students and others watched. He predicts Glass will "revolutionize the way we teach medicine." But this revolution, he adds, is really evolution. A small, wearable, unobtrusive computer is an inevitable step in the journey from room-sized computer to desktop, to laptop and m ost r e cently, to

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D4

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOV 28, 2013

FITNESS Yoga Continued from 01 Though the gender imbalance in yoga classes has social advantages for some men after class, many find it demoralizing to be surrounded by women who, in general, can twist themselves into poses with much greater ease. "It's a challenge," said Alain Benitez, who recalls his first

yoga class as a humbling experience. "Out of a group of 30 or 40, I was the only man, except for the teacher's boyfriend. I learned a lot about how much ego we carry. It was kind of humbling." In the five years since, Benitez has devoted himself to the practice. After studying with several teachers,Benitez began leading his own classes. Last year, he joined the small but growing number of yoga teachers offer ing classes geared exclusively to men. "We have specific limitations," said Benitez, 32, whose

brand of yoga there with a friend in 2009. The plan seems to be working. Broga now has licensed teachers across the country, with two dozen more in the works. The classes, he said, are minimalist: "Let's just focus on the breath and postures and get you through them in a healthy, safe way." Besides the basic poses, Sidoti said, he throws in some power moves. "Men can relate to a push-up, so for the guy who wants to get a little bit of a workout, we get the heart rate up." For this, he said, Broga has been criticized by purists. "But the way yoga has been presented on the surface didn't speak to the buddies I was hanging out with," he said. The soft images on yoga websites, the lotus flowers and new-agey wording, put them off. "I want-

is especially important, said Christopher Dodson, an orthopaedic surgeon at Rothman Institute and Thomas Jefferson University. "Large muscle mass is great for many things, like moving couches and playing football. But with those larger muscles, you do lose flexibility," he said. "The way to prevent injury is to gradually build up. It's similar to if you've never run before, don't try to do a marathon." Before starting his recent Saturday workshop at Anjali Power Yoga in Westmont, Benitez tried to put his students at ease. Built like a ballet dancer, his speech faintly spiced with a Cuban accent, he told them that when he started

h

Ili

April Saul Philadelphia

Inquirer

yoga, he was hopelessly inept.

"There is a difference between setting intentions versus expectations," he said. "If you set an intention to get into ed to repackage yoga," Sidoti a pose, I want you to get there, sard. but if you don't, so what'?" Jake Panasevich, who startAt the back of the room, ed teaching Yoga for Dudes in David Share, 56, a nephroloAugust at Maha Yoga Studio gist from Burlington County, day job is conducting allergy in Philadelphia, has developed hung on every word. Long and research at Children's Hospital enough of a f o llowing that narrow with a slight stoop to of Philadelphia. "Our broader he plans a recurring series of his shoulders, Share had nevshoulders do not help with bal- workshops. er taken a yoga class before. ance. Our minds race a little bit Panasevich, 28, a f o rmer He had come, he said, at the faster. We have a hard time get- college wrestler, was 5-foot-11 urging of his wife, a "yoga adting into a meditative state." and weighed 225 pounds at his dict" who had convinced him it In the safety of a yogic fra- beefiest. "I was like a giant ball would be good for him. ternity, Benitez said, his stu- of muscle," he said. Other students included a dentsfeelmore relaxed. A year a fter P anasevich hip, 23-year-old beer brewer, He helps them get t here graduated from the Univer- bearded and mustached, his by speaking their language. sity of Pittsburgh and moved head in a purple bandanna, When they lie prone for cobra to Philadelphia, his girlfriend and a snowy-headed 61-yearpose, he tells them, "if anything dragged him to a power yoga old commercial real e state needs adjusting, now is t h e class. broker. "Do you think warriors go to time. We don't want pinching." S weating p r ofusely a n d And he notes there is some- struggling to get into the pos- war without weapons?" Benithing reassuring when more es, he said, he was shocked tez asked, picking up a strap than half the men in the room by the intensity of the workand a yoga block. "These are cannot reach past their knees, out. "I tried to muscle my way your weapons." He warned about the risk of let alone palm the ground. through it. I couldn't touch my "I see a lot of broken-down knees." muscling through, saying, "if men, who are shrugged over Five years later, he said, he you can't breathe, you've gone and have no balance," said is getting into poses his teach- too far." Robert Sidoti, 42, cofounder of ers told him he would probably And finally, he said, listen to Broga on Martha's Vineyard. never achieve. your body. If at any time you Sidoti, an o m ni-athlete and For muscular men t r ying feel pain, "Drop the ego and former actor, started his male yoga for the first time, patience step back," he said. "Trust me."

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THURSDAY, NOV 28, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

F IT N E SS

i nw By Nancy Cambria St. Louis Post-Dispatch

ST. LOUIS — Eric Lay, the head trainer at Mary Institute and St. Louis Country Day School, loves to see student athletes succeed, but he and fellow trainers aren't always impressed with fastballs or hat-tricks. They're m or e c o ncerned about whether the athletes can do a decent push-up without their bodies undulating like a worm. Can they do leg lunges without flailing their arms, wobbling or falling to one side? Are they able to touch their toes? Pull up to their chin? Can they shuttle back and forth'? In a nutshell, trainers want to know whether these kids really know how to properly and safely move, and later, can they add strength to those established movements? It's all part of a g r owing p ush among t r a iners a n d others in fitness fields to get schools, parents, coaches and kids back to basics with physical fitness. Instead of focusing p rimarily o n a c quiring f i t ness through organized youth sports — an exploding business with many well-meaning but poorly t r ained coaches — they want parents and kids to refocus and acquire proper movement skills beginning as early as kindergarten and progressing all the way through

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"We all learned the alphabet, and as we learned the alphabet we learned how to put two letters and then three and then four to form words, and pretty soon we had a word, a sentence, a paragraph, a chapter, a book. And you should apply the same things for athletics."

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— Larry Meadors, former coach with the National Association of Strength and Fitness

to be physically active, and sports is an option. So a lot of people think, if my kid is in a sport, that takes care of it," Lay said. "Sport skills are great, but there has to also be some training in fundamental movements." Meadors, a retired 50-year educator who runs a conditioning program in the Burnsville, Minn., school district, said he's seen a significant decline in movement skills in kids over the past decade. "I have 11th- and 12th-graders — 16-, 17- and 18-year-olds — that have the same absolute movement skill deficiencies as 6-year-olds do." Part of it i s due to a decline in physical education in schools and a more sedentary lifestyle. Yet kids also face problems in competitive youth sports, where they learn a limited regimen of m ovements basic to the sport but may lack other critical movement skills high school. to help them fully succeed. " A sports skill i s o nly a If it sounds like a throwback to gym class, it is. Those move- s ports skill, it's part of t h e ments first emphasized in P.E. game. But there is a ton of stuff — skipping, lunging, twisting, the human body does above jumping, stopping and start- those skills that hone that pering, to name a few — are the formance," Meadors said. building blocks of high-perYouth sports i n s e v eral forming athletes and the key metropolitan areas is explodto enjoying all sorts of recre- ing at a very early age with ational activities that encour- increased competition, seemage lifelong fitness, said Larry ingly unlimited options to play Meadors, a former national and pressureto compete in a high school strength and con- single sport, year-round. It has ditioning coach with the ¹ led to a rapid increase in injutional Association of Strength ries even before middle school. and Fitness and author of a paMore than 3.5 million kids 14 per urging "physical literacy" and younger are treated annuamong youth. ally for sports injuries, and the But yet, "For some ungodly numbers areincreasing. More reason we've skipped teach- than half of all youth sports ining fundamental movement," juries are preventable. In about Meadors said. half the cases, the injuries are "We all learned the alpha- associated with overuse, often bet, and as we learned the al- linked with the growing trend phabet we learned how to put of children specializing in one two letters and then three and sport and playing year-round. then four to form words, and In a paper published with pretty soon we had a word, a t he National Strength a n d sentence, a paragraph, a chap- Conditioning A ss o c iation, ter, a book. And you should Meadors said m u sculoskelapply the same t hings for etal injuries in youth are the athletics." result of overall low strength In an age where kids have levels, incorrect landing meseemingly endless opportu- chanics, incorrect deceleration nities to play sports outside of techniques, ligament l ooseschool, all-around good move- ness, muscle tightness, overly ment is not always something developed quadriceps, and Lay says he sees with sea- over-reliance on a particular soned middle and high school limb. These essentially are players. That particularly can tied to poor conditioning and a be the case with specialized lack of knowing how to move year-round, single sport ath- properly in a variety of fitness letes. Often he'll see unbal- situations. anced movement,out ofw hack Many k id s s i mply d o n't from years of kicking with one know how to properly slow leg in soccer or pitching and down and stop when running. throwing on a softball or base- Others can't land a jump propball team. erly, he said. Those physical fitness defiMeadors says all he asks cits can lead to injuries. That's for i s a g r e ater conversabecause thekids do the same tion among schools, parents, thing over and over again, and coaches and kids to identify coaches and organizations can the big connection between have little emphasis on proper proper movement skills, lifetraining beyond a few some- long health and true athletic times misguided skills drills. performance. " Parents want t heir k i d s At this point, in the midst

Photosby J.B. Forbes/St Louis Post-Dispatch

Lay helps Chris Swanson, 13, with a strength and conditioning program.

Trainer Eric Lay leads the junior varsity soccer team through conditioning drills at Mary Institute and St. Louis Country Day School in Ladue, Mo. Lay says he's more concerned with teaching kids about fitness fundamentals than helping them excel in any one sport.

of intense game schedules, coaches lack the time to learn proper conditioning or incorporate it into limited practice schedules, he said. "When we get to the point

of 3.5 million k ids i njured in a given year — that's the fourth leading health risk by the World Health Organization. There's something wrong about that," he said. "The me-

dia loves to hit on the sedentary side and the linkto obesity in kids, and that's a real critical issue. But so is misuse of kids in sports and the mis-training of children."

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D6

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOV 28, 2013

NUTRITION Lakers

RESEARCH

Asamplemenu

Continued from 01 So what exactly do these elite basketball players eat? Check out Gone are the fruit platter, the typical menuselections for these Laker (andformer Laker) l ow-fat Greek y o gurt a n d favorites: peanut butter and jelly jars. Breakfast for Kobe Bryant:Half a waffle with whipped cream In their place are platters of and butter from pastured cows, a small amount of syrup and two meats from grass-fed chickeggs over-easy from pastured chickens. ens and cows, nuts and full-fat Lunch for Steve Nash:Southwest-style grass-fed beef salad with chocolate milk f r o m g r asscheddar cheesefrom grass-fed cows andblack bean salsa; olive fed cows, courtesy ofWhole oil-based chili-lime vinaigrette and abonestock-based soup. Foods markets. "At first, some of the players Snack for Pau GasohPasteurized Wallaby Greek Yogurt or St. would look at that and call a Benoit Yogurt (full-fat version) with plain coconut and raw caball boy over and send them shews, plus a Kombuchatea (any flavor). to the concession stand for a Dinner for Dwight Howard:Grass-fed beef short ribs, mashed hot dog or hamburger," said sweet potato and broccoli, and sauce made with cheddar from Tim DiFrancesco, the Lakers' grass-fed cows. strength a n d c o n d itioning coach. "But guys started to pull me aside after the second or third sense a n d old - f ashioned ciple of Shanahan's practices, game and say, 'Hey, that's not cooking," Shanahan said in a recognizing the benefits of her bad telephone interview from her food rules. Not bad at all. In fact, it's all office in Napa, Calif. "It's just Vitti said he decided to partgood for you. Shanahan said simple, good food." ner with Shanahan because good-fat products and nonsugShanahan and her husband, her food rules were "backed ary foods are keys to proper Luke Shanahan, are passion- by science." He and Shanahan training and overall dietary ate health-food a d vocates, they have developed a system health, not just for the elite having studied nutrition and called PRO Nutrition, which athlete but also for everyone the effects it can have on the stands for Performance, Rewho seeks alonger,healthier body. She says good health covery and Orthogenesis. "It's called that b ecause life. doesn't have to be complicatShanahan said good health ed; simply knowing the source those are the benefits," Vitti doesn't have to be complicat- and traditions goes a long way said. "Our players perform ed. She pointed out that the toward a long and healthy life. better because they are enerbest diet for an athlete is the Shanahan's diet, outlined gized by the food they eat." best diet for weight loss, heart in her book, actually involves Eating protein and the right health, cancer prevention and more than good food. Her kind of fats instead of sugary just about everything else. "It's diet contains the basics of the energy bars or drinks elimisimply a matter of common Atkins Diet (low in carbohy- nates the crash syndrome and sense and old-fashioned cook- drates, little fruit, high in good the fueling of inflammation. ing," she explained, drawing fats) with a few elements of the "The players recover better from her book "Food Rules: popular Paleo plan (grass-fed and keep inflammation down A Doctor's Guide to Healthy meat, plenty of sprouted veg- b ecause they r efrain f r o m Eating." etables). But Shanahan also foods that are inflammatory to Convinced that her studies promotes eating f e rmented the body, and the diet benefits of nutrition and its effects on foods, such as pickles and sau- the articulating cartilage to the body were valid, and eager erkraut, which contain probi- their joints." to test her theories, Shanahan otics, or good bacteria. sent inquiries and a copy of Vitti and DiFrancesco ini- Changing minds her book to two NBA teams tially had their doubts. Was Kobe Bryant a n d S t eve with rosters of older players. this just another fad diet'? A Nash, two Lakers veterans, alOne of the books found its way closer look into Shanahan's ready had their understanding onto the desk of Lakers head food rules and they determined of how nutrition matters, and trainer Gary Vitti. the diet was nothing new. they were ready "to sink their "It's the oldest stuff in the teeth into the concept," Shana"The Lakers were having all these injuries, and my hus- book," DiFrancesco said. han said. band and I thought they would The men knew that all the The rest of the team, howevbe ready for something like training and on-court work er, wasn't so eager to change this," Shanahan said. Vitti, wouldn't be as effective with- its ways, she said. Among disturbed by the rising numout being supported on the those who had trouble initially ber of injuries in the 2012 sea- back end by good nutrition. So adapting to change were Jorson, felt the same. Although he the question became, "What is dan Hill and Jodie Meeks. has seenhis share of diet rec- good nutrition?" They preach But, Shanahan said, once ommendations come across that "you can't out-train a bad the younger players saw Bryhis desk, he was intrigued by diet," and with the number of ant, Nash, then-Laker Dwight Shanahan's philosophies. injuries mounting on the team Howard and Steve Blake reach "It reminded me of the way last season, Vitti and DiFran- for the pregame platters and I was raised," said Vitti, whose cesco were willing to listen to post-game salads and sandparents are in good physical Shanahan. wiches from W h ole Foods, health at age 92. "My parents Midway through the sea- they joined the food revolution. "You're a lways going t o are from Italy (and) my mother son, Vitti turned over the task always had a soup bone in the of changing the Lakers' eat- have early adapters and others house, and our diet was in line ing habits t o D i F rancesco, who are watching what they do," Shanahan said. "They with Dr. Cate's philosophy." who joined the Lakers' staff in 2011. DiFrancesco is found- started to see a true connec'Just simple, good food' er and owner of TD Athletes tion of what you eat is how you Shanahan's philosophy is Edge, which offers high-level, simple. Wholesome, natural, research-based performance organically grown food cou- training for athletes and clipled with grass-fed meats and ents of all levels. Despite his dairy products — a diet every- p revious tr aining a n d r e one can follow. search regardinghealthy eat"It's a matter of common ing, he quickly became a dis-

Midnight snacks may be harmful That late-night pizza

can affect not only your waistline but your overall health, according to a researcher at the University of Kentucky.

