Serving Central Oregon since1903 $1.5Q
SUNDAY March1, 2015
TOMORROW
NORTHWEST TRAVEL: SALEM • C1
I
w avn> ancean e
I
~T-~- SlIe
8 IQ
SPORTSNEN'S Sgggf'se vavs te
STATECHAMPS: CROOICCOUNTYAND CULVERTAICEWRESTLINGTITLES, D1
MORE $~ fg ~ T HAN ~ ~ ~
INCO UPONS INSI D E
bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
SALEM
BEND-LA PINE
Tax break coming for data centers?
BeeS' memOry —Theirs can be unreliable, just like humans', a study finds. A3
By Tyler LeedseThe Bulletin
Afghan serial killer-
By Beau Eastes The Bulletin
Shewas involvedin27deaths, but now she's in prisonraising her daughter.A6
rowing up, Jane Shein learned her coursework through role-playing, a component of the "storyline method" of education. "I can still remember things I did in
ble, but we'll make sure to do the extra
G
At Highland, students have become parkrangers in charge offorestm anagement and pizza parlor employees mastering the art of making change. The building even owns 20 fog ma-
DIIIA — Its new use in lawenforcement: Creating a rendering of a suspect's face.F1
fourth grade, and I'm 37," Shein said. "I
chines to set the scene.
magnet program is significantlyless disadvantaged than the district at large. All three magnets — Highland, Amity Creek and Westside Village — are also disproportionately filled
munication companies, a
with students from the
The state Senate Committee on Finance and
And a Webexclusive
— "Like Dementors in 'Harry Potter,' toxic bosses drain people of their passion, leaving nothing in their wakebut a widespread sense ofdespair." bendbunetin.com/extras
EDITOR'5CHOICE
Transmitting HIV: Shouldit
be a crime?
really, really want that for my kids." Through Bend-La Pine's threeschool magnet program, which is open to all district students through a lottery,
Shein was able to do just that, enrolling her oldest at Highland Elementary,
which employs the storytelling method.
Shein did, however, have one hesitation.
"Unfortunately, Highland definitely is not a slice of Bend. It's fairly homogeneous, economically speaking," Shein said. "Through fifth grade, we're concernedabout them being in abub-
things to get them beyond that."
State lawmakers are tak-
Highland has the lowest poverty rate among elementary schools in the district, and overall, the three-school
city's west side. See Magnet/A4
move that could ensure the future of data centers in Prineville and other rural
Oregon communities. Revenue modified a bill Thursday that would cap some taxes for cable televi-
BEND
Nagnet school magnetism
ing action to appease the tax concerns of some of the nation's largest telecom-
sion and Internet companies and fully exclude them from others.
Bend-La Pine Schools has three magnet schools — Highland, Westside Village andAmity Creek — onBend's west side. Enrollment is open to every student in the district through a lottery system, though the district has a policy of automatically allowing students who live within a "walking zone" to attend the magnet schools, which are based onalternative education models. Overall, the three schools are occupied by adisproportionately wealthier student population when compared with the district at large. The population also overrepresents students from the four west-side schools, particularly High Lakesand Miller elementaries.
Senate Bill 611tackles
Lava Ridge
the concept of "central as-
sessment," Oregon's property taxation formula for communication businesses
that includes assessing intangibles — things such as brand value, financial worth and patents — in
Ponderosa
addition to actual property. The taxation policy is not
unique. The state centrally assess airlines, railroads, oil and gas pipelines, and electric companies.
KEY Number of students attending Bend-La Pine's three magnet schools 4
0
By Emily Greenhouse
See Tax/A5
Bloomberg News
NEW YORK — When Terrance Williams was 21, he met a man in Syracuse,
Buckingham Ensworth
WEST-SIDEELEMENTARIES High Lakes
New York, and the two be-
Highlan
involved. Williams and this
252
partner — who, in court
papers, is referred to only as "the victim" — used protection in their relationship, at first. But one night, Wil-
liams'partnerreached for a condom, and Williams removed it from his hand.
Lift tickets, now priced ike f ights
Juniper
came friends. Some weeks later, they became sexually
Westside Village
160
239
ALL EAST-SIDE EL EMENTARIES
Amity Creek
Bear Creek
W.E. Miller
By Esme E. Deprez Bloomberg News
The two often talked about
On a January Saturdayin Utah's Wasatch mountains, a chairlift whisked Stephen
the dangers of the human
immunodeficiency virus, and Williams' partner
Percassi, an engineer from
asked him, four times, if it
upstate New York, toward the top of Alta Ski Area.
was safe for them to have unprotected sex. Williams
In his pocket was his lift ticket, which would've cost
assured him that it was. That was in the summer of 2010. In December 2009,
$84that day. Instead, weeks
57
Williams had been diagnosed as HIV positive. A
His discount was enabled
by the $11billion ski-andsnowboard industry's shift
42
that he believed might be
toward what economists
Elk Meadow
HIV positive, because, be-
call dynamic or variable pricing, which makes the
SOUTHCOUNTY
fore they had started sleeping together, Williams had had unprotected sex with
R.E. Jewell
Pine Ridge
few months into their relationship, in October 2010, Williams told his partner
earlier, he'd scored it online for$69.
cost of a day on the slopes
ELEMENTARIES La Pine Rosiand Three Rivers
Source:Bend-La Pine Schools
an infected person. Williams suggested that his partner get tested. In No-
more like the moving target of an airplane seat, hotel David Wray l TheBulletin
room or rental car. See Tickets /A7
vember, the partner ended their sexual relationship. Three months later, in
February 2011, he became severely ill, and subse-
States revisit Obamacare as high court weighs subsidies
quently learned that he was HIV positive. It wasn't until two months after that that Williams got in touch, and admitted that he had lied about his HIV status
By Sandhya Somashekhar, JasonMillman and Lena H.Sun
and apologized for infecting his partner.
in several Republican states who balked at participating
ance subsidies for millions. impact of a court ruling. The discussions takingplace The justices hear arguments
places, the ruling could spark
publican leaders had previouslyrefusedto set up state marketplaces are now considering
an immediate crisis. People
what steps they might take to
After reading the con-
in President Barack Obama's
in state capitals around the
about the matterthis week. If
fession, Williams' former partner went to the police.
health care initiative are now
countryarepartofaflurry of
the court sides with the plain-
could see their insurance bills skyrocket or be forced to can-
preserve the subsidies. See Obamacare/A7
The Washington Post
WASHINGTON — Officials
revisiting the issue amid mountingpanic over apossible
planning and lobbyingby officials, insurance and hospital
Supreme Court decision that would revoke federal insur-
executives, and health care advocates to blunt the possible
tiffs, who argue that subsidies are not allowed in the 34 states that opted against settingup their own insurance market-
cel their insurance. At least six states where Re-
Williams' act was
profoundly thoughtless, but was it malicious, and
TODAY'S WEATHER
should it be considered a
crime? And if so, what kind of crime'? See HIV /A5
rr%
Sunny High 44, Low23 Page B6
INDEX Business Calendar Classified
Ef - 6 Community Life Cf -8 Milestones C2 Pu zzles C6 D1-6 B2 Crosswords C6, G2 Obituaries B4 Sp o rts G f - 6L ocal/State B f -6 Opinion/Books F1-6 TV/Movies C8
The Bulletin AnIndependent Newspaper
Vol. 113, No. eO,
4e pages, 7 sections
Q Ilf/e use recycled newsprint
:: IIIII I D 8 8 267 0 2 33 0
7
A2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2015
The
NATION Ee ORLD
Bulletin How to reachUs
RUNWAY ON ICE
STOP, START OR MISS YOUR PAPER?
SeCt leader arreSted —Brazilian authorities said Saturday they arrested a self-professed minister put on aU.S. most-wanted list for allegedly molesting two girls in a"Maidens Group" at his religious fellowship in rural Minnesota. A statement posted on the website of the Public Security Secretariat for the RioGrande doNorte state government reported the arrest of Victor Arden Barnard, 53. TheU.S. Marshals Service also confirmed the arrest in a statement. TheBrazilian statement said police captured Barnard late Friday in an apartment near a paradisaical white-sand beach in northeastern Brazil. He was being held in the city of Natal to await extradition to face charges in the U.S. Bernard, who faces 59counts of criminal sexual conduct, was on the most-wanted list of the U.S.Marshals Service.
541-385-5800 Phonehours:5:30a.m.-5 p.m. Mon.-F i., r6:30a.m .-noonSat.-Sun.
GENERAL INFORMATION
541-382-1811 ONLINE
www.bendbulletin.com
BOStOnmarathen trial —A divided federal appeals court has rejected a motion byDzhokhar Tsarnaev, accused inthe Boston Marathon bombing, to movehis trial out of the city, paving the way for opening statements in thecase to begin Wednesday.Thejurists disagreed 2-1over whether ajury drawn from among 5 million people in Massachusetts, where thedeadly bombings occurred, could befair and impartial. Mere knowledge of acase is not thesame thing as prejudice, the majority said. Tsarnaev,21, is accused of planting bombs at the finish line in 2013, killing three peopleand injuring more than 260.
bulletin©bendbulletin.com N EW S R O O M AFTER HOURS AND WEEKENDS
541-383-0367 NEW S R O O M FA X
541-385-5804
MiSSOuri rampage —Residents of a small southern Missouri town struggled to come to grips with the knowledge that one of their own had killed sevenpeople in aspasmof violence that ended when the gunman shot himself to death on arural county road. Joseph Jesse Aldridge, 36, went to four homes in the unincorporated town of Tyrone in TexasCounty late Thursday, killing relatives andneighbors but sparing two teenagers. Hewas later found dead in avehicle in neighboring ShannonCounty, about 25 miles away.
N EW S R O O M E M A IL Business .....business@bendbulletin.com City Desk..........news@bendbulletin.com CommunityLife communitylife@bendbulletin.com Sports..............sports©bendbu getin.com
OUR ADDRESS Street ...........1777 SW Chandler Ave. Bend, OR97702 Mailing.........P.O.Box6020 Bend, OR97708
Si sil.Am
Drserirsite
ADMINISTRATION Chairwoman Elizabeth C.Mccool..........541-383-0374 Publisher John Costa........................541-383-0337 ManagingEditor Denise Costa.....................541-383-0356
DEPARTMENT HEADS Advertising Jay Brandt.....541-383-0370 Circulation AdamSears ...541-385-5805
HumanResources Traci Donaca .....................
TALK TO AN EDITOR Business Tim Doran.........541-383-0360 CitySheila G.Miler ..........541-617-7831 CommunityLife, Health JulieJohnson....................541-383-0308 EditorialsRichard Coe.....541-383-0353 GD! Magazine Ben Salmon.......................541-383-0377 NewsJanJordan..............541-383-0315 PhotosDeanGuernsey.....541-383-0366 SportsBill Bigelow............541-383-0359
REDMOND BUREAU Street address.......226 NW Sixth St. Redmond, OR 97756 Mailing address....P.O.Box788 Redmond, OR 97756 Phone................................541-504-2336 Fax ....................................541-548-3203
CORRECTIONS The Bulletin's primaryconcern isthat all stories areaccurate. If you knowof an error in a story,call us at541-383-0358.
TO SUBSCRIBE
Home deliveryandE-Edition: One month: $17 <Printonly:$16)
By mail in Deschutes County: One month: $14.50 By mail outsideDeschutes County:Onemonth: $18 E-Edition only:Onemonth: $13 TO PLACE AN AD Classified...........................541-385-5809 Advertisingfax..................541-385-5802 Other information ............. 541-382-1811
OTHER SERVICES Photo reprints...................541-383-0358 Obituaries.........................541-617-7825 Back issues ......................541-385-5800
Ag Bulletin payments areaccepted at the drop box atCity Hall. Checkpayments may beconvertedto anelectronic fundstransfer.TheBulletin, USPS fr552-520, ispublisheddaily byWestem CommunicationsInc., 1777SWChandler Ave., Bend,OR97702.Periodicals postagepaidat Bend,OR.Postmaster. Send address changesto TheBulletin circulationdepartment, Po. Box6020, Bend, OR 97708. TheBulletin retains ownershipandcopyright protection of all staff-preparednewscopy,advertising copy andnewsorad ilustrations. They may not be reproducedwithout explicit prior approval.
HOmeland SeCurity —Democrats arelosingsomeskirmishes Jim Cole/The Associated Press
Planes areparked after landing on frozenLakeWinnipesaukee onSaturday, in Alton, NewHampshire. Dozens of pilots from all over the Northeast took advantage of a rare, sunny, storm-free day to touch down on the frozen lake, atAlton Bay SeaplaneBase, the only ice runway in the lower 48 states approved
by the Federal Aviation Administration. The 3,000-foot airstrip is popular with pilots, said airport director Paul LaRochelle, who keeps it plowed when the ice is strong enough. As he directs pilots to park headvises them not to use their brakes: "You'll just skid," he said.
ama, ean a u on co ision course By Juli e Pace AndMatthew Lee The Associated Press
WASHINGTON
-
For
six years, President Barack Obama and Israeli Prime Min-
are uncertain and would vali- iting Israel in 2010. Additional date his early political promise housing plans that year upendto negotiate with Iran without ed U.S. effortsto restartpeace conditions. talks between the Israelis and NetanyahLt considers un-
Palestinians.
ister Benjamin Netanyahu acceptable any deal with Iran have been on a collision course that doesn't end its nudear proover how to halt Iran's nuclear gram entirely and opposes the ambitions, a high-stakes en- diplomatic pursuit as one that deavor both men see as a cen- minimizes what he considers terpiece of their legacies. an existential threat to Israel. The coming weeks will put Tehran says its nuclear prothe relationship between their gram is peaceful and exists countries, which otherwise re- only to produce energy for cimain stalwart allies, to one of vilian use. "Through scaremongering, its toughest tests. N etanyahu i s b o und f o r falsification, propaganda and Washington for an address to creating a false atmosphere Congress on Tuesday aimed even inside other countries, squarely at derailing Obama's gsrael) is attempting to prevent cherished bid for a diplomatic peace," Iran's top nuclear nego-
The tension between Obama and Netanyahu was laid bare in an unusually public manner during an Oval Office meeting
deal with Tehran. At the same time, Secretary of State John
him, but I have to work with
tiator said Saturday in Tehran. "I believe that these attempts
in 2011. In front of a crowd of journalists, the prime minister
lectured Obama at length on Israel's history and dismissed the president's conditions for Later that year, a m i cro-
phone caught Obama telling his then-French counterpart in a private conversation that
while he may be fed up with Netanyahu, "You are sick of
The numbers drawnSaturday nightare:
tz QzsQ zsQ se6 Q»Q The estimated jackpot is now $90 million.
MEGABUCKS
The numbers drawnSaturday nightare:
QeQoQsQeQa aQ s t
The estimated jackpot is now $11.6 million.
CPAC StraW pOII —Sen. RandPaul, R-Ky., took the top spot for the third year in a row atSaturday's Conservative Political Action Conference straw poll, edging out Gov.Scott Walker, R-Wis., in the last CPAC presidential preference contest before primary voting begins. Paul hadbeenthe prohibitive favorite heading into this year's balloting, which featured17 candidates. More than 3,000 attendees voted, a 20 percent increaseover 2014's turnout.
him every day."
— Fromwire reports
are in vain and should not negotiators will be in Switzer- impede reaching a (nuclear) land for talks with the Iraniagreement," said Foreign Minans, trying for a framework ister Mohammad Javad Zarif. agreement before a late March U.S. and Iranian officials deadline. reported progress in the latIn between are Israel's elec- est talks on a deal that would tions March 17, which have freeze Tehran's nuclear proheightened the political over- gram for 10 years, but allow it tones of Netanyahu's visit to to slowly ramp up in the final Washington. years of the accord. T he prime m inister i s Obama has refusedto meet speaking to Congress at the Netanyahu during his visit, request of Republicans. His visit was coordinated without the Obama administration's
with the White House citing
its policy of not meeting with foreign leaders soon before
knowledge, deepening ten- their elections. Vice President sions between two leaders who Joe Biden and Kerry will both have never shown much affec- be out of the country on trips tion for each other.
announced only after Netanya-
Jeremy Ben-Ami, president of the liberal Jewish advocacy
hu accepted the GOP offer to speak on Capitol Hill.
group J Street, said Netanyahu
T he p r im e
m i n i ster i s
was "crossing some lines that haven't been crossed before
scheduled to speak Monday at AIPAC's annual policy con-
and is putting Israel into the
ference. The Obama administmtion will be represented at
partisan crossfire in a way it has notbeen before." But the largest pro-Israel
lobby in the U.S., the American
Hospice.Theword triggers manyresponsesbut onething you should not feel is alone.St. Charles Hospicecan help, in morewaysthan you may realize.Hospice ismuchmorethan medical care inyour home - our dedicatedteamcanalso provideassistance with practical and financial concerns,householdchores,spiritual support andmore. Now available inDeschutesCounty,St. Charles Hospicehas been providingcomfort anddignity for patients - andsupport for Central Oregonfamilies - for 25 years.Aspart of St.Charles Health System,ourwell-trained, compassionatecaregivers can easily provide aseamless continuumof care to patients.
the event by U.N. Ambassador Samantha Power and national
securityadviser Susan Rice, who criticized Netanyahu's plans to address Congress as
"destructive" to the U.S.-Ismeli "AIPAC welcomes the prime relationship. m inister's speech t o C o n The Iran dispute has spot-
POWERBALL
HamaS —An Egyptian court declared Hamas a"terrorist organization" on Saturday, further isolating the blockaded rulers of the Gaza Strip once openly welcomed bythe country's toppled Islamist-dominated government. The ruling is unlikely to haveany immediate effect on Hamas, still reeling from last summer's war with Israel and choked by an Israeli-Egyptian blockadeset up in 2007. MoussaAbu Marzouk, Hamas' No. 2 leader, is based inCairo and is receiving medical treatment there, members of the group say.The moveunderlines Egypt's increasing hostility to Hamas, which the court blamed for violence in the country's restive Sinai Peninsula.
restartingpeace talks.
partisanship.
As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites
AirCraft traCking —Australia, Indonesia and Malaysia will lead a trial to enhancethe tracking of aircraft over remote oceans, allowing planes to bemore easily found should they vanish like Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, Australia's transport minister said today. Theannouncement comesone weekahead of theanniversary of the disappearance of Flight 370, which vanished last year on a flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing with 239 people onboard. Notrace of the plane has been found. Airservices Australia, a government-owned agency that manages thecountry's airspace, will work with its Malaysian and Indonesian counterparts to test the newmethod, which would enable planes to be trackedevery15 minutes, rather than the previous rate of 30 to 40 minutes, Australian Transport Minister Warren Truss said.
Kerry and other international
Israel Public Affairs Committee, has tried to play down the
Oregon Lottery results
over the Department of HomelandSecurity, but many feel they are winning a political war that will haunt Republicans in 2016and beyond. Democrats lackedthevotes Friday to force Republicans to fund the department for a yearwith no strings. Still, even someRepublicans say party leaders are on aperilous path with a very public ideological struggle only highlighting the GOP'sinability to pass contested legislation and possibly worsening its weakrelationship with Hispanic voters. Worst of all, numerous lawmakerssaid, Republican leaders have offered no plausible scenario for a successful ending, so theysimply are delaying analmost certain and embarrassing defeat. Conservatives defend their doggedness; several said their constituents support their stand, while others said the issuetranscends politics.
gress, and we believe that this is a very important address,"
spokesman Marshall Wittmann said. "We have been actively encouraging senators
You're notalone.Let us help.
lighted rifts in a relationship that has been frosty from the start. Obama and Netanyahu
St, CharlesHospice Apromise of comfort.
lack any personal chemistry, leaving them with virtually and representatives to attend no reservoir of goodwill to and we have received an over- get them through their policy whelmingly positive response disagreements. fromboth sides of the aisle." Within months of t a king Nearlya dozen Democratic office, Obama irritated Isralawmakers plan to sit out Ne-
el when, in an address to the
tanyahu's speech, calling it an affront to the president. Stopping Iran from building a nudear bomb has become a defining challenge for both
Arab world, he challenged the legitimacy of Jewish settlements on Palestinian-claimed land and cited the Holocaust
as the justification for Israel's
Obama and Netanyahu, yet existence, not any historical one they have approached far Jewishtie to the land.
differently. For Obama, getting Iran to prove it is not pursuing nudear weapons would be a bright spot in a foreign policy arena in which numerous outcomes
The White House was furious when Netanyahu's govemment defied Obama and announced plans to construct new housing units in East Jerusalem while Biden was vis-
~
S tCharles .
Hospice 54l-70$-$700 StCharlesHealthCare.org/Hospice 08
SUNDAY, MARCH 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 Sunday, March1, the 60th
day of 2015. Thereare305 days left in the year.
RESEARCH
HAPPENINGS position rallies are planned after the shooting of Vladimir Putin's political rival Boris Nemtsov.
HISTORY Highlight:In1565, the city of Rio de Janeiro was founded by Portuguese knight Estacio de Sa. In1790, President George Washington signedameasure authorizing the first U.S. Census. In1815, Napoleon, having escaped exile in Elba, arrived in Cannes, France,and headed for Paris to begin his "Hundred Days" rule. In1867,Nebraska becamethe 37th state.
In1890, J.P. Lippincott published the first U.S. edition of the Sherlock Holmesmystery "A Study in Scarlet" by Arthur Conan Doyle. In1932, Charles Lindbergh Jr., the 20-month-old son of Charles andAnne Lindbergh, was kidnapped from the family home near Hopewell, New Jersey. (Remains identified as those of the child were found the following May.) In1940, "Native Son," by Richard Wright, was first published by Harper 8 Brothers. In1945, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, back from the Yalta Conference, proclaimed themeetingasuccessashe addressed ajoint session of Congress. In1954, four Puerto Rican nationalists opened fire from the spectators' gallery of the U.S. House of Representatives, wounding five members of Congress. TheUnited States detonated a dry-fuel hydrogen bomb,codenamed Castle Bravo, at Bikini Atoll in the Marshall Islands. In1961, President John F.Kennedy signed anexecutive order establishing the PeaceCorps. In1971,a bomb wentoff inside a men's room at the U.S. Capitol; the radical group Weather Underground claimed responsibility for the pre-dawn blast.
In1981, Irish Republican Army member BobbySands begana hunger strike at the MazePrison in Northern Ireland; he died 65 days later. In1995, the Internet search engine website Yahoo! was incorporated by founders Jerry Yang and David Filo. Tea yearsage:Dennis Rader, the churchgoing family man accused of leading adouble life as the BTKserial killer, was charged in Wichita, Kansas, with10 counts of first-degree murder. (Rader later pleaded guilty and received multiple life sentences.) A closely divided Supreme Court outlawed the death penalty for juvenile criminals. Five yearsage:Wartime Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic, defending himself against charges of Europe's worst genocide since the Holocaust, told judges in his slow-moving trial that he was not the barbarian depicted by U.N. prosecutors, but was protecting his people against a fundamentalist Muslim plot. One year age:Russian troops took over Crimea asthe parliament in Moscowgave President Vladimir Putin a green light to use the military to protect Russian interests in Ukraine.
BIRTHDAYS Actor Robert Clary is 89. Singer Harry Belafonte is 88. Rock singer RogerDaltrey is 71. Actor Dirk Benedict is 70. Actor Alan Thicke is 68. Actor-director Ron Howard is 61. Actor Tim Daly is 59. Singer-musician Jon Carroll is 58. Actor Bryan Batt is 52. Actor John David Cullum is 49. Actor George Eads is48. Actor Javier Bardem is 46. Actor JackDavenport is 42. Actor Mark-Paul Gosselaar is 41.Actor Jensen Ackles is 37.Actress Lupita Nyong'o is 32. Popsinger Kesha (formerly Ke$ha) is 28. Pop singer Justin Bieber is 21. — From wire reports
I
I
Russian slaying —op-
California bird species host me isease By Louis Sahagun
Just like humans, Bees are capable of memory error in which information melds together. Having
Los Angeles Times
fewer than a million neurons compared to a human's 85 billion, bees' brains likely need to be practical on storage, making them valuable case studies for the roots of complex brain functions.
Ticks ~ g th e bacterium responsible for Lyme disease are infesting Northern California's birds and
may be hitching rides on them into suburban settings, according to a new University of C alifornia, Berkeley, study.
By Geoffrey Mohan Los Angeles Times
Bumblebees are just as guilty of merging memories
The tick-borne spirochete
scientists know as Borrelia burgdorferi is found in a
a s NBC anchor Brian Wi l-
liams might be, it turns out. A new study, published online Thursday in the journal Current Biology, suggests that
wide variety of mammals in
California induding wood rats, gray squirrels and deer. Although Lyme disease cases are relatively rare in California, DNA sequencing showed B. burgdorferi's presence in 23 of 53 species
Bombus terrestris is prone to
a type of memory error common among humans — melding information from two episodes into one. Bees may not be able to tell
of birds tested in Mendocino County. The disease-caus-
tales about being under fire
in flights over Iraq, but they do demonstrate remarkable memory ability. And because they have a mere 960,000 neurons compared with the
ing bacteria were detected
human complement of about
finch and oaktitmouse.
inblood samples taken from
species induding the American robin, lark sparrow, dark-eyed junco, lesser gold-
85 billion, they probably need
The
to economize on storage and
processing. That's what makes them valuable models to research-
ers trying to find the roots of complex brain functions in
go l den-crowned
sparrow was infected more Frank Augstein /The AssociatedPress file photo
A bumblebee approaches a poppy flower in a field in Duisburg, Germany in 2014. A new study released last week revealed bees can make memory errors or merge memories.
frequently than any of the other species, according to the study published in the
journal PLOS ONE. "Our findings underscore
the simpler structures pre-
the importance of bird be-
served across species over to remember the last reward many millions of years of evo- (the order of the test flowlution. After all, many studies ers was swapped between have demonstrated that mem- groups). So, if a bee was ory is formed on a cell-by-cell trained on yellow most recentbasis. ly, the bee flew to the yellow Lars Chittka, a behaviorflower at rates far higher (77 al ecologist at Queen Mary percent to 79 percent) than University, London, has been would be explained by chance probing the limits of bees' alone. memories in the lab. He and But as time went on, the colleague Kathryn Hunt were bees started showing a greatcurious about how bumble- er propensity to choose the bees processed episodic mem- hybrid flower — yellow conory.So they trained bees to re- centric rings, for example. spond to rewards doled out by The r e searchers a d d ed artificial flowers: one yellow, complicatedchoices and varanother with black and white ied colors and combinations, concentric circles. testing whether bees were just Afterward, the bees were generalizing for such factors
most was that bees seemed to prefer a merged stimulus over the long haul. Their longterm memory, in other words, seemed to meld two separate events.
"Such memory errors are quite well-established in humans," Chittka said. "We tend to think t hat ou r m e mory
is, in general, accurate, and where it' s inaccurate we have
these errors are a byproduct
havior to explain local tick
of useful memory processes," he said.
infestation and Borrelia infection in these animals,"
E xtracting c ommon
e l e-
ments from various episodes helps us learn rules that govern our environment, prepar-
ing us for similar experiences. That ability is fundamental to higher cognition, in fact. "In itself such rule-learning isn't wrong," Chittka said. "It
a perception that it just fades just produces errors when it's and we might have forgot- applied too generally." ten something. But there is a Psychologists theorize that quite a lot of complete mis-re- "conjunction errors" occur on membering, merging, mix- retrieval, not in the formation ing things up. In the court- of episodic memory. room this can have serious So Wil l i ams' bra i n consequences." might have made a useful, as "yellowness," whether cerg iven three choices — t h e Beyond sinking a career, space-saving shortcut to "resame flowers on which they tain patterns were inherently such errors can prove dead- mind" him that traveling in were trained and a third that more attractive, and whether ly. So, it's a bit of a stretch to a helicopter in a war zone m erged c h aracteristics o f memory and learning were think t hat evolution would can get you shot down. It just both. strongerfor certain colors or have selected for the trait, didn't happen in one episode. Not surprisingly, bees test- patterns. Chittka said. Or Williams could just be "But it's very possible that ed soon after the trials tended The result that stood out lying.
the study says, "and suggest the potential for bird-mediated geographic spread of vector ticks and spirochetes in the far-western United States." "This is the most exten-
sive study of the role ofbirds in Lyme disease ecology in California, and the first to consider the diversityofbird species, their behaviors and
their habitats in identifying which birds are truly the most important as carriers,"
said ecologist Erica Newman, the lead author of the
study.
DOES EVERYONE MUMBLE? Connect Hearing YOUR HEARING PROFESSIONALS
Find It All Scientistsshockedbyclusters Online
on fringes ofthe Milky Way By Amina Khan
FORMERLY
LEAQELDHEARINGAIDCENTER
1-888-568-9884 ~RFATs
bendbulletin.com
argo sald.
Los Angeles Times
Camargo and colleagueshad High above the spiral Milky been looking for new star dusWay, astronomers have spotted ters using data from NASA's two clusters of new stars grow- Wide-field Infrared Survey Exing at the fringes of our galaxy. plorerspacecraft,or WISE for The discovery, published in the short, when they came across journal Monthly Notices of the the strange objects. "I usually spend the nights Royal Astronomical Society, appears to be the first such stel- at home looking for new cluslar cradles found outside the
ters in the W ISE's infrared
galactic disk. The clusters, called Camargo 438 and Camargo 439, were found inside a high-latitude molecular cloud made mostly of hydrogen and named HRK 8L4-77.8. The giant cloud is thought to be about 2 million
sky maps," Camargo said. On a night like any other, he spotted two very faint objects, and
years old and sits about 16,600
important."
emailed their description to
his colleagues. In the morning, he said, his colleague Eduardo Bica told him that he had
"discovered something very
light-years away, high above Using the star dusters, the the galactic disk. Out in the researchers were able to pin interstellar boonies, this doud down the distance to these shouldbe boring — but instead, high-latitude clouds, which it's buzzing withyoung stars. Camargo said was an unprec"The molecular cloud HRK edented feat. 8L4-77.8 is currently forming Why do these star clusters stars, apparently an unprec- exist? There are two possibiledented eventdetected so far ities, Camargo said. First off, among high-latitude clouds," it's possible that stars explodstudy leader and astronomer ing in powerful supernovae Denilso Camargo of the Feder- shoot gas and dust far out from al University of Rio Grande do the galactic disk, and as that Sul in Brazil said in an email. material starts falling back, it Though giant molecular comes togetherto form these clouds can occasionally be giant molecular clouds. The found high above the galactic second explanation is a little disk, none of those few distant more complex: A supernova clouds appeared to hold stel- explosion could produce what lar cradles. Such star-birthing Camargo called a "continuous giant molecular douds are superwind" that blows gas out typically found in the thick of from the disk in an "expandthe inner galactic disk, where ing super-bubble" that could there's a decent density of star actually lead to not just one, stuff that gravity can start but multiple episodes of star pulling together. Finding them formation. high above the hubbub, in the But the scientists also need to sparsely populated halo around continue to examine the clusthe galaxy, isn't just rare — it ters to make sure they're of gahasn't been seen before, Cam- lactic origin, Camargo added.
HIGH LAKES WELCOMES
Dr. Mark Thibert is a board c e rtified
internist who is committed to taking your health to the next level! Dr. Thibert is
looking forward to practicing medicine and getting out into the c o m m u n ity to
meet the people of Central Oregon, the culture and the great outdoors.
To schedule an appointment, call
541-389-7741
HI IAKES H ea l t h C a r e DEDICATED TO SERVING CENTRAL OREGON
Bend Upper Mill Redmond Sisters
A4
TH E BULLETINâ&#x20AC;˘ SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2015
Free andreducedlunchrates
Where magnetstudentscomefrom
January data on the percent of students in eachelementary school qualifying for a free or reduced lunch. Overall, the magnet schools have alower than average rate of free andreduced lunch students compared to the district.
While a great number of students from Bend's west side attend the district's three magnet elementary schools, few from the district's most disadvantaged schools attend. Those schools are Ensworth and Bear Creek in Bend and La Pine Elementary and Rosland in La Pine. The district does not offer busservicebetween La Pineandthemagnetschools.
100%
96%
96%
80
MAGNETSCHOOL
Amity Creek NUMBEROF STUDENTSFROM FOURWESTSIDE SCHOOLSINBEND
112
Highland Iestside Village
292
60
107
55%
51
---49s/o..-
ELEMENTARYMEAN51%
sons why the magnet population fails to represent the
are admitted and the degree
to which their specialized approach is apparent throughout the school day. Amity Creek, which was
the district's smallest elementary school by enrollment at
the start of the year, emphasizes interactions across ages and with parents, who are
invited to join the school for a student-led assembly each morning. A t
W e stside Vil-
lage, which enrolls students from kindergarten through eighth grade, there's a similar emphasis on mixing ages, with the older kids often leading the younger. The school also bases its work around a schoolwide theme that stu-
-
-
-
54%
-
45%
20 9%
Greg Cross/The Bulletin
0
side Village Principal Wendy Winchel.
AMITY BEAR BUCKINGHAM ELK ENSWORTH HIGH HIGHLAND JEWELL JUNIPER LAPINE LAVA MILLER CREEK
How students are admitted
MEADOW
to the magnets depends on
Source: Bend-La Pine
where they live and where their siblings go to school.
like that," she said. "That's
All of the three magnets has
really the downfall of the
a "walking zone" around school." them, which grants any fampush the schools toward serv- ily living within it automat- Walking zones ing a morediverse range of ic acceptance. Because the Drafting t h e wa l k i ng students. three magnets are grouped zones, Wilkinson said, was "a closely together on the city's mix of art and science." School choice "By design and board polwest side, these boundaries Superintendent Ron overlap in some spots, giving icy, there's not equitable acWilkinson said offering par- certain families the opportu- cess to the magnets, because ents a choice of where to send nity to send their kid to one of of the zones, which were their kids to school is "a top two magnet schools and their made to address a revolt takpriority." neighborhood school. ing place from parents on the "Not everyone learns the For a student outside of the west side of town," Wilkinson same, not everyone goes from attendance zone, admission said. "There was a huge inA to B and A to Z the same is left up to a lottery. How- terest in making sure people way," Wilkinson said. "Kids ever, if a student's older sib- who live right across from the learn differently, and some ling attends or is a graduate, school could attend." kids really do need a different they are generally admitted The zones, which overenvironment." automatically. lap with the Miller and High To this end, th e d i strict Currently, the three magnet Lakes attendance areas, are makes it easy for students to schools are dominated by stu- intended to only account for transfer to any of its neigh- dents from the district's four 20 percent of each magnet's borhood schools. Many of the west-side elementary schools, population, a target Wilkinneighborhood schools have especially High Lakes and son estimated the district is a special focus, such as tech- Miller, which make up more hitting. At it s g r eatest disnology at Juniper and art at than half of the student popu- tance, th e z o n e s t r etches Elk Meadow. There is also a lation at Highland. about I/4 miles from Westside Spanish language immersion The magnets' students are Village, though typically the program for a small group of also wealthier than the dis- outer reaches are just under a students at Bear Creek. trict at large, reflecting the mile from each building. The three magnet schools, fact that the student popuRon Paradis, who was a manner in which students
-
MAGNETMEAN30%
district, but there are ideas to
however, stand apart for the
-
14
Source: Bend-La Pine School District
istrators point to many rea-
-
40
13%
Continued fromA1 Principals, school board members and district admin-
-
40
NUMBEROFSTUDENTS FROM FOURMOST DISADVANTAG ED SCHOOLS IN DISTRICT
Magnet
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 48 /// -
4 I/// / /0
LAKES
RIDGE
PINE PONDEROSAROSLAND THREE WESTSIDE RIDGE
as a faculty believe the zone should be lifted to increase diversity." Highland Principal Paul Dean said he sympathizes with those who pushed for the
zones. "If I put myself in the shoes of a parent who lives with-
in walking distance, and I thought about road congestion or the environmental impact, I think I would want to
be able to send my kid to the closest school," he said.
