Bulletin Daily Paper 01-01-15

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Serving Central Oregon since190375

THURSDAY January1, 201 5

icias an ou san as

LOCAL• B1

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD

it t enew earcomesnew re on aws Related

Oregonians will be asked to follow a handful of new

Legislature. The laws are modest in effect, focusing largely on buyers of foreclosed homes, children of volunteer public

line of duty and charities that

While the state became one of four to legalize recreational marijuana in the midterm elections, which will

laws handed down from the

safety workers killed in the

cheat on documents they file

take effect July 1, some as-

By Taylor W.Anderson The Bulletin

SALEM — Starting today,

• See what other laws around the country go into effect today,A5

with the state.

pects of the law will likely be changed before possession is legal. Here's a rundown of Oregon's new laws for 2015. SeeLaws /A5

Fire chief retires —Craig Letz retires after 25 years asa federal firefighter and threeas the fire staff officer for public lands in Central Oregon.B1

/L~B)p ~e~~ • THE 101ST

ROSE BOWL

Mllihs —Idling your car in cold weather doesn't help it warm up anyfaster — and could actually costyou.A3

Airport food — Terminals are the latest place hit with the farm-to-table trend, as travelers look for healthier options when they fly.D1

What BendneedS — As we begin a newyear, wetake stock of the city's arts scene and brainstorm ways to improve it.GO!magazine

Hawaii's wholesome Heismall By David Naknmura

But the Mariotas — whose son

The Washington Post

Marcus, 21, the star Oregon quarter-

HONOLULU — S hortly before they

arrived at the Heisman Trophy cere-

And a Wed exclusiveThose who weretouched by Ebola this year recount how their lives havechanged. bentibnlletin.com/extrns

mony in New York City, Toa and Alana

Deppe-Mariota made a request to the friends from Hawaii who had flown in to support them: no leis.

back, was the heavy favorite this year — were adamant that there be no such display. "Typically, a lei is a celebration. They wanted tobe like everyone else and respect the process. No leis until after," said

Two years earlier, Hawaii native Mantei Sione Thompson, the assistant headmasTe'o of Notre Dame and his parents had ter at the Saint Louis School in Honolulu, worn the traditional Polynesian floral gar- where Mariota played football and gradulands while attending the televised crown- ated in 2011. ing of college football's best player. SeeMariota/A4

(

EDITOR'5CHOICE

Academics upset over possible cut of marriage questioning

Tom Finneran, of Portland, also

known as "The Duck Nut," works on getting the crowd excited at

lf

Oregon's Rose Bowl pep rally at Santa Monica Place on Wednes-

U

day afternoon. Ryan Brennecke 1 The Bulletin

College Football Playoff semifinal No. 2 Oregonvs. No. 3 Florida St.

By Justin Wolfers

WATCH LISTEN

New York Times News Service

If the Census Bureau

Coverage K BNDstarts at 2 AM 1110, p.m. on ESPN FM-100.1

proceeds with a recently released plan, then in a few years' time we will know very little about how the

WE'RE IN PASADENA

contours of family life are changing.

The Bulletin is onthe ground in California, delivering updates and photos for print and multimedia for today'sgame. And if the Ducksmakethe championship game,we'll be there, too. • Coachesbriefedbefore thegame Sports, C1, C4

We will not even know

whether marriage and divorce rates are rising or

falling. For all the talk of evidence-based policy, the result will be that import-

ant debates on issues including family law, welfare reform, same-sex marriage and the rise of nontraditional families will proceed in a statistical void.

Much of what economists who study family issues have learned about

recenttrendsinmarriage

Fans get pumped at Ducks pep rally By Mark Morical The Bulletin

SANTA M O NICA,

C a lif.

Bowl. Duck supporters lined the hand-

semifinal contest against Florida

rails on all three stories of the mall

advance to the national championship game.

Thousands of University of Oregon plaza and were worked into a frenfootball fans packed into the open- zy bythe Oregon Marching Band, air mall of Santa Monica Place on cheerleaders and a couple of speWednesday afternoon and were cial guests. treated to a briefbut boisterous pep Oregon fans were gearing rally in advance of today's Rose up for this afternoon's national

State, the winner of which will The crowd noise grew to a fever

pitch when Duck legend Kenny Wheaton was introduced onto the small, makeshift stage. SeeRally/A4

and divorce has come from

questions in the American Community Survey. It asks people whether they have given birth, married,

divorced or been widowed in the past year. Their an-

swers allow demographers to track marriage and divorce rates by age, gender, race and education. These data have re-

Mark J. Terrill The Associated Press file photo

Indonesia learnslessonsfrom Malaysia in AirAsia crash By Chris Blake

"The Indonesian gov-

sociates in Arlington, Texas,

The airline and the Malay-

Bloomberg News

ernment and AirAsia have

an airline safety and accident

sian government's handling of the crisis were criticized for a lack of urgency in the

found from Malaysian Airline

initial hours, transparency

System Flight 370, which

in releasing information and

have recovered debris and

vanished March 8 on the way

coordination on where to

six bodies floating in the sea from the AirAsia plane that

from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing with 239 people on board.

search.

vealed many important

search for a downed AirAsia

responded more rapidly and with more accuracy to their

went missing on Sunday with 162 people on board. investigation consultant. "PerBy contrast, not a single haps a learned lesson of what piece of wreckage has been

social trends, including the rise of sharply different marriage and divorce patterns between rich and poor and the increase in divorce among older Americans, even as it has fallen for younger people. And they have provided

plane avoided the missteps

customers, family members,

not to do."

that plagued the still-fruitless hunt for a Malaysian jet

and the media in general in comparison to the Malaysian

that disappeared almost 10

accidents," said Curt Lewis,

months ago.

president of Curt Lewis & As-

the only statistical window

into the adoption of samesex marriage. SeeCensus/A5

BANGKOK — Indonesia's

TODAY'S WEATHER i<r ~r

Sunny and chilly High 30, Low17 Page B6

Indonesian search crews

The Bulletin

INDEX Business Calendar Classified

C5-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Health 01-6 Obituaries B2 Crosswords E 4 H o roscope D6 Sports E1-6 Dear Abby 06 Lo c al/State B1-6 IV/Movies

AnIndependent

B5 C1-4 06

SeeAirAsia /A5

Q i/i/e use reclrcled newsprint

Vol. 113, No. 1,

s sections

0

88 267 0 23 29

1


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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 1, 2015

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aes ine'smoves e • ., sraeiwarnin s By Jodi Rudoren New York Times News Service

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JERUSALEM — President

Mahmoud Abbas

m oved

on Wednesday to have the

Palestinian Authority j oin

N EW S R O O M AFTER HOURS AND WEEKENDS

the I nternational C r i m inal Court, opening a new front in the Middle East conflict

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"We want to complain to this organization (the International Criminal Court).As long as there is no peace, and the world doesn't prioritize peace in this region, this region will live in constant conflict. The Palestinian cause is the

keyissue to be settled." — Mahmound Abbas, president of the Palestinian Authority

cials and that risks severe sanctions from Washington

NEW S R O O M FA X

, Colea4Aw.

OR LD

f

The step is part of a strategic shift by the Palestinian leadership to p u rsue state-

hood in t h e i nternational arena after decades of failed U.S.-brokered

n e g otiations

with Israel. It came a day after the defeat of a U.N. Security Council resolution that

demanded an end to Israel's occupation of Palestinian territory by 2017.

"There is aggression prac-

ticed against our l and and our country, and the Secu-

Si oii.rve.

Dtsouies rr

ADMINISTRATION Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool..........541-383-0374 Publisher Gordon Black .................... Editor-in-Chief John Costa........................541-383-0337

DEPARTMENT HEADS

is no peace, and the world the step could have major redoesn't prioritize peace in this percussions, not least because region, this region will live in Palestinian o ff i cials c o u ld constant conflict. The Pales- alsoface charges atthecourt. tinian cause is the key issue to Both Israel and the United be settled." States have promised to reA U.S. State Department spond harshly to the move. spokesman called the action Meeting after a ceremony "counterproductive," arguing marking Fatah's 50th annithat it would only push the versary, the Palestinian leadtwo sides further apart. ership decided to return to the "It is a n e scalatory step Security Council next month, that will not achieve any of when changes in its memthe outcomes most Palestin- bership make passage of the ians have long hoped to see resolution more likely. That for their people," Jeff Rathke, could force a U.S. veto that

rity Council has let us down — where shall we go?" Abbas said at his headquarters in the West Bank city of Ramallah as he signed the

t he spokesman, said i n statement.

Rome Statute, the founding

the summer, has been pressed conventions, though the Pal-

charter of the court, and a

by other Palestinian leaders

estinians cannot take action

number of other international

and by public opinion to sign the statute and then use the

under the agreements for up

conventions.

a

Abbas, whose popularity plummeted after the battle between Israel and Hamas over

"We want to complain to

court to pursue cases against

this organization," he said of the court. "As long as there

Israel's settlement policy and its military operations. But

the Obama

A fterward, A b bas

m a de

a show of signing the papers to accede to the international

to 90 days — a w i ndow of time that some in Washington

— From wire reports

127 prisonersremain at GuantanamoasU.S. sends 5 toKazakhstan

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Denis Tyrin/The Associated Press

People light sparklers as theycelebrate the New Year at RedSquare in Moscow. Millions of revelers converged onthe beachesof Brazil, the streets of Seoul, South Korea,and New York's Times Square to saygood riddance to aturbulent 2014 marred byterror woes and Ebola outbreaks. Worldwide, people gathered to remember those lost in 2014 andoffer blessings for the newyear. But as always, the commonthread for the major celebrations in congested downtowns andpublic squares was fireworks — andtons of them. In Dubai, fireworks surrounded theworld's tallest building, the 2,722-foot Burj Khalifa, which flashed

NEW YORK — The num-

ber of murders in New York

POWERBALL The numbers drawn Wednesday night are:

Q aQvQmQ coQ ss© The estimated jackpot is now $131 million.

MEGABUCKS The numbers drawn Wednesday night are:

QoQnQ aQzsQ ssQ ss The estimated jackpot is now $5.2 million.

with colored lights and images of the country's leaders as organizers went for a GuinnessWorld Record for the largest LED-illuminated facade. Sydney's famedOperaHouseprovidedastunning background for a trademark glittery celebration replete with a tropical-style fireworks display featuring gold and silver palm tree pyrotechnic effects. And in NewYork party-goers eager to claim spots to ring in 2015 in TimesSquare arrived hours early, enduring freezing temperatures and ascarcity of restrooms before the glittering ball drop at midnight at the Crossroads of theWorld. — The Associated Press

Murders fall in NewYork City, but officers aren't ce lebrating New York Times News Service

As listed atwww.oregonlotterr.org and individual lottery websites

turn to terrorism against the

U.S. and our allies." Administration officials identified the three Yeme-

nis as Asim Thabit Abdullah al-Khalaqi, Muhammad Ali Husayn Khanayna and U.S.-run military prison that Sabri Mohammad Ibrahim President Barack Obama is Al Qurashh They were cappushing to close. tured by Pakistani troops in The five former detainees 2001 and handed over to U.S. — three Yemenis and two authorities. Tunisians — are "free men"

The three had been at

for all intents and purposes Guantanamo for more than after the transfer Tuesday, a 12 years and were recomsenior official in the Obama a dministration said. O ff i -

mended for release almost

five years ago by Obama's cials declined to disclose the national security team. security assurances reached between the United States and Kazakhstan or to detail how the men would be

The 'Itmisians were iden-

tified as Adel al-Hakeemy, who had been held for 12 years and 10 months, and Ab-

prevented from returning to dullah bin Ali al-Lufti, held

By J. David Goodman and Al Baker

Oregon Lottery results

By Helene Cooper New York Times News Service

W ASHINGTON — T h e transfer this week of five detainees from Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, to Kazakhstan leaves 127 prisoners at the

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OTHER SERVICES

Yemen dOmbing —At least 23 people were killed in Yemenon Wednesday when asuicide bomber detonated explosives at a cultural center in the southern city of Ibb where hundreds of peoplewere commemorating the Prophet Muhammad's birthday, according to a witness and officials. There were noimmediate claims of responsibility for the attack at the ceremony, which wasorganized bysupporters of the Houthis, a former rebel group that took control of Yemen's capital, Sanaa, in September. an thought they were trapped in acloset at Daytona State College in Daytona Beach, Florida, for two days until police let them outTuesday — and found out the two could haveopenedthe door themselves. John Arwood, 31, andAmber Campbell, 25, claimed theywere chased into the closet on Sunday,Daytona Beachpolice said. After two days, Arwood called 911from his cell phone. Officers tracked his phone's location and let him andCampbell out. A police officer, trying to figure out how the two could havegotten locked in, went into the closet and closed the door, police said. Thedoor did not lock.

The Bullotin's primaryconcern isthat all stories areaccurate. If you knowof an error in a story, call us at541-383-0356.

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Wednesday that King Abdullah wastaken to a hospital for medical checks, triggering a decline in the nation's stocks and crudeoil. The 90-year-old monarch wasadmitted to the King Abdulaziz Medical City in Riyadh, the official Saudi PressAgency cited aRoyal Court statement as saying Wednesday,without giving details. Speculation about the health of the king, who succeededthe throne in 2005, comes at a time of growing turmoil both at homeand among neighboring Arab states. Saudi Arabia, the biggest oil exporter with 15 percent of the world's known crude reserves, is planning to open its stock market to foreign investors next year.

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day denied requests by defenseattorneys for Dzhokhar Tsarnaevto move the casefrom Boston and delay the trial until September, setting the stage for jury selection to begin Monday in theBoston Marathon bombing attacks that claimed three lives andinjured 260 people. U.S. District JudgeGeorge O'Toole Jr. madethe announcement in a brief court filing, saying hewould explain his reasoning "shortly." The defense teamquickly appealed the decisions, filing a legal request with the 1st U.S.Circuit Court of Appeals to order O'Toole to movethe trial out of Boston anddelay its start. They told the higher court: "The nature and impact of the marathon bombings and related events, and the pretrial publicity engendered bythose events, require achangeof venue if Mr. Tsarnaev is to receive the fair trial by a panel of impartial, indifferent jurors guaranteed bythe U.S. Constitution."

are counting on to calm the

RINGING IN 2015

TALK TO AN EDITOR

BOStOnMarathOn bnmding trial — Afederal judgeWednes-

a d ministration

has tried to avoid.

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GrSSCS POlitiCS —Greecedissolved its parliament Wednesday, preparing for early general elections this month that could provoke a showdown with its creditors and cause turmoil in financial markets. The vote, a constitutional requirement after parliament failed to choose a president, is widely depicted as areferendum on the austerity measures imposed bythe country's creditors in return for multibillion-dollar bailouts. By tradition, the dissolution was announced in a decree posted at the door of the parliament building in Athens. The dissolution followed avote in parliament on Monday when the government of Prime Minister Antonis Samaras failed to muster sufficient support for its presidential candidate, Stavros Dimas, setting in motion procedures for elections to beheld onJan. 25.

C ity has d r opped to

w h at

years ago would have seemed like an impossible low: 328 killings recorded in 2014, the lowest figure since at least 1963, when the police department began collecting reliable statistics. With hours left in 2014, the

number of murders capped a year of lower numbers in nearly every major crime category and offered an answer to what had been a central question of Mayor Bill de Blasio's first year: Could a mayor elected on promises of police reform keep the specter of the

bad old days from returning? But there is little celebration among the city's police offi-

also heard calls to reverse The number of rapes, burtheir policing practices and glariesand grand larcenies found their union representa- are also on track to come in tives locked in a bitter public lower than they did a year struggle with the mayor that, ago. in recentdays, has coincided Shootings, which spiked with a substantial drop in en- over the summer, leveled off forcementof everyday crime at 1,162 through Dec. 28 and by officers. remained only slightly ahead Reports of majorcrimes of 2013's low levels. Dermot F. c itywide c o n t inued th e i r Shea, the department's depyearlong decline, to 105,428 uty commissioner of operathrough Dec. 28, from 110,728 tions, said 200 to 300 mostly in the same period in 2013, ac- young men are responsible for cording to police department a majority of those shootings, statistics. Murders dropped according to a d e p artment from 335 in 2013. The drop analysis. in crime in 2014 continues a Among the more surprising two-decade slide in New York trends in 2014 was a sudden City. uptick in car thefts, a crime The number of robberies, a that had virtually disappeared bellwether crime that erodes as a fear for most New Yorkpublic perception of safety, ers. Much of the rise, Shea reached its lowest level yet re- said, came from a loophole in corded, 16,326 through Dec. 28, down 14 p ercent fr om

state law that allows for older

cers, who remain in mourn-

2013. The high point for rob-

also easier to steal — to be

ing after the recent killings

beries came in 1981, when the

of two comrades. They have

police recorded 107,495.

junked with minimal paperwork that proves ownership.

model cars — those that are

battlefields in A f ghanistan or Pakistan. With the move, 28 detainees were transferred in 2014 from Guantanamo to other

countries, administration officials said. It is the biggest number since 2009, when Obama assumed officeand began trying to make good on his campaign promise to close the prison, which top ad-

ministration officials have characterized as a blight on the country's international

for 11 years and 10 months.

The transfer comes a week after Cliff Sloan, Obama's envoy for detainee transfers,

announced his resignation. Sloan had grown frustrated with the slow pace of transfers, administration officials

sard.

Visit Central Oregon's

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standing. Some Defense Department officials and Repub-

lican lawmakers have expressed concern that prisoners released from the

prison may return to take on U.S. troops who remain in Afghanistan. Sen. Kelly Ayotte, R-N.H.,

said the release of the five men this week was of special

concern. "According to public reports, at least three of them

were members of or had fought with aI-Qaida, and one of them was a military

adviser to Osama bin Laden who battled U.S. and allied forces at Tora Bora," Ayotte

said. "Based on their links to aI-Qaida, it is very likely that one or more of them will re-

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THURSDAY, JANUARY 1, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

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

It's Thursday, Jan. 1, the first day of 2015. Thereare 364 days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS 'The Interview' —sonyis continuing its expanded rollout of the controversial film, with viewers able to watch the movie on the Playstation Network starting today.

o enei

In1979, the United States

and China held celebrations in Washington andBeijing to mark the establishment of diplomatic relations between the two countries. In1984, the breakup ofATBT took place asthetelecommunications giant was divested of its 22 Bell System companies under terms of anantitrust agreement. In1985, the music cable channel VH-1 madeits debut with a video of Marvin Gayeperforming "The Star-Spangled Banner." In1995,the World Trade Organization cameinto being, replacing the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade.Sweden, Finland andAustria joined the European Union. Fernando Henrique Cardoso took office as Brazil's president. Ten years ago:Desperate, homeless villagers on the tsunami-ravaged island of Sumatra mobbedAmerican helicopters carrying aid as the U.S. military launched its largest operation in the region since the VietnamWar. Five years ago: A suicide bomber detonated atruckload of explosives on avolleyball field in northwest Pakistan, killing at least 97 people. Fifthranked Florida overwhelmed No. 4 Cincinnati 51-24 in the Sugar Bowl. In the RoseBowl, No. 8 Ohio State defeated No.7 Oregon 26-17. Oneyearalo:Thenation's first legal recreational pot shops opened inColorado at 8 a.m. Mountain Standard Time. Actress Juanita Moore, 99, died in Los Angeles.

BIRTHDAYS Former Sen. Ernest Hollings, D-S.C., is 93. Documentary maker Frederick Wisemanis 85. Actor Frank Langella is 77. Rock singer-musician Country Joe McDonald is 73. Writer-comedian DonNovello is 72. Actor Rick Hurst is 69. Sen. Robert Menendez, D-N.J., is 61. The head ofthe International Monetary Fund, Christine Lagarde, is 59. RapperGrandmaster Flash is 57.Actress Ren Woods is 57.Actress Dedee Pfeiffer is 51. Actor Morris Chestnut is 46. Actor Verne Troyer is 46. Elin Nordegren is 35. Olympic gold medal ice dancer Meryl Davis is 28. — From wire reports

in eco

Although many Americans do it, idling your car's engine for several minutes before driving does not help the car warm up, auto industry experts say. It's actually a costly practice that wastes fuel.

HISTORY Highlight:In1975, a jury in Washington found Nixon administration officials John N. Mitchell, H.R. Haldeman, John D. Ehrlichman andRobert Mardian guilty of charges related to theWatergate cover-up; a fifth defendant, Kenneth Parkinson, wasacquitted, and Mardian's conviction for conspiracy was later overturned on appeal. In1515, Louis XII, King of France, died; hewas succeeded by Francis I. In1660, Englishman Samuel Pepys begankeeping his famous diary. In1863, President Abraham Lincoln issued theEmancipation Proclamation, declaring that slaves in rebel states shall be "foreverfree." In1913, the U.S.Parcel Post system went into operation. In1935, The Associated Press inaugurated Wirephoto, the first successful service for transmitting photographs by wire to member newspapers. In1945, France wasadmitted to the United Nations. In1953, country singer Hank Williams Sr., 29, wasdiscovered dead in the backseat of his car during a stop in Oak Hill, West Virginia, while he was being driven to aconcert date in Canton, Ohio. In1959, Fidel Castro and his revolutionaries overthrew Cuban leader Fulgencio Batista, who fled to the Dominican Republic.

RESEARCH

MISCONCEPTION

By Chris Mooney The Washington Post

We've all heard the idea: In winter, your car needs a little

Drunk birds slur their songs, too By Amina Khan

~~4~a~~ .

Los Angeles Times

You know how that guy at the karaoke bar singing Journey's "Don't Stop Be-

time to warm up before you ple who live in cold and snowy places — and especially those

lievin'" sounds a little off after he's had a few drinks? The same goes for buzzed birds, according to a team led by researchers from

whose carshave remote start-

Oregon Health & Science

ers — often fire up their engines long before they start driving. Heck, they might even

University. For a study published in

can drive it. And that's why across the United States, peo-

I

PLoS ONE, scientists found

i

start the car from the kitchen

that when they got some unsuspecting zebra finch-

in the morning and only then start the coffee brewing. But it turns out that this

es drunk, the birds slurred

idea of idling your car during

their songs. The findings could help scientists study

the winter is just wrong. And

the neuml processes under-

so are the many, many Americans who believe it — one

lying birdsong — and shed light on human speech.

2009 study found that on aver-

age, Americans thought they

While many /

s cientists

want to understand al-

'I

should idle for over 5 minutes

cohol's effects on such a

before driving when temperaThinkstock tures were below 32 degrees! Auto experts today say that you should warm up the car no more than 30 seconds before you start Like many misconceptions, driving in winter. "The engine will warm up faster being driven," the Environmental Protection Agency the idea behind winter car and Energy Department explain. idling begins with a kernel of

complex system as speech, it's difficult to perform the

truth. Cars do get worse fuel

economy when it's really cold out — they are at least 12 percent less fuel efficient, according to Environmental Protec-

tion Agency and Energy Department. And it does take lon-

serious idling problems — ran an idling experiment, freezing threecarsto minus-18 degrees

Celsius and then driving each one the same distance. Some-

turing industry," the paper noted. (In fairness, since the study was published vehicle fuel economy has improved, and new vehicle greenhouse gas emissions have declined, thanks to new regulations. So especially for new vehicles, this may somewhat blunt the overall effects of idling.)

the emissions from the soda

That is not to say that all

creased by 12 to 19 percent,"

idling should be stopped immediately. Some idling — particularly in traffic — may be unavoidable. But the other two categories of idling — in winter and while waiting — make a lot less sense. And the study

the agency reported.

found that they account for

e x p erts. W i t hout increased by 7 to 14 percent and with a 10-minute warm-

warming up, the carburetor would not necessarily be able to get the right mix of air and fuel in the engine — and the car might stall out. During

mans, which is why many researchers turn tobirds. Scientists who want to

a cold country that also has

ger for the engine to warm up times the cars were idled five and reach an optimal driving minutes before driving, and temperature in cold weather. sometimes 10 minutes. The Moreover, older cars result was that the more idling whichrelied on carburetors as time, the more wasted fuel. "The test results showed a crucial engine componentdid need to warm up to work that with a 5-minute warmwell, according to several auto up total fuel consumption industry

necessary studies on hu-

up total fuel consumption in-

nearly half of all U.S. greenergy's Argonne National house gas emissions attributthe 1980s and into the early 1990s, however, the auto in- Laboratory, which has also able to idling. dustry did away with carbure- conducted much research on people doit tors in favor of electronic fuel idling, reported that "idling Yet so many injection, which uses sensors fuel consumption is, of course, A nd n o w o n der: W h e n to supply fuel to the engine linear with time, and increas- 1,300 Americans were surand get the right air and fuel es with engine size." veyed about idling for the mix. This makes the problem Or to put it more bluntly: study, nearly half reported of warming up the car before Whereas newer cars are con- both idling their cars for longer driving irrelevant, because the stantly improving the miles than 30 seconds to warm them sensors monitor and adjust to they get per gallon driven, up and idling for more than 30 temperature conditions. idling will always be stuck in seconds because of waiting. Idling in winter thus has no place — using up gas, but get- Indeed,the average amount of benefit to your (presumably ting no miles for it. time that respondents thought modern) car. Auto experts toBut it's not just fuel waste, you should idle your car before day say that you should warm it's the accompanying emis- driving, when it is lower that up the car no more than 30 sions. What does it look like 32 degrees Fahrenheit outside, seconds before you start driv- when you have a whole pop- was 5.01 minutes! And since ing in winter. "The engine will ulation of people — or at least that's the average, many peowarm up faster being driven," the northern belt of a country ple thought you should idle for the EPA and DOE explain. In- like the U.S. — idling their a lot longer than that. "These values indicate that deed, it is better to turn your cars in winter? engine off and start it again A 2009 study in Energy Pol- beliefs about how much idling than to leave it idling. icy tried to calculate the con- is appropriate or desirable are sequences. The r esearchers highly distorted," the authors A costly practice found that, overall, all types of wrote. So idling does nothing for vehicle idling — idling in winThe study found that if peoyour vehicle, but it does have ter, idling while waiting for ple would just knock off unseveral big (and avoidable) someone or something, and necessary idling of this sort, costs: Wasting fuel, and giving idling in traffic — contribute then consumers as a whole off greenhouse gas emissions a staggering 1.6 percent of all would save $5.9 billion per and other types of pollution. U.S. greenhousegas emissions. year on fuel costs (based on To show as much, Natural T hat number i s "almost the cost of fuel in 2008). The Resources Canada — the en- double the total emissions for saved emissions, the study ergy and resources agency of the iron and steel manufac- noted, would be "larger than T he Department o f

En-

ash, aluminum and limestone

study the origins of human language often study zebra

industries combined."

finches, in part because the

Idling behavior, the paper concluded, is "worthy of poli-

ing Minneapolis has an an-

two speciesseem to share a number of similarities. For example,they both have to learn how to make complex sequences of sound by learning from those

ti-idling statute that restricts

around them. In the case

all nontraffic idling to three minutes per hour (with some exceptions). Anti-idling laws across the country vary, but

of humans, that's usually a

cymakers' attention."

Some have taken note. For i n s tance,

o f t en-freez-

some localities follow a simi-

lar course. So idling isn't just pointless — beyond a point, it may even trigger a hefty fine.

Technological advances Meanwhile, technological advances, and the push for

ever greaterfuel economy, are even starting to help deal with th e

m ost u n avoidable

type of idling: Idling because you're stuck in traffic. Vehicle start-stop technology lit-

erally shuts down the engine when your car is stopped, and automatically switches it on

again when you start to drive again. This technology tends to be found in hybrids but has

spread to other cars as well. GM now boasts that 97 percent of buyers of a 2014 or 2015

Chevy Malibubought a car with start-stop technology. So, it's hard to see any re-

deeming value to idling your

child's parents. In the case

of zebra finches, it's usually the birds' fathers (only the males actually sing). "There are remarkable analogies in how zebra finch song and human speech are learned and produced," the study authors pointed out.

For this paper, researchers gave white gmpe juice to one group ofbirds, and gave a mixture of the juice and ethanol to another group.

They found a number of effectson differentaspectsof birdsong. The birds weren't able to sing as loudly, and they couldn't keep their song's normal structure

stable. It did not affect all aspects of the finches' birdsong equally, however. The scientists think their research offers dues about which parts

of the brain the alcohol is disrupting. Oddly enough, the birds

car in winter. For the final word on the dumbness of this

withthe spikeddrinks didn't

practice, let's turn to the late Tom Magliozzi, the unforget-

sues drunken humans face,

table co-host of NPR's "Car

seem tosufferthesortsofissuch asbeingunabletowalk in a straight line.

Talk." As he put it to a Boston

"We did not detect visible

listener named Lisa, who had

effectson the birds'general behaviors or health, as indicated by the normal appearanceoffeathersandthe ability to perch, feed, main-

asked about her boyfriend's conviction that you need to idle up to 10 minutes in winter:

"Dear Lisa's Boyfriend: You have your head so far up your tailpipe on this one, it may be coming out your air intake."

tain normal posture and fly

inside the cage," the study authors wrote.

Weekly Arts 8 Entertainment In

NEED TO KNOW

You reallydon't needto applyto that manycolleges By Max Ehrenfreund The Washington Post

WASHINGTON — Seniors

in high school are losing their minds filling out college applications. The number of students applying to at least seven colleges has more than tripled since 1990, according to one survey. The biggest factor behind

By balancing risks against one another, students can minimize the number of applications he or she has to complete.

vise seniors to develop lists ly have a portfolio weighted of "safety"schools, "reach" toward 'stretch' schools, and schools, and schools that are still have a surprisingly high somewhere in the middle. For degree of confidence that you the trend is likely that students the staff of Parchment, a com- will be accepted to at least one and their families have little pany that provides a range of school on your list," Pittinsky way of accurately assessing servicesto college-bound se- said. If you're applying to selective the quality of the education a niors, that strategy often isn't school offers. A vague notion the best one. schools, you can't eliminate the of prestige or exclusivity is Matthew Pittinsky, the chief chance that you are rejected the metric that many students executive offi cer, compares everywhere. Each additional seem to base their decisions applying to college to assem- application you complete conon. Many decide to apply to bling a portfolio of financial in- tributes less and less to your several to try to up the odds of vestments. By balancing risks chances of getting in somegetting into one. against one another, students where. That additional applicaBut they may be actually can minimize the number of tion is onlyuseful to you if none playing their odds incorrectly. applications he or she has to of your others are acceptedCounselors typically ad- complete. "You can actual- which, if you've already done

several, is less likely. If your goal is to get into the most highly selective in-

•<

stitutions no matter what, you

might decide to apply to quite a few anyway. But if you're not qualified, you're not qualified. And selectivity is not always the best indicator of a school's

quality, so you could be wasting your time. On Parchment's website, se-

niors applying to college may sign up for help in figuring out how many schools to apply to. They give the company a list of schools they're considering. They also complete a detailed

questionnaire. The company then estimates the probability that the student will get into

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A4 T H E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 1, 2015

Mariota Continued from A1 It is not that the Mariotas

"Just like everyone in Hawaii, I'm very proud of him and wish him the best of luck on New

Year's Day and beyond."

were afraid of celebrating their heritage, friends here said this

— President Barack Obama

week, as Marcus prepaied to lead No. 2 seed Oiegon into the

who lookup to him." national semifinal game against Sitting in his ground-floor

dent. He earned an academic scholarshi p thatcovered a ma-

No. 3 seed Florida State today at

jority of the Saint Louis School's

office, Saint Louis marketingdithe Rose Bowl. To the contrary, rector Alvin Katahara shuffled Mariota paid a heartfelt tribute through a stack of fundraisiiig to his home state in his emo- brochures from last year that tional acceptance speech after featured photos of Mariota on becoming the first Hawaii-born the field in his Crusaders' blue

their house to help send their

sons to football camps on the U.S. mainland.

$12,000 annual tuition, faculty members said. But he did not start at quarter-

backuntil his senior season — a frustrating experience for the

most famous native: President Barack Obama, who is vacationing on Oahu this week In a statement to The Washington

elaborate lei made of m aile leavesfor his appearance at a

the Rose Bowl. It's a really

Wheaton is f a mous f or his interception return for a

neat setting. It's unique. And to UO students. Other stuthe weather is always pretty dents could purchase tickets amazing." through the university. Southern California is enTickets, with a face value during a cold snap this week, starting at $150, on Wedneswith high temperatures only day were ranging from $130 in the 50s and 60s. But that is for upper-level seatsto m ore not stopping Duck fans such than $1,000 for premium as McCleary from enjoying seats on the ticket website their time down here. stubhub.com. "I entered the student M cCleary, 45 and a U O alumnus, said he endured ticket lottery without much many years in the 1980s and hope of getting one of the '90s when the Ducks were few free tickets, so when the pretty terrible at football. email came that I'd actually "Honestly, it was hard to received one I was thrilled,"

Rose Bowl that season. "To see Oregon football where it's at now is just a really, really amazing thing, and I'm just happy to be a part of it in some sort of way," Wheaton said. "The support and the fan base is really amazing." W heaton, 39 ,

w a s al l

smiles as he posed for photos with fans long after the 20-minute rally ended. "Being an old guy like myself, for someone to remember you for what you did 20 years ago, it's a great feeling,

stadium were allotted free

even fathom we would ever

Weaver said.

get there, because we were so Oregon will likely have bad," he said. "When we grew a bit of a home-field advanup, they were never even on tage based on geography, but TV. We listened to them on the radio. I try to tell my kids how weird it was for a while

and I welcome it," Wheaton said. Oregon athletic d irector

Weaver and her fellow stu-

dents hope to heighten that advantage.

just to see them on TV all the time, and then going to all Rob Mullens was also on these bowl games. You can hand and was introduced on getspoiled and loseyourperstage along with the interim spective, but if you've been university president, Scott a Duck fan for a long time, Coltrane. you realize it doesn't always "Everywhere we've been happen." this week the Duck faithful A f i f t h-grade t eacher have been out strong," Mul- at Ponderosa Elementary lens said just before the rally. School in Bend, McCleary "We've taken our show on said he is committed to atthe road several times into tending the national chamenemy territory. It's nice to pionship game on Jan. 12 in have such a significant game Texas should Oregon defeat in our backyard, so to speak." Florida State today. Many Duck football fans He is not sure when such from Central Oregon have an opportunity might arise made the trip to Southern again for the Ducks. California t o

"Even though you start to

w a tc h t h eir

team play in what will be the first College Football Playoff game ever. Scott McCleary, of Bend,

feel like it's going to happen every year, you never know when eventually there's going to be a lull," McCleary and his wife and three kids said. "That's why we decided arehere forthegame.An Or- we're just going to do it all this egon season ticket holder and year. You can't wait around, dedicated fan, McCleary has because who knows." attended many of Oregon's Also taking advantage past bowl games, including of the opportunity to travel the Fiesta Bowl in 2001, the

news conference. Two days later, before leaving New York, he

Mariota, who last month re-

Continued from A1

ton in 1994 that propelled the Ducks to victory and to the

player to win the Heisman. (Te'o No. 8 jersey, with his family af- tall, speedy athlete who also exter Matthew received his senior celled at soccer. Yim said Marias A&M quarterback Johnny dass ring, and helping a young ota privately considered transManziel.) studentput on anecktie. ferring, but ultimatelyhe stuckit "Our motto is, 'Where boys out without complaining. Rather, the friends said, the Mariotas' decision was an ex- who want to change the world Quiet and reserved, Mariota ample of the h umility w i th become the men who do,"' seemed to identify with those which they raised their son Katahara said. "And we feel who were overlooked or unand the quiet dignity that has that Marcus has changed our derestimated. During summer defined the r e dshirt j u nior world." football camp six years ago, he and helped fuel his rapid rise. The day before the Heisman noticed a 9-year-old named Tua Though his statistics are gaudy ceremony in mid-December, Tagovailoa whose attempts to — 3,783 yards passing, with 38 Saint Louis headmaster Walter throw with older players were touchdowns and just two inter- Kirimitsu, a 1958 graduate, and being met with scorn. Marioceptions, and another 669 yards threeother facult y members ta spent time with the younger and 14 touchdowns ~ flew to New York City, where boy each week, working on Mariota maintains a humble, they had rented out the Lex- his passing and taking him to boy-next-door reputation in his ington Brass restaurant in Mid- McDonald's. Tagovailoa is now Saint Louhometown. town Manhattan. For a night, it It is a contrast to the quarter- was transformed into an Aloha is's star sophomore quarterback Mariota will measiue him- State oasis. back, with scholarship offers already from USC, UCLA and self ~ in the R ose Bowl: A H awaiian musical duo 2013 Heisman winner Jameis played island songs. Leis were Colorado, among others. To TaWinston, the Seminoles' sopho- distributed. And three dozen govailoa, his relationship with more who has made headlines members of the Saint Louis Mariota symbolizes the Saint for a string of ignoble off-fleld School"ohana" — the Hawaiian Louis School "brotherhood" the episodes. term for extended family — par- Oregon quarterback referred to in his Heisman speech. In the wake of M a riota's tied late into the evening. "Listening to his speech not success, there has been an outThe guest of honor was unpouring of support for him on able to attend because he was at only gives kids in Saint Louthe islands. Flowers have been Disney World in Orlando, Flori- is hope but the whole state of sent to the Saint Louis School da, picking up the Walter Camp Hawaii hopes that we too can and its faculty has received calls Award formostoutstandingcol- accomplish bigger and better from the governor's office, the lege athlete. Mariota's parents things that kids on the mainmayor's office and the state leg- and brother represented him at land can accomplish," Tagovailoa said. islature. Green-and-yellow No. the Lexington. But even as his star has 8 Otegon jerseys have proliferMariota choked up during ated around town. And Sunday, his Heisman acceptance speech soarei, M a riota r e mains the Honolulu Star-Advertiser when it came time to thank his grounded. After his Heisman published a 28-page supplement parents,who reportedly sold speech, he finally donned an a centerfold photo of him juking an Oregon State defender while making a Heisman Trophy-style pose. His achievements have even caught the eye of the islands'

venue ... you know, you grow literally — as only 500 tickets up your whole life watching in the 92,000-seat Rose Bowl

touchdown against Washing-

was beaten out in 2012 by Tex-

devoted to Mariota, inciuding

Rally

experiences I've ever had," Weaver said. "Everybody knows the fight song, everybody sings the same cheers, everybody knows the same hand movements. It makes

you feel like you're part of somethinghuge, and maybe even (somehow) influencing the outcome of the game, just by standing with 500 other fanatical students."

Weaver will be attending the game with a group of friends, most of whom also are from Bend. She hopes the students the Ducks today in the Rose Bowl.

"As a freshman in Eugene,

I used to be able to hear the

cheers from football games if I had my dorm room window open, and campus is about 2i/2 miles away from the sta-

to Southern California and watch the Rose Bowl is Erin

Cleary said. "I just think the

game is one of the most enthusiasm-charged, e l ectric

and the Oregon crowd can make enough ruckus to help

dium," Weaver said. "Hopefully we'll be able to make that same kind of noise in the

Rose Bowl in 2012, and the BCS National Championship Weaver, a 2012 graduate of Bend's Summit High School game in 2011. "I think th e Rose Bowl, and now a junior at the Unihonestly, is my favorite," Mc- versity of Oregon.

ceived his bachelor's degree in toured the 9/11 Memorial at the general sciences, with an em- old World Trade Center site and phasis on human physiology, left the lei on the name of a vicwas a high school honors stu- tim from his home state.

"Standing in the student

section during an important

Rose BowL" — Reporter: 541-383-0318,

Weaver won the lottery-

mmorical@bendbulletin.com

Post, Obama said Mariota is "as good a young man as he is an athlete, and it's fun to watch all

of Hawaii rootforhissuccess." Obama noted that S aint Louis is the rival to Punahou,

I

0

where the president attended

~

~

10 list on the "Late Show with David Letterman," Mariota re-

turned to his parents'home over

• I

Like the president, he kept a

low profile, spending time with family — including younger

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Christmas for a few days of rest

before jetting off for Pasadena, California.

I'

~

high school. "But I'll let that slide

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The Mariota family member have told school administrators

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said Oregon senior linebacker Isaac Ava, who also played with Mariota at Saint Louis and

whose mother grew up with Mariota's father in American Samoa. "For him to have all

the success he had and do it the right way, it brought me to tears. I have so many little cousins

• I I I

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THURSDAY, JANUARY 1, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

Laws

LOOKING AHEAD: NEW LAWS AROUND THE COUNTRY

ine s i ments in, ti er se ies out By Andrew Welsh-Huggins

er big cat. The measure, which specifically prohibits contact between members of the public and big cats at animal shows,

The Associated Press

New state laws taking effect today give livestock in California more living room, approve direct-to-consumer wine shipments in Massachusetts and

passed after self-portraits with

the animals started becoming more popular online, particularly with some young men on datingsites.

levy the ultimate punishment

on wannabe teen drivers in ¹ vada by denying them licenses if they skip too much school. Otherlaws will allowtrained school personnel in Tennes-

Taxes In North Carolina, Republi-

can lawmakers who approved

see to administer insulin, let

an income tax cut also took

Louisiana teens as young as 16 register to vote, crack down on meth dealers in Michigan, end tax breaks for Hollywood Jae C. Hong /Associated Press file photo in North Carolina and raise A woman looks at the bullet holes on the window of IV Deli Mark the minimum wage in Ohio, where a mass shooting took place near the University of CaiiforNew York, Rhode Island and nia, Santa Barbara campus, in the Isla Vista beach community. In

away breaks to Hollywood and cab drivers. Expiring is a 25

elsewhere. Although it doesn't take ef-

response to the killing rampage of Eliiot Rodger, 22, that left seven

people, including himself, dead, lawmakers approved andCaliforfect until early February, a New nia Gov. Jerry Brown signed a law that requires Iaw enforcement York law captures this year's agencies to develop policies that encourage officers to search "Who knew?"prizebybanning the state's database of gun purchases as part of routine welfare tiger selfies, which have been checks. used by young men as profile photos on social media sites. A look at some of the new ity," meaning silence or a lack administer. Proponents said it laws taking effect Jan. I, in al- of resistance can no longer be will help in an era of dwindling phabetical order by topic: deemed consent. school nurses, while opponents In Michigan, rape evidence say only someone with a medAlcohol may be betterorganized and ical background should give Wine connoisseurs will be tracked under laws designed to insulin in case something unpopping the cork over a new help ensure kits aren't caught expectedhappens. law taking effect today that in the sort of backlog found In Louisiana, smoking will allows out-of-state wineries to

when more than 11,000 untest-

be banned within 25 feet of

percent tax credit for TV and film productions that in 2013

allowed producers to forego paying $61 million in state taxes. It'sbeing replaced in 2015by a grant program for video productions capped at $10 million. In Mississippi, totally disabledveterans and their surviving spouses who have not remarried would not have to pay property taxes on their primary residence.

Veterans

2009.

posure to secondhand smoke.

back and Bend resident Drew Bledsoe. Now a w i n emaker in Washington state, Bledsoe

complained to lawmakers he could not send his products to Massachusetts residents, in-

In California, a ballot initia-

18.

A Delaware law establishes new rules for allocating campaign contributions among joint account holders, such as when spouses submit a politiUnited States says the law goes cal contribution using a single further than any in the coun- check. try when coupled with a law signed by former Gov. Arnold Emrironment Schwarzenegger that extends In New York State, consumthe space requirements for ers must begin recycling old egg-laying hens to out-of-state computers, televisions and vidsuppliers. eo game consoles instead of tiveapproved by votersin 2008 takes effect restricting the confinement of egg-laying hens, breeding sows and veal calves. The Humane Society of the

In Utah, cities and towns

can no longer ban specific dog

throwingthem in the trash. In the face of a three-year

drought, new California laws least 10 cities now have restric- require water districts and othbreeds within their limits. At

and 5 will be required to sit in a

egon, Arkansas, Connecticut,

dosed a loophole so motor-

officers to search the state's da-

cydists can no longer buy a temporary permit every riding season without taking a safety or skills test needed for a full

tabase of gunpurchases as part of routine welfare checks. The bill was prompted by sheriffs deputies' failure to detect the danger posed by a man who

Massachusetts will finallyal- weeks later embarked on a low "hold open" clips on pumps deadly rampage in May near at self-service gasoline stations, ending motorists' complaints

tions that ban ownership of

er local entities to develop plans

breeds such as pitbulls.

to manage their groundwater — particularly in winter-

Crime

and allow the state to intervene

if necessary.

In California, a "yes means yes" standard for sex between Health

give the National Rifle Asso-

child safety seat or booster seat ciation, or any gun owner, a instead of using just a car seat better chance at successfully belt. challenging local firearms orIn Indiana, license plates will dinances in court. In general, be requiredon motor scooters Pennsylvania bars its municfor the first time following com- ipalities from enforcing fireplaints about unsafe driving by arms ordinances that are stronthose who've lost their licenses ger than state law. because of drunken driving arIn California, law enforcerests or other offenses. m ent agencies are required to In Michigan, lawmakers develop policies that encourage

endorsement.

about being in one of the few states where the dips weren't

the University of California, Santa Barbara.