A series of powerful biological cues influence how and whenyour body works at peak efficiency, said Vincent

Cassone, aUniversity of Kentucky College of Arts

and Sciences professor and chair of the biology

department. Hehas published more than100 pa-

pers in leading academic

101

journals on the internal

timekeeping functions of the body.

Most people are aware that thereare universal biological cues that help set abody's clock to do certain things at certain times —such as sleep when it is dark — during the 24 hours

in a day.Thesecircadian rhythms have long been thought to be controlled through a collection of neurons in the hypothal-

amus known asthe suprachiasmatic nucleus. But Cassone saidhis research has shown that "the molecular mech-

anisms for clocks are distributed all over the

body."

"The gastrointestinal system itself is a biological clock," he said. So whydoes that matter? The body is biological-

ly wired, for example, to restore and repair certain systems while resting, and rest is dictated by

that 24-hour cycle. Cassone's research shows that environmental cues, such as eating late, can potentially disrupt that

repair cycle andaffect overall health.

Researchhas shown that people whose

biological clocks are out of sync with their lifestyles — people who work night shifts, for

example —havehigher rates of someillnesses. People who eat at un-

usual times havemore digestive illnesses than those who eat primarily during daytime hours, when the motility of the

gastrointestinal system is at its peak. — Mary Meehan, Lexington Herald-Leader

feel." Bryant had adhered to his own food rules before Shanahan came aboard, cutting out personalfavoritessuch as sugar cookies, Sour Patch Kids candy and pepperoni pizza. The 18-year NBA star had reduced his intake to lean meats, fish and vegetables, and credits this way of eating for helping him extend his career. Now, he includes a dose of good fats, whole-grain waffles and eggs, meat from grass-fed chickens and cows, and bowls of homemade soup made from beef or c hicken bones. He is convinced the bone soup, s tock that contains all t h e valuable nutrients found in animal bones, has helped in his recoveryfrom a torn Achilles tendon. "It's helped. I feel great," Bryant said from Santa Barbara three months after hav-

inflammation goes away can take longer if a dietary imbalance exists. One of the hardest aspects of Shanahan's food rules to grasp is the reliance on good fats. Shanahan said good fats, such asbutter and cheese from pastured cows, whole milk and bacon are crucial because bodies need fat to burn as fuel. A ccordingto DiFrancesco, the type of fats in grass-fed dairy and meat products can actually help lower cholesterol and improve good cholesterol. "It's not your typical diet" DiFrancesco acknowledged. "Most athletes and people in g eneral are told that if y ou eat your veggies and eat your fruits and you eat all low-fat and lean meats or proteins you will be healthy. But you need your carbohydrates, too." But only the kind of carb ohydrates t h a t pro v i d e

ing surgery.

long-lasting energy, such as

Most of the health problems Shanahan has seen over the years stem, she says, from inflammation caused by dietary imbalance. According to the doctor, once your body is caught in an inflammatory state, it can no longer eliminate fat cells or t r ansform them into muscle. How does that work? Say you sprain an ankle and can't exercise until the swelling decreases. The rate at which the

good fats, sprouted grains and breads. DiFrancesco said

relying on the energy coming from carbohydrates and sugars, such as energy bars, is like building a fire with sticks and twigs. "If you put a bunch together and light them, they would burst into flames and then die out quickly," he said. "Switch to good fats, such as proteins and nuts, and an athlete's en-

ergy level will burn longer."

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D8 TH E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, NOV 28, 2013

MoNEY Exchanges

SURVEY

Continued from 01 Some employers may try to stay below the 50-worker threshold to avoid the requirement, while others may

Health benefits costs up this year ATLANTA — The av-

erage per-employeecost

simply pay the penalty and

to provide health benefits through the work-

send workers to the government exchanges to find health insurance. A relatively small but growing number of midsize and larger companies that already offer insurance to employees are now shifting to private exchanges — perhaps the most significant change employees have seen in a while. Companies like IBM and General Electric have adopted them for their retirees, rather than active employees. But if the exchanges work well for their i nitial p a r t i cipants, m o r e companies may shift current workers to exchanges, too. Accenture, a co n s ulting firm, estimates that I million people will enroll in private exchanges this year, but that number could grow to 40 million by 2018. So far, the exchanges seem to appeal to companies that have a range of employees at

place rose 2.1percent this year, down from

a 4.1 percentincrease in 2012, a newannual survey of employers by consulting firm Mercer shows. But employers expect the cost will rise 5.2

percent in 2014, and anticipate they would

go up 8 percent if they did not act to reduceexpenses in anticipation of the impact of Affordable

Care Act reforms. The introduction of higher deductible plans was cited as a key to holding down benefit costs.

Ken Sperling, the company's national exchange strategy leader. Major i n surers l i ke Aetna and UnitedHealthcare are participating. Other firms offering pr ivate exchanges include Towers Watson, Mercer and Buck Consultants. And some insurance companies are expected to start offering their own

exchanges. Details vary, but typically participating employers determine an amount to contribute per employee toward health coverage. That varies by employer. Then, the worker goes onto the exchange to find a plan. Some experts worry that the new model could make it easier for companies to limit their contributions to their workers' coverage. But Sperling said that wasn't happening. Every

ers — platinum plans generally have higher premiums, but lower deductibles; bronze plans have lower premiums and higher deductibles. Employees see on their paycheck stub what the premium is and what portion Sears is paying. "You know the total cost," he said. The result, he said, is that

promotional trinkets from the insurance company. But this year, workers asked insurance company representativesvery detailed questions. "Is my doctor on your plan? How can I get my doctor on your plan? Why is your plan more expensive?"Carter said. Insurance carriers are used to hearing such questions from employees seem to be paying benefits executives, he said, close attention to the details of but not necessarily directly their health plans, including from workers. not only its premiums but othGinsburg said it was uner out-of-pocket costs, as well clear whether the new private as doctor networks. e xchanges would r esult i n H e said h e n o t iced t h e the savings companies were change at the company's an- hoping for, given the current nual benefit fair held during changes in health insurance open enrollment. In years past, industry. For instance, some when Sears used a single car- companies are considering rier,employees would come whether they may save monto get key chains and other ey by switching to a "self-in-

taken decisive action

to slow cost growth so they will be in a better position to handle the

challenges ahead," said Julio Portalatin, Mercer president and chief executive.

The averagecost nationally of health

benefits per employee in 2013 was $10,779,

including employer and employee contributions for medical, dental and

othercoverage. Smaller businesses — those with 500 or

fewer employeesexperienced just a1 percent increase, while companies with 5,000-

plus workers saw their costs rise 3.7 percent. — David Markiewicz, Cox Newspapers

the company paysemployee health claims i tself, r ather than being "fully insured" and paying premiums to an insur-

ance company, which pays the claims — in part because self-i nsured plans are exempt from an insurertax required by the Affordable Care Act. Yet, some employers moving into private exchanges are switching to the fully insured plans. Polzin said taking all factors into consideration, Walgreens decided that joining the exchange and switching to a fully insured health plan was the best option. The model, he said, "will give us more certainty of health care costs from year to year and will align the insurers with us to control costs."

company participating is pay-

ing the same or more than it did in the previous year. "Nobody is using it as an excuse to cut their contributions." M ichael Polzin, a Wa l greens spokesman, said using the exchange would help the company predict costs and offer more choices to its employvarying pay levels — like re- ees. For this year, workers had tail and restaurant companies, a choice of four plans — two which have hourly workers from two insurers. But on the as well as salaried employ- exchange, he said, workers ees — because employers can will have a choice of five insuro ffer more options in p l an ers, offering up to five plans design, said Paul Ginsburg, each. "It comes down to being president of the nonprofit Cen- able to give them more options ter for Studying Health Sys- to better meet their needs," he tem Change, which conducts said. health care research. Dean Carter, chief human Walgreens and Sears par- resources officer at Sears ticipate in the exchange run Holdings, said the company by Aon H ewitt, a b e nefits offered the same level of prec onsultant that s tarted t he mium subsidy regardlessof Corporate Health Exchange the plan employees choose, so in 2012 for its own employees those selecting one with richand added outside companies er benefits might have to pay forthisyear.For next year,the more out of pocket, he said. exchange has 18 companies The exchange uses the same with 330,000 employees par- " metallic" rankings a s t h e ticipating. Including spouses public government exchange and children, the total covered to help employees compare is about 600,000 people, said plans from d i fferent insur-

"The good news is employers havealready

sured" model — meaning that

Light up A Life Tuesday, December 3 Beginning at 5:30 pm For details, donations and ornament orders, call or see our website, www.PartnersBend.org

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THURSDAY, NOV 28, 20t3 • THE BULLETIN

D9

ADVICE ck ENTERTAINMENT

'Gettin On'ta esris swit ta oosu 'ect TV SPOTLIGHT "Getting On" 10 p.m. Sundays, HBO

By Jessica Gelt Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — Most of the actors on the set of HBO's newest program, "Getting On," are over 70. The show, which premieredSunday, takes place in the Billy Barnes Extended Care Unit ofthe beleaguered Mt. Palms hospital in L ong Beach, Calif. Elderly women are cared for under sallow fluorescent lights among sanitized hues of beige and muted pink. The staff is at the breaking point thanks to the burdens of the health care bureaucracy. Doesn't that sound funny? If you take your comedy black, like your coffee, it's a laugh riot. Created by Mark V. Olsen and Will Scheffer, "Getting On" is adapted from a BBC series of the same name. It featuresa cast of edgy female comedy vets including Laurie Metcalf ("Roseanne"), Alex

Borstein ("Family Guy") and Niecy Nash ("Reno 911!"). Olsen and Scheffer are the team behind the HBO hit "Big Love," which dealt with another taboo subject: polygamy. For a polygamy palate cleanser, the

men chose aging, the elderly, death and dying. And HBO said, let's do this. The show is one of a trio of fall programs that have had the

School of Gerontology. "And

facilities, so the men are all too familiar with what it's like. "Is it really that daring? Is it really that different?" asks Olsen on the set of "Getting On" earlier this year. "The answer outside the bubble is, 'Yes it is.' But to us living inside the bubble, it seems as common as

f

of possibly glamorizing and almost romanticizing the kind of jobs that the professionals at these places do. These are products of a remarkably broken health care system." Olsen, Scheffer and the cast have given that pitfall serious thought. Before filming began, the lead actresses spent two weeks trailing staff in nursing homes and hospitals, and the writing does not shy away from the troubling aspects of the work. Scheffer calls the show a "docu-comedy" because it's filmed in an off-the-cuff manner with cameras following the characters around as they experiment with blocking and occasionally i m p rov l i n e s. And, in what many would consider heretical by Hollywood standards, the actors do not get theirhair ormakeup done. The existing overhead fluorescent bulbs serve as the only lighting setup. "The three of us have joked that we are three of the bravest actresses in TV right now with no hairand no makeup," Metcalf says. "This show is really about faces andhearts, " says Olsen, adding that getting actresses to audition without makeup was a truechallenge. "There issuch beauty in t h ose unadorned faces. The beauty of seeing life's struggle on those faces is so much of what this show is about."

day."

. ~ CiRHa~

The six-episode season was filmed in the deserted shell of St. Luke Medical Center in Pasadena, Calif. Empty, drafty and derelict, like the hospital version of "The Shining" hotel, St. Gary Friedman/ Los Angeles Times Luke became the show's nerve From left, Niecy Nash, Laurie Metcalf and Alex Borstein star in center.One wing isset-dressed "Getting On," a new HBO comedy from the creators of "Big Love." with ominous implements of medical care: rows of adjustable beds, twisted black cords courage — or foolhardinesswith those themes, and then attached to flashing boxes for to take on a topic that much of make an audiencewant to go monitoring hearts, cheap plasAmerican culture f amously there with you?" Scheffer asks. tic trays, bowls crusted with old avoids. In addition to "Getting "If it's really close to us, how do oatmeal, bed pans, jars of VaseOn," dying also framed Show- we heal'? By laughing about it." line and bottles ofbaby powder. time's d ocumentary s e ries Scheffer and Olsen hope that Olsen and Scheffer, who "Time of Death," which un- the viewing world will laugh were domestic partners for flinchingly chronicled the last with them. But h i storically nearly 20 years before getting days of its subjects, and Net- speaking, when treated realis- married, nonchalantly naviflix's scripted drama "Derek," tically, the end days of life is a gate the disquieting space and where the specter of death hov- ratings-killer. are deferential to their elderly "The closer you get to being extras. The most difficult thing ers over the residents of an old folks home. elderly and / or dying, the less about making "Getting On," It's no accident these pro- interesting you are for advertis- after all, is taking audiences grams sprouted up on subers,except for sellers of walk- into a world that makes many scription TV services where in bathtubs and the Neptune people uncomfortable without niche shows can thrive and Society," says Leo Braudy, a being exploitive. "I think the potential is for ratings matter less. But are Bing professor of English and viewers, many of them baby American literature at Univer- trivializing the conditions, exboomers who will all be 50 or sity of Southern Cailfornia. periencesand li ves ofthe peooldernext year, ready to face Olsen and Scheffer are both ple and families that are cared their mortality? boomers and lost their moth- for in chronic-care units," says "How do you deal with old ers in the last two years. Both Lon Schneider, a professor of people who are dying and deal women were in boarding-care gerontology at USC's Davis

Fa e re nan ma es rien sic

MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional feefor 3-D andINIAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to changeafter press time. f

Dear Abby: A f r iend of m i ne faked a pregnancy to get a man to stay with her. Once he moved in, she told him she'd had a miscarriage.She even went so far as to name this so-called baby. He now has the baby's name tattooed on his arm!