School board member Peggy Kinkade says the zones "seem bigger than I would Meg Roussos/The Bulletin have drawn them." Jordan Simak, 6, jumps up togreet her mother, Bentley Morgan, "I wasn't in the room doing it, so it's easy to say that now,"
she added. "I still support the notion of a walking zone, of them being accessible to people right there, but I understand how they may limit access across the district. It's
at the end of the day at Highland Elementary School last week. Highland is one of three magnet schools in Bend-La Pine.
capacity to take that on." Wilkinson, however, said
he thinks the sibling policy limits access even further
tricky to balance that." than the walking zones, as Making t h i ngs w o rse, younger brothers and sisters Kinkade said, is the fact that of current magnet school chilthe three magnets are so close dren nearly fill up new kintogether. dergarten classes before they "The district unintentionare even open to the lottery. "Take Amity, where over 50 lations at H igh L a kes and school board member from ally created a monster there," Miller are the two least dis- 1999 to 2005, said the poli- she said. percent of all the new slots are advantaged n e ighborhood cy was implemented to "give The placement of the mag- taken up by siblings; that realelementary schools in the dis- people living next door some nets was forced, in part, by ly has a big impact," Wilkison trict, as measured by the rate form ofapreference." rapid p opulation g r owth said. "I think the policy, as it's on the west side. The three of students receiving free and N onetheless, the t h r ee reducedlunches. interpreted today, takes that magnet programs were orig- magnet principals said they Overall, just more than 50 i dea way f u r t her t h a n i t inally co-located within othgenerally support the sibling percent of the district's ele- should have," Paradis said. er schools, as Bear Creek's policy, as it helps develop a mentary-aged students quali- "Because the schools are so immersion program is today. sense of community between fy for free and reduced lunch. close, some families can get To help with crowding, new the parents and schools. "It's so important for us At the magnets, the rate is their kids into almost any of schools were built on the west about 30 percent; at H i gh- them, and I think that hurts side, while the older, smaller to build those ties with the land it is about 9 percent. In access for those left to the buildings were left to the mag- families, some of them we total, only 36 students from lottery. I would also question nets, which also absorbed have with us for nine years the district's four most disad- how many of the kids who do students crowded out of their or more, and that's just been vantaged schools attend the go there and are within the neighborhood schools. critical to developing our pro"The three of them locat- gram," said Westside Village three magnets, compared to walking zones truly walk." 511 from the four west-side el-
Amity Creek Principal Car-
RIVERS VILLAGE Carli Krueger/The Bulletin
ed so close to each other has Principal Winchel. been problematic, because
utes," Winchel noted. "It's super hard for some families, and I think we've lost some
awesome families because they couldn't afford the gas and didn't want to put their
kids on the bus for such a long rrde.
The district has two routes t hat stretch more than a n
hour taking kids from across Bend to the magnet schools. Neither of the routes, however, serves the La Pine area.
Wilkinson said the lack of convenient busing "is a great limitation" a n d
s o m ething
he hopes to address, though he said the cost of getting a quick route from every corner of the district to the magnets would be prohibitive. "I think we could absolute-
ly be doing more in terms of transportation," said b o ard co-chairman Nori Juba. "I
believe we're offering fair access inthat everyone can put their name in the lottery, but
ementary schools. Shein, who is the president
ol Hammett said, "if we were able to change any policy, it it does tend to draw a lot of
of the Highland Parent-Teach-
would be the zone around the
students from a smaller geo-
Only two students attend
er Organization, estimated that "99 percent" of parents
school.
Westside Village from the
"If you look at the demo-
graphical area," Wilkinson said. "Unfortunately, once
they wish. "I think our model promotes self-advocacy, high levels of self-esteem and a
don't even realize the school
graphics around Amity, you have to have a pretty high
they're located, it's hard to relocate them. We've consid-
has been falling, Winchel be- said those families are also lieves,because ofthe price of more likely to be aware of their options and engaged in gas.
sense of family," said West-
thereisn'taneedforsomeone
dents are able to explore as
has a volunteer to help low-in-
income to own the condos, ered relocating, but there's townhomes and houses down been a lot of issues, including by Drake Park," she said. "We whether or not we have the
come families. "There's the perception that
â&#x20AC;˘
0
o
A long ride
La Pine area, a number that
"We have buses, but they
can sometimes take 90 min-
if you don't have the means to get there, is that really fair'?"
Juba noted wealthier families may have a greater ability to drive their kids, but he also
their child's education.
Continued next page
SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
From previous page "I'm not trying to say eastside families are not concerned, but I think to be involved, you
need to be able to have the time and means," he said. "There's also the fact that if you live on
the west side you may hear about these options from other parents. It's part of the social
networks over there in a way it's likely not on the east side." The district doesn't do any-
thing specific for low-income families to make sure they know about the magnets, ac-
cording to Director of Communication and Safety Julianne Repman. However, Repman
noted information about the magnets is available in Spanish and distributed in all of the dis-
trict's schools. The principals at Amity Creek and Westside Village said they do outreach at day cares, including Head Start,
but Highland's principal said his school relies on the district's efforts to get the word out.
School board co-chairwoman Cheri Helt said she doesn't think the district should have
targeted advertising for low-income families. "I think we should try to
accommodate all children's needs, but that we shouldn't
target based on (socioeconomic status)," she said. "I don't think this is about marketing, and I don't think the issue is whether
or not everyone today has the same access. I think the question is, 'Do we have enough
supply to meet our demand for choice options?' And I think we
could do more." Juba said he would like the
Tax
"We've been talking about this ever since Facebook arContinued from A1 rived," Mneville Planning But for telecommunication Director Phil Stenback said companies such as Facebook, about the possibility of workApple and Amazon, which ing with the Legislature to have built massive data centers rewrite Oregon's central asin Oregon based on promis- sessment taxation f ormula. es of tax-friendly enterprise "These data centers, they're zones, central a s sessment a sophisticated group. We're would add millions of dollars Plan A, but they've got a Plan a year to their property taxes. B out there. They could always The data centers are not cur- move to Plan B if Oregon takes rently being taxed under the too long." centralassessment formula, Cable giant Comcast has but a recent ruling by the Or- fought central assessment egon Supreme Court would since 2009, the first year after likely change that. the Department of Revenue "The current tax system we adopted the rule that commuhave makesOregon one ofthe nication businesses should not most difficult places for tech- be locally assessedbut centralnology and communication ly. Comcast's property taxes in companies to locate to," Ore- the state skyrocketed the first gon House Republican leader year of centralassessment,as Mike McLane, of Powell Butte, its properties across the state said Friday afternoon. "Take were valued at $224.2 million Apple (which has one data cen- during the 2008-09 fiscal year ter in Prineville and plans for butjumped to an assessed valanother). If they were subject ue of $1.013 billion in 2009-10 to central assessment, their tax with the new central assessbill every year would exceed ment. In 2011 the Oregon Tax their investment in their data center." The new bill would make
Court ruled that Comcast had
been improperly assessed, but last October the state Supreme
several changes to Oregon tax Court overturned that decilaw, the biggest for Central Or- sion, ruling that Oregon counegon being that data centers ties could keep the almost $17 would be exempt from central million in property taxes they assessment. SB 611 would also had already collected from the use a formula to cap central cable television, Internet and assessment taxation for com- phone service provider. munication companies and That decision, in which the their non-data center build- Supreme Court unanimously ings, and provide tax exemp- agreed that both Comcast's tions for "gigabit" Internet ser- "cable television and Internet vices, a not-so-subtle attempt accessservi ces qualified as to lure Google Fiber and its datatransmissionservices and blazing fast Internet service to were, therefore, communica-
Bill ih SBISm —Senate Bill 611 would exemptdata centers from central assessment, cap centrally assessed property taxes for other communication company properties and allow Internet companies that provide ultrafast services of1,000 megabits per second — that's 25 times faster than current minimum for broadband service — to qualify for central assessment exemptions. Sponsors: CommitteeonFinanceandRevenue History: Last October anOregon SupremeCourt ruling put data centers' tax deals in jeopardy, leaving business leaders worried that telecommunication companies would flee the state. W hat's next:Secondreading ontheSenatefloorMonday Online: Readthe bill at https://elis.leg.state.or.us
A5
the Senate Committee on Finance and Revenue letters in support of a bill that exdud-
ed datacenters from central assessment. "In Prineville/Crook Coun-
ty, the data center industry has made significant investment
and provided much needed family-wage jobs," Roper wrote on Feb. 10. In her letter
she credits Facebook with providing 120 direct jobs and numerous otherancillary sup-
portpositions. "Crook County has had (the) unfortunate distinction of the
assessment," sent legislators if the bill, with the tax caps and scrambling to protect data cen- exdusions, is passed. "We have and continue to tersfrom central assessment and make it financially feasi- support the provisions in the ble for a project like Google Fi- bill that would give breaks berto come to the state. to and address competitive "Clearly it's a two-pronged issues in attracting new and problem,"said McLane, who keeping existing data centers," in 2012 sponsored a bill that said Mike McCauley, the exgave companies such as Face- ecutive director of the League book that operate in enterprise of Oregon Cities, in a written zones certain tax protections. statement. "These data centers "The taxing scheme of central represent economic growth for assessment is broken. These Oregon and additional, rather current tech companies with than diminished, resources to high values expose the prob- support schools and essential lem. And there's a lack of clar- municipal services. "We also support the one ity of who is assessed in what scheme. This bill is fixing gigabit provisions to create those things." Though McLane new facilities and capabilities said he expects the bill to pass forInternetaccess and speed," the House and Senate and be he added. 'We cannot support signed into law by Gov. Kate the total bill as it is currently Brown, the proposed legisla- written as itprovides excessive tion is not without its critics. A revenue impact study con-
ductedby an economist for the Oregon Legislature projected approximately $16 million in lost revenue during the 201617 fiscal year for local govern-
Portland.
tion services subject to central
ments and education districts
HIV
tim's fate."
out HIV? In the U.S., over 35 states
tax reductions to existing tele-
com andcableproviders,atthe expense oflocal services, without generating new economic development." Locally, Prineville Mayor Betty Roppe and Bend City Manager Eric King both sent
highest unemployment in the state through the Great Recession," she added, "and just
recently with ... (Woodgrain M illwork) laying off 2 0 0 workers, has regained the unemployment title. I cannot imagine what our county's unemployment would be today if the datacentershad notbeen successfullyrecruited." Or as McLane put it: "If a
business never comes here, you get a cut of nothing." McLane, whose House Dis-
trict 55 includes portions of Deschutes, Crook, Jackson, Klamath, and Lake counties,
said the Legislature's response to the question of central as-
sessment should help the state attract more new businesses. "(If the old tax law stood), Apple would have cut all growth in Oregon and looked at leaving," McLane said. "Now I don't think they'll do
that. They and other businesses are seeing that Oregon works." — Reporter: 541-617-7829, beastesNbendbulletin.com
district to study if east-side par-
ents are as familiar with the magnets as those on the west stde.
"I think it should be our goal
But many LGBT-rights ad-
activity," he told me, nor is
there a legal requirement for laypeople to get tested.
have laws that specifically criminalize exposing another person to HIV, sometimes
tain kids that limits access for
Continued from A1 vocates think that even the These questions have been misdemeanor charge is too the subject of New York court much. proceedingsfor nearly four Tom Duane, the first openyears. The Williams case is, ly gay, and openly HIV posin a sense, a final vestige of i tive, member of t h e N e w the scariest, most dangerous York state Senate, believes age of AIDS, when the dis- that some of the stigma he ease carried a powerful stig- encountered in Albany rema, and an infectedbody was mains. Duane, who is now seen as a dangerous weapon. retired, remembers days in Last week, the New York the state Legislature charCourt of Appeals, the state's acterized by intense worry highest court, ruled that that corrections officers, poWilliams should face a mis- lice officers and firefighters demeanor reckless endan- could get HIV from someone germent charge, not the fel- who was i n carcerated; he ony charge a grand jury had compared it to the fear that calledfor,because he did not anyone playing on the court show "depravedindiff erence with Magic Johnson might to human life." For the court, get infected. based on the physician's testiOther sexually transmitted mony about current medical viruses, Duane said, like hertechnology, HIV and AIDS pes or HPV, also pose grave do not present a "grave and risks, like infertility or can-
others." "I think we need to not be
unjustifiable risk of another person's death." The court
cer. And yet the worry is far,
enhanced even further when
court's move away from the
been committed," and it "ap-
far greater over transmission
the number of sexual encoun-
parently believed that (the)
afmid to look at transporta-
wrote that, while the defen- of HIV —
felony charge, he emphasized that the case will now only
dant's conduct was "reckless,
go back to trial: that even this
to make sure parents are equal-
ly aware," he said. "We should definitely make an effort to createmore diverse schools, I think that benefits all the stu-
dents. We don't do it by busing kids, but we do do it by getting the word out and making sure we match the kids to the right school. I think I'm the most ad-
amant board member supporting diversity, and I think the others are a little scared of the
idea of forcing diversity, which sounds like making kids go wherethey don'twant to go. But
if we did a better job explaining what the magnet schools do, I think they would draw a more
diverse population." Kinkade said she thinks "there's certainly a perception,
and likely a reality, that there's an awful lot of choice for cer-
tion," she added. "We have to make a choice about how we allocate resources and how
much we're willing to give to transportation. I'm open to the
conversation and hope we can do what needs tobe done." — Reporter: 541-633-2160, tleeds@bendbulletin.com
selfish and reprehensible," there was no evidence that Williams "exposed the victim to the risk of HIV infection
out of any malevolent desire for the victim to contract the virus," or that Williams "was
utterly indifferent to the vic-
B ut i n t h e N e w Y o r k courts, it is a matter of the
even if the virus is not trans-
risk one knowingly person
mitted. Some laws against HIV exposure criminalize
p oses to another. In W i l -
acts that can't even transmit
HIV, like scratching or spitting — these rules particularly reflect outdated notions
of danger. In 2008, a homeless man in Dallas with HIV was sentenced to 35 years in
prison for allegedly spitting at a police officer, because
his saliva was considered a deadly weapon. In Nebraska, ProPublica reported in 2013,
spitting on a cop is a misdemeanor, but if the offender is HIV-positive, then it's a felo-
ny. Similarly, there are states where criminal penalties are enhanced for sex w o rkers who are HIV positive, and
d i sproportionate ters or partners is high. to what it should be, Duane New York is not such a told me, considering the state state: There is no statute that of advanced medicine."The specifically makes it a crime vast majority of couples are to infect someone with HIV.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention / Submitted image
liams' case, one appellate court judge dissented from the majority opinion, writing
An electron microscope image that he would reinstate the shows HIV-1 budding (in green) countof first-degree reckless from a cultured lymphocyte. endangerment. In Judge Eugene Pigott's eyes, Williams' behavior — taking a condom the charge"; he believes that away from his partner, tellWilliams' case is "poised to ing him it would be safe to createprecedent for allNew engage in unprotected sex"established at the very least Yorkers." Espinoza-Madrigal's cen- t hat defendant acted w i th ter, which is based in New 'wanton cruelty, brutality, or York, filed an amicus brief callousness' and 'utter indifon behalf of a number of local ference' to the victim's fate." and national public health, Pigott said, "The grand medical, and community or- jury plainly believed that ganizations. Yet while Espi- there was reasonable cause noza-Madrigal welcomed the to believe that a crime had
lower charge could mean a criminal prosecution. Espi-
defendant 'did not care at all'" about the victim's health. In a
footnote, he added that "the medical testimony proffered
noza-Madrigal believes that this is unwarranted. "There
by thepeople'sexpert,viewed not intentionally infecting This is part of why Ivan Esin the light most favorable to each other with h erpes or pinoza-Madrigal, the legal is no legal requirement, un- the people, was legally suffiHPV or chlamydia, gonor- director of the Center for HIV der New York state or federal cient to establish the 'grave rhea or syphilis," Duane Law & Policy, "weighed in to law, to disclose one's HIV sta- a nd unjustifiable risk o f pointed out — so why single advocate for the reduction in tus before engaging in sexual death' element."
W W W . B E N D B U L L E T I N .C O M
•
g•1g
•
g• •g•
-
•
•
A6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2015
Fear envelopsRussiaafter Putin critic slain By Andrew E. Kramer
ty prime minister, knew his work was dangerous but tried to convince her that, as
accusedthe security services of responsibility, while othersfloated the idea ofrogue
weeks before he was shot and killed in the highest-pro-
a former high official in the Kremlin, he enjoyed immu-
Russian nationalists on the loose in Moscow.
file p olitical a ssassination
nity, Albats said.
The authorities said they were investigating several
New York Times News Service
MOSCOW — About two
e
1
Gabriela Maj I New York Times News Service
Shirin Gul is serving a 20-year prison sentence for her part in a killing spree that claimed the lives of 27 men, at the Nangarhar Women's Prison in Jalalabad, Afghanistan. Five men were executed for the crimes, but Shirin Gul's life was spared by presidential
decree, and she could be released in eight years.
A anistan's
uni e seria ier recounts er tae By Azam Ahmed New York Times News Service
JALALABAD, Afghanistan
began investigating Shirin Gul and her family. The businessman had mentioned to a
— One of Afghanistan's most notorious serial killers lives in a dank prison cell in Jalalabad, sharing bunk beds, meals and blankets with fellow inmates.
relative where he was going the night of his disappearance, providing the police with a clue and ultimately unraveling a string of disappearances. At
But the guards do not carry
the Kabul home, nine bodies
would become a pivot point toward a revival of lethal vielite in Moscow and an inten-
olence among the leadership
sified climate of fear in Russian domestic politics. "He was afraid of being "Another terrible page has in Russia in a decade, Boris N emtsov met w it h a n o l d killed," Albats said. "And he theories about th e c r i m e, been turned in our history," friend to discuss his latest re- was trying to convince him- some immediately scorned Mikhail Khodorkovsky, the search into what he said was self, and me, they wouldn't as improbable, including the exiled former political prisdissembling and misdeeds in touch him because he was a possibility that fellow mem- oner, wrote in a statement the Kremlin. member of the Russian gov- bers of the opposition had about the killing. "For more than a year now, He was, as always, pu- ernment,a vicepremier,and killed Nemtsov to create a gilistic and excited, saying they wouldn't want to cre- martyr. Putin, for his part, the television screens have he wanted to publish the re- ate a precedent. Because, as vowed in aletterto Nemtsov's been flooded with pure hate search in a pamphlet to be he said, one time the power mother to bring those respon- for us," he wrote of the opcalled "Putin and the War," will change hands in Russia sible to justice. position to Putin. "And now about P resident V l a dimir again, and those who served As supporters of Nemtsov everyone from the blogger Putin and Russian involve- Putin wouldn't want to create laid flowers on the sidewalk a t his apartment desk t o ment in the Ukraine conflict, this precedent." where he was shot and killed President Putin, himself, is recalled Yevgenia Albats, the On Saturday, it was still late Friday, a shiver of fear searching for enemies, aceditor of New Times maga- not clear who was respon- moved through the political cusing one another of provzine. Both knew the stakes. sible for killing Nemtsov. opposition in Moscow. The ocation. What is wrong with Nemtsov, a former depu- Some critics of the Kremlin worry was that the killing us?
. US.Cellular.
weapons, and the prison aides were unearthed from the dirt spend much of their days so- courtyard; the home in Jalalacializing with the convicts. bad yielded 18 more victims. The killer, Shirin Gul, is in Six people, including Shirin Nangarhar Women's Prison, Gul, her son, Samiullah, and where most of her fellow inRahmatullah, were charged mates were convicted of adul- with 27 counts of murder in the tery or theft. She is in the 12th case, convicted and sentenced year of a 20-year prison sen- to death. Investigators told retence for a killing spree that porters at the time that Shirin daimed the lives of 27 men. Gul and most of her accomplicHer 7-year-old daughter was es had confessed to the crimes. conceived and born in custody, The other five were executand other inmates also have
ed. But Shirin Gul's life was
children living in the cells with
spared by a decree from Hamid Karzai, then the president of Afghanistan. Her crimes
them.
In Afghanistan, a country of 30 million people where war were reduced to 27 counts of has dominatedthepast four de- kidnapping and one count of cades, death is a common feature of life. Lurid, tabloid-wor-
adultery. Her death sentence
a relative rarity. That one of the culprits in the male-dominated
ment in the Afghan system.
case even more of a rarity. "We have other murderers
her crimes to visitors, other in-
was changed to a 20-year term thy serial homicide, however, is — considered life imprisonDespite her daims of innosociety is a woman makes the cence, she has also confessed here," said Col. Abdul Wali
mates, prison staff and a mentalhealthexpert who occasion-
Hesarak, the warden of the
ally visited the women's prison
Nangarhar prison, which in- over more than a year. She cludes both male and female told the caseworker, Mahnaz compounds and is one of the largest in the country. "But I
Saadati, that the group com-
though she admits that she had
their home in Kabul, for which
mitted the murders for money, don't see any cases as serious earning the equivalent of thouas hers." sands of dollars by selling their To hear Shirin Gul tell it, the victims' cars. They earned murders were her lover's idea, enough to help a mosque near consented to his killing her husband. She knew that her
they provided food on Fridays as well as new carpeting. "She is like a character out of lover, Rahmatullah, poisoned his victims by slipping toxins a movie," Saadati said of Shirin into the tea and kebabs that Gul. she served them. And it is true
Shirin Gul was born in the
that she frequently heard the
Shewa district of Nangarhar
sound of shovels in her court-
province, in the east of the
There's never been a better time to switch. We'll pay off your old contract, up to $350 per line.
Lines U.S. Cellular' Verizon
ATRT
*
* * >1'I 5 >'I 05 ~ I OO /8G B l8G 8 /7C B
>120"/8GB >'I45'/8Ge >135 */7CB *Per month. Valid as of 2/21/15.
yard, when graves were being country. She says her parents dug. died when she was 2, and that But Shirin Gul says her con-
relatives married her off to an
fession to murder was a fabri- older man when she was just cation. She never killed any- 11. Her husband, who was a one, she says, and she feared colonel in the communist govfor her life while Rahmatullah ernment, beat her and miswas on a killing spree. treated her, she said. One of In an interview at her prison
IAIII u l ll
•e
his cousins, Rahmatullah, the
quarters in Jalalabad, Shirin driver for a Taliban strongGul, who is in her 40s but does man, visited the family often. not know her exact age, came
The more Rahmatullah vis-
across as erratic. She open- ited, Shirin Gul said, the closer ly admitted to having mental the two became. He brought health problems, making it food and gifts to the house, difficult to separate truth from sometimes just for her. fiction in her narratives. She Eventually, he told Shirin laughed uncontrollably one G ul's husband that he w a s moment andappeared on the in love with her, and that he verge of tears the next. She planned to take her away. The c ursed R ahmatullah, w i t h husband, fearful of resisting whom she was convicted of Rahmatullah, conceded. It was the murders, calling him "a then, she said, that she and womanizer,a pedophile and Rahmatullah decided to kill a gambler," and almost in the her husband. "When someone becomes a same breath said that he was the "most beautiful man she coward," she said, "he deserves had ever known." death." "My character is bad, but Shortly before Rahmatulsometimes I behave well," she lah became her lover, Shirin said, as her daughter crawled Gul discovered that he was on and off her lap. involved in criminal rings in When Shirin Gul confessed Kabul and Jalalabad: He had to murder in 2004, she told in- kidnapped and killed drivers, vestigators that she had lured her victims to her home with
and later sold their vehicles.
said, Rahmatullah, her son and
fear him, worried that he might
She says that she begged him the promise of sex. There, she to stop, but that she came to
the family kept, one in Kabul
hurt her if she tried to stop his illegal activities. "We could not say anything because we feared him," she said. It is for this reason,
and the other in Jalalabad. The
among others, that Shirin Gul
severalother men helped her poison and strangle the victims. Their bodies were buried in the courtyards of two homes
dead men's cars were stripped is hopeful that she might be of license plates and sold along granted an early release from the border with Pakistan and prison. "The prosecutors can make in a Taliban-controlled area of up things, you know, for monKhost province. It was only after a business- ey," she said. "Even if I was an man, Mohammed Anwar, dis- infidel or a pig, I could not do appeared that the authorities such things."
$
DOWN Retail Installment Contract, Shared Connect Plan and $25 act fee required 0% APR. 20 mo. payments of $33.
samsung GALAXYQ S
See more plans at Uscellularcom/better Thjjjps Is want youlo know: NewRetail InstallmentContracts, Shared Connect Planaiid $25deviceact. feesrequired. Credit approval required. Regulatory Cost Recovery Feeapplies (curreritly S1.82/ljrie/ month);this js nota jaxor gvmt. requiredcharge.Aijd. fees, taxesarid termsapply andvary bysvc. andeqmt. O ffersvalid in-storeat jiarjjcjpajjrig locationsonly, maybefulfiled throughdirect fulfillmentand cannotbecombined.Seestoreor uscellularcomfor details. Contract Payoij Promo:Offer valid ori upta 6 consumerlines or25businesslines. Mustqortjn current number to U.S. Cellular andpurchasenew Smartphone ortablet througha Retail InstallmentContract ori aSharedConnect Planwith Device Proiectjon+. Enrollment jri DeviceProtectjori+ requiredjri allmarketsexcept North Carolina. Themonthly charge for DeviceProtectjori+ js Sjt99 for Smartphories.A deductible perapprovedclaim applies. Federal Warranty Service Corporation istheProvider of theIjevjce Protscjjon+ ESjlberisjjs, exceptjri jlA ariij OK. Submitfinalbill jijerijifyjrig earlyterminationfss(ETF)chargedbycarrier within 60daysof activation datejo NNAr.uscellulsr.com/coritracjjiayojj or vjamail toU.S.Cellular Contract Payoff Program5591-61; PO Ijox75225l; El Paso,TX88575-2257. Customer wil be reimbursedfor the ET Freflected onfinal bjjj iip to S350/lirie. Reimbursement in formof a II.S. Cellular PrepaidCardis issuedbyMsjaljarike Member FDIC, additional offersareriot sponsoredor endorsed byMejsBsrik. Thiscarddoesnot havecashaccess Iid canbeusedaj anymerchant jocajjari that acceptsMasjerCarde DebitCardswithin the I .S. only.Cardvalid throughexpiration dateshownori front of card.Allaw12-14 weeksjsr processing.Tobe eligible, customermustregister fsr NjyAccount. Retail Inslaljmejit Coijracj: RetailInstallment jlontract (jlonjract)anij monthlypaymentsaccordingto thepayment Schedule intheContract required. If yoii arejndefault oi terminateyourContract, wemayrequire youto immediately paytheentire unpaid AmountFinancedaswell as oiir collectioncosts, attorneys' feesandcourt costsrelajsdtoenforcingyourobligationsunderthe jlontract. KansasCusjsmers: jn areasjn which II.S. Cellular receivessupport from the Federal Universal ServiceFund, all reasonable requests for servicemustbemst. Unresolvedquestions concerning servicesavajlabjljty canbedirected totheKansasCorporatjon Commission Olce of pubjjcAffairs andConsumerprotectionat 1-800-662-0027.umjjeij-tjme offer. Trademarks and tradenames aretheproperty of thejr respectiveowners. AddiTional termsapply. Seestore orijscejlular.com for details.©2015U.S.Cellular
SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
Health law ruling hinges on 4 words
Peoplewithfederally subsidizedhealth plans
Tickets
Millions of people in 34 states could lose the federal subsidies that help themafford private insurance on HealthCare.gov. Subsidies can reducethe cost of monthly premiums by asmuch as 89 percent. Number of people choosing a2015 marketplace plan, IN THOUSANDS
Continued from A1 Behind the change is Liftopia, a venture-capitalbacked San Francisco data and e-commerce company that says it will sell 5 percent of paid daily lift tickets
Plans with federal financial assistance: • 9 0 - 94% •
)$g ig
MT 48
OR
Ih/Y 18
By Michael Doyle NV
WASHINGTON — Four little words will m ake a
KS 83
AZ 174
106Q
296I194' MO ] 219
57
health care law Wednesday.
ideologically divided court must divine the meaning of one crucial but arguably ambiguous phrase in the 906-page law. Its future, and insurance coverage for millions of people, might hang in the balance, for neither
LA AK 17
NJ 216 DE 21
DH II
UT 120
world of difference when the Supreme Court considers a potentially disabling challenge to P r esident Barack Obama's signature
than the Constitution, the
7Q-84%
NH 47
McClatchy Washington Bureau
In a case that concerns language and politics more
85- 8 9%
'o
2
4
329
72 State-based
~4
marketplaces
969 34
State-based exchangesbut are using federal HealthCare.gov because oftechnical problems. Data are for people choosing a plan from Nov.15, 2014, through January 30, 2015. Source: Department of Health and Human Services
The Washington Post
the first nor the last time.
Obamacare
the subsidiesfor federal marketplace states, those pay-
fordable Care Act cases before the Supreme Court for
Continued from A1 Efforts to try to hold on to
decadesto come," predict-
the subsidies are even under
ed Jonathan Adler, a Case Western Reserve Universi-
consideration in South Carolina, which supported the challenge now before the Supreme Court. South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, a Republi-
tures, though in some cases these efforts began even before
ments could halt as quickly as law. "We're prepared for being 25 days later, though the court or Congresscould allow for a able to educate state policylonger transition period. makers on the risks and costs A court decision invalidat- of setting up a state exchange ing the subsidies could under- should they revisit this after mine the individual insurance the court decision," said Tarmarkets, said Larry L e vitt, ren Bragdon, president of the an insurance industry expert Foundation for G overnment at the Kaiser Family Founda- Accountability, a free-market tion. Rather than risk facing policy organization that has financial catastrophe, insur- already begun talking to lawers are likely to pull out of the makers in eight states. marketplaces, dismantling a On the other side, politically central piece of the health law powerful hospitals and insurand leaving millions without ers in states such as Pennsylvathe new coverage they received niaarepressing lawmakers to under it, he said. establish state-based exchang"I don't think any insurer es rather than risk the consewould want to stay in the mar- quences if the subsidies vanish. ket underthose circumstancSo far, these lobbyists have es," Levitt said. "It would be too faced achallenge in persuadunstable." ing Pennsylvania's RepubliBut some c o nservative can-controlled legislature. But scholars have suggested that a court decision against the the sky will not fall. The poten- subsidies "could change the tialconsequences are so great dynamic" in the Pennsylvania that it will put "hydraulic pres- legislature, said James Red-
the court accepted the subsi-
sure" on the states to act, said
dies case. Lobbyists for insurers, hospitals and consumer groups are alerting legislators in some states to what they call the
Thomas Miller, a fellow at the
to back a state marketplace if
GOP alternative
immediate action is needed to
Republicans in Congress pitals saw their costs soar for have sought to show they are providing care to patients with-
"We will be seeing Af-
ty School of Law professor who's a leading critic of the law. The o ra l ar g ument Wednesday morning in King v. Burwell marks the
latest return of the Affordable Care Act to the Supreme Court since 2012.
Then, in a 5-4 decision authored by Chief Justice John
Roberts, the court upheld the law's "individual man-
date" requiring people to buy health insurance or pay a penalty. This time, too, Roberts
can, said in an interview that
her state may consider setting up a marketplace, though it is undear how such a proposal would fare in the staunchly conservative state.
"We're going to start in this next week working on some things statewide," Haley, one of the health law's fiercest critics,
said late last week.
A latestart
might play an important swing role, as the self-ap-
A total of nine states now have bills under consideration to set up their own marketplac-
p ointed protector of
the
es, according to the National
court's reputation. And, as in 2012, the case
Conference of State Legisla-
has drawn an unusual num-
ber of kibitzers. Twenty-one amicus — friend of the court — briefs, some more
trenchant than others, were filed supporting the challengers, and 31 defending the Obama administration's actions.
The Supreme Court's task this time is different from that in 2012 or in 2014,
when a 5-4 majority ruled corporations could claim a religious exemption from a mandate to provide contraceptive coverage. Now, in-
preserve the subsidies. But thereare enormous lo-
gistical and financial barriers
er Congress exceeded its constitutional authority in
to settingup a marketplace this
late in the game, experts say. The states that already have
the nine justices must interpret the statute's meaning.
their own marketplaces took
Under the health care
law, states are encouraged, butnotrequired, to establish
sites, contract with insurance companies and establish call centers. They did so with the
exchanges to offer one-stop
help of hundreds of millions of
shopping for insurance coverage. Obama has likened
dollars in federal grants that
the exchanges to an online
site such as Amazon, aplace where consumers can compare plans. As inducement, the law offers tax credits to those qualified by income who buy insurance through an exchange "established by the State." The challenge
turns on this phrase. Driven primarily by Republican resistance, several dozen states declined to establish health insurance
exchanges. Nevertheless, the Internal Revenue Service has extended tax-credit subsidies to residents in
have rejected the health care
mond, a former hospital association executive and senior
advisor to the Health Policy Institute of Pittsburgh. "The
that as many as 10 states would big question is, 'Where will the set up their own marketplaces. money come from?'" potentially disastrous conse- Congress would also be forced Hospitals are counting on quences ifthe subsidies are to step in and Obama could be the revenue generated unsuddenly revoked. In Pennsyl- compelled to work with Repub- der Obamacare from newly vania, for example, hospitals licans on a solution, some ex- insured patients who come and insurers are trying to coax perts have said. through their doors. In the the Republican-led legislature years before the health care
stead of determining whethwriting the health care law,
free-market American Enterprise Institute, who predicted
stiffen the spines of states that
several years to set up the web-
are no longer available. Lobbying is also taking place in Congress. Aetna's chief executive, Mark Berto-
lini, for instance, is in regular contact with Senate Majori-
ty Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., on this matter, a company executive said. Aetnapartic-
trying to devise solutions that
law was enacted, many hosout adequate insurance.
could salvage the assistance In Pennsylvania, for i nin some form. Rep. Paul Ryan, stance, the cost to hospitals of R-Wis., chairman of the pow- providing care to uninsured erful Ways and Means Com- and underinsured patients inmittee, has said it is a top pri- creasedfrom just over $670 ority for GOP leaders to come million in2007to over $1 billion up with a plan if the subsidies in 2012, a 53 percent increase, are gutted, though he declined said Paula Bussard, chief stratto provide specifics. A trio of egy officer for the Hospital and senior Republican lawmakers Healthsystem Association of this month outlined their prin- Pennsylvania. If the subsidies ciples for a health care plan. disappear, many people could But five years after the health losetheir coverage and hospilaw's enactment, the party tals could see their uncompenremains divided on how to re- sated costs spike, she said. place Obamacare. The association's represenHealth and Human Services tatives have been warning legSecretary S y lvi a M a t hews islators about this possibility in face meetings,Bussard Burwell has said publidy that face-to-
the theory that it's inefficient to
"The past 30 years has
been achunk oftim e when the industry grew based off improvements in physical infrastructure" such as snowmaking and chairlifts, said Evan Reece, a lifelong skier from New England who co-founded Liftopia a decade ago. "The future is going to come with efficiency in bringing people here." The 54-person company has raised $7.9 million. Reece declined to disclose rev-
6 percent last season to $92,
according to the National Ski Areas Association, a trade group. At Vail Moun-
M ammoth M ountain
G etSkiTickets.com, whic h launched in 2008 with about
10 resorts and now has 45, lets resorts drop prices at the last economically efficient, said An-
drew Sweeting, an economist
deciding factor in getting people to come," said Michael Berry, president of the National Ski Areas Associ-
at the University of Maryland and the National Bureau of
Economic Research. It can also make the market feel unfair. "I recently bought a plane ation. Once the people are packed in, resorts can sell ticket home to England, and a more products such as food few days later, it'd dropped by and $5 bumper stickers that $500," he said."Istudy dynamare increasingly important ic pricing, so I know the theory to theirbottomlines. behind it, but it still made me Liftopia.com dominates angry. the online alpine marketplace, selling tickets for more than 250 resorts in Visit Central Oregon's the U.S. and Canada this season, up from the seven it began with in 2005. Almost
HumterDoullas
100 also use the company's e-commerce software embedded in their own sites, a
more than 10-fold increase since that product's debut in 2011. A nnual v i sits t o th e
roughly 470 U.S. ski resorts have remained steady for years at about 57.5 million,
See 100 life sized samples of the latest innovative and stylish Hunter Douglas window fashions!