Welfare I n Tennessee, as part o f

requiring "an affirmative, con- 20 states adding insulin to scious and voluntary agree- medications that school staff

welfare eligibility, a parent or guardian with a child strugSocialmedia gling in a school must attend In New York in February, two or more conferences with it becomes illegal to pose for a the teacher within a year to re-

ment to engage in sexual activ-

photo with a lion, tiger or oth-

college students takes effect,

Tennessee joins more than may volunteer to be trained to

plenty of

Continuing a focus on charities that skirt report-

Measure 91 as passed and in-

ing requirements or that are

allowed.

view the child's status.

have reacted much quicker,

Continued fromA1 longest in the history of mod-

more welcoming of international support than the Malaysians," said Richard Bitzinger,

ern aviation.

coordinator of

with more zeal, and have been

The hunt for MH370 is the

"There was a reluctance to

transformations program at

admit that they had a prob-

the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies in Singa-

lem, a reluctance to admit they had screwed up because they didn't do anything for about the first four or five hours, a reluctance to admit they didn't

pore. "The Indonesians haven't been as secretive or defensive,

or as hostile toward outside criticism."

have the necessary resources

AirAsia C h ief

and the capability to resolve this problem, which just kept getting bigger and bigger," Desmond Ross, principal of

E x ecutive

Officer Tony Fernandes, a Malaysian, has taken a handson approach to the disaster

DRA Professional Aviation

Tatan Syuflana/The Associated Press

Services in Sydney, Austra- AirAsia Group CEO Tony Fernandes walks upon arrival to visit lia, said of Malaysia's search. the command center of the search operation for the victims of "They dug a hole for them- AirAsia Flight 8501 at the airport in Pangkalan Bun on Wednesday. selves that was so deep they

t h e m i l itary

Bad weather hindered efforts to recover the victims of the jetliner

couldn't climb out." Wednesday and sent wreckage drifting far from the crash site, as The disappearance of the grieving relatives "surrounded in darkness" gathered in an airport Malaysia Airlines Boeing 777- and prayed for the strength to moveforward. 200 jet has baffled authorities as contact was lost less than an hour into the journey with

at his airline, shuttling back and forth between the airport at Surabaya where the plane

took off and Jakarta and engaging the public on social media. "We will go through this terrible ordeal together," he said in a Twitter post the day the plane disappeared. Once debris was discovered and bodies found, he offered

Ross said. The search teams portation Safety Board, told have now used sonar to detect Bloomberg Television. "We have a lot more inforsearch continues across 60,000 a largerpartofQZ8501 under square kilometers (23,000 water. mation with this plane than we "This whole AirAsia thing have with the others," he said. square miles) of the southern Indian Ocean, anarea about has been handled in a b etMalaysia Airlines offered twice the size of Belgium. ter way," he said. "They just assistance to A i r Asia after The company's hunt was leaped straight in, all hands its plane disappeared off the further hampered by the July to the pump and have sort of coast of Borneo, a company loss of Flight 17, a casualty of gone for it, which is a much spokeswoman said. It was unthe conflict in eastern Ukraine better scenario." clear if that offer was taken up.

his condolences to the fami-

with the plane shot down en r oute from A m sterdam t o K uala Lumpur. M H17 w a s

ity to offer our thoughts and

no emergency warnings. A

There were other factors

P rime

M in i ste r

Naj i b

making the search for Air-

Razak's officereferred queries

Asia easier than the one for Flight 370, including the shal-

to Hishammuddin Hussein,

carrying 298 passengers and who was acting Transport crew. low depth and smaller area of Minister when M H370 was I ndonesia a n d A i r A s i a the search zone and a more avoided the pitfalls that hin- accurateassessment of the

lost. There was no response

to two text messages sent plane's last known position, to Hishammuddin's mobile M H370 disaster an d w e r e John Goglia, a former mem- phone. "The Indonesiansseem to open about asking for help, ber of the U.S. National Transdered the response to the

lies of passengers, tweeting: "Words cannot express how sorry I am." Malaysia Airlines in a statement yesterday sent its condolences to those affected by the AirAsia disaster. "As an airline that has re-

centlyexperienced such great sadness, we stand in solidarprayers to everyone affected by this tragedy and with the team at AirAsia," it said. "This

is indeed a sad time for everyone working in aviation and for all guests who fly." — With assistance from Elffie Chew and Manirajan Ramasamy in KualaLumpur.

tend to have their way with it in the legislative session that

starts in February.

ceiving tax-free donations if

have been used as

she finds that 30 percent or less of the charity's annual

labs but weren't tested for

on documents and annual reports.

Methhomes A bill sponsored by Rep. Gail W h itsett, R -Klamath Falls, seeks to raise aware-

ness about homes bought in short sales that might m eth

contamination. Oregon is one of 27 states

with a law requiring homebuyersto be notified before they buy a house that was

used by meth manufacturers. The state runs a website that lists properties that have been

declared drug lab sites that weren't deanedup. The new law requires a

Rosenblum in December statement cautioning potensent out a list of the nation's top 20 worst charities. None

of them was from Oregon. Two were from Washington.

tial buyers that a short-sale house hasn't been tested.

Rob UbkeAct

Oregon legislators unanimously passed a law in honSeeking to encourage un- or of an Oregon City reserve derage drinkers to call for officer who was shot and emergency help when they killed while on duty in Noor their friends need medical vember 2013 when he was attention or police help, Ore- training with the Oregon gon will now grant immunity City Police Department. to anyone under 21 who calls The Robert Libke Act exforhelp. pands scholarships to any The law is tailored to pre- state public university or vent law enforcement from community college for chilgiving Minor in Possession vi- dren of public safety officers olations for anyone underage to include volunteer firefightwho specifically seeks med- ers and reserve officers. ical help related to drinking. — Reporter: 406-589-4347, The law doesn't grant immutandersort@bendbttlletin.com

Underage drinking

Census Continued fromA1

waii, I n d iana, L o u isiana and Minnesota. The rationale the health

T he Census Bureau i s statisticians offered for no proposing to eliminate these longer collecting the more questions. It would follow a detailed data was that much series of steps taken over re- of this information could be cent decades that have col- gleaned from a special surlectively devastated the abil- vey taken every five years ity to track family change. as a supplement to the CurThis isn't being done as a rent P o pulation S u r v ey. strategic policy choice but But a different set of govratheristhe resultofa series ernment statisticians killed of isolated decisions made that supplement in the late across several d ecades 1990s. by statisticians scattered All was not lost, as deacross various government mographers could still rely agencies who have failed to on surveys asking people understand the cumulative

AiIAsia

q u estions about

improperly using money, Oregon Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum will get new power to make surecharities are honest. Lawmakers in 2013 gave Rosenblum the power to disqualify a charity from re-

gram services. In 2014, the Legislature gave Rosenblum power to suspend, revoke or deny registration to any charity that willfully provides false or misleading information

Florida, Ohio, Maryland, MasMotor vehicles sachusetts and Rhode Island. can now receive a certificate In California, drivers' licens- A wage increase in New York of employability, which gives es willbe available forpeople in took effect Wednesday. In adbusinesses who hire such indi- the country illegally. dition, troopers in Oklahoma viduals protection from negliIn Nevada, students who get their first pay raise in seven gent hiring lawsuits. are declared habitually truant years. could be delayed from obtainElections ing a driver's license or could Weapons In Louisiana, 16- and 17-year- havetheirlicensesuspended. In Pennsylvania, a law takes olds will be able to register to In Florida, all children aged 4 effect Jan. 5 that's designed to

duding fans and former teammates such as current Patriots quarterback Tom Brady. vote when obtaining a driver's license, though they still won't Animals be able to vote until they turn

Cheating charities

spouses of fully disabled veterans will receive a hiring preference when applying for jobs in state or local government.

Wages

nity for any mischief or other illegal behavior conducted by minors under the influence of alcohol.

Legal marijuana pot GllMctlons A law sponsored by Rep. One of the most notable David Gomberg, D-Otis, will new laws is the statute Oreallow anyone with one con- gonians passed in November viction or court diversion for allowing pot possession and marijuanapossession — from cultivation. But it doesn't go in state or out of state — to into effect until July I,2015. obtain a co n cealed-carry The law will allow possespermit. sion of up to an ounce of pot Before, an O r egonian in public and a half-pound at with a pot-related conviction home; it will also allow growwasn't disqualified from ob- ing up to four plants at home. taining a concealed carry The law won't change the permit if otherwise eligible rules for employers that want to do so, but someone with employees to refrain from the a conviction outside Ore- substance. gon wasn't allowed to get a The law still faces changes permit. from Oregon lawmakers who have made clear they have

expenses are spent on pro-

been stal led for years before In Tennessee, ex-felons who getting a big boost from former have turned their lives around New England Patriots quarter-

Concealedweaponsand

In Nebraska, vets and the

ship bottles directly to consum- ed boxes were discovered in a public entrances to state office The minimum wage goes up ers in Massachusetts. The drive Detroit Police storage facility in buildings as a way to lessen ex- in several states, including Orfor direct wine shipments had

Continued fromA1

A5

effect of their actions. In p r inciple, t racking marriage a n d div o rce shouldn't be too hard. Every wedding, like every divorce, requires a trip to city hall or the county courthouse to file the relevant paperwork. The resulting paper trail should be enough to allow

about their m arital h istories as part of a separate

poll, the Survey of Income and Program Participation. These are useful data as far as they go — and indeed, The New York Times relied

heavily on them in a recent analysis of national divorce t rends. H o w ever, t h e s e marital histories are t ak-

analysts to map th e con- en every five years, they're tours of our changing fami- only as reliable as people's ly life over time. Indeed, un- memories and the results til the mid-1990s, the federal arereleased only yearslater government collated data — the most recent year we from all those marriage and have data for is 2008. divorce certificates into a It is this emerging statiscoherent set of marriage tical void that makes the deand divorce statistics that bate about whether the Cendetailed the changing na- sus Bureau should continue ture of marriage. to collect marriage and diBut in 1996, the Nation- vorce information so critial Center for H ealth Sta- cal. It's also an issue ripe for tistics stopped collecting confusion, because dozens these detailed data. If you of government surveys ask subsequently got married people about their current or divorced, the forms you marital status. But current filled out still exist, but only marital status is not the relas unexamined documents evant statistic for most polin a filing cabinet at your icy debates. For instance, county courthouse. it would be a mistake to Today, states report only

the total number of marriages and divorces each year — providing no detail on who is marrying, which marriages persist or wheth-

infer from Zsa Zsa Gabor's current marital status (still

married) that her children enjoyed a stable family life (he's husband No. 9). It is far more relevant to track the er children ar e i n volved. flow of new marriages and And because the govern- divorces each year, and this m ent devotes so few r e - is the unique contribution sources to collecting these of the questions that are to data, several states don't be cut from the American even bother counting how Community Survey. many divorces they grant. If the cuts proceed, then As a result, estimates of the t he United States will b e U.S. divorce rate do not in- the only developed country clude data on a large share lacking annual estimates of of the country; they are the rates of new marriage missing all of the divorces and divorce for each age in California, Georgia, Ha- group.


A6

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 1, 2015

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.iR ='A T HE ARD URNITUR<• SOFAa • CHAIRS • LOVE SEATS • LAMPS • TABLES • END TAB tS • AR Ew RUG ASES• BED BOARDS • MATTRESSES • BOX SPRINGS • DINING SETS • END TABLES ECLINER PS• TABLES• END E E ARE UG M I DINING SETS• ENb S •R • EN LIN E Al SEATS• LAMPS• • B S• M INGS• IN G SETS ABL LAMPS• TABLES• E S • AREA ES• BE M SSE S• BO RINGS• DININ ABLES HE Nl AS• CHAIRS ES • VE SEATS• TABLES• E S OARDS• MA • RESSES• INGS• DINING END TAB CLI ITURE • BE FAS• • LOVE SEATS• L LES• A TABLES• OARDS SP DINING SE TABL E R ATHE TS • LAMP ES• ABL URNIT L RUGS ARDS• ASES SPRINGS R •T NITURE• S D EAT LQVE SEAT E UGS• S • BOX S BED BOA A E BL E S • RE INERS HAI E SEA MPS • TABLES• EN R FU • BEDB BLES• A GS • DINING SETS SSES• • SOFAS• CHA VE SEATS• LAMPS k 4 D BOARD X SPRINGS FURNITU LOVE SEAT P END TAB • AREA RUGS• VASES• E LES• RECLINERS• L • A END TABLES SETS FURNITURE VASES• BE i i r ERS• LEATHE E SEATS• LAMPS• TABLE U RUGS 2014

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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6

© www.bendbulletin.com/local

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 1, 2015

• I I

• •

I '

stesa+l

e t

Joe Kiine/The Bulletin

The afternoon sun illuminates Three Fingered Jack as skiers line up a run down the slopes at the top of Ed's chair lift on the opening day of Hoodoo Ski Area on Wednesday outside Sisters.

CLOSURESAND NOTICES

Officials look at land use exception

• All city, county, state and federal government offices will be closedtoday, NewYear's Day. • All public schools are closed this week.Central Oregon Community College andOSU-Cascades will be closedtoday. • Banks will be closed today. • Post offices will be closed today. • Deschutes, Jefferson and Crookcounties public libraries will be closed today. • Juniper Swim & Fitness Centerwill be open 8 a.m. to noontoday. • Wilderness Garbage and Recycling's Thursday route will bepicked up Friday. BendGarbage and Recycling, High Country Disposaland CascadeDisposal Thursday routes will be picked up FridayandFriday routes will be pickedup Saturday. • Bend-South, East Bend, Giorgio's West Bend andNorth Bendliquor stores will beclosed today.

By Ted Shorack The Bulletin

Deschutes County and state officials have compiled draft findings for an exception to a state land use goal that if adopted would allow sewer service

to unincorporated areas near La Pine.

The change is being proposed as a solution to the long-standing concern about nitrate levels in

southern Deschutes County groundwater, which ifnot addressed could

lead to contamination levels that threaten public health.

An advisory committee reviewing the problem recommended a sewer system

as a long-term solution for protecting groundwater in the area as opposed to on-site septic systems. The Department of En-

BRIEFING

vironmental Quality and the Department of Land Conservation and Devel-

Board memder resigns ScottAsla resigned fromthe BendPark & Recreation District's board of directors on Wednesday,according to an emailAslasent to board members.Histerm on the boarddoesn't end until June30, 2017,but he and hiswife aremoving to a homeoutside of district boundaries, according to theemail. "I amby lawgoing to have to resign my board position," he wrote. See briefing, B2

Correction In an editorial headlined "Hunting and fishing's decline hurts ODFW," which appeared Tuesday, Dec.30, on Page B4,TheBulletin incorrectly reported Gov. John Kitzhaber's proposed 2015-17biennium budget for the Oregon Fish and Wildlife Department. The governor's proposal includes a56 percent increasefor the department. The Bulletin regrets the error.

opmenthelped prepare the draft findings, which will be used to make a case for the land use exception.

SeeSewage/B5

Photos by Dean Guernsey/The Bulletin

Looking downstream from the Columbia Park footbridge, the Deschutes River is iced over and threatens flooding in Bend.

• Rain, freezing temperaturescause river levels to rise

"It's coming down and that's a contributor to the

higher levels in Bend," Gorman said. He added there are

no plans to adjust the flow, which can be manipulated at

Forest fire officer retires

the Wickiup Reservoir.

By Ted Shorack

The city and county pro-

The Bulletin

vided sandbags to residents on RiverfrontStreet as a pre-

Homeowners gathered sandbags Wednesday after-

caution and warned citizens

noon along NW Riverfront Street amid fears that the Deschutes River would con-

and their pets to stay off ice

that had formed along the riverbank. "This is the quickest I've

By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin

The new year will bring a new fire chief for public lands in Central Oregon. Craig Letz, who had served asfire staffofficer

tinue to rise after a night of subzero temperatures slowed

With the help of friends and neighbors, Gail Rogers passes a

ever seen it freeze," said Ray

Fire Man-

the water's flow and created

sandbag to help form abarrier between the Deschutes River and

sheets of ice in backyards. Several homeowners along

her home in Bend.

Haworth, a resident on Riverfront Street for 22 years with

agement Service since

his wife, Jackie. Several years ago, Ha-

2011, retired

the river's eastbank between

the Galveston Avenue and Colorado Avenue bridges were surprised Wednesday when they woke up to find parts of the river frozen solid. "This froze overnight," said Gail Rogers, who rents a home on Riverfront Street. "That's what everybody is so

for the Central Oregon

Wednesday.

Oregon Water Resources De-

Finestone, a spokesman for

worth said the river level rose

Known to

partment and Pacific Power

the city.

said Wednesday that they would be monitoring the riv-

Kyle Gorman, regional manager for the Oregon Wa-

during cold weather, but said it took much longer for the

er levels and expected them

ter Resources Department,

Maggie Jackson, who

to recede as high temperatures in Bend rise into the

said the flow of water slows down when there is ex-

owns a home next to Mill-

firefighters by the acronym COFMS, the service oversees wildland firefighting on the Deschutes and Ochoco

mid to high 30s in the next

tremely cold weather and ice forms. He also attributed the

shocked about." Officials from the city of

few days. "The river levels are decreasing, so we're just going

Bend, Deschutes County, the

to monitor them," said Justin

river's rise to heavy recent rainfall that caused the Little

Deschutes to peak.

water to freeze.

er's Landing Park, worried that sandbags wouldn't do enough if the water kept inchingtoward her home, which she rents out. SeeFlooding/B5

Letz

national forests, as well as the Prineville District

of the Bureau of Land Management. SeeLetz/B2


B2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 1, 2015

EvxNT TODAY NO EVENTSLISTED.

FRIDAY FIRSTFRIDAY GALLERY WALK: Event includes art exhibit openings, artist talks, live music, wine and food in downtown Bend and the Old Mill District; free; 5-9 p.m.; throughout Bend. OPEN MIC NIGHT:10-minute slots are available on a first-come, first-

serve basis; free;6-8 p.m., signups start at 10 a.m. at the box office; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700.

ENm a

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

Senior Center, 1600 SEReedMarket Road; www.notablesswingband.org or 541-647-8694. TOM LEONARD BENEFITCONCERT: Featuring the Quons, Kurt Silva, William Valenti and more to benefit Tom Leonard and his family; 4-7 p.m.; Kelly D's, 1012 SECleveland Ave., Bend; 541-389-5625.

THE JUNEBUGS: The Portland pop-folk trio performs; free; 7-10 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174.

Jan. 9

MONDAY BEN BALLINGER: TheAustin, Texas-based Americana artist performs; $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

TUESDAY

SATURDAY

KNOW ART:PRIMITIVISM AND THE EARLY MODERNAVANT-GARDE: SUNRIVERAUDUBON CHRISTMAS Explore the origins of the movement BIRD COUNT:Free, registration and the work of Picasso and Matisse requested; 7 a.m.-5 p.m.; Sunriver with Professor Jason Lamb; 6 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library,601 Nature Center 8 Observatory, NW Wall St.; www.deschuteslibrary. 57245 River Road; www. sunrivernaturecenter.org, james@ org/bend, lizg©deschuteslibrary.org Submitted photo or 541-312-1032. sunrivernaturecenter.org or Ben Ballinger performs Monday at Volcanic Theatre Pub. 541-593-4442. GREEN TEAM MOVIENIGHT: KNOW ART:PRIMITIVISM ANDTHE A screening of "Trashed — No Place For Waste," a film about the EARLY MODERN AVANT-GARDE: California bluegrass band performs; Jan. 8 Explore the origins of the movement health, social and environmental free; 7-10 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. and the work of Picasso and Matisse consequences of our waste; free; LIBRARYBOOKCLUB: Read Francis School,700 NW Bond St., with Professor Jason Lamb; 2 p.m.; 6:30-8:30 p.m.; First Presbyterian and discuss "The Art of Racing Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or Church, 230 NE Ni n th St., Bend; Sisters Public Library, 110 N. Cedar in the Rain" by Garth Stein; 541-382-5174. www.bendfp.org or 541-815-6504. St.; www.deschuteslibrary.org/ noon; Redmond Public Library, MOONSHINEBANDITS:The sisters, lizg©deschuteslibrary.org 827 SW Deschutes Ave.; www. twang-rap duo performs, with or 541-312-1032. deschuteslibrary.org/redmond or WEDNESDAY Big B, Demun Jones and Cloaked 541-312-1050. Characters; $15 plus fees in DAVID JACOBS-STRAIN: The LIBRARYBOOKCLUB: Read and SUNDAY Oregon bluesman performs, with advance, $18 at the door; 8 p.m., discuss "The Art of Racing in Bob Beach; $20 suggested donation; doorsopenat7:30 p.m.;Domino NOTABLESSWING BAND:The the Rain" by Garth Stein; noon; 7 p.m.; HarmonyHouse, 17505 Kent Room, 51 NWGreenwood Ave., classic big band performs swing Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 Bend; www.bendticket.com or music including blues, Latin, rock 'n' Road, Sisters; 541-548-2209. NW Wall St.; www.deschuteslibrary. 541-408-4329. roll and waltzes; $5; 2-4 p.m.; Bend DEAD WINTER CARPENTERS:The org/bend or 541-617-7050.

Letz

"I just wanted to pursuea career that allowed

Continued from B1

me to be in the mountains and the forests and

acres of jurisdiction and that

to be outdoors."

"It's just under 4 mi l l i on

is spread out over a 12-million-acre footprint," Letz said

Monday. The fire staff officer guides f irefighting, aviation a n d fuels ma nagement, th inning projects and controlled burns. "In most people's mind that would be comparable to a fire

chief," he said. Letz's retirement ends a 25-

"THE LASTWAVE": Showing of the 1977 Australian film about murder case; free; 7:30 p.m.; Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County Library, 134 SE ESt., Madras; www.jcld.org or541-475-3351. 1 MAN, 3 BANDSBENEFIT: Featuring live music by Five Pint Mary, The Gentlemen Callers and Subject To Change, a raffle and more to benefit Central Oregon Veterans Outreach; $12 plus fees in advance, $15 at the door; 7:30 p.m.midnight; Armature, 50 NEScott St., Bend; subjecttochangebend©gmail. com or 541-543-5383. DEVICEGRIPS:The Portland funk-hop band performs; free; 8 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing, 24 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.silvermoonbrewing.com or 541-388-8331. RIPPIN' CHICKEN: The Seattle electro-funk band performs; free; 9 p.m.;Dojo,852 NW Brooks St., Bend; www.dojobend.com or 541-706-9091.

Jan. 10 POLAR BEAR RUN& EXPO: Family friendly 5K or10K run or walk; all

agesandlevelsarewelcome;$30 for race, registration required; 10:30 a.m.-4 p.m.; St. Thomas Academy, 1720 NW19th St., Redmond; www. redmondacademy.com/polarbear or 541-548-3785. BEND COMMUNITYCONTRA

DANCE:Featuring a live caller and band; $9; 7 p.m. beginner's workshop, 7:30 p.m. dance begins; Boys & Girls Club of Bend, 500 NW Wall St.; www.bendcontradance.org or 541-330-8943. TEASE:BURLESDUEREVUE:The Portland burlesque group performs, featuring Dee DeePepper, Wanda

Bonesandmore;$8plusfeesin advance, $10 at the door; 9 p.m., doors open at 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

Jan. 11 VICTORIA ROBERTSON: The soprano singer performs, presented by the Redmond Community Concert Association; $60, $25 for students 21 and younger, $125 for families, season subscriptions only;, 6:30 p.m.; 2 p.m. SOLDOUT; Ridgeview High School,4555 SW Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; www.

redmondcca.org, redmondccaO hotmail.com or 541-350-7222. AN EVENINGWITH DAVID LINDLEY:The eclectic rock

musician performs; $20plus fees in advance, $25 at the door; 7-10 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; www.belfryevents.com or 541-815-9122.

Jan. 14 THE BANNER DAYS: Featuring Bradford Loomis and Beth Whitney; free; 7-10 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174.

— Craig Lets, retiring fire staff officer for the Central Oregon Fire Management Service

ests and to be outdoors," he said. His career began on the Clearwater National Forest in

Idaho. During his first year working in the woods he was on a timber crew, but went on some fire assignments. He

grew up in Bendsothe couple was drawn to living in Central

Oregon. Jennifer Letz was sustainable operations specialist for the Deschutes and

Ochoco national forests and fire and aviation operations for the U.S. Forest Service

year careeras a federal fire- was hooked and the next year in Oregon and Washington. fighter, which included jobs joined a fire crew. She left in 2012 to become a "The idea of fighting fire consultant. at Crater Lake and Grand Canyon national parks be- was very exciting, it was very Now Craig Letz is doing fore he came to Central Ore- adventurous," he said. the same. He said he plans to gon in 2006. He started with H e started h i s f i r s t o f stay in Bend and will work COFMS as a deputy staff fire two stints at Grand Canyon as a consultant, still focused officer and was promoted to National Park i n 1 991 and on wildland firefighting. The the top post in 2011. worked his way up the ranks couple met when Craig Letz An Iowa native, Letz, 50, to supervisor of the park's he- worked at Crater Lake Nasaid he earned a bachelor's licopter base, which is busy tional Park and they now have Pete Erickson /The Bulletinfile photo degree i n f o r est r e source with search-and-rescue mis- a 13-month-old son, Bridger. Craig Letz walks away from a hot backburn he started on the northern edge of the Baker Canyon management in 1990 from sions along with fires. From Letz was an outstanding Fire near South Junction Road in September 2006. Letz retired Wednesday from his post as staff fire Iowa State University. Be-

1999 to 2002 he served as the

fire staffofficer for Central

fore college he had traveled out West and fell in love with

fire management officer at Crater Lake National Park,

Oregon, Deschutes National Forest Supervisor John Allen

what the region offers.

then returned to Grand Can-

wrote in an email.

"I just wanted to pursue a career that allowed me to be

yon before moving to Central Oregon.

in the mountains and the for-

LOCAL BRIEFING Continued from Bf

His resignation tookeffect4 p.m. Wednesday.Boarddirectors are elected; aparkdistrictspokesman was notavailablelateWednesday to explainwhether someonewilbe appointed toreplaceAsla until an electionis held.

His w i fe, J ennifer L etz,

these areasandcities to limit outdoor burning anduseof uncertified wood stoves whilethe air is stagnant. Light winds and temperature a inversion cause stagnantair, potentiallytrapping smokeclosetothe groundand causing ahealth riskto people.

Three slecturesdurn downin Paulina

A housefire early Wednesdayin the southeastCrookCounty townof Paulina ultimatelydestroyed three State air quality officials arewarnstructures, according tothe Crook ing of stagnantair inCentralOregon County Sheriff's Office. through theweekend. The sheriff's office,Crook The OregonDepartment of EnviCounty Fire &Rescueand Rager ronmental Quality issuedanair stag- ambulancerespondedatabout1:30 nation advisoryWednesday,whichis a.m. Wednesdaytoa house fire ata ineff ectthroughSunday.Theadviso- residence. ry covers muchof Central Oregon,as Two additional structurescaught well as muchofSouthern andEastfire beforeemergencypersonnel ern Oregon,including Bend,Klamath arrived: avacantsingle-family Falls, MedfordandPendleton. residenceandoneside ofa duplex The DEQaskspeopleliving in occupiedbya singleresident. Afam-

Shgnantwir warning issuedin CentralOregon

"He always had public a huge geographic area of and firefighter safety on his responsibility for the Forest mind," Allen wrote. "He had

The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log whensuch arequest is received. Anynewinformation, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358.

BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at 2:56 p.m. Dec.21, in the100 block of NWGreenwood

Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at10:01 p.m.Dec.24,inthe2000blockofNE Monterey Avenue. DUII —Christopher JamesFleming, 37, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at1:59 a.m. Dec.29, in the area of NE Olney Avenueand the railroad tracks. Theft —A theft was reported at11:36 a.m.Dec.29,inthe300blockofNW Georgia Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at12:30 p.m. Dec. 30, in thearea of NEFranklin Avenue and NE Third Street.

Service and BLM with many

c h allenging

co m plexities. presencewillbemissed."

. . . and he handled it all with g r a ce and calm. His skills and

— Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarli n gCibendbulletin.com

stopped thespreading fire, thus saving additional homesfrom catching fire, according toCrookCounty Sheriff' sSgt.JamesSavage. The fire alsoknockedoutthe powerto thecity ofPaulina. Central Electric Co-opwascalledin to restore power. Theresidents declinedRed Cross services,havingmadeother arrangements.

police arrivedthevehicle wasfully engulfed. BendFireextinguished the fire, but thevehiclewasacomplete loss. According topolice, the driver, Tony Bozilov,57, ofBend,drovefrom his NortheastBendresidenceto the vacant lot to gooff-roading inthe snowyfield. Bozilovgot stuck,and as he attemptedto getthe vehicle unstuck, hisfoot becametrapped under thevehicle. Thevehicle caught Man'sfoot getstrapped, fire andseveral peoplestoppedtoasinjuredundervehicle sist. A citizenhelpedfree Bozilovand draggedhim awayfrom thevehicle. A Bendmaninjuredhis footafter Bozilov injuredhis footandwas it becametrappedunder hisvehicle, asthe vehiclecaughton fire Tuesday treated atSt. CharlesBend.Alcohol Bend,accord- was a contributing factorto the Crook County Sheriff'e Deputy Brian Bottoms via The Associated Press afternoonin Northeast crash, according topolice. ing to BendPolice. A fire in Paulina destroys three structures. The fire, which broke After Bozilovwas treated, he was Bend policeofficersandthe Bend out about1:30 a.m. in a home, driving out a family of four, spread to taken tothe DeschutesCountyjail Fire Departmentwere dispatched a vacant house and to aduplex where the only resident escaped. to a vehicle on fire atabout4 p.m. where hewaslodged onsuspicion of driving underthe influence ofintoxiTuesday.Thevehicle waslocatedin avacantwooded lotownedbySt. cants, driving whilesuspended,reckily of four living inthefirst residence The citizensweretreatedfor escapedsafely, asdidthe resident of smoke inhalationandonefor minor Charles Bend between the hospital's less driving and criminal mischief. — Bulletin staff reports the duplex. burns. Theresidents of Paulina parking lotand NE27thStreet. When

NEWS OF RECORD POLICE LOG

officer for the Deschutes and Ochoco national forests, as well as the Prineville District of the Bureau of LandManagement.

DUII —Rickey LeeCoe,28, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at1:06 a.m. Dec. 27, in the100 block of NE Third Street.

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THURSDAY, JANUARY 1, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON

o an 's'ri e ai' ei' isauuse o cu in a ain • A man with a history of snipping women's hairstrikesagain at a DollarTree By Steven Dubois

Por tland- area buses and

The Associated Press

PORTLAND

-

"TriMet barber" h as again, authorities say.

The

sticking glue

cut

in the hair of another.

31-year-old customer at Dollar Tree.

W alter's interest i n

like a huge amount," Paschall waukie, was booked into jail Walter t enc e d t o pris- said. "He went in, and she on charges of h a r assment on for m ore screamed prettyloud, and and a parole violation after than two years. Shortly after that kind of stopped it." cutting a woman's hair in his release in 2013, he was Paschall said patrol offithe checkout line at a Dollar accused of lewd behavior cersarrested Walter near the Tree store, Oregon City police on a bus, pleaded guilty and shopping center. Detectives Sgt. Matthew Paschall said served time in jail. had yet to find the scissors as Wednesday. Police went to an Oregon of Wednesday afternoon. Walter got his nickname City shopping center Tuesday Walter was being held in 2010, shortly after his ar- afternoon after mall security w ithout bail u n ti l h i s a r rest for cutting large clumps alerted them that a man used raignment in an Oregon City of hair from three women on scissors to cut the hair of a courtroom. He will l i kely

hair

dates to childhood. A prosecutor said after th e 2 013 arrest that teachers had to

NO Charge —A grand jury has decided not to indict a WestSalem High School choir teacher accused of leaving the scene of acollision with an 8-year-old boy. Police hadarrested 52-year-old Kimberly McConnell on acharge of failure to perform the duties of a driver to injured persons. Her lawyer said the boy, aneighbor, skateboarded into the car, his family did not want to call 911 or anambulance, and McConnell left only briefly to take her son to school, while her husband stayed behind. Theboy suffered a broken leg. Astatement from the Polk County district attorney's office Wednesdaysaid the grand jury heard sharply conflicting testimony, including that of McConnell, during two weeks of deliberation. It said Tuesday's decision endsany prosecution.

separate Walter from girls because he c ouldn't r esist touching their hair.

Walter acknowledged in

much hair he cut; it wasn't

He was sen-

J ared Walter, 27, of M i l -

PeaCherS Cited —Oregon State Police said their wildlife troopers in Southern Oregonhaveissuedcriminal citations to two Eagle Point men accused of poaching in acase involving a trophy bull elk and four buck deer. Aninitial report was received in early September. In each case, only the headswere taken, with the rest of the carcasses left to waste. Police said Wednesdaythat tips led troopers to recover the animals' antlers and issue citations that require the men toappear in Jackson County Circuit Court. Police said19-year-old Austin Burkett was cited for two counts of unlawfully taking deer, aswell as unlawfully taking elk andwaste of wildlife while19-year-old Christian Cochran was cited for two counts of unlawfully taking deer, aiding in a wildlife crime andwaste of wildlife. Several groups hadoffered more than $15,000 in reward money to help solve thecase.

be assigned a lawyer at that hearing.

Investigators believe Wal-

ter followed the w oman around thestore before attempting the clip, Paschall sacd. "Investigators wer e n't able to tell, specifically, how

AROUND THE STATE

c ourt p aperwork t h a t h i s crimes resulted from sexual

desire. He noted that he has a cognitive disorder stemming from a traumatic brain injury he suffered as a child. "I want help. I just don't know how to get it," Walter

said at his 2013 sentencing.

Early releaSe —Ajudge who hadgranted freedom to a man convicted for a killing at age 14has ordered that the man be kept in custody while the state contests the early release. Theinmate is 30-year-old Trevor Walraven. Heand his older brother carjacked and murdered RogueRiver lodge owner Bill Hull in1998. Walravenwas sentenced to 30years. In September, Judge Timothy Gerking said Walraven qualified for release under anOregon lawthat allows a "second look" for some juvenile offenders after they've served half their sentences. Thestate has contested the release, saying Walraven wasn't eligible. Gerking ruled Tuesday that Walraven must remain in prison while the appealworks its way through the court system.

Walter has roots in Tex-

as, and his criminal record, including a burglary conviction, extends to that state.

BAKER CITY

Police:Taxrefund offered for ex-boyfriend hit The Associated Press BAKER CITY — A woman

accused of trying to hire a hit man to kill her former boyfriendoffered an undercover officer $80 as a down pay-

(Emily Alicia) Munsell first solicited help from the relatiVe in making I7er fOrmer bayfriend "disappear," but the relative refused, Detective

Jay Lohner said in a police report.

ative of Emily A l i cia Mun-

sell, 24, Friday, called Munsell and got the offer, the Baker City Herald reported Wednesday. Munsell first solicited help from the relative in making the former boyfriend "dis-

charges are warranted, District Attorney Matt Shirtcliff sard.

In May, Munsell won a restraining order against the former boyfriend, the father

Munsell has been held on

canceled the order in Septem-

$500,000 bail. She has not entered a plea, and her next

ber, records show. She asked Judge Greg Bax-

Lohner said that when he called Munsell, he told her

scheduled court appearance is Jan. 22. Her lawyer did not

ter on Dec. 23 to rescind her

he was a friend of the relative

immediately return a call for

and wanted to help her. After getting the offer, Lohner

comment.

time with their son, citing an Oregon law that deals with

said, he and another officer

licitation to commit murder.

"immediate danger" to child.

went to Munsell's home to arrest her.

A grand jury will hear the case to see whether further

request.

She is charged with so-

EUGENE —

identity theft, felony attempt A 4 4 - y ear- to elude a police officer, un-

old Springfield woman shot and wounded by police after pointing a replica gun at officersfollowing a car chase

authorized use of a motor vehicle, forgery and drug possession. Last Aug. 28, the woman

has been sentenced to proba-

used a stolen vehicle to lead

tion in a plea agreement.

Baxter d enied

A

L an e C o unty C i r cuit that led onto Interstate 5 and

a

M u nsell's

— From wire reports

/

/

/

I / / /

/

pointing a gun toward officers. The gun turned out to be a replica. Officer Justin Myers shot

Gatewood. His action was later ruled justified. She was

hospitalized for nearly two Springfield police on a chase months.

Court j u d g e se n tenced into Linn County. After she Amanda Lynn G atewood stopped at a gas station south on Monday to four years of of Albany, the woman ran s upervised probation f o r toward a convenience store,

Trial delay —A lawyer is asking for more time to prepare the defense for aGoldendale, Washington, womanaccused of killing her 2-year-old daughter last summer at aCannon Beachresort. The lawyer told a judge inAstoria on Tuesdaythat it was unreasonable to schedule theaggravated murder trial for July. The Clatsop County district attorney hasaskedthe judge to set a firm date some time next summer. Thejudge gavelawyers another two weeks to debate the issue. Jessica Smith has pleadednot guilty to the aggravated murder charge aswell as an attempted aggravated murder charge for a slashing that nearly killed her13-year-old daughter. Smith and her husband were divorcing and involved in acustody dispute over the children.

former boyfriend's parental

Probation for womanshot by police The Associated Press

gardeners potatoes andtomatoes in one plant. TheTerritorial Seed Company in Cottage Grovecalls it "Ketchup 'n' Fries." The plant was developedintheUnited Kingdom. Theseedcompany sayssincepotatoes and tomatoes arefairly closely related, they graft well together. It's not genetic engineering. Gardeners canharvest a double crop of red cherry tomatoes andwhite potatoes from the plant also called a TomTato.

of her child, accusing him of pointing a gun at her, and she

ment and then promised to

pay for the killing with $1,000 from her income-tax refund, appear," but the relative reBaker City police said. fused, Detective Jay Lohner Police got a tip from a rel- said in a police report.

Vegetadle SpliCing — AnOregonseedcompany is offering

Defense lawyer Elizabeth B aker told t h e c o ur t t h a t

Gatewood, who uses a wheelchair, is in a treatment and

rehabilitation program.

MARION COUNTY

Hunters find skeletal remains in field The Associated Press

identification could take six

S ALEM — S k e letal r e mains found by hunters in

months.

a field near Turner are being shipped out of state for identification.

Sgt. Chris Baldridge of the M a rion

C o unty S h er-

iff's Office said the remains are believed to be those of a man about 40 years old, and

Police said they broke free a fter

W i n k l ebleck d r o v e

Baldridge confirmed that them to Marion County and the remains were discovered tried to assault them. where the search for a crim-

Winklebleck was 42 at the

inal suspect took place in

time and a registered sex

2010.

offender.

Police sought Paul WinBaldridge said investigaklebleck in connection with tors are not confident enough the kidnapping of two women to say the remains are those in Portland. of the fugitive.

PUBLIC OFFICIALS U.S. SENATE • Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore. 107 Russell Senate Office Building Washington, D.C. 20510 Phone: 202-224-3753 Web: http:I/merkley.senate.gov Bend office: 131 NW Hawthorne Ave., Suite 208 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-318-1298 • Sen. RonWyden, D-Ore. 223 Dirksen Senate Office Building Washington, D.C. 20510 Phone: 202-224-5244 Web: http:I/wyden.senate.gov Bend office: 131 NW Hawthorne Ave., Suite107 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-330-9142 U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES • Rep. Greg Walden, R-HoodRiver 2182 Rayburn HouseOffice Building Washington, D.C. 20515 Phone: 202-225-6730 W eb:http://walden.house.gov Bend office: 1051 NWBond St., Suite 400 Bend, OR97701

Phone: 541-389-4408 Fax: 541-389-4452 STATE OF OREGON • Gov. JohnKitzhaber, D 160 State Capitol, 900 Court St. Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-378-4582 Fax:503-378-6872 Web: http://governor.oregon.gov • Secretary ofState Kate Brown,D 136 State Capitol Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1616 Fax: 503-986-1616 Email: oregon.sos@state.or.us • TreasurerTedWheeler, 0 159 Oregon State Capitol 900 Court St. NE Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-378-4329 Email: oregon.treasurer©state. or.us Web: www.ost.state.or.us • Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum, 0 1162 Court St. NE Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-378-4400 Fax:503-378-4017 Web: www.doj.state.or.us

• Labor CommissionerBradAvakian 800 NE OregonSt., Suite 1045 Portland, OR97232 Phone:971-673-0761 Fax:971-673-0762 Email: boli.mail©state.or.us Web: www.oregon.gov/boli STATE SENATE • Sen. TedFerrioli, R-District 30 (Jefferson, part of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE, S-323 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1950 Email: sen.tedferrioli@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/ferrioli • Sen. TimKnopp,R-District 27 (part of Deschutesj 900 Court St. NE, 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-District28 (Crook, part of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE, S-303 Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-986-1728 Email: sen.dougwhitsett©state. or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/whitsett

OQ, 0 The snow is good and we are readyforyou to visit!


B4 T H E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 1, 2015

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ooking forward to the fresh start and opportunities of a new year, we offer our wi sh list for 2015:

• Build the campus. Overcome objections and work together to solve the challenges so we can all enjoy the myriad benefits of a four-year Oregon State University-Cascades Campus inour midst. It's frustrating that a small group of critics has managed to stall construction; it would be a

tragedy if the stall dragged on. • Preserve the heart of Mirror Pond. After years of meeting and talking, we're still being asked to approve or disapprove a plan without knowing its costs. The new scheme is appealing, but it vastly complicates and elongates the process.We need to actbefore the pond turns into a wetlands, building on the emerging compromise between those who want the pond exactly as it is and those who want a natural free-flowing river. • Resolve Cover Oregon's future. Although folding the failed agency's duties into other state departments sounds smart, lawmakers must be sure that doesn't cause individuals to l ose subsidies after the U .S. Supreme Court rules on the issue. Settlement must also be achieved in the state's legal battle with Oracle, where legal fees are mounting. • Finish the Bridge Creek Pipeline Replacement Project. The new Bend City Council must respect the i nvestments already made and proceed to preserve a full dual-source system. The city surely did stumble early on by failing to engage the public, but it has regained its footing and made the right choices going forward. • Solve the traffic congestion at the north end of Bend. While we've been contemplating ava-

in July, and retail sales starting in 2016. Of particular concern is

controlling potency, managing edibles and protecting children. The governor should keep a close eye on the process, as he failed to do with Cover Oregon. • Thin the forests. Preventing devastating wildfires and creating jobs go together, but progress has been hampered by distrust

among loggers,environmentalists and the Forest Service. Study and try to duplicate the successes at collaboration, such as the project in John Day that provided a lifeline to the Malheur Lumber Co. mill and the town of 1,700 residents. • Give the Common Core State Standardsand Smarter Balanced assessments a chance. It's a process that could vastly improve our nation's education system, but it will need adjustments as we gain experience with it. Criticism has come from a variety of directions, starting with conservatives who saw the standards as a government takeover of education. Later, teachers said they didn't get enough preparation. Educators and parents worry students will spend too much time on testing

and be discouraged by high fail-

ure rates. The furor has obscured the core value of higher standards shared across the nation. • Provide funding for an additional judge for the Deschutes Circuit Court. As the region has grown, the court has struggled to meet the need despite extensive efforts at designing more efficient systems. • Reject a moat of private land around the proposed Cathedral riety of plans, the region keeps Rock Wilderness. The plan solves growing and traffic flow deterio- a number of problems, including rates. The north needs the kind of consolidating public land in what extensive revamp now underway is now a patchwork of public and to the south as the city continues private property and giving the to grow beyond the original limits public access to a stretch of the John Day River. But a ribbon of of the parkway. private land surrounds the wil• Add balance to state educa- derness area. The public needs tion reform. Gov. John Kitzhaber easy access to its own lands. has launched aggressiveprojects • Keep Cylvia Hayes out of the with positive goals, including his focus on early childhood ed- governor's office. The governor's ucation and the effort to get 80 fiancee should have no official percent of students to get some state role. Recent revelations have post-secondaryeducation and the shown she failed to draw approrest to earn a high school diplo- priate distinctions between her ma. The reforms need construc- public role and her private contive critiques to ensure other edu- sulting business. cational values aren't ignored. • Recruit superior educational • Get it right with pot. This is leadersfor Central Oregon Comfar more complicated than le- munity College and Bend-La Pine galized-marijuana advocates ac- Schools. Longtime COCC Presiknowledge. There's much to learn dent Jim Middleton retired at the from Colorado and Washington end of last year, and the search state, which have taken differ- has identified several finalists. ent approaches and encountered Bend-La Pin e S u perintendent different challenges. The Oregon Ron Wilkinson resigned effective Liquor Control Commission has at the end of the current school been charged with designing and year. Both institutions have been implementing th e r e g ulations, superbly led and deserve continwith possession becoming legal ued excellence at the top.

Nixon listened to Moynihan Moynihan as a top adviser. Nix- and non-white categories for routine on viewed the presidency mainly statistics. through the prism of foreign poliThe greater impact of Moynihan, cy,and didn'tcare much about do- who viewed his charge as broader mestic politics. Yet, like many, he than just urban affairs, was to set was dazzledby Moynihan, whom in motion a bigger Nixon domestic he called "my intellectual-in-resi- view on health, welfare and envidence." Moynihan effectively flat- ronmental issues, and to get beyond tered and persuaded Nixon; and he the traditional budget-conscious poprovided him with books to read. sitionsembraced by Burns. ThecreNixon once surprised his Cabinet by ation of the Environmental Protecurging officials to read David Cecil's tion Agency in 1970 was a seminal biography of Lord Melbourne or achievement. "Pat changed the trajectory of doRobert Blake on Benjamin Disraeli. In the clashes with Burns, Moyni- mestic policies in a way Nixon never han played on Nixon's desire for big promised or expected," Hess said in achievements, but also on the presi- an interview. dent's memories of an impoverished Moynihan and Burns, who shared childhood. a mutual respect, both left the adMoynihan's biggest victory was ministration in 1970. The W hite in the debate over the Family Assis- House changed, former Nixon adtance Plan, a negative income tax viser Herb Klein said, and "hardball or guaranteed minimum income. replaced political philosophy." Sadly, With support from Labor Secretary we know where that led. Hess' short remembrance makes George Shultz, Moynihan persuaded a Republican president to offer a us wish there were a Moynihan radical proposal. and a Burns in President Barack Although themeasure never won Obama's White House, or in George congressional approval, it led to a W. Bush's — or in whatever adminpartial compromise: the Supple- istration takes office in 2017 — demental Security Income program, bating, articulating views on tax rewhich has helped people with dis- form, income inequality, health care. It's a treat to recall Moynihan, abilities and the elderly poor for decades. who died in 2003. There are several There were other Moynihan other books in the works, though we victories: He got the president to still await the definitive biography embrace the redevelopment of of one of the most influential figPennsylvania Avenue, which trans- ures of last half of the 20th century. formed Washington's signature Sen. Edward M. Kennedy said that artery — then a wasteland of broMoynihan was one of his colleagues ken down and tacky buildings and — Mike Mansfield was the other-

By Albert R. Hunt BIoomberg News

M

o re power started to b e vested in the White House

staff in 1969, during Rich-

ard Nixon's administration. Today,

there are about twice as many fulltime White House staff members as there were then. Yet if more administrations han-

dled domestic issues in the way the Nixon White House did in 1969,

therewould be many fewer complaints about powerful White House staffs. That's right, the Nixon adminis-

tration is a model for a huge-stakes, professional debate over the direc-

tion of the country. The protagonists were Daniel Patrick Moynihan, the Democratic in-

tellectual from Harvard University, and Arthur Burns, the pre-eminent conservative economist. Moynihan,

who went on to serve four terms as a U.S. senator from New York, was

appointed by Nixon to serve as urban affairs adviser in 1969. That same year, Burns joined the White

House as domestic policy adviser. He wenton to become chairman of the Federal Reserve Board. Their relationship is the theme of

a delicious new book, "The Professor and the President," by political scientist Stephen Hess, who was

Moynihan's deputy in the White House. It captures the dynamics

as Moynihan and Burns clashed over economics, welfare, the environment and health care. The

views of the liberal Moynihan often stores — into a glittering boulevard. whom he could envision in Philaprevailed. With his fetish for data, he cajoled delphia with America's founders in Nixon, the bane of most liberals, the administration into ending the 1776. surprised everyone by selecting practice of keeping separate white — Hunt is a Bloomberg View columnist.