She goes on Facebook and talks about DEAR how she misses her ABBY "little baby boy," and counts every month a s though it i s h i s birthday. Every time I read it I get a sick feeling. I want to tell this man the truth. I know for a FACT she was not pregnant. I'm not sure how to go about this. If I say something, I know I will

end upthe bad guy.Should Im ind my own business or let this man know he's living with a maniac? — Wants To Tell The Truth Dear Wants: Your friend may have told this lie so often that she has come to believe it herself. Or, she may be acting this out in order to hang onto the man. While I don't think she is a maniac, I do think she may be unbalanced. I agree the man has a right to know. Wouldn't you want to be told if you were him? The way to do it is face-to-face. And be prepared for

the friendship to end afterward. Frankly, that may be for the best because the woman has more problems than you can cope with. Dear Abby: My husband and I have recently moved and are now being bombarded with demands to see our home. I was brought up to believe that inviting yourself JQp to anything, especially the privacy of someone's home, is extremely rude. I understand our family is excited for us, and it is nice to be loved — but our home isn't ready to be shown, and people won't give up! Telling them about the remodeling mess and that we plan to have a housewarming party in the future when everyone can see our place has been ineffective. Please advise me how to say "no" without offending those who are offending me. — Etiquette-bound Homeowner in Kansas Dear Homeowner: I'll offer a tip. It is amazing what a person can get away with saying if it is done with a smile. All you have to do is smile and say, "Nope. NO ONE can see it until the unveiling." And remember, it isn't rude to

stand your ground when someone is trying to encroach upon it. Even

family members. Dear Abby: My problem is my mother. My entire life (I am 50) she has made me choose between her and Dad for the holidays. They have been divorced for 30 years, and she still speaks ill of him. She has made every wedding or family event unbearable.It has reached the point that I feel guilty if I want to go and see him. She is now doing the same thing with my boyfriend of four years. A lot has transpired between us, but we are on a good path and are very much involved in each other's lives. She refused to spend this past Easter with us, including my children, if he was around. I told her that it was her choice and she is always welcome to attend. With Christmas fast approaching, I don't want all the drama and blackmail to continue. Help! — Weary in Wisconsin Dear Weary: You handled Easter appropriately and you should do the same with Christmas. If your mother chooses not to attend, the choice ishers.Consider asking your father to join you if she won't be there. — Write to Dear Abbyat dearabby.com or P0. Box69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069

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DAY, NQV. 28, 2013: This year, remaining goal-oriented serves you well. You easily could witness one or two of your life's aspirations become areality. Your friendships might be changing as other dimensions of your life open up. If you are single, you might meet someone who could end up sharing part of your life history with you. If Starsshowthe kmd you are attached, of day you'll have the two of you can ** * * * D ynamic

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21)

YOUR HOROSCOPE about possibly missing a game onTV, you'll give this person your attention. Tonight: Put on your dancing shoes.

** * You'll need to break free at some point during the day. That is not to say that you won't haveagoodtime;youjustneed to indulge in a nap or take some "you" time. News about the possibility of a trip and/or visit will make you happy.Tonight: Mum's the word.

CANCER (June21-July 22)

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21)

By Jacqueline Bigar

** * * You'll see life from a renewed, upbeat perspective. You won't mind doing all the holiday prep work, because family is what is important. For many of you, Thanksgiving is one of your favorite holidays. Tonight: Once youaredone, kick back and enjoy your company.

time together frequently. Take that special trip you have always spoken LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) about. LIBRA is ** * * You seem to havenaughty a always gracious, but he or shecan besuperficial at times. perspective on almost everything that happens right now. Your light playfulness will ARIES (March 21-April19) be contagious, but others seem to take it to ** * * Sociability surrounds you this extremes. A loved one might surprise you Thanksgiving. Many people will tend to emote, yet they still will be enjoyable com- with his or her actions. Give this person the space to grow. Tonight: Swap jokes. pany. You might discover that you have very little to complain about. It is your job VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) to enjoy yourself. Tonight: Let it all hang ** * You will have a tendency to go to out. extremes right now. You might indulge in way too much turkey or some other slightly TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * Yourexpectationsfor Thanksgiving addictive behavior. If you saw this type of behavior from others, you would be very are grounded in your past. You'll enjoy critical. Be less judgmental in the future. making the social rounds, so to speak, in Tonight: Rein yourself in. thatyou like visiting with everyone and catching up on news. A loved onewill be LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) instrumental to the success of this Thanks- ** * * * S ome Thanksgivings are better giving. Tonight: Help clean up. than others. You havetremendous potential this year. Enjoying a loved onehappens GEMINI (May 21-June20) ** * * Others always dominate on naturally. You could be jolted by some Thanksgiving. Let the stress of the day fall element of this Thanksgiving's celebration. to the wayside. A loved onewill demand Relax. You don't need to make acorrecyour time. Though you might grumble tion. Tonight: All smiles. ** S

'

** * * You might want to spend some extra time with a friend, but because of the nature of the holiday, it could be difficult to do. Where there's a will, there's a way.A relationship could heat up, andyou finally will see a desire become areality. Tonight: Zero in on whatyou want.

CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan. 19) ** * Take the lead and carve the turkey, especially if others have trepidations. It seemsthatwhateveryou do,loved ones find your actions nearly perfect. Enjoy this short period in which itseems as ifyou can do no wrong. Tonight: Everyone turns to you.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) ** * * Reach out to someone atdisatance whom you care alot about. This person might be a longtime friend. Open up to new possibilities, and stop working within a rigid framework. Knock down a restriction or two. Live it up! Tonight: Use your imagination.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March20) ** * * You could be taken abackwhat by you hear and from whom you hear it. If something feels off toyou, it probably is. Don't lose your focus on the holiday and a special loved one, no matter what is going on in the background. Tonight: Plan on some special time with a special person.

04 King Features Syndicate

9 a.m. onA K3, "Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade" — Toothless from "How to Train Your Dragon" is the latest character to be immortalized in a giant balloon for this beloved Turkey Day tradition. New SpongeBob SquarePants and Snoopy balloons are also in the lineup this year, along with a balloon commemorating the 75th anniversary of "The Wizard of Oz." Al Roker, Matt Lauer and Savannah Guthrie anchor NBC's coverage of the parade, which includes performances by Joan Jett, Kellie Pickier and more. 9:30 a.m. on l3, "NFL Football" — A Thanksgiving Day tripleheader of NFLaction gets underway with a clash of NFC North rivals as Matthew Stafford and the Detroit Lions welcome in the Green BayPackers, who may or may not be without the services of recuperating quarterback Aaron Rodgers. Immediately after on CBS, the Oakland Raiders visit the Dallas Cowboys, followed by a Pittsburgh Steelers-at-Baltimore Ravens tilt on NBC in prime time. 12 p.m. onH C3, "The National Dog Show" — As much of a Thanksgiving Day tradition as the parades, this special takes viewers to the Kennel Club of Philadelphia's annual competition, where top dogs vie for the coveted best in showtitle. John O'Hurley hosts, with David Frei providing expert commentary. This year's show introduces three breeds newto the American Kennel Club: the Chinook, rat terrier and Poltuguese podengo pequeno. 8 p.m. onH El, "A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving" — In this f 973 animated special, the pressure is on for Charlie Brown after pushy Peppermint Patty decides she andthe gang will have Thanksgiving dinner at "Chuck's" house. First, though, he hasto submit to a mortifying ritual of fall: Lucy yanking the football away just as he tries to kick it. Still, everything ends happily as the gang gathers around a pingpong table for an unusual feast prepared by Snoopy andWoodstock. 8p.m. onE3,"The Big Bang Theory" — A game of Dungeons and Dragons hasSheldon (Jim Parsons) revisiting moments from Christmases past. Koothrappali (Kunal Nayyarj tags along on a ladies night with Amy, Pennyand Bernadette (Mayim Bialik, Kaley Cuoco, Melissa Rauch), who try to find a date for him in "TheSanta Simulation." Johnny Galecki and Simon Helberg also star. © Zap2it

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McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 54 I -330-8562 • Dueto Thanksgiving, nomovies will be shown today. • After 7 p.m., shows are21and older only. Younger than 21may attend screenings before 7 p.m.if accompanied by a legal guardian. i

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Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin PanAlley, 541-24t-2271 • Oueto Thanksgiving, no movieswill be shown today. I

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORTHURS-

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Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, 680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • 12 YEARS A SLAVE(R) 6:30, 9:35 • ABOUTTIME (R) 10:45a.m., 6:25 • CAPTAIN PHILLIPS (PG-13) t:25, 4:35, 7:55 • CLOUDY WITHA CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 2 (PG!1t:05 a.m. • DALLAS BUYERS CLUB(R) t 1:15 a.m., 3:t5, 6:20, 9:10 • DELIVERY MAN (PG-13) t0:20 a.m., t255,450, 725, to:05 • EN0ER'S GAME (PG-13) 3:45, 9:15 • FREE BIRDS (PG! 10:05 a.m., t2:25, 3:40 • FROZEN (PGj1040 a.m.,t:25,405,645,9:25 • FROZEN3-0(PG) 11 a.m.,2,440,715,9:55 • GRAVITY (PG-13) 2:10 • GRAVITY 3-0 (PG-13) t 1:t 0 a.m., 5:05, 7:40, 1 0 • THE HUNGER GAMES: ATCHING C FIRE (PG-13)10a.m., t 0:30 a.m., 1 t:30 a.m., t 2:40, t:1 5, t:50, 2:45, 4:30, 5:30, 6:15,8,9,930 • THE HUNGER GAMES: ATCHING C FIRE IMAX (PG-t3) Noon,3:30,7,10:15 • JACKASS PRESENTS:BA0 GRANDPA(R) 3:20,t0:IO • LAST VEGAS (PG-13) 10:25 a.m., 1:05, 6:35 • PHILOMENA (PG-13j 10:t 5 a.m., 3:55, 640, 9:05 • THOR: THEDARKWORLD(PG-13)10:50a.m.,t:35, 4:20, 7:05, 9:50 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies.

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Redmond Cinemas,1535 S.W.OdemMedo Road, 54t -548-8777 • DELIVERY MAN (PG-13) t 1:45, 2, 4:15, 6:30, 8:45 • FROZEN (PG) 1t:1 5 a.m., t:45, 4:1 5, 6:45, 9:1 5 • THE HUNGER GAMES: CATCHINGFIRE (PG-13) 11:30 a.m., 2:45, 6:t5, 9:30 • THOR: THEDARKWORLD(PG-13) tt a.m., t:30,4,6:30, 9 Sisters Movie House, 720 Desperado Court, 54t-549-8800 • 12 YEARS A SLAVE(Rj 12:45 • DELIVERY MAN (PG-13) I • FROZEN (PG) t • THE HUNGER GAMES: ATCHING C FIRE (PG-13)t2:30 Madras Cinema 5, t 101S.W. U.S. Highway 97, 54 I -475-3505 • DELIVERY MAN (PG-13) 2:25, 445, 710, 935 • FROZEN (PGj 4:50, 7:20 • FROZEN 3-0 (PG) 2:30, 9:40 • HOMEFRONT (R)12:30,2:50,5:IO,7:30,9:45 • THE HUNGER GAMES: ATCHING C FIRE (PG-13)3:30, 6:30, 9:30 • THOR: H TE DARK W ORLD (PG-t312:20,4:40,7,9:20 •

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Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-10t4 • THE HUNGER GAMES: CATCHINGFIRE (PG-13) 6:15 • THOR: THE DARK WORLD (Upstairs — PG-13) 6:30 • Theupstairsscreening roomhas limited accessibility.

WILSONSof Redmond 541-548-2066

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0 GO! Magazine • Watch movie trailers or buy tickets online at bendbulletin.com/movies

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ON PAGES 3&4.COMICS & PUZZLES ~ The Bulletin

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 20'I3 •

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Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the business hoursof 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.

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Subscribe or manage your subscription

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264- Snow Removal Equipment 265 - Building Materials 266- Heating and Stoves 267- Fuel and Wood 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment 270 - Lost and Found GARAGESALES 275 - Auction Sales 280 - Estate Sales 281 - Fundraiser Sales 282- Sales Northwest Bend 284- Sales Southwest Bend 286- Sales Northeast Bend 288- Sales Southeast Bend 290- Sales RedmondArea 292- Sales Other Areas FARM MARKET 308- Farm Equipment and Machinery 316 - Irrigation Equipment 325- Hay, Grain and Feed 333- Poultry, Rabbits and Supplies 341 - Horses andEquipment 345-Livestockand Equipment 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers 358- Farmer's Column 375- Meat and Animal Processing 383 - Produce andFood 203

Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 3rd Holiday Fair Coming to Sisters at Outlaw Station Shopfor Craft Fair & Bazaar ping Center close to Dec. 7; 9-5 & Dec. 8; Ray's Food Place, 10-3. Booths: $30 Hwy 20. Open11/29 crafts / $50 commercial thru 12/22, Mon. 202 Accepting donations f or Rummage S a l e . Thur., 10-4, Fri. Sat. Want to Buy or Rent Sun., 10-6. Donate items through Vendors wanted! Dec. 6. Receipts availCOWGIRL CASH 541-595-6967 We buy Jewelry, Boots, able for donations. TACK & EQUIPMENT, Vintage Dresses 8 People Look for Information 15% Consignment More. 924 Brooks St. About Products and Let us sell your tack & 541-678-5162 www.getcowgirlcash.com equip. For info call Services Every Daythrough ... ABIGDeal...