See us also for: • Retractable Awnings • Exterior Solar Screens • Patio Shade Structures
according to the National Ski Areas Association. Two
things threaten growth. One is weather, such as the
high temperatures and low precipitation plaguing California, where drought has
s~a C ~S S IC COVERINGS
closed ski areas mid-winter.
knowing the outcome of the
younger adherents as Baby Boomers age out. The idea behind Liftopia, said Reece, 36, grew from
1465 SW Knoll Ave., Bend www.classic-coverings.com • •
i )
and submitting them to state
insurancedepartments before
going as a state," said Michael to handle the new business cre- Stinziano, a Democratic legated by the marketplaces are islator who is co-sponsoring figuring out whether layoffs a bill in Ohio to set up a state may be needed. exchange. About 8.8 million AmeriAmong the other Republicans this year have signed up can-led states where officials for insurance through Health- are now looking at options for Care.gov, the enrollment web- engaging with the ACA health site serving nearly three dozen care program are M aine,
Supreme Court decision. Due to this uncertainty, the
operated by the federal government," the legal team headed by U.S. Solicitor General Donald Verrilli Jr.
states that didn't set up their
BlueShield of North Carolina.
cent qualified for subsidies, ac-
Tom Wolf, a Democrat, has
er servicecallcenters,process
said in a Jan. 21 brief, "and
said he supports going forward with a state exchange, a shift from the position of the previous Republican governor. Opposition to the health law
claims and provide care management. Without sufficient
Wednesday, Nlarch 18th 2015
revenue, the insurer would
1pm or Spm
The remaining statesincluding California, Kentucky, Idaho and Washing-
cording to administration data. The subsidies were key to making coverage affordable for the vast majority of these people, cutting monthly premiums on average by nearly three-quarters, according to administration figures.
ton — as well as the District of Columbia have estab-
Plaintiffs in the case before the court contend that the law
the state from setting up an ex-
panicked customers.
lished their own exchanges. The tax-credit subsidies,
as written allows subsidies only to go to people who buy coverage in marketplaces "established by the state." The
he has ruledout a state-based
health insurance in the middle
these states who buy insurancethroughthe federalex-
change, HealthCare.gov. "More than 5 million of the people who obtained
coverage through exchanges in 2014 lived in one of the 34 states with an exchange
the overwhelming majority of these people relied on tax credits to pay their premiums each month."
moreover, are an essential
part of the health care law's insurance r equirements. Congress, Verrilli noted, "cannot mandate people havingsomethingthey can't afford."
South Dakota and Utah, as
Blue Cross Blue Shield Asso-
I
i
I
ciation, the national trade association, is working on "deep scenario analysis" to model
what would happen if the subsidies are invalidated, said Bri-
an Caveney, vice president and medical director of BlueCross
The insurer has hired thouown marketplaces. Of those well as South Carolina. Pennwho signed up, about 87 per- sylvania's newly minted Gov. sands of people to staff custom-
have to cut those jobs, he said. At the same time, a court
remains fierce in some states. ruling striking down the payThis week, a Tennessee legis- ments could inundate insurers lator introduced a bill barring queries and concerns from
"If all of a sudden consumchange. In Indiana, Gov. Mike Pence, a Republican, has said ers realize they are losing their
marketplace regardless of of the year, how on earth are what the Supreme Court does you supposed to explain the O bama administration h a s and urged Congress to craft a implications to the policyholdcountered that it is clear Con- solution that gives states more er onvery short notice?" said gress meant for the subsidies to flexibility. Russell Davis, who consults for go to all marketplaces. Conservative activists also health plans at the Advisory If the justices strike down are ramping up their efforts to Board Company.
Ski
Area in California changed to dynamic pricing using Liftopia's e-commerce platform this year. Chief Marketing Officer
"The lift ticket is still the
to hold on to these customers.
Insurers that did major hiring
Football League teams began deploying it last year, following those in the National Basketball Association and Major League Baseball .Golfcourses use it to price tee times.
costs $159.
ics: The sport must attract
care and what direction we're
cept into new arenas. National
minute to lure more people. That approach is the most
Insurers may be in an even more difficult position. Open ished. Insurers will be completing their calculations for next year's premiums this spring
The rise of e-commerce and
more sophisticated data collection have propelled the con-
tain Resort in Colorado, a same-day ticket this winter
not have a backup plan. So stategovernments are set up its own marketplace. confronting the prospect of a Insurers are gaming out public backlash if insurance who is going to drop coverage, prices skyrocket. "Now that we have so many and how quickly, if the subsidies dry up. The companies Ohioans enrolled, this has a have begun devising strategies significant impact on their
enrollment for 2015 just fin-
the same amount for a rainy
enue but said Liftopia is on Erik Forsell credits the move track to be profitable within with helping drive advance two years. sales 15 percent higher than "The key investment has last season. It's also boosted been in the technical team, revenueby enablingearlycomputting in the hard hours munication with consumers, he to bring both transactional said, giving the company more e-commerce and hotel-style time to push ancillary sales like yield management," said equipment rentals and lodging. A 3.5-hour drive north in the Erik Blachford, an investor who serves on Liftoshadow of the Sierra Nevada pia'sboard and is former mountain range is Homewood chief executive of online Mountain Resort, on the Caltravel company Expedia. ifornia side of Lake Tahoe. Its "That's much harder than it shift to dynamic prices has appears." helped it better allocate workCustomers are rewarded ers andspread out skier traffi c with discounts for commit- to reduce crowding, said generting early, resorts hedge al manager Kevin Mitchell. The against cancellations if the timing was fortuitous: Mitchell weather turns and skiers had to stop the lifts for 16 days come who otherwise might this season due to lackof snow. be deterred by ever-rising Liftopia's prices only rise as advertised prices. The aver- the ticket's date approaches. age adult weekend rate rose Its competitor, Denver-based
The other is demograph-
ipatesin insurance exchanges in 17 states, only one of which
have people pay at a physical ticket window and to pony up
day early in the season as for a sunny powder day later. Liftopia charges 12 percent commission for tickets sold through its website and as much as 5 perthis year. Resorts across cent on those dispensed using the U.S. have also gone this its software. Dynamic pricing route on their own, indud- isn't new. Deregulation of the ing Alta in Utah, Intrawest airline industry led to powerful Resorts with its six ski areas yield-management software including Mont Tremblant that took hold in the 1980s to in Quebec, and Wachu- help balance supply and desett Mountain Ski Area in mand. Hospitality and rental Massachusetts. carcompaniessoon followed.
SBld.
the federalgovernment does
A7
Class information:
Bend Shilo Inn 3105 O.B. Riley Road Bend, OR97701
OregonlUtah: $80 (validin wA)
Oregon only: $45 firearmjrainingnwogmail.com
360-921-2071
•
AS THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2015
•
•
•
•
You'll want to show all your friends.
Oygp
r~z,„„ lo.g (
The Comfort Sleeper® by American Leather Expertly crafted furniture, made-to-order in Dallas. Texas. in your home in about 30 days. Leather. Fabric. Crypton™. Ultrashadeo. l www.americanieather.com
Comfort Sleeper®By American Leather®
February 27 thru March 31
8300 off manufacturers retail price on any Comfort Sleeper®
I' F IN E
F U R N IT U R E
FREE STATEWIDE *
DELIVERY
Bend River Promenade l w w w . m j a c o b s f a m i lyofstores.com 541-382-5900• Toll Free 1-800-275-7214 Open Mon.-Fri. 10AM to 7PM Sat. & Sun.10AM to 6PM *$999 or more **iComfort & iSeries beds excluded
Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B4 Weather, B6
© www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2015
WASHINGTON WEEK
Board to en ra r e on we comes diSCUSS easing ear o e ee
WASHINGTON-
The House ofRepresentatives passedlegislatio nWednesdaymaking it easier to savemoney for college inwhat's known as a529 account. Under the change tothe IRS code, moretypes of expenseswould qualify for the savings plans, including Internet access and computer equipment. Also, if a student dropped out of college, the refund from the institution to the 529account would not besubject to taxes, as it is now.The measure passedbya
SDC fees By Scott Hammers The Bulletin
The Bend Park 8t Recreation District board on
Tuesday will be revisiting the question of whether it
should contribute to local affordable housing efforts by relaxing development fees. In February, the city of Bend's affordable housing manager Jim Long gave a presentation to the dis-
®Ii,u l s > " "
401-20 margin, with 240
I ct
Republicans and161 Democrats voting yes. One Republicanand19 Democrats opposed
'l
I
I
trict's board, outlining the
the bill.
lii
U.S. HOUSE VOTE Walden(R)........................... Blumenauer(D) .................. Y Bonamici (D) ....................... DeFazio (D).......................... Schrader(D)........................N
Also on Wednesday, the Houseapproved a program that would expand grant opportunities for teachers in science, technology, engineering and math, or STEM.The bill would particularly expand in theareaof computer science.The STEM Education Act passed, 412-8, with 232 Republicans and180 Democrats voting in its favor. All eight of the no votes werecast by Republicans.
U.S. HOUSE VOTE I/Iralden (R).......................... Y Blumenauer (D).................. Y Bonamici (D) ....................... Y DeFazio (D).......................... Y Schrader(D)........................ Y — Andreyl/Clevenger, The Bulletin
Have a story idea or sudmission? Contact us!
The Bulletin Call a reporter Bend ......................541-633-2160 Redmond...............541-617-7831 Sisters....................541-617-7831 La Pine ...................541-617-7831 Sunriver .................541-617-7831 Deschutes.............541-e17-7820 Crook.....................541-617-7831 Jefferson...............541-617-7831 Salem ..................406-589-4347
case for reducing or waiving system development charges to encourage the construction of new housing that would be affordable for lower-income
city residents. Also known as SDCs, the charges are levied against the builders of new housing units to
n
offset the impact new resi-
dents have on road, water, sewer and park systems. The park district colPhotos by Meg Roussos/ rhe Bulletin
JianFeng Chen, center, performs as part of the Chinese New Year celebration at Bend Elks Lodge in Bend on Saturday. Chen brings his
students from Oregon Tai Chi Wushu every year to participate in the festivities. The celebration raised money for EChO, an organization that aids Chinese orphans with disabilities by establishing schools for them.
ment or other multifamily unit. At the meeting in
By Scott Hammers
do something for Chinese orphans after he and his wife vis-
February, Long told the
ited China to adopt two girls. He said it was difficult for them
vacancy has dipped to an estimated 0.3 percent, and rental rates have climbed as the supply of units has tightened. More than half of families and individuals earning less than 80 percent of the area's median income are "rent burdened," Long said, paying more than half of their income for rent.
The Bulletin
Central Oregon celebrated Chinese New Year on Sat-
urday, with performances of Chinese music, a traditional Chinese tea ceremony and martial arts demonstrations at
the Bend Elks Lodge.
board that Bend's rental
to simply come home to Oregon with their adopted daughters after seeingthe living conditions at the orphanage. "It's hard. You go and save a
couple kids, but what canyou days afterthe traditional Chido for therest?"hesaid. nese calendar flipped from the Tadjiki's early efforts cenYear of the Horse to the Year of tered on selling scrolls painted the Sheep — was a fundraiser by Chinese orphans, with for EChO, a Bend-based orthe proceeds going to pay for ganization that has made it its various orphanage needs. The mission to aid Chinese orphans focus narrowed to education with developmental and physi- for orphanage residents, and cal disabilities. narrowed further to special The organization has hosted needs orphans when Tadjiki, Saturday's event — held nine
a Chinese New Year celebration every year for the past
eight years. This year, the celebration relocated to the Elks
Lodge from its prior home at the downtown Bend Boys & Girls Club. EChO founder Robert Tad-
jiki said he felt compelled to
•
,
District board members
took a skeptical view of Long's request, suggesting AJ Stuehling, 6, performs as part of the Oregon Tai Chi Wushu
there was little evidence
group during a Chinese New Year celebration.
reduced SDCs would spur the construction of new
Bend High School, realized Chinese orphanages were poorly equipped to work with suchstudents.
ditions for Chinese orphans more broadly. The partnership allowed EChO to slightly shift its focus once again. Now,
train them in how to work with
affordable housing and warning that waiving the
the special needs population.
fees would force current
After three years, EChO turns
over operation of the school
residents to shoulder the cost of new park
In 2012, EChO partnered with Love Without Bound-
the organization establishes
to the Chinese government,
construction.
a schoolforspecialneedsorphans, and spends three years
which provides the fundingto keep it running. See New Year/B5
M aterials prepared for the board for Tuesday's
a special education teacher at
aries, a larger nonprofit that works to improve living con-
working with Chinese staff to
ing SDCs under certain
Allegations alsoinvolvesexual conduct with children
Business...............541-e17-7815 Education..............541-617-7831 Health...................541-383-0304 Public lands..........541-e17-7812 Public safety.........541-383-0376
• Central Oregon health caregroup director charged with two solicitation felonies
Email: letters@bendbulletitt.com Mail:My Nickel's Worth
or In MyView P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR 97708 Detailsonthe Editorialspage inside. Contact: 541-383-0358
• Civic Calendarnotices: Email event information to news@bendbulletin.com,with "Civic Calendar" inthe subject, and include a contact name
and phonenumber. Contact: 541-383-0354
• Schoolnewsandnotes: Email newsitems and notices ofgeneral interest to news@bendbulletin.com. Email announcements ofteens' academicach ievements toyouth©bendbulletin.com. Email collegenotes, military graduationsandreunion infoto bulletin©bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358
• Obituaries, Death Notices: Details onthe Obituaries page inside.Contact: 541-617-7825, oblts@bendbulletin.com
• Communityevents: Email events to commuttitylife@ bendbulletin.com orclick on
"Submitan Event"onlineat bettdbulletin.com. Details onthe calendarpageinside. Contact: 541-383-0351
• Engagements,marriages, domestic partnerships, anniversaries, birthdays: The Milestonespagepublishes Sunday itt Community Life. Contact: 541-63a-2117
meeting indicate the
park district will discuss the possibility of waiv-
D.c.......................202-e62-745e
Submissions • Lettersand opinions:
lects $6,013 for every single-family home built, and $5,651 for every apart-
assault on an animal. Ryan is accused of soliciting Nelson to engage in a deviant sex act with a child younger than 12, in a sex act
By Paul Daquilante
commit first-de-
with a child younger than 14
(McMinnville) News-Register
gree sexual abuse, a Class C felony. He was also charged
and in sexual contact with a
Charges against the executive director of a Bend-based
membership organization forhealth careproviders and against a McMinnville woman allege sexual conduct with children, as well as with
a dog. John William Ryan, 47,
w ith two counts each of sexu-
R yan
al assault on an animal, a Class A misdemeanor, and solicitation to commit sexual
assault on an animal, a Class
was charged with one count
B misdemeanor.
each of solicitation to commit
Casie Lynn Nelson, 29, was charged with two mis-
firstdegree sodomy, a Class B felony, and solicitation to
demeanor counts of sexual
dog. She has been charged with following through with the acts involving the dog. The all eged crimes occurred in Yamhill County in March 2014. A record with more infor-
circumstances. Options include waiving them only for multifamily units, or
only for nonprofit affordable housing organiza-
ciationon Monday, according to an email Dr. Stephen Mann, the organization's interim executive director,
tions. The district could
sent to members last week.
targets to measure the success of an exemption,
The association is made up of more than 600 physicians and providers who pay an annual membership fee in exchange for contract negotiation, in-
surance discounts and other support. Ryan, arrested Monday in Bend, was lodged in the Yamhill County Jail on $517,500
mation about the case has been sealed by the court. bail. Nelson, taken into cusRyan was placed on leave tody in Yamhill County, was from his position as executive lodged on $142,500 bail, acdirector of the Central Oregon cordingtojailrecords. Independent Practice AssoSee Ryan /B5
set a dollar limit on how many fees it would waive in a year, set performance or set a fee exemption that
expires after a year or some other period of time. Elsewhere on the agenda at Tuesday's meeting, the board will hear updates on the efforts to de-
velopanew management plan for Shevlin Park and to construct a new De-
schutes River Trail bridge across the river on the south end of Bend.
See Meeting /B5
YESTERYEAR
Farmers urgednot to kill wild bee colonies at county meeting in i940 Compiled by Don Hoiness
from archived copiesof The Bulletin at Des Chutes County Historical Society.
100 YEARS AGO
hog raising in Central Oregon. began stock experts have If the lesson of that article is been pointing out that Oregon learned, the county will be would shortly find herself repaid many times for the where she was a few years ago — importing hogs from cost of the extension work it had agreed to share this year. Nebraska — with the slow upNone of the expenditures auhill gains of the last four years
For the week ending Feb. 28, 1915
thorized by the county court
On the hog (editorial)
vided so reluctantly.
will bring more than that for the agriculturist, which is pro-
all lost. That will mean a flow of money out of the state and a return to a condition believed
Every farmer who sees this paper is urged to read the
Ever since the slaughter of swine which followed the
to have been done away with,
article by Professor Potter on
increase in the price of wheat
been caught with their eggs in
allbecause our farmers have
to sell for money with which to
Soon though, the balance will go the other way. Because so many hogs have been killed those remaining will increase in price until they more than
raisemore corn to feedmore pigs and so on. Here we have not raised enough wheat for feed, we have depended on
reflect the cost of the wheat necessary to finish them for the market. Read Professor Potter's
buying it and now that wheat
article. Keep the few hogs you have left even though it costs
one basket.
The aim of the Nebraska farmers is said to be to raise more corn, to feedm orepigs,
has gone up we have begun to kill our pigs. And because everyone else is doing it the price of pork is way down.
something to feed them. You
will be repaid in the end. See Yesteryear/B2
B2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2015
E VENT
ENDA R
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communityli fe@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at vpvpvp.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
541-317-0700.
TODAY BEND INDOORSWAP MEET: Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.;Bend IndoorSwap Meet,679 SE Third St.; 541-317-4847. INANIMATEEXISTENCE AND WRVTH:The death metal bands perform, with Existential Depression, Season of Suffering, Death Agenda
andmore;$5plusfeesinadvance, $6 at the door; 3 p.m., headliners at 9 p.m.; Third Street Pub, 314 SE Third St., Bend; www.j.mp/inexbend or 541-306-3017. NOTABLESSWING BAND: Big band plays swing, blues, Latin music, rock 'n' roll and waltzes; $5; 2-4 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 SE ReedMarket Road; www.notablesswingband.org or 541-647-8694. "WHAT EVER HAPPENEDTOBABY JANE?":A play about Jane, her older sister Blanche and asuspicious accident; $19, $16for students and seniors; 3 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626. CONNOR GARVEY:The Portland, Maine, folk musician performs; $15$20 suggested donation, registration requested; 6:30 p.m., potluck starts at 5:30 p.m.; TheGlen at Newport Hills, 1019 NWStannium Road, Bend; houseconcertsintheglen@ bendbroadband.com or 541-480-8830. BLACKPUSSY:The Portland stoner-
TUESDAY GREEN TEAM MOVIENIGHT: A screening of "Crude," a film about the $27 billion legal battle between 30,000 Amazon rainforest dwellers in Ecuador and U.S. oil giant Chevron; free; 6:30-8:30 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 NE Ninth St., Bend; www.bendfp.org or 541-815-6504. "THE DROPBOX":Thestoryof Lee Jong-rak, a pastor dedicated to embracing and protecting hundreds of newborn babies abandoned on the streets of Seoul, South Korea; $12.50; 7 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 8 IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive; Bend; 541-312-2901.
WEDNESDAY COMMUNITY BOOK CONVERSATION:Discuss "Overcoming Our Racism: Journey to Liberation" by Derald Wing Sue; free; 4-6 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Wille Hall, 2600 NW College Way,Bend; www.cocc. edu/multicultural or 541-383-7412. NELSON ILLUSIONSSHOW: A performance by four master magicians featuring illusions
and more;$25 plusfees, $15for
IN THEMOOD:Featuring the American1940s musical revue with singers and dancers and the String of Pearls Big BandOrchestra; $35-$59 plus fees; 3 and7:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or
children12 and younger; 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. "THE DROPBOX": The story of Lee Jong-rak, a pastor dedicated to embracing and protecting hundreds of newborn babies abandoned on the streets of Seoul, South Korea; $12.50; 7 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium168 IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive; Bend; 541-312-2901. INCITE:The metal band performs, with Better Left Unsaid, Spades andBladesand more;$5 plusfees in advance, $6 at the door; 8 p.m.; Third Street Pub, 314 SE Third St., Bend; www.j.mp/incitebend or 541-306-3017. REBELUTION:TheCalifornia reggae band performs, with Gondwana and Jeremy Loops; $22.50 plus
Yesteryear
world will come, and without them."
Continued from B1
Regarding Germany's European aims, Hitler said "Central Europe was built by us, not by
rock bandplaysan album-release
show, with In the WhaleandThe Beerslayers; $8 plus fees in 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.
MONDAY
Arthur Vandevert entertains A weekend party was given by Arthur Vandevert Saturday in honor of the senior class
the British."
"My first goal is the security of our own living space," Hitler said. "There are still some
Submitted photo
The Nelson Illusions Show will take place at 6 p.m. Wednesdayat the Tower Theatre in Bend. Featuring health organizations, activities, parenting information, food and more; free; 5-8 Bend; www.randompresents.comor p.m.; Redmond Proficiency 541-408-4329. Academy, 2105 W. Antler Ave.; www2.redmond.k12.or.us or CAHALEN MORRISONatCOUNTRY 541-633-0311. HAMMER:The Seattle country BILLY STRINGS 8(DONJULIN: band performs, with Hacksaw An evening of vintage bluegrass Tom; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre and old-time mountain music; Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive; Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or $20; 7 p.m.; String Theory Music, 1291 NW Wall St., Bend; www. 541-323-1881. stringtheorymusicbend.com or 541-678-0257. THURSDAY "THE COMEDY OFERRORS": BEND INDOORSWAP MEET: A performance of William Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, Shakespeare's shortest comedy; $5, antiques, children's activities, music $3 for seniors and students; 7 p.m.; and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 Crook County High School, 1100 SE p.m.; Bend IndoorSwap Meet,679 Lynn Blvd., Prineville; 541-416-6900. SE Third St.; 541-317-4847. "THE DROPBOX":Thestoryof CENTRAL OREGONSPORTMEN'S Lee Jong-rak, a pastor dedicated to SHOW:Featuring gear and more embracing and protecting hundreds for outdoor sports enthusiasts of all of newbornbabiesabandoned ages; $10, $5 for children ages 6-16, on the streets of Seoul, South free for children 5 and younger; 12 Korea; $12.50; 7 p.m.; Regal Old p.m.; DeschutesCounty Fairand Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX, 680 Expo Center, 3800 SWAirport Way; SW Powerhouse Drive; Bend; Redmond; www.thesportshows.com 541-312-2901. or 503-246-8291. HOBO NEPHEWS OFUNCLE COMMUNITY RESOURCEFAIR: FRANK:The Minneapolis-based
pionships this past weekend at
Brundage Mountain. Mike Metke and Jerry Blann were named to the 15
regions in Europe which have member men's team. Karen been built by Germany and Skjersaa, Sherry Blann, Sarah
reminiscences of Mexico and
he said that if he had been
there we shall live and in this
Goodrich and Kiki Cutter will
living space we shall not tolerate any threat or political com-
form the nucleus of the nine member women's squad. The skiers will all participate in slalom, giant slalom
Reiterating Germany's confidence of winning the war,
Arizona in the evening. Con- chancellor in a Nazi regime sidering the number of lads during the world war, Germaand lassies the chaperon, Mrs.
and downhill events.
More snow'falls'at Pilot Butte
ny would have been the victor.
E. F. Stockwell had under her He was cheered when he charge, her management was emphasized how he had renothing short of m arvelous. armed Germany as it had nevAlthough the guests were feel- er been armed before.
CENTRAL OREGONSPORTMEN'S SHOW:Featuring gear and more for outdoor sports enthusiasts of all ages; 12 p.m.; $10, $5 for children ages 6-16, free for children 5 and younger; Deschutes County Fair and Expo Center, 3800 SWAirport Way; Redmond; www.thesportshows. com/shows/central-oregon or 503-246-8291. FIRST FRIDAYARTWALK: Event includes art exhibit openings, artist talks, live music, wine and food in downtown Bend and the Old Mill District; 5 p.m.; throughout Bend; Bend. AUTHOR! AUTHOR!: Ann Patchett: Author of "The Magician's Assistant" and "Bel Canto" will speak; 7 p.m.; $20 $20 for general admission seating; $75 for preferred seating; Bend High School,230 NE Sixth St.; Bend; www.dplfoundation.org or 541-312-1027. HAMLET:A performance of the classic Shakespeare play by the Ridgeview theater department; 7 p.m.; $10, $5 for children in grades
6-12, $3 for grades5 or younger;
Ridgeview High School,4555 SW Elkhorn Ave.; Redmond; www. ridgeviewhs.seatyourself.biz or 541-504-3600.
Operators of the Pilot Butte
Ski Development Area laid another four to five inches of artificial snow on the Pilot Butte
calls what C harles Darwin wrote about the influence of
in which he demanded still spinsters — old maids — on more living room for Germany clover crops. Darwin's theory and the return of her colonies.
"God did no t
c r eate the catch mice, the killing of the
world for England alone," he mice savesbees from destrucshouted, declaring that the tion and the more bees there conception of the "haves" and
are the better is the polleniza-
that must be destroyed. He derided the statesmen of
clover. Mr. Jackman, meet Charles Darwin.
"have nots" is a conception tion and consequent growth of the allied powers as a string of
zeros," he said. "These men
who dominate the greater part of the globe are not even able to eliminate unemployment. And these old, toothless men
talk about the reconstruction
I
.
rl I
I
'' & Boat/RV Sale
•
•
,
I I I I
I I a a •
I
I
VALID MARCH 5-6, 2015
I
Thu —Fri............12 nOOn —8 P.m.
For the week ending Feb. 28, 1965
I
Adult- $10• Juniors (6-16) — $5• 5 lt under- FREE
Six Bend skiers win positions on Alpine team
I
of Europe, a r econstruction among those named to the which already has happened Pacific Northwest Ski Assobut without them. ciation Alpine team which "Reconstruction o f t he will compete in the National
.
I
REGULAR SHOW HOURS
s k i er s w e r e
• a •
in Redmond
I
S ix B en d
•
I
.„,. 0
I
50 YEARS AGO
CENTRAL OREGONSPORTMEN'S SHOW: Featuring gear and more for outdoor sports enthusiasts of all ages; 10am; $10, $5 for children ages 6-16, free for children 5 and younger; Deschutes County Fair and Expo Center, 3800 SWAirport Way; Redmond; www.thesportshows. com/shows/central-oregon or 503-246-8291. LATINODANCE FESTIVAL:Local dance instructors teach ladies' salsa styling, fun footwork and partner combinations in salsa, bachata and merengue in one-hour workshops, to benefit the Latino Club Scholarship Fund; workshops noonto4:45 p.m.,socialdanceand performance 6:30-9 p.m.; $5; Wille Hall — COCC,2600 NW College W ay; Bend; www.cocc.edu/LatinoEvents or 541-318-3726.
I
"
Bank of the Gascades Centerand Deschutes CountyFair B ExpoCente r
zero.
"I have always had the bad luck to fight against a lot of
' ~eza.nmz, oszaoar .
was mentioned here several
There are some regions of years ago. Under the circumcentral Europe which Germa- stances it will bear repeating. ny built and in which she is According to the scientist, entitled to "lebensraum," Hit- clovercrops are bestin those ler said, apparently intimating country sections where live that she has not yet occupied the greatest number of spinall the territory to which she is sters and he reasoned it this entitled. way. Spinsters keep cats, cats
SATURDAY
December. Over the past few neither for the faint of heart months, business has grown nor the light of wallet. "You can get into a comas fast as the popularity of radio-controlled racing. petitive setup for somewhere "Last year it was nominated in the neighborhood of $500," as the fastest growing sport in Mills said "Then if you want to keep America,"Mills said. 25 YEARSAGO Mt. Bachelor Radio Race- up the competitiveness and For the week ending ways has about 30 regular race regularly,by the time you Feb. 28, 1990 racers who show up for most get your tool box equipped of the regular racing sessions (this is an adult-oriented sport Big times with small racers and more than 100 who race rather than a hobby) you'll It's not Daytona or India- occasionally. A single day of spend $1,000 before you can napolis, but it may be the next racing may draw as many as walk into any track in Amerbest thing. 50 competitors. ica, throw your stuff down It's radio-controlled scale When the cars aren't racing and compete. You can start auto racing, the featured main on the dirt oval or the off-road off with a $175 car that a few event six days a week at Mt. track,the raceway is open for years ago won all the internaBachelor Radio Raceways in practice sessions from the tional championships." Bend. greenest rookie to the most Or for $5, you can rent one "It's the closest thing to real seasoned veteran. of the raceways cars and take racing that you'll ever experiA word of warning, howev- it for a few spins around the ence," said Al Mills, owner of er. Radio-controlled racing is track. the racing rental and repair business. "The cars have all of the real
ski jump Monday night and this morning. Bees in clover The snow was made during features of a race car and the they are willing, without exAt county farm meetings about 10 hours of operation. racing aspect, even if you don't ception to try it all over again last week, E .R . J a ckman, The artificial snow is sprayed have the seat-of-the-pants feel, at any time. of the state college, told his as a water and air mixture when you're leading the pack hearers that for the benefit of through five nozzles on the ski and there are nine or 10guys their clover crops they should run, site of the Junior National on your tail, the pressure is on. 75 YEARSAGO refrain from destroying the Ski Championship's jumping Mills opened an outdoor dirt For the week ending colonies of wild bees that are competition here March 20. track at his location on Cen"Everything ran smoothly," tury Drive, started building Feb. 28, 1940 found in the nearby junipers. Every colony of wild bees, Denny Reese, ski area manag- around it in October and reNazi expansionnot Mr. Jackman said, is worth er said this morning. "Weather opened with indoor racing in completed $25 to the nearby clover seed Fuehrer Adolf Hitler, shout- growers. I e' ing at the top of his voice, flung Mr. Jackman's advice re- I I ing the effects of their strenuous amusements on Monday,
defiance at the "international plutocrats" in a speech tonight
"COMEDY OFERRORS": A performance of William Shakespeare's shortest comedy; 7 p.m.; $5, $3 for seniors and students; Crook County High School, 1100 SE Lynn Blvd.; Prineville or 541-416-6900. "WHAT EVERHAPPENEDTOBABY JANE":A play about Jane, her older sister Blanche and asuspicious accident; 7:30 p.m.; $19, $16 for students and seniors; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave.; Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com. "THE LANGUAGE ARCHIVE": A playabouta man consumed with preserving and documenting languages who is at a loss for words when it comes to his own life; 7:30 p.m.; $20, $16 for seniors, $13 for students; Cascades Theatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave,; Bend or 541-389-0803. "GONE GIRL": A screening of the 2014 psychological thriller; 7:30 p.m.; Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County Library, 134 SE E St.; Madras; www.jcld.org or 541-475-3351. WORLD'S FINEST:The Portland ska band performs; 9 p.m.; $7 in advance, $10 at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Dr; Bend; www volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
conditions were not as good as the previous night though." Reese will continue making snow lowing the Pacific Northwest on a nightly basis as long as Slalom and Downhill Cham- weather conditionsallow. Bend March 14-21. The team was named fol-
of the highschool at his home, 20 miles up the river from Bend. A very delightful time was had. Alarge feast was prepared by the hosts' brothers William and George, it being the most enjoyable affair of the trip. Mr. Vandevert told some
bination against us."
FRIDAY
fees in advance, $25 at the door; 8 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; Midtown Ballroom, 51 NWGreenwood Ave.,
Junior ski Championships in
Americana brother duo performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174. "WHAT EVERHAPPENEDTOBABY JANE?":A play about Jane, her older sister Blanche and asuspicious accident; $19, $16 for students and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626. HOPE NFEAR ART SHOW: Music, visual art and more, headlined by B. Dolan and Rubedo; $8; 8 p.m.; Domino Room, 51 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; 541-408-4329. FAIRY BONES: The Phoenixbased rock band performs, with Don Quixote; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theater, 70 SWCentury Drive; Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
REGULAR ADMISSION FREE PARKING
n ~W m ~
~ e~ l-
I ' Couponvalid for $5 off regular adult admission.WEEKDAYSONLYAFTER5 PM. May not becombinedwith other discounts.Onecouponper person. Sale of thiscouponis unlawful. WWW.thSSPDrtShOWS.COm BB
i wAttT.YOU •
•
•
'Ttt Ktte
I I
I•
INTAÃ,lldoo
I I I I I •
•
•
SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON
a econsi ers annIn mos vauine exem ions By Shelia V Kumar
schedules.