Letters policy

In My Viewpolicy How to submit

We welcomeyour letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250words and include the writer's signature, phonenumber and address for verification. Weedit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhereandthose appropriate for other sections of TheBulletin. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.

In My View submissions should be between 550and 650 words, signed and include the writer's phone number and address for verification. Weedit submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject those published elsewhere. In My View pieces run routinely in the space below, alternating withnational columnists. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.

Please address your submission to either My Nickel's Worth or In My View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin. Email submissions are preferred. Email: letters©bendbulletin.com Write: My Nickel's Worth / In MyView P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804

ODFW practices misguided wildlife management By Joseph Loe he article in the Dec. 13 issue of The Bulletin announcing the formation of a pro-hunting advocacy group, Hunting Works for Oregon, deserves a differing opinion. Co-director and outdoors man Gary

T

early settlers who hunted to put meat

IN MY VIEW

on the table. Unfortunately, it has now turned into a recreational sport

direction for those who seem to enjoy

to foster the practices of the Oregon the "thrill of the kill." Department of Fish and Wildlife that

overpromotes an activity it should be managing. ODFW is now in a $32 Lewis' comment that, "when hunters million budget pickle for the next bigo and do their things, everybody ennium because fewer Oregonians benefits" is laughable. Polls show are hunting and the fees from the that the public has far more concerns sale of licenses are not keeping up about those who do the hunting than with expenditures. The Associated hunting per se. Hunters, as a demo- Press writer Chad Garland writes graphic group, have fallen to around that, "between 2002 and 2012, the 5 percent of the total population of population of Oregon grew by more the U.S. but continue to be responsi- than 13 percent, but the number of ble for the annual deaths of 200 mil- people with hunting licenses dropped lion wild animals from a wide variety by 15 percent." He indicates that of species. Some of the hunting prac- hunters tend to blame their decreas-

Stan Steel, an ODFW budget ad-

visory committee member and also a co-director of Hunting Works for

Oregon, wants the agency to shift back to state general funds for its financial support. He sees a "death by

While firearmsales have exploded in recent years, Garland indicates this has not translated into a boom in hunting participation that has steadily declined over the

past 30 years and shows little signs of changing.

and shows little signs of changing. Deschutes River Canyon area. After So what's causing the decrease in describing the history of relocation find a way to decrease its reliance hunting? He attributes it to social fac- efforts to a wide variety of places to on revenue from smaller numbers of tors such as increasing urbanization mix the genetics of the herd, it was hunters. I suggest his phrase more and competition from other sources. heartening to note that the sheep appropriately describes the thou- Translated, this indicates that city survived the move and were in good sands of animals that are maimed by boys and generations X, Y and Z ha- shape. After the move, an ODFW ofirresponsible hunters and crawl off to ven't exactly bought into the notion ficial noted that bighorn sheep were die a slow painful death rather than that hunting animals for recreation is "one of the rarest game mammals lack of funding for an agency whose an activity they can support. It's now in Oregon and ODFW issued fewtices connected with these deaths ing interest on the loss of traditional budget has increased 67 percent an RV, a camp ground, a lake view, a er than 100 tags for them last year." have challenged the competency of hunting grounds, reduced wildlife since 2000. campfire, a lawn chair and a beer. This begs the question if bighorn the organizations to manage the in- populations and the cost for an activiWhile firearm sales have explodThe paradox of misguided wildlife sheep are so rare, why is ODFW isterests of wildlife they are chartered ty that gets more and more expensive ed in recent years, Garland indicates management practiced by ODFW suing "once-in-a-lifetime" tags except to support. every year. By any reasonable met- this has not translated into a boom in is personified in the well-written ar- to pacify the appetite of recreational The pros and cons of hunting have ric, the economics of hunting indicate hunting participation that has steadi- ticle in your Dec. 15 issue relative to and trophy hunters'? been debated since the days of the the activity is heading in the wrong ly declined over the past 30 years the relocation of bighorn sheep to the — Joseph Loe lives in Bend. a thousand cuts" if ODFW cannot


THURSDAY, JANUARY 1, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

B5

NORTHWEST NEWS

BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES Jack L. Griffin, of Bend Dec. 4, 1932 - Dec. 26, 2014 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home is honored to serve the family. 541-382-2471 Please visit the online registry for the family at www.niswonger-reynolds.com

Services: A Celebration of Life service will be announced at a later date. Contributionsmay be made

FEATURED OBITUARY

er ou t iscrimination or women By Tamar Lewin

to:

New York Times News Service

Summit Community Church at 63850 Old Bend Redmond Hwy., Bend, OR 97701.

Paul Sprenger, a Washington lawyer who repre-

Yvonne Ash, of Bend

first class-action lawsuit fo-

sented female iron miners in Minnesota in the nation's

April 29, 1922 - Dec. 26, 2014 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel, 541-382-5592, www.deschutesmemorialchapel.com

Services: Celebration of Life will be held at a later date. Contributions may be made

cused on sexual harassment

— at the time an emerging legal concept — died on Monday while on vacation in Curat„ao. He was 74. His wife and law p a rt-

ner, Jane Lang, said the cause was apparently a

to:

heart attack he had while

Partners In Care and River Rock Adult Facility.

snorkeling. Sprenger, who began his legal career in Minneapolis,

Gordon "Gordy" Wayne Wanek,of

"He'd been an insurance defense lawyer but when he discovered what a great feeling it was to win something for someone who didn't have anything, he said, being a plaintiff's lawyer was

a no-brainer." — Jane Lang, wife and law partner of Paul Sprenger

as in onsae, e s esin ir s oravian u The Associated Press SEATTLE — Federal and

state officials are testing wild birds in Washington state to see how far a type of avian influenza has spread. Separate strains of the H5

Washington state officials say the virus poses no apparent threat to humans, but highly pathogenic strains can be deadly to domestic poultry, and rarely, wild birds.

virus were identified in a wild

duck and a captive gyrfalcon in northwest Washington this

Kraege said officials want to virus in the pintail duck as they responded to a die-off of wild month. Neither virus has been birds has it and to get a base- ducks at Wiser Lake in Whatfound in commercial poultry in line to see how far the virus com County. A respiratory the U.S. spreads. fungal disease has so far killed State officials say the virus An avianinfl uenza outbreak about 120 ducks, Kraege said. poses no apparent threat to earlier this month in British The duckhad the virus but likehumans, but highly pathogen- Columbia spread to several ly died of the fungal disease, he ic stmins can be deadly to do- poultry farms there and has satd. mestic poultry, and rarely, wild affectedabout 245,000 birds, Federal agricultuml officials birds. the Canadian Food Inspection have also confirmed the presOfficials are taking swabs Agency said on its website. ence of the H5N8 virus in guinfrom about 600 ducks and othThe state's two confirmed ea fowland chickens in a backer waterfowl that are taken by cases are a captive falcon with yard poultry flock in Winston, hunters, said Don Kraege, with the H5N8 strain of avian flu, Oregon. the state Department of Fish and a wild duck with the H5N2 State and federal officials adand Wildlife. They're focus- strain, similar to th e strain vise people to report sick birds ing in Whatcom, Skagit, Sno- found in poultry in British and take steps to assure their homish, Thurston and Clark Columbia. flocks don't come into contact know what percentage of the

counties.

State officials discovered the

with wild birds.

won important victories-

and large settlements — for

La Pine Dec. 21, 1930 - Dec. 29, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel of La Pine is honored to serve the family. 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: No services will be held, per Gordy's request. Contributionsmay be made to:

Boys 8 Girls Club of Central Oregon, 500 NW Wall St., Bend, OR 97701, (541) 617-2877,

www.bgcbend.org

Bobby J. Rose, of Bend Nov. 14, 1949 - Dec. 11, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel of La Pine is honored to serve the family. 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com

Services: Services and interment were held in Elkton, Kentucky. Contributions may be made to:

Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97702, 541-382-5882, www.partnersbend.org

Obituary policy Death Notices are freeand will be run for oneday, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. Theymaybe submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. TheBulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on anyof these services or about the obituary policy, contact

women, minorities and older workers against some of

an age-discrimination cas-

the nation's largest companies, including 3M, Cargill

Bank and another against

es, one against First Union Control Data.

In 2010 Sprenger was "He'd been an insur- the lead counsel representance defense lawyer," Lang ing television writers in a said, "but when he discov- $74.5 m i l l io n s e t tlement ered what a great feeling it against the television prowas to win something for duction industry, the largsomeone who didn't have est settlement in the histoanything, he said, being ry o f a g e-discrimination a plaintiff's lawyer was a litigation. no-brainer." Paul Sprenger was born Sprenger first became on Sept. 8, 1940, in Stillwainvolved in gender discrim- ter, Minnesota. He received i nation l i t i gation i n t he his bachelor's degree and 1970s, when he represented his law degree from the UniShyamala Rajender, an as- versity of Michigan. sistant professor of chemisSprenger met Lang when try at the University of Min- they were on opposites sides nesota, which at the time of a case involving black had never had a tenured fe- employees of the Burlingmale professor in engineer- ton Northern Railroad. He ing or the hard sciences. represented th e w o r k ers, "It was the first sex disshe the railroad, and they crimination class action negotiated a s e t tlement. against a university," Lang They merged their practicsaid. "He won a 10-year es in 1989, forming the firm c onsent decree, and i t Sprenger & Lang, with officchanged higher education es in Washington and Minfor women." neapolis, and married the It would be almost a denext year. cade before he b rought Sprenger learned he had the landmark sexual ha- prostate cancer 17 years rassment case, that of Lois ago and Parkinson's disease Jenson, a miner, against seven years later, Lang said. the Eveleth Taconite Co. It His son, Steven, bought became the basis of a 2002 the firm in 2000, although book, "Class Action," by Sprenger and Lang continClara Bingham and Lau- ued to do legal work for sevra Leedy Gansler, and of a eral years. The Minneapolis and Control Data Corp.

2005 film, "North Country,"

office closed in 2009, and

in which Woody Harrel- the younger Sprenger, like son played a lawyer based the older, had stopped takon Sprenger and Charlize ing new cases, Lang said. Theron played a character But while cutting back on based on Jenson. the law practice, Sprenger Jenson started w ork- and Lang turned to philaning at a mine in northern thropy, together f o undMinnesota's Iron Range in ing the Atlas Performing 1975. Almost from the start,

Arts Center on H Street in

according to court docu-

Washington and helping

ments, she and the other fe-

to revitalize its neighbor-

male miners were subjected

hood. They led a $24 mil-

to sexual harassment, ver- lion capital campaign for bal abuse, threats, stalking the center. It opened in 2005 a nd i n t i m idation. T h e y in a long-neglected former were pinched, grabbed and movie theater, which had stared at. b een transformed int o a

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 dayafter submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9 a.m. Mondayfor Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; please call for details.

In 1984, a week after Jen- 60,000-square-f oot complex son mailed a complaint to with four performing spaces t he State Department of

and three dance studios.

Human Rights, her tires

second trial was to begin, 15

Besides his wife and son, Sprenger is survived by two daughters, Heidi and Sara; two stepchildren, Jessica Lang and Benjamin Alamar; 14 grandchildren; and one great-grandchild. Lang said that she and her husband had formed

women settled with Eveleth

their firm w it h t al l a mbi-

were slashed in retaliation.

Sprenger filed his class action on behalf of Jenson and other female miners in 1988.

The court proceedings and appeals dragged on for a decade, and in 1998, just as a

Phone: 541-617-7825

Email: obiis©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254 Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box 6020

Bend, OR97708

for a total of $3.5 million. Sprenger won a far larger settlement in a race and gender discrimination case against Pepco, the Washington power company, which changed its practices as a result of the litigation. He had comparable success in

OREGON NEWS

3 indicted in gangshooting outside schoolenter pleas The Associated Press PORTLAND

-

Three

Sewage Continued from 61 After being finalized by the county, an ordinance changing the comprehensive plan

indicted on three additional

counts, including evidence tampering, hindering prosecution and being a felon in possessionofa firearm.

New orexpanded sewer systems outside of an urban growth boundary are not allowed under Goal 11, an adopted statewide land use requirement to prevent urban sprawl. An exception is allowed in state administrative

would be considered at public hearings.

rules in order to prevent public health threats.

New or

e x panded sewer

systems outside of an urban growth boundary are not allowed under Goal 11, an adopt-

ed statewide land use requirement to prevent urban sprawL An exception is allowed in state administrative rules in

order to prevent public health threats.

"This Goal 11 exception will create the ability to support existing homes and some future

ceptible to having high nitrate nances were repealed and are levels that exceed drinking now regulated by the county water standards. Porous soil on behalf of DEQ. from volcanic activity is a conAccording to DEQ, some retributing factor that makes it search links exposure to high difficult to protect the shallow nitrate levels to gastric or bladgroundwater. der cancer in adults and can A solution hasn't been easy. cause miscarri ages or birth The county adopted ordinanc- defects. Additional research is es in 2008 requiringmore still needed, however, before advanced septic systems that concretely linking the potenreduce nitrates in disposed tial health problems.

households with sewer service, which is necessary to pre- wastewater. A voter referenDEQ and the Department of serve the integrity of the area's dum followed, repealing one of Land Conservation and Develgroundwater," an excerpt from the ordinances. County com- opment are planning to hold the draft findings states. missioners repealed the other meetings over the winter to The concern about ground- ordinance in 2011 after a law- discuss the exception with the water in southern Deschutes suit was filed. public and why it is needed for County began in the late 1970s. Some residential develop- protecting drinking water in Multiple studies by state and ments in southern Deschutes southern Deschutes County. federalagencies since then County ha d t h e a d vanced — Reporter: 541-617-7820, have found that the area is sus-

Flooding

top, because we were right."

rents.

she said. "He really believed

cuted as an adult. Dugas was also indicted on an additional charge of being a felon in possession of a firearm. Murphy was

to account for the exception

that if we just worked harder we would come out on

norities and older workers,"

16-year-old appeared in juvenile court but will be prose-

young men indicted on the shooting. charges that i n clude atMarquel Dugas, 18, Lonzo tempted murder in a Dec. 12 Murphy, 22, and a 16-yeargang-related shooting out- old boy have all been indictside a Portland high school ed on more than two dozen have entered not guilty pleas. charges, including attemptFour young people were ed murder, assault, unlawful injured in the shooting near use ofa firearm and reckless Rosemary Anderson High endangering. They entered School. One was grazed by their pleas Wednesday. The

Continued from B1 "It feels like it's going to be pointless to bag it," said Jackson, when considering whether water would go under her deck and reach a bedroom. "The only way is to put sandbags along the doors on the deck and hope that water doesn't get that high." Rogers said she put out a Facebook message to friends Wednesday asking for help with protecting the house she

tions. "We were going to do big things and change the world and make a difference for women and mi-

a bullet while the other three were more seriously hurt in

septic systems before the ordi-

tshorack@bendbulletin.com

"lt feels like it's going to be pointless to bag it. The only way is to put sandbags along the doors on the deck and hope that water doesn't get that high." — Maggie Jackson, when considering whether water would go under her deck and reach a bedroom

river's edge was submerged under the frozen portion. "It's nice that the city sent

people out," said Jackson, as people filled sandbags with the help of workers from the city and county.

— Reporter: 541-617-7820, tsftorack@bendbulletin.com

The National Weather Ser-

A dozen neighbors and friends helped Rogers build

viceforecasts high temperatures in the low 30s today in a It/~-foot sandbag wall in her Central Oregon with sunny backyard. Sheets of ice had skies. Friday is expected to be covered about 30 feet of her in the high 30s with freezing backyard. A fire pit near the fog in the morning.

DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths ofnote from around the world:

cancer. Eddie B. Rice, 77: Moth-

Edward Herrmann, 71: er of former NFL great JerTowering, melodious-voiced ry Rice. Died Dec. 25 in actor who brought FrankStarkville, Mississippi. lin D. Roosevelt to life in Howard Schultz, 61: Vetfilms an d

d o cumentaries, eran producer of unscripted

won a Tony Award and charmed audiences as the

TV whose credits include the long-running reality pro-

stuffy dad on TV's "Gilmore

gram "Extreme Makeover."

Girls." Died Wednesday in New York City from brain

Died Monday whilevacationing in Hawaii.

D onald Newman, 8 5 : Longtime tho r oughbred owner and breeder with a

Find It All Online bendbulletin.com

number of stakes winners. Died Dec. 23 in New York.

Christine Cavanaugh, 51: Prolific voice actress whose characters included the tit-

ular character of "Babe." Died Dec. 22 at her home in Utah. — From wire reports

Hardwood 0utlet ~~

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B6

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 1, 2015

W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather, lnc. ©2015

I

i

i

'

I

TODAY

iI

TONIGHT

HIGH 3O. I f '

ALMANAC more sun thanclouds. Clear to partly cloudy

TEMPERATURE 40 23'

Low

44/37

CENTRAL:Partly to

24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" mostly sunnyand Record 1.98"in 2005 " y " Lincoln Month to date (normal) 1.3 8" (2.20") partly cloudy andcold 47/35 Year to date(normal) 9.9 9 " (11.36") tonight. Newpo Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 4 2" 45/31 WEST:Partly to mostly SUN ANDMOON sunny andcold today. Today Fri. Clear to partly cloudy Sunrise 7:40 a.m. 7: 4 0 a.m. and cold tonight. Flor en e Sunset 4:37 p.m. 4: 3 8 p.m. Some sunshine 46/36 Moonrise 2 :18 p.m. 3:04 p.m. tomorrow. Moonset 4:1 0 a.m. 5:1 0 a.m. OREGON EXTREMES F ull La s t New Firs t YESTERDAY e' High: 57 Jan 4 Jan 13 J an 20 J an 2e at Brookings Low: -12' Tuuight' s sky:CometC/2012 Q2 Lovejoy at Meacham po 0 3/ may reach naked-eyevisibility below Orion. Source: JimTodd,OMSI

UV INDEX TODAY 2

2 p.m. 4 p.m.

~ 1

I

18'

9 7'

Partly sunny

Mainly clear

SUNDAY

36' 25'

Sunshine andsomeclouds

0

The higherthe AccuWealher.rxim liy index number, the greatertheneedfor eyssndskin protsdion. 0-2 Low 3-5Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 YeryHigh; 11+ Exlreme.

ROAD CONDITONS ror web camerasof ourpasses, goto www.bendbuuetin.com/webcams I-84ut Cabbage Hill: Cold todaywith sun-

/24

andy •

Mc innviu

7/24

Sale

heaag 2 6 28/18 • He ppner Gove nt • upi Condoli 5/14 Cam '25 30/ • pray

• 9/24

OrV R S I

Ca mPSh man R9tI

I\

32/17

39/25

0/12 Mitch ll 28/ 1 2

• 25/16

• Prineville

• •

27/14

• Pa lina e Re d Brothers 31 10

• Eugene

Joseph Grande • 2311 u'nion 11 •

Granitee 29/11

'Baker C 20/10

eu

• John Day

6/9

tario

320

2 11

Valee 21/14

l4

Su ivere 30/1'7

• 34/ 7 Ham ton C e La Pine Grove Oakridge 3 • Burns Juntura 26/14 42/29 /27 • FortRock Riley 25/10 Cresce t • 34/14 27/16

Nyssa 21/11

38/18

Roseburg 46/29

Marsh 39/18

Gra a

Yesterday Today Frlday

• Chn s tmas alley Silver 32/11 35/13

Klamath 'Falls

• Burns Juntion • 24/12

Rome

33/12

Yesterday Today Friday

H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i ty Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 43/25/0.00 44/31/pc 48/36/c L sGrande 12/ 1/0.00 2 3/11/s 34/22/c 14/-4/ 0.00 20/10/s 27/14/c La Pine 28/-12/0.00 35/17/s 41/19/pc Brookings 57/36/0.00 52/38/s 52/39/s Me d ford 42/1 9/0.00 43/26/s 49/29/s Bums 15/-9/0.00 25/10/s 31/13/s Ne wport 43/3 0 /0.00 45/31/s 48/35/c Eugene 35/1 9/0.00 37/24/s 44/30/pc NorthBend 45/28/0.00 49/33/s 51/36/s Klamath Fags 33/7/0.00 37/1 8/s 42/22/s O n tario 20/5/0.00 21/11/s 26/1 8/s Lakeview 28/9/0.00 33/12/s 38/16/s Pe ndleton 21/ 7 /0.00 2 2/12/s 34/24/c

City Astoria Baker City

21/10

Fields • 30/14

• Lakeview

37/18

24/11

31/7

37/13

36/16

Jordan Vgey

Frenchglen

• Paisley

• Chiloquin

McDermi 28/5

Yesterday Today Friday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Portland 37/2 1/0.0038/25/s 41/31/pc Prinevige 19/ - 6/0.0027/14/s 41/18/pc Redmond 19 / - 9/0.0027/11/s 39/16/pc Roseburg 38 / 21/0.00 40/29/s 47/32/s Salem 38/22/0.00 39/24/s 44/30/pc Sisters 21/-9/0.00 32/13/s 43/18/pc The Dages 2 9 /1 3/0.00 28/18/pc 38/26/c

Weather(W):s-sunny,pc-partlycloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers,t-thunderstorms,r-rain, sf-snowflurries, sn-snowl-ice,Tr-trace,Yesterday data asof 5 p.m. yesterday

shine andsomeclouds.Drypavement. US20at SuntiumPass:Coldtoday with a partly to mostly sunnysky.Drypavement. US 2BatGov'tCamp: Mostlysunnyand cold today. Dryandcold tonight. US 2B atOchocoDivide:Partly to mostly sunnyandcoldtoday.Drypavement. ORE Ba at Willamette Puss:Noweatherrelated travel delaystodaywith plenty of sunshine; cold. ORE1sa at DiamondLuke:Partly to mostly sunnyandcoldtoday withdry pavement.

SKI REPORT ln inches as of 5 p.m.yesterday

Ski resort New snow Base Anthony LakesMtn 0 49-4 9 0 25-3 0 Hoodoo SkiArea Mt. Ashland 0 20-3 3 0 50-8 2 Mt. Bachelor Mt. HoodMeadows 4 42-58 0 26-3 6 Mt. Hood Ski Bowl Timberline Lodge 0 28-2 8 Willamette Pass:est. opening Jan. 3 Aspen / Snowmass, CO 1 35-49 Vail, CO 0 45-4 5 Mammoth Mtn. Ski, CA 0 30-48 Squaw Valley,CA 1 18-4 5 ParkcityMountain,UT 0 46-46 Sun Valley, ID 0 46-8 3 Source: OnTheSnow.com

NATIONAL WEATHER ~ 106 ~ g s

~g s

~t gs

~ 208

~s g s ~4 0 s ~ 50 s ~e o s ~7 0 6 ~ag s ~g g s ~ 10 0s ~ 1 10s

Cel ry** * 6/3

NATIONAL EXTREMES YESTERDAY (for the

• i niPe9 Tfrnnder Bay 8/127

41/31

48 contiguousstates) National high: 83 at Tamiami, FL National low: -de'

. . i.. d 38/26

,o

+* „*+*+t t ve c *

*

*

Hi/Lo/Prec. HiRo/W 26/15/0.03 32/31fi 25/15/Tr 30/23/s 27/12/0.00 30/23/s 26/13/0.00 36/18/sn 43/39/Tr 29/18/c Aeanfa 51/38/0.00 54/41/pc Atlantic City 35/21/0.00 43/35/s Austin 41/38/0.00 40/37/r Baltimore 35/21/0.00 42/27/s Billings 14/2/0.00 33/20/c Birmingham 47/29/0.00 52/40/pc Bismarck 25/-1/0.00 28/11/c Boise 19/13/Tr 21/1 2/s Boston 30/20/0.00 34/27/s Bridgeport, CT 33/20/0.00 37/29/s Buffalo 23/16/0.03 30/25/sn Burlington, VT 24/9/0.01 30/21/sf Caribou, ME 7/-15/Tr 20/9/sf Charleston, SC 54/40/0.00 58/40/s Charlotte 46/27/0.00 53/35/s Chattanooga 47/30/0.00 49/36/pc Cheyenne 24/-20/0.00 25/5/s Chicago 17/4/0.00 27/20/s Cincinnati 28/13/0.00 35/28/s Cleveland 24/14/Tr 31/24/s ColoradoSprings 32/-11/Tr 28/1 0/sf Columbia, MO 25/9/0.00 34/25/pc Columbia, SC 51/30/0.00 58/39/s Columbus,GA 52/37/0.00 58/43/pc Columbus,OH 26/1 5/Tr 32/24/s Concord, NH 27/1/0.00 29/20/s Corpus Christi 46/44/Tr 49/46/r Dallas 35/32/Tr 36/34fi Dayton 27/12/Tr 32/25/s Denver 30/-15/0.00 25/2/s Des Moines 23/0/0.00 34/1 7/s Detroit 24/14/Tr 28/23/pc Duluth 13/-7/0.00 18/-3/sn El Paso 30/24/0.00 52/33/c Fairbanks 37/15/0.21 18/-7/pc Fargo 20/-3/0.00 21/5/sf Flagstaff 21/17/0.65 24/7/sn Grand Rapids 18/14/0.02 28/24/sf 18/-1/0.00 23/8/sf Green 6ay Greensboro 44/25/0.00 49/34/s Harrisburg 33/23/0.00 37/26/s Harfford, CT 32/15/0.00 32/24/s Helena 11/-4/0.00 23/7/c Honolulu 75/62/0.34 76/63/pc Houston 46/38/0.00 48/43/r Huntsville 47/30/0.00 46/38/pc indianapolis 23/10/0.00 29/23/s Jackson, MS 50/31/0.00 49/40/pc Jacksonville 52/49/0.00 64/49/pc

Hi/Lo/W 34/31/r 34/23/pc 35/21/pc 34/16/sf 22/12/c 52/46/r 47/34/pc 45/40/r 45/29/pc 37/14/c 49/45/r 30/7/c 27/18/s 39/24/s 40/28/s 32/20/sf 28/10/sf 13/-8/pc 60/48/r 56/44/r 46/42/r 34/21/pc 29/23/pc 37/30/pc 33/24/pc 35/11/s 39/29/pc 58/45/r 56/47/r 36/26/pc 34/14/pc 52/47/c 39/37/r 36/26/pc 38/15/s 32/23/pc 33/20/pc 14/9/pc 49/30/sn 7/-4/s 25/16/c 28/6/s 30/18/pc 20/11/s 53/41/c 41/27/s 38/22/s 33/11/c 77/63/1 51/48/r 44/44/r 33/26/pc 51/48/r 69/56/pc

Amsterdam Athens

50/39/sh 46/34/pc 73/59/pc 68/45/s 83/67/s 42/16/s 63/55/sh 44/34/sb 70/43/s 34/29/pc 79/57/s 72/51/pc 61/44/pc 32/-2/sn 84/74/s 44/37/pc 42/35/sf 45/34/sh 73/62/t 65/58/s 41/35/pc 54/41/c 81/59/pc 78/67/sb 57/40/pc 52/38/pc 54/30/pc 83/72/s

Port

• Billings

33/20

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*

* *

* q' *2

ee

* *

Fo ro

3

Mostly cloudy

City

Juneau Kansas City Lansing Lss Vegss Lexington Lincoln Little Rock Los Angeles Louisville Madison, Wf Memphis Miami

Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New YorkCity Newark, NJ Norfolk, VA OklahomaCity

Omaha Orlando

Palm Spdings Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME

Providence Raleigh

Rapid City Reno Richmond Rochester, NY

Sacramento St. Louis Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco San Jose Santa re Savannah Seattle Sioux Fags Spokane Springfield, MO Tampa Tucson Tulsa Washington,Dc Wichita

Yakima Yuma

Yesterday Today Friday

Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W 39/33/0.23 43/31/r 32/11/sf 22/3/0.00 33/22/pc 36/27/pc 18/14/0.01 28/23/pc 29/18/pc 43/34/Tr 44/31/pc 47/30/s 30/16/0.00 37/28/pc 37/32/c 21/-4/Tr 34/15/s 32/20/pc 44/28/0.00 37/35/r 40/38/r 57/41/0.12 60/40/s 62/42/s 30/18/0.00 38/31/pc 39/34/pc 19/-1/0.00 27/13/c 26/18/pc 39/27/0.00 41/36/r 41/40/r 81/70/0.00 81/70/c 82/72/pc 18/2/0.00 28/17/c 28/22/pc 13/-7/0.00 24/7/sf 21/1 4/s 34/26/0.00 43/34/pc 42/39/r 55/42/0.00 60/53/c 69/64/r 32/27/0.00 35/31/s 40/31/s 34/24/0.00 37/30/s 41/29/s 44/26/0.00 49/36/s 53/38/c 25/17/Tr 32/27/i 22/-1/0.00 32/16/s 65/62/Tr 78/62/pc 54/44/0.05 55/35/s 24/5/0.00 31/21/s 33/25/0.00 39/30/s 50/42/0.11 50/35/pc 25/17/Tr 31/24/s 28/11/0.00 31/23/pc 32/17/0.00 35/25/s 46/26/0.00 50/35/s 26/-15/0.00 37/11/pc 30/8/0.00 35/15/s 44/24/0.00 48/34/s 23/16/0.01 30/25/sf 56/35/0.00 52/28/s 29/14/0.00 38/30/pc 20/2/0.00 28/13/pc 41/38/Tr 42/40/r 56/44/0.05 60/40/s 57/46/0.00 56/41/s 55/38/0.00 55/32/s 26/8/Tr 33/13/sn 58/42/0.00 60/44/s 38/27/0.00 41/31/pc 14/-12/0.00 26/5/s 20/8/0.00 19/13/c 26/15/0.00 35/28/c 65/63/Tr 76/64/c 60/45/0.26 50/31/pc 25/19/0.00 32/28/i 39/29/0.00 45/33/s 18/7/Tr 33/19/c 27/10/0.00 27/15/pc 52/42/0.07 54/34/s

38/32fi

93/70/0.00 72/50/0.00 19/7/0.00 19/-8/0.38 81/54/0.00 81/69/0.02 64/47/0.00 54/34/0.17 32/21/0.00 19/5/0.05 45/35/0.00

94/68/s 72/42/s 21/4/pc 36/32/c 83/54/s 83/70/pc 65/51/s 41/30/c 43/41/pc 20/4/c 50/35/sh 94/79A 51/35/s 86/56/s 89/70/t 26/18/sn 29/13/sn 47/33/s 85/75/c 44/30/sh 83/70/r 61/57/pc 64/51/pc 44/36/pc 31/17/sf 41/30/c 39/35/pc 41/33/sh

43/41/pc 44/40/r 73/58/s 67/45/s 84/65/s 37/1 7/s 70/56/pc 39/34/pc 70/39/pc 29/23/c 76/57/1

78/57/pc 60/42/s 36/23/c 83/72/s 56/38/r 53/36/r 37/24/s 70/61/1

66/55/s 42/36/r 59/40/pc 76/58/1

78/66/pc 57/39/s 54/50/c 52/26/s 80/72/sh

Mecca Mexico City Montreal

Moscow Nairobi Nassau

New Delhi

Osaka Oslo

Ottawa Paris Rio de Janeiro 95ng/0.08 Rome 39/30/0.00 Santiago 81/61/0.00 Sao Paulo 88/72/0.00 Sapporo 31/19/0.06 Seoul 34/20/0.00 Shanghai 47/41/0.00 Singapore 84/77/0.12 Stockholm 38/32/0.02 Sydney 76/68/0.00 Taipei 70/50/0.00 Tel Aviv 69/44/0.00 Tokyo 54/37/0.00 Toronto 20/16/Tr Vancouver 36/23/0.00 Vienna 23/14/0.02 Warsaw 32/16/0.08

93/70/s 72/42/pc 27/17/sn 35/34/pc 83/55/s 82/69/s 64/48/s 38/30/pc 50/42/c 25/15/sn 40/35/pc 95/80/1 48/34/s 83/55/s 90/73/1 27/15/pc 24/13/s 41/28/s 83/76/r 43/39/c 85/70/pc 56/52/c 69/52/pc 41/33/c 28/24/sf 40/31/pc 37/27/c 37/30/c

N e W Y ecLI" from

" Norma DuBois

uli e M o e

Thank you to our Buyer s, Seller s, Fellow Realtor s® and Fr iends!

2014 Real Estate Sales Address Sales Price 3385 NW18th Fairway Place*. ... ............ $60,000 Lot155 hlW 18th Fairway Place *............ $75,000 293 Jefferson Avenue............................... $78,400 3397 NW 18h Fairway Place* ..... ............ $84,000 101 5 SE 4th Street ¹11 ................ ............ $85,300 3377 NW Fairway Heights Drive* ......... $136,000 56808 Dancing Rock Loop* ........ .......... $149,900 3167 NE Wells Acres Road ..................... $165,000 20300 NW PoeSholes.................. .......... $180,000 3169 NW Shevlin Meadow Drive* ........ $190,000 700 NW Green Forest Circle................... $197,721 608 SE Glengarry Place.......................... $208,920 19490 Stafford Loop* ................. .......... $209,400 31 SE Benaiah Circle .............................. $210,000 1425 NW17th Street............................. $219,500 19336 Seaton Loop*................... .......... $224,400 21241 Starlight Drive ............................. $225,500 2109 NW Oak Avenue............................ $229,000 2158 SW 36th Court .............................. $242,000 6081 7 Granite Drive............................... $243,000 2679 NW Hilton Court * ........................ $250,000 19334 Laurelhurst Way .......................... $253,000 61486Weinhard Court *........................ $258,742

20770 Beaumont Drive ............. 61875 Broken TopDrive ¹32 ..... 20295 Mariner Drive................. 21184 Philly Avenue ................. 19473 Baker Road..................... 61580Tam MCArthur Loop *..... 2966 hlW Cabernet Lane........... 61611 Summer Shade Drive...... 61281 Columbine Lane ............. 20343 Travelers Place................ 61191 Kepler Street .................. 2238 hlW Oak Avenue............... 2412 hlW Summerhill Drive....... 512 NW OgdenAvenue............. 61 050 Snowbursh Drive ............ 1721 hlW Wild Rye Circle * ....... 1370 hlW Fresno Avenue........... 20618 Boulderfield Avenue....... 61409 Davis Lake Loop ............. 20022 Millcrest Place................ 1574 hlW Kingston Avenue ....... 61020 Bachelor View Road*.... 22280 White Peaks Drive .......... 19165 Doe Lane........................

..... $259,900 ..... $260,000 ..... $265,000 ..... $267,000 ..... $270,000 ..... $270,000 ..... $275,000 ..... $275,000 ..... $282,000 ..... $283,375 ..... $299,900 ..... $299,900 ..... $300,000 ..... $310,000 ..... $315,000 ..... $320,000 .....$327,950 ..... $337,500 ..... $338,000 ..... $355,000 ..... $358,000 ..... $375,000 ..... $382,500 ..... $383,000

20402 SEPenhollow Lane...................... $386,000 61 745 Bridge Creek Drive ...................... $399,91 5 2327 NW Frazer Lane............................. $400,000 3115 NW MetkePlace * ........................$400,000 65900 Mariposa Lane* ......................... $410,000 19717 Mt. Bachelor Drive ¹518 .............$412,500 63125 Pikes Court.................................. $41 5,000 746 SE Briarwood Court......................... $420,000 63129 Pikes Court.................................. $425,000 2625 NW Lemhi PassDrive .................... $431,000 1223 NW Fort Clatsop Street ................. $440,000 19521 Painted Ridge Loop ..................... $455,400 65191 Highland Road ............................ $480,000 60567SeventhMountain Drive .............$485,000 61 901 BrokenTop Drive ......................... $500,000 1532 NW Kingston Avenue .................... $516,000 22285 Calgary Drive .............................. $548,000 18605 Macalpine Loop* ....................... $550,000 1784 SWTroon Avenue .......................... $575,000 2592 NW Crossing Drive........................$584,000 22079 Quebec Drive .............................. $597,000 3194 NW Fairway Heights Drive ............ $610,000 61365 Triple Knot Road.......................... $627,580 61 861 Fall Creek Loop ........................... $635,000

1641 NW Promontory Drive ................... $665,000 61553 Tam MCArthur Loop..................... $672,500 1154 NW Redfield Circle ........................ $675,000 3185 NW Fairway Heights Drive ............$675,000 2169 NW Lolo Drive ............................... $699,000 677 NWStonepineDrive........................$700,000 62826 Stenkamp Road........................... $735,000 22405 White Peaks Drive ....................... $739,500 3209 NW Fairway Heights Drive ............ $740,000 132 NW Phils Loop.................................$810,000 61619 Tam MCArthur Loop..................... $850,000 1151 NW Clark Court............................. $875,000 61842 Red Meadow Court.....................$895,000 21019, 21023, 21027 NE Carl Street...... $900,000 61668 Tam MCArthur Loop.................. $1,075,000 65660OldBend Redmond Highway ...$1,140,000 2806 NW Nightfall Circle .................... $1,150,000 77 NW Pinecrest Court........................ $1,150,000 21880 Rickard Road............................ $1,200,000 2837 NW Nightfall Circle .................... $1,378,000 62638 Sparrow Hawk Circle................ $1,400,000 62608 Sparrow Hawk Circle................ $1,600,000 * indicates a lot sale

¹ I SalesVolume in Central Oregon TEAMWORK FROM THE TEAM THAT WORICS Top 1% Internationally

p

www TeamNoimaAndiulie.com I

Licensed brokersin the State of Oregon

Norma DuBois

e I

31/21/pc 82/67/pc 59/37/s

34/25/pc 43/30/s 55/34/s 36/25/s 35/16/pc 39/24/s 55/41/c 42/23/pc 42/20/s 52/36/c 33/22/sf 54/33/s 40/33/pc 32/20/pc 47/42/r 62/44/s 56/42/s 56/34/s 31/1 0/sf 62/50/r 44/36/c 25/1 8/s 25/1 3/c 40/32/c 80/68/pc 48/28/s 40/34/i 48/35/pc 35/28/c 33/18/c 58/35/s

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City Abilene Akron Albany Albuquerque Anchorage

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31'

Yesterday Today Friday

• • 26/11

39/2

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MONDAY "'" 43'

TRAVEL WEATHER

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Yesterday Normal Record 21 -8'

SATURDAY

OREGON WEATHER

Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday

High

LOW

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I

FRIDAY "'" 40'

541.312.4042

Julie Moe

Cascade Sotheby's

TEAM

Each office is independently owned and operated

INTERNATIONAL REALTY


IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 NB A , C3 Sports in brief, C2 P r eps, C3 College hoops, C2 College football C4

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 1, 2015

NFL

COLLEGE FOOTBALL: ROSEBOWL

Bills coachopts out of contract There often is one significant surprise in the annual firing-and-hiring season for NFL coaches, and this year's stunner came Wednesday.Doug Marrone opted out of his contract with the Buffalo Bills early on New Year's Eve,making him a highly attractive coaching free agent and leaving the Bills to join the five other NFLteams searching for new head coaches. Marrone's contract gave him threedays after the regular season ended to opt out of his deal becausethe Bills were sold this year from the Ralph Wilson estate to Terry and KimPegula. He had two seasonsremaining on his four-year, $16 million contract. Under the terms of his contract, Marrone receives his $4 million salary from the Bills for next season in addition to any income hemight receive from another team if he is hired elsewhere, according a the person withknowledge of the deliberations. Marrone went15-17 over two seasons with

Influx of cashmakes college likethe pros

RoseBowl

By Marc Tracy and Tim Rohan

TV:ESPN Rntgo:KBND 1110-AM, 100.1-FM

New York Times News Service

After taking a sociology exam, Cardale Jones,

a quarterback at Ohio State, posted a message on Twitter that echoed across

college sports: "Why

lnefde

Jones will be the starting quarterbacktomght against Ala b ama in the Sugar Bowl, the second semifinal

game of the College Football Playoff,

Inside

been so awash in

• In the other semifinal: Ohio State coach UrbanMeyer brings SECstyle BuckeyesupagainstSEC champion Alabama,C4

' Ducks coaches tops and his words have in playoff renewed relevance. boriuses,C4 Never has the sport

should we have to

College Football Playoff semifinal: No.2 Oregon vs. No. 3 Florida State When: 2 p.m.today

go to class if we came here

mo n ey, a growth industry

to play FOOTBALL, we ain't

on c ampuses that some ob-

come to play SCHOOL, class- servers believe increasingly es are POINTLESS." resemblesprofootballmore Two years after publishing t han higher education. that provocative statement, SeeMoney/C4

Keep track of the RoseBowl all day today with photos, stories, multimedia andmoreat bendbnlletin.com/rosebowl

Q

Finally, the time for talk is over LOSANGELES-

he questions have all finally time to play. TForit'sOregon, those quesbeen asked, and now

MARIC

MORICAL

tions always seem to be the

same. Are the Ducks physical enough? Can they win close games? Can they win the big one'? Well, this one qualifies as the big one, at least until the

PREP SWIMMING: SEASON PREVIEW

next one. A win today over Florida State in the Rose Bowl and

Oregon will face the Alabama-Ohio State winner in

the national championship game on Jan. 12. SeeQuestions/C4

NHL

the Bills.

The San Francisco 49ers, Oakland Raiders, New York Jets, Atlanta Falcons andChicago Bears also are looking for coaches.

Susan Walsh i The Associated Press

Chicago's Jonathan Toows walks out for practice

Wednesday ahead of today's Winter Classic.

—TheWashington Post

Baldwin takes jad at Hardaugh

Hockeyno longer has New Year's to itself

RENTON, Wash.

— Seattle Seahawks receiver Doug Baldwin initially wished his former college coach, Jim Harbaugh,good luckin his new job at Michigan. But then Baldwin couldn't resist a little dig. "I wish him the best

of luck," Baldwin said. "I know he's anxious to get that program turned around anddo some great things at Michigan. So I wish him the best of luck. And go Buckeyes." Baldwin has talked previously about his sometimes contentious relationship with Harbaugh while he played for him at Stanford. "All of you guysknow that Jim Harbaughand I did not havethe best of relationships while I was at Stanford, but all of that stuff is settled now," Baldwin said last January. Baldwin added then that "I actually thank him now for the adversity he helped me through, so to speak. He made mewho I am today, a better person and a better football player." —TheSeattle Times

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — For the first time, hockey's

Winter Classic is sharing New Year's Day with col-

lege football games that actually have something to do with the national Andy Tullis i The Bulletin

Summit swimmers Mackenzie Halligan, left, and Tommy Brewer look to lead the Storm girls and boys to fourth straight Class 5A swimming championships. Halligan is a two-time individual state champion, and Brewer is a six-time individual state champion.

No. 6TCU

No. 9 Mississippi 3 8 30

ORANGEBOWL No. 10 GeorgiaTec No. 8 Mississippi St. 34

CORRECTION A"Ducks RoseBowl History" feature that appeared inWednesday's Bulletin on pageEB misidentified the Oregon Ducks' ball carrier in a photo from the1958 Rose Bowl. Theball carrier was Willie West. The Bulletin regrets the error.

championship. So what should a sports fan do: Watch outdoor

hockey early in the day

• summit boys, girls are eachseeking their fourth straight state championships By Grant Lucas • The Bulletin

Inside

my Halligan has been at the helm for 10 Summit swimming state championships — seven for the girls, three for the boys. Under the 11th-year coach, the Storm have swept the boys and girls Class 5A htles each of the last three seasons. They boast NCAA Division I-bound swimmers

in Mackenzie Halligan (Colorado State) and Tommy Brewer (Auburn) and have drawn nearly 70 boys and girls for the 2014-15 season, giving Summit the kind of depth that Amy Halligan says could "be hard to overcome for any of the other schools."

• A capsule look at all seven boys and girls swimming teams in Central Oregon,C3 • White Buffaloes girls win on final day of Sisters tourney. Prep roundup,C3

and then

go out for

Winter Classic

Or plan Chicago at your day so that you Washington are home Wh en: in time for

the Rose

1 0 a.m. today TV:NBC

Bowl in the afternoon and the Sug-

ar Bowl in the evening? Brooks Larch thrnks 1t should be a slam dunk

decision. "This is one of my favor1te catchphrasestouseof all time: 'Who cares? It's

college,' " the Washington Capitals defenseman said. "I hope the rest of America has the same mindset I do." The NHL's annual

But even with all of the

PEACH BOWL

FIESTA BOWL No.21 BoiseS. N o. 12 Arizona

By Joseph White

pieces that have the Storm set up for a four-peat state

showcase has been able

sweep, the longtime Summit

on Jan. 1 in part because college football essentially

to establish a beachhead

coach is not about to crown her squads just yet. "I think it's going to be really tough," Amy Halligan

abandoned what used to be

its biggest day, populating it with run-of-the-mill bowl games and saving the big ones for later. This year, they are trying to take

says. "I don't know that it's

impossible. But it's going to be a lot of strategy and a little bit of good luck."

it back, with the College

Fortunately, the Summit

boys do have Brewer, a sixtime individual state champ and owner of three 5A state

records. The Storm also have John

The Bulletin file photos

Summit's Tommy Brewer, left, has three individual Class 5A state swimming records. Mackenzie Halligan, right, won the 200 freestyle during the 2014 Class 5A championship.

Hartmeier, the two-time de-

fending 100-yard freestyle winner at state.