VENDORS WANTED

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541.548.6088 or kim-

The BulletinClassilieds

berly.griffiths © orNeed to get an egonstate.edu SUNRIVER RESORT ad in ASAP? 12th Annual Traditions Holiday Marketplace You can place it Just bought a new boat? Fri., 11/29, online at: Sell your old one in the 11:30 am - 5:30 pm www.bendbulletin.com classifieds! Ask about our Sat., 11/30, Super Seller rates! 9:00 am - 4:30 pm 541-385-5809 Homestead/Heritage 541-385-5809 Free Admission

C h a n d i e r

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208

Santa's Gift Basket

Pets & Supplies

A cabin west of Bend isolated by winter snow. Three victims. The Trapper Murders, A True Central Oregon Mystery. Link to site: htt://www.christmas ~valle .net

Chihuahua male pups, one short hair, 100; one long hair $250. 541-213-9731

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ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202- Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free ltems 208- Pets and Supplies 210- Furniture & Appliances 211- Children's Items 212 - Antiques & Collectibles 215- Coins & Stamps 240- Crafts and Hobbies 241 - Bicycles and Accessories 242 - Exercise Equipment 243 - Ski Equipment 244 - Snowboards 245 - Golf Equipment 246-Guns,Hunting and Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- Health and Beauty Items 249- Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253- TV, Stereo and Video 255 - Computers 256- Photography 257- Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259- Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - Medical Equipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools

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Pets & Supplies

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Includes up to 40 words of text, 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold headline and price. Little Red Corvette"

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Newfoundland puppies Twin size bed, fully adA1 Washers & Dryers AKC registered. 2 blk justable, great shape $150 ea. Full warm ales, parents o n ranty. Free Del. Also used less than 6 mo. site. Almost 4 wks old. with spread and wanted, used W/D's C all J il l at 541 sham. $500. 541-280-7355 2 79-6344 t o c o m e 541-526-0687 Chihuahua puppies, (2) French Bulldog AKC adorable male & female, visit and see the boys. Christmas Pups! born 8/23, weaned & BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS The Bulletin Cream Colored, 5m Pomeranian puppy 9 ready! $250 ea or best recommends extra Search the area's most 1f. 541-410-1299 wks old, male, black comprehensive offer. 541-410-8888 Trapper listing of I ca.tc na. p . little fur ball cute face. M urd e r s chasing products or, classified advertising... Kittens! Fixed, shots, ID $350.541-480-3160 Check out the real estate to automotive, services from out of I chip, tested, more! classifieds online the area. Sending t Many @ PetSmart on Poodle pups, AKC. Toy merchandise to sporting www.bendbuffetin.cem 11/23, also at rescue, Also - 7 mo. M, $200; F, goods. Bulletin Classifieds cash, checks, or appear every day in the I credit i n f ormation Updated daily 65480 78th, B e nd, $250. 541-475-3889 AT * C t 10 M t print or on line. may be subjected to Thurs/Sat/ Sun 1-5, I FRAUD. For more 541-389-8430; ki tten Call 541-385-5809 Take care of information about an f foster 5 4 1-815-7278 www.bendbulletin.com your investments advertiser, you may www.craftcats.org. Pets & Supplies • call t h e Or e gont The Bulletin with the help from Stn Mg Ct rtal ttttgcn tinct 1303 Lab puppies black and State Attor ney ' .,n//33 yellow pure b red, The Bulletin's I General's O f f ice The Bulletin recomFullcouch and mends extra caution Chihuahua puppies, tea- males and f emales "Call A Service loveseat, coffee table Consumer P rotec- • ready to go now. $250 t ion ho t l in e at I when purc h a s- cup, shots & dewormed, with glass inserts, 2 Call 541-771-5511. Professional" Directory ing products or ser$250. 541-420-4403 end tables and 2 table I 1-877-877-9392. vices from out of the lamps. Asking $200. Lab Pups AKC, black 8 Queenstand Heelers area. Sending cash, Chihuahua/Yorkie mix, yellow, 541-526-0687 Master Hunter Standard & Mini, $150 checks, or credit in2 males, $150. sired, performance pediGENERATE SO M E f ormation may b e 541-771-2606 8 up. 541-280-1537 gree, OFA cert hips 8 elsubjected to fraud. www.rightwayranch.wor EXCITEMENT in your Call a Pro bows, 541-771-2330 neighborhood! Plan a For more i nforma- Donate deposit bottles/ www kinnamanretrievera.cem dpress.com garage sale and don't Whether you need a tion about an advercans to local all vol- LABRADOR AKC black Rodent issues? Free forget to advertise in fence fixed, hedges tiser, you may call unteer, non-profit resthe O r egon State cue, for feral cat spay/ pups born 8 -18-13, adult barn/ shop cats, classified! tnmmed or a house $250. 541.508.0429 fixed, shots, s o me 541-385-5809. Attorney General's neuter. Cans for Cats built, you II find friendly, some n o t. Office C o n sumer t railer at B en d P e t Labrador puppies, AKC, Will Lodge sofa/loveseat slip Protection hotline at Express East, across choc., yellow & black. 541-389-8420 deliver. cover style, green and professional help in 1-877-877-9392. from Costco; or do- $500. 541-977-6844 cream houndstooth. The Bulletins Call a nate Mon-Fri at Smith $150. Velvet w ing- Service Professional" Siberian-Husky pups, The Bulletin Labrador Pups, AKC Sign, 1515 NE 2nd; or AND Wolf-Husky pups, b ack c h a ir , $50 ; gertng Central ctagpntrnca l903 Directory Chocolate & Yellow. at CRAFT in Tumalo. $400 ea. 541-977-7019 Queen mattress set Call for Ig. quantity Hips OFA guaranteed. 541-385-5809 a nd f r a me , $5 0 . $300-$400. 541-604-4316. 55 gal fish aquarium & pickup, 541-389-8420. 1-541-954-1727 .4 wood stand, no flaws! www.craftcats.org Sectional w/ottoman, by $125 obo. 541-408-8611 Labradors AKC ChocoCrandall, 1 year old, late males, shots, DO YOU HAVE brown, excellent cond. wormed, health guaranA ussies, Mini, A K C , SOMETHING TO Paid $1596; asking $500 black tri, M/F. Parents on tee, $500. 541-536-5385 SELL 541-388-7382 puppy, 16 wks, Antiques wanted: tools, site. 541-788-7799 www.welcomelabs.com Whoodle FOR $500 OR 3rd shot, wormed, just 1 furniture, marbles, beer male left! Reduced to cans, early B/W phoLESS? Maine Coon 8 wk, kittography, Western Non-commercial $700. 541-410-1581 tens, unique pets, no items. 541-389-1578 advertisers may papers, 1 polydactyl Yorkie 9-wk male, tail place an ad with female, 1 male, $100 dewclaws, $600. oui ea. obo. 541-389-0322 docked, Can deliv. 541-792-0375 "QUICK CASH HANCOCK & /t oettvttztt n cottcept SPECIAL" Just too many Dsvttz" Yorkie mix males, (2), MOORE SOFA Blue Tick/Walker Cross Visit our HUGE $150 each. Salmon/Coral cheGood Hunting Parcollectibles? c ~aa aka aat home decor 541-771-2606 nille fabnc with diaents. Ready to start Ad must include consignment store. mond pattern Traditraining today, $250 Sell them in price of single item New items tional styling w ith each. Been wormed of $500 or less, or The Bulletin Classifieds arrive daily! loose pillow back, healthy, & eating solid multiple items 930 SE Textron, down-wrapped seat food 541-815-6705 whose total does Bend 541-318-1501 cushions, roll arms, 541-385-5809 , r&C not exceed $500. www.redeuxbend.com skirt, two matching Find exactly what illows an d ar m Call Classifieds at PUPPY SALE! Poodle/ YorkiePom 8 Pom-a-poo p covers. L i k e n ew KENNEDY DEAD Origiyou are looking for in the 541-385-5809 Maltese females, puppies, 9 weeks 8 nal Bend Bulletin from condition. $1500. www.bendbuiletin.com CLASSIFIEDS $200, males, $150. HEALTHY! $350 call/text 541-526-1332 11/22/1963, in fair cond, 541-977-7773 (LOCAL) Cash 541-546-7909. $100. 541-317-1196

FOR ONLY w

On the web at: www.bendbulletin.com

Place, cancel or extend an ad

--r'tttun&'.;:~ 2004 Corvette Convertible Coupe, 350, auto with !32 miles, gets 26-24 mpg. Add lots more description and interesting facts foi' $9. Look how much fun a girl could have in a sweet car like this!

$12,500 541-000-000

• Daily publication in The Bulletin, an audience of over 70,000. • Weekly publication in Central Oregon Marketplace —DELIVERED to over 30,000 households.

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E2 THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

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269

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tional fraud. Deal lo-

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BarkTurfSoil.com •

whenever posPROMPT D E LIVERY Monday • • . • • • • • • . • • • • • • • • . • • 5:00 pm Fri • cally 541-389-9663 sible. ErWatch for buyers Tuesday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . Noon Mon. who offer more than For newspaper your asking price and ask to have delivery, call the Wednesday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. who Circulation Dept. at money wired or 541-385-5800 back to them. Thursday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. handed To place an ad, call Fake cashier checks 541-385-5809 and money orders or email are common. Friday. • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. YNever give out perfinancial inforThe Bulletin Saturday RealEstate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri. sonal mation. v'Trustyour instincts be wary of Saturday • . • .. 3:00 pm Fri. and 270 someone using an Lost 8 Found escrow service or Sunday.. • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • agent to pick up your Found 2 loose keys on classIfIed@bendbulletIn.com sen ng cencrar oregonInce Iggt

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OVER '500in total merchandise

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4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days.................................................$33.50 28 days.................................................$61.50

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A Payment Drop Box is available at Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS B ELOW MARKED WITH A N (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin reserves the right to reject any ad at any time.

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Bicycles & Accessories

Exercise Equipment Nordic Trac A2350. Presents beautifully. Hardly used. A perfect holiday gift. $350.00

Reber's Farm Toy Sale! Each Sat. 8 Sun., 10-5 until Christmas, 4500 SE Tillamook Lp., Prineville. 541-447-7585

The Bulletin reserves the right to publish all ads from The Bulletin newspaper onto The Bulletin Internet website.

Cash and carry.

2005 Maverick ML7a M ountain Bike,

541-390-1713.

15

frame (small). Full Proform Crosswalk 380 suspension, Maverick treadmill, like new, only 1 s hock, S RA M X O hour of usage! $275 obo. drivetrain 8 shifters, 9 541-408-0846

EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools andTraining 454- Looking for Employment 470 - Domestic & In-Home Positions 476 - EmploymentOpportunities 486 - Independent Positions

Employment Opportunities

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Automotive Driveability Tech needed. We are an extremely busy automotiveshop in n e e d of a TOP-NOTCH EXPERIENCED Driveability Technician. S tarting wage is $30 per flat rate hour plus benefits. If you have the proven skills and ability, we have a position available for you. Send replies to PO Box 6676, Bend, OR

421

325

Industrial Way, Wed. • H ay, Grain & Feed Nov 27. 541-382-4537

'500 you can place it in The Bulletin Classifieds for:

FINANCEAND BUSINESS 507 - Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 528 - Loans and Mortgages 543 - StocksandBonds 558 - Business Investments 573 - Business Opportunities 476

ALFALFA, 4th cutting, nice & clean; not too Older Necchi Super Nova Lost diamond ring at Juautomatic sewing ma- niper Pool 11/25, cluster fine-stemmed. Mid-size c hine i n c a binet w / of diamonds, sentimen- bales (800 Ib avg) $200 / E clipse Model B L E 1tal value. 541-330-7378 ton. 541-480-8264 Culver serger, all attachments & Lost iPhone at Pappy's many extras. $300 obo. Pizza in R e dmond,First quality Orchard/Timothy/Blue Grass mixed 541-548-0913 would the fellow who hay, no rain, barn stored, Wanted- paying cash found it please call $250/ton. Patterson Ranch for Hi-fi audio & stu- 541-408-5382. Sisters, 541-549-3831 dio equip. Mclntosh, J BL, Marantz, D y TURN THE PAGE The Bulletin's naco, Heathkit, San"Call A Service For More Ads sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Professional" Directory Call 541-261-1808 The Bulletin is all about meeting Garage Sales Lost small brown metal your needs. suitcase, containing car Call on one of the Garage Sales 'ack & other parts, maye downtown near JackGarage Sales alope Grill, Sat. Oct. 29. professionals today! Reward! 541-389-7329 Find them Looking for your in Have an item to next employee? Place a Bulletin The Bulletin sell quick? help wanted ad If it's under Classifieds today and

PLEASENOTE:Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call tts immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right 541-385-5809 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 WHEN YOU SEE THIS Classified ads running 7 or more days will publish in the Central Oregon Marketplace each Tuesday.

Antiques & Collectibles

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reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also ~ OO '10 - 3 lines, 7 days appear on M Ore P i X a t B e n d b u ll e t i I .CO II I '16 - 3 lines, 14 days bendbuiietin.com Art, Jewelry On a classified ad which currently 8 Furs (Private Party ads only) go to receives over www.bendbulletin.com 1.5 million page to view additional Lost walking stick, handviews every photos of the item. made of wood + hand month at no beaded/leather work, last 263 extra cost. s een R e dmond S t . Tools Charles. $50 Reward. Bulletin 541-420-8771 / 256-0293 Classifieds New 10 n Delta bench Get Results! 14 carrot white gold saw with access. asking CaII 541-385-5809 ladies wedding band $130. 541-318-8503 or place your ad with a bright polish on-line at 265 finish, 1.66 c a rrot bendbuiietin.com diamond Hearts and Building Materials

Schools & Training Oregon Medical Training PCS. Phlebotomy classesbegin Jan. 6, 2014. Registration now open: www.oregonmedicaltraining.com 541-343-3100

97708

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Employment Opportunities CAUTION: Ads published in "Employment O p portunities" in clude employee and independent positions. Ads fo r p o sitions that require a fee or upfront i nvestment must be stated. With any independentiob opportunity, please i nvestigate tho r oughly. Use extra c aution when a p plying for jobs online and never provide personal information to any source you may not have researched and deemed to be reputable. Use extreme c aution when r e s ponding t o A N Y online employment ad from out-of-state. We suggest you call the State of Oregon Consumer H o tline at 1-503-378-4320 For Equal Opportunity Laws c o ntact Oregon Bureau of Labor & I n d ustry, Civil Rights Division,

FIND IT! BUY IT! SELL IT! The Bulletin Classifieds NURSE

Saint Alphonsus BOISE NANOA ONTARIO SANER CITY

From mountain hiking, thrill-seeking white wat er rafting, skiing a t 8i000 feet, or visiting the historic Oregon Trail Interpretwe Center, Baker County welcomes you.