The Associated Press
Some cite religious reasons for opting out, while others
SALEM — JenniferMargulis has her kids vaccinated and she gets shots herself. But she
prefer alternative medicines.
Others spurn government
AROUND THE STATE McMinnville homeless —Thecity of McMinnvile haslost patience withadowntown homelesscamp. Homelesspeoplehave been camping for about six months on the grounds of the combined Lutheran/Methodist church. TheRev.Courtney McHill, the church's Methodist minister, said the guests havebeenprovided with laundry, transportation and job-placement services in aneffort to put them on the road to self-sufficiency. City Manager Martha Meekersaid if the encampment established by McMinnville Cooperative Ministries is not gone by theend of the March, the church will get hit with $500 a day in civil penalties. Meekersaid that the city has given the congregation plenty of time to address the problem since it was first provided notice in December. Lauri Muller is the church's development director. She saidgetting hit with a hard-and-fast deadline left her stunned and hurt. Shesaid, "There areall sorts of things we're doing day-in and day-out, and the fact that the city doesn't see that is very disheartening."
doesn't like the idea of govern-
mandates.
ment telling parents they must
Bobbie Cassler, a medical assistant, prepares a vaccine at Childhood Health Associates of Salem on Feb. 12. Parents who want
Under the Oregon proposal, families who decide against shots would be barred from sending their children to schools or daycares, though they still could use online charter school programs or homeschool their children. The Legislature has been holding public hearings on the proposal. Testimony has been heated, and has sometimes
to maintain the right to refuse vaccinations are mounting a strong
focused on parents' rights to
OffiCer injured —Authorities said a Portland police officer was hospitalized with serious but not life-threatening injuries after her patrol car was hit by asuspected drunk driver. Portland police spokesman Sgt. PeteSimpson said Allison Renanderwas responding to a domestic-violence call whenthecollision occurred late Friday. Hesaid the officer was slowing downwhile approaching an intersection when a pickup driven byGary Clark struck the back ofher car.Theforce sent the patrol car into ayard. Clark wascharged with reckless driving and driving under the influence of intoxicants. He isscheduled to bearraigned Monday.Simpson said Renander hasbeenwith the Portland Police Bureaufor sevenyears.
fight against an Oregon bill that takes aim at the state's highest-inthe-nation rate of non-medical vaccine exemptions.
make choices for their children. Parents opposed to the
Missing mau found — ACorvallis restaurant ownerreported
get their children immunized. That's why she spoke at a recent legislative hearing to oppose anamendment to an Oregon bill that takes aim at the state's highest-in-the-na-
tion rate of non-medical vaccine exemptions. "I really feel this is an assault on parental freedom and medical choices. I am really strongly in favor of vaccines. I get into trouble among people in southern Oregon for speak-
Anna Reed i (Salem) Statesman Journal
ing out about why I chose to
bill say the number of vaccines
vaccinate my kids," said Margulis, a parent from Ashland, a city in Oregon with a high vaccination exemption rate. If the bill passes, Oregon would join Mississippi and West Virginia as the only
is unnecessary and questioned their safety. Those who spoke in favor of the bill said the shots benefit the child receiving them and those who are too young or unable to get immunized. Those who support the bill argue that Oregon's high rate of exemptions makes it hard
states allowing exemptions
solely for medical reasons, and no longer for religious, philosophical or personal reasons. Washington, California, and Vermontare considering similar bills that remove either
the personal, religious or philosophical exemptions. Last year, Oregon put into
effect a law requiring parents with kindergartners to consult with a health professional or
watch aone-hour educational videobeforeshotsarew aived. That bill was prompted by Oregon's high rate of exemptions for kindergartners — about 7 percent. Nationwide, the medi-
signing waivers. cent for last year's class, acParents who choose not to cording to the Centers for Dis- vaccinate their children have ease Control and Prevention. become lightning rods during Exemption figures for this the scare over a measles outyear have not been released. break traced to Disneyland. But some legislators say they The CDC says 133 people are hearing of anti-vaccine from seven states, including parents who go through the o ne from Oregon and t w o motions when they attend the from Washington, were linked for the state to achieve "herd consultations. to the outbreak. i mmunity," w h i c h me a n s " People can l ook a t t h e The CDC has said the mea- enough people are vaccinatvideo at school-based health sles-mumps-rubella vaccine ed to prevent disease from centers and they'll sit there is 97 percent effective at pre- spreading. and multitask," like looking at venting measles. They say Herd immunity varies by their iPhones, said state Sen. vaccines are the best defense disease. More contagious disElizabeth Steiner Hayward, againstmanydiseases andthe eases, require a higher perD-Portland. "Most of them go suggested vaccine schedule centage of the population to in saying pretty clearly, 'Ok I'll can protect newborns from se- be immunized, said Dr. Paul sit through this thing, but it's rious infections. Cieslak, medical director of notgonna change my mind.'" But there are pockets of communicablediseases and Steiner Hayward, a family parents around the country immunizations at the Oregon physician promoting the bill, who choose to delay or for- Health Authority. Oregon said she has also heard of par- go certain shots, or opt out of can't afford to sustain such a ents badgering doctors into state-recommended vaccine high exemption rate, he said. an exemption rate was 1.8 per-
missing last weekhas beenfound alive at a Lincoln City hotel. Police said that 34-year-old ChadFerschweiler had beentraveling the coast since he waslast seen on Feb. 16. Friends and relatives were concerned because hedisappeared atthe sametime his restaurant — the Pita Pit — closedabruptly. The newspaper reports he hadfallen behind on payments. Mining permit —The Malheur County Planning Commission has approved anamended permit allowing the OwyheeMining Co. to mine all minerals at its site betweenRomeand Burns Junction. The original permit allowed thecompany to only minezeolite. The amendment clarifies that the companycould mineother minerals, too. Managing partner BobRobertson said the companyneeds to minethe overburden, which contains someother minerals, to get at a zeolite deposit. Thezeolite would be hauled to arail head in Idaho or Nevada for shipment. Thesite contains anestimated 50 million tons of zeolite. The mineral hasmultiple uses, including cleaning up radiation and oil spills. Robertson said the minecould employ 20 to 30 people at full production. DOrm aSSault CaSe —A former Linfield College student accused of raping a woman in acollege dormitory plans to take his case to trial. Diego Garcia, 20, haspleaded not guilty to charges of rapeand sexual abuse. A two-weektrial has beenscheduled to start July 7. Theman was expelled from the McMinnville-based collegeafter last year's arrest and ajudge allowed him to return home to California until trial. — From wire reports
Farmersstep up to saveMalin Potato CO-Op,newfacility opens soon By Samantha Tipler
The building i s 4 0,000 ity was out of date, an aging square feet and houses equip- wooden structure built in the MERRILL — T h i s c ould ment from New Zealand, Slo- 1930s and '40s and added on have been the last year for the vakia, Canada, and from the to over the years. "The equipment is antique; Malin Potato Co-Op. Instead, old shedacross the railroad the 52-year-old company is tracks in Merrill. they don't make it any more," "It's an international efbuilding a state-of-the-art, $7 Cacka said. million facility to move it into fort," Cacka said. "It's light But as the board was conthe future of agriculture. years ahead." sidering its demise, a group "It's exciting," said Dave Malin Potato Co-Op was of organic p otato f a rmers Cacka, general manager for approachedabout the idea of stepped up saying they wantMalin Potato Co-Op. "We're building a new shed in No- ed a state-of-the-art packing looking forward to getting vember 2013. facility. "They decided to do it. Take this operational. The fellas At t he ti me , th in g s that own the co-op, they're do- weren't looking good for the the risk," Cacka said. "It's a ing this for the future of ag in company. big risk." "With the way potato acrethe Klamath Basin. It's for the The co-op found financyoung guys coming up. If we age has been going in the ing help from Washington can find a niche that works, Basin, they're growing less Federal on the big, $7 million and they can make a profit, and less acres and less and project. that's the thing to do here." less acres," Cacka said. "This It hired Volm Companies, The new building is near- probably would have been the of Wisconsin, to design the ly done. Cacka hopes it will last year for the Malin Potato facility. Workers from Wyma, start packaging potatoes later Co-Op." of New Zealand, built and next month. Also the old packing facil- installed the potato washing Herald and News (Klamath Falls)
Cover Oregonleavesbehind costly legacy By Gosia Wozniacka
failed modernization t ech-
The Associated Press
nology project. gon will pay Oracle to host the • $9.1 million — s pent Medicaid system until Decem-
PORTLAND
—
A
bi ll
dissolving the independent
through the end of 2014 to
hire hundreds of temporary Oregon is on its way to Gov. workers to manually process Kate Brown. But even when paper applications. it is gone, Cover Oregon will • $6.6 million — amount leave a legacy of hundreds of Cover Oregon paid Deloitte millions of dollars spent on a to assess glitch-filled exhealth exchange that failed change and provide future — with even more millions in options for the state, as well legal fees and other expens- as to transition the state to es still to come. HealthCare.gov. Here is a breakdown of • $1 million — amount paid how much money has been for independent assessment spent as a result of the Cover of Cover Oregon project by Oregon fiasco, by whom, and First Data, and for services expenses still to come. of turnaround expert Clyde corporation that runs Cover
Money spent: • $240 million — amount Oregon paid to Oracle for developing both the exchange for individuals and small businesses and for public assistance modernization proj-
• Unknown — amount Ore-
and polishing machines. The conveyors, holders and holding tanks came from Canada,
and the packaging machines came from Holland. Talking really state-of-theart, an Odenberg machine is an optical sorter, which reads each potato with a computer
and decides if that potato is the right size, shape and quality to be packaged. "It will look at the potatoes
chine moved from the old
would look for defects and
shed to the new.
cull out any potatoes not good
"That's the only piece of old equipment," Cacka said. "We saved $850,000 by using that. It's a good machine." Malin Potato Co-Op has been certified to package organic potatoes for years, Cacka said. The new facility will be able to package both organic and c o nventional potatoes.
with the optics, and you can All this new equipment and pre-program it to grade your automatizing means Malin potatoes," Cacka said. "It'll Potato Co-Op will hire fewer look at all kinds. It's comput- seasonallaborers for its packerized. Just program it for ing operations. But it also will whatever variety." mean better efficiency and The Odenberg was built by moving more product through an Irish company in Slovakia. the shed. On Wednesday, workers The optical sorter is a prime were installing a sizer, which example. puts potatoes in cartons and Before, workers would sort boxes. That particular ma- the potatoes by hand. They
website for small businesses
to obtain health coverage for employees. • Unknown — a mount it
will cost Oregon to modernize the state's legacy social services computer systems.
• Unknown — additional legal fees for Oregon-Oracle lawsuits an d
c r i m i nal
investigation.
Contested money
Cacka said. To do that by hand, everything slowed down, increasing hourly costs. Speaking from his experience, Cacka thought this facility might be the first new
potato packaging shed built from scratchin Oregon for 30
years. Companies often upgrade old facilities but rarely build new, he said. "If you compare it to packaging sheds in I daho, in Washington — it's small," he
said. "But if you compare it to packing sheds in Oregon, in the Klamath Basin — it's big."
tIc Recteation
District
Distinctive Retiremen.i Lijesfyks
The Bend Senior Center
Proudly Sponsors Community Events for Seniors
Hamstreet and his team who • $23 million — Oracle took over C over O r egon's says Oregon still owes it reins at the height of its fail- this amount for building the
ure last spring. exchange; the company is • $1.9 million — attorney's seeking the money as part of fees for legal fight against a breach of contract lawsuit Oracle and federal criminal it filed last August against investigation into exchange the state. ects. This was funded in part failure. • $5.5 billion — In its own by a $300 million federal lawsuit, also filed last Augrant. The remainder of the Money still to be spent: gust, Oregon accuses Oracle federal grant went for sala• $30 million — estimated of fraud,false claims, breach ries, marketing, communica- amount Oregon will pay for of contract and civil racketions, community grants and adapting Kentucky's Medicaid teering. The state is seeking other administrative costs. system. The federal govern- multiple claims for damages, • $23 million — addition- ment has promised to pay 90 penalties, and attorney's fees al state money spent on the percent of it. that total this amount.
cull 70 percent of them out,"
9QSPSRTSVg I&17S
ber 2015. • Unknown — a mount it
will cost Oregon to build a
enough for packaging. "When you'retalking red and yellow organic potatoes, you get into lots where you'd
Presents
A. p~a A'e tteX
'
Candlelight Dinner Dance FRIDAY, MARcH 13
6:00 Im- 9:00 Im at the Bend Senior Center Dance to live music by The Notables Swing Band
Elegant Irish Buffet Dinner
Presate ont served from 6:00-7:00 available st the Prepared by Bend Senior Center No tickets available ar the doop Executive Chef Mary Fromm For Reservations tI|: Tickets 8' his p e ring 8 tnds Retirement call 388-1133 w/help of Bend High Culiniary Team Food donated by Whispering Winds
2g2o 3V;K Conners A ve Send, OregOn gPPOI
541-312-9690 c)
B4
TH E BULLETINâ&#x20AC;˘ SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2015
BITUARIES DEATH XOTICES Carl Houston Willis, of Crooked River Ranch Mar. 17, 1933 - Feb. 25, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond 541-504-9485 www.autumnfunerals.net
Services: A private gathering will take place at a later date. Contributionsmay be made to:
St. Charles Hospice, C/0 St. Charles Foundation, 2500 NE Neff Rd., Bend, OR 97701
Daphne 'Dee' Delores Noah, of Dayville Passed away Feb. 25, 2015 Arrangements: Driskill Memorial Chapel, John Day, 541-575-0529 driskillOcenturytel.net Services:
There are no services
planned at this time. Contributions may be made to:
Memorial contributions may be made toBlue Mountain Hospice through Driskill Memorial Chapel 241 S. Canyon Blvd., John Day, OR 97845.
Loretta V. Fread, of Bend Mar. 28, 1922 - Feb. 23, 2015 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel 541-382-5592 www.deschutesmemorialchapel.com
Services: Loretta was laid to rest at Deschutes Memorial Gardens in Bend.
Elden Dean Myrben,of Terrebonne March 2, 1935 - Feb. 25, 2015 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel, 541-382-5592 www.deschutesmemorial chapel.com Services: A visitation will be held at 11:30 a.m., on Monday, March 2, 2015, at Deschutes Memorial Chapel in Bend. Elden will then be laid to rest at
a graveside service at
1:00 p.m., at Deschutes
Memorial Gardens and a Celebration of his Life will follow at 4:00 p.m., at Crooked River Ranch Senior Center. Contributionsmay be made to:
Elden was an animal lover. Memorial contributions are appreciated in his name to BrightSide Animal Center, 1355 NE Hemlock Ave., Redmond, OR 97756 www.brightsideanimals.org
Sharon Irene Biltcliffe, of Redmond Aug. 5, 1949 - Feb. 23, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net
Earl Edgar Corum, of Silver Lake Mar. 31, 1923 - Feb. 23, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Friday, March 6, 2015, 11:00 a.m., at Fort Rock Community Church, Fort Rock, OR 97735. Graveside, at Silver Lake Cemetery, Highway 31, Silver Lake, OR 97638. Contributions may be made
FEATUREDOBITUARY
Elden Dean Myrben Mer. 2, 1935- Feb. 25, 2015 Loving h u s band, f a t h er a nd g r a n d f ather, E l d e n Dean Myrben passed away on February 25, 2015. Elden was born on March 2, 1935, in Pontiac, Michigan, to M a r vel a nd L y l a
He was knownfor style on, off court By Bruce Weber New York Times News Service
AnthonyMason,am uscular, bellicoseforward whose bruis-
ing play helped the New York Knicks reach the NBA Finals in
1994, died Saturday morning in Manhattan. He was 48.
Mason's death was confirmed by Jonathan SupranowMyrben. itz, aspokesman forthe Knicks. In 19 6 8 , Don Cronson, Mason's long(Smith)
he met the love of his life, Patrito: Elden Myrben cia Sue Lions' Club or Silver Lake G ill, a n d Fire Department. t hey w e r e m a r r ie d l a t e r that year. They raised two lovely d a u ghters, C o lette Ruby Jeanette and Teresa. Schlaht-Kraus, of Ever an i n dustrious and Redmond hard worker, Elden owned Apr. 24, 1935 - Feb. 22, 2015 a dental lab, Elden's ProsArrangements: thetic L a b , i n Gr e s h am, Redmond Memorial Chapel OR, for 21 years. Upon reis honored to serve the t iring i n 1 9 98, Elden an d Kraus family. Please sign Pat moved to Terrebonne. our guest book at There, he enjoyed spendwww.redmondmemorial.com ing time o utdoors, hik i ng 541-548-3219 a nd fishing. H e w a s m e Services: c hanically gifted and w a s Celebration of Ruby's Life often found remodeling old will be held 1:00 p.m. cars and tr actors, as well Saturday, March 14, 2015 a s spending time with t h e at Juniper Golf Course, T Bums auto c lu b i n M a 1938 SW Elkhorn Ave., dras. Redmond, OR 97756; E lden is survived by h i s 541-548-3121 l oving w i f e , P a t ; d a u g h ters, Colette Erickson and T eresa C a r l e ton ; s e v e n r andchildren; a nd h i s eloved c a n in e c o m p a nion, Terra. S ervices will b e h eld o n April 8, 1928- Febreety 24, 2015 h is b i r t h d ay , M on d a y , M arch 2 , 2 0 15. A v i s i t a Kenneth Eugene James of Redmond, Oregon, passed tion wil l b e h el d a t 1 1:30 am, at D e schutes M emoaway at his home on Febr ial Chapel an d a g r a v e ruary 24, 2015. He was 86. K en wa s b o r n A p r i l 8 , s ide service will f o l low a t 1928 in Lincoln, Nebraska, D eschutes Memorial G a r dens at 1:00 pm. A celebrato Wilbur and Leona (Lehn) tion of his life will be held J ames. He grew up in L i n at 4:00 pm, atthe Crooked c oln, graduating from L i n coln High School i n 1 946. R iver Ranch S enior C e n After graduation, he served ter. E lden w a s an an i m a l in the U.S. Navy until 1947. lover and memorial conHe then attended Nebraska State Trade School, com- tributions are a ppreciated in his name t o B r i g htside pleting the Auto Body and Repair course in 1950. Ken A nimal C e n te r i n Red mond, OR. worked as a painter in the E lden w i l l b e dear l y maintenance department at Ventura C o u nt y M e d i c al m issed and forever in o u r C enter, u n ti l r e t i r in g i n hearts. D eschutes M emor i a l 1990. C hapel i s e n t r usted w i t h Ken was an active memhis arrangements. ber of the Redmond Senior C enter, a m e m ber o f t h e Redmond R o d a n d Gu n C lub and t h e B e n d T r a p Club. He is survived by his lovDeath Notices are freeand ing wife of 67 years, Evelyn will be run for oneday,but F. James; h i s d a u ghters,
Kenneth Eugene James
time agent, said Mason was at
Ius, K r i st i K . (h u s b and M ichael) Gaf f e r y and d aughter i n - l aw , P a u l i n e James. Other survivors include 10 grandchildren, 21 great grandchildren and 3 great-great grandchildren. He is preceded in death by both parents; a son, Gary E. James and a brother. N o services will b e h e l d per Ken's request. Contributions i n K e n ' s m e mory can be made t o t h e R e dm ond Senior C e nter, 3 2 5 NW D ogwood A v e., Redmond, OR 97756 A utumn Fu n e r a l s of R edmond h a s b e e n e n trusted wit h t h e a r r a ngements, (541) 5 04-9485. www.autumnfunerals.net
Email: obits@bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254
Margaret Evelyn Bortner passed away
peacefully at the age of 90, Tuesday, January28,2015,undetthecareofHospice, and with family by her side. Margaret
was born July 10, 1924 to John and Mette Christina Nessa in Karlstad, Minnesota. She moved to Portland, Oregonwithheroldersisterlngrid,shortly
after graduating from Karlstad High School in 1942. Margaret met and married Edward Schon in 1945, Together they raised three children, Jack, Jill and Julie, Margaret and Ed's only son, John
Edward Schon, born in Portland August 15, 1946, was killed in action in Vietnam in 1967, while serving for the United States Navy, as a Hospital Corpsman 2nd Class. He received the Silver Star for bravery and was20years old. Margaret and Edmoved to Prineville in 1973. Ed passed in 1974, Margaret met and married Francis Bortner several years later. Margaret and Francis resided together in
Redmond foi 37 years. They were avid square dancers, golfers and traveled far and wide to pursue their hobbies. After Francis' passing in 2013 Margaret resided at Whispering Winds Retirement
Center wheresheenjoyed playing bridge andmademanywonderful friends, She is survived by her two daughters, Jill Noreem and Julie Schiedler, both of Bend, four grandchildren, Kimberly Sargent of Flagstaff, AZ, Jon Sargent of Bend, Erin Hatch of Seattle, and Jeff Schiedler of Bend; and three great-grandchildren, Mariella Sargent, Miles Sargent, and Jameson Schiedler, all of Bend. A Celebration of Life is planned for Margaret March 15th at Ipm at the Sons of Norway Hall in Bend.
~>f '. Qv it i'
"
~
college team, Tennessee State,
was never a power, and he spent three years on the fringes of the professional game, playing mostly abroad and in U.S. leagues of lesser quality than theNBA. But he became a
regular player with the Knicks
Amy Sancetta/The Associated Press file photo
New York Knicke forward Anthony Mason (14) dunks the ball during the fourth quarter of Game 5 of the1994 NBA Finals in New York. Mason died Saturday morning. He wae 48.
in 1991 under their new coach, Pat Riley.
Mason's unbridled style of play made him a fan favorite in
ing defender who sometimes matched up with the opposing New York, his hometown, and center. his personal style did, too; he Statistically, Mason's best was known for having a barber years were the first of his three shave words (his nickname, seasons with Charlotte, when Mase, for instance) into his he averaged career highs in close-croppedcoiffure. points (16.2) and rebounds Mason was also a hound- (11.4), and 2000-1, when he was
on the Heat and averaged 16.1 points and 9.6 rebounds per
game. Mason finished his career in 2003 with the Milwau-
kee Bucks. Overall, he played in 882 NBA games, averaging 10.9 points and 8.3 rebounds per game and shooting over 50 percent from the field.
DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deathsof note from around the world:
Henry Segeretrom, 91: California developer and arts patron who transformed his family's lima bean farm into Orange County's booming ~ and commercial downtown. Died Feb. 20 in Newport Beach.
William Thomas McKinley, 76:Prolific American composer whose music was infused
with the jazz he had performed since childhood. Died on Feb. 3 at his home in Reading, Massachusetts. â&#x20AC;&#x201D; From wire reports
**
* WIL L IAM WALL CHACE akaBill MARcH 20, 1920 - JANUARY 3, 2015
***
Bill, 94, was born in New York on March 20, 1920, he was the son of Clarence and Hannah Chace. He passed away peacefully with his caregiver Judy Barnes and nephew Ron Wechsler by his side on January 3, 2015. Bill served his country honorably in WW11 to bring about the total defeat of the enemy. As one of the Nation's finest, he undertook the most severe task one could be called upon to perform. While during the war he married Brenda Pugh. They had two children a son and daughter. Brenda, daughter Wendy, sister lvlillicent Chace Wechsler and Bill's loving companion Claire Coodwin preceded Bill in death. Their son, Cordon lives in San Antonio, Texas. His two nephews, Richard and Ronald Wechsler, live in Southern California. Bill was a self-employed mechanic in the auto and boatingindustries both in California and Oregon. He loved cars and boats and owned many. As one not to sit idle, he enjoyed restoring cars. He was a member of the local Chrysler Car Club where he had great times and many friends. Bill will be greatly missedby everyone whose life he touched. A very special thanks to the staff of Partners In Care of Bend. You all were wonderful. Following Bill's wishes, his ashes will be scattered at sea in a private ceremony. A celebration of Bill's life is being planned for early spring. Contact Judy Barnes at 541-410-7466 for further information.
Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR 97708
Dora Ester Cusick October 6,1936- February 21,2015
July 1 0, 1 924 - January 28, 2015
I
Mason, who played for six teams in 13 NBA seasons, was an unlikely success story. His
James Hewitt Pessemier Margaret Evelyn Bortnet
li
congestive heart failure and remained there until his death at 2:26 a.m. Saturday.
Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday specific guidelines must be through Friday for next-day followed. Local obituaries are publication and by4:30 p.m. paid advertisements submitted Friday for Sunday publication. by families or funeral homes. Obituaries must be received Theymay besubmitted by by 5 p.m. Monday through phone, mail, email or fax. The Thursday for publication on Bulletin reserves the right to the second dayafter subedit all submissions. Please mission, by1 p.m. Friday for include contact information in Sunday publication, and by all correspondence. 9 a.m. Monday for Tuesday For information on any of these publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall services or about the obituary for details. policy, contact 541-617-7825. Phone: 541-617-7825
/
NYU Langone Medical Center on Feb. 6 when he experienced
Obituary policy
Nancy J. (husband Rick)
a j
James Hewitt Pessemier, age 78, passed away peacefully on February 21, 2015. Jim was born on October 6, 1936 in Portland, Oregon. He was raised as an only child by his loving parents Albert and Eunice in Centralia, WA. Affer graduating from Centralia High School he earned his degree fromSi.Martin's College in Lacy,WA,where he was a varsity baseball player. Jim wasproud of hisservice in the U.S.Army,serving from i 960 until1962. He married Elizabeth JayneBrady in 1963and they had three children in the next four years. Toni,Tomand Tracy were all born in Olympia, WA and lived in nearbyShelion, WAfor several years before moving io Springfield,OR,Jim began hislong career withJered'sOutdoor'n More Store in Albany and then transferred io Bend in1975. He also spent a great deal of time officiating football and baseball throughout Central Oregon. Hewasrespected as a calm and fair officiant.
Feb 15, 1925 - February 15, 2015 This is one of the hardest thing that I have ever had to do. Love hurts. Dora Ester Cusick died on Sunday, February 15, 2015 when she turned ninety years old to the day. She was born on a Sunday in Hood River, OR, on February 15, i925 to Moses and Delpha Addington: The family soonmoved to Maupin, OR, where she graduated from Maupin High School. In April 21, i946, she was married in Astoria OR, to ottr father, Robert G. Cttsick who passed in 2003. The pair moved often, butsoon settled in Bend OR, around i956. Mom leaves behind her five children, Robert, Roger, Ester, Floyd, and Patricia. All of whom call Bend their home. Mom had io grandchildren and 22 great-grandchildren that are spread allacrossthe United States. She was the last to survive of her siblings, and she missed them to the end of her days.
Jim married Cynthia Ann Widner in 1984 and shortly thereaffer purchased Call-A-Cab (later called TheBreeze) which kepi them busy until their retirement. Jim was on active step-father to Cindy's three children, Joseph,Valerie and Jerry.
As with most people from her time, shewas awitness to somany great and horrible events. Including the Great Depression, theloss of her beloved brother, Floyd Addington at Pearl Harbor, and enduring her oldest son's time in Vietnam.
One of hisrecent favorite pastimes wasacompetitive game of pinochle with friends af Aspen Ridge Independent Retirement Community. He also enjoyed brewing award-winning private label beer with the club at AspenRidge.
Our mother never did learn to drive, she never took up smoking, drinking, nor was shecrazy about coffee. Dora wasone of the strongest and most independent ladies thatI had ever known. She cared fiercely for all animals mostly the babies and shehad a way of willing them to live. Her flowers were just as important to her. A Thanksgiving cactus that she inherited from her Mother is over 100 years old.
Jim took great pleasure in spending time with his twelve grandchildren, traveling throughout the U.S. io visit them. Jim is survived by his wife Cindy, his three children three stepchildren and twelvegrandchildren. Autumn Funerals is incharge of the arrangements. A celebration ol life will be heldSaturday, March 7th at 1i AM af McMennamins.
fev
Our family, attd now you have witnessed the passing of a Great Lady who did make a lifeof90 yearsherown. A graveside service will be held on Sat., Mar. 7 at h30 PM at Deschutes Memorial Gardens, Bend. Arrangements have been entrusted to Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home. 541-382-2471
SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
B5
WEST NEWS Being thrown off a tall diff Study finds 7,500 marine mammal s draws attention to Oregonian in lower ColumbiaRiverfor smelt
By Mark Freeman
(Medford) Mail Tribune VM
TALENT — Blake Burwell
I
arose in Norway one morning last June bent on adding a little
spice to the increasinglytedious task of jumping off a 3,000-foot diff. "I woke up that morning and thought, let's try something new," says Burwell. "Normally, we just, you know, jump. But it just seemed like a good idea to have some friends join in." So he had two friends grab his hands and feet and literally
are eating are endangered as would amend existing law
LEWISTON, Idaho — An aerial survey of marine mammals in the lower Columbia
well," said Steve Jefferies of the Washington Department
River found spring Chinook
Lewiston Tribune. A study last year indicated
sea lions and 100 Steller sea
lions. The marine mammals are drawn into the river this time Jamie Luech/(Medford) Mail Tribune
feet above a river. "It scaml me a ton the first
time," he says. "It still scares me alittle bit, but that's the fun of it."
He's since done 74 other higher BASE jumps off moun-
Under
the
leg i slation,
Washington, Oregon and Idaas much as 40 percent of the ho, along with the Nez Perce, spring and summer chinook Yakama, Warm Springs and run that enters the Columbia Umatilla tribes, would each River disappears. be able to secure a lethal take
past more than 6,000 hungry harbor seals, 1,500 California
Blake Burwell, 31, shows off his wing suit at his home in Talent.
and make it easier for states and treaty Indian tribes to kill
of Fish and Wildlife told The problem sea lions.
salmon will have to make it
toss him off the edge of a sheer diff wall called Kjerag, and the ensuing video has transformed far has gotten this 21st-century the 31-year-old Talent man into Icarus safely to earth 75 times. "I'mnotthinkingaboutlifeor the crazy face of BASE jumping on three continents. death," says Burwell, who has "I didn't reallyplan on it hap- had sevenfriends die in jum ps pening that way," Burwell says. since he started. "I'm really in "They didn't throw me very the moment, thinking about far. So it turned out to be pretty performing, moving away from exciting." the rocks. I hope I don't (die), The video of that jump, but I've definitely considered called "Throwing Blake Bur- the possibility. If not, you're well off a Cliff," has registered not being honest with yourself. 30,000views on Facebook. The best way to survive BASE Terms like exciting and dan- jumping, other than not trying gerous are all relative in the it, is to be honest with yourself world of BASE jumping, per- and your abilities." haps the most dangerous of exBurwell fell into BASE jumptreme sports, where daredevils ing quite honestlyin 2010, when like Burwell don special suits the longtime rock dimber was that help them harness gravity ascending El Capitan, the faand literally soar like super- mous rock face in Yosemite heroes through the sky before National Park While sleeping parachuting to the ground. in a bag pegged to the cliff face, "BASE" Burwell was startled by the The a cronym stands for Building Antenna roaring sound of something Span Earth, encapsulating the falling from above. tall things from which memIt was a rogue BASE jumper bers of this tiny ultra-niche illegally launching himself off group of thrill-seekers launch El Capitan, a no-no in national themselves. Calling their pas- parks. He might as well have time death-defying is not an taken Burwell right with him. "It seemed like a n atural exaggeration. A 2012 University of Colora- course of things," he says. "If do study found that 72 percent you're going to climb up these of wingsuit flyers had wit- beautiful rocks, you might as nesseddeath or serious injury, welljump off them." and 76 percent had experiBut one doesn't just dabble in enced a "near miss." BASE jumping. BASE jumping websites He spent the next two years have chronicled 248 deaths skydiving, with mixed results. since 1981, a specter that not He broke a leg and had to take only comes into play with every a year off. His first BASE jump jump but also provides a mix came in 2013 when he launched of adrenalin and clarity that so off Idaho's Perrine Bridge 480
New Year
The Associated Press
State fisheries managers permit and remove as many
have applied for and gotten as 10 animals each and a of year to take advantage of a permits to lethally remove maximum of 92 among all the large smelt run, but they will some of the sea lions. But do- agencies. switch to spring Chinook by ing so has been controversial. When the Marine Mammal sprmg. Over the past six years, about Act was written, there were "We have more sea lions 50 animals have been killed. only about 30,000 sea lions, than ever in the Columbia, and A bill before Congress said Doug Hatch of the Cothey are there when endan- sponsored by Rep. Jaime Her- lumbia River Inter-Tribal Fish gered salmon and steelhead rera Beutler, R-Wash., and Commission. Now, estimates are there, and the smelt they Rep. Kurt Schrader, D-Ore., put thepopulation at 350,000.
tains and cliffs that are in the
ironic category called "terminal base." Because it's mainly illegal to launch off anything worth jumping off in t h e United States, Burwell saves the mon-
eyhe makes as abud-trimming contractor in the medical-mari-
Ryan Continued from B1 Ryan is scheduled for arraignment on a g r and jury indictment at 1:30 p.m. W ednesday. Nelson h a s a trial
because the Alps are where it's
March 16. Information leading to the
In the viral video shot at the
BASE-jumping mecca at Kjerag, Burwell is wearing what's called a "tracking suit," a nylon body suit full of pores that fill with airupon descent and swell his profile to that of a flying marshmallow. He's since graduated to a "wing suit," which makes him resemble a human flying squirrel hurtling toward a tree that's not there.
Burwell knows BASE jumping ultimately becomes a numbers game. There are no bad old BASE jumpers, but the
believe the public interest in
partment of Justice.
reviewing this information outweighs the minor child's right to privacy." A probable cause affidavit states facts as to why prob-
Case information is limited to what was filed by the Yamhill County District At-
torney's Office. Deputy DA
Kate Petersen asked that the r e port c o nference probable cause affidavit be
juana growingbusiness to travel to Norway and Switzerland, at for BASE jumping.
referral from the state De-
someone, conduct a search sealed by the court, and her or seize property. request was granted. Circuit Judge Cynthia "I have read the probable Easterday appointed Mccause affidavit filed for this Minnville attorney Janmarie
scheduled for 10:40 a.m. arrests was gleaned from an investigation into illegal
case," Petersen wrote. "The
nville Police Capt. Dennis Marks said Thursday. The case was investigated by McMinnville police under a
Meeting
The park district and the
ment plan for Shevlin Park was written in 1992. To mini-
the east side of the river with
age from current and future
park district staff who have
levels of use, the district is looking to update its plan and potentially make changes to the park.
been studying the options
l o ng
children, I'll probably retire from BASE jumping. But I'll still sky-dive. That's way safer."