As for the girls — aside from Mackenzie Halligan,

Football Playoff semifinals highlighting the schedule. Then again, there might be room for both. Now in its seventh year, the Classic has established enough of a presence to withstand a bit of competition.

winner in 2013, and Ali Epple, who was first at state in

the 200 individual medley

the 200 free champ last sea-

and second in the 100 breast-

son and the 100 freestyle

stroke last season — Amy

Halligan says the Storm are "pretty thin." Especially since Hannah Peterson, a

rin, winner of the 100 backstroke in 2013, have transferred to Mountain View and

state placer in two individual events last year, and Elli Fer-

Bend High, respectively. SeeSwimming/C3

SeeClassic/C2

Inside • NHL roundup,C2


C2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 1, 2015

ON THE AIR

COREBOARD

TODAY Time TV/Radie 9 a.m. E SPN2

FOOTBALL

Outback Bowl, Auburn vs. Wisconsin Cotton Bowl, Baylor vs. Michigan State Citrus Bowl, Minnesota vs. Missouri Rose Bowl, Florida State vs. Oregon Sugar Bowl, Alabama vs. OhioState SOCCER England, TottenhamHotspur vs. Chelsea

9:45 a.m. ESPN

1 0 a.m. AB C 2:10 p.m. ESPN 5:50 p.m. ESPN 9:30 a.m. NBCSN

HOCKEY

NHL, Chicago atWashington

1 0 a.m.

NB C

FRIDAY FOOTBALL

Armed Forces Bowl, Houstonvs. Pittsburgh TaxSlayer Bowl, lowa vs.Tennessee High School, All-American Game Alamo Bowl, KansasSt. vs. UCLA Cactus Bowl, OklahomaSt. vs. Washington

9 a.m. E S PN 12:20 p.m. ESPN 1 p.m. E SPN2 3:45 p.m. ESPN 7:15 p.m. ESPN

BASKETBALL

Men's college, Washington St. at Stanford Women's college, Auburn at South Carolina Women's college, Marquette at Georgetown Men's college, Florida St. at Mississippi St. Men's college, South Dakota St. at Denver Women's college, Missouri at Tennessee Men's college, Southern Cal atUtah Men's college, Washington at California Men's college, UCLAat Colorado

noon Pa c -12 4 p.m. SEC 4 :30 p.m. F S 1 5 p.m. E SPNU 6 p.m. Roo t 6 p.m. SEC 7 p.m. E SPNU 7 p.m. P a c-12 7 p.m. FS1

WRESTLING

College, lowa at Rutgers

5 p.m. B i g Ten

Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. TheBulletin is notresponsible forlate changes madebyTVor radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF FOOTBALL BeaverS name running daCkS COaCh—Oregon State announced Wednesday it will hire Telly Lockette as running backs coach. Lockette has held the sameposition with South Florida for the past two seasons andwas ahigh school coach in Miami prior to that. The hire completes newheadcoach Gary Anderson's full-time staff.

HOCKEY NHL aPPrOveSCOyateSSale — TheNl-IL boardof governors on Wednesdayapproved IceArjzona's sale of 51 percent of the Arjzona Coyotes to Philadelphia hedgefund manager Andrew Barroway. In October, IceArizona agreed to sell the majority stake to Barroway for $155 million. Barroway will replaceGeorgeGosbeeasthe team's chairman andgovernor. Barroway previously tried to buy the New Jersey Devils andNewYork Islanders.

U.S. fallS to Canada at WOrld JuniOrS — Arizona Coyotes prospect Max Domi scored two empty-net goals to help Canadabeat the United States 5-3 onWednesday in theWorld Junior Championship. The Canadians finished 4-0 in round-robin play in Group A to advance to aquarterfinal against Denmark, the fourth-place team in Group B. TheUnited States (2-1-1j finished second in the pool and will play Russia in the quarterfinals. The pregamehypecentered on Canada's Connor McDavid andAmerican star Jack Eichel, expected to be the first two picks in the NHL draft. They eachhad anassist. — From staffand wire reports

COLLEGE BASKETBALLROUNDUP

Villanova matches program's best start The Associated Press

No. 9lowa State 83,MVSU

V ILLANOVA, P a . 33: AMES, Iowa — Naz There have beenFinal Four Long made seven 3-pointers

teams and a national cham- and scored a season-high 24 pionship team and multiple points forIowa State. BigEasttitlewinnersforvilSeto n Hall 78, No. 15 St. John's 67: N E W ARK, N.J. — Ster-

lanova since its first

recognized game in

ling Gibbs had 25 points and e i ght assists to lead Seton Hall in the Big East opener for both

1920.

Only one other edition has ever been perfect through 13

games. Up next for coach teams. St. John's had Jay Wright's crew: a won seven straight chance to be alone in since losing to thenthe record book. No. 10 Gonzaga in Ryan Arcidiacono I(Iext gy late November. scored 15 points and No. 1 6 W i c h ita JayVaughn pinkston Oregon State State 66, Drake 68: had 13 to help No. 6 atOregon DES M O INES, low Villanova beat But- Whee:5 p m — Ron Baker scored ler 67-55 on Wednes- Saturday 23 po i nts, including day and match the

TV :ESPNU 1

beststartinProgram Rele KB history. ND-AM 1110

The Wildcats are FM 1001 13-Oforthefirsttime KICE940AM since th e 1 9 37-38 KRCO AM690 season. That team FM 96 9

lost its 14th game

3 st r a ight down the stretch, for Wichita State

ON DECK Today Boys basketball: Culver vs. Kennedy at Salem Academy Tournament, 11:30a.m. Girls basketball: Culvervs. EastLinn Christianat SalemAcademyTournament,10 a.m.

In the BleachersO2010 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Ucuck www.oocomics.com/inthebleachers

Wednesday'sGames

Toronto4, Boston3,SO N.Y.Islanders5,Winnipeg2 TampaBay5,Buff alo1 N.Y.Rangers5, Florida 2 Pittsburgh 2, Carolina 1 Columbus 3, Minnesota1 Detroit 3,NewJersey1 SanJose3, Anaheim0 Dallas 6,Arizona0 Colorado4, Philadelphia3, OT Calgar y4,Edmonton3,OT

Today'sGames ChicagoatWashington,10 a.m. Los Angeleat s Vancouver, 7p.m. Friday/s Games Florida atBuffalo,4 p.m. Montrealat Ne wJersey, 4p.m. TampaBayat Pitsburgh, 4p.m. PhiladelphiaatCarolina, 4 p.m. Torontoat Minnesota,5 p.m. EdmontonatColorado,6 p.m. N.Y.IslandersatCalgary, 6 p.m. St. LouisatAnaheim,7 p.m.

Saturday Boys basketball: The Dagesat Bend,7p.m.; Central at MountainView,3 p.m.; Burnsat LaPine, 6:30 p.m.; CulveratSalemAcademyTournament, TBD; Gilchrist atProspect 4pm Girls basketball: Bend atTheDalles, 7p.m4Central at MountainView,1:30p.m.; NorthSalemat Redmond, 2:30p.m.;BurnsatLaPine,5p.mcCulver atSalem Academy Tournament,TBD;Hosanna ChristianatTrinity Lutheran,5:30 p.mcGilchrist at Prospect,2:30p.m. Swimming: BendatLebanonInvite,TBD;Redmond, Ridgeviewat KFalls Henley Freeze,TBD Wreslling: Ridgeviwat e WestAlbanyTournament,TBD; CrookCountyat Rollie laneinNampa, Idaho, TBD; CulveratFreeberryTournament inPendleton,TBD Nordic skiing: OISRA classic, skateandpursuit races atDiamondLake, 11:30a.m.

DEALS Transactions BASEBALL NationalLeague LOSANGELESDODGERS—Agreedto terms with LHPBrettAndersononaone-year contract. Designated SS ErisbelArruebarrenafor assignment. PHILADE LPHIA PHILLIES— Traded OFMarlon ByrdandcashtoCincinnati for RH PBenLively. BASKETB ALL National Basketball Association PHOENIX SUNS— Recalled GsTyler Ennis and ArchieGoodwinandFTJ. Warrenfrom Bakersfield

BASKETBALL Men's college Pac-12 All TimesPST Friday's Games WashingtonSt.at Stanford, noon SouthernCalatUtah,7p.m. UCLAatColorado,7 p.m. Washingtonat California, 7p.m.

Wednesday'sGames

TOP 26 No. 2Duke84,Wofford 55 No. 4Wisconsin89, PennState72 No. 6Viganova67,Butler 55 No.9lowaState83,MVSU33 SetonHall78,No.15St.John's67 No.16WichitaState66,Drake58 No.18Okl ahoma61,GeorgeMason43 No. 24ColoradoState 71,Boise State65 Xavier70,No.25Georgetown53 EAST

BostonU.75,Holy Cross72,OT Bucknel57, l American U.47 Colgate68,Lehigh61 Dartmouth 76, Bryant59 Fordham 74,SCState54 Hofstra84,CCSU56 Lafayette92,Army78 Navy70,Loyola(Md.) 47 Providence 65,Creighton53 RhodeIsland80,Brown60 SetonHall78,St.John's67 Syracuse 61,Cornell 44 Temple57,Uconn53,OT Villanova67, Butler 55 SOUTH AustinPeay65,North Florida 60 Campbel53, l Liberty46 CoastalCarolina83, HighPoint 68 Duke84, Wofford55 Gardner-Webb 81,Presbyterian 64 Memphis 73,Houston54 Northeastern58, Richmond57 NorthwesternSt.94, LouisianaCollege 68 Tennessee 71, ETSU61 Tennessee St.73, KennesawSt.62 Tulane67, East Carolina59 Tulsa56,UCF54 UNCAsheville 62,Radford 60 UNCGreensboro 92,Mars Hil 48 WakeForest80,Princeton 66 Winth rop82,Longwood72,OT MIDWEST DePaul61,Marquette58 Georgia 50, KansasSt. 46 Green Bay54, Chicago St.50 Indiana 70, Nebraska65 Indiana St.63, glinois St. 61 lowaSt.83, MVSU33 Loyolaof Chicago64,Bradley49 MissouriSt.53,S. Illinois 50 Purdue72,Minnesota68 Vanderbilt70,SaintLouis55 WichitaSt. 66, Drake58 Wisconsin89, PennSt. 72 Youngstown St.78, N.Kentucky 74 Xavier70,Georgetown53 SOUTHWE ST Oklahoma 61,GeorgeMason43 SMU83, SouthFlorida 49 FARWEST CS Bakersfield87, LaVerne36 Colorado St. 71,BoiseSt.65 NewMexico76, FresnoSt.64 SanDiegoSt.53, AirForce49 UC Irvine82,Hampden-Sydney53 UtahSt. 61,SanJoseSt. 33 Wyoming76 UNL V71

"Pass the ball, Kevin! Don't try to dribble your way out of trouble!"

(NBADL ). UTAHJAZZ— AssignedGToure' Murryto Idaho (NBADL ). FOOTBALL National Football League ARIZONACARDINALS— SignedCBRashadCarFriday Wo m e n's college michaelandGAntoineMcclain to futurescontracts. Armed ForcesBowl FALCONS— SignedOTReidFrageltoa Wednesday'sGames Puttsburgh 3 3 53t A Ho uston ATLANTA futurescontract. TOP 25 TaxslayerBowl t B UFFALO BILLS—Announced coachDougMarNo. 2Uconn89, East Carolina38 Tennesse e 3tat 3 51at ronehasoptedoutof hiscontract. No. 5TexasA&M75,N.Texas38 Alamo Bowl NIBENGALS— PlacedWRDaneSanzen-2 Indiana70,No.24Michigan St. 51 Ucla 1 5 9lat K ansas St CINCINAT bacheroninjuredreserve. SignedWRCobi Hamilton EAST CactusBowl from the pra c t ice squad. American U. 60,Bucknell 55 56l at Oklahoma St Washington 6 6 DENVER BRONCOS— SignedLBChaseVaughnto BostonCollege66, Northeastern56 a futures con t ract. Bryant57,NewHampshire 54 DETROIT LIONS—Signed WRIfeanyi Momahto NFL George Washington82,Towson48 afuturescontract. Holy Cross71, BostonU.48 NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE GREEN BAYPACKERS—Signed OTDerekSherrod Lafayette71,Army60 All TimesPST to a futures contract. Lehigh86,Colgate68 KANSAS CITYCHIEFS—SignedDBDeji Olatoye, Loyola(Md.)55,Navy49 O T Cu r t i s F e igt,LBJoJoDickson,DTsHebronFangupo Wild-card Playoffs Penn65,King's(Pa.) 20 andJerelWort hy,TEsBrandonBardenandAdam SchilSaturday'sGames SOUTH tz, Gs JarrodPughsleyandRickyHenryandWRsArmon Arizona at Carolina,1:35p.m. Elon 62,Lenoir-Rhyne46 B inns, Kyl e W iliams, FredWilliams andCorbin Louks Baltimore at Pittsburgh,5:15p.m. SouthFlorida72, Memphis 39 to futures contracts. Sunday'sGames MIAMIDOLPHINS—SignedTEJake Stoneburner, Stetson72, UNCWilmington55 Cincinnatiat Indianapolis,10:05a.m. CB LowellRose,LBJakeKnott, DEEmmanuel Dieke, Uconn89,EastCarolina 38 Detroit atDallas,1.40p.m. QB McLeo dBethel-ThompsonandG MarkAsperto Wake Forest77, W.Carolina 59 futurescontracts. MIDWEST N EW Y O RKGIANTS—NamedMikeSulivan quarCollege Dayton96,Cent. Michigan89 terbacks coach. Indiana70,MichiganSt.51 All TimesPST NEWYORKJETS— SignedRBDarylRichardson, WrightSt.118,Central70 PK Andrew Furneyand DTsKonaSchwenkeandTevita SOUTHWE ST W ednesday' s Game s Finau tofuturescontracts. StephenF.Austin 73,S.Arkansas50 Peach Bowl P HILADE PLHIAEAGLES— SignedPKCareySpear, TexasA&M75,NorthTexas38 No. 6TCU42, No.9Mississippi 3 S EdReynolds, DBCurtis Marsh,QBG.J. Kinne, NT Tulsa74,Cincinnati52 WadeKelikipi, OTKevin Graf, RBKenjon Barner, G Fiesta Bowl FARWEST JoshAndrewsandWRs Quron Prat andWil Murphy No. 21BoiseState38,No.12Arizona 30 BoiseSt.75, ColoradoSt. 65 to futures contracts. OrangeBowl Cal St.-Fullerton72, UMKC52 PITTSB URGHSTEELERS— Released DBJordan No. 8Mississippi St.49, No.10GeorgiaTech34 FresnoSt.71,NewMexico 65 Sullenfromthepractice squad.SignedWRTimBenford Hawaii76,Hawaii Pacific 68 to thepracticesquad. Today'sGames Seattle66,UCSantaBarbara46 ST.LOUISRAMS—SignedDTDougWorthington, OutbackBowl SanDiegoSt. 74,Air Force65 LB MarshallMcFadden, Lg SJorgenHus, SChristian W isconsi n (10-3) vs. A uburn (8 -4), 9 a .m . SanJoseSt.62,UtahSt.58 Bryant,GTravis Bond,OTStevenBaker andWRsDevon Cotton BowlClassic UNLV58,Wyoming55 Wylie and E m or y B lak e t o f u turescontracts. MichiganState(10-2) vs.Baylor (11-1),9:30a.m. SANDIEG OCHARGERS— Signed GCraig Watts Citrus Bowl to a futures contract. Minnesota(8-4) vs.Missouri (10-3),10a.m. FOOTBALL SEATTLE SEAHAWKS—Signed RBSpencer Ware Rose Bowl(Playoff semifinal) to a futures contract. O regon (12-1) vs. Fl o ri d a S tat e (13-0), 2 p. m . TAMPABAY BUCCANEERS— Signed P Jacob America's Line Sugar Bowl(Playoffsemifinal) Schum to afuturescontract. Home teamin CAPS Alabama (12-1) vs.OhioState(12-1), 5:30p.m. TENNESSEE TITANS— SignedPKTravisCoonsto Favorite Open Current 0/U Underdog afuturescontract. Friday's Games WASHINGTON REDSKINS— Announceddefensive NFL playoffs ArmedForcesBowl coordinator JimHaslettwil notreturnnextseason. Saturday Pittsburgh(6-6)vs.Houston (7-5), 9a.m. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague PANTHERS 5 6 38 Card inals TaxslayerBowl NHL —FinedVancouverFJannik Hansen $5,000 S TEELERS 3 3 47 Rave ns lowa (7-5) vs.Tennessee(6-6),12:20 p.m. for an ilegalcheckduring Tuesday's game.Announced Sunday Alamo Bowl the Board ofGovernorsapprovedthepurchaseof amaCOLTS 3 3I /z 4 9 Be ngalsUCLA(9-3)vs.KansasState(9-3), 3:45p.m. joritv stake intheArizonaCoyotestoAndrewBarroway. COWBOYS 7 6'I~ 48Vt L ions CactusBowl COLUMBUSBLUEJACKETS— SignedLW Nick Oklahoma State(6-6) vs.Washington(8-5), 7:15p.m. Foligno to asix-yearcontract extensionthroughthe College 2020-21season. Today Saturday'sGames DALLAS STARS — Recalled F Brett Ritchiefrom OutbackBowl Birmingham(Ala.) Bowl Texas(AHL). Auburn 6 7 63I/ t Wisconsin Florida(6-5)vs.E ast Carolina(8-4),10 a.m. MINNES O TAWILD—Reassigned GJohnCurry to Cotlon Bowl lowa(AHL).ActivatedGNiklasBackstromfrominjured Baylor 3 2 ' A 70 t/t Michigan St Sunday'sGame reserve. Citrus Bowl GoDaddyBowl TAMPABA YLIGHTNING—RecalledDNikitaNestMissouri 6 4 ) k 4 7 trk Minnesota Toledo(6-4) vs.ArkansasSt.(7-5),6 p.m. erovfrom Syracuse(AHL). Rose Bowl COLLEGE Oregon 8 8 71V t FloridaSt Monday,Jan. 12 FLORIDA — Announced a mutual agreement with Sugar Bowl College Football Championship KRAndreDeboseto leavethefootball team.Suspended Alabama 9 Y/ 9 58V t Ohio St SugarBowlwinnervs. RoseBowlwinner, 5:30 p.m. DT DariousCummingsfor theBirminghamBowi.

NHL ROUNDUP

Rangers defeat Panthers,get back to winning ways The Associated Press game winning streak snapped SUNRISE, Fla. — Ryan Mc- at Dallas on Monday. It was Donagh, Chris Kreider and the longest run in 40 years Martin St. Louis had a goal for New York (20-11-4), which and an assist each, and the went 9-3 in December. New York Rangers got back to Also on Wednesday: their winning ways with a 5-2 Islanders 5, Jete 2: WINvictory over the Florida Pan- NIPEG, Manitoba — Frans thers on Wednesday night. Nielsen scored two goals and Derick B r assard, M a rtin

added an assist for New York,

St. Louis and Dominic Moore which is 6-1-1 in its past eight also scored for New York, and games. Derek Stepan had two assists. Lightning 5, Sabres 1: BUFHenrik LLmdqvist made 19 FALO, N.Y. — Ondrej Palat saves to earn the win. had a goal and three assists, The Rangers won their first and Tampa Bay reclaimed the game after having an eight- Eastern Conference lead.

Penguins 2, Hurricanes 1: PITTSBURGH —

Stars 6, Coyotes 0: DAL-

B r a ndon LAS — Kari Lehtonen made

Sutter scored the winning goal

32 saves for his 30th shutout,

with 1:42 left to lift Pittsburgh.

and Brett Ritchie scored in his

Blue Jackets 3, Wild 1: CO- first NHL game. LUMBUS, Ohio — K evin Sharks 3, Ducks 0: ANAConnauton had a goal and HEIM, Calif. — Antti Niemi an assist, and Sergei Bo- earned his 30th NHL shutout, brovsky made 28 saves to lead and third of the season, with Columbus.

28 saves for San Jose.

Red Wings 3, Devils 1: DE-

Flames 4, Oilers 3: CAL-

TROIT — Darren Helm scored two goals to lead Detroit.

GARY, Alberta — Josh Jooris scored 1:08 into overtime to

Maple Leafs 4, Bruins 3:

give Calgary the win. Avalanche 4, Flyers 3: DENVER — Ryan O'Reilly scored at

BOSTON — Nazem Kadri and Mike Santorelli scored in the shootout for Toronto.

4:40 of overtime for Colorado.

No. 18 Oklahoma 61, George Mason 43: NORMAN,

Okla. — Buddy Hield scored all but two of

Classic

his 17 points in the Continued from C1 "I'm a football fan like most College. Villanova can set f i rst half for Oklahoma. a school record with a 14-0 N o . 24 Colorado State 71, people in this country," CapBo i s e State 65: FORT COL-

itals coach Barry Trotz said. "I think there's a lot of foot-

In other Top 25 games L INS, Colo.— John Gillon Wednesday: scored a c areer-high 25 No. 2 Duke 84, Wofford 55: points for Colorado State,

ball and it's great, but you also get tired of it too, and I think

DURHAM, N.C. — Fresh-

the Winter Classic is that one

c o nverting a critical three-

man center Jahlil Okafor p oint play in the final minute. scored 24 points, Justise The Rams extended their Winslow added 16 points and winning streak to 14 games, Quinn Cookhad 15for Duke. the l ongest single-season No. 4Wisconsin 89, Penn run in schoolhistory.

thing that's different during this time of year that I think everybody gravitates to.e

points and 14 rebounds, Nigel Jalen Reynolds scored 17

It would help if the games do not go head-to-head. That is the plan, but the big ol' sun might mess it up. The 1 p.m. Eastern time

Hayes scored 21 points and

start today between Chicago

State 72: MADISON, Wis. — Frank Kaminsky had 18

NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE All Times PST

Friday Boys basketball: Culverat SalemAcademyTournament,TBD;Central ChristianatGilchrist,630 p m. Girls basketball: NorthSalematMountain View,7 p.m.; CulveratSalemAcademyTournament, TBD; CentralChristianatGilchrist,5 p.mcTrinityLutheran atPaisley,2;30p.m. Wrestling: CrookCountyat Rollie Lanein Nampa, Idaho,TBD Swimming:MadrasatGresham,4:45p.m.

against Westminster

startSaturdayatSetonHall.

HOCKEY

IN THE BLEACHERS

Xavi e r 70, No. 25 Georget o w n 65 : C INCINNATI p o i nts to lead Xavier in the

Wisconsin shot a blistering Big East opener for both 6 3 percent from the field. team s .

and Washington is in jeopardy because brilliant, cloudless

Alzner, who wore sunglasses the end of the street in the duringWednesday'spractice. tiny town of Wawota, Sas"Nobody wants to delay the katchewan, even creating game," Bill Daly, the NHL's a makeshift diagram of the deputy commissioner, said houses at his locker as an Wednesday. "So if there's any illustration. "Last time, I don't think I the shadows from the stands w ay wecan avoid delayingthe have covered the rink — then game, we're going to avoid de- enjoyed the Winter Classic the end of the game could con- laying the game." enough," said Laich, who was flict with the early minutes of Depending on one's point on the Capitals team that won the Rose Bowl, which starts at of view, the Classic is either in the New Year's Day rain 5 p.m. Eastern. nostalgia or n ovelty. For in Pittsburgh in 2011. "I don't A decision is not expected hockey lifers from the North, think I took it i n enough. I until shortly before the sched- it is a reminder of games was just focused on winning Uled game time. There is talk played on makeshift ice in the hockey game. "This year, a l i t tle more of switching sides halfway freezing weather every night through the first period so until called home for sup- composed, a little older, I rethat the glare would hamper per. Those memories are so ally realize how lucky we are both teams equally, and some etched in Laich's mind that to have this game and how players say they might emu- he recited every childhood far this sport has come in late Capitals defenseman Karl friend who used to gather at D.c. n skies are in the forecast. The

sun would create a potentially dangerous glare, making the puck hard to see and causing the ice to get too soft. If faceoff is moved to, say, 3 p.m.— after


THURSDAY, JANUARY 1, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

C3

NBA ROUNDUP

PREP ROUNDUP

Durant back,Westbrook ejected in Thunderwin

Bu i r s cosetourne wit win S ISTERS —

The Associated Press OKLAHOMA CITY —

Also on Wednesday: Spu r s 9 5 , Pelicans 93:

R ussell W e stbrook w a s SA N A N T O NIO — M a n u ejected after a fast start, so G i n obili had 26 points, and

Kevin Durant put together a the Spurs avoided their big finish. fourth overtime loss at home Durant had 44 points, i n December. Ginobili had 10 rebounds and seven as- seven points in overtime, sists in his return from a

he l p ing the Spurs overcome

sprained right ankle, and a n early six-point deficit in the Oklahoma City the extra period. T hunder beat t h e Bucks 98, CavPhoenix Suns 137aliers 80: CLEVE134 in overtime on

LAND — Brandon

Wednesday night. Knight scored 26 "It felt good. My points and Milwaut eammates w e r e iiiext gp kee led most of the running plays for way in a road win " me and getting me over short-handed " " open shots," Durant Cleveland, w hich w ithou t said. "I just tried to yy h en:7Prlt p lay e d finish for them. My Saturday LeBron James for shots felt good, and TV:CSNNW the s econd straight that win felt better.' ttattto:KBNp gam e Durant was 13 for 111p-AM Rockets 102, Hor23 from the field and 1pp1 FM' nets 83: HOUSTON 12 for 12 at the free-

James Harden

throw line. He was 6 for 11 scored 36 points, and Housfrom 3-point range. ton bounced back from con"You know, I didn't even

s e cutivelosses.

realize he had 44 points,"

Pac e rs 106, Heat 95: IN-

Thunder coach Scott Brooks said. "That just tells yo u

D I A N A POLIS — C.J. Miles s c o r ed 25pointsforIndiana,

what kind of a leader he is. and George Hill added 20. He just kept everybody in the Cli p pers 99, Knicks 78: right place mentally and on LO S A N GELES — J . J. the court." Redick scored 20 points, and Durant'spresencebecame Los Angeles handed New even more important when York a year-ending ninth Westbrook was ejected af- consecutive loss. ter scoring 20 points in 17 Pa c ers 106, Heat 95: INminutes.

DIANAPOLIS — C.J. Miles

"He came out aggressive. scored 25 points for Indiana, He came out like he never andGeorgeHilladded20. lost a step," Westbrook said Cet t ics 106, Kings 84: o f Durant. "It was a good win

B O STON — J a r e d Sul -

for us tonight." linger had 20 points and 11 Westbrookpickeduptwo r e bounds, and the Celtics technical fouls late in the s napped a four-game losing first half after a brief skir- s treak. Sacramento coach mish with Suns center Alex 7yrone Corbin said before Len and then an unspecified the game his interim tag has infraction near the Phoenix

bench.

b e en lifted for the rest of the season.

NBA SCOREBOARD lntandings W L 24 6 23 6 22 9 22 10 16 14 17 16 15 16 14 19 11 16 13 22 12 21 10 23 6 23 5 29 4 26

d-Toronto d-Atlanta Washington d-Chicago Cleveland Milwaukee Brooklyn Miami Boston Orlando Indiana Charlotte Detroit NewYork Philadelphia WesternConference W L d-GoldenState 25 5 d-Portland 26 7 d-Memphis 23 6 22 9 Houston Dallas 23 10 L.A. Clippers 22 lf SanAntonio 20 14 Phoenix 16 16 NewOrleans 16 16 OklahomaCit y 16 17 13 19 Sacramen to Denver 13 19 Utah fl 21 L.A. Lakers 10 22 Minnesota 5 25 d-divisionleader

A f t e r tw o

straight losses, Madras salvaged as much of the Sisters

Girls basketball

Holiday Tournament as pos-

Sisters HolidayTournament

sible Wednesday,outscoring Illinois Valley by 13 points in the fourth quarter en route to

a 50-23 girls basketball win on the last day of the tourney. "These girls will play good basketball as long as their attitudes are adjusted," White Buffaloes coach Zach Lillebo

Crook County(43) —Kimmber Severance16, Malot t10,Bannon9,Thompson5,Thomas3.Totals 1611-25 43. NorthBend 12 9 9 8 — 38 C rookCounty 15 9 1 0 9 — 43 Three-poingoal t s — NorthBend:Wallace; Crook County:none.

Madras 50, Illinois Valley 23 Madras (50) —MariahStacona15, Sloan10, Iverson 6,Harry 6, Suppah6, Wolfe 4, Leonard2, Adams2.Totals 20 8-10 50. l linois Valley (23) — Mahka yla Sommers5, Nordal 4,Miler 3,Baez3, Primeau3, LaFlamme2, Unknown 2, Jonasl. Totals 95-1223. Madras 11 7 13 19 — 50 l llinoisyalley 6 5 6 6 — 23 Three-poingoal t s—Madras: Stacona, Suppah; llinois Valley:none.

Wednesday'sresults Sisters HolidayTournament La Grande 64, Sisters38 Madras50,llinois Valley23 Henleydef.Seaside Banks 46, Sisters30

Redmond54, TheDalles 41

La Grande(64) — AveryAlbrechtf 6, Collman 16, Miles11,Avila 8, McDanief-Perrin 6, Wilcox4, Browning 2.Totals2114-17 64. Sisters (38) —Haylie Hudson9,Horner8,Stew... and they came together toart 6,Mann6,Moore3,D.Knoop2,G.Knoop2,Smith day. They finished 2014 off on a 2. Totals 157-1430. La Grande 15 19 13 17 — 64 good note." 15 6 2 15 — 38 Mariah Stacona paced Ma- sislers Three-poingoal t s: LaGrande: Collman3, Miles3, dras (5-4) with a game-high 15 Albrecht2;Sisters: Horner.

in the preseason. These girls are looking at the big picture

Also on Wednesday:

Girls basketball La Grande 64, Sisters 38; Banks 46, Sisters 30: SISTERS — The Outlaws lost twice in the final day the Sis-

Newporl (45) — BrendenThnrber-Blaser 14, Blaser12,Lancaster 6, Imbler-Bremner 6, Beaudry4, Teodoro 3 Totals1412-22 45. Crook County (59) — BlakeBartels17, Kessi 15, Jones 8, Kee7, Harper 5, Hernandez4, Lapsley2, Kilthau f.Totals1820-35 59. Newporl 8 10 13 14 — 45 CrookCounty 9 23 9 1 8 — 59 Three-poingoal t s—Newport Blaser2,Teodoro,Thurber-Blaser,Lancaster; CrookCounty: Kessi2, Harper. Sisters HolidayTournament

Wilsonville Invitational

and we're getting it all out here

tributed with 10 points.

Crook County59, Newport 45

Boys basketball

said. "Everybody is allowed one game off here and there, La Grande64, Sisters 38

points, and Hailey Sloan con-

LesschwahHolidayTournament At Marshfield High

Redmond(54)— CodyMoss15,Aamodt7, Winters 7,Cable6, Burroughs5, Troutman5, Benson 5, McDonal2, d Wilingham2. Totals 233-7 54. The Oalles (41) — CobyConlee13, Noonan 6, Wilson6, Murr3, Harris 2, Byers2, Strassheim2, Douthit 2,Flores2,Walkerl. Totals15 0 1241. Redmond 2 17 25 10 — 54 The Oalles 9 13 7 12 — 41 Three -pointgoals— Redmond:Moss3,Burroughs, Benson;TheDalles: Morr,Conlee,Wilson.

Banks 46, Sisters 30

North IdahoTournament

Banks (46) —MeganBunn 16, Slifka f 2, Streblow 4,Gerlinger4, Monroe3, Wren3, Klein 2, Cooper 2.Totals1810-1346. Sisters (30) —AshleySmith 6,Mann5, Hudson 5, Horner4,Stewart3, Arrnda2,G. Knoop2,D.Knoop 2, Moorel. Totals1010-1530. Banks 8 11 14 13 — 46 sislers 11 8 8 3 — 30 Three-poingoal t s:none.

Ridgeview 66, Mountain View (Idahoj 59 Ridgeview (66) —Tanner O'Neal 17,Mendazona15,Albrecht14, C.Mansele 10,Alvarez9, Penhollow l. Totals 25 9-1866. Mountain View (59) —How ard 13, Lyons10, Godosevis10,Gibson6, Farris 6,Thacker5,Jacobi 3, Elkins 3, Perry 2,Schiebontl. Totals 246-12 59. Ridgeview 20 13 13 20 — 66 Mountain View 9 8 15 27 — 59 Three-poingoal t s—Ridgeview:Alvarez3, Mendazona3,O'Neaf;MountainView:Godnsevis3,Jacobi, Howard,Thacker, Elkins.

ters Holiday Tournament. Lesschwab HolidayTournament Against La Grande, Haylie At Marshtield High Hudson led Sisters (4-7) with nine points, while Nina Horn- Crook County43, North Bend38 er added eight points. Nine Norlh Bend(38) — Daton 12,Knbli 9, Forder6, players scored for the Outlaws Wall ace5,Finnigan2,Hobson2.Totals149-1030. against Banks, paced by Ash-

Scappoose37, Sisters 34 scappoose(37) — ReedJohnson 7, Brennen McNabb 7,Marcantonio6, Lohman6, Wendelschafer 6, Backus 2.Totals12 9-14 37. sislers(34) — HayesMoore9,B.Larson6,Greaney 7,Gill 6,Schaab2, Mackenzie2. Totals16 04 34. scappoose 9 11 7 10 — 37 Sisters 11 11 8 4 — 34 Three-pointgoals — Scappoose: McNabb; Sisters: Moore,Greaney.

Madras 58, Henley 54 Madras (58) —SheaYeahquo 13, Sulivan 11, Bryant10,Pichette6, Rauschenburg7,Rehwinkel5, LeRiche 4. Totals 23 5-11 58. Henley (54) —TylerCook14, Fahner 13, Goodell 6, Meyers5, Kn)awski 5, Fleming5, Hoggarth 4. Totals16 20-2554. Madras 20 10 14 0 — 58 Henley 13 8 11 22 — 54 Three -pointgoals— Madras;Yeahquo3,Rauschenburg 2,Bryant2;Henley: Fahner 2. Wednesday'sresults Sisters HolidayTournament Baker71,llinois Valley36 Banksvs.Seaside Madras56, Henley 54 Scappoose 37,Sisters 34

ley Smith's six points. Cier-

ra Mann and Hudson each poured in 15 points to lead Redchipped in with five points. mond to a Wilsonville InvitaCrook County 43, North tional win. Nick Aamodt and Bend 38: COOS BAY — The Cody Winters each had seven Cowgirls (3-8) ended the Les points, and Alani Troutman

had lppoints andsixrebounds. tion play at the Sisters Holiday Crook County 59, Newport Tournament. Madras' Shea Ye-

Schwab Holiday Tournament

totaled five points and 10 re-

Schwab Holiday Tournament

11 points from Brent Sullivan

at Marshfield High with a 2-1 record after topping the Bulldogs in consolation play. Kimmer Severance posted 16 points and 10 rebounds,

bounds for the Panthers (2-8). Rtdgevievv66, Mountain View (ldaho) 59: COEUR D'ALENE, Idaho — George Mendazona nearly had a triple-doublefinishing with 15 points, nine rebounds and eight assists-

at Marshfield High. Blake Bartels posted 17 points and 10 rebounds for Crook County (4-7). Seth Kessi had 15 points, nine boardsand threestealsforthe Cowboys. Madras 58, Henley 54: SIS-

and 10 from Voshaun Bryant. Scappoose 37, Sisters 34:

Chelsea Thomas added three

points and nine boards, and Michaeline Malott scored 10 to lead the Ravens to a North points for Crook County.

Idaho Tournament win. Tan-

ner O'Neal added 17 points for Boysbasketball Ridgeview (9-2), Garrett AlRedmond 54, The Dattes 41: brecht logged 14 points and six WILSONVILLE — Cody Moss boards, and Carson Manselle

45: COOS BAY — A 23-point

ahquo hit three 3-pointers and

second quarterpropelled the finished with 13 points. The Cowboys to a win at the Les White Buffaloes (7-2) also got

TERS — Most of a 25-point

SISTERS — A Ben L arson

layup with 15 seconds left in the game pulled the Outlaws to within one point, but Scap-

poose hit two free throws and then blocked two 3-point tries

third-quarter lead got away by Sisters to secure the Sisters from the White Buffaloes be- Holiday Tournament chamfore Bryce Rehwinkel's free pionship. Hayes Moore paced throw in t h e f i nal seconds the Outlaws (6-4) with nine clinched the win in consola- points.

Pacers106, Heat 95

All TimesPBT

EasternConterence

PREP SCOREBOARD

Bulletin staff report

MIAMI (95)

Pct 00

.750 .742 r/r 710 fr/r .686 2 .563 6 .515 7'/z .464 6'/r 424 tgr/r 379 tfr/r .371 12'/z .364 12'/r .303 14'/r .256 15'/r .147 20 .133 19

Pct 00 .633 ,766 r/r 742 2r/r .710 3'/r .697 3'/z .667 4'/r .566 7

.529 9 .500 10 .465 tgr/r .406 13 .406 13 .344 15 .313 16 .167 20

Wednesday'sGames Boston106,Sacramento64 Indiana106,Miami95 LA. Clippers 99,NewYork78 Houston102,Charlotte63 SanAntonio95,NewOrleans93,OT Milwaukee96,Cleveland60 Oklahoma City137, Phoenix134,OT Today'sGames Denverat Chicago, 5p.m. Sacramento atMinnesota, 5p.m. Friday's Games BrooklynatOrlando,4p.m. ClevelandatCharlotte, 4p.m. Dallas atBoston, 4:30p.m. Detroit atNewYork,4:30 p.m. Houstonat NewOrleans,5 p.m. WashingtonatOklahomaCity, 5p.m. Indiana at Milwaukee,5:30 p.m. Philadelphiaat Phoenix, 6 p.m. Atlanta atUtah,6 p.m. Toronto atGoldenState, 7:30p.m. Memphiat s LA. Lakers, 7:30p.m.

Summaries

Rockets102, Hornets 83 CHARLO TTE(83) Kidd-Gilchrist 6-154-416, Zelfer 3-5 0-0 6, Biyombo1-2 7-10 9, Walker4-11 3-312r Henderson7-14 2-216, Maxieff2-4 0-04, Wiliams 1-4 0-0 3, Neal3-7 4-5 10,Hairston1-6 0-0 2, Roberts1-72-25, Vonleh0-10-00. Totals 297622-26 03.

HOUSTON (102) Ariza4-12f-l 10, Smith2-70-25, Howard5-5 1-311,Beverley5-160-014, Harden12-194-436, Motie)unas 5-13 2-2 12,Brewer2-8 0-0 5, Terry 2-4 0-0 5,Dorsey0-01-2 f, Canaan0-2 0-0 0, Johnson f-l 0-03, PapanikolaouO -f 0-00. Totals 38-88 9-14102. Charlotle 25 20 23 15 — 83 Houston 23 24 29 26 — 102

Celtics106, Kings 84 SACRAME NTO(84) Gay 4-191-2 9, Hollins 2-3 0-0 4, Cousins 5-171-211,Collison4-106-614, McLemore3-5 4-4 12, Landry7-ff 0-0 14, Stauskas1-62-4 4, Evans0-01-2 1, Wiliams1-5 0-0 2, McCallum 48 3-611, Casspi 1-3 02 2. Totals 32871028 84. BOSTON (106) Green 2-6 2-3 6, Sullinger 9-162-2 20,Zeller 3-5 f-l 7,Turner4-102-2 10, Bradley4-8 1-29, Olynyk6-102-2 15, Smart4-6 0-0 11, Bass3-7 2-2 8, Crowder 5-10 1-1 12,Nelson1-8 0-0 2, Wright3-40-06,Pressey0-00-00. Totals44-94 13-15 106. Sacramento 1 92 0 22 23 — 84 Boston 23 26 28 29 — 106

Deng6-113-515, Andersen3-75-611, Bosh 7-142-3 18,Chalmers2-60-05, Wade9-202-2 20, Cole2-4 2-2 6, Wiliams0-0 0-0 0, Granger 6-9 0-0 14,Whiteside3-6 0-0 6. Totals 30-77 14-18 95.

INDIANA (106)

S.Hill 1-4 6-6 6,West4-71-1 10,Hibbert4-6 2-2 10, G.Hill7-144-4 20, Stuckey3-5 0-0 6, Miles 6-166-1025, Allen2-5 0-0 4, Wa tson 3-4 4411, Scola26 125, Copeland 3601 7.Totals 35-79 26-30106. Miami 24 27 19 25 — 95 Indiana 20 22 30 28 — 100

Thunder 137, Suns134 (OT) PHOENIX (134) Tucker 4 93 4 13, MarkMorris 1O -f7 2 3 25, Len 1-2 00 2,GDragic712 56 21,Bledsoe10197-729, Marc.Morris7-112-2 16,Green3-11 6-914, Plnmlee3-4 0-0 6, I.Thomas1-5 4-46. Totals 46-9029-35134. OKLAHOM ACITY (137) Durant f3 2312-1244,Ibaka5-122 215,Adams3-73 39,Westbrook5-139-1020, Roberson 1-4 1-2 3,Jones4-6 0-0 6, Morrow1-7 6-911, Jackson 4-162-410, Perkins2-45-5 9, Smith3-5 2-26. Totals41-9944-49137. Phoenix 29 3 3 32 34 6 — 134 OklahomaCity 30 34 36 20 9 — 137

Spurs 95, Pelicans 93(OT) NEWORLEANS(93) Babbitt 1-20-0 3,Davis8-125-6 21, Asik0-2 3-4 3, Holiday5-180-013, Evans5-16 5-615, Rivers 270 04, RAnderson7-f82 2 18,Fredete 5-82-214, Cunningham 1-40-02.Totals34-89 17-20 93. BANANTONIO(95) K.Anderson2-3 0-0 4, Duncan6-12 4-6 16, Bonner1-4 0-02, Joseph4-9 1-2 9, Green3-13 1-27, Splitter 3 7006, Belinelli 4 62 410,Ginobili 9-173-426, Mills 3-90-07, Diaw4-70-06. Totals 39-8911-1895. Neworleans 14 14 32 24 9 — 93 sankntonio 17 21 24 22 11 — 95

Bucks 96, Cavaliers 80 MILWAUKE E(96) Antetokounmpo 5-11 3-414, O'Bryant1-50-2 2, Pachulia4-91-2 9, Knight fl-f9 0-0 26, Middleton3-91-29, Dudley4-60-09,Henson3-60-0 6, Mayo6-130-015, Marshall1-5 0-02, Wolters 2-30-04. Totals 40-905-1096. CLEVELAN D(80) Miller 2-60-0 5,Thompson3-114-410, Haywood 2-50-14, Irving 9-236-7 25,Dellavedova 3-8 2-2 fl, Harris 1-50-02, Amundson0-2 0-0 0, Waiters510 0 010,Jones3 60 0 9, Price1-4 2 24, Kirk0 1 000. Totals 29 85141680. Milwaukee 31 2 1 19 25 — 96 Cleveland 18 29 7 26 — 80

Clippers 99, Knicks 78 NEWYORK(78)

Anthony7-16 4-619, JaSmith1-51-2 3, Aldrich 4-90-06, HardawayJr 2-70-0 5, Calderon 2-50-04, Prigioni3-62-29, Bargnani4-1f 1-29, Larkin3-70-06, JSmith 3-100-17,Acy3-52-26, Wear01000.Totals3284101578.

LA. CLIPPERS (99)

Barnes3-7 0-0 9, Griffin 6-16 1-3 13,Jordan 6-6 2-714, Paul2-11 0-05, Redick7-132-3 20, Hawes4-7 0-0 10, Crawford 4-10 3-313, Farmar 3-5 2-211, Davis0-4 2-2 2,Bullock0-2 0-00, Cunni ngham 1-10-0 2,Udoh0-00-00.Totals 36-8212-20 99. Newyork 21 19 18 20 — 78

L.A.Clippers 2 9 21 24 25 — 99

Leaders ThroughWednesday's Games Scoring G FG FT PTB AVG Harden,HOU 3 1 260 260 656 27.7 James,CLE 2 9 2 5 6 171 731 25.2 Davis,NCR 3 1 2 9 4 165 753 24.3 Bryant,LAL 29 2 3 5 184 698 24.1 Anthony,NYK 3 0 270 13571723.9 Wade, MIA 25 2 2 7f l l 580 23.2 Aldridge,POR 29 263 122 663 22.9 Curry,GOL 30 2 4 4 106 664 22.6 Griff in,LAC 33 266 163 746 22.6 Lillard,PCB

33 2 4 4 144 723 21.9

Prey swimming glance A glance at Central Oregonschools competing this season: CLASS SA BEND Coach:TamasBessenyei (first season) 2013-14:Girls second at state meet; boys sixth at state meet

REDMOND Coach:Denise PBLeone(second season) 2013-14:Girls and boys both fifth

at Special pistrict1 meet Swimmers towatch: Senior Elizabeth Moss finished seventh in the girls100 back at theSpecial Pistrict1 championships last season; senior AlecCarter placed

Swimmers towatch: Senior Bella Wiener led the girls at state last season with a third-place finish in the 11th in both the boys 50 and 100 50 free and asixth-place showing In the100 free; junior Paul Rogers took free at the district meet. second and third at state in the boys RIDGEVIEW 500 and 200 free, respectively. Coach:Jeff Vallie (third season) 2013-14:Girls 10th at MOUNTAINVIEW Coach:Kory Bright (seventh season) 4A/3A/2A/1A state meet; boys 2013-14:Girls sixth at state meet;

boys tied for second at state meet Swimmers towatch: Sophomore Kennedy Bright placed fifth at state in both the girls 50 free and the100

breast; sophomore Jonathan Pavami placed seventh at state in the boys 500 free.