• Nurse Manager, Acute Care Baker City, Oregon RN Positions also available: • ICU • OB • Resource RN • RN Supervisor, float pool environment

To learn more& apply www.saintal honsus.or bakercit ~ ROOFERS with experience, needed. Call River Roofing, 541-316-7663

971-673- 0764. Advertise your car! Missing: Chihuahua Add A Picture! Reach thousands of readers! since 8/2 in Crooked Sererng Cenrral Oregoncrnce lgta Call 541-385-5809 Call The Bulletin At Building Supply Resale River Ranch. Male, 8 • Horses & Equipment 541-385-5809 rs old, about 6 lbs. 544 -385-5809 Quality at LOW here has been a PRICES Place Your Ad Dr E-Mail sighting of him with a 541-281-7815 Need help fixing stuff? also skis & b i ndings, 740 NE 1st At: www.bendbulletin.com n man in his late 50's Say ngoodbuy $250. 541-480-4811 541-312-6709 Call A Service Professional with black hair, mus2008 Thuro-Bilt 3H Open to the public. find the help you need. 240 to that unused tache & glasses in slant Shilo, g reat chasing products or I www.bendbulletin.com Crafts & Hobbies Sisters Habitat ReStore CRR. $5000 c ash Computers • c ondition. $5 9 0 0 services from out of item by placing it in Building Supply Resale reward, no questions obo. 541-317-0988. Add your web address i the area. Sending 3rd Holiday Faircom- The Bulletin Classifieds Quality items. asked. 541-325-6629 T HE B U LLETIN r e c ash, c hecks, o r CHECK YOUR AD to your ad and reading to Sisters, at OutLOW PRICES! or 503-805-3833 quires computer aders on The Bulletin's i credit i n f o rmation lawstationZShopping 150 N. Fir. Look at: vertisers with multiple 5 41-385-580 9 web site, www.bend- i may be subjected to Center close to Ray's 541-549-1621 Bendhomes.com FRAUD. ad schedules or those bulletin.com, will be Food Place, Hwy 20. Open to the public. selling multiple sysFor more informafor Complete Listings of able to click through Open 11/29 -12/22 tems/ software, to distion about an adverArea Real Estate for Sale automatically to your REMEMBER: If you Mon.-Thur. 10-4, What are you close the name of the i tiser, you may call website. Fri. Sat. Sun. 10-6. have lost an animal, on the first day it runs business or the term the Oregon State looking for? Vendors wanted! don't forget to check to make sure it is cor- "dealer" in their ads. i Attorney General's Press Operator 541-595-6967 The Humane Society rect. nSpellcheckn and You'll find it in Private party advertisCo n s umerI The Bulletin, located in beautiful Bend, Oregon is Office Bend human errors do ocers are defined as seeking a night time press operator. We are part Protection hotline at I 541-382-3537 AGATE HUNTERS cur. If this happens to those who sell one The Bulletin Classifieds i 1-877-877-9392. of Western Communications, Inc. which is a Redmond Polishers • Saws BOB Apex Bicycle your ad, please concomputer. small, family owned group consisting of 7 newss' trailer, used very 541-923-0882 tact us ASAP so that ie Bplletig g papers, 5 in Oregon and 2 in California. Our 541-385-5809 PI e Ille little, never in dirt. corrections and any Repair & Supplies ideal candidate must be able to learn our 54I-447-TITS; $275. 541-389-0099 adjustments can be r 266 equipment/processes quickly. A hands-on style Misc. Items or Craft Cats made to your ad. is a requirement for our 3 T/a tower KBA press. In Looking for your next Heating 8 Stoves 541-389-8420. 541-385-5809 employee? addition to our 7-day a week newspaper, we A cabin west of Bend The Bulletin Classified have numerous commercial print clients as well. Place a Bulletin help isolated by winter 280 NOTICE TO wanted ad today and snow. Three victims. In addition to a competitive wage and benefit ADVERTISER Estate Sales reach over 60,000 The Trapper Murders, program, we also provide potential opportunity Since September 29, A True Central readers each week. • • for advancement. 1991, advertising for i Estate Sale! Your classified ad OregonMystery. If you provide dependability combined with a used woodstoves has L arge e s tate, g u n s Link to site: will also appear on been limited to mod- t ools, pick up , b a ss positive attitude and are a team player, we bendbulletin.com C all 54/-3 8 5 -5 8 0 9 800 rds 7.62x39 + ammo htt://www.christmas els which have been boat, S UV , h u nting, would like to hear from you. If you seek a stable box. $250; 6 AK mags, which currently ~valle .net work environment that provides a great place to to Promote your service c ertified by the O r - fishing, camping. $15 ea. Must sell, surreceives over 1.5 Trapper egon Department of For pics and details go live and raise a family, let us hear from you. gery. 541-306-0166 million page views M urd e r s Contact Al Nelson, Pressroom Manager at Environmental QualHandyman to w w w.farmhousees- anelson@wescom a ers.com with your comIBuilding/Contracting every month at Bend local pays CASH!! ity (DEQ) and the fed- tatesales.com no extra cost. piete resume, references and salary history/refor all firearms & eral E n v i ronmental 21695 Boulder Court, NOTICE: Oregon state Home Repairs, Remod Bulletin Classifieds ammo. 541-526-0617 Protection Ag e n cy Bend. Sat. 9-5, Sun. 9-5. quirements. No phone calls please. Drug test is law r equires anyone els, Tile, Carpentry Get Results! required prior to employment. EOE (EPA) as having met who con t racts for Finish work, M a inte AT Call 385-5809 C I 10 N I smoke emission stanconstruction work to nance. CCB¹168910 Get your or place dards. A cer t ified TiCk, TOCk be licensed with the Phil, 541-279-0846. your ad on-line at Bend Indoor Swap business w oodstove may b e Construction Contracbendbulletin.com Meet - A Mini-Mall full identified by its certifiTiCk, TOCk... tors Board (CCB). An of Unique Treasures! Pressroom cation label, which is active license ...don't let time get 3rd St. & Wilson Ave. permanently attached means the contractor Landscaping/Yard Care Night Supervisor 10-5 Thurs-Fri-Sat. is bonded & insured. to the stove. The Bulaway. Hire a The Bulletin, located in beautiful Bend, OrRIMXCS Verify the contractor's NOTICE: Oregon Landletin will no t k n owwith an ad in egon, is seeking a night time press superviprofessional out Buying Diamonds CCB l i c ense at scape Contractors Law ingly accept advertissor. We are part of Western Communications, The Bulletin's /Gold for Cash of The Bulletin's www.hirealicenseding for the sale of Inc. which is a small, family owned group con(ORS 671) requires all Saxon's Fine Jewelers "Call A Service contractor.com uncertified businesses that a d"Call A Service sisting of seven newspapers: five in Oregon 541-389-6655 or call 503-378-4621. vertise t o woodstoves. Professional" and two in California. Our ideal candidate will pe r form Professional" The Bulletin recom- Landscape Construcmanage a small crew of three and must be Directory 267 mends checking with tion which includes: Directory today! Want to impress the able t o l e ar n o u r e q uipment/processes the CCB prior to con- p lanting, Fuel & Wood decks , quickly. A hands-on style is a requirement for relatives? Remodel CASH!! tracting with anyone. fences, arbors, 266 our 3 I/a tower KBA press. Prior management/ 526 For Guns, Ammo & your home with the Some other t r ades water-features, and inleadership experience preferred. In addition to Sales Northeast Bend Reloading Supplies. Loans & Mortgages also req u ire addi- stallation, repair of irhelp of a professional WHEN BUYING our 7-day-a-week newspaper, we have nu541-408-6900. tional licenses and rigation systems to be from The Bulletin's FIREWOOD... merous commercial print clients as well. BeWARNING certifications. licensed w i t h t he "Call A Service sides a competitive wage and benefit proTo avoid fraud, ** FREE ** The Bulletin recomDON'TMISSTHIS Landscape Contracgram, we also provide potential opportunity for Professional" Directory The Bulletin mends you use cauGarage Sale Kit tors Board. This 4-digit Debris Removal advancement. recommends paytion when you proPlace an ad in The number is to be i nIf you provide dependability combined with a ment for Firewood vide personal cluded in all adverDO YOU HAVE BUYING Bulletin for your gaJUNK BE GONE positive attitude, are able to manage people only upon delivery information to compaSOMETHING TO Lionel/American Flyer rage sale and retisements which indiand schedules and are a team player, we I Haul Away FREE and inspection. nies offering loans or trains, accessories. cate the business has SELL ceive a Garage Sale would like to hear from you. If you seek a For Salvage. Also • A cord is 128 cu. ft. 541-408-2191. credit especially a bond,insurance and FOR $500 OR Kit FREE! 4' x 4' x 8' stable work environment that provides a great Cleanups & Cleanouts those asking for adworkers c o mpensaLESS? place to live and raise a family, let us hear • Receipts should Mel, 541-389-8107 BUYING & S E L LING KIT I NCLUDES: vance loan fees or tion for their employNon-commercial from you. include name, All gold jewelry, silver • 4 Garage Sale Signs companies from out of ees. For your protecadvertisers may Contact Al Nelson, Pressroom Manager at phone, price and and gold coins, bars, • $2.00 Off Coupon To state. If you have tion call 503-378-5909 place an ad I Domestic Services anelson@wescompapers.com with your comkind of wood rounds, wedding sets, Use Toward Your concerns or quesor use our website: with our piete r e sume, r e ferences a n d sa l a ry class rings, sterling silpurchased. Next Ad tions, we suggest you "QUICK CASH A ssisting Seniors a t www.lcb.state.or.us to history/requirements. No phone calls please. • 10 Tips For "Garage ver, coin collect, vin- • Firewood ads consult your attorney Home. Light house check license status SPECIAL" Drug test is required prior to employment. Sale Success!" tage watches, dental MUST include or call CONSUMER keeping 8 other ser before contracting with 1 week3lines 12 EOE. gold. Bill Fl e ming, species & cost per the business. Persons HOTLINE, OI' v ices. L icensed & doing 541-382-9419. cord to better serve land s cape 1-877-877-9392. a e ek a E SI Bonded. BBB C e rti ~ pick Up YQUR our customers. maintenance do not fied. 503-756-3544 Ad must GARAGE SALE KIT at r equire an L C B BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS include price of Cemetery plot at 1777 SW Chandler cense. Search the area's most N~le Ie or Ssoo Tumalo cemetery. Ave., Bend, OR 97702 Sernng Centra( Oregon crnre Iggg I Electrical Services comprehensive listing of or less, or multiple A bargain at $450. 541-848-7436 classified advertising... items whose total Advertising Account Executive 1 cord dry, split Juniper, Mike Dillon Electric real estate to automotive, does not exceed Rewardingnew business development Electrical troubleshoot$200/cord. Multi-cord Nelson merchandise to sporting $500. discounts, & t/~cords ing, new panel installaLandscaping & Bulletin Classifieds The Bulletin is looking for a professional and goods. tions. 24 yrs exp. Lic./ available. Immediate Maintenance Call Classifieds at appear every day in the Need to get an ad driven Sales and Marketing person to help our Bonded ¹192171 delivery! 541-408-6193 Serving Central 541-385-5809 print or on line. customers grow their businesses with an Holiday Special $50/hr in ASAP? Oregon Since 2003 www.bendbulletin.com A-1 dry Juniper & Call 541-385-5809 expanding list of broad-reach and targeted 503-949-2336 Residental/Commercial Tamarack $185 split, or www.bendbulletin.com products. This full-time position requires a $165 rnds multi-cord background in c onsultative sales, territory Fax it to 541-322-7253 Good classified ads tell Sprinkler Blowouts I Han dyman discount, deliv. Classic Stallion management and aggressive prospecting skills. the essential facts in an Sprinkler Repair 541-977-4500 The Bulletin Classifieds Two years of media sales experience is interesting Manner. Write Boots I DO THAT! BANK TURNED YOU preferable, but we will train the right candidate. All yearDependable Ladies size 7T/s, Fall Clean Up from the readers view - not Home/Rental repairs DOWN? Private party seldom worn, Firewood: Seasoned Small jobs to remodels the seller's. Convert the 292 The p o sition i n c ludes a comp etitive will loan on real esSnow Removal Lodgepole, Split, Del. Paid $1100; Honest, guaranteed facts into benefits. Show compensation package including benefits, and tate equity. Credit, no selling for $290. Bend: 1 for $195 or 2 Sales Other Areas work. CCB¹151573 the reader how the item will Schedule for 2014 rewards an aggressive, customer focused problem, good equity for $365. Cash, Check 541-480-1199 Dennis 541-317-9768 help them in some way. •Weekly 8 Monthly salesperson with unlimited earning potential. is all you need. Call or Credit Card OK. NOTICE This Maintenance 541-420-3484. Oregon Land MortERIC REEVE HANDY Remember to remove advertising tip •Landscape Email your resume, cover letter gage 541-388-4200. SERVICES. Home 8 C .O. m i xe d wo o d , your Garage Sale signs drought to youby Home Security Construction and salary history to: semi-dry, split, Del. in Commercial Repairs, •Water Feature (nails, staples, etc.) The Bulletin System 2GIG Jay Brandt, Advertising Director Carpentry-Painting, The Bulletin Bend. 2 cords $250; 1 after your Sale event 'brandt@bendbulletin.com To Subscribe call Installation/Maint. Brand new installed cord for $135, Cash or se ng central 0 egon since l goa Pressure-washing, is over! THANKS! or' •Pavers by AbbaJay in541-385-5800 or go to Honey Do's. On-time •Renovations check. 541-312-4355. From The Bulletin Ruger American Rifle, cludes 2 hour indrop off your resume in person at www.bendbulletin.com promise. Senior and your local utility •Irrigation Installation stallation and one 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; NIB, $365. Discount. Work guarPine & Juniper Split companies. 541-771-5648 LOCAL MONEY:We buy year basic security Or mail to PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708. anteed. 541-389-3361 Senior Discounts secured trustdeeds & service. $325. No phone inquiries please. or 541-771-4463 R uger G P 10 0 35 7 Bonded & Insured note,some hard money (Valued at $850) PROMPT D E LIVERY Sererng Central Oregon rrnceIgga Bonded 8 Insured 541-815-4458 mag., 6" bbl, SS, NIB, loans. Call Pat Kelley 541-382-3479 54Z-389-9663 EOE / Drug Free Workplace CCB¹181595 LCB¹8759 www.bendbulletin.com 541-382-3099 ext.13. $500. 541-480-1373.