Chen said his own experience growing up in China's Continued from B1 traditional Chinese music, and Fujian province exposed him The first two schools es- JianFengChen of Oregon Tai to how difficult life can be for tablished by EChO are now Chi Wushu in Bend brought children with developmental funded and managed by the several of his local students to and physical disabilities. BeChinese government, and the demonstrate their craft. tween the country's one-child newest school in Liupanshui Chen first learned of EChO policyand the extreme poverwill be handed off in the com- two years ago, he said, when he ty endured by many Chinese ing years. EChO is in the early was pondering opening a Tai families, Chen said it's not unstages of planning for a fourth Chi school in Bend. Curious usual for the parents of such school. whether there were any local children to turn them over to Tadjiki said the arrangement groups focused on Chinese cul- a state-run orphanage at a allows donations to EChO to go ture, he discovered the organi- young age. further, assuringmore Chinese zation and was quickly taken China is slowly getting betstudents get the services they in by their commitment to the ter about attendingto the needs need. children of China. of people with disabilities, "We're not always stuck on Chen said with few Central Chen said, but while trying to one in perpetuity," Tadjiki said. Oregon residents of Chinese modernize a country of more "It's this wonderful model, ancestry, it's understandably than 1 billion people over the we're able to keep going, and difficult to recruit performers past few decades, the governwe're never stuck." for a Chinese New Year cele- ment has only rarely made the For Saturday's event, or- bration. But, he's committed to issue a priority. "Those kids live in a very ganizers solicited donations being part of the event for the for fundraising auctions and long haul. harsh situation, they need peo"We'd definitely like to try to ple to help them," Chen said. raffles, and food donations from local Asian restaurants. bringmore culture,everyyear, — Reporter: 541-383-0387, A pair of musicians from the more and more," he said. shammers@bendbulletin.com Lan Su Chinese Garden in
Portlandcame overto perform
Emily Ann (Bump) cVoore Emily Moore, 71, started her life journey here on earth on October 6, 1943 in Newberg, O regon.ShebeganherHeavenly journey withherLord on February 6,2015 at045p.m .
BendPark8 RecreationDistrict doardmeeting
city have been considering a bridge across the Deschutes
among newcomers as seasoned jumpers. term," Burwell says. "If I have
When:5:30 p.m. Tuesday Where:District office building, 799 SWColumbia St.
Deschutes National Forest mize user conflicts and dam- trails on the west. Tuesday, will p r esent th e
d i strict's connecting trails. — Reporter: 541-383-0387,
board with potential locations for the new bridge and
shammers@bendbulletin.com
0
'i
•
•
•
•
•
•
I When
Q Where
Wednesday, March 11, 2015 Lunch Session: 12:00 p.m. - 1:30 p.m. Dinner Session: 5:45 p.m. - 7:15 p.m.
The Riverhouse Convention Center 2850 Rippling River Court, Bend
She graduated from Newport High School in tire spring of 1961 and the next fall began attending Oregon College of Education in Monmoutir, Oregon. She graduated kom O.C,E, in Education in 1965, later she received her Master's Degree in Special education.
Lunch and dinner will be provided
Emily began her teaching career in Bend in 1965. At that time she was teaching third grade at Yew Lane School. Later she moved to Special Education and taught at Pilot Butte, Bear Creek and retired kom Jeweli Elementary School in 1995. After one year she returned to irer career in education as a Special Education Coneultant for tire Mitchell and Spray School distri cts forseveralyears,
Learn the complexity of the retirement process, the importance of personal circumstances and how avoiding mistakes can be just as important as managing risk in retirement.
In 1971 Emily met her "forever" man, Henry "Hank" Moore. He was also a teacher. They were married in March of 1973 and enjoyed many happy years until iris passing in February of 1995.
Emily was a "people person" wiro gloried in adding to her family with a 'family' of frienda. Sire enjoyed 50i years as a member of Eastern Star and also 50f years as a member of PE.O. Sire belonged to several other groups inciuding the
o IRA rollovers o Withdrawing income Beneficiary planning
"Cooking Group" and the "Happy Lunch Bunch".
To reserve your seat:
Emily grew up with the Lord always beside her. In Newport and Bend she attended tire Episcopal Church. While married to Hank they attended The First Presbyterian Church of Bend where she was able to share her love of the piano and organ with so many. After Hanir's passing, ehe returned to Trinity Episcopal Church of Bend where she woreiriped, playedher mus ic,volunteered and worked in the oKce.
CAU. 541.382.1778 l E-MAIL Serninars@oregonCornmunityCU.org
Emily is preceded in death by her husband, her father, Irer mother and her brother. She is survived by one cousin and her family, two niecee and one nephew and their familiee.
I
•
- ••
•
Sire will be dearly miseed by all of those kiends and family she has left behind. %ere is a saying about, "going to meet your maker". Emily didn't have to go, she already knew Km and Ks Son and 'They' were constantly with her. They just took her hand, walking her, she knew, to 'the room He had prepared for her in eaven.
'Securities and advisor)r services offered ffrrough LPLFinancial and Registered Investment Advisor, member FINRCVSIPC. Insurance products offered through LPL Financial or its licensed affiliatea Oregon Community Credit Union andOregon Community Investment Services are not registered broker-dealers and are notaffiilated with LPL Financial.
A celebration of life will be held at Trinity Episcopal Church of Bend on Saturday March 21, 2015 at 2:00pm. Donations may be made to Special Olympics Oregon High Desert or PE.O. Chapter FY
lf V
Oregon Community Credit Union is proud to sponsor a complimentary seminar hosted by the Oregon Community Investment Services Team and LPL FinanciaL
Two weeks after her birth in Newberg, Emily returned to Newport, Oregon where she lived through her school years, playing, working and growing her faith on tire family farm with her father, Victor A. Bump, her mother, Clare Gumelius Bump and irer younger brother, Walter A. Bump. She started piano lessons at age Irve with music being Irer life's joy whicir slre shared with many.
r e present
— Bulletin staff contributed to thisreport
nor child who is referenced in counts 1 and 2. I do not
statistics show as many deaths
per-sustaining in th e
Dielschneider to
probable cause affidavit con- Nelson. Ryan's request for tains personal identifying a court-appointed attorney information regarding a mi- was denied.
computer activity, McMin-
Continued from B1 Bend's population has qua- River on the south end of drupled tomore than 80,000 town since 1995, to connect people since the last manage- the Deschutes River Trail on
"It doesn't seem to be su-
able cause exists to arrest
Not NCUA Insured
Not C r e dit Union Guaranteed
May Lose Value
B6 T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2015
W EAT H E R Forecasts and graphics provided byACCHWeather, lnc. ©2015
I
i
i
'
I
TODAY
iI
TONIGHT
HIGH 44'
LOW 23'
Not as cold with plenty of sunshine
I f ' I
ALMANAC
MONDAY
TUESDAY ' ' 41'
43' 21'
u
'r~~
A morning shower or two; rather cloudy
Mostly cloudy and seasonably cold
WEDNESDAY
16'
22
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
59/
UV INDEX TODAY 10 a.m. Noon
3 1~ 4
I
45/16
Yesterday Today Monday
H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i t y Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 58/37/0.02 54/39/s 54/34/pc La Grande 46/34/0.02 47/23/pc46/21/c 44/29/0.00 44/21/s 45/21/c La Pine 33/25/0.05 45/22/s 43/23/sh Brookings 61/42/0.08 60/41/s 55/41/sh M edford 57/4 2/0.32 55/31/s 54/31/sh Bums 40/33/0.00 38/18/s 43/19/c Ne wport 57/3 7 /0.03 55/41/s 52/37/sh Eugene 57/37/0. 12 52/37/s 54/32/sh North Bend 59/43/0.37 58/42/s 55/38/sh Klamath Fags 42/27/Tr 48/22/s 47/23/sh Ontari o 55/37/0.02 51/25/s 51/29/c Lskeview 36/25/0.01 45/1 6/s 45/22/sh Pendleton 47/28/Tr 46/28/s 46/23/c
City Asturis Baker City
3-5 Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlrsms.
ROAD CONDITONS ror web camerasof ourpasses, goto www.bendbugetin.com/webcams I-84at CabbageHilh Plentyof sunshine,but chily today.Mostlycloudyandcold tonight. US20at Sangam PamcWarmertoday with plenty of sunshine.Mostly cloudyandcold tonight. US26at Gov't Camp:Mostlysunnytoday.Mostly doudytonight. US26at OchocoDivide: Chilytodaywilh abundant sunshine.Mainly doudyandcold tonight. ORE58at WilhmuauPamcNotascold today wilh plenty ofsunshine. Mostlydoudy andcold tonighL ORE138at Diamondlake Plenty ofsunshine today.Mostlycloudytonight.
44/16
Fields• 45/17
• Lakeview
48/22
Yesterday Today Monday
1
The highertheAccuWealheraumiiv Index number, the greatertheneedfor eysandskin proisdiun. 0-2 Low,
McDermi 45/20
Yesterday Today Monday Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 57/3 9/0.0055/39/s 55/33/p c 39/ 30/0.0146/25/s 43/22/c 40 / 30/0.0446/21/s 44/19/sh 59 / 41/0.06 54/37/s 54/35/sh 57/34/Tr 54/39/s 55/32/p c 39/30/0.10 47/21/s 44/19/sh
City Portland Prinevige Redmond Roseburg Salem Sisters The Dages
5 5 / 34/0.03 54/31/s 55/31/c
Weather(W):s-sunny, pc-psrffy cloudy,c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow l-ice, Tr-irsce,Yesterdaydata asof 5 p.m. yesterday
NATIONAL WEATHER ~ 108 ~ g s
~ gs
~ t ea
NATIONAL EXTREMES YESTERDAY(for the
~ 20a
~ 306
~ 406
~ 50s
~ ega
Cafus
~ 708
~ 806
~ 90s
54/41
~ 10 0 8 ~ 1 1 08
Que c 23/1
* r * * * "T "nrkvr uay
31/19
5
48 contiguousstates) National high: 86 at Fort Myers, FL National low: -SO'
Periods of cloudsand sunshine
i
Wi ipeg
fu~ns 29/14
55/39
aiamsrck
po~
23/2
's
~
Yesterday
Today Monday
City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Abilene 28/20/Tr 46/33/r Akron 23/-3/0.00 34/20/sn Albany 26/2/0.00 27/21/sn Albuquerque 38/19/0.37 59/35/sh Anchorage 34/26/0.01 34/22/s Atlanta 56/31/0.00 52/45/sh Atlantic City 28/14/0.00 30/30/i Austin 37/31/0.04 55/42/r Baltimore 31/1 4/0.00 32/29/sn Billings 33/1 7/0.00 29/1 4/s Birmingham 63/29/0.00 61/48/c Bismarck 22/2/0.00 23/2/pc Boise 47/35/Tr 46/27/s Boston 31/1 2/0.00 30/27/pc Bridgeport, CT 27/6/0.00 30/26/sn Buffalo 18/-1/0.00 29/21/sn Burlington, VT 24/-8/0.00 28/19/sn Caribou, ME 25/-6/0.00 24/16/pc Charleston, SC 53/38/0.02 52/45/sh Charlotte 44/29/0.00 38/37fi Chattanooga 54/27/0.00 50/42/c Cheyenne 22/-2/Tr 22/11/c Chicago 21/-10/0.00 29/11/sf Cincinnati 29/11/Tr 38/22/sn Cleveland 25/-9/0.00 31/18/sn ColoradoSprings 20/-1/Tr 24/1 5/c Columbia, MO 25/15/0.25 36/20/sn Columbia, SC 52/35/0.01 41/40/sh Columbus,GA 59/32/0.00 60/48/c Columbus,OH 25/0/0.00 36/19/sn Concord, NH 32/-9/Tr 30/21/sn Corpus Christi 55/44/0.34 70/58/sh Dallas 31/26/0.16 46/36fi Dayton 25/5/0.00 35/17/sn Denver 22/0/Tr 21/13/c Des Moines 24/2/0.04 34/13/c 21/-2/0.00 Detroit 30/18/sn Duluth 21/-1/0.00 21/2/c El Paso 69/26/0.00 74/49/pc Fairbanks 32/11/0.00 18/-4/s Fargo 28/6/0.02 23/-1/pc Flagstaff 38/33/0.34 40/33/sn Grand Rapids 21/-2/0.00 28/15/sf Green Bay 19/0/0.00 28/9/c Greensboro 36/24/0.00 35/34fi Harrisburg 28/6/0.00 31/27/sn Harfford, CT 32/1/0.00 29/24/sn Helena 27/15/0.00 31/14/s Honolulu 82/68/0.26 81/69/sh Houston 57/37/0.01 66/58/sh Huntsville 55/30/0.00 54/39/c Indianapolis 25P/0.02 33/17/sn Jackson, MS 68/33/0.00 65/53/sh Jacksonville 54/46/0.02 68/55/c
Hi/Lo/W 50/45/r 29/1 2/c 31/7/sf 60/33/1 37/30/s 60/51/r 38/21/pc 59/47/c 40/20/pc 37/6/pc 56/51/r 35/4/pc 49/29/c 36/15/sn 36/15/pc 23/5/sf 28/1/sf 26/-2/sn 66/50/c 60/40/pc 52/42/r 36/10/c 28/23/pc 35/25/pc 27/13/pc 40/26/sn 40/33/c 65/48/c 69/55/r 31/1 8/pc 35/5/sn 71/60/c 49/44/r 29/19/pc 36/14/sf 32/28/c 32/16/s 25/13/pc 71/52/c 25/6/s 27/15/pc 40/19/1 28/16/s 26/14/pc 55/32/pc 36/16/pc 37/13/pc 32/8/sn 82/70/pc 71/61/c 50/45/r 32/25/pc 59/54/r 75/55/c
ln inches ss of 5 p.m.yesterday
Base 49-4 9 1-1 27-5 6 53-9 1
33-73 1-5 28-4 4
40-68 59-5 9 24-48 30-6 0
56-56
31-6 1
Source: OnTheSnuw.com
M ne 2 /8
Bois
Amsterdam Athens
47/38/sh 60/46/sh 79/62/s 75/48/s
45/36/pc 61/49/pc 76/65/pc 73/50/s
51/27/s 64/55/pc 46/36/r 68/47/t 51/37/pc 79/65/1 80/61/s 70/51/s 31/1 9/pc 86/70/s 44/33/sh 45/33/sh 47/45/r 78/60/1 72/64/c 50/42/pc 57/41/s 74/53/1 82/68/pc 61/52/pc 52/38/sh 65/46/pc 90/73/c
55/28/s 63/56/sh 45/34/r 68/48/sh 53/35/sh 88/70/s 84/62/pc 70/55/s 22/-5/sn 88/70/pc 42/32/sh 42/32/c 51/38/r 79/59/1 72/67/r 52/46/pc 55/41/pc 72/52/sh 82/70/pc 62/52/s 46/37/c 67/47/s 89/73/s
Yesterday Today Monday Hi/Lo/Prec. 45/26/0.00 23/14/0.09 21/1/Tr 62/52/0.00 34/16/0.00 24/5/0.04
City
Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vegas Lexington Lincoln Litffe Rock Los Angeles Louisville Madison, Wl Memphis Miami
38/26/Tr 65/53/0.00 35/17/0.00 17/-9/0.00 49/28/0.00 80/69/1.01 18/-3/0.00 Milwaukee Minneapolis 20/-3/0.00 Nashville 50/25/0.00 New Orleans 62/41/0.00 New YorkCity 29/14/0.00 Newark, NJ 31/13/0.00 Norfolk, VA 30/25/0.00 OklahomaCity 29/19/0.14 Omaha 23/6/0.02 Orlando 68/55/0.83 Palm Springs 71/56/0.00 Peoria 26/1/0.04 Philadelphia 32/16/0.00 Phoenix 70/60/Tr 27/-1/0.00 Pittsburgh Portland, ME 27/-7/Tr Providence 29/10/0.00 Raleigh 37/26/0.00 Rapid City 23/4/0.00 Reno 39/33/0.21 Richmond 36/19/0.00 Rochester, NY 24/-2/0.00 Sacramento 61/46/Tr Si. Louis 28/15/0.15
Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego Ssn Francisco Ssn Jose
45/27/Tr 38/34/0.08
63/58/Tr 62/50/Tr 60/48/0.05 Santa re 33/15/0.02 Savannah 50/39/0.05 Seattle 54/38/0.00 Sioux Fags 27/4/0.00 Spokane 43/27/0.00 Springfield, Mo 27/19/0.27 Tampa 67/56/2.22 Tucson 72/56/0.00 Tulsa 27/20/0.04 Washington, DC 33/20/0.00 Wichita 23/16/0.17 Yskima 55/40/0.00 Yuma 73/56/0.00
slifsx 8/25
ro to„* * * /2
i
48/32/0.24 Boston 59/46/0.27 • 44/27 * " 6 * * Ra City uffsfu *. Auckland 72/63/0.00 30/11 Baghdad 77/48/0.00 s ol s * at Elkader, IA Che n Bangkok 95/81/0.07 ** ** * * y 34/13* 2'/1 Precipitation: 2.87" Beijing 41/22/0.01 Beirut 64/61/0.00 at Hollywood, FL Berlin 44/37/0.03 Lab r i k * ** * * * * * Bogota 68/50/0.00 xxNx x 65/I s * * Budapest 48/39/0.18 * * • ( Buenos Ai r es 77/52/0.00 * ,x vrf ou Csbo SsnLucss 79/58/0.00 i i * J ~ • v i O k l hema ity * a Cairo 70/55/0.00 xxxpho ~ ' 38/ 7 Anchorage i i i xo A Calgary 28/7/0.03 33/21 si p' Cancun 84/77/0.05 x uju jrrulls hssu ' x xxxx 74/49 42/ Dublin 54/45/0.20 4 Edinburgh 48/43/0.65 Geneva 45/34/0.00 a O.' dsndo Harare XS ' • 83/60/0.08 4/ea % % % w urfssh5 x h 8 45 Hong Kong 72/66/0.02 Honofufu»'6 a k s k s k s ea/60 ss Chihushus 0 Istanbul 54/46/0.16 81/49 81/53 Mismi Jerusalem 57/48/0.00 Monte y ' ee/53 Johannesburg 73/56/0.20 6 Lima 81/70/0.00 Lisbon 59/50/Tr today's noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. Shown are London 50/41/0.63 T-storms Rain Showers Snow F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 61/32/0.00 Manila 90/75/0'.00
SKI REPORT Ski resort New snow Anthony LakesMtn 3 Hoodoo SkiArea 0 Mt. Ashland 3 5 Mt. Bachelor Mt. HoodMeadows 4 Mt. Hood Ski Bowl 0 Timberline Lodge 4 Wigamette Pass:est. opening TBA Aspen / Snowmass, CO 4 Vail, CO 1 Mammoth Mtn. Ski, CA 8 Squaw Valley,CA 17 ParkcityMountain,UT 1 Sun Valley, ID 1
54/
60/41
2 p .m. 4 p .m.
~ S
Klamath
• Ashl nd 'Falls
Bro ings
255
TRAVEL WEATHER
OREGON WEATHER
Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows. EAST: Sunny topartly ria /3 cloudy today.Partly umatiaa Seasid TEMPERATURE Hood 51/27 cloudy tonight with 53/41 Yesterday Normal Record RiVer Rufus • ermiston the slight chance for a Cannon /31 High 37 47 76' i n 1923 rain or snowshower lington 49/25 Portland Meac am Losti ne 53/43 28' 25' -8'in 1960 Low /3 9 • W co 5 30 48/25 Enterprlse late. dleten 42/1 he Daa • 46/24 Tigamo • PRECIPITATION CENTRAL:Sunshine andy• 56/42 Mc innviff • 54/31 Joseph 4/37 Gove • He p pner Grande • 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.49" most of today.Partly to nt • upi C Iiiloli 7/ 2 5 47 23 Cam Record 0.59" in 1904 mostly cloudy tonight Lincoln u 45/ Month to date (normal) 0.8 6" (1.09") with a stray rain or 54/43 Sale • pmy Granitee Year to date(normal) 1.11 " (2.62") snow shower. 54/ • /30 'Baker C Newpo 41/22 Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 0 7" 5/38 55/41 • Mitch il 44/21 C a m P S h m a n R 9 d WEST:patchy fog pos44/23 I\ O rV R9I SUN ANDMOON eu Yach 48/26 • John sible early; otherwise, 55/42 55/38 • Prineville oay /19 Today Mon. tario mostly sunnytoday. 46/25 • P a lina 4 4/ 2 4 6:43 a.m. 6 : 4 1 a.m. 5 25 Spotty showers will Floren e • Eugene ' Re d Brothers 5:53 p.m. 5: 5 4 p.m. move in tonight. Valee 55/43 2l Su iVere 44/23 2:29 p.m. 3: 2 5 p.m. 50/26 Nyssa • 4 5 / 4 • l.a pine Ham ton e 4:16 a.m. 4 : 5 3 a.m. 4 J untura 50/ 2 4 Grove Oakridge Co • Burns OREGON EXTREMES L ast Nw e Firs t 45/22 56/36 /33 57 1 • Fort Rock Riley 38/18 YESTERDAY e' Cresce t • 44/20 41/15 46/24 High: 61' Bandon Roseburg • Chr i stmas alley Jordan V gey Mara M a r1 3 M a r2 0 M a r 26 at Brookings 57/42 Beaver Silver 43/19 Frenchglen 54/37 Low: 24' 42/23 Marsh Lake 44/23 Touight' 6 uity:Venus and Mars low above 47/22 at Meacham 45/20 Gra • Burns Jun tion • Paisley 8/ the western horizon, Jupiter aboveeastern a • 44/1 7 Chiloquin Medfo d '4N21 horizon. Gold ach Rome
0'
~
Sunny
Mostly sunnyand cold
Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday
Source: JimTodd,OMSI
TH U RSDAY
5
Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 44/24/pc 39/25/s 35/21/sn 40/32/c 28/14/sf 28/14/s 56/46/sh 57/42/c 43/26/r 38/30/c 38/1 5/c 40/32/sn 46/36/r 43/39/sh 63/49/1 61/48/sh 43/27/r 41/33/c 29/8/c 27/22/pc 50/37/r 46/44/r 8301/pc 8390/s 29/14/c 28/22/pc 25/8/pc 26/21/pc 49/33/c 47/39/c 68/60/sh 74/62/c 34/32/sn 40/20/pc 34/29/sn 39/17/pc 35/35/sh 44/27/pc 38/27/sn 45/38/r 37/15/c 39/32/c 81/65/sh 79/63/pc 62/48/c 65/49/c 31/13/sn 30/25/c 32/30/sn 40/20/pc 73/57/sh 62/49/1 36/22/sn 30/1 6/sf 30/24/pc 37/11/sn 30/28/sn 37/13/pc 36/35/i 53/33/pc 30/11/pc 42/4/pc 46/24/pc 49/26/c 33/32/i 49/24/pc 32/22/sn 27/5/sf 64/43/pc 61/39/sh 37/21/sn 39/31/c 46/32/c 46/32/sn 59/47/r 62/52/c 62/54/r 61/53/sh 64/49/pc 61/48/sh 62/43/pc 60/42/sh 50/28/sh 52/27/sn 58/47/sh 70/54/c 54/41/s 52/34/pc 30/4/c 30/24/sn 43/25/pc 41/20/c 32/20/sn 41/34/sh 81/65/pc 80/63/pc 74/55/c 69/45/1 34/25/sn 44/37/r 35/33/i 43/27/pc 31/20/sf 42/33/sh 52/28/s 55/25/c 63/52/sh 64/46/c
I
Mecca Mexico City
100/75/0.00 100/73/s 79/48/0.00 78/46/pc Montreal 21/0/0.00 25/21/sn Moscow 36/32/0.08 36/31/sf Nairobi 86/58/0.00 89/59/pc Nassau 84/73/0.02 81/69/s New Delhi 82/57/0.04 66/60/1 Osaka 50/37/0.15 51/34/r Oslo 36/27/0.37 44/39/r Ottawa 23/-2/0.00 25/18/c Paris 50/32/0.05 52/45/c Rio de Janeiro 93/77/0.10 86/72/pc Rome 59/39/0.00 59/49/pc Santiago 77/59/0.00 83/54/s Ssu Paulo 77/70/0'.66 78/64/r Sspporo 37/31/0.03 39/34/sn Seoul 45/21/0.00 43/25/pc Shanghai 44/37/0.54 50/39/pc Singapore 91/79/0.00 89P5/1 Stockholm 39/35/0.00 40/35/r Sydney 82/68/0.00 93/68/1 Taipei 71/63/0.06 58/55/r Tel Aviv 67/55/0.00 65/52/s Tokyo 50/39/0.05 54/42/r Toronto 23/0/0.00 27/22/sn Vancouver 50/17/0.00 48/35/pc Vienna 46/37/0.00 52/39/r Warsaw 46/37/0.06 48/37/pc
96/Tgn 93/79/1
96/73/s 78/49/s 26/0/sf 37/31/c 88/59/c 81/68/s 72/55/t 50/34/pc 44/33/sn 25/-2/sf 50/36/pc 88/74/pc 61/49/sh 80/53/s 82/66/pc 39/31/sn 46/32/s 53/46/pc 87/76/t 41/34/c 77/65/pc 68/60/r 65/53/pc 51/40/pc 26/4/pc 50/30/s 53/36/r 48/34/r
• •
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
L IM I TED T o
S TocK G N HAND ! •
•
•
' •
•
gaH Ip, I
Ql Qg
i1 •
•
Q
•
' •
•
SpECIAL F INAN C I N G AY A I U L B LE
I
• •
"See store for Detail
-AUF HNNBRES
Ql
q)
ON FLooR M o D KL$
'I
I
•
I I
'
•
•
GE a llery-Il e n d
•
6 6
6
4
4•
I••
•
M<ATTREII
•
•
5
'6
•
•6
6
6 •
J •
• • •
I
i : J
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Milestones, C2 Travel, C4-5 Puzzles, C6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2015
O www.bendbulletin.com/community
Patchett
a ~
; knows " books like few -M others
By David Jasper
5
i
I
g
The Bulletin
If you're the sort with romantic, muse-filled notions about what it takes to become a successful author,
, 1'll
you might want to skip what Ann Patchett has to say about it. Patchett, the award-win-
ning writer behind "Bel Canto," "Run," "State of
hi
i
I
Wonder" and other books, could take a little of the wind from your sails. She spoke to The Bulletin on Tuesday about her pending appearance Friday in Bend (see "If you go") and said that working on her next, in-progress novel has her thinking a lot about the act of writing.
Hence, "I've been talking about work a lot lately. It's P:
I
41 8
just sort of on my mind," Patchett said. "I'm kind of
IKi
at a point in my life where
I
I'm over the idea of creativ-
8
ity and inspiration and all of that. And I'm just think-
ing, you know, you just get up and you go to your job and that's how you write a book." That's good news and bad news, she said. "In some ways, I think
it's very comforting," she said. "Because if you believe that the muse is going to whisper in your ear and that it isn't going to be
ICeepingbusy at Oregon's •
hard, then it's disappoint-
The Oregon State Capitol was built in 1938 by the Works Progress Administration in the
waning years of the Great
Library Foundation's Au-
Depression. Its
thor! Author! series, which,
interior walls
this season, has brought in Jess Walter and Garth
with murals that depict
working-class Oregonians,
(while beingcareful not to run afoul of theowl)
Next week: Camano Island,
Washington
really want to write a book
... you can do that, if you just sit down in the chair every day." Patchett is visiting as part of Deschutes Public
are covered
NORTHWESTTRAVEL
ing that that's not going to happen. But if you just
Stein. On May 29, the foundation will host Piper Kerman, the memoirist behind
"Orange is the New Black:
and its dome is crowned with
My Year in a Women's Prison," upon which the
a gold-plated sculpture of a
Netflix series is based.
plonoor.
when such high-profile
Book lovers benefit writers come to town; as Patchett notes from having
spoken here before, Bend is not necessarily an easy place to get to.
She's attuned to such aspects of the bookbusiness — not just as a working author, but also as abookstore owner. Threeyears
• Seeing Salem through the eyesof Bend'sfreshman representative By John Gottberg Anderson For ~ the Bulletin
ago, Patchett and a partner,
SALEM — If you're planning a visit to Salem, beware of the owls.
Karen Hayes, opened Parnassus Books, an indepen-
This is not a joke. In fact, it's created a minor crisis in the
dent bookshop in Nashville,
Tennessee. "All the bookstores in Nashville had closed, and it was a sort of state of emergency. I never want-
intricately planned schedule of State Rep. Knute Buehler,
who has found his jogging routine interrupted.
ed to open a bookstore,
Owls, you see, can be ferociously protective of their nesting areas. One particular barred owl, res-
the tel e v ision network.
I didn't want to go into ,'p@'"..HR
retail. I looked around and
ident of an oak grove at Bush's Pasture Park on SaReaders of Salem's lem's south side, has taken it upon itself to dissuade S tatesman Jou r n a l morning visitors from venturing anywhere near its newspaper have dubbed domicile, even when the intruders remain on desig- the bird "Owlcapone." nated trails.
I kept thinking, well, somebody's going to do this, and nobody did it." SeePatchett/C7
According to John Kleeman,
Four joggers, and counting, were attacked in Feb- operations supervisor for Salem ruary when strong talons followed an almost silent Parks, the city doesn't want to caprush of feathers. Injuries were minor — light bumps, ture or scare the bird away. scalp scratches and theft of favorite hats — but it was
"We do what we can to help nature
enough to prompt Salem's municipal government to post notices to warn park pedestrians of avian aggressiveness. "I don't knowmuch about Salemyet," said Buehler, who is barely a month into his first term as a state
in the parks," Kleeman told the Statesman
representative, "but I can tell you about the owls."
Journal in a Feb. 12 story. "We love to celebrate nature when it intersects with the urban
community."
Learning the city
New signs, featuring the silhouette of an owl As a freshman legislator, Buehler is still learning swooping down upon a running stick figure, were about Salem. inspired by a Feb. 5 segment of "The Rachel Maddow The Bend Republican is not quite chained to the Show" on MSNBC. Salem Parks got permission to State Capitol, but at times it must seem so. use the signs, which were created by designers for See Salem /C4
Ifyou go Asign designed for MSNBC's "Rachel Maddow Show" warns visitors to Bush's Pasture Park in south Salem to beware of
owls. Photos by John Gottberg Anderson For The Bulletin
What:Author! Author! featuring Ann Patchett When:7 p.m. Friday Where:Bend High School, 230 NE Sixth St.
Cost:$20, $75 for preferred seating and author reception Contact:www.dplfoundation.org
C2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2015
M IQESTON'
v Bendor by For ms f o r e ngagementw,eddinganniversary orbirthday announcements areavailableat TheBulletlnl,777swChandlerdve emai l i n g m ilestones®bendbulletin com. Forms and photos mustbesubmittedwithinonemonthof the celebration. Contact: 541-633 2117.
ts + ~L 7
o sin asu ersize we in
ANNIVERSARIES
By Martha C. White New Yorh Times News Service
'th
When Carly Zipp Garbis got married last August, she knew what she wanted.
"We wanted a big party; we wanted a great party," she said. But it was a challenge finding space for her
/
300 guests in a place that
fit her requirements: close to Washington, a half-day's drive from New York City
and near a major airport. She and her wedding planner, Lindsay Landman, eventually found the Salamander Resort and Spa, a 168-room resort in
horse country in Middleburg, Virginia. It had been open a year when Garbis' wedding took place. As big as Garbis' wed-
Bob and Mary(Field) Latham
ding was, it was not unusu-
Latham
two grandchildren.
Father Julian Cassar during
track and cross country by the National High School
Mr. Latham was a teachBob and M ar y ( F ield) er and coach for B end-La Latham, of Bend, celebrated Pine Schools and retired in their 50th wedding anniversa- 2 000. He wa s n a med N a ry with a special blessing by tional Coach of the Year for Mass Feb. 27 at St.Francis of Assisi Catholic Church in
Athletic Coaches Association
Bend. They are planning a Eu- in 1992, 1995 and 2000. He is ropean vacation for a later date. a member of the Knights of T he c ouple w e r e m a r - Columbus. ried Feb. 27, 1965, in Long Mrs. Latham was actively Beach, California. They have involved with many nonprofit three children, the late Paula organizations. Latham, Amy Steigman, of They have lived in Central Bend, and Eric, of Bend; and Oregon for 32 years.
al. About 30 percent of the Janet Jarman/The New YorkTimes Salamander's weddings A sunrise tour via hot air balloons floats above San Miguel de Allende, Mexico, past newly built plazas have included 250 guests or attheRosewood Mayakoba hotel,which hasexpanded to accommodate largeweddings.A growing more, and about 10 percent number of Iuxury hotels and resorts are renovating and expanding to capitalize on the lucrative busiare in the 300 range. Most ness of supersize destination weddings. of the
d estination wed-
dings the hotel hosts are are growing bigger. According to research conducted by The Salamander is one the Knot, a wedding planning of a growing number of website, the average bride who for clients who, like Garbis, come from New York. luxury hotels and resorts that are renovating and ex-
married in 2013 and spent
more than $60,000 on her panding to capitalize on the wedding had 201 guests, up lucrative business of super- from 196 one year earlier.The sized destination weddings. typical wedding in 2013 aver"Destination w e ddings aged 138 guests. used to be tiny," said LandComprehensive data going man, who is based in New back to the end of the recesYork. "The smallest one I sion was unavailable, but Virhave next year is 150." tuoso, a high-end travel agenWithin the last twoyears, cy network, says that many Jim Hanna via The New York Times Landman said her average of its member agencies say in- The Salamander Resort and Spa in Middleburg, Virginia, has guest count had crept up terest in destination weddings hosted many large, luxury weddings for couples coming from New from about 200 to 280 to 350 has increased year-over-year, York. guests. "We're in this place along with their size. where people are spending While the growth of hotel more on weddings. They spaces springing up to cater But creating an atmosphere the right space was worth the have more to spend." to this market is good news like this takes a lot of space. effort. "The No. 1 thing we look "There really weren't that These couples need for the bride with a long guest space, she said, and they list and a flush budget, it's also for is that there can be unique many that could hold that want the high level of ser- good news for the resorts. The spaces for all the different many people," Garbis said. A vice that a luxury hotel or Knot's research found that this events going on," Landman tried-and-true solution — cutresort can deliver. subset of high-spending brides said. "That's been a really ting the guest list — wasn't an "Having a staff that ca- spent an average of $91,148. big shift." Often, even hotels option. It had to be just right. "I'm an only child so my "The way we negotiate is it with sizable ballrooms aren't tered to us and being able to take over to the hotel becomes a multiday event," equipped to offer three or four parents were going all out and having the feeling like said the wedding planner different spaces that can hold with the guest list," she said. "And I didn't want anyone to it was ours for the week- Jung Lee, co-founder of the 300 for a meaL end, it was just one of those event planning firm Fete. "It For Garbis, the search for feel left out." weekends every b r i de becomes, forsure, a lucrative dreams of," Garbis said. business for the hotels." And the clients are willWedding groups such as m m m • • • ing to pay for it — Garbis Garbis' tend to spend more characterized the cost of on food and drink than a her wedding as in the six comparatively sized business figures — which is be- group would, she said. When * • Month to Morlth '4 hind the recent spate of her clients, who often work in development. finance or real estate, bring MEMBERSHIP •No Deadlines At the Rosewood May- hundreds ofguests to a resort, • No Contract CALL NON! akoba in Mexico, requests they tend to want to stay on for large wedding space the premises. This means that p rompted the hotel i n the hotel books revenue from • 's 2012 to build a beachfront rehearsal dinners, reception function area that could after-part ies and brunch the accommodate 400people. morning after. ul decided to commit to "In addition to the larger Two years later, the hotel become a better me as i expanded the space so it numbers, we're seeing more neared my fifties. Metabolic can hold 500. The hotel said resort spend from those tested myhormones and we it had five weddings with guests as well," said Shane discoverd an imbalance that •
h nnhn *
•.
esrsesh l.a
• e neh'.