Swimming

ninth at Special District 3 meet

Swimmers towatch: Senior Casee Lantz wasthird in the girls 100 breast at the district meet last

seasonandplacedseventhinthe 50 free; junior OwenHuckewas seventh in the boys 200 freeat state and third in the 100 free at districts.

state the last couple years, and that core group of girls were Continued from C1 pretty young. Now they're seWith reclassification moving niors. Now they're maturing. several perennial 5A state con- ... I think it's safe to say that tenders, including West Alba- we have strength in every ny and Sherwood, to Class 6A stroke, and allofourrelaysare this season, the field becomes very strong. I think we have a more competitive and offers great season ahead of us when other programs the potential to it comes down to districts and make headway as they target then state." Bend's boys, who daimed Summit at state. That competition just might come from right the Special District 1 champiacross town: Bend High and onship and finished sixth at Mountain View. state, return junior Paul Rog"The tide, I think, is leveling ers, who was second at state in out for sure in Central Oregon," the 500 freestyle and third in Amy Halligan says, "and even the 200 free, as well as junior across the state." Ben Brockman (third at state in Looking toknock off the the 200 IM and fifth in the 100 crosstown Storm are the Lava butterfly) and junior Christian Bear girls, who have taken sec- Offenhauser (third 500 free). "The biggest strength is reond at state each of the last two years. And with seniors Bella ally their maturity," says BesWiener and Jennifer Robeson senyei, noting how the vast maand junior Chyna Fish all re- jority of last year's boys team is turning after placing at state back for this season. "They're lastseason, first-year coach growing and getting better and Tamas Bessenyei says this getting stronger. The strength Bend girls squad may be the is that they are a versatile strongest theprogram hasever group of kids. You can really seen. look at any of those swimmers, "We have had really great and they can swim in any difdepth for the women's team," ferent event." says Bessenyei, who takes over Mountain View's boys, fresh the Bears after he was an as- off theirbest finish at state (secsistant the previous three sea- ond) since winning the title in sons. "We've been second at 2001, are in rebuilding mode.

SUMMIT Coach:Amy Halligan (11th season) 2013-14:Girls and boys both state champions Swimmers towatch: Senior Mackenzie Halligan woft the girls 200 free at state andwas second in the 500 free; senior Tommy Brewer won both the boys 50 freeand the100 breast at state, setting a 5Astate meet record in the 50 free.

CLASS4A/3A/2A/1A MADRAS Coach:Denise Horton (first season) 2013-14:GIrls12th at state meet; boys th(rd at state meet

Swimmers towatch: Senior Sophie Gemelas placed third and fourth at state last year in the girls 200 IM and100 breast, respectively; senior BradyTuckerwas fifth in the boys100 butterfly at state last season and sixth in the 200 IM.

SISTERS Coach:Brittany Baldessari (third season) 2013-14:Girls11th at state meet; boys10th at state meet Swimmers towatch: Junior Mary Stewart took second in the girls 50 free at state last year andwasfourth in the 100 fly; senior Jonathan Luz,whowas apart of the sixth-place boys 200 medley relay team atstate last season, finished seventh at districts in the100 fly.

Coach Kory Bright's team was hit hard by graduation, but some talented swimmers are back, induding sophomore Jonathan Davami, a seventh-place finisher at state in the500 free,and juniorLogan Stevens, who at districts last season swam on the Cougs' third-place 400 freestyle relay team and place eighth in the 200free.

The Mountain View girls, who were sixth at state last season, look strong with the return of sophomores Teresa

them whenever I need them."

The many elite swimmers who compete for the t hree

Bend high schools are a testament to the city's successful club programs. Kory Bright, who swam for the Bend Swim Club and starred at Mountain View until she graduated in

1988, says Central Oregon swimming today could be the strongest it has ever been. "It's great. I grew up here, and growing up here, I swam year-round as well," says the seventh-year Cougars coach.

Cobb (third at state in the 200 "Just having it become more IM) and Kennedy Bright (fifth of a dominant sport out of in both the 50 freestyle and Central Oregon as compared 100 breaststroke) and the ad- to the (Willamette) Valley, dition of the transfer Peterson, it's great to see how it's come who was second at state in the

to fruition.... I think all that

100 back for Summit and took year-round training is finally fourth in the 100 free while paying off. These groups of swimming fo r t h e S t orm's kids, they're dedicated to the c hampionship-winning 4 0 0 sport, and I think it says a lot free and 200 medley relays. forthatsportaswell,forsure." "As far as the group of girls "I think it's going to be anythat I have that will be going to body's race," Amy Halligan state — Teresa and Kennedy, says of the hunt for the 5A for sure — both of them are team state titles this season. very versatile," Kory Bright "I'm not counting us out. But says. "I can put them in any- ... we're definitely going to thing and know that they're have to scratch and claw and going to have strong races. fight our way to get their, for That's a nice thing, that they're sure." good at all the strokes that they — Reporter: 541-383-0307, swim. I feel like I can count on glzzcas®bendbulletin.com.


C4

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 1, 2015

OLLEGE FOOTBALL Questions

SUGAR BOWL

Continued from C1

Meyer's goal ofSEC

Some of t hose questions

might finally get answered this afternoon against the Seminoles.

North to be tested

Just what would a victory here mean for the Oregon program? Well, it could change perceptions among fans and me-

By Paul Newberry

dia, but not among the Duck

The Associated Press

coaches and players. "It would validate things externally a lot more than in-

ternally," Oregon coach Mark Helfrich said Wednesday.

he made it clear what kind of

"Externally" would include

Florida State coach Jimbo Fisher. He has been highly complimentary of the Ducks all week, but there was this from him at the head coaches'

press conference Wednesday talking about Oregon's success in recruiting: "They've done it with facilities, money, Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin presentation, uniforms." Oregon coach MarkHelfrich poses with the Rose Bowltrophy during amedia conference onWednesAgain with the uniforms. day morning in LosAngeles. Really'? Maybe if Oregon wins totremendous. reaching their second na- said. "Marcus is Oregon linebacker Derrick d ay those c omments w i l l die down. Helfrich acknowl- tional title game. (They lost He's one of the best college Malone Jr. noted how Florida edged on Wednesday that an to Auburn in the 2011 BCS footballplayers ever.There's State always finds a way to very few holes and weakness- win, even when it gets behind ascension in recruiting might championship.) "I feel like a lot of people es (in Oregon). They're a com- early in games. Like many, have started with the Ducks' ever-changing, flashy hel- feel like we come up short a plete football team. They do Malone expects a close game today. mets and uniforms. lot, couldn't beat Stanford, not beat themselves." "There's going to be a lot of " But h o pefully w e ' v e couldn't w i n t h e n a t i onal Florida State comes into the moved beyond that," Helfrich c hampionship, things l i ke Rose Bowl today as 8t/2-point back and forth, everything said. "The uniforms don't give that," Freeman said. "I know underdogs. But Fisher said like that," Malone said. "We you points. If they do, we'd this group wants to prove peo- "we've never looked at our- have to make sure if they love that, if we could look into ple wrong, but it's not about selves as underdogs." make mistakes we find a way that. But being around there that. It's about proving to ourPerhaps that i s b e cause to capitalize on them." The Ducks have not played (Eugene) on a daily basis, it's selves and our fans that we the Seminoles have not lost a all about the people." — they — deserve to have a game over the past two sea- in nearly as many close games Some of those people in- national championship under sons. Or perhaps because this season as the Seminoles. clude Heisman Trophy quar- their belt. It's something we Winston has playmakers like If it comes down to late in the terback Marcus Mariota, who want to bring them." wide receiver Rashad Greene fourth quarter and the game in 2014 set both the Pac-12 sinIn Florida State, the Ducks (1,306 yards, seven touch- is still undecided, will Oregon gle-season and career records are taking on a fast, physical downs) and tight end Nick be capable of handling the for total touchdowns, while defense, and an offensethatis O'Leary (614 yards, six touch- pressure? "Our team has not had as also breaking the single-sea- led by possibly the second-best downs) to whom he can dismany close games, but we son recordfor total offense. quarterback in the country in tribute the balL "If we go down and score, fought through a lot of adverAnd true freshman running Jameis Winston. The reignback Royce Freeman, who ing national champion Semi- you have to think it's 7-7, 14-14, sity and when you get to this has rushed for 1,299 yards noles have won 29 consecutive just because Jameis and that point, something's got to give," this year to become one of just games, often finding ways to offense will find ways to get said Oregon offensive coordisix freshman running backs win in the fourth quarter. back in the game," Mariota nator Scott Frost. in Pac-12 history to rush for Oregon will be led by no said. "He's such a good playThousands of q uestions more than 1,000 yards in a doubt the best quarterback er and they are never down have been asked this week. in the country. As Mariota and out. We definitely have Today at the Rose Bowl, even season. Freeman, for his part, ac- goes, so go the Ducks, it would to make sure we finish every more will be answered. knowledged that the Ducks seem. drive and try to score as many — Reporter: 541-383-0318, "Mariota is Mariota," Fisher points as we can." have something to prove in mmorical@bendbtdletin.com.

Money Continued from C1 In some ways, even the NFL,

that $10 billion-a-year enterprise, might be struggling to compete. Michigan on Tuesday introduced its new football

coach, Jim Harbaugh, who left the NFL's San Francisco 49ers to join the Wolverines. His base

salary — $5 million annually for sevenyears, with 10percent increases after the third and

fifth years — will eventually amount to more than what he was earning in the NFL.

Harbaugh will have one of the highest base salaries in the country. The highest-paid college football coach at around $7 million this season was Alabama's Nick Saban, who also

chose to leave a head coaching position in the NFL, in 2007, for the riches of the college ranks.

"When you hear presidents

and athletic d i rectors t alk

about character and academics and integrity, none of that really matters," said Mack Brown,

a longtimecoach atTexaswho is now a television analyst. "The truth is, nobody has ever

Ducks'coachingdonusestopsin playoffs NEW YORK — Oregon's coaching staff has $1.38 million in bonuses riding on theDucks' performance in thefirst College Football Playoff, more thantheother three playoff teams combined. Oregon headcoach Mark Helfrich and his assistants will earn the additional money if the Duckswin their semifinal and then capture the school's first national title. Thecoaching staffs from Florida State ($656,652j, Alabama($423,640j and OhioState ($188,054) have a combined$1.26 million on the line in thenext two weeks. Helfrich is paid $1.8million in basesalary, less than half that of the next closest coach inthetitle chase, andhas already made $575,000 in bonusesthis year. Hewill earn another $25,000 if Oregon beats Florida State, and$250,000 if the Ducks winthe championship. Helfrich's assistants eachearned abonus of two months of salary for making thesemifinals andhaveat least another six months of salary on the linedepending on results. Alabama's coaching staff has thehighest total basesalary in the playoffs at $12.1million. More than half of that goes to headcoach Nick Saban,collegefootball's highest-paid coachthis year. Like Oregon,Alabamaupdated its contracts to include thefull playoff structure. Each assistant on Saban's staff — which includes defensive coordinator Kirby Smart, at $1.35 million the highest-paid assistant of the four playoff teams —received abonus for reaching the semifinals. Theywill get additional payfor afinals berth and a national title. Florida State coachJimbo Fisher, who last weeksigned a new eight-year contract that the school said will makehimoneof the highest -paidcoachesinthecountry,hasmade$275,000inbonuses this year ontop of his $3.5 million salary. Hecan earn another $600,000 for winning thenational title and finishing undefeated. Florida State assistants will earn abonusfor beating Oregon, but none for a national title. That structure mirrors that of everyOhio State coach, including headcoach UrbanMeyer.

been fired for those things. They get fired for losing." Harbaugh, like most college football coaches, will receive bonuses. His incentives come for reaching the Big Ten cham- increase to about $50 million, pionship game ( $125,000), from about $28 million unwinning the Big Ten champi- der last season's system. The onship ($250,000), reaching base revenue will nearly triple a College Football Playoff for the five conferences that bowl ($200,000), playing in make up the next tier of college the four-team national cham- football. pionship playoff ($300,000) The playoff is such a profand achievingteam academic itable showpiece that many performance (up to $150,000). believe it will be expanded to Winning a national title would eight teams or more. bring him $500,000. There may be an irresistible The story of college football's financial incentive to expand gold rush can be told through the playoff, but critics worry

— Bloomberg News

trainer, said about whether further expansion would be too much. "And I think it is. I

d a i s a s M eyer and Saban

12 national championship posed for pictures with the game against either Florida SugarBowltrophy. "Our entire staff and all of State or Oregon, which play in the other semifinal today our players have responded at the Rose Bowl.

very well to the standard that

The Crimson Tide is going we try to set for the way we for its fourth national cham-

w a n t things to be done and

pionship in six seasons, a how they need to be done stunning run of dominance so you can have success," in what is supposed to be an Saban said, methodically era of increased parity. explaining the success of a eYou can have that one-

p r o gramthatseemstobeon

shot wonder, that one-year championshipautopilot. wonder, that one year where

Ohi o State has never beat-

everything goes right," Mey- en an SEC team in a bowL At er marveled at the final Sug- least not officially. The Buckar Bowl news conference eyesare 0-10,havingvacated Wednesday. "But to h av e a v i c t ory over Arkansas in it year after year, that's the the2011SugarBowlbecause model that people look for."

of N C A A violations.

BOWL ROUNDUP

Boise Stateparties at Fiesta Bowlonceagain

ball and basketball," said Lou Anna Simon, the president of

The Associated Press

Michigan State, who serves

Ajayi ran for 134 yards and three touchdowns, and No.

PEACH BOWL

member universities ultimate-

No. 6 TCU 42, No. 9 Missis21 Boise State made a late de- sippi 3: ATLANTA — Defensive stand to hold off No. termined to show it should 12 Arizona 38-30 in the Fies- have been included in the ta Bowl on Wednesday. four-team playoff, TCU rode Boise State raced to a 21-0 three touchdown passes lead in the opening 10 min- from Trevone Boykin and a utes before allowing Arizona dominant defense to a blowto claw its way back. out win. The Wildcats marched ORANGE BOWL quickly down the field in the No. 10 Georgia Tech 49, closing seconds, but Kamalei No. 8 Mississippi State 34: Correa sacked Anu Solomon MIAMI GARDENS, Fla.

ly decided to retreat and emphasize basketball.

at the 10 on the final play. Grant Hedrick threw for

Justin Thomas ran for three touchdowns and threw for

on the NCAA's board of directors for Division I universities.

"That has become skewed because of the value the public

has placed on football." Mike Tranghese, the former commissioner of the Big East Conference, watched his

former conference implode in recent years as it struggled to sustain a formidable group of football programs. Several

"I love the sport of f oot-

ball," Tranghese said. "But the collegiate athletic world as we know it is absolutely con-

trolledby the sport of football." Football is the main reason top-tier college programs have increased their revenue over recent decades at a rate that

would makeblue-chip companies blush. In constant dollars,

GLENDALE, Ariz. — Jay

their third Fiesta Bowl victory.

Also on Wednesday:

-

309 yards and a touchdown, another, and Georgia Tech helping the Broncos cap a rushed for 452 yards in its successful first season un- first Orange Bowl victory in der coach Bryan Harsin with 63 years.

SIIPERISR

M OllNIAI NAlN S I I I @

RECVCE INI I IILIAIE

RENTILS , FATBIKESI SKIS

~WEI'INEITAll!HORiSTRICTIOHI! 541-323-1701

the median Division I athletic department revenue in 1970

62980 LBOYQ IICRES lRlils BEili

was $6.5 million, and in 2012, it was $56 million, according to one NCAA-commissioned

study. And nearly every Power Five program makes far more money than that figure. According to USA Today's college financial database, Arizona State in 2013 had $65 mil-

imortgage' imortgagel Bend is pleased to welcome

$91 million, and Texas, one of the most marketable athletic

Brad Haun to our

tively transferred power over f ootball from the NCAA t o

college football is oversatu-

the conferences and institu-

seems to me, it ends up being a dynamic that it's the more the

tions, which led to television

departments in the country,

made $165 million — 66 percent from football. "Anytime anyone has tried to make the argument that rated, or there is too much, it

deals and even entire cable merrier," said Ilan Ben-Hannetworks. an, ESPN's vice president for Including donations and college football programming. other revenue sources, football "Fans pretty much have an brings in at least 65 percent of insatiable appetite for college total revenue at major athletic football." programs, according to fed-

that such a move would further

compromise the athletes' academic obligations. Alabama's semester begins Jan. 7; Ohio State's starts Jan. 12, the day of the title game. The extra games could also prove physically trying to college players. The two teams that reach this season's

eral Education Department numbers calculated for The

Each of the five major conferences — the Southeastern, the Atlantic Coast, the Pac-

final will have played a total of 15 games.

New York Times by OSKR, an economic consulting firm.

12, the Big 12 and the Big Ten meetings," Doug C alland, Ohio State's head athletics

winneradvancestothe Jan.

lion in revenue, Florida State

championship playoff format that began this season, ESPN is paying $7.3 billion over 12 years to telecast seven games a year — four majorbowl games, two semifinal bowl games and the national championship game.

"We talk about that in our

t i t les in 2009, 2011 and 2012

program he wanted to build. and came oh-so-close to winSEC North. ning it all two other Well, he will get Sl l g 8I' y ears. a chance to see just g p ~ l A s if t r ying to how that plan is goshow the Buckeyes ing when the Buck- ~nllegeFoot ju s t w hat they are e yes take o n t h e hnll Pinynff up against, the Tide Southeastern Con- semiflnnhNo broke out a helmet ference powerhouse l Al»eme with the number 15 — s y mbolizing the e veryone wants t o «No.4ohio State. emulate. number of n a t ionTop-seeded Al- Wh en: 5:30 a l tit l es the school abama (12-1) will p .m. today cla i m s to have won — for its photo ops meetNo.4seedOhio Ty.ESPN State (12-1) in the l eading up to t h e Sugar Bowl tonight, a semifi- game. nal game in college football's It was the r e a g a in new playoff system. The W ednesday, propped on the

think they're pushing the envelope on how many — this is a long season." College sports have been growing more lucrative for years — ever since a 1984 Supreme Court decision effec-

television contracts. Under the

— will see its base revenue

No one does it better than

Nick Saban and the Tide, N EW OR L E A N S who have gone 84-10 over When Urban Meyer got back the past seven seasons. Alinto coaching at Ohio State, abama captured national

"In the old days, there was

a much more even distribution of revenue between foot-

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12172014dk

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C5 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 1, 2015

+

17,823.07

O» To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbugetin.com/business. Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection.

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2.17%

2,058.90

2 120

50$P 500

18,120"

2,040.

Close: 2,058.90 Change: -21.45 (-1.0%)

17,580

The New York Stock Exchange and 1,960 ' " " " ' 10 DAYS Nasdaq Stock Market will be closed 2,160 " for New Year's Day. All of the major U.S. stock exchanges are scheduled to reopen 2,080 " for business on Friday.

+ -16.70

$1,183.90

.

17,500"

.

"

"

16,500" A

NYSE NASD

Vol. (in mil.) 2,518 1,425 Pvs. Volume 2,370 1,233 Advanced 1132 1187 Declined 2043 1570 New Highs 1 92 1 2 4 New Lows 35 42

Meadowbrook Ins.

"

16,000

6

StocksRecap

HIGH LOW CLOSE C H G. DOW 18043.22 17820.88 17823.07 -160.00 DOW Trans. 9257.44 9137.13 9139.92 -58.28 DOW Util. 632.02 61 7.61 61 8.08 -11.49 NYSE Comp. 10948.60 10834.26 10839.24 -93.75 NASDAQ 4806.43 4734.11 4736.05 -41.39 S&P 500 2085.58 2057.94 2058.90 -21.45 S&P 400 1474.66 1452.23 1452.44 -1 5.36 Wilshire 5000 21942.66 21661.92 21669.86 -206.31 -8.35 Russell 2000 1221.44 1204.69 1204.70

S

MIG Close:$8.46L1.33 or 18.7/o China's Fosun International invest-

0

%CHG. WK -0.89% V -0.63% V -1.83% V -0.86% V -0.87% V -1.03% V -1.05% V -0.94% V -0.69% V

MO QTR YTD L +7.52% L L +23.50% L L +25.99% L +4.22% L +1 3.40% L +11.39% L L +8.19% L +9.97% L L +3.53%

NorthwestStocks NAME

Economic bellwether

-.0052

.

1,840. " J

/

1.21 02+

StoryStocks

17,000

1,920 "

+ -.65 '

The stock market had a strong year, but finished with a loss on Wednesday, as major indexes fell from recent record highs. The Standard & Poor's 500 index and the Dow Jones industrial average sank in light trading. Cisco Systems led the Dow lower, while all 10 sectors of the S&P 500 fell, with utilities and telecommunication companies losing the most. The S&P 500 posted its sixth consecutive annual gain. All told, eight of the 10 sectors of the S&P 500 rose in 2014. Markets will be shut Thursday for the New Year's holiday.

"

18,000"

"

$53.27

Dow jones industrials '

18,500"

+ -.67

$15.57

Close: 17,823.07 Change: -160.00 (-0.9%)

17,040 ' ""' 10 DAYS "

"

2,000 "

-.02

52-WK RANGE o CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L TICKER LO Hl CLOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous) P/E DIV

ment group will buy the commercial insurance underwriter at a premium for about $433 million. $10 8

Chevron

CVX

Close:$112.18 V-0.93 or -0.8% The price of crude oil continued its monthslong declineonweak demand, weighing down shares of the energy company and its peers. $120 110

0 N 52-week range $5.24~

D $8 .53

00

D 0 N 52-week range $1DD.15 ~ $135 .10

Vol.:3.8m (1 5.3x avg.) PE: 47.0 Volc6.4m (0.7x avg.) PE: 10 . 3 Mkt. Cap:$423.8m Yi e ld:0.9% Mkt. Cap:$212.07b Yi e ld: 3.8%

Resolute Energy

REN Close:$1.32%0.28 or 26.9% The oil and gas company said it secured a term loan for $150 million and that it amended its senior revolving credit facility.

Civeo

CVEO Close: $4.11%0.19 or 4.8% The workforce accommodations company's stock rebounded a day after it provided a weak outlook and suspended its dividend. $30

Alaska Air Group A LK 35.80 ~ 60.51 5 9. 7 6 -.01 . . . L L L +62.9 +6 7 .7 88 1 1 6 0. 5 0 Avista Corp A VA 27.71 ~ 37.37 3 5. 3 5 -.98 -2.7 V L L +25.4 +33 .7 27 7 1 1 1. 2 7 Bank ofAmerica BAC 14 . 37 — o 18.19 17 .89 -.24 -1.3 W L L +14. 9 +1 7 .4 55261 17 0 . 20 $6 L V -70.5 -68.9 181 d d 0 .88f Barrett Business BB S I 1 8.25 ~ 102. 2 0 2 7 . 40 -.52 -1.9 V 20 Boeing Co BA 116.32 ~ 144. 5 7 12 9.98 -1.85 -1.4 v w L -4.8 -0.9 2587 19 3.64f 10 Cascade Baacorp C A C B4 .11 ~ 5.82 5.19 ... ... T L L -0.8 + 1 . 2 68 +4.7 163 17 0. 6 4f Columbia Bokg C O L B 23.59 ~ 30. 36 27.61-.32 -1.1 W L L + 0.4 0 N D J J A S 0 N D Columbia Sportswear COLM 34.25 ~ 45. 87 44.54 -.41 -0.9 W W L + 13. 1 +1 5 .2 2 5 4 2 7 0. 6 0f 52-week range 52-week range CostcoWholesale COST 109.50 ~ 1 46 .82141.75 -1.74 -1.2 V W L +19. 1 +2 2 .0 1 395 29 1 . 4 2 81.DD~ $9.65 $3.88 ~ $28.40 C raft Brew Alliance BREW 10.07 r$ 17.97 13 .34 -.51 -3.7 W L W -18.8 -15.1 5 2 83 Volc3.8m (2.2x avg.) P E:. Volc13.4m (6.1x avg.) P E: . . . FLIR Systems F LIR 28.32 ~ 37.42 3 2. 3 1 -.54 -1.6 V L L +7.3 $.1 1 .8 3 8 5 2 3 0. 4 0 M kt. Cap: $102.77 m Yiel d : . Mkt. Cap:$438.68 m Yield: 12.7% HewlettPackard H PQ 27. 2 7 — o 40.95 40 .13 -.59 -1.4 W L L +43. 4 +4 7 . 3 6789 15 0 .64 Intel Corp I NTC 23.50 ~ 37.90 3 6. 2 9 -.47 -1.3 V W L +39. 8 $. 4 5.7 19350 17 0 .96f NephroGenex NRX RedHIII Biopharma R DHL L +3.6 +7.2 49 1 3 1 3 0.26 Keycorp K EY 11.55 ~ 14.70 1 3. 9 0 -.20 -1.4 V L Close: $1 3.35L8.70 or 187.1% Close: $13.33 L2.60 or 24.2% Construction spending -.30 -0.5 V L L + 62. 4 +6 4 .4 2 378 20 0 .74f Kroger Co K R 3 5 .13 ~ 64.83 6 4. 2 1 The pharmaceutical company anThe biot echnology company's pomonthly percent change Lattice Semi L SCC 5.30 ~ 9.19 6.89 +. 0 7 + 1.0 L L V +25 . 5 + 2 5. 1 6 4 8 3 1 nounced the successful completion tential treatment for chemotherapy LA Pacific L PX 12.46 ~ 18.88 1 6. 5 6 -.19 -1.1 V L L -10.5 -10.2 1757 dd of a cardiac safety study for a poside effects was accepted for review MDU Resources MDU 21 . 33 ~ 36.05 2 3. 5 0 -.43 -1.8 V V V -23.1 -18.8 893 1 5 0 .73f tential kidney disease treatment. in the United Kingdom. June Mentor Graphics ME N T 18.25 ~ 24.1 2 2 1. 9 2 -.41 -1.8 W W L -8.9 - 5.7 46 9 1 9 0 . 20 $15 $14 Microsoft Corp MSFT 34.63 ~ 50.05 4 6. 4 5 -.57 - 1.2 V V L + 24.2 +29 . 2 20341 18 1 . 2 4 July 0.3 10 12 Nike Inc B N KE 69.85 ~ 99.76 9 6. 1 5 -.73 -0.8 V W L +22. 3 +2 4 .3 2 265 29 1 .12f 5 10 — o Nordstrom Ioc JWN 54.90 79.57 79 .39 + . 63 +0.8 L L L +2 8.5 +29 .5 1 3 74 2 1 1. 3 2 Aug. 0.1 Nwst Nat Gas NWN 40.05 ~ 52.57 4 9. 9 0 -.92 -1.8 V L L +16. 5 +2 2 .6 80 23 1. 8 6f M AM J J A S O N D 0 N D PaccarIac PCAR 53.59 ~ 71.1 5 6 8. 9 1 -.79 -1.1 T W L +14 .9 + 2 0 .1 1 066 1 9 0 .88a 52-week range 52-week range Sept. Planar Systms PLNR 1.93 ~ 9.17 8.37 -.20 -2.3 L L L $.22 9 .5 +236.1 5 6 2 4 9 $3.88~ $12.88 $5.88~ $21.88 Plum Creek P CL 38.70 ~ 46.74 4 2.7 9 -.44 -1.0 T L L -8.0 - 3.2 62 3 4 1 1 . 7 6 Oct. Vol.:23.6m (190.2x avg.) P E : .. VolJ 936.1k (39.8x avg.) PE: . . . Prec Castparts PCP 215.09 ~ 275. 0 9 24 0.88 -.90 -0.4 W L L -10.6 - 9.9 53 4 1 9 0 . 12 Mkt. Cap:$118.31m Yield : .. Mkt. Cap:$116.49 m Yield : ... Safeway Inc SWY 26.69 — o 36.03 35 .12 . .. ... L L L +20.5 +23 .0 1 3 97 3 0.92 est. Nov. 0.3 Schonzer Steel SCHN 2 1.41 o — 33.3 2 22 . 56 -.35 -1.5 w w w -30.9 - 26.3 246 7 8 0 . 75 Aquinox Pharma. AQXP Tekmira Pharma. TKMR Sherwin Wms SHW 174.29 — o 26 6.23263.04 -1.89 -0.7 V L L +43.3 +46 .6 35 3 3 0 2. 2 0 Close:$7.50%0.26 or 3.4% Close: $15.15 %1.25 or 9.0% Source: FactSet Staocorp Focl S FG 57.77 ~ 71.80 69. 8 6 - 1 .18 - 1.7 V L L + 5.4 +9.8 125 13 1. 3 0f The pharmaceutical company startThe drug developer said it completStarbucks Cp S BUX 67.93 ~ 84.20 82.0 5 +. 2 6 +0 .3 L L L +4.7 +5.5 37 2 0 3 0 1 . 28f ed dosing patients in a midstage ed enrollment in clinical studies foclinical trial focusing on a potential cusing on a potential treatment for a Triquint Semi TQNT 7.96 — o 28.50 27 .55 -.77 -2.7 W L L +230 .3 +239.9 17070 cc group of cancers. Umppua Holdi ngs UM P Q 14.94 $y 19.60 17 .01 -.31 -1.8 V W L -11.1 -6.4 1253 23 0 . 60 skin disorder treatment. Manufacturing barometer $15 $30 US Bancorp U SB 38.10 ~ 46.10 4 4. 9 5 -.61 -1.3 V L L +11.3 +15 .5 4 7 74 1 5 0. 9 8 The latest reading of an index Washington Fedl WAF D 19.52 r$— 24 . 53 22 . 15 -.22 -1.0 V L L -4.9 -2.4 33 7 1 4 0 . 59f based on a survey of purchasing 10 20 Wells Fargo & Co W F C 4 4.17 — o 55.95 54.82 -.60 -1.1 W L L +20 . 7 + 2 4.8 9021 1 3 1 . 40 managersis expected to show a L L +13. 7 +1 9.2 1 897 2 7 1 . 16 Weyerhaeuser W Y 2 7.48 ~ 36.88 35 . 8 9 - .55 -1.5 V slight monthly decline. M AM J J A S O N D 0 N D Economists anticipate that the 52-week range 52-week range Institute for Supply Management's $5.58~ $14 .35 $7.55~ $3 1.48 manufacturing index slipped to 57.5 DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, iiut are not included. ii - Annualrate pius stock. 8 -Liquidating dividend. 8 -Amount declaredor paidin last12 months. f - Current Vol.:13.9k(0.5x avg.) P E: . . Volc3.4m (1.7x avg.) P E: .. . annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafter stock split, no regular rate. I —Sumoi dividends paidthis year.Most recent in December from 58.7 a month Mkt. Cap:$80.21 m Yield:.. Mkt. Cap:$338.06 m Yield : ... dividend wasomitted or deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend earlier. That would be the second announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding 12months plus stock dividend. i - Paid in stock, approximate cash SOURCE: Sungard AP monthly drop in a row. Any number value on ex-distriiiutiks date.PE Footnotes:q —Stock is 8 closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc —P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last12 months. above 50 signals expansion. The InterestRates NET 1YR October reading matched a TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO Spotlight three-year high reached in August. The Decemberindex isdue out Shake Shack started from a hot dog cart in Manhattan's 3-month T-bill . 0 1 .01 ... L .07 tomorrow. Madison Square park in 2001. Three years later it opened a 6-month T-bill . 1 2 .11 + 0 .01 L L L .09 52-wk T-bill .21 .19 +0 . 0 2 V L L .11 institute for Supply Management permanent kiosk in the park and had its first official location. Now the company is ready to make its debut on Wall Street. manufacturing index 2-year T-note . 6 6 .6 9 -0.03 V L L .38 The yield on the The burger chain filed for an initial public offering Monday, 5-year T-note 1.65 1.68 -0.03 W L W 1 7. 4 10-year Treasury and hopes to raise as much as $100 million. There are now 63 edged down to 10-year T-note 2.17 2.19 -0.02 W T W 3.03 Shake Shack restaurants around the world and the company 60 2.17 percent est. plans to use the cash raised to open more 30-year T-bond 2.75 2.76 -0.01 V V w 3.94 Wednesday. 57.5 restaurants, including its first one in Austin, Yields affect NET 1YR and to renovate existing stores. rates on mortBONDS YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO In 2013, the company had revenue 55 gages and other of $84.5 million, up 45 percent Barclay s LongT-Bdldx 2.60 2.61 -0.01 W W W 3 .75 consumer loans. from the year before. It posted a Shake Shack Expe cted ticker: SHAK Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.27 4.27 .. . w w w 5.1 3 profit of $5.4 million in 2013, up Barcl aysUSAggregate 2.26 2.28 -0.02 W L W 2.47 Locations: Exchange: 31 percent from 2012. PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield 6.60 6.61 -0.01 W L L 5.65 63 around the world NYSE RATE FUNDS 50 M oodys AAA Corp Idx 3.73 3.75 -0.02 w w w 4. 5 3 AP J A S 0 N D YEST3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.92 1.94 -0.02 W L W 1. 8 9 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Source: Factset Barclays US Corp 3.12 3.14 -0.02 W L L 3.25 1 YRAGO3.25 .13 AmdFocus SelectedMutualptgnds

The Commerce Department reports its latest data on construction spending tomorrow. Building activity has slowly improved through much of 2014, although its contribution to broader economic growth has been relatively modest. Economists predict that spending on single-family homes, schools and other construction projects rose 0.3 percent in November from the previous month.

SU HS

AP

Davis Financial has tightened its focus on the financial sector under FAMILY Marhetsummary the direction of new manager Chris American Funds Most Active Davis, which Morningstar says is NAME VOL (Bgs) LAST CHG likely to be maintained.

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 AmBalA m 24 . 75 16 +9.6 +9.8 +15.0+12.2 CaplncBuA m 59.58 43 +7.4 +7.5 +11.3 +9.0 CpWldGrlA m 46.99 32 +4.7 +4.9 +15.9 +9.1 EurPacGrA m 47.13 24 -2.1 -2.1 +11.9 +5.8 S&P500ETF 1043756 205.54 -2.06 FnlnvA m 52. 9 6 43 +9.9 +10.3 +19.2+13.4 BkofAm 552613 17.89 -.24 GrthAmA m 42.68 28 +10.0 +10.5 +21.1+13.5 RF MicD 459839 16.59 -.35 Davis FioclA m RPFGX IncAmerA m 21.58 15 +9.1 +9.3 +13.1+11.2 8 iPVixST 408657 31.51 +2.31 InvcoAmA m 37.98 34 +13.1 +13.5 +20.1+13.3 VALUE B L EN D GR OWTH Apple Inc s 393334 110.38 -2.14 NewPerspA m36.28 23 +3.9 +4.2 +16.7+10.5 CSVLgNGs 356991 3.98 -.84 WAMutlnvA m40.95 40 +12.3 +12.7 +18.6+14.9 iShR2K 339100 119.62 -.72 iShEMkts 337042 39.29 +.03 Dodge &Cox Income 13.78 +.91 +5.5 +5 .5 +4.6+5.2 C A 8 CSVixSht 301675 2.76 + .35 IntlStk 42.11 -.29 +0.1 + 0 .1 +15.2 +7.9 A A A GeoElec 263049 25.27 -.30 Stock 180.94 -1.73 +10.4 +10.4 +23.7+15.6 C A A Fidelity Contra 97.97 - . 8 3 +9.6 + 9 .6 +19.6+14.8 C C 8 Gainers ContraK 97.9 0 - . 82 +9.7 + 9 .7 +19.7+15.0 C C 8 NAME L AST C H G %C H G LowPriStk d 50.25 -.19 +7.7 + 7 .7 +19.7+15.6 D D C Fideli S artan 500 l dxAdvtg 72.85 -.76+13.6 +13.6 +20.4+15.4 A 8 A NephroG n 13.35 + 8 . 7 0 + 1 87.1 StatelnvBc 2 0.72 + 5 . 3 6 +3 4 .9 54FraakTemp-Franklin Income C m 2.43 -.91 +3.5 + 3 .5 +10.1 +8.9 D A A 85 RedhillBio 1 3.33 + 2 . 6 0 +2 4 .2 53 IncomeA m 2. 4 0 - .91+4.1 + 4 .1 +10.6 +9.4 C A A SpaoBdc h 2 .90 +.55 +23 . 4 Oakmark Intl I 2 3.49 . . . -4.8 -4.9 +16.7 +9.7 Brainstm rs 4 .76 +.88 +22 . 7 843 Oppeoheimer RisDivA m 19 . 99 -.21+10.9 +10.9 +16.8+13.0 C E D IndSvAm If 5 .97 +1 . 0 9 +2 2 .3 Morhingstar OwnershipZone™ RisDivB m 17 . 69 - .18+ 10.1 +10.1 +15.8+12.0 D E E LimeEngy 2 .93 +.52 +21 . 6 RisDivC m 17 . 56 -.18+10.1 +10.1 +15.9+12.2 D E E e Fund target represents weighted FinjanH 2 .70 +.46 +20 . 5 Q SmMidValA m48.72 -.49+10.6 +10.6 +18.6+13.2 C D E DailyJourn 263.01 + 42.90 + 1 9 .5 average of stock holdings SmMidValBm 40.99 -.41 +9.8 +9.8 +17.6+12.3 C E E Mdbklns 8 .46 +1 . 3 3 +1 8 .7 • Represents 75% of fuhd's stock holdings T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 32.8 0 - . 32 +7.5 + 7 .5 +17.8+13.3 E D C Losers CATEGORY Financial GrowStk 51.9 5 - . 31 +8.8 + 8 .8 +21.7+15.8 D A A NAME L AST C H G %C H G MORNINGSTAR HealthSci 67.9 9 - . 38+31.9 +31.9 +38.1+27.8 8 A A RATING™ *** r r r r Newlncome 9. 5 8 . .. +6 .0 + 6 .0 + 3.1 +4.5 8 C D -4.10 -22.6 NeuroDm n 14.04 DxRsaBllrs 16.54 -3.51 -17.5 ASSETS $562 million Vanguard 500Adml 189.89 1.98 +13.6 +13.6 +20.4+15.4 A 8 A -.84 -17.4 CSVLgNGs 3.98 500lnv 189.89 1.98 +13.5 +13.5 +20.2+15.3 A 8 8 EXP RATIO 0.88% GWG Hld n 6.76 -1.22 -15.3 CapOp 52.74 -.31 +18.9 +18.9 +26.2+15.9 A A A MANAGER Christopher Davis -.75 -12.5 Sphere3D g 5.25 Eqlnc 31.21 -.32 +11.3 +11.3 +18.0+15.9 8 D A SINCE 2014-01-01 IntlStkldxAdm 26.90 -.99 -4.2 -4.2 +9.3 NA 8 D RETURNS 3-MO +6.6 Foreign Markets StratgcEq 32.18 -.32 +13.7 +13.7 +24.1+18.6 A A A YTD +13.0 TgtRe2020 28.46 -.12 +7.1 +7.1 +11.7 +9.7 A A A NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +13.0 Tgtet2025 16.53 -.98 +7.2 +7.2 +12.8+10.2 A 8 A Paris 4,272.75 +27.21 + . 64 3-YR ANNL +20.6 TotBdAdml 10.87 +.91 +5.9 +5.9 +2.6 +4.4 8 D D London 6,566.09 +19.09 + . 29 5-YR-ANNL +12.2 Totlntl 15.55 -.95 -4.2 -4.2 +9.2 +4.3 8 D D Frankfurt 9,805.55 -1 21.58 -1.23 TotStlAdm 51.60 -.50 +12.6 +12.6 +20.5+15.7 8 B A Hong Kong23,605.04 +1 03.94 +.44 TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT TotStldx 51.58 -.51 +12.4 +12.4 +20.3+15.6 8 B A Mexico 43,145.66 +1 26.91 +.29 Wells Fargo & Co 9.81 Milan 19,011.96 -118.06 -.62 USGro 29.91 -.22 +13.1 +13.1 +22.0+15.0 A A B American ExpressCo 9.18 Tokyo 17,450.77 -279.07 -1.57 Welltn 39.15 -.25 +9.8 +9.8 +13.9+11.3 A A A 6.79 Stockholm 1,464.55 -14.38 -.97 Bank of NewYork Mellon Corp Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, or redemption -3.70 -.07 Markel Corporation 6.28 iee. i - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or Sydney 5,388.60 Zurich 8,983.37 -51.18 -.57 Visa Ioc Class A 4.76 redemption iee.Source: Morningsiar.

Commodities

FUELS

The price of oil slid further Wednesday. All told, it fell 45 percent in 2014,

Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) Heating Oil (gal) Natural Gas (mmbtu) UnleadedGas(gal)

making it the

worst year for crude since the 2008 financial ci'Isis.

METALS

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

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 53.27 54.12 -1.57 -45.9 -1 4.9 1.63 1.63 1.85 1.87 -1.19 -40.0 2.89 3.09 -6.63 -31.7 1.44 1.45 -1.27 -48.5

CLOSE PVS. 1183.90 1200.60 15.57 16.24 1208.90 1218.10 2.84 2.87 798.40 804.20

%CH. %YTD -1.36 -1.5 -4.16 -19.5 -0.76 -11.8 -1.06 -17.5 -0.72 +11.3

AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.66 1.66 -0.10 +23.2 Coffee (Ib) 1.67 1.65 +1.09 +50.5 -5.9 Corn (bu) 3.97 4.07 -2.34 Cotton (Ib) 0.60 0.62 -2.76 -28.8 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 331.10 335.70 -1.37 -8.1 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.40 1.42 - 1.02 + 2 . 6 Soybeans (bu) 10.19 10.38 -1.78 -22.3 -2.6 Wheat(bu) 5.90 6.02 -2.03

Foreign Exchange The dollar fell versus the pound, butrose against euro and yen. The ICE U.S. Dollar index, which compares the dollar's value to a basket of key currencies,

rose.

h5Q HS

1YR.

MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5584 +.0027 +.17% 1.6565 Canadian Dollar 1.1 625 +.0022 +.19% 1.0630 USD per Euro 1.2102 -.0052 -.43% 1.3750 JapaneseYen 119.87 + . 3 2 + .27% 1 05.31 Mexican Peso 14. 7 460 +.0148 +.10% 13.0736 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.8986 -.0058 -.15% 3.4698 Norwegian Krone 7 . 4742 +.0499 +.67% 6.0780 South African Rand 11.5678 +.0106 +.09% 10.5309 Swedish Krona 7.7 9 3 3 + .0459 +.59% 6.4387 Swiss Franc .9939 +.0044 +.44% . 8 928 ASIA/PACIFIC 1.2237 +.001 2 +.10% 1.1197 Australian Dollar Chinese Yuan 6.2046 +.0029 +.05% 6.0540 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7552 -.0027 -.03% 7.7543 Indian Rupee 63.205 -.110 -.17% 61.840 Singapore Dollar 1.3238 +.0020 +.15% 1.2624 South KoreanWon 1093.40 -3.25 -.30% 1055.70 -.02 -.06% 29.88 Taiwan Dollar 31.63


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY f, 2015

BRIEFING

ac eor emo

Unemployment stays low Initial applications for unemployment benefits rose more thanexpected last week, but remained low, the Labor Department saidWednesday. Claims for jobless benefits increasedby 17,000 from the previous week to 298,000. Economists had expected claims to rise to 289,000 for the weekended Dec. 27, according to FactSet. Claims tend to swing erratically around the holidays becauseseasonal adjustments prove more difficult. Most signs lately point to an improving economy. In the third quarter, the U.S.recordedits strongestgrowth in more than adecade. Even with the rise in claims last week,applications hovered near early 2006 levels.

• Firm to add units at southeast Bendfacility

a r e w i ex an

provides short-term and longassisted living communities,

By Joseph Dlfzler

already there.

Nemory care expansion

corporationrecords,isalso part of the Keizer project.

term accommodations in its

In Texas, the company in

according to its website.

October announced plans

Mt. Bachelor Memory

Frontier Management operates facilities in 24 Oregon

Care LLC plans to expand

cities and in eight other states:

with Caddis Partners LLC for an 86,000 square-foot facility called Heartis San Antonio

"Mt. Bachelor Memory Care

The Bulletin

opened with great success in spring 2013 and reached full its facility on Powers Road in capacityby the end of 2013," southeast Bend in the coming wrote Mallory DaCosta, the year, according to a company facility's executive director, in filing with the city of Bend. an email Tuesday. "Mt. BachThe firm's Portland-based elor remains full with a wait parent company. Frontier list, and our sister property Management LLC, plans to in Bend, Aspen Ridge Retirebuild 76 assisted living units ment Community, is also exand 24 memory care units at periencing a wait list and high the corner of Powers Road demand for our product." and Southeast Third Street, The existing facility offers adjacent to its facility and the studio apartments with private Bend Factory Outlet Stores, or shared bathroom options, according to a preliminary according to the company application filed with the city website. In addition to caring Dec. 18. The expansion would

for clients with Alzheimer's

add 73,500 square feet to the

disease and dementia in memory care, thecompany

28,200 square-foot facility

Washington, Idaho, Califor-

Mt. Bachelor Memory Care plans an expansion of its Powers Road facility.

with 101 units for assisted living and memory care, according to the San Antonio Business Journal. The Journal

nia, Colorado, Arizona, Iowa,

Illinois and Texas, according to its website. The company along with investors in 2014 announced new projects in Keizer and in San Antonio.

reported Frontier was devel-

assisted living and memory

oping at least two more senior living projects in Texas. The company in the fall opened a 107-unit facility in Clovis, California, and planned

care center, will have 126

a second phase with another

apartments, according to Keiz-

78, according to FresnoBee. com and the Frontier website.

The Keizer facility, a planned 100,000 square-foot

ertimes.com. Frontier Management expects to open the

— From wi Breports

PERMITS City of Bend • Eastlake Village LLC,680 NE Bellevue Drive Building 1, Bend, $1,086,667 • Eastlake Village LLC,680 NE Bellevue Drive Building 2, Bend, $1,086,667 • Eastlake Village LLC,680 NE Bellevue Drive Building 3, Bend, $1,086,667 • Eastlake Village LLC,680 NE Bellevue Drive Building 4, Bend, $1,086,667 • Eastlake Village LLC,6BO NE Bellevue Drive Building 5, Bend, $750,000 • Long Term Bend Investors LLC,60991 SE Geary Drive, Bend, $228,'I95 • Fletcher C. Chamberlin, 3169NW Shevli n Meadow Drive, Bend, $488,667 • Daniel E. Dobry, 60970 Bachelor View Road,Bend, $579,706 • Glassow Heights LLC, 1969 NWGlassow Drive, Bend, $342,062 • Long Term Bend Investors LLC, 61221 SE Geary Drive, Bend, $212,773 • Stonegate Development LLC, 20206 Stonegate Drive, Bend, $350,099 • Michael Knoell, 3475 NW McCready Drive, Bend, $332,632

hase Rd.