The Bulletin

Sereng Central Oregon srnce lggs

speed rear cassette,

34-11, Avid Juicy disc brakes. Well t a ken care of. $950. 541-788-6227. Salomon women's ski boots, sz 6-6ya, worn 1x;

arrows round c ut, Sl -1 Clarity, F color. Appraised at $15,000. Very unique piece. Asking $9500.

Bend Habitat RESTORE

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By FRANK STEWART

doubles. What do you say? ANSWER: If your opponent had passed, a response of one spade would be reasonable. But the double suggests length and strength in spades, and since the auction may become competitive, to give your parbver a general picture of your strength and distribution may help him judge w hether t o c o mpete. Suppress your shaky spades and bid I NT. South dealer Both sides vulnerable NORTH 48743

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Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO

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PUZZLE BY PETERA. COLLINS

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For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.49 a minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800-814-5554. Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visit nyiimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past

puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.

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ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE: D E C O

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By David W. Cromer (c)2013 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

11/28/1 3


THE BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 28 2013 E5

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

~

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I

750

f •

e

Redmond Homes

880

Motorcycles & Accessories

e

RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605 - RoommateWanted 616- Want To Rent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomes for Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648 - Houses for RentGeneral 650 - Houses for Rent NEBend 652- Housesfor Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Housesfor Rent SWBend 658 - Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for RentSunriver 660 - Houses for Rent La Pine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663 - Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RV Parking 676 Mobile/Mfd.Space

682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687 - Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726 - Timeshares for Sale 730- New Listings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744 - Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746- Northwest Bend Homes 747 -Southwest Bend Homes 748- Northeast Bend Homes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- Redmond Homes 753 - Sisters Homes 755- Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson CountyHomes 757- Crook County Homes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational Homes andProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780- Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land

3/2.5, 1-level on 1/3 acre $310,000 2248 NW 19th, Redmond 541-923-3093

rage sale and don't forget to advertise in classified! 385-5809.

USE THE CLASSIFIEDS!

860

865

The Bulletin Classified

Motorcycles & Accessories

ATVs

541-385-5809

850

emp/oyee?

Snowmobiles

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

The Bulletin

Victory TC 2002, runs great, many accessories, new tires, under 40K miles, well kept. $5000. 541-771-0665

Looking for your next Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000

Motorh o mes •

M otorhom e s

GENERATE SOME excitement in your neigborhood. Plan a ga-

Canyon Rim Beauty •

Boats & Accessories

1994 Arctic Cat 580 EXT, in good condition, $1000. Located in La Pine. Call 541-408-6149.

Serving Central Oregon srnce 1903

Door-to-door selling with fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell.

Get Results! Call 385-5809 or

obo 541-447-5504

N avion R V 20 0 8 , Sprinter chassis 25'. Mercedes Benz diesel, 2 4 ,000 m i les, pristine con d ition, quality th r o ughout, r ear s lide-out w i t h queen bed, d e luxe captain swivel front seats, diesel generator, awning, no pets, no smoking. $79,950 obo. Financing avail.

541-382-2430

Watercraft

Ads published in eWa-

place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

G ulfstream Su n sport 30' Class A 1988 ne w f r i dge, TV, solar panel, new refrigerator, wheelc hair l i ft . 4 0 0 0W g enerator, Goo d condition! $12,500

tercraft" include: Kayaks, rafts and motorIzed personal watercrafts. For " boats" please s e e Class 870.

KOUNTRY AIRE

1994 37.5' motor-

home, with awning, 2013 Harley Honda TRX 350 FE and one slide-out, Davidson Dyna Providence 2005 2006, 4 wheel drive, Only 47k miles Wide Glide, black, Fully loaded, 35,000 electric start, electric and good condition. only 200 miles, miles, 350 Cat, Very s hift, n ew tire s , 771 brand new, all stock, $25,000. clean, non-smoker, $2500, 541-980-8006. Lots 541-548-0318 plus after-market 3 slides, side-by-side ~541-385-5809 870 (photo aboveis of a exhaust. Has winter refrigerator with ice MLS¹ 20 12 0 0 9 37 similar model & not the cover, helmet. maker, Washer/Dryer, Boats & Accessories actual vehicle) $535,000. Estate liv Serving Central Oregon since 1903 Selling for what I Flat screen TV's, In ing in The highlands owe on it: $15,500. motion satellite. a t b roken t o p 1 0 Call anytime, $95,000 Motorhome Tow B a r, acres, gated, private 541-554-0384 541-480-2019 used Roadmaster Fal• Motorhomes w ell, utilities at l o t , con all-terrain, $115. app for cap-fill septic. 541-383-0521 Pam Lester, Principal Harley Davidson 2009 Find exactly what B roker Century 2 1 745 you are looking for in the Sunchaser Pontoon Super Glide Custom, Gold Country Realty, boat - $19,895 Stage 1 Screaming Homes for Sale CLASSIFIEDS Bxfl &itjin Inc. 541-504-1338 Eagle performance, 20' 2006 Smokercraft oy ~g Pg too many options to cruise, S-8521. 2006 12250 NW Dove Rd. MLS¹201305077 75hp. Mercury. Full list, $8900. One level 2500 sq. ft COACHMAN $169,000. 20+ 541-388-8939 camping e n c losure. Freelander 2008 custom log home on A CRES I N WE S T Pop u p cha n ging 4.9 acres. Floor to 32' Class C, M-3150 NATIONAL DOLPHIN POWELL BUTTE ES room/porta-potty, BBQ, 37' 1997, loaded! 1 ceiling windows with TATES, gated c om Pristine - just 23,390 swim ladder, all gear. miles! slide, Corian surfaces, views of t h e m t ns. munity, mtn. v iews, Garage Sales Efficient coach Trailer, 2006 E a sywood floors (kitchen), has Ford V10 Hickory hardwood and private well, p aved gal v a nized. w/Banks pwr pkg, 2-dr fridge, convection Garage Sales loader tile floors $ 385,000 627 732 r oads w/access t o Rexair 28-ft P urchased new, a l l 14' slide, ducted furn/ microwave, Vizio TV 8 201101447 BLM. 1991Vacation Rentals Commercial/Investment MLS records. 541-706-9977, Garage Sales roof satellite, walk-in motorhome, AC, flat screen TV, Juniper Realty, Pam Lester, Principal Ideal for camping or cell 503-807-1973. 16' awning. No pets/ shower, new queen bed. & Exchanges Properties for Sale 541-504-5393 B roker Century 2 1 hunting, it has 45K Find them White leather hide-asmkg. 1 owner13' Seaswirl P14, 15hp Gold Country Realty, miles, a 460 gas enbed & chair, all records, Downtown Investment $279,000 - E x traordi- Inc. 541-504-1338 a must see! $52,500. in motor + trailer, $500. no pets or s moking. gine, new tires, auProperty - 5 u nits nary Cascade views. 541-548-4969 541-410-2308 .-=IF" tomatic levelers, The Bulletin $28,450. across from the river 1-acre, custom home, $97,000 - 2.59 acres. Onan generator, CalI 541-771-4800 on 1st St. 8 1509 NW bui l d . People Look for Information knotty hickory, knotty R eady t o Classifieds it king-size bed, aw2nd St. Original vin- alder, About Products and Corian, MLS¹201100751 Reduced $1 Oki ning. Nice condition tage 1917 home re- wrap-composite deck, Call Travis L. Han541-385-5809 Services Every Daythrough Have an item to Sell or trade? $8700. Christmas at nan, PC, Principal modeled in 2007. 3 dbl attached gar. MLS The Bulletin Classifieds 541-815-9939 the Coast sell quick? Broker BR, 3 bath, gourmet 201302855 WorldMark srtg 541-788-3480 kitchen, h a r dwood, Nancy Popp, If it's under Depoe Bay, OR Redmond RE/MAX granite 8 4-level elPrincipal Broker '500 you can place it in 2 bedroom condo, Need to get an Land & Homes Fleetwood Discovery evator. Main l i ving 541-815-8000 sleeps 6 2008 40X, Corian with vacation rentals Real Estate The Bulletin ad in ASAP? Crooked River 12/22 - 12/29 or 541-771-7786 counters, convection/ which will p r oduce Realty You can place it Classifieds for: 12/23 -12/30. micro 2-door fridge/ s®% m ost i n come. A t Mountain Estates Sf399 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, freezer, washer/dryer, online at: tached vacation rental 8579 SW Panorama Hager Harley Davidson 541-325-6566 '10 - 3 lines, 7 days is 1 BR, 1 bath, great Well maintained 3 bed, 4 lots, $30,000 each lo- 2011 Classic Lim- inboard motor, g r eat central vac, new tile 8 www.bendbuHetin.com cated in Silver Lake. carpet, roof sat., 3 TVs, cond, well maintained, room 8 huge deck, 2 bath, 1,404 sq. ft., '16 - 3 lines, 14 days Underground power ited, LOADED, 9500 $8995 obo. 541-350-7755 window awnings, levelseparate e n t rance, view of the Mtns. Inmiles, custom paint 541-385-5809 and conduitfor phone ers, ext'd warranty, multiiPrivate Party ads only) Call a Pro heating, etc. MLS ¹ s ulated s ho p w i t h and internet. Views of "Broken Glass" by media GPS, 350 Cum201309397. Whether you need a power & con c rete Hager Mountain. Sep- Nicholas Del Drago, TiCk, TOCk mins diesel, 7.5 gen. $1,500,000. f loor. Ac r oss t h e tic feasibility for stannew condition, fence fixed, hedges Many extras! $119,900. Call Ainslie Reynolds, street from the comm. d ard s ystem. T h e heated handgrips, TiCk, TOCk... 541-604-4662 trimmed or a house Principal Broker p ark 8 trails . area is a sportsman's auto cruise control. ReMax Key Properties. ...don't let time get built, you'll find $134,000. MLS paradise. $32,000 in bike, only 541-410-1054 Cell ¹201308611 away. Hire a professional help in Bobbie Strome, $23,000 obo. 541-728-0033 Office Juniper Realty, 541-318-6049 Principal Broker TIFFINPHAETON QSH professional out The Bulletin's "Call a 541-504-5393 John L Scott Real 2007 with 4 slides, CAT 738 Head south of The Bulletin's Service Professional" Estate 541-385-5500 350hp diesel engine, for the winter! Multiplexes for Sale "Call A Service L Directory NOTICE $125,900. 30,900 miles, 1997 Tropical by SHEVLIN RIDGE All real estate adverFleetwood D i s covery National RV. 35-ft, new Michelin tires, great 541-385-5B09 Professional" Three fully o ccupied tised here in is sub- 17,000 Sq.ft. Iot, ap40' 2003, diesel mocond! Dishwasher, w/d, Chevy Vortec en3182ysq.ft. t r iplexes ject to t h e F e deral proved plans. More Directory today! torhome w/all central vac, roof satellite, gine, new awnings, l ocated just a f e w details and photos on 630 F air H o using A c t , craigslist. $ 159,900. options-3 slide outs, aluminum wheels, 2 full everything works, blocks from shopping which makes it illegal Rooms for Rent Harley Davidson Sportsatellite, 2 TV's,W/D, slide-thru basement trays excellent condition, 8 the facilities of Juni- to advertise any pref- 541-389-8614 & 3 TV's. Falcon-2 towster 2 0 0 1 , 12 0 0cc, etc. 3 2,000 m i les. 1 owner, non-smokper Park. Exterior of Room for rent in Red- buildings have vinyl erence, limitation or 9,257 miles, $4995. Call Wintered i n h e ated ers, $15,000 OBO. bar and Even-Brake in775 mond, $350+ utilities. No discrimination based cluded. Michael, 541-310-9057 shop. $84,900 O.B.O. 541-408-7705 siding and are neat on race, color, reliManufactured/ smoking. Mature, r e541-447-8664 Call 541-977-4150 attractive. gion, sex, handicap, sponsible, 8 stable. Call and Mobile Homes 19' Seaswirl 1969 I/O, $ 325,000 fo r e a c h familial status or naHDFaf Bo 1996 Jim, 541-419-4513 160hp 6-cyl MerCruiser, triplex tional origin, or inten- FACTORY SPECIAL heavy duty trailer, $1000 MLS ¹201309427, 632 tion to make any such New Home, 3 bdrm, obo. 541-389-1473 201309433, $46,500 finished preferences, l i mitaApt./Multiplex General 201309444 on your site. tions or discrimination. 21' Crownline Cuddy Bobbie Strome, J and M Homes We will not knowingly CHECK YOUR AD Principal Broker 541-548-5511 Cabin, 1995, only accept any advertisJohn L Scott Real 325 hrs on the boat, Completely ing for r eal e state LOT MODEL Estate 541-385-5500 5.7 Merc engine with Rebuilt/Customized which is in violation of LIQUIDATION outdrive. Bimini top 2012/2013 Award this law. All persons Prices 745 Slashed Huge & moorage cover, Winner are hereby informed Savings! 10 Year $7500 obo. Homes for Sale Showroom Condition that all dwellings adon the first day it runs conditional warranty. 541-382-2577 Many Extras vertised are available Finished on your site. to make sure it isn cor- 16751 SW DOVE RD. Low Miles. on an equal opporturect. aSpellcheck and ONLY 2 LEFT! One level 2500 sq. ft. nity basis. The Bulle$17,000 human errors do ocRedmond, Oregon custom log home on 541-548-4807 cur. If this happens to 4.9 acres.Floor to ceil tin Classified 541-548-5511 your ad, please conJandMHomes.com ing windows w/views 746 tact us ASAP so that of the Mtns. Hickory Rent /Own Suzuki DRZ400 SM corrections and any hardwood 8 tile floors. Northwest Bend Homes 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes 2007, 14K mi., adjustments can be 21' Sun Tracker Sig. seMLS $499,999 4 gal. tank, racks, Clean 2 bdrm with large $2500 down, $750 mo. made to your ad. ries Fishin' Barge, Tracker 201208751 OAC. J and M Homes recent tires, fully basement. Spacious 54I -385-5809 50hp, live well, fish fndr, Juniper Realty, 541-548-5511 serviced. attached studio. Dbl The Bulletin Classified new int, extras, exc cond, 541-504-5393 $3900 OBO. garage. Move-in $7900. 541-508-0679 780 541-383-2847. Where can you find a Super nice. Well cared ready. Only $320,000. Ads published in the Call Glenn Oseland, Mfd./Mobile Homes for NE Bend, 3 bdrm, helping hand? "Boats" classification Principal Broker, 2 bath, 1502 s q.ft. with Land include: Speed, fishFrom contractors to 541-350-7829 This one owner home Holiday Realty ing, drift, canoe, yard care, it's all here has new carpet, inte $189,900 Nearly house and sail boats. 71/2-acres with Casr ior paint, l ight f i x in The Bulletin's I For all other types of 750 tures, sink f aucets, cade & D e s chutes "Call A Service watercraft, please go River canyon views. high q u a l it y dis Redmond Homes to Class 875. 0 Professional" Directory tressed har d wood 3 bdrm, 2 bath, w/ex541-385-5809 tensive decks. Double Triumph Day t ona laminate in k i tchen,$ 279,900 - Home - 3 dining & utility rooms. Car Garage - RV garage and workshop. 2004, 15 K m i l e s, 648 MLS 201307097 Nice t i le d k i t chen Parking, 3 b drm, 2 Serving Central Oiegon since 1903 perfect bike, needs Houses for counters, tiled floors b ath, G reat R o o m Nancy Popp, nothing. Vin Rent General Principal Broker and counter in bath Vaulted, Ga s F i r e¹201536. 541-815-8000 r ooms. Nice w o r k place, 12x20 Bonus/ $4995 PUBLISHER'S Crooked River bench and cabinets in Media Room, 22x48 Dream Car NOTICE garage. Extraordinary Concrete RV Area. Realty Auto Sales All real estate adver- l andscape 8 w a t e r Audrey Cook, Broker Just bought a new boat? f801 Division, Bend tising in this newspa- feature in vinyl fenced 541-923-4663 Sell your old one in the DreamCarsBend.com Beautiful h o u seboat, per is subject to the back y ard. U n d er Windermere $85,000. 541-390-4693 Ask about our 54I -878-0240 F air H o using A c t ground sprinklers front Central Oregon Real classifieds! Super Seller rates! www.centraloregon Dlr 3665 which makes it illegal a nd back. Move i n Estate 541-385-5809 houseboat.com. to a d vertise "any r eady! N o dis a p preference, limitation p ointments here ! $349,500 Small or disc r imination ¹201308584 acreage with i r r ibased on race, color, John L. Scott Real 1Is& gated pasture overss& YOURADwILL REcEIt/E cLosE To 2,00&000 religion, sex, handi- Estate 541-548-1712 looking p on d 8 Classified EXPOSURES FOR ONLY I2SO! cap, familial status, f enced past u r e marital status or naA,dVertisittg 0 ge cl f lrassrinngsrnel v r c r % sronsesrvtntv phl l s t c n eae ready for horses or Get your tional origin, or an inother critters. DeWeek of Novemher 25, 2013 Network tention to make any business tached garage shop such pre f e rence, w/storage. limitation or discrimiMLS¹201307823. nation." Familial sta- G ROWI N G Call Don C h apin, Serving Central Oregon since 1903 tus includes children P rincipal Bro k e r under the age of 18 541-385-5809 541-923-0855 with an ad in living with parents or Redmond RE/MAX The Bulletin's legal cus t o dians, L and 8 Hom e s pregnant women, and "Call A Service Real Estate people securing cusL ist one It em " i n 541-771-7786 DIVORCE $155. Complete preparation. Includes Professional" tody of children under children, custody, support, property and bills Directory 18. This newspaper The Bulletin's Classifieds for Good classified ads tell will not knowingly acdivision. N o co u r t a p p e arances. D i vorced the essential facts in an cept any advertising Gorgeous Custom Built three days for FREE. in 1-5 weeks possible.503-772-5295. Www. for real estate which is Home On 3 3 A c re interesting Manner. Write paralegalalternatives.com legalalt©msn.com in violation of the law. W/Views! $1,990,000 from thereaders view - not the seller's. Convert the O ur r e aders ar e TEAM Birtola Garmyn factsinto benefits. Show hereby informed that High Desert Realty P RINT and ON -LIN E all dwellings adver541-312-9449 the reader how the item will tised in this newspawww. BendOregon help them in someway. Gordon Trucking, Inc. CDL-A Solos & Team Truck at bendbulletin.com per are available on RealEstate.com This Drivers. Up to $5,000 Sign-On-Bonus 8 $.54 an equal opportunity advertising tip basis. To complain of 7150 SW S WALLOW brought to you by CPM. Consistent Miles, Benefits, 401k, EOE. Call discrimination cal l RD. Spacious 1804 7 days/week 866-435-8590 HUD t o l l-free at sq. ft. 3 bdrm, 2 bath The Bulletin se ng cenirai 0 egon smce l sos 1-800-877-0246. The w ith S m i t h Roc k DRIVERS It's a great time to change! Haney Truck toll f re e t e l ephone v iews. B r ight a n d Ranch number for the hear- o pen k itchen a n d $389,900 Line seeks top-quality, professional truck drivers ing im p aired is great room. Private house - Barn - Shop for regional work! Earn up to $0.375/mile. CDL-A 1-800-927-9275. location on 5.62 6.39 Acres zoned for acres. $199,000. MLS 2 acre lots, 3 Acres Irrequired. 1-888-414-4467. Apply online: www. 201304491 J u n iper rigation & Mt. Views, 5 693 gohaney.Com 60 F t . Realty, 541-504-5393 S tall Barn 8 Office/Retail Space round pen, 210x105 To receive your FREECLASSIFIEDAD, call 385-5809orvisit D rivers-Whether y o u ha v e exp e r ience o r for Rent Pristine Large Family Arenas, Oversize gaHome or V a cation rage an d w h large need training, w e o f f e r u n b eatable c areer The Bulletinoffice at: 3777SWChandler Ave.(onBend's west side) 500 sq. ft. upstairs Getaway. $399,900 shop. opportunities. Trainee, Company Driver, LEASE office on NE side of TEAM Birtola Garmyn Audrey Cook, Broker * 541-923-4663 OfferallOWS far 3 ineSoi teXt Only. EXCludeSall SerV10 0, hay, WOO d, PetS/ammalS, PlantS, ilCkeiS,WeaPOnS, town, private bath, all High Desert Realty OPERATOR, LEASE TRAINERS. 877-369-7104 rentalS andemPIOyment adVertiSmg, and all CommergialaCCO untS.MuStbeanmdlgldual liem under$200.00 and util. paid. $500 month 541-312-9449 Windermere WWW.CentraltruCkdriVingjobS.Com pace oi individual liem must be mcl u ded m the ad. Ask your Bul l e en Sales Representat>veaboutspecial pnclng, plus $500 d eposit. www. BendOregon Central Oregon Real longerlun schedulesandaddnonal teuures. umx i ad pel liem per30 daysio besold. 541-480-4744 RealEstate.com Estate