•
•
•
m~Qjgg)jg
t,e '
.
•
Say "YES" ToSuccess! "I lost 31 pounds!"
'r
v mcy
guest counts of more than
400booked. When its sister property, the Rosewood San Mi-
Allor, director of sales and marketing at the JW Marri-
was hindering my attempts at weight loss. Before I knew it the weight seemed to melt off and I'm no longer taking high blood pressure medication. My energy has increased and I feel AMAZING!"
ott Scottsdale Camelback Inn Resort and Spa. Last year, five
guel de Allende in Mexico, of the 22 weddings that took opened in 2011, managers place at the Camelback had h ad to contend with a n
more than 200 people. In this
unexpected demand for weddings with head counts of 400 or higher. To avoid turning down these requests and losing potentially lucrative business, the hotel last year turned some
calendar year, the hotel has already fielded nearly 100 more inquiries for weddings than it
of its outdoor space into a plaza that can host wed-
Gene and Marcia (Moore) Montalbano
dings of up to 800 people.
did in all of 2014, Allor said.
The resort just completed
Metsbolic ResearchCenter Client
Call NOW for your FREE Consultation! It's the First Step to Changing Your Life!
construction on a new out-
door space and renovations to its golf club to accommodate weddings of up to 300. "It's almost like a vacation," he said.
Bend
541 -213-5657 visit us at emetabolic.com
It has been a hit. "Since
Montalbano
tired in 1996. He is a former
FBI agent and a member of
Gene and Marcia (Moore) the Society of Former Special Montalbano, of Bend, celebrat-
Agents of the FBI, the Amer-
ed their 60th wedding anniversary Feb. 27. The couple were married Feb. 27, 1955, in Queens, New
ican Legion and the Marine Corps League, and a life member of the Central Oregon Mil-
York. They have three chil-
dren, Meredith (and Gary) Savadove, of Bend, Michael (and Anne), of Loveland, Ohio, and Mark, of Portland; and five grandchildren.
itary Officers Association of America.
Mrs. Montalbano was a kindergarten teacher and retired
in 1984. She enjoys cooking, reading and knitting. Together they enjoy spending time with Mr. Montalbano was a spe- their grandchildren. cial investigator for the U.S. They have lived in Central Department of State. He re- Oregon for 11 years.
we opened it in August, we held four weddings, and for this year we already have four wedding confirmed forthatspace,"said Oscar Molina, director of sales
and marketing.
••
' tt
caughtthem by surprise. "We had this image that American weddings were smaller," he said. Expensive weddingsdriven by an increasing number of people with the means to pay for them-
TheBulletin
RESEARCN CENTER welanrtassspsclAUsrs
'OnMetebolicMore', most clierds canexpest tolose1 2 lbs. perweek.rtesullsvsty petsanta person.Newdients will have eonetime enrollmentree of S49tostsrl. Produtts nat Induded.
The Bulletin MI LESTONES
GUIDELINE
He said that the demand from th e U n i ted S tates
Find Your Dream Home In Real Estate •
ia
maLhIOUC
If you would like toreceiveforms to announce your engagement, wedding, or anniversary, plus helpful information to plan the perfect Central Oregon wedding, pick up your Book of Love at The Bulletin (1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend) or from any ofthesevalued advertisers: AAA Travel Awbrey GlenGolf Club Bad Boys Barbecue Bend Park 6z Recreation District Bend Wedding S. Formal Cordially Invited Bridal Deschutes County Fair S. Expo Center Faith HoPe 6b Charity Vineyard Illuminate YourNight
Meadow Lakes Nicole Michelle Northwest Medi Spa Phoenix Picture Framing Professional Airbmsb Tanning Revive Skin Services Salon Je' Danae SHARC Aquatic S. Recreation Center The Bend Trolley The Bridal Suite S. Special Occasion The Dress The Soap Box Widgi Creek Golf Club
SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
C3
uisite,inex ensive inin wa outo t ewa By John Dowling Chicago Tribune
T he w ater
t ax i g r ound
gently onto the beach, and we hopped over the side into
warm, knee-deep surf. It was an appropriate way to arrive in Yelapa, a sunny,
secluded oceanfront enclave about 15 miles south of Puerto Vallarta by water. It's a tiny,
slightly threadbare fishing village with a broad, open crescent of beach, drawing day-trippers who sun, swim and drink and a few tourists who stay longer. Well, come for the beach and the drinks but stay for the food. As with the amphibious
landing, don't expect anything fancy — think plastic tablecloths and chairs apparent-
ly supplied by the local Corona beer distributor. And don't
bother pulling out a credit Photos by John Dowling I Chicago Tribune via Tribune News Service card. The lure is simple menus There are no cars in Yelapa, so boats are the only way to get to and from Puerto Vallarta, or anywhere with an emphasis on fresh
else for that matter. But they also make a pretty scene.
seafood and a few delightful, unexpected twists. The village of Yelapa is a tangle of narrow pedestrian lanes; there is no access by road, only by water, and thus no cars. So Ray's restau-
both had a taste for shrimp. Her shrimp satay arrived as a pyramid of three gargantuan shrimp atop a salad studded with goat cheese. I opted for
rant was a bit hard to fi nd in the upper reaches of the
town, away from the harbor. But the word of mouth had been strong almost from the
time we stepped ashore. By dusk, strings of lights gave the restaurant's veranda and
walled courtyard an inviting glow. My wife and I sat under open sky in the shadow of the town church. We ordered drinks and, almost as a n
a f t erthought,
guacamole and chips. How can something so simple and ubiquitous be a
r e velation?
limes, rather than the usual lemon, to give her Hollandaise a distinctive tang. The egg dishes were 130 pesos (about $8.90), and an Olympic-size the Blue Coast shrimp, three bloody Mary was 80 pesos big ones stuffed with mozza- (about $5.50). rella cheese and wrapped in Yelapa's main beach is lined bacon, paired with rice and with eating and drinking essauteed vegetables. Not cut- tablishments that mostly cater ting-edge cuisine, perhaps, to the daytime crowds. Anbut the shrimp were fresh as gelina's restaurant, at the far could be, and the flavors mar- north end of the beach, is one ried perfectly. We shared a of the few that serves dinner. dessert, and with a generous Getting there was another tip, the tab was 470 pesos, or adventure, down a long stairabout $32. case from the village, through Cafe Bahia had been our knee-deep water of a channel first dining stop as we ex- that connects the harbor to a plored the village. We were lagoon,and down the length drawn by th e breakfast-all- of thebeach, deserted except day option and the perfect
The zippy, chunky guac was view of the harbor and town spiked with jalapeno and ci- pier (yes, there is a place to lantro, and the kitchen-made land and keep your feet dry; chips were cooked to a nut- we opted for the beach arrivty, earthy flavor. Our server al to avoid a long hike with insisted they were fried, but luggage) from the dozen or so there was not a hint of oil. And umbrella-shaded tables. My my margarita on the rocks ar- wife and I split an avocado, torived in what would serve as a mato and goat cheese omelet, water tumbler in most restau- which arrived with r oasted rants — easily 12 to 14 ounces. potatoes, chewy house-made We were more than content, bread and a generous spooneven when the entrees were ful of passion-fruit jam. It was slow to arrive — the Saturday a perfect midday snack for dinner rush is a bad time for two, and with two cold Pacifthe kitchen propane tank to ico beers, the bill came to 140 run out. pesos (about $9.60). Entrees included several That was enough to lure us preparations of a r r achera back the next day for the Sun(the traditional Mexican flank day brunch featuring eggs steak) and mahi mahi (that Benedict and eggs Florentine. night's choices were finished Brooklyn-born, Paris-trained chef-owner Susan P asko with tequila and cilantro or garlic). But my wife and I uses juice from locally grown
for a few beachgoers still nursing drinks. We were seated no more than 40
f eet f r o m w a ter's
edge under a palapa, a rustic canopy of tightly woven palm leaves, by Elena, Angelina's daughter. And when I saw "Elena's spicy shrimp" on the menu, well, how could I go wrong? The pile of shrimp arrived with salad, sauteed red onions and four piping-hot corn tortillas, so I took the
The closest thing to an address for Casa Pericos in Yelapa is third house on the right after you get off the boat at Playa Isabel. It's a four-story boutique hotel with three units. The penthouse takes up
the top two floors. All of the rooms are open to the water and sky.
hint and made myself delicious shrimp tacos. For Yelapa
it was a splurge at 220 pesos ($15), but the view of boats bobbing in the harbor in the fading sunlight was completely worth it. My wife's fish ta-
cos were a bargain at 80 pesos for 60 pesos ($4.10) each. Angelina's had one other ($5.50), and we washed it all down with passion-fruit mar-
HomeAccents
• Decorative Crosses WALLa TABLE
wALL a TABLE
• Decorative Spheres
• Birdhouses & Wind Chimes
• Adhesive Vinyl Wall Art
• Polyresin 8 Pottery Decor Sale
• lamps 8lamDshades • Candles, Flameless I.ED Candles, Fragrance Warmers & Diffusers
• Ceramic Decor Sale FEATURING TABLETOP DECOR, PlATES, SERVING DISHES, PITCHERS, CUPS, SALT a PEPPER AND OTHER CERAMIC DECOR DOES NOT INCLUDE DECORATtyE DRAWERPUllS
FEATURING FtNIALS, CANDLEHOLDErts, BOXESa BOWLS INCLUDES FLOttAL PLANTERS. VASES a OTHER POLYRESIN a POTTERY DECOR
ITEMSPRICED$4.99 a UP DOES Not INCLVDE crlNDIE FX~, TErtUGHTS, yoytVES.VALUEPACKSORFRAGRANCEWAXScorts
• Pillows. Rugs 8 Throws
ITEMS LABELED THE SPRING SHOP r EASTEIIr ST PATRICK 5 AND SUNMERI ARE NOT INCLUOED IN HONE ACCENTS SALE
Easter Items
All Items labeled. • sthe
•
40'OFF
Summer Toys Summer Craftsst VSS Utlle Wishes
• Clttlls & Nole
Furniture St. Paeick'IOav
~oat ottlsorles Usted
D0Es rror laalloE retsorarorresrMerr ORITE Ms IAsaso "rtorutAccElps"
IS~NF
5$'OFF
rwrxllosFerrHeu
30 "Oi'F
THE MNIKED NICP'
• Oecorattoas • Pa+ Sepplles • Cralts a Morel
• Potted Tiees & • Flowerlns st
Greenery Sushes
Floor Plants
fl8PPJ
50'OFF
2 3 9 5 7
87 49 38 62 14
5 1 6 4 9
4 2 1 8 5
9 6 2 7 3
1 7 4 3 8
Answer:
8
36 3 85 ' 57 19 a 62 !
ZIPPER
CH A N C E UN E A SY
HARBOR KITTEN T R ENDY They jumped out of the plane together and were able to-
"CHUTE" THE BREEZE
INCLUDES CLEM s CUNG STAMPS
Papercralinl
T A P A S
T A C S
E T D S L A S S
A L A M 0
B O O S A S K A
S S IN I E T L E A L I F A B I D E R U C K E R I S A N T A T S I B A N O R T G G S I O Q U E S R U S T E E P S S 0 0 E E T T L S I A G O P O T O N Y N 0 D
G A L E M 0 A N E D
E C C L E S R U S K
C A Y R O R Y O C P A S
P IT O L A U D O M M E U N V E L S E N T E X T S E S J S B I S E L S T A T E A R S A R D D E C 0 K I G A N R T I C A T E R IV A I L E R E A L A
M I N E
N E E D L E
E A T S C I C E R N T S 0 R M E D I I D IA
S H R E C I K E T M E T E M O N N T
A R S O N S P 0 U S E
C O M M O A M T I N A N 0 R E S Y L 0 G J N R U I L E D N T G O R A M S P E O R N I N I T T A L S S A B E W E S S A S P A R T 0 L E
A S Y S M E A N
INESNOr fNCLVDENGEKrrr ON llr DS!lllrMENr
rur r r STICKEI5
S A M S
N A N O S
P S S T
R A G E D
A R E S 0
-- c,...,
2f l .0 0 coLoRED a FLUoREscENT
• Nester's Touch' Art Canvas S Panels
DOES Nor INCUIDEMsrrtulcsltrros
-V
sr thepeer seao~ eueamsunw <rnc~una, cARDrloclc rnLKrll NcKs• AutrAerr. CHOCSE RLON Orrll 11rO lA l%TITrr
50 %OFF
.,Sc» ~ 4~
3QQ Qf f
• Art Easels & Tables
pads, Pads a SlssteSheets
8 Dry-Erase Soards
ArtIupplles
l ~ ~e i
• Stldters e 3-D Stlckers
1QDDLER T-SHIRTS,CREEPERSa DRESSES
• Chalkboards. Corkboards
ITEMsrrtrcsb $499 a up
rNrrrNOT INCLUDE IMlorrlrr
• Scrapbook Papers
a TANK 1Qre a INFANTa
• EVA Foam PackagedShapes a Packaged Sheets
STICKilBluTIEs
• Slnlx'. i:uttlebug', 8 spellblnders' Dle algns Plodllas
ALWAYS 30%OFFTHE rtArtKED PtuCP' INCLUDESvQtrrH a ADULT T-SHIRTS
Alll-DRYa JEWsulv CLAY
30~0ff
50 %OFF
• T-Shirfs
CHOOSE FRON MODEUNG. OVEN-SAKE,
ALWAYS 50% OFF THE MARKED PRICa
cHoosE%0Movel rro rrrur
40~0ff
80aOFF
• leather S Leather ICits • AII Clays
• Posters
• Reachr-Nade Open Frames •Shadow Soxes,Display Cases StFlag Cases • Rubber Stemps a Seh
Craftiml
catesorlesusted
APRONS. BAGS 4 CAPS
Irshls rercso$4.99 aup
INCLUDES WOODEN PHOTO STORAGE
tsr tsepaperstsdsr'
SOLUTION TO TODAY'SLAT CROSSWORD
sppUss roNAstaorar
TASLETOP FRAMES
• Scrapbook Rlbbona Flbels
JUMBLE IS ON C6
ALWAYS 50% OFF THE MARKED PRICP'
SELECTION OF BASIC & FASHION
CHOOSERIOMNENILY 300rrrur
SUDOKU IS ON C6
• Nes MySal a Sssicallli Yours
• Custom Frames
• Photo Frames THE MARKED PtucP' CHOOSE FROM OUR ENTIRE
30'OFF EASBSPNcso sl2.99 a UP
PROMOTIONAL2~5
• Arllst Sets AILT, WATERCOLOR,
• Naster's Touch'Oil Paint
50"OFF
30'OFF Irsrrts rwrcsossarr a ur
4.81 50 ml 12r81 200 ml
jewe l e Mlhinl
' ";„;„,»«FIIhionFabric cHoosE Rtort
50'SFF
• Srllllance and Sead Treasures GLA% FACETED SEADS,
• Poetlc Spl¹t +a en ~ ™
sraANDS, FLAT-SACKED
• Czech GlassSeads
C HomsraoNSEEO sue~~~ o
• Color Gallenr ss a e tt .~- • N~ l gagee 7" sTRANDs OF FAsHION GLASS BEADS
PRINTS, SOUDS, SHEERS a lAMINATED I'Asslc ALWAYS
oosr rror rrraucE rrewws rtrrer
30%0FF
Souos a MICROFIBER ALWAYS
30'OFF THE MARKEDrtuCP
• Warm St Neturel' • ffome Pecor or warms white' SaNns by fhe ~ard
30 0
809
• Calico Prlnts a Solids
INCWDES APPARELPRINts a SATIKS ALWAYS
30"Off
THE rrAttKKI PRICP
e DISCOUNTS PROYIDED EYERY DAY) MARKED PRICESREFLECT COMPARASLE PRICES OFFERED BY OTHER SELLERS FOR SIMILAR PRODUCTS.
HOIIBV LSBB
psrcss GooD er srcllerr MoNDAY, MARcH 1- sarusoAT, NARCH r,201s
• alcss eooo oNUrrs $UNDAY,rtaacH I -SATUIDAY, iraacH r, ans
rortr Acvrsllrro nsreNOTAYAlwrtE ONUNE sALEsSustscr To suppLTINsTocK. SELEcnoN ANoouANTITIKYAsr sr STORE Ao ooK NOT APPLY To PRE-RroucKI ITee
3/1/1 5
cHoosE%OMrluNrs.
50"Off
THE rtAltKED l%ICV
STORE HOURS: 9 A.M.- 8 P.ht. CLOSED SUNDAY
• 5ENP: North Highway 97 in the5end R.iver l'romenade
(541) 582-7559
5996
I
Valid th r e ugh March 7, 20IS oliesood foronefrrmareruhrpriceonly.
umsonecoupon percustomerperday. Mustpmmtmuponatimeofpurchase. olhrsnotvalidwleanyolhamupon,dhcauntorprevlowpunhase. hsudesCRQlrprodum,tfm Hohz'vagabond'Machlneslhowneosrt(rMwhlna ondyssnaeprodudsgumsmhe haliumtanh giftonhcusomankrr spedalmdln stormrssInddasau.sslnrkcuroflahtcoralm'tsrheyanl'epalsoneKem. Onllnefabrlcstrlmttscounts llmltadto10rardsslnglearr. c hv I v14c.
CROSSWORD IS ON CB
• Fleece
• St. Pstrlck's s Easter Fabric
sloNESa GLASS PENDANTS
PENDANTS, BEADS, LEATHER a NORE
G laSS SeadS ~~~ M m
v' "
30"OFF
Framlll
ALWAYS 50% OFF
6 5 1 7 3 8 2 9 4
swEET osueHT poMp
4.22 3s4oz
• Padtasad Qullt Bsttlnss s plllow Forms
StLtnrrr
catesorles llsted
Z95LK X
swEET osueur a
• Salt Secrct
DOES NDT rNCWDE FEATHERS
SOLUTION TO TODAY'S JUMBLE
CHOOSE RtoM HUSHASTE.
4A9 ooz
Iadudes AII Floral a isreenertr Stems
Elena's spicy shrimp makes for a fine seaside dinner.
• Baby Bee Saby Yams
3@33 4asoz
• Floral Stems
30sOFF
~\ •
Needle Art • Yam Bee' Emertresce
DOES Nor fr rCWDE POTTED TllEES
4 tt - 8 ft
~l •
D0Es Nor INQllos Nsrrlc. curor oR rasKErr wlTHowor
FIOFII
Naturals
~uousrs
IImmerl
• Plush Anlmals • peper pletes s Napttlns • Nome & Party Decor • besttets • Plestlc Eggs
'40'AIFF
RRHl&
All Items Labeled
40"OFF '
spring = shop"
. stem
4 25 8 9 1 6 7 3 ' 1 96 3 7 4 5 2 8 8 73 2 6 5 9 4 1
• Nen's Resin & Ceramic Decor
DOES NOT INCLUDESEASONrtLDEPARTrytENT
• Statuary • Gezlng Bells • Garden Planters • Garden Wall Decor & Mote
SOLUTION TO TODAY'S SUDOKU
e CIOCIS WALLSTABLE
Categories Listed
e NlrrOrS WALL aTABLE
crucial amenity: a water taxi
garitas, the house specialty, for a dry trip back.
I I
S HOP A N Y T I N E @ H O BB Y L O B B Y . C O M
C4
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2015
4®
e
o
/
tt
tt
Ill
a
State Rep. Knute Buehler, R-Bend, finds a rare moment of relaxation with a cup of coffee at Ike Box, a cafe near the State Capitol. His schedule is so busy, "There is not enough time for me to think and contemplate."
Photos by John Gottberg Anderson / For The Bulletin
Built in1883, the Oregon State Hospital has a147-acre campus facing Center Street in northeast Salem. Its 2-year-old Museum of Mental Health displays photos and artifacts from an era that was brutally depicted by novelist Ken Kesey in "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest."
Salem Continued from C1 Sworn in Jan. 11, he be-
gan five months of legislative session work Feb. 2 — and
he winds up taking most of his breakfasts and lunches in the House Lounge, whose
patronage is limited to other representatives. "It's one of my few sanctu-
aries," Buehler told me when I visited him Feb. 18 and 19. "Not even our staff can go in
there. It's the one place where I can really talk with my col"Oceanscape,n a1994 sculpture by Salem artist Robert Hess, anleagues in the Legislature." My visit coincided with the chors a contemporary corner of the Carl Hall Gallery at Willamette inauguration of Gov. Kate University's Hallie Ford Museum of Art. It is accented by abstract Brown. But once the 25-min- works by Carl Morris and NormaHeyser. ute ceremony was over, it was business as usual in Salem. Buehlerreturned toa calendar
there's reason to get acquaint-
the first school of higher edu-
that has him serving on three ed with the charms of Salem l egislative committees a n d beyond the Capitol steps. meeting privately with visitors Within a half hour's drive — about 400 in his first two of the capital are such sterweeks in office, he estimated. ling attractions as Silver Falls
cation in the western United States. Facing the Capitol is
"There is not enough time
State Park, the Oregon Gar-
for me to think and contem- dens, wineries famous for plate," he told me over coffee their pinot noir production and abagel at Ike Box, a coffee and the hugely popular Woodshop near the Capitol campus. burn Outlet Malls for diehard "That's one of the biggest in- shoppers. hibitors to creativity. Jogging But in the city itself, there's is so important to my spiritual plenty more to see and do, beand mental health." ginning with the State Capitol The only other time he has itself. to ruminate, he said, is during Built in 1938 by the Works the drive between Bend and
P rogress Administration i n
Salem, which he makes twice the waning years of the Great a week without fail. Depression (the previous cap"Hopefully, in the spring, itol burned to the ground), I'll have a chance to explore this unique building has a Salem," he said. Meanwhile, wedding-cake appeal. The he depends upon his chief of gold-plated sculpture of a pistaff, Jordan Conger, and Con- oneer rises above its cylindriger's wife, Holly, Buehler's ad- cal marble dome, and interior ministrative assistant, to make
walls are covered with mu-
recommendations. "Salem has good restaurants, nice parks, friendly people, and I can walk to work
rals depicting working-class Oregonians. The Capitol grounds feature a large number of classical sculptures and monuments.
from my apartment," Buehler said. "West Salem, just across
the (Willamette River), is
Newest is the state's official World War II Memorial, at the
beautiful. I hear there's a nice run along the river, and there
northwest corner of Willson
are certainly nice wineries in
Built at a cost of $1.2 million and dedicated last June, the
the hills."
Park, just west of the Capitol.
the oldest building on campus, Waller Hall, built in 1867
and completely renovated The Oregon WWII Memorial was dedicated last June. Located at the northwest corner of Willson Park, in 1989. Today, Willamette's just west of the State Capitol, it bears the names of 3,771 Oregonians who were killed in action during student body numbers about 1,750. The university's Mark
O. Hatfield Library, dedicated mette University. cent to the mill are four misgraduate, who was Oregon Thomas Lister Kay introsionary-era houses dating to governor from 1959 to 1967 duced wool manufacturing to 1841. and a five-term senator from Salem in 1889, establishing Newly established is the 1967 to 1997. a large mill that was driven Museum of Mental Health at J ust off campus is t he by turbines on a millrace he the Oregon State Hospital, school's Hallie Ford Museum diverted from nearby Prin- made famous, or perhaps infaof Art, two blocks from the gle Creek. The mill contin- mous, by the Ken Kesey novel Capitol. For its size, this is one ued to run until 1962, and its and subsequent 1975 movie, of the best art museums in the legacy is carried on today by "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Northwest. E x hibits r o tate the Pendleton Woolen Mills, Nest." through every few months. owned and operated by Kay's Continued next page Current presentations feature descendants. the cross-cultural pop-art creExhibits describe Kay's life ations of Japanese-American and times, focusing on the imSee us for retractable artist Roger Shimomura and portancetoOregon'seconomy awnings, exterior solar t urn-of-the-20th-century i m of the manufacturing jobs his screens, shadestructures. ages by photographer Myra mill created. A walking tour Sun ehen Jouwantit, Albert Wiggins. The Carl Hall takes in the millrace and turshade when you needit. Gallery offers work by Pacific bines, the rooms where wool Northwest artists, historic and was picked clean of burrs and se contemporary; th e S ponen- dyed and the second-chamburgh Gallery surveys 4,500 ber, where wool was turned years of art history from four from fleece into fabric through O'N DEMAND continents. carding, spinning, dressing and weaving. The machinery 541-389-9983 Heritage sites is still in working order. Adjain 1986, honors its namesake
ISI I Q
ital should have a number of
3,771 Oregonians who were For the hundreds — and by killed in action. the end of session, it will be I mmediately south of t h e thousands — of Central Ore- Capitol is the 61-acre camgonians who visit the offices of pus of Willamette UniverBuehler and the region's oth- sity. Founded by M ethodist er state legislators this year, missionaries in 1842, it was
historic sites. None is more w orthy of a v i sit t han t h e
V CI
www.shadeondemand.com
It's fitting that a state cap-
memorial bears the names of
Sights of Salem
the war, between1941 and1945.
I ZI Mitzi is a lovely, liVely tWO-yeae gld
who loves people. Her owners moved away and left her behind, alone and pregnant. When she was rescued the puppieswere 4 daysold. Mitzi's motherly instincts were called into action again when 8motherless, very sick puppies arrived and she nursed them. Now it's Mitzi's turn to be taken care of. Shewill reward her new family with loyalty and loads of affection.
@ Sponsored by @
BrightSide Animal Center
BRIGHTSI DE A N I MA L
C R N TE R
BRIGHTSIDE ANIMAL CENTER 1355 NEHEMLOCKAVE., REDMOND, OR
(541) 923-0882
Willamette Heritage Center, formerly known as the Mission Mill Museum. It's a short
walk from the Capitol, across 12th Street to the east of Willa-
•
. •
'Half.PriceOlterends March 8.Ssswsbsits for promocodesand restrictions.
The Historic Deepwood Estate is a Queen Anne-style Victorian home that was built in1894 for a wealthy physician. Open for special events and house tours, it is adjoined by a formal English garden designed by what is thought to be the first female landscape architecture team in the Northwest.
C6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2015
SU D O K U
co mpletegri the d so
that every row, column and3x3 box contains every digit from1 to 9 inclusively.
4
~Et
FR
~ EI ~
~
Unscramble these six Jumbles one lgttgr to each square, to form gix ordinary words.
TH AT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME by David L Hdyt hhd Jdff Khuthk
'~qg@tnsedht?etntevt ttrlt i tJtPA
PRIZEP
58 96
yogt eon dothg nt oollege?
BARRHO
nhollt vollt
dllnghtel?
light bathes Barbara Simoneschi as she gazes out the
TENTiK
tt'
„ '
3
SAUYEN
I
T HEY ~ OLIT O F THE PlANE TOGETHER ANIP yttEICE ABLE TO-
DERTNY
3I 38 2 .'
Now arrange the circled lgtlgrs Io form the surprise answer, ag
suggested by the above cartoon. PRINT YOUR ANSWER INTHE CIRCLES BELOW
"EKXXX3" EXX3
*
DAILY BRIDGECLUB
sMRaBy, MBTeh1,2ofs
Playing lesson Tribune Content Agency C)
g i v e "playing
clubs. East-West followed low, so Ed lessons." They play a session with a led a club to dummy's ten and won pupil, then critique the deals. Coping the 13th trick with the queen. Making with a pupil is a taxing business, three! partly because the pupil wants to Ed did his job, and his pupil was learn but also wants to win. The pro pleased. N o r t h-South g ot a must strike a balance between those matchpoint top for plus 140, and goals. North l earned something about Ed, my club's best player, often counting Astribution by inference. gives playing lessons. North dealer " I wa s S outh," E d t o l d m e , Neither side vulnerable showing today's deal. "When West's raise to two diamonds was passed to NORTH me, I could have balanced with a 4QJ2 double, but then my pupil might have 9752 been declarer at a shaky contract. So 0742 I risked a bid of two spades." 4 AQ106 I groaned inwardly, but pros are e xpected to m ake such bids i n WEST EAST support of their pupils. 476 4 A 108 3 "West led a diamond," Ed said, QQ93 Q AJ 8 4 "and I took the ace and led a trump to 0 K 96 3 OQJ10 dmnmy's queen. East might have 4 J 8 4 2 497 done well to play low, but he won. He cashed two chamonds and next led the SOUTH 4hK95 4 ace anda low heart.My king won. "I knew East had held only three 9 K106 diamonds. West wouldn't have raised 0A85 with three-card support. He hadn't glgK53 responded one heart, so East had four of those. And if East had held three North E ast South West Aamonds and three clubs, to open Pass 10 P ass 20 Pass 24 All Pas s one club would have been correct. So P ass I gave East 4-4-3-2 shape." Ed led a trump to the jack and Opening lead —0 3 finessed with his nine next. He drew the last trump and took the A-K of (C) 2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
CD
Egy
CD
Ct5 CD CD
CO CD
E Ct5
CR CD
Li
CD C3)
CD Ctg C3
CD Ctg
CD CD
C/)
LOS ANGELESTIMES SUNDAY CROSSWORD Edited by Rich Norrisand Joyce Nichols LeWIS SAY WHAT?" By PAM AIIIIICK KLAWITTER
ACROSS I Prohibition
specifics
88 "Ready 89 R&B grauP Hill
90 StartIo foam? 92 White wine aperitif 93 FDRand JFK 94 Moves very
I
models 47 Eagle-eyed 19 raptors 49 Word from apro 22 50 RIg 51 C-ration successofs 25 53 set 54 Obstacle Io 30 pfogtess 56 Atmospheric prefix 57 French for "under" 58 TriesIo buy, on
esay
60 Arrivals at home? 6I Bach choral works 63 Marketorder 64 Worked (Upj 66 Govt.
2
DOWN I Salamanca
snacks
please findyour
4
5
6
Renaissance. There's something about the way she's framed that
7
8
9
IO
tt
I2
13
14 1 5
16 I7
dedicated their lives to restoring and maintaining the garden.
These aren't the most incredible gardens we saw in It- the significance of the villa aly, but hearing their personal as a child. He lived next door history from someone who and grew up playing hide and loves them was both heartseek in the garden. He enwarming and fascinating. joyed playing a trick or two The morning sun rose over on visiting groups. When he the green mountains, illumiknew a tour was coming, he nating deep red dahlias and would head for the attic and making them shine amid pretend to be a ghost. In the beautifully pruned hedges library he got the pump organ and ancient stone walls. Wa- going and pressed on the keys ter splashes from a fountain with both arms "to make the and falls playfully on the face most horrible sound." "It was very, very funny," of a stone cherub near two large reflecting pools. A mys- he added with a laugh.
31
28
46
with cheerful pink begonias are framed by a doorway, variegated yuccas in containers waver when seen through the old glass windows and the view from the second floor is
delicate Italian pastries.
dens. Mozzoni, the last mem-
Behind the villa are old ber of his family to remain greenhouses filled with re- close to the villa, still hopes placement plants for filling for help from the governholes in the garden. Explor- ment, but he relies mainly on ing a back trail next to the tourists and the occasional glass houses reveals tall pur- wedding reception to bring in ple asters covered with honey funds for the work. bees. His grandmother moved When Mozzoni is joined in- out of the villa during World side by his longtime partner, War II and never returned, Silvia Casarotto, things really living in the guesthouse next get interesting. It's obvious the door. During the war, the villa two are in love, not only with was home to three families of each other but also with the refugees. villa itself. The affable couple In 1957, the formal gardens are quick with good-natured and home were opened to the barbs but also with soft kiss- public, so the ancient fresco es. Our group of travelers paintings and classic archihang on each word as they tell tecture could be enjoyed by stories about the place they the masses. "To leave it empty was usehave dedicated their lives to preserving. It's huge,very old less," Mozzoni said. and needs work. When a visiW alking back i nto t h e tor reaches up to touch a shiny courtyard from the gardens, orb on a banister, it almost visitors are greeted by those falls off, nearly giving her a famous fresco paintings on heart attack. Later we see a the walls and ceiling of a porportrait of a countess on the tico. They have faded with same stairway, and the orb is time, but artwork inside a there, too. great hall remains vivid deMozzoni didn't understand spite its great age. Even after
Even though the job of keeping up with the villa is endless, the couple don't let it
get to them. uI love this place," Mozzoni says, "and don't worry about
the money." Casarotto finds it hard to
put into words, especially English, what this ancient home means to her. She first came
here nearly a quarter of a century ago and learned the importance of the villa from Mozzoni's mother, Eleonore.
Her eyes fill with tears as she talks passionately about Ele-
onore's love for Villa Cicogna Mozzoni and how she passed that passion on to her. uShe was the countess for
this villa, spoke seven languages and helped me to understand to do these things," she says. When asked why the cou-
plework sohard torestorethe villa, she pauses and smiles. "Simply because it's our life," she says. "I get to live in a fantastic dream."
tt 1
•
•nnn nent
gonneeSSeenegn
Ben 's est e at c u offers more for members...
18
42 43
47
51 52
56
Classic stone containers filled
36
39 40
37 38
The interior offers inter-
esting views of the garden.
small container in a corner.