Powers R

E istin faclll Ilio 0

Andy Zetgert/The Bulletin

In Bend, the expanded fa-

Keizer facility late this year. Burghardt Investments, which

cility will mean more jobs at

owns Mt. Bachelor Memory

Mt. Bachelor Memory Care, DaCosta wrote. "Mt. Bachelor

Care, according to Oregon

currently employs 40 and we

will likely see that number double." — Reporter: 541-617-7815, jditzler@bendbulletin.com

Bull market for stocks continues

The Federal Avia-

Chick-fil-A is looking into the possibility of a breach of credit cards used at some of its locations, according to an online site that broke the storyabout Home Depot's hack. Brian Krebs, who runs the website KrebsonSecurity.com, said financial institutions have traced credit card fraud to accounts used at Chick-fil-A stores around the nation. Krebs said he first heard about the possible hack inNovember, but the reports were spotty.

expansion

F FT 0

tion Administration

Possidle data breach at chain

Planned

Source: City of Bend

FAA proposes fining Amazon proposed fining Amazon.com $91,000 on Wednesday for shipping an item in violation of hazardous materials regulations. The agency alleges thatAmazon shippedan 8-ounce plastic container of GECaulk Smoother last summer, andthat workers at a UPSsorting facility in Kentucky discovered that about four ounces of flammable alcohol had leaked through the container. In a news release, the agency said, "Amazon failed to provide emergency response information and used abox that was not adequate for shipping."

ND

Reed Ln.

4

By Sarah Max

"ur

New York Times News Service

r

By Peter Eavis

BIG SKY, Mont. — Inthe

New York Times News Service

weeks before the holiday season, snowfall at the Yellow-

An accelerating U.S.

stone Club is both ablessing and a curse. It is an essential

economy trumped problems overseastoliftthe

ingredient for this 13,600-acre

stock market to new highs in2014.

private ski club just north of

The Standard & Poor's

Yellowstone National Park. Yet it is also an unwelcome wrinkle for the 2,000 to 3,000 con-

500 index closed Wednes-

daywith again of 11.39

tractors who come and go each day, racing to build homes, renovate lodges andbreakground on new projects. Just a fewyears ago, such activity would havebeenhard to fathom. This alpine resort defaulted on a $375 million loan in November 2008, epitomizing the risky loans and real

percent for 2014 — 13.68 percent when reinvested

sN10s L-to

dividends are included. It was the third consecutive year the market benchmark

had risenbymore than 10 percent. Other market measures

ended the year on a strong note. The Dow Jones indus-

estate speculation that precipi-

tated the financial crisis, and it became miredin bankruptcy and a messy divorce case. Today, sixyears after its

Janie Oehorne/The New York Timee

bankruptcy, the Yellowstone Club is thriving. In the last two

A look at one of many new homes under construction at the Yellowstone Club, a golf and ski resort in

ended up 13.4 percent.

Big Sky, Montana, just northwest of Yellowstone National Park. This alpine resort defaulted on a $375 million loan ln 2008. Now, slx years later, lt ls gearing up for what ls likely to be lts busiest winter yet.

Can the partyin U.S. stocks keep going in 2015'? "We don't see a lot onthe

years alone, the club has sold nearly $1 billion in real estate. It has doubled its membership, which includes the likes of Bill

horizon that could derail the

Gates and the investor and

Hollywood producer Peter Chernin, to more than 500 households from 260 in 2009,

property. The smallest condominiums cost about $4 million, and single-family homes start at $5 million, with annual assessments inthethousands of

who pieced together more than

dollars. There is also an initial

lots at Yellowstone Club were selling for seven figures and membership had grown to include hedge fund managers,

sitionedto pull this off," saidScottPrince,aformer

professional athletes and captains of industry.

joinedthe dub in 2004 and was amongthe 78members

The dub's financialwoes

who invested. "Had it been an

fee of $300,000, in addition to $36,000 ayear for dues. Only

and itis gearingup for what is likelytobe its busiest winter since the dub broke ground more than 15 years ago. Of course, busy here is

members, their families and

guests have access to the dub, with its ski-in, ski-out homes

100,000 acres of undevelopable timberland and swapped it for land on the back side of Big Sky Resort. By the mid-2000s,

Club out ofbankruptcy in 2009.

that typically indude ski rooms with individual lockers, heated driveways, bunk rooms and $5,000boot dryers. They have accessto 15chairlifts,an 18hole golf course designed by Tom Weiskopf, and three ski lodges. There are no fences, but

Hepointedto a Web camera showing what looked like ants

the surrounding250,000 acres of Gallatin National Forest and

cated in 2005. In October2008, the Blixseths divorced, with Edra

dotting a ski run at the Breck-

asecuri tyteam runby aformer

Blixseth assuming ownership

enridge resort in Colorado, then called up satellite images

SecretService offi cerare reas-

of the dub and its debt. When

surance enough; many guests do not even locktheir doors. Although Byrne has made acareerbuyingand financing distressed real estate, his inter-

the dub filed forbankruptcy

relative, and that is one of the

biggest sellingpoints. "Look at the crowds at

Breckenridge on opening day," said Sam Byrne, the financier who bought the Yellowstone

of lift lines at Vail Ski Resort.

Like many members, Byrne

trial average dosed up 7.52 percent for 2014, while the Nasdaq composite index

cured creditors. CrossHarbor in turn invited members and

U.S. market in particular,"

said Raymond Nolte, chief investment officer at SkyBridge Capital, an investment firm focused on hedge funds. "But there could be

other investors, induding Dis-

covery Land Co., tobuy into thedealunder thesame terms. uSam was uniquely po-

continued volatility."

The market's astonishing ascent began in early 2009,

Goldman Sachs partner who

when the newly elected

Obama administration was scrambling to revive the economy and right the teetering financial system. The run-up has lasted nearly 70 months, making it the fourth-longestbullmarket since World War II, accord-

opportunishc investor, I don't thinkyou would have seen the same balance of doing what's right for the members andthe

stemmed from a loan to Blixseth and his wife at the time, Edra, that "they never

should have gotten," Byrne said, referringto a $375 million loan that Credit Suisse syndi-

investors." One of Byrne's first tasks af-

ing to data from S&P. In recent months, in-

terthepurchase was to repair the club's reputation. The for-

mer owners owed $10 million to local contractors, vendors and employees. Another priority for Byrne was to make the operations

a month later, it was losing

vestors have encountered deterrents that might have

thwartedprogress. The FederalReserve,forinstance, recently wound down its

$20million ayear between transparent and work with first visited the Yellowstone operating expenses and debt members to outline a strategy Club as aguest and, after servicing. for eventually turning over seeing its 2,200 skiable acres, est in buying the Yellowstone Homeowners weren't caught ownership to the club. When became amember in 2005. Club was as much about seeing unaware. In spring2008, a the dub reaches 700to 750 "The first time I skied here, the club succeed, he said, as it group of 14 members formed households, Byrne will start I didn't even make it into the was about turning a profitan adhocboard to represent the handover process. In the lodge because I was so enamthoughthe deal is shapingup all owners, who collectively meantime, he said, the club has ored," said Byrne, a founder of to be incredibly profitable. owned more than $3 billion in no remaining debt from the "He turned a Wild West CrossHarbor CapitalPartners, real estate at the dub. "Nobody bankruptcy and has positive a private equity firm based in project into something with wanted to see a bankruptcy," cashflow. Boston. institutional diligence," said Byrne said. There is a laundry list of new That is a common initial Mike Meldman, a member of When that did happen, projects in the works, induding impression of the club. Its Yellowstone Club and the chief Credit Suisse and CrossHarbor more restaurants, a golf dubcurrency is not its night life or executive ofDiscovery Land were the only two bidders. house, below-ground parking shopping, but the promise of Co., which took over the dub's In June 2009, CrossHarbor and new spa and fitness facilities. Nevertheless, Vail or privacy, security, no lift lines operations and development paid $115 million for the club andpristine fields of snow. in2009. and pledged an additional $100 Breckenridge itwillnever be. Untrammeled trails do come The club was originally the million for capital improveM embership iscapped at864 with a price. Patrons must own brainchild of Tim Blixseth, ments and payments to unsehouseholds.

enormousbond-buying program, which had helped drive stocks higher. The economies of Europe and Japan remain fragile. The conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East, as well as a steep plunge in oil prices, have gnawed at confidence. Investors, however, appeared to anticipate that

the U.S. economic recovery would gather pace in 2014. As that materialized in the

second half of the year, the stock market kept rising and was even able to bounceback from twobig sell-offs, in October and early December.

BEST OFTHEBIZ CALENDAR MONDAY Discover a Career in Real Estate: Jim Mazziotti answers questions before beginning a career in real estate; free, RSVP byemail; 6 p.m.; Exit Realty Bend, 354 NEGreenwood Ave., Suite I 00; 541-480-8B35 or soarwithexit@gmail.com. TUESDAY • What's Brewing? Bend's Town

Hall: Bend Chamber of Commerce; outlook for the 2015 legislative session; panelists discuss biofuels, Cover Oregon, workforce education, affordable housing, taxes and more; pre-registration $15 chamber members, $20 nonmembers; 5-7 p.m.; Deschutes Brewery & Public House, 1044 NWBond St.; 541-3823221 or www.bendchamber.org.

• Brewing Certilicate Information Session: Learn about the Central Oregon Community College exampreparation course to earn the Institute of Brewing & Distilling General Certificate in Brewing; free, registration requested; 5:30-6:30 p.m.; COCC ChandlerLab,1040 NW Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-3B3-7270, ceinfo@cocc.eduorwww.cocc.edu/

continuinged/GCB. • SCORE free business counseling: Business counselors conduct free 30-minute one-on-oneconferences with local entrepreneurs; check in at the library desk on the second floor; 5:30-7 p.m.;Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St.; www. SCORECentral0regon.org. WEDNESDAY

• Business Startup Class: Decide if running a business is for you; $29, registration required; 6-8 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 NWTrenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7290 or www. cocc.edu/sbdc. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday's Bulletin or visit dendbulletin. com/bizcal


IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Money, D2 Medicine, D4 Nutrition, D5 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 1, 2015

O www.bendbulletin.com/health

MS patientscheer new drug'sapproval

a

'

By Michele Munz

barely move her right arm. She had to quit her job as the

St. Louis Post-Dispatch

ST. LOUIS — Patients facing limited options for treat-

director of development at

the Southeast Missouri Food Bank and can't play outside with her sons, ages 3 and 6. MEDICINE celebrating Everything — from getting the FDA's ready in the morning to atapproval of a new aggressive tending school activities — is drug treatment. The ruling difficult. "I just try and not think reverses the agency's decision a year ago that the drug about it, because it gets me was not yet ready. furious — that I could've ing their relapsing multiple sclerosis are

aal

r ii i

•IIS

a)awlr, Illelr

y", ' nrrrt

"Isn't it wonderful?" said

maintained where I was in-

Linda Kostelac, 64, of Belleville, Illinois, who wrote

letters to newspapers urging readers to sign an online pe-

" ""P'It •

tition after the initial thumbs-

down of the drug Lemtrada. Kostelac has a son, 38, with

MS. The ruling comes in time for Kostelac's son, but the

<a,s

year without it has been devastating for Kristen Canter, Photos by Robert Stolarik/The New York Times

A store called New York Minute sells packaged food, milk and water from producers in New York at Kennedy International Airport in

New York. The farm-to-table movement hascome toairports across the country, bringing fresh, local produce, meat and other goods to restaurants led by well-known chefs and shops with local culinary specialties.

m iz w i

1IllIl

but I am excited it's been approved now, and I'm ready to move forward." The U.S. Food and Drug Administration initially

to stop using a medication be-

ofconcerns overrigorous studies and potential serious

infection the longer she took

m

with my kids," Canter said. "It is extremely frustrating,

37, a mother of two who lives near Cape Girardeau, Mssouri. Earlier this year, despite doing well, Canterhad cause she was at higher risk of getting a dangerous brain

iI I

stead of declining so much, that I could still be working and having a much more active life, going out with my friends and doing more stuff

it. She was hoping to switch to Lemtrada but had to opt for another drug. Canter deteriorated, and

now needs a walker or scoot-

rejected the drug, despite dramatic improvements in study subjects, because side effects. In June, the FDA

allowed drug manufacturer Genzyme to resubmit its application with additional

analysis of research data and information addressing the concerns.

er to get around, and she can

See MS/D4

Severeepilepsycontrolled through 'smart' device

1 Il

By Cheryl Powell Ahron (Ohio)Beacon Journal

AKRON, Ohio — After

marking Hanukkah last

rtiaaay'"lN ll

month, Laura Hood is cele-

' ilI

brating what she considers herpersonalmiracle.

By Matt KrupnickeNew York Times News Service

utside of the hotel minibar, few places

a cy

suffered from debilitating seizures ar,

Hood,47, is one of the first people in the nation to get a new device implanted

a.

in her brain that monitors

But that is starting to change.

storm.

airports across the country,

gKDVV ",

bringing fresh, local produce, meat

etv M Ik~

and other goods to restaurants led by well-known

Healthy packaged food choices are offered from producers at New York Minute inside Kennedy International Airport.

chefs and shops with local culinary specialties.

erage and restaurant development for HMSHost, which

forsigns ofseizuresand sends impulses directly to the source to quiet the

E A c ay

The farm-to-table movement has come to

vice president for adult bev-

surgery that has quieted years of seizures.

control.

stale, prewrapped sandwich and fast food burger.

runs concessions at more than 100 airports. "Airports want

Laura Hood andher husband,

erfulmix of medications couldn't

unhealthy fare than airports, home of the

"It's the same kind of renais-

Michael Chritton /Akron (Ohio) Beacon Journal

MEDICINE that a pow- Michael, talk about the brain

y

for business travelers have had more

sancethatw e'reseeing sheetside," said Frank Sickelsmith,

rl!I//

Since 2007, Hood had

Before undergoing brain surgery at the Cleveland Clinic in April, Hood suffered seizure activity as often as five times a day. Now she experiences two or three auras a month

tional Airport in New Jersey

ment, which is based in New

is bringing in several leading chefs, including Benoit's Alain

York City, chefs at Newark willbe required to shop at

that end before a full seizure begins. "I feel it coming on very faintly, and then it stops," she said.

Ducasse, to revamp Terminal

green markets three times

The NeuroPace RNS

C. As at other airport restaurants runby OTG Manage-

weekly from springto fall.

iconic brands from the local market. More often now, that's farm-to-table." Newark Liberty Interna-

System is a "smart device"

that monitors the brain's activ-

ity, interprets the signals and provides stimulation when needed for patients' intractable seizures.

The NeuroPace RNS is an improvementover othersystems that provide stimulation

without regard to the individual's unique brain activity, said Dr. Dileep Nair, section head

of adult epilepsy at the Cleveland Clinic and an investigator in the trial for the device.

"We teach the device to look for the specific pattern that pa-

ing anywhere else." SeeEpilepsy/D4

tient has that's associated with

a seizure," Nair said. "We try to stop that activity from mov-

SeeAir ports/D5 PAIDADVERTISEMENT

entuc in ssicest, oorest are rawnto eat care an By Abby Goodnough

the beneficiaries.Sheearns

New York Times News Service

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jobs are multiplying and far sa i d Mayhew, 38. "They endWilliamDeShazer/TheNew YorkTimes more Kentuckians are getting ed up having to pull three David Elson, 61, who signed up for health insurance in February preventive checkups and

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D2 THE BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 1, 2015

MoNEY Kentucky

more modest private enroll-

into University of L ouisville

ment here is partly due to the Continued from D1 Kentucky's relative povertyBut as the firstyear of cover- more uninsured people here age ends, potential obstacles to were eligible for Medicaid than the law'ssuccess are also comfor subsidized private covering into sharp relief here. Rel- age when the law took effect, atively few people have signed according to the Kaiser Family up for private health plans of- Foundation — national polls fered through the state's new have found that many people online marketplace, Kynect. simply consider the exchange People earning between 138 plans unaffordable, even with and 400 percent of the poverty subsidies. "We've got a lot of work to level — between about $16,000 and $47,000 for a single per- do in that area," said Bill Wagson — can get subsidies to help ner, the executive director of with the cost. Family Health Centers, a netEven with that i ncentive, work of

Hospital, a safety net hospital that treats the city's uninsured. There, he was told some-

thing he had been dreading: his kidney function had dropped to less than 10 percent

of the normal level, and he had to start dialysis to save his life. That would mean being hooked up to a machine four hours a day, three days a week, to clear the toxins and extra

fluid from his body. The bad news came with a

silver lining: because he needed dialysis to survive, he was now eligible for Medicare, the government insurance program normally reserved for people 65 and older. The coverage would begin Jan. 1 and would pay 80 percent of his

c o mmunity clinics

only about 76,000 Kentucki- here thathelped 7,000 people ans signed up for these plans enroll in Medicaid this year in 2014 and have renewed the but only 700 in private plans. coverage for next year. Since The Affordable Care Acthas the enrollment period for 2015 rapidly changed the fortunes began Nov. 15, an additional of Family Health Centers. Last 9,000 people have selected ex- year, half of its 40,000 patients change plans. Before the new were uninsured; the proporcoverage options took effect, tion has dropped to 19 percent. state officials estimated that An infusion of Medicaid revesome 340,000 uninsured Ken- nue has helped the organizatuckians could get private in- tion close an operating deficit, surance through the exchange. hire four new doctors and start David Elson signed up for pri- increasing salaries. Construc-

William Deshazer/The New York Times

year, nuzzies her1-year-old daughter, Caramia, as they andTeri Eisenmenger, Mayhew's mother, view Christmas decorations in downtown Louisville, Kentucky. trying to work up the nerve to

extract it herself. "It's s ad in

t h e re," s h e

vate healthinsurance in Febru-

tion is almost finished on a

warned the hygienist at her ap-

ary,but then decided he could not afford the $350 monthly premium for a plan that inciuded his doctors. He never paid his bill and lost his coverage. His poor health got worse, and in October, he landed in the hospital with end-stage kidney disease. "The president gets up there and says, 'We've got to get affordable health care for our people,'" said Elson, 61. "It's

huge new downtown ciinic, financed largely by $5 million

pointment this month. A count of her teeth confirmed it.

not."

Kentucky's experience so far underscoressome of the challenges the law faces nationally. Nearly 400,000 people here — 9 percent of the population — joined the Medicaid

rolls after Gov. Steven Beshear, a Democrat, expanded the federal-state program for the

poorovertheobjectionsofRepublicans in the increasingly conservative state. Critics ar-

gue that this rapid growth in the Medicaid enrollment will

prove too much of a burden on federal and, eventually, state budgets. At the same time, support-

ers say the private insurance exchanges will need robust business, including young and healthy customers that help balance the cost of sicker ones, to thrive. And while the

in Affordable Care Act funds. The network will soon start

advertising the new location on bus shelters and billboards,

adding to a marketing blitz by hospitals and Medicaid plans

"She's missing 1, she has 2, missing 3, missing 4," the hygienist ticked off. "She's missing 17. She has 18 through 29. Then she's missing 30, 31 and 32

pregnancy — but she stopped much to work." taking them when the coverHe had surgery last winter age ended. Now she is back on to stop bleeding at the back of them, and feeling good. his eyes, a complication of dia"That's been a big thing for betes, and the ophthalmologist, me," she said. Dr. Inder Singal, was pleased Andyet. with the result. But when Elson "I don'tlove Obamacare," told him he was still uninsured she said. "There are things in because the premiums and deit that scare me and that I don't ductible had proved too high, agree with." Singal shook his head.

Newly motivated, she is eaery neighborhood. ger for a partial denture to reAt the same time, morale place some of her missing mohas flagged this year among lars and help her chew. Medexhausted, ov e r whelmed icaiddoes not cover dentures, doctors and nurses at Family so she is hoping her tax return Health Centers, some of whom next spring will cover the cost, have left. which her dentist said could reach $750. After delays, care She is a deeply religious Mayhew, an even-keeled Christian, with a tightly knit single mother of four, was un- family that prays together insured for most of her adult even atfast-food restaurants life until this year. She has got- and has suffered one health ten checkups at Family Health crisis after the next. Her mothCenters, where she has been er was run over by a car and a patient since childhood, but spent six months in hospitals specialty and dental care were and r e habilitation c e nters. beyond her reach until now. Then her father got cancer "I am fairly healthy and and died within months. And blessed," she said from her of- this year, Mayhew's cherished fice at a breast-feeding supply grandmother died of complicastore, where, she noted wry- tionsfrom a stroke.Her grief, ly, she files health insurance she said, has been hard to bear. claims. "My main issues are A nurse practitioner at Fammy teeth." ily Health Centers had preOne Thanksgiving, she re- scribedanti-depressants after membered, an infected tooth Mayhew had her last baby in hurt so badly that she lay 2013 — at the time, she had moaning on her couch all day, temporary Medicaid for her

Asilver lining For Elson, with advanced

diabetes, chronic high blood pressure and an income too

high for Medicaid but too low to pay all his bills, the Afford-

TODAY AMERICANRED CROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required; call for appointment; 10 a.m.-3 p.m.; Bend Blood Donation Center, 815 SWBond St., Suite110; www.redcrossblood. org or 800-RED-CROSS.

FRIDAY AMERICANRED CROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required; call for appointment; 9 a.m.-2:30p.m.;Bend Blood Donation Center, 815 SWBond St., Suite110; www.redcrossblood. org or 800-RED-CROSS. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required; call for appointment; 10:30 a.m.4 p.m.; Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Lane;

www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. AMERICANRED CROSS BLOOD

MONDAY AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required; call for appointment; 1-6 p.m.; Sisters Community Hall, 301 S. Elm St.; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required; call for appointment; 1-6:30 p.m.; Bend Blood Donation Center, 815 SWBond St., Suite 110; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS.

DRIVE:Identification required; call for appointment; 9 a.m.-2:30 p.m.; St. Charles Madras, 470 NE A St.; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required; call for appointment; 11 a.m.4:30 p.m.; Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 450 SW Rimrock Way, Redmond;

AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD

With the help of a Fami-

RUNNINGPERFORMANCE BIOMECHANICSCLASS: Designed by Jay Dicharry and taught by Jen Luebke; for runners 15 to 105, beginners and elites; Level1, 6:30 p.m.; Level 2, 5:30 p.m.; $96 for eight weeks;; Rebound Physical Therapy andBiomechanicsLab,1160 SW Simpson Ave., Ste. 200, Bend; info© REPoregon.com or 541-419-8208. CERTIFIEDPERSONAL TRAINER

800-RED-CROSS. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required; call for appointment; 10 a.m.3 p.m.;Bend Blood Donation Center, 815 SW Bond St., Suite 110; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. COFFEE 8CONNECTION: Meet other people whose lives have been affected by cancer; free; 12:30 p.m.; St. Charles Cancer Center, 2100 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend; www.stcharlescancer.org or 541-706-3754.

www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required; call for appointment; 12:305:30p.m.;Bend Blood Donation Center, 815 SW Bond St., Suite 110; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS.

AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required; call

•Dan Schuettehasbeenelected as chairman of the St. Charles Health System board of directors. Schuette joined the board in 2007after serving on the St. Charles' Planning and Development committee. Schuette served as thechairman of the Governance Committeeandasa member of the Compensation, Audit, Finance, Investment andStrategic Planning committees. • Dennis Dempsey,Ph.D., has been elected as vice chairman of the St.

Charles Health System board of directors. Dempseyjoined the board in 2001 and is thesuperintendent of schools for the Catholic Dioceseof Baker, and theeducational leadership supervisor for the University of Oregon In Central andEastern Oregon. Dempseyservedasthechairman of the Patient Safety andQuality Committee andCompensation Committee, and as amember of Mission Effectiveness andGovernance committees.

mobile

about it yet. He has settled into a new

routine, waking at 4:30 a.m. to get to the dialysis clinic by 5 and finish his treatment in

chairs. "I don't think there's a per-

son in here that really wants to do it," he said as he arrived

at the dialysis clinic one morning. "But if the alternative is being 6 feet under, or doing it, I'm doing it." He has lost 70 pounds of water weight and appears re-energized. He has become more careful about what he eats, he said, and his blood sugars have dropped. He can sleep soundly again, with no pain waking him overnight. Hooked upto the machine one recent morning, Elson pulled his new Medicare card out of his shirt pocket and held

it to the light before carefully tucking it back inside. "I finally got insurance," he said. "What a way to get it." Then he drifted into sleep.

How to submit Events:Email eventinformation to healthevents©bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit anEvent" at bendbulletin.com. Allow at least 10 days before thedesIred date of publication. Ongoing class listings must beupdatedmonthly and will appear online at bendbulletin.com/healthclasses. Contact: 541-383-0358. Announcements:Email information about local people or organizatIons involved in health issues to healthevents©bend bulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358.

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THURSDAY, JANUARY 1, 2015 • T HE BULLETIN D 3

sin socia me iatos ot istress rovesris By Natasha Singer ~New York Times News Service

posts of the original group high-profile people can face of 171 depressed volunteers. the same problems and difIts accuracy in predicting de- ficulties as regular people,

he Samaritans, a well-known suicideprevention group in Britain, recently introduced a free web app that would alert users whenever someone they followed on Twitter posted worrisome phrases like "tired of being

health conditions. The experience of the Samaritans highlights the perils involved.

nerable @SamaritansRadar," a Briton named Sarah Brown

Social media posts offer

sible mental health disorders

Amber Fouts/The New York Times

M unmun De Choudhuryhas been studying mental health and

social media, and was previously a member of the Microsoft Research team studying depression, In Atlanta. The Ill-fated introduction In Britain of an app to detect predictors of suicide shows what

may happen when social media posts are scrutinized for cues about a person's mental health. "That doesn't mean we shouldn't be doing this research to try to create in-time interventions," said Choudhury.

a vast array of information amounts to medical quackery. — things as diverse as clues For one thing, said Dr. Allen about the prevalence of flu,

Frances, a psychiatrist who is

attitudes toward smoking and a professoremeritus at Duke patterns of prescription drug University School of Mediabuse. Academic r esearch-

cine, crude predictive health

ers, often in partnership with algorithms would be likely social media platforms, have to mistake someone's articumined this data in the hopes of

lation of distress for clinical

gaining more timely insights depression, unfairly labeling into population-scale health swaths of people as having trends. The N ational I nstitutes of Health, for instance,

mental health disorders.

recently committed more than $11 million to support studies into using sites like Twitter and Facebook to better under-

if consumers feltfree to use

stand, prevent and treat sub-

For another thing, he said,

opment, said in a statement at

plement to more traditional

s pokeswoman fo r

research methods.

maritans, said the group was consulting with a variety of

the Sa-

ed that social media analy-

an interview, saying that the

sis might also eventually be used to identify patterns of

group felt it was inappropriate to comment publicly during

post-traumatic stress disorder immediately after events like tsunamis or terrorist attacks. "You can see the prospect of

the review process.

watching a news story break and using these tools to map the pulse of society," he said. But researchers generally agreed that it was premature

safety questions it raised by offering the public easy access to an unproven diagnostic

The Samaritans group was clearly unprepared to address the fundamental fairness and

tool.

individuals. "People always ask, 'Can you predict who is going to try to commit suicide'?'" said Dredze, the Johns Hopkins

"If someone tweets, 'I'm going to kill myself,' you can't just jump in," said Christophe Giraud-Carrier, a computer scientist at Brigham Young University who studies the role of social media in health

researcher. "I think that's way

surveillance. "There are all

to apply such nascent tools to

beyond what anyone can do."

have sophisticated employment consultants who will do the vetting on people's psychiatric states, derived from some cockamamie algorithm,

indicated they had moderate tosevere depression, the researchersanalyzed all of

on your 7witter account."

before the onset of their de-

In phone interviews, researchers who study social

pression and compared those

media an d

For volunteers whose scores

their Twitter posts in the year

with a year's worth of posts

m e ntal h e alth from volunteers who were not

disorders said they were pro- depressed. Among other findceeding cautiously — and ings, the researchers reported transparently.

unvalidated diagnostic apps on one another, it could po- Trackinq signs of tentially pave the way for depression insurers and employers to For a study published last use such techniques covertly year, for instance, scientists at as well — with an attendant M icrosoft Research recruited

stance abuse. Facebook and OkCupid, a popular dating site, have also risk o f s t i gmatization and conducted experiments in discrimination. "You would be mislabeling which the companies manipulated content presented to their millions of people," Frances own members to study the im- said. "There would be all sorts pact on their behavior. of negative consequences." Now a handful of research He added, "And then you can

maritans Radar alerts could p r evi- opt out.

"We couldcompute the un-

But translating this popu-

nounced it was reconsidering the notion of consumer apps the outreach program and dis- like Samaritans Radar that abled the app. would let u ntrained people parse the posts of individual A bounty of data friendsand strangers forpos-

7witter posts to appear in Sa-

happiest places in the United outside experts about its app. States," Horvitz said. He add- She declined a request for

Not so quick to judge

lation-level data into health posted on Twitter. A week and predictions and interventions a half after the app's intro- for individuals is fraught. To duction, the Samaritans an- some leading psychiatrists,

the day after the app was introduced, the Samaritans said

measure population-level de- the time. pressionpatterns — as a comSusan Golaszewski, a

could identify and prey on the an assistant research proemotionally vulnerable — the fessor of computer science very people the app was creat- at Johns Hopkins University ed to protect. who studies social media and "A tool that 'lets you know health. "You can expect to see when your friends need sup- tremendous results." your stalking victim is vul-

people who did not want their

using social media as a tool to

R a d ar, research," said Mark Dredze,

port' also lets you know when

map of depression across the United States. Their results

their Twitter followers." But

"We need to use tools such ously published by the Centersfor Disease Control and as Samaritans Radar to enPrevention. courage people to look out for Dr. Eric Horvitz, the direc- one another online, helping tor ofthe MicrosoftResearch them to reach out and offer lab at Redmond, Washing- support," Joe Ferns, the Saton, said his group's studies maritans executive director demonstrated the potential for of poli cy,research and devel-

"Social media and discustification to those being monitored. But just about as quick- sion websites are producing ly, the group faced an outcry data sources that are revolufrom people who said the app, tionizing behavioral health called S a maritans

they wouldn't be appreciative of some extra support from

depression patterns

A week after the app was and nonprofit groups are anintroduced on i t s w e b site, alyzing social media postings more than 4,000 people had with the aim of detecting and activated it, the Samaritans predicting patterns in mental Twitter accounts, with no no-

so there is no reason to think

users is unknown. In a related study, the researchersapplied their prediction system to millions of Twitter posts to generate a partly mirrored geographic

alone" or "hate myself."

said, and those users were following nearly 1.9 million

pression in other social media

that the depressed volunteers tended to be less socially ac-

tive and to post messages that were more negative and more

concerned about health and relationships than the nonde-

these psychological factors that come into play that may How the app worked push someone over the edge." The Samaritans developed He and other academic the Samaritans Radar app in researchers who have been consultation with experts at grappling with these quesuniversities in Scotland and tions say they are unlikely to Wales;the academic research- be resolved anytime soon. " That doesn't m ean w e ers provided examples of possible suicidal phrases, derived shouldn't be doing this refrom their own studies of so- search to try to create in-time cial media posts. interventions," said Munmun The app sent email alerts De Choudhury, an assistant to users when anyone they

professor in the School of In-

followed posted a potentially teractive Computing at Georworrisome comment. The Sa- gia Tech who studies mental maritans particularly hoped to

health and social media, and

reach people between the ages was previously a member of pressed volunteers. of 18 and 35, a demographic the Microsoft Research team several hundred Twitter usFrom those findings, the that is active on social media studying depression. "But we ers who volunteered to take a researchers developed a clas- and among whom suicide is a have to think very carefully standardscreening testforde- sification algorithm to predict leading cause of death. aboutwho getsaccesstothese pression. The volunteers also whether a person was vulInitially, th e S a m aritans tools and what the boundaragreedto allow the research- nerable to depression. It was suggested in press material ies are for technology used ers one-time access to their about 70 p e rcent accurate that users might monitor ce- to make judgments about personal Twitter accounts. when tested on the Twitter lebrities: " Well-known a n d individuals."

Baltimore hospice helps keep Some heart patients do better workers on 4hejob in Tanzania when the cardiologist is away By Meredith Cohn The Baltimore Sun

BALTIMORE — In the mid2000s, workers at G i lchrist

Hospice Care had raised about

"When we heard they were losing funding, we didn't want the program to fold. It was never really an option."

By Monte Morin Los Angeles Times

Researchers have found that certain high-risk heart

in Tanzania to give their over- — Robin Stocksdale, Gilchrist Hospice Care's grief services manager whelmed center a boost. But

patients stand a b etter chance of survival if they go to a teaching hospital when all the cardiologists have left

when U.S. government aid ran

town.

$5,000 for some counterparts

out in 2009 for many African hospices, the Baltimore area caregivers made a decision. Theywouldstep up fundraising, by selling dolls and brace-

Gilchrist's commitment goes beyond what most partners

diagnosis to death," he said via email from Tanzania. "We will ensure that patients with

provide, according to John Mastrojohn, the group's exec- a life-limiting condition, and utive director and executive their families, can easily aclets and hosting events. And vice president of the National cess a level of high-quality theynowpay theentire$50,000 Hospice and Palliative Care palliative-care service that is annual operatingbudget for the Organization. appropriate to their needs, re"There is a huge unmet need, gardlessofage,care setting or Nkoaranga Lutheran Hospital palliative-care program, which especially in the developing dlagnosls. serves up to 900 terminally world," he said. "In fact, 80 Hundreds of full and partill patients at any time in the percent of the global need for time staff at Gilchrist, an affilimountainous northern part of palliative care is in low- and ate of Greater Baltimore Medithe country where life expec- middle-income countries. A cal Center, are constantly trytancy is no more than 50 years. compounding issue is the treat- ing to fill the hospice's needs. "We were so moved by what ment of pain... These countries, With help from a Rotary Club, they do with so little," said Rob- which represent 83 percent of they bought a special ambuin Stocksdale, Gilchrist's grief the world's population, utilized lance, a Toyota Land Cruiser services manager, who also a mere 8 percent of total mor- big enough for a stretcher, able manages the Tanzania hospice phine consumption worldwide." to reach patients in remote arfundraising program. "When Lack of painkillers makes it eas, in the rainy season, miles we heard they were losing a bit tougher for the staff of five from the hospice. funding, we didn't want the and 40 volunteers at NkoaranThe staff also has paid for program to fold. It was never ga,who primarily servepeople scholarshipsfor a half-dozen really an option." with AIDS, but also those with children whose parents died of The grass-roots efforts at heartdisease,other diseases AIDS and for playground items Gilchrist are part of a larger and problems associated with at the hospital, as well as Bavolunteer attempt to provide aging, said Nkoaranga's pallia- kari's salary. services to the dying in Africa, tive-care doctor, Bartholomew Now the workers are raisw herepainkillersarerare,and Bakari. Most patients and their ing money to build the hospice the idea of palliative care is still families are glad for the aid, its own wing at the hospital to unheard of in many regions, ac- which indudes some medical care for patients whose pain is cordingto care organizations. care,emotional support, coun- uncontrolled, as well as to hold Gilchrist hooked up with seling and bereavement ser- events and training for voltheir program through Global vicesandevenprayer. unteers and medical trainees Partners in Care, which was With Gilchrist's help, the pro- from other hospitals. created in 1999 during the gram has enhanced "respect Stocksdale said they would AIDS pandemic and now links for health and life" and reduced continue to sell items, encour81 U.S. hospice and hospital "community a n x iety a b out age payroll deductions and organizations in 30 states with death," Bakari said. hold events to raise money for "Our vision for the future Nkoaranga. groups in 13 countries in Africa "We have a common cause," serving 60,000patients. is that palliative care will be a There are few other funding gradual and natural increas- she said. "We'll do this as long sources for such centers, and ing component of care from as there is a need."

Also, researchers did not find the same disparity in survival rates at nonteaching hospitals.

The answer, however, might p othesized incorrectly t h at have to do with the reluctance mortality rates would rise on non-cardiologist doctors have meeting dates and that this in performing aggressiveor rise would be particularly invasive procedures in the ab- noticeable at teaching hospisence of a heart specialist. tals, where cardiologists were

Though heart doctors In addition to the rise in surhave joked that the safest vival rates, researchers found place to suffer a heart attack

that teaching hospitals per-

would be in a city hosting a formed 7percent fewer angionational cardiology meet- plasties on high-risk myocaring, researchers at Harvard dial infarction patients during Medical School, the Univer- convention dates. sity of Southern California Researchers wrote t h at and the Rand Corp. were when treating high-risk heart among a group that found patients, the answer may be the exact opposite tobe true. that"lessism ore." "One explanation for these In research published this week in JAMA Inter- findings is that the intensity nal Medicine, study authors of care provided during meetfound that the survival rate ing dates is lower and that for forhigh-risk cardiac arrest high-risk patients with cardiopatients rose 10 p ercent when they were admitted

to a major teaching hospital on days that a national

cardiology meeting was in session. "That's a tremendous reduction in mortality, better

than most of the medical interventions that exist to treat

these conditions," said lead study author Dr. Anupam Jena, who teaches health

care policy and medicine at HarvardMedicalSchool. High-risk heart patients

are typically older people with pre-existing medical conditions. They may be overweight and smoke, or suffer from diabetes or high blood pressure, among other problems. It remains undear exactly why this subset of patients

experienced substantially lower mortality rates while low-risk patients did not.

meetingdays, 69 percent on non-meeting days. The researchers had hy-

more likely to attend national

meetings. In an accompanying note, journal editor and University

of California, San Francisco cardiologist Dr. Rita Redberg said it was a relief to know that

patient outcomes do not suffer when cardiologists were away at meetings. However, it was still unclear

how the findings should be interpreted.

"One possibility is that more interventions in high-risk patients with heart failure and

cardiac arrest leads to high of this care may unexpectedly mortality," Redberg wrote. "Indeed, some high-risk inoutweigh the benefits," authors wrote. terventions, such as balloon The study, published Mon- pumps or ventricular assist day,examined the 30-day mor- devices, are being used in poptality rate for 8,570 Medicare ulations in which they are not beneficiaries who were hospi- shown to improve outcomes, talized for acute myocardial and recent reports have raised infarction, heart failure or car- concerns about high rates of diac arrest on national cardiol- fatal complications from pump ogy meeting dates from 2002 to thrombosis and other prob2011. lems," Redberg wrote. Those rates were then comThe authors of the study said pared to 57,471 similar patients theirs was not the first to find who w er e a d m itted t h r ee an unexpected connection beweeksbefore and after meeting tween mortality rates and the dates. absence of physicians. "Our results echo paraThe results were the exact opposite of what researchers doxical findings documented had anticipated. during a labor strike by Israeli Only 17 percent of high-risk physicians in 2000, in which heart failure patients died on hundreds of thousands of outmeeting dates, but almost 25 patient visits and elective surgipercent died on non-meeting cal procedures were canceled, dates. The gap was even wid- but by many accounts mortalier forhigh-risk cardiac arrest ty rates dramatically fell during patients: 59 percent died on theyear," authors wrote. vascular disease, the harms


D4

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 1, 2015

MEDjctNE

eac er iscoversnew IS oeasin c ronic ac ain By Harry Jackson St. Louis Post-Dispatch

ST. LOUIS — Carly Rich-

meyer, 32, can move again

qualified for it. The study is run out of the program for physical therapy at the university.

everything."

they're told — easier said than orthopedic surgeon had told done. The study takes people her, that a disk had been worn up to 60 years old. Bad habits down to half its depth. "The could have been around for twist wore down my disk, more thanhalfa century. which caused the pain," she Researchers are f i nding sard. new things as well as putting Next, a p hysical thera- older knowledge into context. pist watched her do houseFor example, "Activity i s hold tasks. "Movements that necessary," Van Dillen said. seemednormal mayhave been Change the load on your back contributing to my pain," she about every half hour. "If said. "Taking dishes from the you're standing, sit," she said. dishwasher, I'd plant my feet "If you're sitting, stand and and twist as I removed or re- move around. Change posiplaced dishes. tions. You're changing how "When I was sleeping in your weight is distributed on bed, all night long my torso the spine." was twisting." Staying in one position can Thephysicaltherapists inthe "change the tissue," she said. program showed her how to So muscles you avoid can besleep on her side with a pillow come atrophied, and lower exbetween her knees and how to tremities can lose strength. sit and stand without using othAnother finding is that bed er musdes to compensate for rest is not good for you when it the pain in her lower back. comes to back pain. "There are "Once I knew theproblem, a lot of physical issues associthe cause, I could adapt," Rich- ated with bed rest, and they're meyer said. Still, she had to not good," Van Dillen said. Richmeyer says she's still break some old habits. "Once you move a certain way for 30 adapting. "The hardest thing years, you just get used to it." to adapt to was the sleeping," She experienced some sore- she said. "I was so used to ness in the new muscles she sleeping in that twisted posiwas strengthening. "It was like tion that my body didn't want going to the gym and exercis- to sleep any other way." ing after being off a while," she She has started exercising sard. again, but slowly, with yoga

Linda Van Dillen, professor of physical therapy and orthoback to exercising, standing pedic surgery, said the study more than she sits and making is aimed at finding ways to plans for her June wedding. relieve lower back pain that Richmeyer as recently as six has no apparent cause, which months ago had debilitating includes the vast majority of lower backpain, a common such complaints. The study affliction. About 80 percent does not include people with of Americans will have some back pain caused by injury degree ofnon-specifi c lower and illness, she said. back pain over the course of The study approaches theratheir lives. py in two ways: She said she started noticing Strength and flexibility folower back pain around age cuses on building muscles that 25. "I've always been really have been overloaded when active, fitness oriented; when people compensate for pain. I would do certain things, it Motor skills therapy tarwould hurt, even day-to-day gets how people move around things," she said. in ways that can cause lower She had difficulty exercis- back pain. "Then we show ing, wrestling with her pets how to do that differently," Van or even teaching her middle Dillen said. school classesat Holy Cross Richmeyer is in the motor Academy in Webster Groves, skills group. "At my first apMissouri. pointment, they told me I was "I'd started teaching sitting twisting my pelvis, my lower down," she said. Her middle back constantly," Richmeyer school students pushed her said. "I used to sit on one leg a round her classroom in a and that would tilt my pelvis; chair. I was crossing my legs too In July 2013, she returned much, when I did certain tasks, from a vac a t io n a l m o st I'd twist because it was more bedridden. comfortable." She went to a chiropracHer therapists learned that tor who said her right leg was by placing adhesive sensors Three sessions after she shorter than her left. "I went over her pelvis, back and up- started, the back pain had through all of this, physical per body. Then she did simple eased enough that she was gettherapy and adjustment and movements. The sensors pro- ting back to the self she'd lost insoles for my shoes, and I still duced a three-dimensional pic- seven years ago. had back pain. ture on a computer screen. Six sessions into it, "I was "I was very depressed. I'm "They didn't d etermine kind of excited," she said. "I a fitness-oriented person, and which came first, the pain or asked the therapist when I for me not to be able to work (the effect from) the twisting," could start exercising again; out... I couldn't do anything. Richmeyer said. "But every- she said I could do anything I In March, she saw a televi- thing I was doing was caus- want that didn't cause pain." sion spot about a Washington ing a twist, drawing in my Van Dillen said the study University study aimed at re- abs, bending over, sitting at so far is finding a few things lieving lower back pain and my desk reaching for things, they expected. Either method without her back torturing her to be still. More than that, she's

works if the person does what

T hat explained what a n

and Pilates. But even with those she must be aware of moves that require twisting.

She's confident the bad old days are behind her. "I would go through sixibuprofen a day, just to deal with the pain." By the fifth week of the pro-

gram she wasn't taking any. She has half ayear left inthe study, she said. And if some bad habits slip back in, she said: "I know what to do and who to call."

Acase ortreatin ot min an 0 y By Stacey Burling The Philadelphia 1nquirer

New research from Rutgers

University lends more support to the idea that integrating treatment of mind and body

mate how much it would cost to give patients enough care to prevent hospitalizations. Patients with inadequately

which also has given $7 million to support the formation of seven ACOs, believes that care will improve when primatreated mental-health and sub- ry careand behavioralhealth stance-abuseproblems may providers work closely togethbe less likely to follow doctors' er. Nicholson is funding pilot instructions about health con- programs in health centers in

could lead to better — and cheaper — medical care. Sujoy Chakravarty, a health ditions or to take medications economist with the Rutgers appropriately. Addictions and Center for State Health Policy, medications for serious menfound that people who were tal illness also can make paoften hospitalized or whose tients more vulnerable to some hospitalizations pro bably physical problems. could have been prevented Chakravarty's report is one with good primary care were in aseries at Rutgers funded disproportionately likely to by a $300,000 grant from the have mental-health or s u b- Nicholson Foundation. The stance-abuse problems. goal is to identify baseline He concluded that better levelsof care,gaps in service coordination of primary care and potential cost savings in and behavioral health care New Jersey communities eli— for example, putting both gible to participate in Medickinds of care providers at aid Accountable Care Orgathe same office or near each nizations, said Rachel Cahill, other, and encouraging col- the foundation's director of laboration — might increase health-careimprovement and the odds that health problems transformation. would be treated appropriately In Accountable Care Orgabefore becoming emergencies. nizations, hospitals, doctors C hakravarty s a i d th a t and other providers cooperwould likely improve the over- ate to improve efficiency and all quality of care patients quality of care. They share receive, and could reduce ex- financial rewards when there cessive hospital use, which is are overall cost savings. expensive. He could not estiCahill said her foundation,

MS Continued from 01 Doctors, patients and advocates wrote letters to the FDA

and gathered nearly 10,000 signatures on petitions, arguing that some patients are willing to face risks for a better quality of life. Lemtrada is generall y reserved for patients who have not responded well to two or more other treatments.

"We are pleased that the voices of the MS community have been recognized, and that people with relapsing MS will have access to a new, needed treatment option," said

Dr. Timothy Coetzee, chief of advocacy at the National MS Society.