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E6 THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2013 • THE BULLETIN •

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AUTOS &TRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916- Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932- Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935- Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles 881

Tioga 24' Class C Motorhome Bought new in 2000, currently under 20K miles, excellent shape, new tires, professionaly winterized every year, cutoff switch to battery, plus new RV batteries. Oven, hot water heater & air conditioning have never been used! $24,000 obo. Serious inquiries, please. Stored in Terrebonne. 541-548-5174

Winnebago Aspect

2009- 32', 3 s lideouts, Leather interior, Power s e at, locks, windows, Aluminum w heels. 17" Flat S creen, S urround sou n d ,

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BOATS &RVs 805 -Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - MotorcyclesAndAccessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats &Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885 - Canopies andCampers 890 - RVs for Rent Motorhomes

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9

Travel Trailers

Fifth Wheels

Aircraft, Parts & Service

541-382-9441

Tango 29.6' 2007, Rear living, walkaround queen bed, central air, awning, 1 large slide, $15,000 obo (or trade for camper that fits 6f/s' pickup bed, plus cash). 541-280-2547 or 541-815-4121

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Keystone Challenger

Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories

Pickups

Sport Utility Vehicles

2 M ichelin/2 B ridgestone P25 5 /65R-17

541-617-8997

Les Schwab Mud & Snow blackwall Murano

1 /3 interest i n w e l l- Observe G02, used equipped IFR Beech Bo- 1 winter. Pd $1200. nanza A36, new 10-550/ Will take reasonable prop, located KBDN. offer. 541-306-4915 $65,000. 541-419-9510 932

Antique & Classic Autos

FORD XLT 1992 3/4 ton 4x4

matching canopy, 30k original miles, possible trade for classic car, pickup, motorcycle, RV $13,500. In La Pine, call 928-581-9190

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Cessna 150 LLC

150hp conversion, low time on air frame and engine, hangared in Bend. Excellent performance & affordable flying! $6,500.

Toyota Celica Convertible 1993

Honda Accord LX, 2004, 4-door, 541-598-3750 silver exterior with www.aaaoregonautocharcoal interior, source.com great condition, 67,000 miles, Volkswagen T o uareg asking $9000. 2004 Met i culously Call 435-565-2321 maintained. Very clean inside and out. (located in Bend) V6. Recently serviced - 60 point inspection Advertise your car! s heet. $8900 C a l l Add A Picture! Oregon

AoroSouroe

Reach thousands of readers!

541-480-0097

I nternational Fla t Bed Pickup 1963, 1 t on dually, 4 s p d. trans., great MPG, could be exc. wood hauler, runs great, new brakes, $1950.

Call 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Ctassifieds

Vans

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GMC 1995 Safari XT,, A/C, seats 8, 4.3L V6 studs on rims, $1500 obo. 541-312-6960

Black Friday DEAL! 1999 Subaru Outback •

Au t o mobiles

Lincoln LS 2001 4door sport sedan, plus set of snow tires. $6000. 541-31 7-0324.

loaded, silver, 2 sets of tires and a set of chains. $13,500. 541-362-5598

AutoSouroe

www.aaaoregonautosource.com

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541-410-6007

Corvette Coupe 1996, 350 auto, 135k, non-ethanol fuel/synthetic oil, garaged/covered. Bose Premium Gold system. Orig. owner manual. Stock! $10,500 OBO. Retired. Must sell!