It wasn't until his mid-20s
29
35
32
she still finds something new when she looks at the intricate paintings.
can't be identified by a plant that he realized his calling: expert on the trip thrives in a to preserve the villa and gar-
terious pink i mpatiens that
23 27
all this time, Casarotto says
spellbinding. After the tour, Simoneschi serves powerful black espresso in tiny glass cups along with plump green grapes and
20
50
55 58
57
60 I
62 66
assistance program
67 "ThISIs my fishingspot-
3
53 Leaves painfully 88 "Bird-Wire" link worst synopsis 55 LSAT cousin 91 Ithas a Stgng I've ever read!" 57 Supporter of a attached I7 Anthem opener StrOng, 92 BignameIn Is Prohibition centralized stunt jumping notable government 93 nWe dId theright 2I Alexander 58 What asports thing" star maysport 95 Chip source GrahamBell, e.g. 59 Company 97 Numberone 23 Major blow founded by HUR 28 DIez squared Gem State 98 Binding 31 Drawout brothers material 33 Aggravates 62 Condensed, 99 Columncouple 34 Frodo's forest condensed 10I Tar Heel State friends 63 Gawk campus 36 Wordsbefore 65 Paper size: 104 Tuned in manywords Abbr. 105 Flowed 38 Textingshrug 68 Salt furiously 39 Space 69 16th-Century 106 Sandbox 40 Increasingly rare date rebuttal screens 71 SomeIPods 107 Girl 42 Average 72 Head-turner of a108 Jimmy VAward 43 Shopping club SOII for 44 Gray onesare 74 TheCowboysof Perseverance, debatable the Big 12: e.g. 45 "Do you know Abbr. 110 Bk. reviewers? how Io copythis 77 March followers 111 Singer India. disk?" 78 SFO Postings I13 Old Bruin 48 CauSeSOI 79 Quayle follower nickname unusual weather 81 Vocalist Vikki II6 Word on LI.S. 50 Tic 82 Green 2001 title coins 51 Sounded like hero 118 Celestial altar the wind 85 Canadianpump 119Gross 52 '60s secretary of name 120 Muppet monkey state 87 Pub. concern Minella 16 "That's the
126 City where the AICazarIS located
2 Memorable 7 Embodiment 14 Bad flareUP? slowly shrine 96 "Heart, liver, 3 Phosoup 19 Yukonneighbor kidneys, ... " gamish 20 SUPermodel 100 Farm call 4 Org. that SchIffer 102 SIUbHUb employed Julia 2I Ringbearer, offerings Child during often 103 Actress Gilbert WWII 22 nI got a C" of "The Big 5 Steinbeck' s 24 Causes for Bang Theory" Tom Joad, e.g. pauses 6 Capital east of 25 Bordeaux bud 107 Rigaresident PinPOint Gallup 26 End of aseries, 109 112 "Let There": 7 "Turn! Turn! briefly Newton-John Turn!" source: 27 Worldwide hII Abbr. cultural org. II4 Price 8 Gaza Stripgp. 29 Adams and 9 eWhO ": 2001 I I5 Panini cheese Grant I I7 "I survivedboot ¹I country hII 30 FIsh order camp!" 10 Uproars 32 Exeter exams 12I Exactlyright II Danish seaport 35 1986 rock 12 "Battle Hymn Control on a autobiography 122 wing of the 37 "Edison was Republic" born In 1847 123 Just-in-case items possessive and died in 124 Ecclesiastical 13 Wolfs down 1931" COunCil 14 PYI. address 4I Bases for 125 Weatherproofing 15 It's often deviation application grated 44 PUIUP WIIh 46 '80S IBM
p alace, which dates to t h e
vates his small audience with tales from another era.
By FRANK STEWART
h
weathered windows of Villa Cicogna Mozzoni. She's watching our group of 32 gardeners explore the courtyard and frescoes of this historic
seems reminiscent of a classic Italian painting. Below her, we are given a guided tour by the most down-to-earth nobleman in the world. Jacopo Cicogna M ozzonishares sweet stories Doug Oster /Pittsburg Post-Gazette about being in the gardens An overall view of the formal garden at Villa Cicogna Mozzoni in as a child. He laughs easily, Bisuschio, Italy. Funded by tourists and occasional weddings, Jareveals his sly wit and capti- copo Cicogna Mozzoni and longtime partner Siivia Casarotto have
JUMBLE SOLUTION IS ON C3
SUDOKU SOLUTION IS ON C3
B ridge pro s
By Doug Oster BISUSCHIO Italy — Soft
NACCHE
7
DIFFICULTYRATING:*** *
he'e doinn gnnn.whlll
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
6 382 4 3 912 5; I
,i
go, htne te
gggth Tnhone ContentAgency,CLC Att Rtgue Reeetved.
Restoring historic palace motivates Italian couple
67
73 74
68
69
75
76
80
78 79
70 T t
72
83
82
OWnn
70 Econ. yardstick 84 73 Northof Nogales 89 75 Hammersites 76 Gradeschool 94 exhIbtts 78 They're deliberately biokensothey can be fixed 107 108 80 Oft-swiped item 82 Viciousand t15 others 83 Littlehouseson I21 the prairie 84 KitChenIOPPers t24 86 Gator tail? 87 Hairy npet"
3/1/15
86 90
92
95
96
109
ft6
98 99
4 pools, Pilates, 25 yoga classes aweek,
I02
1 03 104 I05 t 0 6
110 11 1
tty
activities in addition to...
93
97
tot
IOO
88
87
112
113
118 tfg t23
I25
126
xwordeditor@aol.com
114
t20
I22
CROSSWORD SOLUTION ISON C3
more weekly youth and family over 40 cardto/strength group exercise classes a week, cycling, cardio, tennis, basketball, racquetball, private women's only fitness center, and exceptional service from Bend's Best Professionals.
©2015 Tribune ContentAgency, LLC. •
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
C7
Pristine an owe u, Antarctica is aive — an enivenin By Eddy Haltenstein eLos Angeles Times
BROWN BLUFF, Antarcticao ahead. Tell people you're traveling to Antarctica and wait for the responses: "Wait, what? Did you say Antarctica?"
1 ' i
s
f
"Be sure to get a selfie with a polar bear, OK?"
lha 5.
"You'll freeze your (you-know-what) off!" And, perhaps most frequently, "Why?" I did say Antarctica. It was
arctic Peninsula. We would
I
'a
penguins, not polar bears, we cross this confluence of the would see aplenty. We didn't Pacific and Atlantic oceans freeze our you-know-whats twice, a 36-hour transit that off; it was chilly, but I've felt
can often test the mettle of
colder skiing at Mammoth. That left only the question of why, and before this long-overdue vacation, I didn't really
even the most seasoned sailor. The weather gods smiled on us, and our passages going and coming were relatively
have an answer. Why take three planes that
calm, so we never needed the
freelydispensed seasickness deposit you in a former penal medication. colony? Why board a ship Now, with t h e A n t arctic that will then cross some of Peninsula coming into view, it the world's most treacherous was showtime. waters? Why travel to a place about which one early explorer Observing the animals wrote, "Polar exploration is ... The Explorer is equipped (the) most isolated way of hav- with about a dozen 10-pering a bad time which has been son Zodiacs and three dozen devised"? two-person kayaks, key to Apsley Cherry-Garrard, the getting us close enough to let
II
rr • •
• I I t • •
Smmmtlorrr
ttrt
Photos by Carl Hartenstein I Los Angeles Times
The148-passenger Explorer, seen from DancoIsland, Antarctica, is one of two National Geographic ships offering tours of Antarctica. Despite stereotypes, Antarctica offers a bounty of activities and sights without the danger of freezing to death. Numerous species of sea-
birds, which often came arm'slength close, wheeled and turned overhead, theircries
punctuating the chilly (temperatures were generally in Robert Scott's 1910 expedition magic. the high 20s) summer air. We to the South Pole, had it rough. Over the next seven days, watched predatory skuas as He survived; Scott did not and our expedition took us to Half they tried to pluck an unsusdied knowing he had failed to Moon Island in the South Shet- pecting penguin chick from author of that line and part of
the White Continent work its
beat Roald Amundsen to become the first to reach that elu-
land Islands, then Brown Bluff, Cierva Cove, Enterprise and
its nest. In our Zodiacs, we
zoomed alongside porpoising sively hostile point: 90 degrees Danco islands, through the Le- penguins scooping their fill of south latitude. maire Channel and Gerlache krill. For my t w o a d ul t s ons, Strait, to Booth and Detaille And then there were the The predatory leopard seal, photographed from aZodiac, in the iceberg graveyard at Booth Island in Carl and Christian, and me, islands, and finally Port Lock- whales: the distinctive (and, Antarctica. Another seal in the region, the Weddell seal, can stay under the water for an hour. our two-week adventure was roy, the British outpost with at one time, nearly extinct) infinitely easier than Cher- threeyear-round staffers. humpback, weighing in at colonies and learn moreabout ry-Garrad's. It was only after Each morning — at least, as much as 79,000 pounds; clavas and long underwear other wildlife. we'd been to this place — at the clock said it was morning, the minke, which can reach kept the elements at bay; our Ushuaia is the point of This trip was through Naonce harsh yet fragile, bleak though during our December speeds of 24 mph; the even naturalists kept us safe. Like embarking for most cruises to tional Geographic, which operyet majestic, complex yet sim- trip, the sun never really setspeedier sei ( p r onouncedthe explorers of the early 20th Antarctica. ates two ships onAntarctic exple — that we knew why. we would rise by 7, eat break- "say"), which motor up to 30 century, we were dazzled by peditions. The148-passenger fast, then head for the Zodiacs mph; the sleek fin, which can the fierce beauty, but we were CRUISESTOANTARCTICA A trip initself Explorer offers14- and 24-day The "season" for trips to or kayaks for the first of two be as long as 70 feet; and the never in danger of anything It's not easy getting to Ush- outings. feared orca, also known as the more than aesthetic overload. Antarctica is usually late Octo- trips to Antarctica; the longer uaia, the Argentine town at Deposited on land, Lisa Kel- killer whale. ber or early November through trip includes South Georgia and the Falkland islands. The the southernmost tip of South ley, the expedition leader, and They breached and sang Not lacking amenities the first part of March. America. From Los Ange- her staff of 14 naturalists in- and showed their flukes and Like any good cruise, this There are numerous options 106-passenger Orion offers les International Airport, it troduced us to the ubiquitous left us amused at their antics one made the most of mealfor seeing the White Continent 24-day trips. It embarks from SantIago, Chile. Prices begIn means about 18 hours in the penguins and taught us how and amazed at their majesty. times; the food and service by sea, and talking with your at $12,970 per person, based air (unless you stop in Bue- to differentiate among the speWe were awakened about 3 were excellent, and the casutravel agent is a goodplaceto on double occupancy. Info: nos Aires, which we did and I cies. For Adelie penguins, we one morning by Kelley's voice al ambience made it easier to begin. Makesure your travel www.nationalgeographicexrecommend) before you reach were to look for white feathers on the public address system relax after a day filled with provider is a member of the peditions.com/expeditions/ this embarkation point for around the eyes. The chinstrap alerting us to pods of orcas the exhilarating tension of International Association antarctica-cruise. about 90 percent of all trips to was easy to spot because it swimming alongside the ship. many firsts and even more of Antarctic Tour Operators To learn more about cruise Antarctica. looked like its name. Gentoo From the deck, we could see superlatives. (www.iaato.org), which propossibilities: Polar Cruises of Along with our gear — three have a black throat, a big tail them turning over on their Each day, the eminently permotes responsible travel to Bend, 541-330-2454, www. carry-on bags, three parkas and a white mark above each backs, playing and flirting sonable and knowledgeable Antarctica. polarcruises.com. Polar Cruis(provided by the tour compa- eye. withus. staff recapped what we had Large cruise ships somees also books cruises to the Whatever the s pecies of Our jaws dropped when seen using videos and stills, times include Antarctica on ny), three sets of Wellington their itineraries, but passenArctic. Owner ChuckCross and boots rented in Ushuaia, as- penguin, the 75 million that we saw the natural wonders often shot that day, and charts. his wife, Lynn, areveterans of sorted video and still cameras live here share traits: They of this vast land: fields of ice- As we listened to their presengers wIII get mostly a "drIveby" view. more than 100 trips to Antarcand numerous 32GB memo- seem fearless, they toddle like bergs, along with calving gla- tations, so fascinating that we Smaller ships, IncludIng tica and the Arctic. ry cards plus a laptop — we wobbly waiters, and, like all ciers that cracked like a rifle always longed for more, the big luxury vessels, can navigate Alumni organizations, tour boarded the Explorer, a Na- living creatures, they excrete. shot as they sent ice crashing picture of Antarctica began to straits and channels andtake companIes andother travel tional Geographic vessel that After our visits to the rooker- into the water. We traversed emerge. It's a microcosm of the passengers ashore in Zodiacs providers also offer trips to can carry 148 passengers in its ies, our boots were covered valleys, ridges and bluffs, in- delicate balance of the Earth's and kayaks. Onland, passenAntarctica and areworth 81 cabins. (We had a triple cab- with their strong-smelling sou- cluding a 4-mile hike through climates and ecosystems, a gigers can hike, visit penguin checking. in. They are scarce and sell out venirs. (Boots were washed soft snow on which an almost ant science project that offers quickly.) thoroughly and disinfected 1,000-foot elevation gain left us important lessons about the The Explorer, an ice-rated when we d isembarked and winded. issues affecting our globe. ship whose steel hull can cut re-embarked.) It is odd to think of the 5.5 These debriefings also gave Adelie penguin that betrays simply immerse themselves in through the frozen stuff, is Seals, too, are an important million square miles of this us a chance to appreciate anew its identity; the cherubic face an experience unlikeany other. small enough to get into bays part of this animal ecosystem. continent as a desert, but it is. the passion the staff and crew of a Weddell seal; the slightly We came home with plenand inlets so we could easily We saw the fearsome leop- It receives little precipitation, brought to their roles as nature fishy-smelling "blow" from a ty of photos, of course (but no go ashore but large enough ard seal, induding one sitting but when it does snow, it stays evangelists. Afterward, we felt whale; the 3 a.m. surprise play selfies with polar bears — they to withstand the tempestuous alone on its own ice floe; Wed- put. As a result, more than 99 duly deputized as ambassa- date with orcas. live at the other pole). But the Drake Passage. dell seals, which can stay un- percent of the land is covered dors of Antarctica. Each day was a tsunami of memory of our experiences in Sometimes it's referred to as der thewater formore than an with ice that's as much as three Our fellow passengers also photo opportunities. As a fa- this nearlyblank slate — largethe "Drake Tax" — the price hour; and the slender crabeat- miles deep in some places. had a chance to share their ther, though, I was gratified to ly unspoiled, wholly seductive you pay to travel the 700 or so er seals, which generally feed Our waterproof pants and "aha!" moments with one an- see my sons occasionally put — is the portrait we'll treasure miles from Ushuaia to the Ant- on krill, not crab. parkas as well as gloves, bala- other: the distinctive call of the down their camera gear and for a lifetime.
Gettingthere
DREAMS CAN COME TRUE
Patchett Continued from C1 Hayes, too, was considering opening a bookshop, and rather than opening rival shops, the two formed a partnership. "It's been nothing but a joy," she said. Opening a book shop is a
L,~ ,I
r
unique endeavorfor a famous
author. It hasn't changed her approach to writing, Patchett said, "But it certainly made me understand a lot of things I should have understood a long time ago, which is, you know, I would go to bookstores on book tour, and people would be like, 'Oh, God, thankyou so much for coming! Thank you, thank you.' "I thought they were being polite, you know, I thought
Submitted photo
"State of Wonder" and "Run" author Ann Pstchett will speak at Bend High School on Friday as part of Deschutes Public Library Foundation's Author! Author! series, which benefits the library.
to your store, those are enormous paydays. You're selling hundreds of hardback books in a night. And that's why it's a huge part of what keeps us in business." It's a lot about location, and,
easy to reach from major cit- working adult life.' You write ies, making it easy for authors a book that's going to sell, and it's really good for everybody. to visit the shop. "There's a direct flight to It's like you're creating jobs. It's Nashville from everywhere. fabulous," Patchett said. "I never thought of writing Again, crazy stuff you don't think about — you have to do a book as playing a role in the direct flights, it has to do with economy. And now I do. And parking," she said. I love that. I'm not just sitting "When I'm writing a book up here by myself making art. now, I feel sort of like, 'Oh, No, I am part of this country. God, this is reallygoingto help. Iam your tax base," she said, It will help my store. It will help laughing. the stores of the booksellers — Reporter: 541-383-0349,
fortunately, Nashville is pretty
that I've known m y
they were like, 'It's good to see you, Ann.' But now that I own
a bookstore, I understand ... you get Liz Gilbert and Donna Tartt and Amy Tan to come
w h o le
djasper®bendbulletitt.com
AN EX CELLENTEDUCATIONYOURFAMILYCANAFFORD
m~n PK3-6th GRADE ENROLLMENT BEGINSMARCH 2ndat6pm PLEASE CALLTOSCHEDULEATOUR Small Class Size S M ART Board Technology S panish A r t M us i c D r a m a P E B ib l e C u r r i c u l u m Junior Kindergarten Kindergarten ('Ram-2pm)
(SRI) 382-20VR ww w . eastmontschool.com
CS TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2015
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
ea eoni in s aanceinwor an ie TV SPOTLIGHT
12 — "every day. He is part of my family." He even remains
ter," "Deep Impact," "Span-
glish" and "Jurassic Park III." Her previous series include the sitcoms "Flying Blind" and
"Madam Secretary" 8 tonight, CBS
close with his former in-laws,
she added: "We are a perfect tennis foursome."
"The Naked Truth."
On "Madam Secretary," Leoni plays a w oman of
ByFrazier Moore The Associated Press
NEW YORK — W e dnes-
strength, charm and forbear-
day was Tea Leoni's birthday.
ance juggling obligations as a world figure, a wife and a
B ut when r eferring t o
her
age recently, she realized she wouldn't be turning 50 this
mother of three. The show,
time, but 49 instead.
"I keep doing this!" she said with a laugh, meaning giving her age a boost. Ever since her
last birthday, she had reported her age as 49. "I lost 48 this year — totally!" It started as a playful goof on the ploy of a friend who routinely claims she's eight Craig Blankenhorn via Cee years older than she is. "Then Tea Leoni stars as Elizabeth McCord, the shrewd, determined, people tell her, 'Oh, my God! Secretary of State in "Madam Secretary." You're GORGEOUS!'"
There is no need for Leoni to give herself any such cover. over andover for its star:Who She is gorgeous, agelessly and inspired her portrayal of her naturally, even bundled in a character,Secretary of State sweater and jeans against a
Elizabeth McCord — real-life
raw winter day in a sandwich shop near her Manhattan
counterparts Hillary Clinton or Condoleezza Rice or Madeapartment. leine Albright? "For a while," Leoni said, Besides, she's a woman who knows who she is. And what "I joked around that it was she wants. (Henry) Kissinger, because " I really d o w an t t o d o I was getting so tired of the s omething special for m y question." 50th," she announced in her
husky purr. This was a rare day off from shooting her CBS political drama, "Madam Secretary," which, since its premiere last fall, has spurred one question
F amily i s
But the truth is, she's in-
spired by her dad. Anthony Pantaleoni, she said, "is the most even-keeled,
most diplomatic human being!" A prominent New York corporate attorney, "He has
renewed for a second season, days. She makes time for hobis not so much about overbies (she loves fly-fishing) and coming opposition as finding serves as a national board common ground — whether member of the U.S. Fund for at work or at home. UNICEF, which her grandCo-stars include Bebe Neu- mother founded in 1947. wirth and Zeljko Ivanek as
Bottom line: The entertainment world isn't the be-all
well as Tim Daly ("Private Practice"), who plays her loving husband, Henry.
and end-all for Leoni, nor is her acting career, which she " To me, Henry w a s t h e largely put on hold in recent realbreakout character, "said years in favor of the role of Leoni. "A theology professor, full-time mom. "Sometimes people say, with a twist. I love that she can come home with her eth- 'Do you wish your career had the grand empathy to see ical dilemmas and he can be amounted to more'?' And I both sides of a question. I can likemy dad,the guy who can think, 'Ouch!' But the answer discuss things with him, and see both sides and is willing to is: no. he doesn't get adamant that
" With
talk about it."
MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-0and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. l
Dear Abby: I am 23, and my riedfortwo years.Since ourwedding, I have felt an overwhelming amount of pressure to "settle down and buy a house." One friend's boyfriend recently bought a house. She lives with him. Every
time we get together s e ragsa ou o w important i t i s to buy a house and not
DFP,R
ABBY
"waste money" by renting an apartment. My husband and I are happy renting because it allows us the money to travel and experience life together. The thought of being tied down to a mortgage at 23 yearsold for the next 30 years doesn't sit well with me. I am new
and doing what we like to do, and h owever, then that's what y o u then follow the status quo and should do. sign a mortgage that will tie us Dear Abby: I am a cat person. I'm not particularly fond of dogs, down for the next 30 years? — Feeling Pressured especially when they jump on in Maryland you, try to lick you or sit in your Dear Pressured:Have you ever lap, etc. This is regardless of the heard the saying, breed or size. "Different strokes My question is, when visiting for different folks"?
someone who has a dog that be-
You appear to be pressuring yourself
haves like this, what should I do'? It makes me really uncomfort-
as a result of your
able, and sometimes I don't even
friend's b r agging. want to visit someone's home if I Whether or not to buy a home is know I'm going to be slobbered on a personal decision, one that can
or have my clothes soiled or dam-
vary from couple to couple (or per- aged by their dogs. son to person). You do not need to — Uncomfortable Cat Person "keep up with the Joneses" or do Dear Uncomfortable: A way to anything you don't feel ready for. ensure it won't happen would be A house is more than a roof to talk to the dog owner in adover one's head. It can also be
vance, explain that it makes you
a reservoir of money that accrues as equity. If you're afraid that if you buy a home you will be trapped for30 years, think again. People have been known
very uncomfortable when animals do this and ask that the dog
as it seems everyone is rushing to to change homes several times in settle down, have children, buy a a lifetime. Because you and your
son you want to visit with to come
in my career and have no idea where it may take me.
I understand that buying a house is a good investment. I often feel as if we are the "minority," house, etc. Is it wrong that we would rath-
husband would prefer to take your time and wait to buy until you're
er wait, enjoy ourselves traveling
more established in your careers,
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORSUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2015:This yearyou might feel as if you are having an identity crisis at times. You could be questioning your long-term goals and whether they suit you anymore. You have avery creative and dynamic way of looking at people
and expressing yourself. If you aresingle, you need to take your time getting to know a potential sweetie. Understand that you might not be realistic when it comes to this per8tarsshowtheging son. Ifyou are atof day you'8 gave tached, your lives ** * * * D ynamic revolve around ** * * p osltlve the practical ap** * Average plic ation of living ** So-so together. From September on, * Difficult
a c t ing," s h e e x -
Reports suggest that Daly plained, "I love everything He even inspired Leoni into has become Leoni's leading between 'rolling' and 'cut.' I acting. man off-camera as well as on, love it! It's everything else" "I was going to be an an- although she chooses not to — deals, promotion, celebrithropologist, and I was re- discuss such matters beyond ty — "that's hard and I don't ally good at it. But I wasn't saying, "Tim Daly sure is a really love." Those are things passionate about it. He said, swell fella." she has mostly kept at arm's 'Don't do something because Her 17-year marriage to Da- length. "When I watch a scene I'm you're good at it. Do it because vid Duchovny ended last year. "It's not to say we didn't you're passionate about it, and in and remember hearing you'll GET good at it.'" both have hurt, but David 'rolling,' it's like the memory The advice paid off for his and I still adore each other," of a friend." Between "rolling" daughter, whose many films she said. "We text every day, and "cut" and beyond, she include "Fun With Dick and deal with the kids" — their summed up, "I've had it exactJane," "Flirting With Disas- daughter and son, now 15 and ly how I've wanted it." there's a single right way."
Cou e ee ressureto u ome husband is 27. We've been mar-
i m p o r tant t o
Leoni, who grew up in Manhattan and counts 25 cousins living nearby. Also important are friends, many of whom she has kept since school
YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
you in anoddway.Tonight:Onceyou start chatting, don't count on an early night.
be kept in another room while
you're there. But if you are looking for a guarantee, ask the perto yourhome or to meet you in a pet-free place. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069
you to move forward, yet an unexpected diversion might take you down a different path. You'll hear news from a loved one that could get you thinking. More information could come forward and color your decisions. Tonight: Out late.
SAGITTARIUS(Nov.22-Oec. 21)
** * * * Y ou might want to reconsider a change involving a child. You could ** * * Keep moving forward, and stay be surprised by all the energy you optimistic despite a lot of unexpected get from the people involved. Take a demands that could disruptyour plans. drive in the country, or find a different Rather than disagree or try to maintain activity to get some distance from the the status quo, go along with someone issue. Tonight: A surprise is likely. Stay else's suggestion. Tonight: Treat yourself open-minded. to a special meal at a favorite place.
CANCER (Jone21-Joly 22)
LEO (July 23-Aug.22)
** * Take the morning off just for you. increased romance Some of you will get a head start on your taxes, whereas many of you will relax or adds a new quality to your relationship. sleep in late. When you surface in the afLEO is supportive. ternoon, others will express their appreARIES (March21-April19) ciation for having your company. Tonight: ** * * Confusion or the inability to find Beam in whatever you want. a resolution seems to mark the morning. VIRGO (Aog.23-Sept. 22) In the afternoon, you'll visit with others ** * * You could be in a situation this and enjoy yourself. Make some extra time to spend with a loved one; you must morning that delights you. Go with the flow rather than manipulate plans, espenot ignore this person. Tonight: Act as if cially if you desire a repeat occurrence. there were no tomorrow. A dear friend might do the unexpected. TAURUS (April 20-May20) Others will have strong feedback. To** * * M ake calls and reach out to night: Make it early. friends and loved ones with whom you LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) have not had time to share news. You ** * * You might be in a situation could have a sudden realization about a where you would prefer to be open and financial expenditure. Rethink this cost, forthright. However, accepting as many and give yourself permission to change responsibilities as this situation is likely your mind. Tonight: Order in. todemand could causea problem. Make GEMINI (May 21-Jone28) no commitments, but watch what goes ** * You could have a problem with a on around you. Tonight: The party besuggestion from a friend. When you start gins. talking and get some feedback, you'll know that this person might have a point. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21) A loved one is likely to come through for ** * * Y our sixth sense will be telling
CAPRICORN(Dec. 22-Jan.19)
** * * You will see a situation in a new light. How you deal with this new perspectiv e and how you to chooseto inform others where you stand could be important. Expect a surprising reaction. Tonight: Keep conversations on a oneon-one level.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 28-Feb. 18) ** * * D efer to others, as you have a lot to get done. No one is likely to mind that you won't be present in the earlier part of the day, as long as you plan on being more social in the evening. A loved one might share news that makes you happy. Tonight: Forget work for now.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March28) ** * * Use the morning to enjoy your immediate loved ones. This extra special time will be so important to all of you. By midafternoon, relax and decide whether you want to go to the movies or to some other happening. You might be happiest where you are. Tonight: Put your feet up. © King Features Syndicate
I
I I
Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • AMERICAN SNIPER (R) 11:30 a.m., 2:45, 6:45, 9:50 • BIRDMAN (R)12:05, 3:05, 6:10, 9:20 • THE DUFF (PG-13) 11:50 a.m., 3:15, 6:20, 9:15 • FIFTY SHADES OFGREY (R) noon, 3, 7,10 • FOCUS (R) 12:30, 3:15, 6:30, 9:05 • FOCUS IMAX (R) 1:15, 4, 7:25, 10:20 • HOT TUB TIME MACHINE2 (R) 12:45, 3:20, 7:35, 10:40 • THE IMITATION GAME(PG-13) 2:55, 6:40, 9:25 • JUPITER ASCENDIN(PG-13) G 12:25, 6:55 • JUPITERASCENDING 3-D(PG-13!3:40,9:50 • KINGSMAN: THESECRET SERVICE (R)1,3:55,7:30, 10:25 • THE LAZARUS EFFECT(PG-13) I:10, 4:15, 7:45, 10:05 • MCFARLAND, USA(PG) I2:35, 3:50, 7: IO,10:10 • PADDINGTON (PG) 11:45a.m. • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 11:55 a.m. • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE: SPONGE OUTOF WATER 3-D (PG) 2:55,6,9 • STILL ALICE (PG-13) 12:15, 3:10, 6:15, 9:10 • THETHEORY OFEVERYTHING (PG-13) 12:10, 3:30, 6:50,9:55 • WHIPLASH (R) 12:20, 3:35, 7:40, 10:30 • Accessibility devices are available forsome movies. •
TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports 8 p.m. on 2, 9, "Once Upon a Time" — The fantasy series resumes with a newepisode with a title Bruce Springsteen fans will appreciate, "Darkness on the Edge ofTown." Gold's (Robert Carlyle) absence means achance for Storybrooke's citizens to rebuild their lives, but a newevil presents itself. Cruella de Vil (gueststar Victoria Smurfit), the villainess of "101 Dalmatians," is sought by Gold and Ursula (guest star Merrin Dungey). Filmmaker Jon Amiel ("Copycat") directed the story. 8 p.m. on 6, "Madam Sec-
retary" — Accusations of corruption in a program she's shepherding don't make Elizabeth (Tea Leoni) happy — neither with herself nor her support staff — in the new episode "Whisper of the Ax." She then enlists a consultant (guest star Kevin Rahm) to help her straighten things out. The investigation into the death of Vincent Marsh continues. Journalist Martin Bashir guest stars as himself. John Bedford Lloyd ("Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps") also guest stars. 8 p.m. on10, "The Simpsons" — Ever get an e-mail claiming a member of foreign royalty wants to cut you in on a fortune? Moe (voice of Hank Azaria) did, and he wants to reclaim the money that was scammed from him in the new episode "The Princess Guide." He thinks the Nigerian princess (voice of Yaya DaCosta, "Whitney") being guarded by Homer
(voice of DanCastellaneta) can help. Joe Mantegna reprises his voice role as Fat Tony. Entrepreneur Richard Branson voices his animated likeness. 9 p.m.on 6,"The Good Wife" — The new episode "Dark Money" is loaded with notable guest stars: Dylan Baker is back as the ever-unpredictable Colin Sweeney, David Hyde Pierce returns as Alicia's (Julianna Margulies) political opponent Frank Prady, and Ed Asner plays a monetary donor those two candidates vie for the favor of. Sweeney wants representation when he claims a television series is based on him. Laura Benanti, seen lately on "Nashville," also returns as Sweeney's wife. O Zap2it
2 Locationsio Bend Main Center 2150NEStudioRd,Suite10 NWX 2863 NorthwestCrossingDr,suiteio
r
I
McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 • THE HOBBIT: THEBATTLEOFTHE FIVE ARM IES(PG-13) 5:30 • THE HUNGERGAMES: MOCKINGJAY — PART1 (PG13) 2 • NIGHTAT THE M USEUM: SECRET OF THETOMB (PG! 11:30a.m. • THE WEDDING RINGER(R) 9:15 • Younger than 21 may attend all screeningsif accompanied byalegalguardian.
541-389-9252 sylvanlbendbroadband.com
716 SW11tII St. Redmond 641.923.4732
Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • A MOSTVIOLENT YEAR (R)7:30 • SONG OFTHE SEA (PG)2:45 • WHIPLASH (R) 5 I
I
CKATCN
ElYT
I
Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • FOCUS(R)I2:15,2:30,4:45,7,9:I5 • KINGSMAN: THESECRET SERVICE (R)3: 45,6:30,9:15 • THE LAZARUS EFFECT(PG-13) 11:30 a.m., 1:30, 3:30, 5:30, 7:30, 9:30 • MCFARLAND, USA(PG)12:30, 3:15, 6:05, 8:45 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 11:30 a.m., 1:45
S ECT I O Pl Blemiehed prodacta that work llne.
Nhtch us growand chanrte! 541-aez-e223 johneonbrottreraar.eom
•
I
•
-
-
•
, Vour laeal epgrlhanee exgerts
Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • FOCUS (R) 2, 4:15,6:30 • THE IMITATION GAME(PG-i3) 1:15, 3:45 • MCFARLAND, USA(PG) I,3:30,6 • STILL ALICE (PG-13) I, 3: I5 • THETHEORY OFEVERYTHING (PG-13)5:30 • WHIPLASH (R) 6:15 r)~r
Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • BIRDMAN (R) 1:20, 6:50 • FIFTY SHADES OFGREY (R) 1:25, 4:10, 7 • FOCUS (R) I2:05, 2:25, 4:50, 7: IO • HOTTUB TIME MACHINE 2 (R) 7: I5 • KINGSMAN: THESECRET SERVICE (R)4 • THE LAZARUS EFFECT(PG-13) I: l0, 3: l5,5:20, 7:25 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 12:20, 2:35, 4:50 •
•
Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • FOCUS (R) 1:10, 4:10, 7:15 • MCFARLAND, USA(Upstairs — PG) 1,4, 7 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.
O
Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GOIMagazine
•
Clara was brought to the shelter because she was found at someone's house and they could not keep her. Clara is a sweet but shy cat who is looking for a loving home who will iet her do her own thing. She has been around other cats (she came in with Stephanie) anddogs.Ifshe soundslike agood fit for your lifestyle, come on down to the shelter and meet Clara! HUMRNESOC IGV OF CCNTRRLORGGON/SPCR trl 170 S.C.27th St., 8END (541) 38R-3537
Scoreboard, D2 N BA, D3 Sports in brief, D2 Golf, D3 NHL, D3 Motor sports, D6
© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2015
PREP WRESTLING: STATECHAMPIONSHIPS
PREP BOYS BASKETBALL
Cougarstopseed
in 5A tournament Mountain View is the top seed in theClass 5A state boys basketball tournament, while Summit and Ridgeview will have to play their way in to the 16-team field. The Oregon School Activities Association announced the field for the Class 5Atournament late Friday night, and Intermountain Conference champion Mountain View (19-5), which lost to Summit 78-76 in
overtime Friday night, will be the top overall seed. In the play-in round Tuesday, Summit (18-5) will host Hillsboro (1014), the No. 6team from the Northwest Oregon Conference. Ridgeview (17-7) will travel to Parkrose (12-12), which finished fourth in the NOC. The first round of the playoffs is scheduled for Friday.
• Crook County nearlydoublesup second-place Henleyfor its third straight Class4Astate championship
— Bulletin staff report
TRACK 8. FIELD Modin wins MPSF heptatlon Oregon sophomore Mitch Modin won the
indoor heptathlon at the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation Championships in Seattle on Saturday with a career-best 5,543 points, edging Stanford freshman Harrison Williams by four points. The Mountain View graduate's time of 2 minutes, 48.04 seconds in the1,000-meter run, the final event, was just .35 seconds faster than the time that would have created an overall tie. Williams finished the 1,000 in 2:40.57.
Modin was thetop scorer in with 60-meter dash (6.98 seconds), and in the shot put )44 feet,1t/4inches).
The Ducks wonthe 14-team meetwith 95 points. — Bulletin staff report
SKIING Bachelor to host club nationals The United States
Collegiate Ski and Snowboard Association (USCSA) will host its national championships Monday through March 7 at Mt. Bachelor ski
area. More than 400 athletes from 180 colleges from across the country are expected to compete for club national titles in alpine, nordic, and snowboard/freestyle events.
!I~Pllnltl
tittn,tttiligll'tt
ttl! "..
Joe Kline i The Bulletin
Crook County's Trayton Libolt celebrates after winning his126-pound championship match against Banks' Kurt Mode at Memorial Coliseum in Portland onSaturday night. He was one of four Cowboys wrestlers to win an individual state title, and the Cowboys won their third straight team championship.