Multiple sclerosis is a disabling disease in which the

Trenton and Lakewood that allow doctors and counselors

to assess patients together or to use an online version of cognitive behavioral therapy developed by Yale University professorsfor their company, Cobalt Therapeutics. The initiatives are too new, she said, to show if such interventions can reduce hospital

izations — at least four hospital stays during the study's time period — had one or

more behavioral-health diagnoses, compared with only 32 percent of patients with fewer

stays. "We were surprised by how high it was," he said. He said the difference was not unique to Medicaid, which serves low-income people. The Rutgers team also looked at hospitalizations for such chronic conditions as

diabetes or heart failure that could havebeen avoided with proper outpatient care. Forty

percent of such hospitaliza-

use. tions were associated with The Rutgers report focused behavioral-health problems, on 13 low-income communi- compared to 35percent for ties in New Jersey, but also ex- h ospitalizations t ha t c o u l d amined statewide data. In the not be avoided. The gap was 13 regions, it analyzed 931,179 greater for Medicaid patients: inpatient hospitalizations and 47.9 percent vs. 34.2 percent. 2.9 million emergency departAmong patients who visited ment visits from 2008 through the emergency department six 2011. It found that $953 million

or more times, 56 percent had

behavioral-health diagnoses, compared to 18.1 percent of

in inpatient and emergency cost was associated with pa- those who visited less often. tients with behavioral-health Surprisingly, though, people diagnoses. with behavioral-health probSeventy-five percent of pa- lems were less likely to make tients with frequent hospital- "avoidable" emergency visits.

of those living with MS." A comprehensive risk evaluA study of nearly 1,400 pa- ation and mitigation strategy predictable symptoms range tients with progressive forms will be instituted in order to from numbness and tingling of the disease showed that help detect and manage the to blindness and paralysis. those taking Lemtrada had serious risks identified with About 2.3 m illion people nearly 50 percent fewer new treatment." worldwide have MS, including attacks than those taking the The drug must include a 400,000 in the U.S. current best medication. New warning about the risk of seDamage from multiple scle- brain lesions also significant- rious, sometimes fatal autoimrosis varies by patient, and pa- ly reduced. The drug has mune conditions as well as setients also respond differently been approved in more than rious, life-threatening infusion to medication. 40 countries, including Can- reactions. The warning also "Many of our patients are ada, Australia and European notes Lemtrada may increase not responding to our cur- nations. the risk of malignancies, in"Today's approval is the cluding thyroid cancer and rent therapies," said Dr. Barry Singer, director of the MS Cen- culmination of more than a melanoma. The drug will be ter for Innovations in Care at decade of work by Genzyme distributed through a restrictMissouri Baptist Hospital. He to develop Lemtrada," CEO ed program to ensure that it is was involved in clinical studies D avid M e eker s a i d a f t e r given only by certified healthof the drug and advocated for the drug was approved last care facilities and that patients the FDA to change its mind. month. "Lemtrada demon- are followed closely. "Based on our experience as strated superior efficacy over Harold Johnson, 44, of investigators," Singer said, "we Rebif on annualized relapse Swansea, Illinois, was aware saw the tremendous impact rates in the two studies which of the risks when he agreed that Lemtrada has on the lives were the basis for approval. six years ago to participate in immune system attacks the central nervous system. Un-

Michael Chritton/Akron (Ohio) Beacon Journal

Laura Hood lights the menorah with her husband, Michael, mother Elaine Williamson and family friend MIcki Wise in

FaIrlawn, Ohio. Some are calling her seizure-reducing braIn surgery a Hanukkah miracle.

Epilepsy

much," she said.

Continued from 01 M ore than

2 mi l l i o n

Americans have epilepsy, a neurological condition with unpredictable seizures, or sudden surges of electrical activity in the

Hood has relied on her husband, mother and longtime family friend Micki Wi se of Akron to take her to and from appointments and other places. When her doctors at the Cleveland Clinic said a new device might help her, she and her family were eager to try it.

brain, according to the Epilepsy Foundation. The majority of people She became the first patient can control their epilep- at the hospital to get the Neusy with medications, Nair roPace RNS after it earned said. But for about 30 per- Food and Drug Administracent of patients, anti-sei- tion approval. "I was glad there was an zure drugs alone aren't effective. option," Hood said. "In this group, the opThe NeuroPace RNS can tions really have been to be offeredonly at advanced see if they are epilepsy sur- epilepsy centers, such as the gery candidates," he said. C leveland Clinic, t hat c a n But resecting (or cut- conduct invasive brain testing ting out) the portion of the in which electrodes temporarbrain where the seizures ily are implanted in the brain originate isn't always pos- to pinpoint seizure activity. "There's a whole process sible, particularly if the region is vital for movement that leads up to seeing if a or speech or if multiple patient is even a candidate," parts of the brain are in- Nair said. volved, Nair said. The device consists of a For Hood, her seizures stimulator implanted in the began about six months s kull under th e scalp and after she and her husband, leads embedded in the brain. Michael, got married at a Up to two focal points for seilocal temple, where they zure activity can be targeted. met. She was a Hebrew A wand is held against the t eacher, and h e w a s a scalp to transfer data wirebuilding manager. lessly from th e N euroPace While in the hospital RNS to a computer so it can after her first seizure, she be analyzed by doctors and struggled to remember re- adjusted as needed. A specent events and important cialized magnet also can be people in her life, even her waved by the head to "mark" husband. in the data when the patient "Who is that nice man?" experiences seizure activity. she asked he r

m o t her,

The neurostimulator costs

Elaine Williamson.

about $37,000, not including Over the next several the surgery and necessary years, medications failed pre-testing, according to a to control her seizures, in- NeuroPace s p okesperson. cluding a major episode Most major i nsurers, inthat caused her to go into cluding Medicare, cover the cardiac failure. device. Every day, she expeThe battery lasts about rienced auras, a strange

three years before it must be

feeling "like a very, very horrific dream you're having," she said. "You can feel it coming on your body." Epilepsy surgery to remove the portion of her

replaced. In a clinical study, 55 per-

brain where the seizures

started wasn't an option because that region is responsible for her memory. "If they removed a portion, then she would have no short-term memory at

all," her husband said. Hood quit her job in sales, gave up d r iving and began staying close to home for fear of having a seizure or frightening aura. "I miss working so

cent of patients with the Neu-

roPace RNS System had their seizure frequency reduced by 50 percent or more over a

two-year period after getting the device, Nair said. " We were able t o

o f f er

something for patients who have a very devastating epilepsy who had no other options," he said. "This is an example of a new generation of devices."

H ood's h u sband s a i d they're hopeful her doctors soon can wean her off some

of her medicines, which make her groggy all the time. "It's a real-life miracle," Wise said.

studies of Lemtrada. The drug — which is given intravenously once a year over five days the first year and three days the next — changed his life. "I rolled the dice on myself because I had to. I had to do something," Johnson said. "I

and work full time as a com-

wanted to live life, the rest of it

Lemtrada infusion late next

I had left, with some quality in

month at M i ssouri B aptist o nce the certification is i n

there." The medication he was in-

jecting three times a week made him feel like a zombie. His vision got worse, and he would choke when eating or drinking. He would shake and sometimes needed a cane or walker. His brain scans

puter technician at Southwest-

ern Illinois College. He even got married. "I never thought I would see something this ef-

fective in my lifetime," he said. Canter is on a list with others who plan to get their first

place. Canter is not sure if it will help her regain some of what she lost. She just wants

to do whatever she can to be there for her children. " All yo u w a n t i s h o p e ,

and this gives me hope," she said. "The way the past nine s howed dozens o f ac t i v e m onths havebeen, it scares lesions. me to think what is going to Today, his lesions are inac- happen nine months from

tive. Johnson can ride his bike,

now if I don't try this. That's

play in the park with his dog, what scares me more than build robots in his basement anything."


THURSDAY, JANUARY 1, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

D5

TION

Nutritiona e erts sa it's time to sto earin at By Melissa Dribben• The Philadelphia Inquirer

Stepping back from the fray, Mozaffarian, who has ence was sound and had not

hose seeking the keys to a healthy diet these Decades of studies have produced vast stores of data about the foods and nutrients likely to enhance and extend life. But any attempt to

urated fats as a whole to oth-

and your heart than a plate

er dietary elements does not take into account other im-

of eggs fried in butter. Steak salad is preferable to a plate of

portantfactors,he said.There

hummus and crackers. And a

are, for instance, many differentforms ofsaturated fat,and

snack of full-fat cheese is bet-

some, such as those in dairy

retrieve this vital knowledge lands the public in an

products, might be beneficial in preventing diabetes.

informational crossfire.

A complicatedmatter Which leads to one other

Of all dietary staples, none increase in the consumph as created as much f u r y tion of sugars and refined as fat. How much, and what carbohydrates — has made kind, is good for you? In the Americans significantly less spring, the Annals of Inter- healthy. nal Medicine published a paMany of the same experts per concluding that saturated who established the previous fats do not increase the risk national guidelines are advisof coronary disease. It also ing the public to increase fat found no statistically signif- intake while cutting down on i cant health b enefits f r om breads,cereals,potatoes,rice eating polyunsaturated vege- and especially "low-fat" prodtable oils. ucts such as sodium-infused The study made news. Big, processed meats and salad sexy, controversial news. dressings made with sugar and "Everyone loves the idea salt instead of vegetable oil. that everything you thought Does this mean the road to you knew about nutrition is cardiac health is paved with wrong," said Marion Nestle, bacon-wrapped burgers? Most nutritional authorities

food and a professor in the

say, sorry, no.

department of nutrition, food studies and public health at New York University.

butter is back. Red meat is back," said Dariush Mozaf-

"The message is not that

The paper's authors were cast by some as a sort of nutritional Innocence Project who

f arian, dean of

had finally exonerated butter, lard and marbled meats,

the coauthors of the Annals

T u ft s U n i -

versity's School of Nutrition Scienceand Policy and one of

study. "No one said saturated those dietary fiends long con- fat is good for you, per se, as demned as murderers. a class. No one is saying don't eat fruits and vegetables. That An ongoing debate is an incorrect interpretation The verdict, however, was of the findings." by no means unanimous or W hat the experts are sayclear-cut. ing, Mozaffarian explained, is Statisticians, doctors, nu- that a healthful diet requires a tritional experts, journalists, wide variety of whole, natural biochemists and even some of foods, including many, such the paper's own authors con- as cheese and nuts, that continue to debate what the find- tain some saturated fat. ings mean and what, if any, Nothing about the issue is changes people should make simple, however. in their diets. F or t h e "meta-analysis," They all agree on this M ozaffarian an d h i s c o l much: Food pyramids that leagues pooled results from used to recommend restrict- scores of studies that had ing all fat intake to an ascetic examined the association beminimum were misguided, tween dietary fats and coroand the result — a marked nary disease.

point on which everyone can agree: The biochemistry offats is irredeemably complicated. Like many of h i s c o lleagues, Mozaffarian said he

popular Denver farm-to-table

ter than fruit." T eicholz, whose book i n -

cludes nearly 1,000 footnotes, also argues that so-called healthy polyunsaturated oils produce toxic c ompounds when heated, and she challenges the value of the Mediterranean diet, which most ex-

perts believe is close to ideal. "What's happening now is that nutrition experts are de-

believed that, "as a practical

Thinkstock

Darlush Mozaffarian, dean of Tufts Unlverslty's School of Nutrltlon

Science and Policy, says, "The message is not that butter is back. Red meat Is back. No one said saturated fat Is good for you, per se, as a class. No one is saying don't eat fruits and vegetables. That Is

an incorrect interpretation of the findings." It was not the first paper to drates,saturated fats appear to have a neutral effect on ly, saturated fats appear to be cardiac health and diaberelatively benign. tes, he said. Compared with The "relative" aspect, how- trans fats, sugar and refined ever, is key. carbohydrates,saturated fats When one type of food is almost surely are healthier. removed from a diet, it has to Compared with fats, they are be replaced with something less healthy. else, said Alice Lichtenstein, The Annals study was miswho also serves on the Tufts leading, he wrote, because faculty, helped develop na- it was a "statistical summational nutritional guidelines, ry of published papers and and is a member of the Na- could only look at saturated tional Academy of Sciences. fat vs.other sources of calThe choice of those alterna- ories combined. When this tives makes all the difference, is done, there is no apparent Lichtenstein said. "If you use increase in the risk of heart polyunsaturated fat to replace disease because bad is being saturated fat, there is a clear compared with bad. However, benefit." if saturated fat is compared to polyunsaturated fat (or nonAddressing the public hydrogenated vegetable fat Concerned that the public in general), saturated fat inwould be confused by media creases risk." coverage of the study, in May, Critics have cited other report that, at least statistical-

H arvard University held a teach-in about saturated fats. Walter Willett, chairman

of the department of nutrition at the Harvard School of Pub-

lic Health, was highly critical of the meta-analysis and presented charts and graphs supporting the theme that "healthy" is a relative term. Compared with carbohy-

G unthorp's family h a s supplied celebrity chef Rick Continued from 01 eatery. The airport location, Bayless with pork and poulJetBlue opened a shop, New which opened in 2013, has try for at least 14 years. But York Minute, that sells New brought its share of challenges when Bayless opened his TorYork produce, honey and oth- for Justin Cucci, the chef and tas Frontera at O'Hare four er local products in the ren- owner. years ago, Gunthorp could ovated Terminal 5, and the Between security, logis- not find a way to get his pork airline is considering growing tics and the a i rport's loca- the 170 miles to the airport in potatoes or other crops at John tion — about 20 miles east of time for the brief nightly winF. Kennedy International Air- downtown Denver — getting dow when food deliveries are port in New York. That would arugula and grass-fed beef to allowed. follow the lead of Chicago's the airport has been difficult, With the help of FarmLogix, O'Hare International Airport, Cucci said. an intermediary that connects "We have over 40 purvey- farmers with large businesswhere an aeroponic garden suppliesherbs and vegetables ors, and getting all those pur- es and institutions, Gunthorp to restaurants. veyors out there has been a and othersmall-scale farmers The push toward healthi- challenge," he said. "There are have found a lucrative new er, more interesting airport just some farmers that will not market in airports. Gunthorp, dining has been welcomed by come outthere,so we need to who now provides bacon and travelers. David Danto, a tech- find the next best thing." chorizo to T ortas Frontera, nology consultant who travels Greg Gunthorp, a pig farm- has had to add employees and up to six times a month, once er in LaGrange, Indiana, expe- farmland to keep up with the would have resorted to a Mc- rienced that challenge himself. O'Hare demand. er at Root Down, a branch of a

salad with a f r uit smoothie

been challenged. for lunch is u ltimately less But the comparison of sat- healthy for your waistline

daysfacea predicament.

Airports

c a r bohydrates c a use

obesity, heart disease and study, said the underlying sci- diabetes, she writes, "a beet h is own q u ibble w it h t h e

PHILADELPHIA-

author of numerous books on

Given the ample evidence that

fending themselves against tool for trying to improve the the last 30 years of advice that health of the population, the they've given Americans," she focus on reducing saturated said. Having invested their fat is a failure. The only real careers in the catechism that disagreement is how do you saturated fats are unhealthy, message this to the public'?" she said, the academic "elites" That disagreement appears suffer from "cognitive dissoto be as intractable as it is nance," and dismiss conflictnuanced. ing evidence. The fundamental probIn response, Willett said lem, said Mozaffarian, is that he was perplexed as to why "when people are lowering someone with n o s cientific saturated fat, they're not get- credentials should be taken ting the healthy benefit be- seriously. "She has zero credibility cause they are eating low-fat, low saturated-fat foods that and appears to be only anare just as bad, if not worse." other journalist out to sell a Low-fat processed turkey? book," he wrote in an email. Lean protein, but too much He also noted that, contrary sodium, he said. Baked po- to Teicholz's assertion that he tato chips? "One of the worst

ideas ever," he said. "The only really healthy thing about potato chips is the vegetable oiL" Tuna packed in water? Your body benefits more when the

"has bought into the saturat-

ed-fat-being-evil idea," he published a paper in the British Medical Journal in 1994 "that first showed that saturated fat was not associated with risk of heart disease when com-

fish is packed in oil. Nearly 10 years ago, when pared tothe other sources of journalist Nina Teicholz be- calories in the U.S. diet." gan researching her book In many ways, dietary ad"The Big Fat Surprise; Why vice hasn't changed since the Butter, Meat and Cheese Be- 1950s, said Nestle. "It is still to eat lots of fruits long in a Healthy Diet," she said she planned to "give a and vegetables, don't eat too problems with the meta-anal- tour" of the various kinds of much junkfood and balance ysis, i n cluding c o ncerns fat. As she was finishing the calories. Nobody has ever about the accuracy of data project, Teicholz said, her ed- said this better than Michael provided by test subjects who itor noted that saturated fat Pollan: Eat f ood, mostly were asked to remember what seemed to be the dominant plants, not too much. What they ate. And because some of theme, and so she sharpened makes this all seem comthe studies looked at people

the focus.

with chronic illnesses such as After reviewing the history coronarydisease,the results of nutritional research, Temight be different for healthy icholz came to a provocative people. conclusion.

"They're our biggest bacon

dining. In Chicago, Bayless' airport outpost has proved so times, it's been hard to keep successful that he has develup, to be honest. It's been oped an app that allows travrough, but it's been fun." elerstoorderfood from Tortas With t h e f ar m - to-table Frontera before they arrive at movement breaching previ- O'Hare. ously untouched frontiers like One lesson Bayless said he airports, chefs and farmers had learned from Tortas Fronsay that it can only benefit tera was that the old restausmall producers, who have rant-management t h eories not had much in the way of do not work in an airport. good news in recent decades. Restaurants can provide fresh, The Department of Agricullocal ingredients in airports, ture has predicted a 25 per- he said, but their survival will cent decline in farm income be difficult unless the agriculthis year. tural system changes. "We're just starting to see "There's the boutique farmcustomer by far," he said. "At

plicated is r e search based on single nutrients and vast

fortunes thrown into trying to sell one food product or another."

FarmLogix." Even with the new options, not all travelers are convinced of how much demand there

will ultimately be. Joe Brancatelli, an airport regular who runs the business-travel site

Joe Sent Me, says time spent in airports is a business travel-

er's worst enemy, making dining there less important. "We want better dining op-

tions, clearly, and we'll spend more money than the leisure traveler, but the fact that there's more farm-to-table op-

tions won't change anything

for us," said Brancatelli, a Cold how this farm-to-table move- to-table idea, and it's very ro- Spring, New York, resident. m ent ca n r e v italize r u r al mantic," Bayless said. "But the "My goal in life as a business America," Gunthorp said. only way it really makes sense traveler is not to sample Rick Early evidence shows that is to grow farms that are a bit Bayless at O'Hare. I'd much the farm-to-table concept has bigger, and then we have to rather eat in town at his real

at least revitalized airport

develop these middlemen like place."

Donald's chicken sandwich.

"Now you can even go into an airport bar and pick up a salad or healthy sandwich," said Danto, from

M i l burn,

New Jersey, adding that he prefers not to have heavy or

greasy food before flying. "You get one meal that doesn't agree with you and it shuts you down for the whole trip." Harriet Baskas, an author who runs the blog Stuck at the Airport, said it was important

fortravelerstohavea choice. "I'm old enough to remember when your choice was a hot dog rotating on a spit," she sard.

It's a huge part of the services we offer our patients. Partners In Care has been providing expert care mixed with comfort, compassion

In its annual survey of food at the busiest U.S. airports,

and respect to our community for over

the Physicians Committee for

end-of-life care, choose your community's

Responsible Medicine in November found that 75 percent

35 years. When you need support with leader in hospice care.

offered healthful plant-based

meals. Baltimore-Washington International Airport topped the 23-airport list, while New-

(541) 382-5882 partnersbend.org

ark, La Guardia and Kennedy all made the top 11. Travelers at Denver Inter-

national Airport can now skip tired options in favor of, for ex-

ample, a Colorado lamb burg-

Hospice House I Transitions Palliative Care

Partners HOSPICE


D6

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 1, 2015

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

' m ire'roc son ox,cic esan a TV SPOTLIGHT

"Macbeth." Ruthlessly ambi- the family. tious though he may be, his Unlike Lucius, Cookie is wife, Rhonda (Kaitlin Double- not only fine with Jamal's day), is even more cold-blood- sexuality, she knew he was ed, and the pair will apparent- going to grow up gay from the ly stop at nothing to gain the time he was an infant: "You business throne. different, OK'? It's something It takes a while for Henson Mama knows," she tells him to make her appearance, but in a flashback scene. Now just once she does, she becomes out of prison, she walks into the biggest magnet in cast. Jamal's apartment and snaps, With her claw-like fake nails "For a queen, you sure do keep and exaggerated wigs, Cook- a messy place." ie's a force to be reckoned with, The show is graced by sevboth by the other characters eral very strong performancand the actors who play them. es, especially by Henson and Truth to tell, that's bad news Smollett. The roles of the other for her old "Hustle & Flow" co- two sons aren't as thoroughstar Howard. He's a good ac- ly fleshed out in the first epitor, but doesn't completely pull sode, but once they are, both off the whole street thug to mu- Byers and Gray seem more sical mogul thing, especially in than capable of playing them flashback scenes in which he's well. The show has a terrific supposed to look far young- supporting cast in Gabourey er and, frankly, doesn't. The Sidibe as Lucius' loyal assis-

"Empire" 9 p.m.Wednesdays, Fox By David Wiegand The San Francisco Chronicle

San Francisco — Uneasy lies a head that wears a crown, even if the crown is that of the

ruler of a music-business "Empire." But uneasier still lie the heads of those who would be

emperor in Fox's cliche-ridden but eminently watchable nighttime soap opera premiering Wednesday. Almost nothing about "Empire," created by Lee Daniels ("The Butler"), feels original, but just a few minutes into the premiere episode, you'll stop caring. The show even acknowledges one of its sources when one of the music mogul's three sons asks, "We 'King Lear' now'?" after Dad announces that Jamal, Andre

character is meant to be tough Andy Kropa/The Associated Press

and Hakeem will have to com- Lucius Lyon, a wealthy music mogul played by Terrence Howard, pete with each other to determine who will inherit the mul-

places his three sons in competition for his multimillion-dollar

'Empire' in Fox's nightime soapopera.

timillion-dollar empire. But the three sons of Lucius

Lyon (Terrence Howard) aren't the only ones bidding for control of the business: There's

also Lucius' ex-wife, Cookie (Taraji Henson), who's justbeen releasedaftera 17-year prison

sentence for selling drugs. Mama's back and mama wants what's owed to her.

What no one knows, yet, is that Lucius is facing a major health issue, adding a certain

degreeofurgency to his deci- the quiet, sensitive middle son sion about which of his sons with an abundance of artistic should be his successor. talent as a singer/songwriter. His sons are as different He's also gay and out, which from each other as they could isn't always an easy fit in his be, especially to a script writer. father's hyper-macho music The youngest, Hakeem (Bry- world. Lately, he's been living shere Gray), is out of control, with a Latino boyfriend named headstrong, living in the fast Michael (Rafael de la Fuente). lane and pushing even harder Andre (Trai Byers), the oldon the gas pedaL est, is actually carved from Jamal (Jussie Smollett) is yet another Shakespeare play,

and scary and Howard isn't cius' boyhood friend and longvery convincing. If anything, time ally in the company. he's a "Lyon" in winter, which, One of the series' major ascome to think of it, may sug- sets is unseen but heard, and gestanother source ofinspira- to great advantage at that: tion for Daniels. Timbaland, who serves as Cookie is the noisier center both songwriter and music of our attention, and her son, director. Even if the cliches acJamal, the quieter, more intro- tually bother viewers (which is spective center. Of the three unlikely), the music is legit and sons, his arc is most devel- hot. There's great hip-hop one oped. It doesn't hurt that he's minute, and neo-soul the next. pretty easy on the eyes and Like the music in "Glee," Tima terrific singer. Once Cook- baland's music is anything but ie decides to mentor her son incidental to the considerable toward amusic career,she is appeal of "Empire." declaring open war with her Great TV? No, but "Empire" ex-husband for control of the looks like great fun, and that's company and, for that matter, more than good enough.

tartin res ort e new ear Dear Readers: Welcome to 2015!

accept those I cannot.

If the last year was challenging for Just For Today:I will improve some of us, a new one has arrived, my mind. I will read something that bringing with it our chance for a requires effort, thought and concennewbeginning. tration. I will not be a mental loafer. Today is the day we have an opJust For Today:I will make a conportunity t o

d i scard destructive scious effort to be agreeable. I will

old habits for healthy

Holy Vedas say, "Man has subjected himself to thousands of self-inflicted bondages.Wisdom comes to a man who lives according to the true

eternal laws of nature." The prayer of St. Francis (of which there are several versions) contains apowerful message: "Lord, make me an instrument of your peace

be kind and cournew ones, and with teous to those who that in mind, I will cross my path, and I'll DEP,R "Where there is hatred, let me share Dear Abby's not speak ill of othABBY often requested Iist ers. I will improve my sowlove "Where there is injury, pardon of New Year's Resoappearance, speak "Where there is doubt, faith lutions, which were softly and not inter"Where there is despair, hope adapted by my late mother, Pauline rupt when someone else is talking. "Where there is darkness, light Phillips, from the original credo of Just For Today:I will refrain from Al-Anon: "And where there is sadness, joy. improving anybody but myself. "0 Divine Master, Just For Today: will I live through Just For Today:I will do some"Grant that I may not so much this day only. I will not brood about thingpositive to improve my health. yesterday or obsess about tomor- If I'm a smoker, I'll quit. If I am over- seekto be consoled as to console "To be u nderstood, a s row. I will not set far-reaching goals weight, I will eat healthfully — if to or try to overcome all of my prob- only just for today. And not only understand "To be loved, as to love lems at once. that, I will get off the couch and take "For it is in giving that we receive, I know that I can do something abriskwalk, even if it's only around for 24 hours that would overwhelm

the block.

"It is in pardoning that we are

me if Ihadtokeepitup for alifetime. Just For Today:I will gather the pardoned, "And it is in dying that we are Just For Today:I will be happy. courage to do what is right and take I will not dwell on thoughts that responsibility for my own actions. born to eternal life." depress me. If my mind fills with And now, Dear Readers, I would And so, Dear Readers, may this clouds, I will chase them away and like to share an item that was sent new year bring with it good health, fill it with sunshine. to me by L.J. Bhatia, a reader from peace and joy to all of you. — Love, Abby Just For Today:I will accept what New Delhi, India: is. I will face reality. I will correct Dear Abby:This year, no reso— Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com those things that I can correct and lutions, only some guidelines. The or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORTHURSDAY, JAN. 1, 2015:This yearyou add wisdom and wit to your communication style. You might not even be conscious of how much your style is transforming, but others' responses will indicate a difference. Your focus will be less on long-term goals and more on your daily life. If you are single, an unusual person walks into your life. You will Qsfs show ths ldsff need to decide of dayyou'B gave what tyPe of bond ** * * * D ynamic you want. If you ** * * Posltive are attached, the

YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

with a personal matter. In fact, his or her response might be to leave the issue unresolved. Tonight: Ask questions.

CANCER (June21-July 22)

* *** You coul d bestressed outabout what is going on around you. You tend to get so into the holidays that you have difficulty saying goodbye to that time of year. Curl up and take a much-needed *** Average tw o of you enjoy nap. Tonight: Allow yourself the freedom ** So-so developing a daily of doing nothing. routine together. * Difficult Passions often run LEO (July23-Aug.22) ** * * * You might have more fun high, and you'll today than you have had during most of perfect the art of kissing and making up. the holiday season. You will want to have GEMINI can be scattered. a long-overdue discussion with a loved ARIES (March21-April 19) ** * * You'll wake up feeling thankful. one that the hectic pace of the past weeks has prevented. Don't be surprised to hear Those in your inner circle might express some anger. Tonight: In the here and now. their feelings, though one person could be closing down. Don't worry — your VIRGO (Aug.23-Sspt. 22) ** * * You suddenly might start thinkoptimism will draw this person out. Listen carefully to what he or she has to say. ing about everything you still haven't Tonight: Follow your imagination. done, which could add to the pressure of the moment. Stay calm; otherwise, you TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * Now that the pace is slowing down, easily could get into a tongue-lashing with an associate. Enjoy some downtime. you might want to consider everything Tonight: Pace yourself. that has happened over the past few weeks. You finally will be able to evaluate LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) the cost of the holidays. Be practical as ** * * You may want to open up to a you look at your budget. Tonight: Reach change. A loved one could be extremely out to a special person. touchy and willful. You can't seem to avoid confrontation anymore. Revisit a GEMINI (May 21-June 20) ** * * You could be in a situation where goal you thought you had fulfilled but actually haven't. Relax at home. Tonight: you feel overwhelmed by everything Make a call to a friend at a distance. that is happening around you. A partner could be less than happy about dealing SGORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21)

tant, and Malik Yoba as Lu-

** * * You'll deal with a situation differently from how you have in the past. You are able to communicate your bottom line much more easily now. Know thatyou can't control someone who might decide to be angry and vocal. Go out for a while. Tonight: Be a duo.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) ** * * You might find that several people around you are pushing for more timewith you,asyouseem to have been somewhat of a recluse lately. You'll have had a lot to consider. Be careful — an animated conversation could turn into a fight. Tonight: Consider your options.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.19) ** * You have so muchto do thatyou can't seem to squeeze in enough time to suityour group of friends. You know your priorities; there is nothing wrong with honoring them. Trust your decisions, and don't feel as if you need to explain. Tonight: Get some exercise.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) ** * * You might want to kick back and do some hard thinking about your choic-

es,yetsomeoneseekingagoodtime could walk in through your front door. You'll be able to make all the difference in this person's day. Go with spontaneity. Tonight: And the party continues.

PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * You might feel a sense of obligation to make certain decisions and take some time putting order back into your life. You could find yourself feeling angry for no reason. Be sensitive to what a friend offers or suggests as a solution. Tonight: Invite friends over. © King Features Syndicate

MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-0and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. I

I

7 a.m.on HGTV, "Castle Hunters" — Each episode of this

new series —oneof several sneakpeeks HGTV is providing viewers in advance of later regular time-slot premieres — follows head-in-the-clouds Americanhome buyersasthey tour some of the greatest castle properties in Ireland, the South of France and elsewhere to see whether they are, in fact, truly to the manor born. 11 a.m. on HGTV, "Half-Price Paradise" —Each episode of this upcoming new series follows a family that relocates to a new city in a quest to find more domestic bang for their homeowner buck. They're ready to trade in the higher ticket price of their current lifestyle in favor of one that's significantly more affordable and, in some respects, downright spectacular. 3 p.m.on HGTV, "Living Big Sky" —For more and more couples, Montana's vaunted "big sky country" is the newest destination, offering breath-

taking scenicappealandsome decidedly unique housing opportunities. First, though, these prospective Montanans need to figure out whether they can adjust to true country living that can mean your "next door neighbor" is miles away. 6:15 p.m. on TCM, Movie: "A Night at the Opera" —The plot of this 1935 comedy involves two young opera singers looking for their big breakand the manager and his two bumbling buddies who try to help. But as with any Marx Brothers movie, the plot is just a delivery device for Groucho's one-liners, Harpo's slapstick and Chico's

languagemangling. Margaret Dumontis onceagain on hand as the brothers' oh-so-proper foil.

I I

Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • ANNIE (PGi 11:40a.m., 3:35, 6:25, 9:15 • BIG EYES iPG-13) 10:35 a.m., 1:20, 4:/I5, 7:40, 10:25 • BIG HERO 6 iPG) 11:05 a.m., 1:45, /I:30 • EXODUS: GODSANDKINGS lPG-13) 11:15a.m., 6:35 • EXODUS: GODSANDKINGS3-D (PG-13) 3:10, 10:10 • THE GAMBLER lR) 10:15 a.m., 1, /I:25, 7:25, 10:10 • THE HOBBIT: THEBATTLEOFTHE FIVE ARM IES(PG-13) /I5, 10 noon, 3:30, 6: • THE HOBBIT: THEBATTLEOF THE FIVE ARM IES3-D (PG-13i 12:30, 4, 7:15, 10:30 • THE HOBBIT: THEBATTLEOF THE FIVE ARM IESIMAX 3-D (PG-13i11:30 a.m., 3, 6:15, 9:30 • HORRIBLE BOSSES2(R) 7:30, 10:20 • THE HUNGERGAMES: MOCKINGJAY — PART1 (PG-13) 12:05, 3:05, 6, 9:05 • THE IMITATION GAME(PG-13) 10:25 a.m., 1:10, 4:35, 7:20, 10:05 • INTERSTELLAR (PG-13i11:50 a.m., 4:10, 8 • INTO THE WOODS(PG) 10 a.m., 12:55, 4:15, 7:10, 10:05 • NIGHTAT THE M USEUM: SECRET OF THETOMB (PGi 11:25 a.m., 3:25, 6:05, 9 • PENGUINS OFMADAGASCAR (PGi 11a.m., 1:30, 4 • UNBROKEN iPG-13) 12:40, 3:55, 7:05, 10:15 • WILDlR) 11:45 a.m., 3:20, 6:10, 9:10 • THE WOMAN INBLACK 2:ANGELOF DEATH (PG-13) 7, 9:30 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies. •

TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports

r

I

McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 • The Rose Bowl screensat2p.m. Thursday. • The Sugar Bowl screens at 5:30 p.m. Thursday. • Younger than 21 may attend all screeningsif accompanied t/yalegal guardian. Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • THETALE OFTHE PRINCESS KAGUYA (PGi3 • KEEP ON KEEPIN' ON(R) 6 • LAGGIES (Ri 8 I

I

I

Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • ANNIE (PGi 11:15a.m., 1:45, 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 • THE HOBBIT: THEBATTLEOFTHE FIVE ARM IES(PG-13) noon,3,6:05,9 • NIGHTAT THE M USEUM: SECRET OF THETOMB (PGi 11:30 a.m., 1:45, 4, 6:15, 8:30 • UNBROKEN iPG-13) I2:15,3:15, 6:15, 9:15 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • THE HOBBIT: THEBATTLEOFTHE FIVE ARM IES(PG-13) 1,4,7 • INTOTHE W OODS (PG)noon,2:45,5:15,7:45 • UNBROKEN iPG-13) 1:15, 4:15, 7:15 • WILDiR) noon, 2:30, 5, 7:45

8 p.m. on 2, 9, "The Taste"This food show hasn't missed a chance to mark the holidays lately, so a new episode titled "Happy New Year" — on a most appropriate night — shouldn't

come as amajorshock.Asthe season of celebration begins to come to a close, Anthony Bourdain, Nigella Lawson, Ludo Le-

febvre andMarcusSamuelsson oversee thecompetingcooks'

"decadent" (per the network) efforts with such ingredients as caviarand champagne.Michael Symon ("The Chew") is a guest judge. © Zap2it

~p~coolsculpting LE F F E L C EN T E R 0 CO S

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Don't s etr/rfor anyone but a p /cutir surgeonfor Coo/rru//r/ng

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www.leffelcenter.com '541-388-3006

2 Locationsin Bend Main Center 2150NE StudioRd,SuiteIO

NWX 2863 NorthwestCrossingDr,suiteio

541-389-9252 sylvan©bendbroadbsnd.com

%ILSONSsf Redmond 541-548-2066

Adjustable Beds

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Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, 5/I1-475-3505 • ANNIE (PGi 1:25, 4:05, 6:50,9:20 • *THE HOBBIT: THE BATTLEOF THE FIVEARMIES(PG13i 12:30, 4, 7:30 • NIGHTAT THE M USEUM: SECRET OF THETOMB (PGi 12:10, 2:30,/I:50, 7:10, 9:25 • UNBROKEN iPG-13) 1, 3:50, 6:45, 9:35 • WILDlR) 2,4:25,7,9:30 • No passes or discounts accepted. •

Pine Theater, 214 N.Main St., 541-416-1014 • THE HOBBIT:THEBATTLE OF THE FIVE ARMIES (Upstairs — PG-13)6:15 • NIGHTAT THE M USEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB (PGi 6:30 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.

O

Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GG! Magazine

•3

ASSURANCE iswhatyou getwhen EVERGREEN manages your lovedone's medications

EVERGREEN

In-Home Care Services 541-389-0006 www.evergreeninhome.com


ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 1, 2015 •

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Ads starting as low as $10/week rivate art onl

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Call for package rates

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Packages starting at $140for28da s

Call for prices

Prices starting at $17.08 erda

Run it until it sells for $99 oru to12months

:'hours:

contact us: Place an ad: 541-385-5809

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On the web at: www.bendbulletin.com

B u I l e t i n :

264- Snow Removal Equipment 265 - BuildingMaterials 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 NorlhwestBend 284- Sales Southwest Bend 286- Sales Norlheast Bend 288- Sales Southeast Bend 290- Sales RedmondArea 292 - Sales Other Areas FARM MARKET 308- Farm Equipment andMachinery 316- Irrigation Equipment 325- Hay, Grain and Feed 333- Poultry,RabbitsandSupplies 341 - Horses andEquipment 345-Livestockand Equipment 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers 358- Farmer's Column 375 - Meat andAnimal Processing 383- Produce andFood

ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202- Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free Items 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,Huntingand Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- HealthandBeauty Items 249 - Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253 - TV, Stereo andVideo 255 - Computers 256 - Photography 257 - Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259 - Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - Medical Equipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools

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00 208

Pets & Supplies

1 7 7g

208

210

Pets & Supplies

Furniture & Appliances

Husky-Wolf female, 3 mos, adorable! Black & white, only $200. 541-977-7019

Maremma Guard Dog pups, purebred, great dogs, $350 e a c h, Dining Chairs (e) 541-546-6171.

& Table Moving, just 6 months old. Purchased at Haven Homes for $10K; asking $5,000. 541-419-8860

USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! The Bulletin recomDoor-to-door selling with mends extra caution when purc has- fast results! It's the easiest ing products or serway in the world to sell. vices from out of the area. Sending cash, The Bulletin Classified checks, or credit in541-385-5809 f ormation may be subjected to fraud. POODLE or POMAPOO Have an item to For more i nformatoy. Adorable! tion about an adver- puppies, sell quick? 541-475-3889 tiser, you may call If it's under the O regon State PR UKC Blue Show Attorney General's potential A m erican'500 you can place it in Office C o n sumer Bullies (pit bulls). The Bulletin Protection hotline at r eady to g o , ve t Classifieds for: 1-877-877-9392. checked, first vaccine, dewormed, fa m i ly The Bulletin '10 - 3 lines, 7 days raised and well soServing Central Oregon sinceaggg cialized. call/text for '16 - 3 lines, 14 days info (Private Party ads only) Adopt a rescued cat or more kitten! Altered, vacci- 541-570-9492 nated, ID chip, tested, QueenslandHeelers more! CRAFT, 65480 Standard 8 Mini, $150 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, 8 up. 541-280-1537 1-5. 541 - 389-8420www.rightwayranch.wor www.craftcats.org dpress.com Aussies, AKC mini red tri, red merle, M/F, must see! Shots, wormed. Call Dining tableplus 6 541-598-5314 chairs, ocustom o e

Siberian Huskies, cute hybrids. Reserve your Christmas puppy now! 3 M's, 3 F's, ready 12/20. Dachshundsminilong- $500. 541-280-0457 haired AKC. $500 & up 541-598-7417

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Daschund mix pups 2 female, 2 males, 1st shots, wormed, $250. 541-508-2167.

Toy American Eskimo spayed females 18 mos and 2~/~ years. $500 & $600 541-475-1399

Donate deposit bottles/ Yorkie pups AKC baby cans to local all vol., dolls! Shots, potty trained, non-profit rescue, for health guar., ready now! feral cat spay/neuter. $600& up. 541-777-7743 T railer a t Jak e ' s 210 D iner, Hwy 2 0 E ; Petco (near Wal-Mart) Furniture & Appliances in Redmond; or donate M-F a t S mith A1 Washerse Dryers Sign, 1515 NE 2nd $150 ea. Full warBend; or CRAFT in ranty. Free Del. Also Tumalo. Can pick up wanted, used W/D's large amts, 389-8420. 541-280-7355 www.craftcats.org

made, 82 x43 x29 end grain walnut and alder. $1150. 541-312-2393

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O r e g o n

9 7 7 0 2

210

212

245

246

255

260

Furniture & Appliances

Antiques & Collectibles

Golf Equipment

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

Computers

Misc. Items

South Korean Apothecary chest typical of what was used decades ago to sell herbs and medicinals. This piece is believed to have been produced in 1940se or

Three Chinese Men produced in solid teak. Dimensions: 15 e high x 6.5o wide.

Figures were produced in Thailand in 1978. $200 for all 3 statues, cash.

later. 35eW x 9.5

deep x 42" high. Asking $2500 cash 231-360-5105(Bend)

1-231-360-5105

NEW Cleveland Irons! 4-5 HB, 6-PW, still in

plastic,$350!

951-454-2561

(in Redmond) 246

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

(in Bend)

1983 AK47 $1000; new B ushmaster AR1 5 BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS $1000; PPI $500; 1984 240 Search the area's most Ruger 44 mag $800; Crafts & Hobbies comprehensive listing of 1919 BMG kit $1900. classified advertising... 541-420-0577 Probably don't want to real estate to automotive, miss! Viking Quilt Demerchandise to sporting 300 Weatherby la r g e goods. Bulletin Classifieds s igner w it h magnum Mark V amount of extras and appear every day in the i ncludes 10 el e c - German made, with print or on line. Leupold 3x9x50 tronic stitch cards. Call 541-385-5809 scope. Lovely price of $795 www.bendbuuetin.com firm. 541-549-1947 $1600 obo. 541-480-9430

The Bulletin

241

Seniog Central Oregonsinceigtg

Bicycles & Accessories

Tick, Tock Tick, Tock... ...don't let time get away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory todayi

South Korean Blanket Chest typical of storing blankets for frigid nights. Dimensions e

Men's Enhanced Aluminum Alloy-constructed Crossroads Sport 2012, S/N ENI14764,has are 31e long x 14.5 never been used or ridwide x 22" high. den.Wheel & rear repays CASH!! Asking$800 cash. flectors, removable front Bendforlocal all firearms & 1-231-360-5105 basket, special order (Bend) comfort seat, Planet Bike ammo. 541-526-0617 eco-rack, unisex bar, Find exactly what Shimano non-slip gear WANTEDwood dressers; dead washers. system. Was $940;sell- you are looking for in the ing for$775 cash,firm. 541-420-5640 CLASSIFIEDS

T HE B ULLETIN

r e - BUYING & SE LLING quires computer ad- All gold jewelry, silver vertisers with multiple and gold coins, bars, ad schedules or those roundgsg wedding sets, selling multiple sys- class rings, sterling siltemsi software, to dis- ver, coin collect, vinclose the name of the tage watches, dental Fl e ming, business or the term gold. Bill Ruger M77 270 Win. "dealer" in their ads. 541-382-9419. w/3x9 scope. Brass, Private party adverlis- How to avoid scam dies, 320 rnds ammo, ers are defined as and fraudattempts $750. 541-419-7001 those who sell one YBe aware of internacomputer. Springfield Armory 1911 tional fraud. Deal loA-1, .45 cal., competically whenever pos257 t ion trigger, 1 b o x Musical Instruments sible. fired. $575. Y Watch for buyers 541-728-0445 who offer more than your asking price and 247 who ask to have money wired or Sporting Goods handed back to them. - Misc. 1948 Wurlitzer piano, Fake cashier checks all wood, no plastic. and money orders Basketball Hoop, Tuned in Nov., looks are common. outdoor portable, like new, with bench VNever give out per$50. 541-383-2062 $700 541-382-3837 sonal financial information. 249 Baldwin upright apt. size gg'Trustyour instincts iano 46" H, wi matching Art, Jewelry and be wary of ench, great cond, $400. someone using an & Furs 541-382-1867 escrow service or agent to pick up your Need help fixing stuff? merchandise. Call A Service Professional The Bulletin find the help you need. Serving Central Oregon sroce rggg www.bendbulletin.com Say "goodbuy" 260 Above artwork, to that unused created in 1975 in Misc. Items Bangkok, Thailand, item by placing it in is fabricated from litBuying Diamonds The Bulletin Classifieds erally thousands upon /Goid for Cash thousands of wax Saxon's Fine Jewelers particles, and can 541-389-6655 5 41-385-580 9 only be described as unimaginable art! BUYING Lawn Crypt for two at Painting is 44" x 32". Lionel/American Flyer Deschutes Memorial Asking$2,500 cash trains, accessories. 231-360-5105 (Bend) Gardens near the Pond. 541-408-2191.

Rock Island .45 1911$350. Remington 770 30.06 with scope $300 Call or text Sean at 541-678-0214

$1500. 541-771-4800

1-231-360-5105

r

CASH!!

TheBulletin

Take care of your investments i caution when purchasing products or, with the help from services from out of I The Bulletin's the area. Sending f cash, checks, or "Call A Service i credit i n f ormation may be subjected to Professional" Directory

For Guns, Ammo 8 Reloading Supplies. 541-408-6900.

t call t h e Or e gont ' State Atto r ney ' i General's O f f i ce Consumer Protec- • N EW Marin A r tion h o t line a t i enta Nev er ridi 1-877-877-9392. en 2 010 m o del Shimano 105 thrul TheBulletin l o ut. 6 06 1 a l u m. Seresog Central Oregon since Sggg triple- butted Hydro Edge Road m a in frame with carbon 212 s eat-stay and E 4 Antiques & anti-flex chain-stay. o Collectibles Fits 5'8 o- 6'1 $750 ($825 if you want PD

Non-commercial advertisers may place an ad with our "QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week3lines 12

recommends extra '

i

I I

Il i i FRAUD. For morei about an c I information advertiser, you may i i

I

5 700 B l ac k

S himano 105 pedals)

Must See!

Dining Table (with 2 leaves) 8 chairs with burgundy upholstered seats, hutch and buffet, built in 1927, a beautiful Exceptional c r a fts- set! Seats 10-12. manship signed by Paid $4500; builder. All solid oak medium colored stain asking$1800 obo.

541-480-2483 242

III'IIIISHHH DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL FOR $500 OR LESS?

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Ad must include price of

eo le iiom oi geoo ~

s ell y o u r s tu ff . Add a photo to your Bulletin classified ad for just $15 per week.

Call Classifieds at 541-385-5809

Visit www.bendbulletin.com, click on "PLACE AN AD" and follow the easy steps.