Mercedes C300

Chevy 1955 PROJECT 2009 car. 2 door wgn, 350 4-door 4-Matic, Look at: BMW X3 2 0 07, 99 K small block w/Weiand red with black miles, premium packBendhomes.com dual quad tunnel ram age, leather interior, heated lumbar for Complete Listings of with 450 Holleys. T-10 navigation, pan541-923-1781 Keystone Raptor, 2007 Area Real Estate for Sale 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, supported seats, panoramic roof, loaded! oramic moonroof, 37 toy hauler, 2 slides, Weld Prostar wheels, camera, Queen bed, One owner, only ski bag, Xegenerator, A/C, 2 TVs, extra rolling chassis + Bluetooth, Foam mattress, Aw29,200 miles. non headlights, tan & BMW 525 2002 satellite system w/auto extras. $6500 for all. black ning, Generator, Inleather interior, $23,000 obo. Luxury Sport Ediseek, in/out sound sys541-389-7669. verter, Auto Jacks, 541-475-3306 n ew front 8 rea r tion, V-6, automatic, tem, sleeps 6,m any exAir leveling, Moon brakes O 76K miles, '-0f tras. $32,500. In Madras loaded, 18" new roof, no smoking or one owner, all records, call 541-771-9607 or tires, 114k miles. Find It in p ets. L i k e ne w , very clean, $16,900. 541-475-6265 $7,900 obo $74,900 541-388-4360 1974 Bellanca The Bulletin Classifieds! (541) 419-4152 541-480-6900 1730A Take care of 541-385-5809 your investments o o Ford Model A 1930 WEEKEND WARRIOR 2180 TT, 440 SMO, ~ Porsche 911 Toy hauler/travel trailer. with the help from Coupe, good condition, 180 mph, excellent Carrera 993 cou e 24' with 21' interior. $16,000. 541-588-6084 Chevy Tahoe 2001 condition, always The Bulletin's 5.3L V8, leather, Sleeps 6. Self-conhangared, 1 owner air, heated seats, "Call A Service Need help fixing stuff? tained. Systems/ for 35 years. $60K. Call A Service Professional fully loaded, 120K mi. appearancein good Professional" Directory $7500 obo BMW M-Roadster, Winnebaqo Suncruiser34' condition. Smoke-free. find the help you need. 541-460-0494 In Madras, 2000, w/hardtop. 2004, 35K, loaded, too Tow with ys-ton. Strong www.bendbulletin.com call 541-475-6302 $19,500 much to list, ext'd warr. suspension; can haul 57,200 miles, thru 2014, $49,900 Den- ATVs snowmobiles, 1996, 73k miles, Titanium silver. Not nis, 541-589-3243 Dramatic Price ReducTiptronic auto. even a small car! Great many M-Roadsters price - $8900. tion Executive Hangar transmission. Silver, available. (See 881 at Bend Airport (KBDN) blue leather interior, Call 541-593-6266 Craigslist posting id Price Reduced! 60' wide x 50' deep, moon/sunroof, new Travel Trailers Monaco Lakota 2004 w/55' ¹4155624940 for wide x17' high biFord T-Bird, 1966, 390 quality tires and 5th Wheel additional details.) Looking for your fold dr. Natural gas heat, engine, power every- lnfiniti FX35 2012, battery, car and seat 34 ft.; 3 s lides; imSerious inquiries next employee? bathroom. Adjacent thing, new paint, 54K Platinum silver, covers, many extras. maculate c o ndition; offc, only. 541-480-5348 Place a Bulletin help to Frontage Rd; great orig. miles, runs great, 24,000 miles, with Recently fully serl arge screen TV w / visibility wanted ad today and for aviation busi- exc. cond.in/out.$7500 factory wa r ranty, viced, garaged, entertainment center; ness. 541-948-2126 or reach over 60,000 obo. 541-480-3179 f ully l o aded, A l l looks and runs like reclining chairs; cen- email 1jetjock@q.com readers each week. Wheel Drive, GPS, new. Excellent conter kitchen; air; queen Your classified ad sunroof, etc. dition $29,700 Fleetwood A m e ri- will bed; complete hitch also appear on TURN THE PAGE $35,500. 541-322-9647 cana W i lliamsburg and new fabric cover. bendbulletin.com 541-550-7189 For More Ads 2006. Two king tent $18,000 OBO. which currently reend beds w/storage (541) 548-5886 The Bulletin over 1.5 milBuick LaCrosse CXS Porsche 911 Turbo a!t runk b e lo w on e , ceives lion page views ev2 005, loaded, n e w slideout portable diPiper A rcher 1 9 8 0,GMC fxston 1971, Only ery month at no battery/tires, p e rfect nette, bench s e at, extra cost. Bulletin based in Madras, al- $19,700! Original low $8495. 541-475-6794 cassette t o i le t & exceptional, 3rd ways hangared since mile, Classifieds Get Reshower, swing level new. New annual, auto owner. 951-699-7171 Call 385-5809 Cadillac El Dorado galley w/ 3 bu r ner sults! pilot, IFR, one piece a~ . %a.a or place your ad 1994 Total Cream Puff! cook top and s ink. ELK HUNTERS! MONTANA 3585 2008, windshield. Fastest Aron-line at Body, paint, trunk as 2003 6 speed, X50 outside grill, outside Jeep CJ5 1979, orig. exc. cond., 3 slides, cher around. 1750 tobendbulletin.com showroom, blue added power pkg., shower. includes 2 owner, 87k only 3k on leather, king bed, Irg LR, tal t i me . $6 8 ,500. $1700 wheels 530 HP! Under 10k propane tanks, 2 batnew 258 long block. w/snow tires although Arctic insulation, all 541-475-6947, ask for miles, Arctic silver, teries, new tires plus C lutch p kg , W a r n 882 options $35,000 obo. Rob Berg. car has not been wet in gray leather interior, bike trailer hitch on hubs. Excellent run541-420-3250 GMC Sierra 1977 short Fifth Wheels 8 years. On trip to new quality t i res, back bumper. Dealer very dependable. Boise bed, e xlnt o r i ginal ner, avg. 28.5 mpg., and battery, Bose serviced 2013. $8500 Northman 6 f/s' plow, cond., runs & drives $4800. 541-593-4016.s premium sound ste541-948-2216 Alpenlite 2002, 31' great. V8, new paint Warn 6000¹ w i nch. reo, moon/sunroof, with 2 slides, rear and tires. $4750 obo. $9500 or best reacar and seat covers. sonable offer. kitchen, very good 541-504-1050 USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Many extras. Ga541-549-6970 or condition. raged, perfect conSave money. Learn 541-815-8105. Non-smokers, Door-to-door selling with OPEN ROAD 36' dition $59,700. to fly or build hours no pets. $19,500 fast results! It's the easiest 2005 - $25,500 541-322-9647 with your own airFIND IT! or best offer. King bed, hide-a-bed way in the world to sell. c raft. 1 96 8 A e r o 541-382-2577 BUY IT! sofa, 3 slides, glass Corvette 1979 Commander, 4 seat, SELL IT! shower, 10 gal. waL82- 4speed. Porsche Carrera 911 The Bulletin Classified 150 HP, low time, ter heater, 10 cu.ft. The Bulletin Classifieds 2003 convertible with 85,000 miles Call The Bulletin At full panel. $23,000 541-385-5809 MGA 1959 - $19,999 hardtop. 50K miles, fridge, central vac, Garaged since new. obo. Contact Paul at 541-385-5809 Convertible. O r iginew factory Porsche s atellite dish, 27 " Black Friday DEAL! I've owned it 25 541-447-5184. nal body/motor. No Fleetwood Wilderness Place Your Ad Or E-Mail motor 6 mos ago with TV/stereo syst., front Lexus RX300 2000 years. Never damrust. 541-549-3838 18 mo factory warN.W. Edition 26' 2002, At: www.bendbulletin.com front power leveling AWD ¹104318 aged orabused. ranty remaining. 1 slide, sleeps 6 , jacks and s c issor The Bulletin's $7,938. Price good $12,900. $37,500. queen bed, c o uch, stabilizer jacks, 16' Oo until 3 p.m only. "Call A Service ~ Dave, 541-350-4077 541-322-6928 stove/oven, tub/ aawning. Like new! Professional" Directory M ore Pi x a t B e n d b u ll e t i n . c o m 541-419-0566 shower, front e lec. 0 m is all about meeting Just bought a new boat? jack, waste tank heatAutoSouroe Sell your old one in the e rs, s t abilizers, 2 your needs. What are you classifieds! Ask about our 541-598-3750 prop. ta n ks , no Super Seller rates! Call on one of the www.aaaoregonautosmoking/pets, winter- Arctic Fox 2003 Cold looking for? 541-385-5809 professionals today! source.com i zed, g oo d co n d . Weather Model 34 5B, You'll find it in $8500 OBO licensed thru 2/15, exlnt cond. 3 elec slides, solar Black Friday DEAL! Subaru Imp r eza 541-447-3425 CORVETTE COUPE Plymouth B a r racuda Lexus RX330 2006 panel, 10 gal water htr, The Bulletin Classifieds 2006, 4 dr., AWD, Glasstop 2010 14' awning, (2) 10-gal 1966, original car! 300 AWD. ¹562006. silver gray c o lor, Grand Sport - 4 LT Where can you find a propane tanks, 2 batts, hp, 360 V8, centerauto, real nice car in $16,717. Price good loaded, clear bra 541-385-5809 helping hand? lines, 541-593-2597 catalytic htr in addition to until 3 p.m only. great shape. $6200. hood 8 fenders. central heating/AC, gen541-548-3379. From contractors to New Michelin Super tly used, MANY features! SuperhawkSports, G.S. floor yard care, it's all here Must see to appreciate! Only 1 Share mats, 17,000 miles, Subaru STi 2010, AoroSouroe in The Bulletin's $19,000. By owner (no Crystal red. 16.5K, rack, mats, cust Available dealer calls, please). Call 541-598-3750 "Call A Service $42,000. snow whls, stored, oneEconomical flying or text 541-325-1956. www.aaaoregonauto503-358-1164. owner, $29,000, in your own Professional" Directory source.com 541.410.6904 Recreation by Design VW Bug Sedan, 1969, IFR equipped Just too many 2013 Monte Carlo, 38-ft. Cessna 172/180 HP for fully restored, 2 owners, Top living room, 2 bdrm, with 73,000 total miles, collectibles? only $13,500! New has 3 slideouts, 2 A/Cs, Garmin Touchscreen $10,000. 541-382-5127 a ~ • entertainment center, avionics center stack! Sell them in yp 933 fireplace, W/D, Exceptionally clean! The Bulletin Classifieds garden tub/shower, in Pickups Hangared at BDN. great condition.$36,000 Call 541-728-0773 Keystone Laredo31' or best offer. Call Peter, 541-385-5809 RV 20 06 w ith 1 2 ' 307-221-2422, slide-out. Sleeps 6, ( in La Pine ) Trucks & WILL DELIVER queen walk-around CHECK YOUR AD 1966 Ford F250 Heavy Equipment bed w/storage under3/4 ton, 352 V8, 2WD, neath. Tub 8 shower. Say "goodbuy" P/S, straight body, 2 swivel rockers. TV. runs good. $3000. to that unused Air cond. Gas stove 8 541-410-8749 refrigerator/freezer. item by placing it in Microwave. Awning. on the first day it runs The Bulletin Classifieds Outside shower. to make sure it is corChevy 1986, long bed, Slide through storPeterbilt 359 p o table four spd., 350 V8 rea ge, E a s y Lif t . rect. "Spellcheck" and water t r uck, 1 9 9 0, 5 41-385-580 9 human errors do ocbuilt, custom paint, $29,000 new; 3200 gal. tank, 5hp ti r e s and Asking$18,600 cur. If this happens to pump, 4-3" h o ses, great RV space avail. in 541-447-4805 your ad, please concamlocks, $ 2 5 ,000. wheels, new t a g s, Tumalo, 30 amp hk-up $5000 obo. tact us ASAP so that 541-820-3724 $375. 541-419-5060 541-389-3026 corrections and any adjustments can be 925 Dodge 2007 Diesel 4WD Want to impress the made to your ad. Utility Trailers SLT quad cab, short box, 541-385-5809 relatives? Remodel auto, AC, high mileage, The Bulletin Classified your home with the $12,900. 541-389-7857 help of a professional 05 MTN BIKE from The Bulletin's Layton 27-ft, 2001 Clean andSmooth "Call A Service running mountain bike! • c Professional" Directory Front & rear entry Replaceyour oldtrail bikeyouandfindthat AWESOMEnewride! Full Suspension, doors, bath, shower, New 2013 Wells Cargo 1 te frame, Discbrakes, queen bed, slide-out, Item Priced af: You r Total Ad Cost onl: I V-nose car hauler, 8ys' x Drive train upraded! •oj ji• j• •j o I I oven, microwave, air A Must Ride! 20', 5200-Ib axles. Price Ford Supercab 1992, • Under $500 $29 Fleetwood Prowler conditioning, patio new is $7288; asking brown/tan color with $1000oeo 32' - 2001 • $500 to $99 9 $ 39 awning, twin pro$6750. 541-548-3595 m atching f ul l s i z e 541-000-000 2 slides, ducted • $1000 to $2499 $ 49 pane tanks, very c anopy, 2WD, 4 6 0 heat & air, great nice, great floor plan, • $2500 and over $59 over drive, 135K mi., condition, snowbird $8895. Need to get an ad full bench rear seat, ready, Many upRV Transport Includes up to 40 words of text, 2" in length, with 541-316-1388 slide rear w i ndow, grade options, fiin ASAP? Local or Long Dishe Bu l l e t j I l bor der, full color photo, boldheadlineandprice. bucket seats, power Serrmg Central Oregon once e03 nancing available! tance: 5th wheels, seats w/lumbar, pw, • The Bulletin, • The CentralOregonNicke Ads $14,500 obo. camp trailers, toy Check out the 5 4 ] 385 5 8 0 Q Fax it to 541-322-7253 HD receiver 8 trailer haulers, etc. • Central Oregon Marketplace o bendbulletin.com classifieds online Some restrictions apply brakes, good t ires. Call Dick, Ask for Teddy, www.bendbuffefln.com The Bulletin Classifieds Good cond i tion. Privateparfymerchandiseonly - excludespets& ivestock, autos,Rvs, mo!orcyces, boats,airplanes, andgaragesaecafegories 541-480-1687. 541-260-4293 Updated daily $4900. 541-389-5341

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On a classified ad go to www.bendbulletin.com to view additional photos of the item.

Mercedes Benz

E500 4-matic 2004 86,625 miles, sunroof with a shade,

541-598-3750

1921 Model T Delivery Truck Restored 8 Runs $9000. 541-389-8963

d rive, M ust S E E ! $5995. R e dmond. 541-504-1993

' More PixatBendbuletim.com

Sport Utility Vehicles

$5,289 Price good until 3 p.m only.

cyl, 5

speed, a/c, pw, pdl, nicest c o n vertible around in this price range, ne w t i r es, wheels, clutch, timing belt, plugs, etc. 111K mi., remarkable cond. i n side and out. Fun car to

WHEN YOU SEE THIS

935

AWD ¹321487

G T 2200 4

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541-419-5480.

1/5th interest in 1973

Automo b iles

$8,222 Price good until 3 p.m only

$150. 765-427-8347

4 studded snow tires on rims, 70-R17, fits Ford Expedition. $75 ea including rim, obo.

Autom o biles •

Black Friday DEAL! Mercedes ML320 2001 AWD. 275900

P245/50/R-20 102T

2004 CH34TLB04 34'

fully S/C, w/d hookups, new 18' Dometic awning, 4 new tires, new Kubota 7000w marine diesel generator, 3 slides, exc. cond. ins ide 8 o u t . 27 " T V dvd/cd/am/fm entertain center. Call for more details. Only used 4 times total in last 5ys y ears.. No pets, n o smoking. High r etail $27,700. Will sell for $24,000 including sliding hitch that fits in your truck. Call 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. for appt to see. 541-330-5527.

933

Hancook DynaPro tires s tudded, o n ri m s , 225/70R/16, like new $375. 541-593-4398. Pirelli Scorpion snow & ice tires, 235/65R17. used on e s e a son. 1/3 interest in Columbia $150 f o r all 4. 400, $150,000 (located I Bend.) Also: Sunri- 541-322-6964. ver hangar available for The Bulletin sale at $155K, or lease, To Subscribe call O $400/mo. 541-385-5800 or go to 541-948-2963 www.bendbulletin.com - ~

Orbit 21'2007, used only 8 times, A/C, oven, tub s hower, micro, load leveler hitch, awning, dual batteries, sleeps 4-5, EXCELLENT CONDITION. All accessories are included. $14,511 OBO.

931

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

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Legal Notices LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SEIZURE FOR CIVIL FORFEITURE TO ALL POTENTIAL CLAIMANTS AND TO ALL UNKNOWN PERSONS READ THIS CAREFULLY

If you have any interest in the seized property described below, you must claim that interest or you will automatically lose that interest. If you do not file a c laim for t he property, the property may be forfeited even if you are not convicted of any crime. To claim an interest, you must file a written claim with the forfeiture counsel named below, Th e w r i tten claim must be signed by you, sworn to under penalty of perjury before a notary public, and state: (a) Your true name; (b) The address at which you will a c cept f u t ure m ailings f ro m th e court and f o rfeiture c ounsel; and (3) A s tatement that y o u have an interest in the seized property. Your deadline for filing the claim document with forfeiture cou n sel n amed below is 2 1 days from the last day of publication of this notice. Where to file a claim and for more i nformation: Da i n a Vitolins, Crook County District Attorney Office, 300 N E T h i rd Street, Prineville, OR 97754.

Notice of reasons for Forfeiture: The property described below was seized for forfeiture because it: (1) Constitutes the p roceeds of the violation of, solicitation to violate, attempt to violate, or conspiracy to violates, the criminal laws of the State of Oregon regarding the manufacture, distribution, or possession of controlled substances (ORS C h apter475); and/or (2) Was used or intended for use in committing or f acilitating the violation of, solicitation to violate, attempt to violate, or conspiracy to violate the criminal laws of the State of Oregon regarding the manufacture, distribution or possession of c o ntrolled sub s tances (ORS Chapter 475). IN THE MATTER OF:

(1)One 1996 H o nda A ccord, O L N 61 5 EFQ, and $3,217.00 in US Currency, Case No. 12-251999 seized 12-12-12 from Adam Merritt. LEGAL NOTICE The following units will be sold at Public Auction on Friday, December 6th, 2013 at 11 a.m. at Bend Mini Storage, 1 00 S E

B end,

3rd St.,

Oreg o n

97702. Unit ¹ C129

— Jennifer Bradley, Unit ¹ C121 — Jessica Devan Unit ¹ C171 — Burt John Duer and Maylene Woods, Unit ¹ C188 — Frederick Jensen, Unit ¹ B33 Michael Ray Perry, Unit ¹ B51 — James Scoit.


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