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Pilates Power Gym Pro n ew $ 2 5 0 obo . 541-408-0846. 245

CHECK YOURAD 541-548-2797 desk that looks as elegant from the back as it does from the STAMP COLLECTOR front. Lumbar sup- Cash paid for postage ported chair included. stamps. Old or new, Paid $4400 asking albums, collections, on the first day it runs $650 cash. More info anything in stamps. to make sure it is coravailable. 541-279-0336 rect. eSpellchecko and 541-408-5227 human errors do ocThe Bulletin reserves cur. If this happens to the right to publish all G ENERATE SOM E ads from The Bulletin your ad, please conEXCITEMENT in your tact us ASAP so that onto The neighborhood! Plan a newspaper corrections and any Bulletin Internet webgarage sale and don't site. adjustments can be forget to advertise in made to your ad. 541 -385-5609 classified! The Bulletin The Bulletin 541-385-5809. gereiogCentralOregoo since aggg Classified

s tu ff ,

or less, or multiple items whose total does not exceed $500.

Exercise Equipment

Golf Equipment

S hew y e u r

• New, never fired Weatherby VanguardS2, synthetic stock, cal 30-06.$550. • New, never fired Howa,wood stock, cal .300 Win Mag.$725 Must pass background check. Please call 541.389.3694, leave message. Remington1100 semi- auto 12 ga., 3" shells. Purchased in 1980s. Present condition is like new. Asking $750. 541-410-4066

All ads appear irl both print and online. Please allow 24 hours for photo processing before your ad appears in print and online.

assi ie s

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5 41 -385 - 5 8 0 9


E2 THURSDAY, JANUARY 1, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

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AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES

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476

Sales Other Areas

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NOTICE Remember to remove your Garage Sale signs (nails, staples, etc.) after your Sale event is over! THANKS! From The Bulletin and your local utility companies.

Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. The Bulletin Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. www.bendbunetin.com Serrlng Central Oregon sincefgta

Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri.

Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • • PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines

• . 3:00pm Fri. • • 5:00 pm Fri •

541 w385-5809

Place aphotoin your private party ad foronly$15.00par week.

*UNDER '500in total merchandise

OVER '500 intotal merchandise

7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00

Garage Sale Special

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

4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00

icall for commercial line ad rates)

*Illlust state prices in ad

Need to get an ad in ASAP? You can place it online at: www.bendbulletin.com

325

Hay, Grain & Feed

A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin The Bulletin bendbulletin.com reserves the right to reject any ad at any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702

MX

1st Quality, 2nd cutting grass hay, no rain, barn stored, $250/ton. Call 541-549-3831 Patterson Ranch, Sisters

:> Qfy J~;QJljI~~ Can be found on these pages:

CAUTION: Ads published in "Employment O p porfunitles" include employee and independent positions. Ads fo r p o sitions that require a fee or upfront investment must be stated. With any independentjob 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 to A N Y online employment ad from out-of-state. We suggest you call the State of Oregon Consumer Hotline at 1-503-378-4320 For Equal Opportunity Laws c ontact Oregon Bureau of Labor 8 I n d ustry, Civil Rights Division,

476

476

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Looking for your next Mental Health Specialist employee? Community CounPlace a Bulletin help seling Solutions has wanted ad today and two full-time Mental reach over 60,000 Health Sp e cialist readers each week. Your classified ad positions open in our Boardman O f f ice. will also appear on Salary range bendbulletin.com $31,200-$50,400/ which currently year DOE. Excellent receives over 1.5 benefit pa c kage. million page views For an application, every month at please contact Huno extra cost. man Resources at Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! ( 541)676-9161 o r download an appliCall 385-5809 cation at www.comor place munitycounselingyour ad on-line at solutions.org. For a bendbulletin.com c omplete job d e scription, g o to www.worksourceoGarage Sales regon.org ¹1296025

971-673- 0764.

The Bulletin Serring Central Oregon sincetgat

541-385-5809

Premium orchard grass, barn stored no rain, Add your web address to your ad and read1st 8 2nd cutting. Del. ers on The Buifetin's avail. 5 4 1-420-9158 web site, www.bendor 541-948-7010. bulletin.com, will be Quality orchard mixed able to click through grass hay, $190-$235 automatically to your ton, small bales. Deliv. website.

FINANCEANDBUSINESS 507- Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 528- Loans andMortgages 543- Stocks andBonds 558- Business Investments 573 - BusinessOpportunities

EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools andTraining 454- Looking Ior Employment 470- Domestic & In-HomePositions 476 - EmploymentOpportunities 486 - IndependentPositions

SALESPERSON (Bend/Redmond) Big Country RV is expanding and seeking salespeople looking for a performance based pay plan, potential commiss ions of u p t o 3 5 % equaling $100,000 plus; Retirement Plan, Paid Vacation, and a competitive m edical b e nefit package. Looking for a team player with a positiye attitude, to operate with energy and to be customer service oriented. Will provide training. Apply online at w~ww.ai ars.aom oraa ply in person at 63500 N

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Loans & Mortgages BANK TURNED YOU DOWN? Private party will loan on real estate equity. Credit, no problem, good equity is all you need. Call Oregon Land Mortgage 541-388-4200. The Bulletin To Subscribe call 541-385-5800 or go to www.bendbulletin.com LOCAL MONEY:We buy secured trust deeds & note, some hard money loans. Call Pat Kellev 541-382-3099 ext.13.

What are you looking for? You'll find it in The Bulletin Classifieds

541 w385-5809

avail.541-280-7781 PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction 541-385-5809 betwn Bend/Redmond ADMINISTRATIVE is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right DMV Title & to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these Licensing Clerk Graphic Designer Position Call a Pro newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party (Bend) Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. Whether you need a Big Country RV has fence fixed, hedges immediate opening for a Sertring Central Oregon since 1903 260 265 266 269 trimmed or a house DMV Title 8 Licensing Clerk / Receptionist to Misc. Items Building Materials • Heating & Stoves Gardening Supplies The Bulletin is seeking a new member for our built, you'll find 'oin our team. Must Creative Services Team. The ideal designer & Equipment ave experience with professional help in NOTICE TO possesses strong design skills, is practiced in automotive or RV titling • Cambria Quartz ADVERTISER The Bulletin's "Call a or extensive adminis- Hwy 97, Bend, OR 97701 the fine art of communication, comfortable with nBellingham,n Since September 29, For newspaper daily deadlines and has a passion for creating Service Professional" trative experience. We 55 nx36", nearly 1991, advertising for delivery, call the visual communication solutions for a wide a re expanding a nd The Bulletin's 1-1/2 n thick, never Directory used woodstoves has Circulation Dept. at variety of local businesses. Proficiency using l ooking for a te a m "Call A Service installed,$300 or been limited to mod541-385-5800 541-385-5809 Adobe InDesign, lllustrator, and Photoshop is player with a positive Professional" Directory best offer. Olhaunsen regulaels which have been To place an ad, call a must. The ideal candidate will work with a attitude to operate with tion size pool table certified by the Or541-385-5809 is all about meeting variety of local clients, sales executives and energy and to be cusWheat Straw for Sale. • Bronze & Crystal in very good shape egon Department of or email other WESCOM newspapers. t omer-oriented. To p your needs. Also, weaner pigs. 2-tier, 6-arm chanclassifiedgtbendbulletin.com with cues, balls, Environmental Qualpay, retirement plan, 541-546-6171 delier, 22" across, misc. accessories. ity (DEQ) and the fed- The Bulletin Call on one of the For qualifying employees we offer benefits p aid v a cation, a n d $300 or best offer. $1 000. eral E n v ironmental medical benefits pack- professionals today! including life insurance, short-term 8 long-term 541-923-7491 541-389-1272 or Protection A g e ncy Looking for your age. Apply in person at: disability, 401(K), and paid vacation. Drug test 541-480-4695 (EPA) as having met next employee? 63500 N Hwy 97 Bend, is required prior to employment. The Bulletin is 270 Service Technicians smoke emission stanOregon or online at a drug-free workplace, EOE. No phone calls Place a Bulletin Lost & Found Big Country RV Dealerdards. A cer t ified ww.tn ers.oom w~ please. Look at: help wanted ad Wanted- paying cash ship in Bend & Redmond, w oodstove may b e today and for Hi-fi audio & stuBendhomes.com Oregon seeks service identified by its certifiPlease send your resume to dio equip. Mclntosh, reach over for Complete Listings of technicians. We are excation label, which is Banking spetrus©bendbulletin.com JBL, Marantz, Dy60,000 readers panding and looking for a Area Real Estate for Sale permanently attached REMEMBER: If you Job posting deadline: Jan 7, 2015. naco, Heathkit, Saneach week. team player with a posito the stove. The Bul> first communit tiye attitude to operate have lost an animal, sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Your classified ad letin will not knowdon't forget to check Call 541-261-1 808 REDMOND Habitat will also with energy and to be ingly accept advertisThe Humane Society We are excited to RESTORE customer-oriented. RV & General appear on Bend The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our SaturPeople Lookfor Information Building Supply Resale ing for the sale of announce an Camper experience a bendbuHetin.com uncertified 541-382-3537 available position for day night shift and other shifts as needed. We About Products and Quality at plus but will train right which currently woodstoves. Redmond a Financial Senrice person. Top pay, retire- currently have openings all nights of the week. Services Every Daythrough LOW PRICES receives over 541-923-0882 Representativein 1242 S. Hwy 97 ment plan, paid vacation, Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts The Bulletiu Class/T/effs 1.5 million page Madras start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and 541-548-1406 Bend, Oregon. and medical benefits Get your 541-475-6889 views every package. Apply in per- end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. AllpoWHEN YOU SEE THIS Open to the public. Prineville month at no business son at: 63500 N Hwy 97, sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. Salary Range: 541-447-7178 extra cost. $13.00 - $22.00 Bend, Oregon or online at Starting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we pay a or Craft Cats minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts Good classified adstell Bulletin w~ww.ai ars.aow MOreP iXatBejidtIjletijl.COm the 541-389-8420. are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of essential facts in an e ROW I N G Classifieds First Community On a classified ad loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackCredit Union is an interesting Manner.Write Get Results! 275 go to ing product onto palletsi bundling, cleanup equal opportunity from the readers view not Call 541-385-5809 with an ad in www.bendbulletin.com Auction Sales and other tasks. For qualifying employees we employer of the seller's. Convert the or place your ad The Bulletin's to view additional caution when puroffer benefits i ncluding life i n surance, protected Veterans on-line at facts into benefits. Show photos of the item. "Call A Service O nline nl Re a r n chasing products or I short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid and individuals with the reader howthe item will bendbuHetin.com services from out of a vacation and sick time. Drug test is required disabilities. For more Professional" help them in someway. 264 AUCTION prior to employment. details please i the area. Sending This Directory Snow Removal Equipment 341 c ash, checks, o r Closes Jan. 7th 3 PM apply online: advertising tip Please submit a completed application attenwww.myfirstccu.org. i credit i n f ormation Former Bond Street Horses & Equipment brought toyouby Toro Power clear 180 tion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available Grill, 932 NW Bond i may be subjected to 267 18 n 4 c ycle snowFRAUD. at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. ChanSt., downtown Bend The Bulletin Fuel & Wood Sen'ngtentralo S nsince tata For more informa- I blower, good cond., dler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be Complete Liquidation: $225. 541-639-9857 Medical Assistant tion about an adver- ' obtained upon request by contacting Kevin flattop and charbroiler, Community Couni tiser, you may call Eldred via email keldred©bendbulletin.com). grills and ovens, deep WHEN BUYING seling Solutions has the Oregon State No phone calls please. Only completed applifryer, ice machine, bar FIREWOOD... a full-time position i Attorney General's cations will be considered for this position. No equipment, flat screen open for a Medical Office C o n sumer s resumes will be accepted. Drug test is reTo avoid fraud, 3-horse Silverado Tvs, tables, chairs and our Protection hotline at l quired prior to employment. EOE. The Bulletin booths, plus much, 2001 29'x8' 5th wheel Assistant i n • • 1 recommends paymuch more! trailer. Deluxe show- Grant County Health I 1-877-877-9392. Department located ment for Firewood Item Preview man/semi living The Bulletin in John Day, Or- gThe Bulleting Serwng Central cregon sincenea only upon delivery Jan. 5th & 6th 10-5PM quarters, lots of exCall 54 I -385-5809 egon. Wage range and inspection. Bid and Buy online at tras. Beautiful condito r o m ot e o u r service $11.15 - $16.73/hour • A cord is 128 cu. ft. PIAuctioneers.com tion. $21,900. OBO 4' x 4' x 8' DOE. Excellent benPacific Industrial 541-420-3277 efit package. For an Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care • Receipts should Auctions & Appraisals IjOIB application, please YOVR /to WILL RECEIVE CLOSETo 2,000,000 include name, 541-913-7455 contact Human Re0~ 5 i eC NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon Landphone, price and ExposUREs FQRQNLYaso! 260 sources at s s law requires anyone scape Contractors Law kind of wood J b~ @ S o s CI r d s s s w tNn k f rAoa N nt p st l s ( 541)676-9161 o r who con t racts for (ORS 671) requires all purchased. Estate Sales MLvl%©yjjt Reek of December 29, 2014 download an appliconstruction work to businesses that ad- • Firewood ads cation at www.combe licensed with the vertise t o pe r form MUST include Living Estate Sale! munitycounselingConstruction Contrac- Landscape Construcspecies 8 cost per 1 Day only - January 3rd. solutions.org. For a tors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: cord to better serve Everything must go. Serving Central Oregon since 1903 active c omplete job d e license p lanting, deck s , our customers. Tools, furniture, dishes, scription, g o to 541-385-5809 means the contractor fences, arbors, clothes, books, linens, is bonded & insured. water-features, and in- The Bulletin www.worksourceotoys, antiques, col421 Verify the contractor's stallation, repair of irSersing CentraiOregonsince sgte regon.org ¹1295523 lectibles and much more. CCB l i c ense at rigation systems to be 9am-4pm only. Schools & Training www.hirealicensedl icensed w it h th e NO EARLY SALES. contractor.com Landscape Contrac- All year Dependable Sign-in sheet on front DIVORCE $155. C o m plete p r e paration. IITR Truck School FIND YOURFUTURE or call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit Firewood: Seasoned; steps, Tam at 1850 SW REDMOND CANPUS HOME IN THE BULLETIN Includes children, custody, support, property The Bulletin recom- number is to be inLodgepole, split, del, 23rd, in Redmond. Our Grads Get Jobs! mends checking with cluded in all adver- B end, 1 f o r $ 1 95 1-888-438-2235 Your future is just a page and billS diViSiOn. No COurt aPPearanCeS. 266 the CCB prior to con- tisements which indi- or 2 cords for $365. WWW.HTR.EDU away. Whetheryou're looking tracting with anyone. cate the business has Call fo r m u lti-cordSales Northeast Bend Divorced in 1-5 weeks possible. 503-772for a hat or a pl a ce to hang i t , Some other t rades a bond, insurance and discounts! 454 The Bulletin Classified is also req u ire addi- workers c ompensa- 541-420-3484. 5295. WWW.ParalegalalternativeS.COm Looking for Employment your best source. tional licenses and tion for their employ** FREE ** certifications. ees. For your proteclegalalt©mSn.COm Garage Sale Klt Will do modest quid pro Every daythousandsof Just too many tion call 503-378-5909 andsellers of goods Place an ad in The quo. Nothing to lose; buyers Debris Removal or use our website: collectibles? services dobusiness in Bulletin for your gasomething to gain! El- and www.lcb.state.or.us to f these Theyknow rage sale and reder care, c o oking, you can'pages. check license status JUNK BE GONE t beat TheBulletin Sell them in ceive a Garage Sale cleaning, s hopping, before contracting with I Haul Away FREE Classified Sectionfor NEED CLASS A CDL TRAINING? Start a transportation, enter- selection the business. Persons The Bulletin Classifieds Kit FREE! For Salvage. Also andconvenience tainment in exchange doing lan d scape CAREER in trucking today! Swift Academies item isjust a phone Cleanups 8 Cleanouts maintenance do not KIT INCLUDES: for private bedroom, -every call away. Mel, 541-389-8107 541-385-5809 • 4 Garage Sale Signs office space, parking. offer PTDI certified courses and offer "Bestr equire an LC B l i • $2.00 Off Coupon To Appreciate s h a ring The Classified Section is cense. Handyman Use Toward Your In-Class" training. New Academy Classes mature stories with easy to use. Every i t em Dry, split Juniper, Ad Painting/Wall Covering $210/cord. Multi-cord •Next flexible, rye humor for is categorizedandevery 10 Tips For "Garage Weekly. No MOney DOWn Or Credit CheCk. I DO THAT! 1-3 hours per day, or cartegory is indexedonthe discounts available. Sale Success!" Home/Rental repairs 30-90 hours per month. ALL AMERICAN Immediate delivery! section's front page. Certified MentorS Ready and A Vailable. Small jobs to remodels PAINTING 541-408-6193 Consider the below Whether youare lookingfor Honest, guaranteed Interior and Exterior NO's: Nursing; heavy a home orneeda service, Paid (While Training With Mentor). Regional PICK UP YOUR work. CCB¹151573 Family-owned lifting; long hours; poli- your future is inthepagesof GARAGE SALE KIT at Dennis 541-317-9768 Residential 8 Commercial Pine & Juniper Split and Dedicated Opportunities. Great Career 1777 SW Chandler tics; religion; violence; The Bulletin Classified. 40 yrs exp.• Sr. Discounts victimizing; a l cohol; Ave., Bend, OR 97702 Path. Excellent Benefits Package. Please 5-vear warranties TURN THE PAGE drugs; crime; weapons; PROMPT D ELIVERY HOLIDAY SPECIAL! The Bulletin The Bulletin B.S. or manipulation. For More Ads 541-389-9663 Call 866-315-9763 SwringCentral Orcgonsince tata Serring Central Oregon sincetges Call 541-337-6149 Call 541-306-9816 T he B u l l e t i n

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By FRANK STEWART "Minnie's been playing longer than I've been alive," Cy the Cynic said to me. "Do you think she observes all the so-called rules of dummy play?" "I suspect she makes her own," I sald. " I saw h e r d o j u s t t h at," C y growled. Minnie Bottoms, my club's senior member, wears old b i f ocals that make her mix up kings and jacks, often to her opponents' chagrin. In a team match, M i nnie played four hearts, and Cy, West, led the king of diamonds. Minnie took dummy's ace and led a trump: eight fiom East, jack from Minnie! When West discarded, M innie drew trumps and had 10 tricks.

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01/01/15


THE BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY1 2015 E5

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

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Boats & Accessories

Motorhomes

Travel Trailers

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RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605- RoommateWanted 616- Want ToRent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent 632 - Apt./MultiplexGeneral 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NW Bend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SE Bend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648- Houses for RentGeneral 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for RentSunriver 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663- Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RVParking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space

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

2007 Bennington Pontoon Boat 2275 GL, 150hp Honda VTEC, less

than 110 hours, original owner, lots of extras; Tennessee tandem axle trailer. Excellent condition,$23,500 503-646-1804 Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fisrting, drift, canoe, • house and sail boats. For all other types of watercraft, please go to Class 875. • 541-385-5809 •

The Bulletin

RV PACKAGE-2006 Illlonaco Illlonarch, 31 ', Ford V10, 28,900 miles, auto-level, 2 slides, queen bed 8 hide-a-bed sofa, 4k gen, conv microwave, 2 TV's, tow package,$66,000. OPTION - 2003 Jeep Wranglertow car, 84K miles, hard & soft top, 5 speed manual,$1 1,000 541-815-6319

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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 Reor place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com 882

Fifth Wheels

The Bulletin

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Dodge Ram 2003

1/3interest in

1965 Mustang Hard top, 6-cylinder, auto trans, power brakes, power steering, garaged, well maintained, engine runs strong. 74K mi., great condition. $12,500. Must see! 541-598-7940

Columbia 400,

Financing available.

$125,000

(located O Bend)

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Chevy 454, heavy duty chassis, new batteries & tires, cab & roof A/C, tow hitch w /brake, 21k m i . , more! 541-280-3251

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Aircraft, Parts & Service

541-288-3333

Winnebago 22' 2002 - $28,500

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Servin Central Ore on since 1903 Alpenlite 28 ft. Call The Bulletin At 1987, New stove, fridge. Good fur541-385-5809 nace, AC. Stereo, Place Your Ad Or E-Mail DVD player. Queen At: www.bendbulletin.com bed WITH bedding. 20 ft. awning. Bayliner 185 2006 Good shape. $4500 open bow. 2nd owner 541-977-5587 — low engine hrs. — fuel injected V6 745 — Radio 8 Tower. CHECKYOUR AD Ready to makememories! Great family boat Homes for Sale Top-selling Winnebago Priced to sell. 31 J, original owners, non$1'I,590. NOTICE smokers, garaged, only 541-548-0345. All real estate adver18,800 miles, auto-leveltised here in is subing jacks, (2) slides, up875 graded queen bed, bunk ject to th e F ederal on the first day it runs Watercraft beds, micro, (3) TVs, Fair Housing A c t, to make sure it is corsleeps 10! Lots of storwhich makes it illegal nWarect. nSpellcheckn and ds published in age, maintained, very to advertise any prefhuman errors do octercraft" include: Kay632 clean! Only $67,995! Ex860 erence, limitation or cur. If this happens to aks, rafts and motortended warranty and/or fiApt./llllultiplex General discrimination based Motorcycles & Accessories Ized your ad, please conpersonal nancing avail to qualified on race, color, relitact us ASAP so that watercrafts. For buyers!541488-7179 CHECKYOUR AD gion, sex, handicap, corrections and any "boats" please see familial status or naadjustments can be Class 870. 881 tional origin, or intenmade to your ad. 541-385-5809 tion to make any such Travel Trailers 541-385-5809 preferences, l i mitaThe Bulletin Classified tions or discrimination. Serving Central Oregon since 1903 on the first day it runs We will not knowingly Harley Davidson any advertisWant to impress the to make sure it is cor- accept ing for r eal e state 2001 FXSTD, twin rect. nSpellcheckn and relatives? Remodel cam 88, fuel injected, which is in violation of human errors do ocyour home with the Vance & Hines short this law. All persons cur. If this happens to shot exhaust, Stage I help of a professional 2007 Jayco Jay Flight are hereby informed your ad, please con- that all dwellings ad29 FBS with slide out & Keystone Everest 5th with Vance & Hines from The Bulletin's tact us ASAP so that awning - Turn-key ready Wheel, 2004 fuel management vertised are available "Call A Service corrections and any use, less than 50 to- Model 323P - 3 slides, on an equal opportu- system, custom parts, Professional" Directory to adjustments can be tal days used by current rear island-kitchen, extra seat. nity basis. The Bulleowner. Never smoked in, made to your ad. fireplace, 2 TV's, $10,500 OBO. tin Classified no indoor pets, excellent 541-385-5809 CD/DVR/VCR/Tuner Call Today 880 cond., very clean. Lots of w/surround sound, A/C, The Bulletin Classified 541-516-8684 750 Motorhomes bonus features; many custom bed, ceiling fan, Senior ApartmentRedmond Homes have never been used. W/D ready, many extras. Independent Living Asking $18,000. C a l l New awning & tires. ALL-INCLUSIVE Harjey Davidson Lisa, 541-420-0794 fo r Excellent condition. Looking for your next with 3 meals daily more info / more photos. $18,900.More pics 883 Sportster emp/oyee? Month-to-month lease, available. 541-923-6408 1998, 20,200 miles, Place a Bulletin help check it out! exc.cond., wanted ad today and Dutchman Denali Call 541-233-9914 Laredo 2006 31' reach over 60,000 32' 2011 travel $3,500. readers each week. 2007 Winnebago Fully S/C 648 541-548-2872. trailer. 2 slides EvYour classified ad Outlook Class"C" erything goes, all one slide-out. Houses for 31', solar panel, will also appear on kitchen ware, linens Awning. Like new, Rent General bendbulletin.com catalytic heater, etc. Hitch, sway hardly used. Harle Fat Bo 2002 which currently reexcellent condition, bars, water & sewer Must sell $20,000 PUBLISHER'S ceives over more extras. hoses. List price or take over payNOTICE 1.5 million page Asking $55K. $34,500 - asking ments. Call All real estate adverviews every month Ph. 541-447-9268 $26,800 Loaded. 541-410-5649 tising in this newspaat no extra cost. Must see to appreciper is subject to the Bulletin Classifieds ate. Redmond, OR. F air H o using A c t Get Results! 541-604-5993 14k orig. miles.. Exwhich makes it illegal Call 385-5809 or Laredo 30' 2009 cellent cond. Vance & to a d vertise "any place your ad on-line Hines exhaust, 5 preference, limitation at spoke HD rims, wind or disc r imination bendbuUetin.com vest, 12n rise handle based on race, color, 32' 2007, like bars, detachable lug- Allegro religion, sex, handinew, only 12,600 miles. 762 gage rack w/ back cap, familial status, Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 hwy pegs & many transmission, marital status or na- Homes with Acreage rest, dual exchrome accents. Must overall length is 35' tional origin, or an inhaust. Loaded! Auto-lev- Heartland P rowler see to appreciate! tention to make any Peaceful Country Liv- $10,500. eling system, 5kw gen, 2012, 29PRKS, 33', has 2 slides, Arctic in CRR area such pre f erence, ing - Beautiful custom power mirrors w/defrost, like new, 2 slides-liv- package, A/C, table call530-957-1865 l a r ge & chairs, satellite, limitation or discrimi- home, approx. 3253 2 slide-outs with aw- i ng area & Arctic pkg., power nings, rear c amera, closet. Large enough nation." Familial sta- sq. ft. on 4.5 acres to live in, but easy to awning, in excellent trai(er hitch, driyer door tus includes children with .5 acre irrigation. condition! More pix w/power window, cruise, tow! 15' power awunder the age of 18 Private well, pond, HDFatBo 1996 at bendbulletin.com exhaust brake, central ning, power hitch 8 living with parents or close in, private and vac, satellite sys. Asking stabilizers, full s i ze $22,500 legal cus t odians, s ecluded with t o o 541-419-3301 $67,500. 503-781-8812 queen bed, l a r ge pregnant women, and many extras to menshower, porcelain sink $660 , 400. people securing cus- tions. & toilet. tody of children under MLS201304783 Call L 18. This newspaper C arolyn Emic k , $26,500. 541-999-2571 will not knowingly ac- 541-419-0717 Completely Advertise your car! Rebuilt/Customized cept any advertising Duke Warner Realty Add A Picture! 541-382-8262 for real estate which is 2012/2013 Award Reach thousands of readers! in violation of the law. Winner Call 541-385-5809 771 O ur r e aders a r e Showroom Condition Beaver Marquis, The Bulletin Classtfieds MONTANA 3585 2008, Lots Many Extras exc. cond., 3 slides, hereby informed that 1993 king bed, Irg LR, all dwellings adverLow Miles. 40-ft, Brunswick Arctic insulation, all tised in this newspa- 19999 Badger Road$15,000 floor plan. Many options - reduced by per are available on Rare, large 8 lovely 541-548-4807 extras, well main$3500 to $31,500. an equal opportunity 7405 sq ft lot close to tained, fire sup541-420-3250 basis. To complain of town & Old Mill, ready pression behind to build your dream d iscrimination ca l l refrig, Stow Master Need to get an ad HUD t o l l-free at home! No thru traffic, Keystone Laredo 31' 5000 tow bar, 1-800-877-0246. The directly to west/adjain ASAP? Rt/ 2006 w ith 1 2 ' $21,995. toll f ree t e lephone cent is a huge privacy 541-383-3503 slide-out. Sleeps 6, number for the hear- berm w/large trees & queen walk-around ing im p aired is scrub brush. $74,500. Fax it to 541-322-7253 bed w/storage under1-800-927-9275. MLS¹201405024 neath. Tub 8 shower. Snowbird Special! Laura Hilton, Broker, The Bulletin Classifieds 2 swivel rockers. TV. Open Road 36' 2005 ABR, GRI, EA, 0L Air cond. Gas stove & model is like new S.T.A.R. B3ce9 &MtRs refrigerator/freezer. w/3 slides!! King 541-306-1800 Microwave. Awning. op bed, hide-a-bed, [Pp ©ggg John L. Scott Outside sho w er. glass shower, 10 gal. Real Estate, Bend Fleetwood D i scovery HD Softtail Deuce 2002, 40' 2003, diesel, w/all Slide-through storwater heater, 10 johnlscottbend.com broken back forces options - 3 slide outs, a ge. E as y Li f t . cu.ft. fridge, central sale, only 200 mi. on satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, $29,000 new; Asfrvac, satellite dish, Find It in 27" TV /stereo sysnew motor from Har- etc., 32,000 m iles. ing $13,600 541-447-4805 ley, new trans case tem, front power levThe Bulletin ClassiTieds! in h eated and p arts, s p o ke Wintered eling jacks 8 scis541-385-5809 shop. $79,995 obo. 726 wheels, new brakes, 541-447-8664 sor stabilizer jacks, Check out the 16' awning. 2005 Timeshares for Sale n early all o f bi k e 773 classifieds online brand new. Has proof model is like new! Acreages $25,995 B ranson, MO . N i c e of all work done. Rewww.bendbuffetin.com 541-419-0566 French Quarter III removable windshield, Updated daily sort. 1 w ee k e ver HARD TO FIND 5 acre T-bags, black and all other year. We are flat buildable corner chromed out with a too old to travel. Very lot located in Lake willy skeleton theme reasonable. Call for P ark E states w i t h on all caps and covmore i nfo. (541) mature l a n dscape. ers. Lots o f w o r k, Freightliner 1994 Custom 408-5443. A ls o 2 MLS¹ 201 4 06959 heart and love went Motorhome weeks in Texas for $135,500 into all aspects. All sale. Pam Lester, Principal done at professional Will haul small SUV or toys, and pull a Broker, Century 21 shops, call for info. 738 Gold Country Realty, Must sell quickly due trailer! Powered by Multiplexes for Sale Inc. 541-504-1338 to m e d ical bi l l s, 8.3 Cummins with 6 speed Allison auto $8250. Call Jack at 775 Duplex in Bend's Old trans, 2nd owner. 541-279-9538. Mill District. Ad ¹2182 Manufactured/ Very nice! $53,000. TEAM Birtola Garmyn 541-350-4077 870 Mobile Homes High Desert Realty Boats & Accessories 541-312-9449 Where can you find a List Your Home www. BendOregon JandMHomes.com 17.5' Bayliner 175 Capri, helping hand? RealEstate.com We Have Buyers like new, 135hp I/O, low From contractors to Get Top Dollar time, Bimini top, many Financing Available. yard care, it's all here extras, Karavan trailer 541-548-5511 with swing neck current in The Bulletin's registrations. $7000. NEW Marlette Special "Call A Service 541-350-2336 1404 sq.ft., 4/12 roof, Professional" Directory a rch shingles, d b l DUPLEX BY OWNER dormer, 9 lite door, 0/9 $224,900 2 bdrm,1 glamour bath, applibath,2 story, gapkg, $69,900 rages,14yrs old. Bend. ance finished on site karenmichellen@hot- PRICE GUARANTEED mail.com 541-815-7707 TILL MARCH 17.5' Seaswirl 2002 JandMHomes.com HOLIDAY RAMBLER 745 Wakeboard Boat 541-548-551'I VACATIONER 2003 I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, Homes for Sale 8.1L V8 Gas, 340 hp, tons of extras, low hrs. I/inter Clearance workhorse, Allison 1000 Full wakeboard tower, 26 acres with Timber - 4 3 Bdrm, 2 Bath, light bars, Polk audio 5 speed trans., 39K, b edroom, 2 ba t h , 1601 sq.ft., speakers throughout, NEW TIRES, 2 slides, 2464 sq ft home with RETAIL completely wired for Onan 5.5w gen., ABS 4-car garage. $85,609 amps/subwoofers, un- brakes, steel cage cock$415,000. SALE derwater lights, fish pit, washer/dryer, fireMLS201208278 $77,599 Finished lace, mw/conv. oven, finder, 2 batteries cusCall Duke Warner On Your Site. ree standing dinette, tom black paint job. Realty Dayville at J & M Homes $12,500 541415-2523 was $121,060 new; now, 541-987-2363 541-548-5511 $35,900. 541-536-1008

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0

932

Antique & Classic Autos

m. - •

1/3 interest in well-

equipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. $65,000. 541-419-9510 www. N4972M.com

BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS Search the area's most comprehensive listing of classified advertising... real estate to automotive, merchandise to sporting goods. Bulletin Classifieds appear every day in the print or on line. Call 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com

The Bulletin

Good runner Vin¹ 672057

$'5,998 ROBBERSON y LleeoLn~

~

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Pnce good thru 01/31/15

Ford 150 2010

Supercrew 4x4 with heated and cooled seats, Vin¹ A36361.

$29,977 ROBBERSON

Serving Central Oregonsince Sgtg

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 01/31/15

HANGAR FOR SALE. 30x40 end unit T

Tick, Tock

hanger in Prineville. Dry walled, insulated, and painted. $23,500. Tom, 541.788.5546 Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809

Mercedes 380SL 1982 Roadster, black on black, Tick, Tock... soft & hard top, excellent ...don't let time get condition, always garaged. 155 K m i les, away. Hire a $11,500. 541-549-6407 professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today! V W CONV. 1 9 78 $8999 -1600cc, fuel injected, classic 1978 Volkswagen ConvertSave money. Learn ible. Cobalt blue with a black convertible to fly or build hours with your own airtop, cream colored c raft. 1968 A e ro interior 8 black dash. Ford F-150 Supercab This little beauty runs Commander, 4 seat, 2013, like new, and looks great and 150 HP, low time, 13K miles. turns heads wherever VIN only full panel. $21,000 ¹C20617. $28,888. it goes. Mi: 131,902. obo. Contact Paul at (exp. 1/7/1 5) DLR ¹366 Phone 541-504-8399 541-447-5184. 933

916

Trucks & Heavy Equipment

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J

M.F. 230 DIESEL CASE 200 GAS FORD 2N GAS BEND 541-382-8038

Pickups

Chev Siiverado

2005 crew cab great looking! Vin¹972932

$22,998 msm K I

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 01/31/1 5

Antique & Classic Autos

The Bulletin

Servlng Central Oregon since 1903

Ford F350 2002

Peterbilt 359 p otable water truck, 1 990, 3200 gal. tank, 5hp pump, 4 - 3e hoses, camlocks, $25,000. 541-820-3724 932

Good classified adstell the essential facts in an interesting Manner. Write from the readers view -not the seller's. Convert the facts into benefits. Show the reader howthe item will help them insomeway. This advertising tip brought to youby

ROBBERSON LIIIeeLII ~

541-749-2789 smolichmotors.com

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ChevyCrew Cab 2005, 4x4, low miles. VIN ¹821964. $22,888.

7.3 powerstroke 4x4 Vin¹A90623

$75,998

(exp. 1/7/1 5) DLR ¹366

ROBBERSON

541-749-2789

smolichmotors.com

A Private Collection 1956 Ford pickup 1932 DeSoto 2dr 1930 Ford A Coupe 1929 Ford A Coupe 1923 Ford T Run. All good to excellent. Inside heated shop

BEND 541-382-8038

Have an item to sell quick? If it's under '500you can place it in The Bulletin Classifieds for: '10 - 3 lines, 7 days '16 -3 lines, 14 days (Private Party ads only)

Chevelle Malibu 1966 Complete restoration, $32,900.

(509) 521-0713 (in Bend, OR)

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 01/31/2015

Find It in 935 The Bulletin Classifiedst Sport Utility Vehicles 541-385-5809

CA L L vh.

TODAYA

ChevyPickup 1978 long bed, 4x4, frame up restoration. 500 Cadillac eng i ne, fresh R4 transmission w/overdrive low mi., no rust, custom interior and carpet, n ew wheels a n d tires, You must see it! $25,000 invested. $12,000 OBO. 541-536-3889 or 541-420-6215.

BMW X3 35i 2010 Exlnt cond., 65K miles w/100K mile transferable warranty. Very

clean; loaded - co(d weather pkg, premium pkg & technology pkg. Keyless access, sunroof, navigation, satellite radio, extra snow tires. (Car top carrier not included.)$22,500. 541-915-9170

Chevy Silverado 2012 4x4 Crew Cab FordEscapeXLT2012, 4x4, 6 speed auto. 39K miles, White Diamond paint, VIN ¹B92544. $15,888. (exp. 1/7/1 5) DLR ¹366 Tonneau cover, leather heated seats, running boards, tow-ready, new tires (only 200 miles on them), like new inside and out! 541-749-2789 $28,900. 541-350-0775 smolichmotors.com

The Earned Income Tax Credit. You may have earned it. Why not claim it? If you're working hard just to make ends meetand have one or more children living with you, you may qualify for the EITC. Think of it as a reward for doing one of life's most beautiful, most important and most loving jobs. Visit our Web site or ask your tax preparer if you qualify. Because when it comes to getting more for your family, consider it done. A message from the Internal Revenue Service. www.irs.gov/eitc

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The Internal

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E6 THURSDAY JANUARY 1 2015 • THE BULLETIN I

• I ~ I

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

• •

975

975

975

975

975

975

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

SubaruLegacy 3.0R Limited 2008,

Toyota Camry LE 2007 73,200 miles, newer tires, includes keyless start after factory, 4 studless snow tires not on nms. $9300. 541-771-0005 or 541-389-3550

I

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BOATS &RVs 805- Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorbomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies and Campers 890- RVs for Rent

AUTOS8ETRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916 - Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles

935

935

935

Sport Utility Vehicles

Sport Utility Vehicles

Sport Utility Vehicles

Toyota FJ Cruiser 2012, 4WD, w/traction control, alloy wheels, mud & snow t ires, tow pkg. + trailer break, back VWTiguan 2012, up camera, r oof feature packed! rack, ABS breaks + VIN ¹076343. $24,998 independent system, (exp. 1/7/1 5) blue tooth connecSMOLICH tion, hands free cell phone c a p ability, V Q LV Q compass, o utside 541-749-2156 temp, inclinometer, smolichvolvo.com 32K mi. , p r istine DLR ¹366 condition, $29,900. 541-549-1736 or FIND IT! 541-647-0081. BIIT IT!

JEEP WRANGLER

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2009 hard top 16,000 miles. automatic, AC, tilt & cruise, power windows, power steering, power locks, alloy wheels and running boards,

garaged. $22,500.

541-419-5960

SELL ITr

USE THE CLASSIFIEDSI

Toyota Highlander

ROBBERSON i ~m

RRR S R

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 01/31/15

(exp. 1/7/1 5)

SMOLICH

Get your business

V Q LV Q 541-749-2156 smolichvolvo.com DLR ¹366 FIND IT!

e ROW I N G with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional"

Bt!T ITI

SELL IT! The Bulletin Classifieds

Directory

MERCEDES-BENZ GL450 2 010 Im-

maculate, custom wheels and new 20" tires. 2nd set MBZ wheels with snowflake tires. Full new car ext. warranty March 2017. 59,500 miles. Fully loaded incl. DVD and NAV. $34,500. 541-815-3049

Chrysler Pacifica 2005,

SMOLICH

$12,979 or $169/mo.,

(exp. 1/7/1 5)

(exp. 1/04/1 5)

Vin ¹315989 Stock ¹44375A

smolichvolvo.com DLR ¹366

$2500 down, 72 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title included in payment.

BMW 330c2003

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V Q LV Q 541-749-2156

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$7,977 ROBBERSON LINCOLN ~

IM RO R

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 01/31/1 5

Garage Sales Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds

541-385-5809 EI

~

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 01/31/15

payment.

©

Find exactly what payment. you are looking for in the S UBA R U . CLASSIFIEDS 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

©

(exp. 1/04/1 5) Vin ¹668743

Stock ¹62316

$12,979 or $195/mo.,

$1000 down, 72 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title included in payment.

S US A R U .

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Subaru Legacy LL Bean 2006, (exp. 1/4/1 5) Vin ¹203053. Stock ¹82770

DUSCRUOUSRRD.OOII

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3621 $17,979 or $199/mo., Dlr ¹0354 $3500 down, 64 mo. at 4 .49% APR

to that unused item by placing it in The Bulletin Classifieds 541

© Scion XB2013, (exp. 1/4/1 5) Vin ¹034131 Stock ¹63065

Volvo S60T5 2012, low miles, Turbo charged. VIN ¹083351. $19,998 (exp. 1/7/1 5)

SMOLICH

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. $15,979 or $199/mo., $2000 down, 84 mo., 877-266-3821 4 49% APR o n a p Dlr ¹0354 proved credit. License

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

©

V Q LV Q

®

S US A R u

SIIRCRUOÃIRRD.OOU

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 677-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

Clean and very nice. 541-749-2789

smolichmotors.com Ch sler 300C 2005

Gorgeous, low miles

ROBBERSON y

10,977

Hyundai Accent 2012, Great gas mileage VIN ¹049211.$10,888.

(exp. 1/7/1 5) DLR ¹366

ROBBERSON'L ~

mDRIR

~

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price

good thru 01/31/1 5

541-749-2789

smolichmotors.com

OURCSUOUSRND.OOSI

Only$11,977 LINCCLN ~

Vin¹689855

Buick LeSabre 2005 m id-size with o n ly 179k miles. $3,900 obo. 541-419-5060

Vin¹211545

S US A R u

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

Toyota Camry 2004

I M RDR

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 01/31/2015

Loaded, runs and looks great! Vin¹ 155032

Take care of your investments with the help from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

$10,977 ROBBERSON ~ U

541-312-3986

Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 01/31/1 5

Garage Sales Garage Sales Garage Sales Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds

541-385-5809

M(s

S US A R U . Dlr¹0354

Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5609 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

HG@IN

o n ap -

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3621

Looking for your next employee?

N385-5809

proved credit. License and title included in payment.

$13,979 or $195/mo.,

©

Say cgoodbuy

S US A R u

(exp. 1/4/1 5) Vin ¹535474 Stock ¹83015

$2000 down, 72 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title included in payment.

OUSCRUOSSRUD.COU

proved credit. License and title included in

® Dodge Avenger2013,

(exp. 1/4/15) Vin ¹053527

S UBA R U

Stock ¹83072 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. $15,979 or $199 mo., 877-266-3821 $2000 down, 84 mo., Dlr ¹0354 4 .49% APR o n a p -

Mercedes Benz E-Class 2005, PT Cruiser 2007, 5spd, 32 mpg hwy, 80K miles new tires+ mounted studded snow tires, $7250. 541-433-2026

$3600 down, 84 mo., 4 .49% APR o n ap proved credit. License and title i ncluded in Toyota Corolla2013

®

Volvo XC60 2010, AWD. VIN ¹118925. $21,995 (exp. 1/7/1 5)

541-749-2156

$21,979 or $259/mo.,

I

975

smolichvolvo.com DLR ¹366

LINCCL N ~

(exp. 1/4/15) Vin ¹207261 Stock ¹82547

Chrysler Town & 541-749-2156 Country LXI 1997, and title i ncluded in smolichvolvo.com beautiful inside & payment. DLR ¹366 out, one owner, nonSubaru Outback smoker, loaded with Chrysler200 LX2012, Limited 2014, S US A R U . Need help fixing stuff? options! 197,892 mi. (exp. 1/4/15) (exp. 1/4/15) Service rec o rds 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Call A Service Professional VIN ¹219928 VIN ¹292213 877-266-3621 available. $4 , 950. find the help you need. Stock ¹82924 Stock ¹83014 Dlr ¹0354 Call Mike, (541) 815- $13,979 $27,979 or $339/mo., www.bendbulletin.com Honda Accord 3.5 EX or $195/mo., 8176 after 3:30 p.m. $3900 down, 84 mo., $2000 down, 72 mo., 2010, leather, 4 .49% APR o n ap 4 .49% APR o n a p moonroof, loaded. Subaru Legacy '09 proved credit. License proved credit. License VIN ¹002776.$14,888. and title i ncluded in and title included in Call a Pro (exp. 1/7/1 5) DLR ¹366 payment. payment. Whether you need a

Automobiles

S IVIOLIC H V Q LV Q

Vin¹615069

ROBBERSON y

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

Garage Sales Garage Sales

AWD Sedan. Bargain Corral Price $12,977

SuaARu

Convertible, seasonal special Vin¹U96242

Vans

2008 Sport, 3rd row, and lots more! Vin¹024803 $19,977

LexusRX 330 2004, AWD, Super Sporty, V6 VIN ¹064428. $13,495

The Bulletin Classifieds

BMW328i 2011, low miles. X Drive. VIN ¹N81801. $24,879

940

Door-to-dcor selling with fast results! It's the easiest way in the world tc sell. The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809

S

I

VOLVO XC90 2007 AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L,

power everything, grey on grey, leather heated lumbar seats, 3rd row seat, moonroof, new tires, always garaged, all maintenance up to date, excellent cond. A STEAL AT$13,900. 541-223-2218

WHEN YOU SEE THIS

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

000 1000

Legal Notices LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE IS H EREBY G I V E N that t h e un d e r-

signed has b e en appointed personal r epresentative A l l p ersons hav i ng claims against the estate are required to p resent t hem, with vouchers attached, to the undersigned personal r epresentative a t 1345 NW Wall St Ste 101, Bend, OR 97701, within four m onths after t h e date of first publication of this notice, or the claims may be barred. All persons whose rights may be affected by the proceedings may obtain ad d i tional information from the records of the court, the personal repres entative, o r th e lawyers for the personal r e presentative, DeKalb 8 Associates 1345 NW W all St St e 1 0 1, Bend, OR 9 7701. Dated and first published on December 18, 2014. Leslie Gail Starr, Personal Representative.

Time to deCIUtter? Need SOme eXtra CaSh? NeedSomeeXtra SPaCethe garage?

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List one Item" in The Bulletin's Classifieds for three days for FREE. PLUS, your ad appears in PRINT and ON-LINE at bendbulletin.com

The Bulletin

To receive yourFREECLASSIFIED AD, call 541-385-5809 or visit The Bulletin office at: 1777 SWChandler Ave. (on Bends west side) *OI!erallowsfor 3linesol textonly. Excludesall service,hay,wood,pets/animals, plants,tickets,weapons,rentals andemployment advertising, andall commercial accounts. Mustbeanindividual itemunder$200.00andprice ol individual itemmust beincludedinthead. Ask yourBulletin SalesRepresentativeaboutspecial pricing,longerrunschedulesandadditional features. UmitI adperitemper 30daysto besold.


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