Inside
Bulldogs roll to their 8th title in the past 9seasons By Grant Lucas The Bulletin
CLASS 2A
commonly spoken by J.D.
in the past nine years. "Every one's different, but we
Alley, and it was one that was
want each one to be more spe-
especially fitting at Veterans Memorial Coliseum on Saturday night. "It's a great day," the longtime Culver coach said, "to be a Bulldog."
cial," Alley said. "We ARE used to winning.... It's a streak of
PORTLAND — It is a phrase
With three wrestlers claim-
ing state titles, the Bulldogs
consistency that speaks to the
whole wrestling organization in Culver, from mat-club moms
and coaches and people in concession stands, rolling up mats,
racked up 147.5 points to win
working tables. It's a tremendous culture that I'm so proud
the Class 2A/1A state championship — their eighth state title
and fortunate to be a part of. SeeBulldogs/D4
4 win titles asCowboyslay claim asstate's bestteam
• La Pine's David Kerr joins his father as the only Hawks' state wrestling champions. • In an all-IMC final, Redmond's Summit's Grant Leiphart • More notes from the finals in Portland, state championships notebook,D4 See additional photos on The Bulletin's website:bend bulletin.com/sports
CLASS 4A
By Grant Lucas The Bulletin
Mitch Willett tops
A far cry from the all-classifications record of 405.5
"We knew from seventh grade, the first practice, that we could do something great if we just stuck together and workedourbuttsoff,"
they set last season, the
said Trevor Rasmussen, the
Cowboys rode four individual state champs to post the
220-pound winner Saturday. "We did, and amazing things did happen. Coaches, from day one, were telling us we could
PORTLAND — Only Crook
County can make 327 points seem like just another number.
O
second-highest point total in
OSAA history and earn a third straight Class 4A wrestling state championship Saturday
night at Veterans Memorial Coliseum.
be the greatest team ever in
Oregon history. They weren't wrong. They're totally right." See Cowboys /D4
— Bulletin staff report
COLLEGE BASKETBALL Beavers women win Pac-12 title Sydney Weisehas 23 points, including a season-high seven 3-pointers, and No. 7 Oregon State clinches the Pac-12 regular-season title outright with a 73-55 victory over No. 24 California,D3
PACE OF PLAY
Every secondcounts in bid to keepfans Storm sweep OHSNO By Christopher Clarey On a summer evening in Sydney in January, two for-
during a minor league game in
mer Grand Slam champions, John McEnroe and Patrick
Scottsdale, Arizona, in October 2014.
Rafter, played an abbreviated version of tennis. Rafter won the exhibition
No. 7Arizona scores the last eight points to rally
truncated score of 4-3, 4-1. "It's whatever the crowd wants, whatever TV wants," Rafter said of the new format, called Fast 4."I thinkthe Grand
and take atwo-game lead in the Pac-12with two games remaining. Roundup,D3
A pitch clock is tested
New York Times News Service
Arizona mentake commandinglead past No. 13 Utah 63-57
NORDIC SKIING
Mark J. Rebilas/ New York Times
match by the strange and
Slams will always stay their way, but for the other events, if this is what the fans want, this
is what we should be playing." In a world where attention
News Service
spans are under duress and where big-screen and smallscreen entertainment options are proliferating by the hour, sports are increasingly fo-
statechampionships Bulletin staff report MOUNT BACHELOR-
Another year, another Summit sweep at the Oregon
nior squad finished first in the 3x1,000-meter relay,
concluding the three-event meet with just 23 points. The
High School Nordic state
Storm finished well ahead of
championship. The Storm boys and girls
Bend, which came in second
dominated the 5-kilometer
River Valley (48). The Bend girls edged out Summit in
cused on not only making
classic race at Emil's Landing at Mt. Bachelor ski area on Saturday, placing three girls in the top five and three boys in the top six to solidify
their formats more compact
their positions atop the team
but on making the most of literally every second. SeePace of play/D6
standings. Summit clinched the boys title when its all-se-
with 45 points, and Hood the team relay, but the Storm entered the final event with
such a large lead that Summit easily took the title with 23 points, while the Lava
Bears finished second overall with 37. SeeOHSNO /D5
D2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2015
ON THE AIR
CORKBOARD
TODAY Time 6 a.m.
SOCCER England, Arsenal vs. Everton TENNis ATP, Argentina Open,Final
9 a.m.
T V /Radie NB C SN Tennis
BASEBALL
College, Clemson atSouth Carolina MOTOR SPORTS NASCAR,Sprint Cup,Atlanta
9 a.m.
SEC
9 :30 a.m.
Fox ,
KRCO 690-AM, 96.9-FM BASKETBALL
NBA, L.A. Clippers at Chicago Women's college, Maryland at Northwestern Women's college, Texas atWest Virginia Men's college,SMU atUConn Women's college, TexasA&M at LSU Women's college, Minnesota at lowa Women's college, North Carolina at Duke Men's college, OregonSt. at California
10 a.m. 10 a.m. 10 a.m. 11 a.m. 11 a.m. noon n oon noon
ABC
KICE 940-AM
KRCO 690-AM, 96.9-FM
3 :30 p.m. E S PN 3:30 p.m. ESPNU 4 p.m. FS1, KBND 1110-AM, 100.1-FM
Men's college, Purdue atOhio St. Men's college, Arizona St. at Colorado Men's college, Washington State at UCLA
4:30 p.m. Big Ten 5:30 p.m. ESPNU 6:30 p.m. FS1
GOLF
PGA Tour, HondaClassic PGA Tour, HondaClassic HOCKEY NHL, Anaheim atDallas NHL, St. Louis at Vancouver
10 a.m. noon
Golf NBC, Golf
5 p.m. NB C SN 7:30 p.m. CSNNW
MONDAY SOCCER North America, U-17championship, Trinidad/Tobago vs U.S.
3 p.m.
FS2
BASKETBALL
Men's college, Virginia at Syracuse Women's college, UConn at South Florida Men's college, Baylor at Texas Men's college, Oklahoma at lowaSt. Men's college, Boston College atVirginia Tech
4 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m.
Women's coll ege Pac-12 All TimesPST W L PcL W L Pct. Oregon St. 1 6 2 . 8 88 26 3 .897 Arizona St. 1 3 3 . 8 13 24 4 .857 Stanford 13 4 .764 21 8 .724 California 13 5 . 7 22 21 8 .724 Washington 1 1 7 . 6 11 22 8 .733 8 10 .444 12 17 .414 UCLA Washington St. 7 11 .388 16 13 .552 Southern Cal 7 1 1 .38815 14 .517 Colorado 5 11 .313 12 15 .444 Oregon 5 12 .294 12 16 .429 Arizona 3 14 .176 9 19 .321 Utah 2 13 .133 9 17 .346
B i g Ten E S P N2 6 sGames E S PNU Washington74, Saturday' UCLA61 Washi n gton St. 68, So ut h ern Cal62 Big Ten Oregon St. 73,California 55 Today' s Games ESP N 2 tanfordatOregon, 1p.m. Pac - 12, S Colorado at ArizonaSt.,1 p.m.
Women's college, Georgia at Florida noon SEC NBA, Cleveland at Houston 1 2:30 p.m. ABC Men's college, Marquette at Providence 1 2:30 p.m. FS1 Men's college, Michigan St. at Wisconsin 1 p.m. CBS Women's college, Stanford at Oregon 1 p.m. ES P NU Women's college, OhioState at Nebraska 2 p.m. Big Ten Women's college, South Carolina at Kentucky 2 p.m. ESP N2 Women's college, Utah atArizona 2 p.m. Pac - 12 Women's college, Vanderbilt at Tennessee 2 p.m. SEC NBA, Portland at Sacramento 3 p.m. C S NNW; NBA, OklahomaCity at L.A. Lakers Men's college, Pittsburgh at WakeForest Men's college, Oregon atStanford
BASKETBALL
ESPN
ESP N2 ESP NU ESPN
ES P NU
Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. The Bulletin is not responsible for latechangesmadeby TVor radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF MIXED MARTIAL ARTS RoiiSey needS 14SeCOndSto StOPZingano — RondaRousey stopped CatZinganowith an acrobatic armbar14 seconds into the first round, dramatically defending her bantamweight title at UFC 184 on Saturday night in Los Angeles. Rousey(11-0) earned the most impressive victory of her career with jaw-dropping speed, taking out the previously unbeatenZingano with her signature armlock from an unlikely position.
BASEBALL Win giveS OregOn SerieS Over UCSB— I edbyBrandon Cud-
dy's seven RBlsand astrong pitching performance from freshman David Peterson, Oregon cruised to an11-3 victory over UCSanta Barbara in Goleta, California, on Saturday. TheDucks scored five runs in the fifth inning to pull away.
OregOn State take tWOOVerGramdling State — Oregon State wrapped up a three-game series sweep over Grambling State on Saturday in Corvallis by taking a doubleheader, 25-3 in the opener and9-2intheevening game. OSU's25runsingameonemarkedthe second-highest single game total by an NCAAteam this season, and the 22-run differential was the third-highest.
SOFTBALL NO. 2 Oregan beatS San DiegO State — Junior KoralCosta led Oregon (16-2) with a 3-for-4 hitting performance, including a homerunandadouble,astheDuckstooka7-3victoryoverhome team San DiegoState on Saturday. Pitcher Cheridan Hawkins picked up the win, taking her record to 6-2.
BeaVerS take tWO at FreSnO State ClaSSiC — Oregon State scored 30 runs in two gamesSaturday, beating UCSanta Barbara 14-5 in five innings in the first game, followed by a16-12 victory over Fresno State.
SKIING Reichelt leadsAustrian WorldCupdownhill sweepHannes Reichelt led anAustrian sweep of a shortened downhill race on the Kandahar slope for his 10th careerWorld Cupvictory on Saturday in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany.
TENNIS Federer deatS DjokOViC to defend Diibai title — Defending champion RogerFedererwon his seventh Dubai Championships title and second of the year,defeating No. 1NovakDjokovic 6-3, 7-5 on Saturday.
SafarOVa deatS AZarenka to Win the Qatar OPen — Fed Cup winner Lucie Safarova beatVictoria Azarenka in straight sets, 6-4, 6-3 to clinch the QatarOpenSaturday. It was her sixth career title and first since QubecCity in 2013 aswell as her first at the Premier-level.
Ferrer, BRCSinSzky take MexiCO OPen titleS — No.2 seed David Ferrer of Spain beat top-seed KeiNishikori 6-3, 7-5 in the men's championship of the Mexico Open inAcapulco on Saturday. For the women, fifth-seeded TimeaBacsinszky of Switzerland earned her second WTATour title, beating third-seededCaroline Garcia of France 6-3, 6-0. — From staffand wire reports
Utah atArizona,2p.m.
Saturday'sGames TOP 26 No.1 Conne cticut 87,Memphis 24 No. 7OregonState73,No.24California 55 No.14 Princeton79, Brown67 No.18Chattanooga64,EastTennesseeState42 No. 21FloridaGulfCoast 78,Jacksonville 47 EAST
AmericanU.65, Buckneg55 Army57,Lafayette41 Buffalo87, Akron80 CCSU 77,Fairleigh Dickinson56 Colgate61,Lehigh 60 Dartmouth 54, Cornell 35 Fairfield72,Manhatan 54 Harvard 82, Columbia81 Holy Cross76,Boston U.62 lona81,Niagara53 Marist 65,Rider56 MountSt.Mary's68,Wagner 65 Navy59,Loyola(Md.) 50 Penn59, Yale33 Princeton79, Brown67 SacredHeart 78, LIUBrooklyn 71,OT St. Francis(NY)62, Bryant52 Temple79,East Carolina 69 Uconn87,Memphis 24 SOUTH AppalachianSt.80, Louisiana-Monroe61 Bethu ne-Cookman50,NCCentral33 Charlotte74,Rice59 Chattanooga64,ETSU42 FAU83, Marshall 73 FloridaGulf Coast78,Jacksonville 47 Furman 70,Woff ord53 Georgi aTech67,WakeForest60 Hampton106,Howard57 High Poin83, t Radford 63 JacksonSt.58, MVSU54 JacksonvilleSt.83, MoreheadSt. 78,OT Kennesaw St.75, Lipscomb57 Liberty64,Campbell 57 Longwood 58, Charleston Southern51 Louisiana-Lafayette 62,GeorgiaSouthern35 Md.-Eastern Shore68, DelawareSt.61 Mercer70,Samford65 Morgan St. 73,Coppin St.55 N. Kentucky 83, SC-Upstate60 NewOrleans71,Abilene Christian 50 Nicholls St.73,McNeeseSt. 68 Old Dominion70,North Texas48 PrairieView81, AlabamaAS,M71 Savannah St. 55,SCState52 SouthFlorida99,UCF71 Southern U.76,Alcorn St.55 Stetson 77, NorthFlorida45 Tenne sseeSt.70,Belmont53 Tennessee Tech84, E.Kentucky71 Texas Southern64,AlabamaSt.52 Troy88,GeorgiaSt. 75 UAB62,MiddleTennessee57 UNC Asheville 87,Coastal Carolina 53 UT-Martin87,MurraySt.74 W. Kentucky88,FIU47 Winthrop60, Presbyterian53 MIDWEST AustinPeay72,SEMissouri 67 Detroit78,Valparaiso57 E. Michigan 60, N.Illinois 52 Green Bay73, YoungstownSt. 27 Illr-Chicago64,Oakland 54 llinois 72,Michigan60 lowaSt. 76,Baylor 71 Miami(Dhio)66, KentSt.59 MichiganSt.61, Purdue56 Ohio67,BowlingGreen47 S. Dakota St.82, IUPUI53 SIU-Edwardsville72,E.Illinois 55 SouthDakota78, W.Ilinois 75 Toledo62,Cent. Michigan53 W. Michigan 51, Ball St.50 SOUTHW EST Cent.Arkansas73,SELouisiana57 Cincinnati56,SMU46 Grambling St.59, Ark.-PineBluff45 Kansas65,Oklahoma58 Lamar81,IncarnateWord 64 Oklah omaSt.47,TexasTech44 Oral Roberts84, IPFW56 Stephen FAustin 69, Houston Baptist 57 TCU67,KansasSt. 47 Texas A&M-CC60,Sam HoustonSt.52 TexasSt. 83,ArkansasSt. 74 Tulsa55,Tulane52 UALR 48,Texas-Arlington 38 FARWEST BoiseSt. 64,SanDiegoSt. 58 CS Bakersfield 73, Seattle 61 CS Northridge 88,UCRiverside70 Gonzaga73,BYU66 GrandCanyon57,UMKC42 IdahoSt. 63,Weber St. 56 LongBeachSt.69,CalSt.-Fugert on62 LoyolaMarymount74, Pepperdine57 Montan a69,E.Washington59 Montana St. 71,Idaho62 N. Colorado88,N.Arizona67 NewMexico 63, FresnoSt.60 NewMexicoSt.80,Texas-PanAmerican60 Oregon St. 73,California 55 S. Utah 73, NorthDakota66 Sacramento St.123, PortlandSt. 77 SaintMary's(Cal)74, Santa Clara71 San Diego 80,Portland 72 SanFrancisco91, Pacific 79 SanJoseSt.81, Nevada72 UC Irvine84,CalPoly75 UC Santa Barbara57,UCDavis 52 UtahSt.84, Air Force50 UtahValley68,ChicagoSt.53 Washington74, UCLA61 WashingtonSt.68, SouthernCal62 Wyoming99, UNLV68
Saturday'sGames
TOP 26 No. 1Kentucky84,No.18 Arkansas67 No. 2Virginia 69,Virginia Tech57
BYU73,No.3Gonzaga70 No. 4Duke73, Syracuse54 No. 6Vilanova78,Xavier 66 No. 7Arizona63,No.13Utah57 No. 8Kansas69, Texas64 No. 11WichitaState74, No.10 Northern lowa60 KansasState70,No.12lowaState69 No.14 Maryland 66, Michigan56 No.15NorthCarolina 73,Miami (Fla.) 64 No.160klahoma67,TCU60 No.17 Louisville81,FloridaState59 No.19 Baylo78, r No.20West Virginia 66 Dayton59,No.22VCU55 No. 23Butler67, DePaul53 BoiseState56, SanDiegoState46 EAST Albany(NY) 79,Vermont73 Bingha mton76,UMBC69 BostonCollege79, NCState63 Bryant61,St. Francis (NY)51 Bucknel71, l American U.69 Colgate61, Lehigh55 Dartmouth56,Cornell 45 Delaware65,Towson60 FairleighDickinson73, CCSU66 Harvard80,Columbia70 Holy Cross77, BostonU. 70 lowa81,PennSt. 77,OT Lafayette74,Army64 MountSt. Mary's74,Wagner 64 NJIT90,SarahLawrence55 Navy57,Loyola (Md.) 47 NewHampshire65,Maine56 Princeton80,Brown62 RhodeIsland59, LaSalle 56 Richmon d63,SaintJoseph' s57 RobertMorris71,St. Francis(Pa.) 70, DT SacredHeart 84,LIUBrooklyn73 SetonHall67,Creighton66 St. Bonave nture92, Duquesne75 St. John's81,Georgetown70 StonyBrook74,Harfford 59 UMass82,Fordham74 Yale55,Penn50 SOUTH AppalachianSt.66,Louisiana-Monroe43 Belmont88,TennesseeSt. 62 Charleston Southern 97,HighPoint 93,30T Chattanooga 61, UNCGreensboro58 Cincinnati63,Tulane47 Clemson 70,GeorgiaTech63,OT CoppinSt.88, MorganSt.77 David son77,GeorgeWashington66 Dayton59,VCU55 Drexel80,Wiliam& Mary66 Duke73,Syracuse54 E. Kentucky 70,TennesseeTech67 EastCarolina71,UCF66 Elon 74,UNCWilmington 55 Florida66,Tennessee49 Georgia68,Missouri44 GeorgiaSt.75,Troy64 Hampton68,Howard67 Jackson St. 73,MVSU49 Jacksonville75,FloridaGulfCoast 67 JamesMadison82, Hofstra 73 Kentucky84, Arkansas67 LSU73,Mississippi63 Lipscomb 94, KennesawSt.75 Longwood 70,Campbell 65 LouisianaTech76, UTSA66 Louisiana-Lafayette 68, GeorgiaSouthern58 Louisville 81,FloridaSt.59 Marshall79,FAU63 Maryland 66, Michigan56 McNeese St.83, Nicholls St. 78,OT Md.-EasternShore69,DelawareSt. 65 Mercer69,ETSU64 Morehead St.87,Jacksonvile St.55 MurraySt. 73,UT-Martin 67 N. Kentucky84,SC-Upstate65 NC AS,T77,FloridaA&M65 NC Cen tral72,Bethune-Cookman49 NewOrleans75,Abilene Christian 55 NorthCarolina73,Miami 64 NorthFlorida86, Stetson71 Northeastern65,Col. of Charleston 56 PrairieView75,AlabamaA&M72 Radford72,Gardner-Webb62 Samford80,VMI69 SavannahSt.68, SCState57 SouthCarolina81, Mississippi St.68 SouthernMiss.63, UTEP60 SouthernU.71,Alcorn St.63 TexasSouthern58,AlabamaSt.49 Tulsa 74,Memphis72,OT UAB100,MiddleTennessee95, 30T UNCAsheville95, Liberly 77 Vanderbilt73,Alabam a 66 Virginia69,Virginia Tech57 W. Carolina67,TheCitadel 54 W. Kentucky 77, FIU61 Winthrop80,Presbyterian 53 Woffor d62,Furman60 MIDWEST BowlingGreen62,Miami(Ohio) 57 Buffalo71,KentSt. 65 Butler 67,DePaul 53 ChicagoSt.65, UtahValley44 George Mason78,SaintLouis50 GreenBay83,Oakland63 IPFW 84, W.Illinois 64 Ill.-chicago61, Wright St.46 llinois 86,Northwestern60 llinois St.69,Evansville 67,DT IndianaSt.60, Bradley52 Kansas69,Texas64 Kansas St. 70,lowaSt.69 Loyolaof Chicago65,Missouri St.51 Milwau kee82,YoungstownSt.74 N. Illinois73,Cent. Michigan55 Nebra ska-Omaha87,IUPUI80,20T S. Illinois63,Drake57 S. Utah71,North Dakota65 SE Missouri89,Austin Pea y65 South Dakota80,S.DakotaSt.64 Toledo70, BallSt. 59 UMKC 70, GrandCanyon65 Viganova 78,Xavier 66 W. Michigan 80, E.Michigan72 WichitaSt.74, N.Iowa60 SOUTHW EST Ark.-PineBluff66,Grambling St.57 Baylor78,West Virginia 66 Charlotte77,Rice76 Oklahoma67,TCU60 Old Dominion70, NorthTexas57 OralRoberts60,Denver 57 Stephen F.Austin102, HoustonBaptist 87 Texas A&M80, Auburn 55 Texas A&M-CC61,SamHoustonSt.59 TexasSt.70,ArkansasSt.60 Texas Tech63,OklahomaSt.62 Texas-Arlington82, UALR73 FARWEST
Arizona63, Utah57 BYU73, Gonzaga70 BoiseSt.56, SanDiegoSt.46 CS Northridge 83, UCRiverside 76 FresnoSt.59,NewMexico 55 Men's college Idaho80,MontanaSt.73 LongBeachSt. 70,CalSt.-Fugerton47 Pac-12 Montan a77,E.Washington76 All TimesPST N. Colorado 76, N.Arizona74 62,SanJose St. 51 Conference O v erall Nevada e LoyolaMarymount 49 W L Pct W L Pc t Pepperdin65, St. 73,PortlandSt. 60 Arizona 14 2 . 8 7 5 26 3 . 8 97 Sacramento San Di e go 78, Portland 66 Uialt 12 4 .750 2 2 6 . 7 86 Oregon 11 5 . 6 8 8 21 8 . 7 24 SanFrancisco65,Pacific 55 Stanford 9 6 .6 0 0 18 9 . 667 SantaClara71,Saint Mary's (Cal) 70 UCLA 9 7 .563 1 7 1 2 .586 Seattle53,CSBakersfield 43 Cal70, Washington 55 OregonSt. 8 8 .5 0 0 17 1 1 .607 Southern ArizonaSt. 7 8 .4 6 7 15 1 3 .536 UC Davis66, CalPoly56 69,Wyoming 57 California 6 9 .4 0 0 16 1 2 .571 UNLV Washington St. 6 9 .400 1 2 1 5 .444 UtahSt.74,Air Force60 Weber St. 61,IdahoSt.57 Colorado 5 10 .333 1 2 1 5 .444 Washington 4 1 2 .250 1 5 1 3 .536 Southern Cal 3 14 .176 1 1 18 .379 TENNIS
Saturday'sGames
Arizona 63, Utah57 Southern Cal70,Washington 55
Today'sGames Oregon St.at California, noon OregonatStanford, 4p.m. Arizona St, atColorado,5:30p.m. WashingtonSt.at UCLA, 6:30p.m. Wednesday'sGames SouthernCalatUCLA, 6p.m. OregonatOregonState,8 p.m. Thursday'sGames Californiaat Arizona,6p.m. Coloradoat Washington, 6p.m. StanfordatArizonaState,8 p.m. Utah atWashingtonState, 8p.m. Saturday, March7 Californiaat ArizonaState, 11:30a.m. StanfordatArizona,1p.m. Utah at Washington, 1:30p.m. Colorado at WashingtonState,3:30 p.m.
ATP Duhai Championship Saturday atDuhai, UnitedArabEmiratns Championship RogerFederer(2), Switzerland, def. NovakDjokovic (1), Serbia6-3, , 7-5.
Ahierto MexicanoTelcel Saturday atAcapulco, Mexico Championship DavidFerrer(2), Spain,def. KeiNishikori (1),Japan, 6-3,7-5. ArgentinaOpen Saturday atBuenosAires, Argentina Semifinals Juan Monaco,Argentina,def. Nicolas Almagro, Spain,6-3,6-7(6),6-4. RafaelNadal(1), Spain,def. CarlosBerlocq,Argentina, 7-6(7), 6-2.
WTA
HOCKEY
Qatar Open Saturday atDoha,Qatar Championship LucieSafarova,Czech Republic, def. VictoriaAza renka, Belarus,6-4,6-3.
NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE AH Times PST
Abierto Mexicano Telcel Saturday atAcapulco, Mexico Championship TimeaBacsinszky(5), Switzerland,def. Caroline Garcia(3),France,6-3,6-0.
GOLF PGA TheHondaClassic
Saturday
At PGA Natio nal (Champin oCourse) Palm Be ach Gardens,Fla. Prrrse: $6.1 million Yardag n: 7,140;Par: 70 Sncond Round PadraigHarrington 67-66—133 PatrickReed 67-67—134 lan Poulter 71-64—135 Brendan Steele 66-69—135 LukeDonald 69-67—136 RussellKnox 69-68—137 Jim Herm an 65-72—137 Phil Mickelson 71-67—138 Martin Flores 67-71 — 138 DanielSummerhays 71-68—139 RobertGarrigus 70-69—139 PaulCasey 69-70—139 JamieDonaldson 68-71—139 RyoIshikawa 74-65—139 71-68—139 Jeff Overton 68-71—139 DanielBerger 68-71—139 S.J. Park 71-69 — 140 JasonDufner 69-71—140 BrendondeJonge 71-70 — 141 ScottStallings 72-69 — 141 RobertAgenby 71-70 — 141 Cameron Tringale 70-71—141 Sean O'Hair 6 8-73 — 141 Scott Piercy 70-71 — 141 Charles Howell Iff 72-69 —141 Carl Pettersson 72-70—142 George McNeil 73-69—142 MarcLeishma n 71-71—142 JonasBlixt 70-72 —142 BenMartin 78-64—142 BrooksKoepka 74-68—142 JohnPeterson 71-71—142 WilliamMcGirt KevinKisner 74-68 —142 JamieLovemark 72-70—142 MichaelThom pson 69-73—142 SergioGarcia 72-70—142 BrianDavis 71-71 — 142 ZacBlair 71-71—142 Joost Luiten 71-71—142 FabianGomez 73-69 — 142 RickyBarnes 74-69—143 AndresGonzales 73-70—143 DerekFathauer 74-69—143 Jon Curran 71-72—143 ChadCampbell 71-72—143 AdamHadwin 72-71—143 BenCrane 69-74—143 RusselHenl l ey 73-70—143 RickieFowler 70-73—143 RyanPalmer 71-72—143 MartinKaym er 68-75 — 143 RorySabbatini 68-75—143 Matt Every 70-73—143 YE. Yang 71-72—143 JohnHuh 70-73 — 143 72-71 — 143 Scott Langley DavidLIngmerth 68-75—143 Scott Pinckney 73-71—144 Tim Wilkinson 73-71—144 CamiloVilegas 73-71 — 144 73-71—144 RobertStreb 73-71—144 Stephe nGaff acher PatrickRodgers 75-69 — 144 75-69 — 144 BlayneBarber 71-73—144 LeeWestwood 73-71—144 NickWatney 73-71—144 StewartCink 70-74—144 BrianHarman 74-70—144 DerekErnst 74-70—144 SteveWheatcroft Missed cut 72-73 —145 Will MacKen zie 73-72—145 BrianStuard 70-75 — 145 DavidHearn 71-74 —145 D.A. Points 7 3-72 — 145 BooWeekley 71-74—145 HarrisEnglish 73-72 — 145 JustinRose 74-71—145 ChadCollins 7 3-72 — 145 CharlieBeljan JasonBohn 73-72—145 ZachJohnson 69-76—145 71-74—145 Chris Kirk Seung-YulNoh 74-71—145 GraemeMcDowell 74-71—145 LukeGuthrie 72-74—146 JustinHicks 73-73—146 ErnieEls 77-69 —146 RetiefGoosen 72-74—146 Billy Horschel 75-71—146 Spencer Levin 72-74—146 DavidToms 71-75 — 146 Keegan Bradley 71-75—146 JasonKokrak 70-76—146
LPGA HondaLPGAThailand Saturday At SiamCountryClub (PatlayaOldCourse) Chonhuri, Thailan d Purse: S1.5miHion Yardage: 6,668;Par:72 Third RoundLeadeI's a-amateur 66-64-73 —203 StacyLewis 67-66-71 —204 AmyYang 71-66-68 —205 SandraGal MirimLee 67-69-70—206 70-66-70—206 JennyShin 66-72-70—208 YaniTseng 71-69-69—209 ChellaChoi 68-71-70—209 Mo Martin Lee-Anne Pace 71-67-71—209 67-75-68—210 Suzann Petersen 70-69-71—210 Shanshan Feng 69-70-71—210 Azahara Munoz 68-71-71—210 LexiThompson 70-66-74—210 CarolineMasson 70-73-68—211 SeiYoung Kim 72-70-69—211 HyoJooKim AnnaNordqvist 72-70-69—211 a-Paphangkorn Tavatanakit 72-70-69—211 Kim Kaufm an 72-69-70—211 BrittanyLang 66-73-72—211 InbeePark 70-74-68—212 f heeLee 72-71-69—212 KarrieWebb 72-69-71—212 a-Budsab akornSukapan 67-72-73—212 CristieKerr 68-69-75—212 KarineIcher 71-72-70—213 BeatrizRecari 72-71-70—213 SunYoungYoo 75-67-71—213 MichegeWie 73-66-74—213 CatrionaMathew 71-66-76—213 AriyaJutanugarn 67-69-77—213 Na Yeon Choi 71-72-71—214 Mika Miyazato 69-72-73—214 JulietaGranada 70-74-71—215 MoriyaJutanugarn 70-74-71—215 BrittanyLincicome 71-73-71—215 MinaHarigae 71-72-72—215 Jessica Korda 70-71-74—215 HeeYoungPark 70-71-74—215 HaruNom ura 73-72-71—216 Pornanong Phatlum 74-71-71—216 68-76-72—216 CarolineHedwall 69-74-73—216 ChristinaKim 67-76-73—216 LizetteSalas ThidapaSuwannapura 71-71-74—216 72-69-75—216 DanielleKang 76-70-71—217 CarlotaCiganda 72-74-71—217 AustinErnst 71-72-74 —217 MeenaLee 73-73-72—218 PernigaLindberg 71-75-72—218 Ai Miyazato 72-74-72—218 GerinaPiler 72-74-72—218 So Yeon Ryu 72-73-73—218 BelenMozo 71-71-76—218 LineVedel 75-72-72—219 MariajoUribe 73-75-72—220 CheyenneWoods 73-74-74—221 MiJungHur 70-76-75—221 PaulaCreamer 73-73-75—221 Jodi EwartShadoff Eun-HeeJi 71-73-77—221 76-71-75—222 MorganPressel Angela Stanford 73-76-75—224 KatherineKirk 74-76-75—225
NHL
Montreal
Tampa Bay Detroit Boston Florida Ottawa Toronto Buffalo
EasternConference Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pls GFGA 62 41 16 5 8 7 171 135 63 38 19 6 82 207 167 61 35 15 11 81 180 159 62 31 22 9 7 1 165 161 62 27 22 13 67 150 175 60 27 23 10 64 171 163 62 25 32 5 55 170 189 63 19 39 5 43 123 212
Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pls GFGA N.Y. Islanders 64 41 21 2 84 205 179 N.Y.Rangers 61 38 17 6 8 2 192 152 Pittsburgh 6 1 3 5 17 9 7 9 176 152 Washington 63 33 20 10 76 184 159 Philadelphia 63 27 25 11 65 168 183 NewJersey 63 26 27 10 62 141 164 Columbus 61 2 6 31 4 5 6 157 191 Carolina 6 1 2 4 3 0 7 5 5 142 162 WesternConference Central Division GP W L OT Pls GF GA Nashville 63 41 15 7 89 191 151 St. Louis 62 40 18 4 84 192 153 Chicago 63 37 21 5 7 9 183 150 Winnipeg 63 31 20 12 74 174 170 Minnesota 62 33 22 7 7 3 176 161 Colorado 63 27 25 11 65 167 182 Dallas 62 27 25 10 64 195 207 Pacilic Division GP W L OT Pls GFGA Anaheim 63 39 17 7 85 186 176 Vancouver 61 35 23 3 73 174 162 Los Angeles 61 29 20 12 70 164 157 62 33 25 4 7 0 175 160 Calgary SanJose 63 30 25 8 68 175 181 Arizona 63 20 36 7 47 138 214 Edmonton 63 18 35 10 46 143 208 Saturday'sGames Florida 5,Buffalo3 Detroit 4,Nashville 3 Carolina5, N.Y.Islanders3 NewJersey2, Columbus0 Boston4,Arizona1 Montreal4, Toronto0 Philadelphia4, N.Y.Rangers2 Minnesota3,Colorado1 St. Louis2, Edmonton 1 Ottawa 4, SanJose2 Today'sGames LosAngelesat Winnipeg,1 p.m. Tampa Bayat Florida, 2p.m. Columbus at Pittsburgh,2p.m. TorontoatWashington,4 p.m. AnaheimatDallas, 5 p.m. St. LouisatVancouver, 6:30p.m. Monday'sGames Nashville atN.Y.Rangers, 4p.m. Carolinaat Chicago,5;30 p.m. Montrealat SanJose,7p.m. Tunsday'sGames Nashville atNewJersey,4 p.m. Calgaryat Philadelphia, 4p.m. Washingtonat Columbus,4 p.m. Buff aloatTampaBay,4:30p.m. Torontoat Florida, 4:30p.m. Ottawaat Minnesota,5 p.m. NewYorkIslanders atDallas, 5:30p.m. AnaheimatArizona,6 p.m. LosAngelesatEdmonton,6:30p.m. SanJoseat Vancouver, 7p.m.
Scoring Leaders ThroughSaturday GP G JohnTavares, NYI 6 4 30 Jakub Voracek,Phi 6 3 19 PatrickKane,Chi 61 27 Nicklas Backstrom, Was 63 18 A lex Ovechkin,Was 63 39 SidneyCrosby,Pit 5 7 20 EvgeniMalkin, Pit 56 24 Vladimir Tarasenko,StL 62 31 TylerJohnson,TB 6 1 23 JamieBennDal 62 23 TylerSeguin,Dal 55 29 RyanGetzlaf, Anh 6 0 19 ClaudeGiroux, Phi 6 2 18 RickNash,NYR 60 37 2tiedwith57pts.
A PTS
35 46 37 46 23 42 37 29 37 37 30 40 41 21
65 65 64 64 62 62 61 60 60 60 59 59 59 58
MO TOR SPORTS NASCAR Sprint Cup Folds ofHonorQuikTrip 600lineup After Fridayqualifying; race today At Atlanta MotorSpeedway,Hampton, Ga. Lap length:1.64 miles (Car number in parentheses) 1. (22)JoeyLogano,Ford,194.683. 2. (4) KevinHarvick, Chevrolet,193.792. 3. (1)JamieMcMurray,Chevrolet,193.623. 4. (11)DennyHamlin, Toyota,193.4. 5. (19)CarlEdwards,Toyota,193.137. 6. (42)KyleLarson,Chevrolet,192.949. 7 (31) Ryan Newman Chevrolet 192942 8. (9) Sam HornishJr., Ford,192.313. 9. (88)DaleEarnhardt Jr., Chevrolet,192.206. 10. (5)KaseyKahne,Chevrolet,192.14. 11. (47)AJAgmendinger, Chevrolet,191.483. 12 (2) BradKeselowski Ford191403 13. (27)PaulMenard, Chevrolet,192.326. 14. (78)MartinTruexJr., Chevrolet,192.313. 15. (3)AustinDilon, Chevrolet,192.146. 16. (51)JustinAggaier, Chevrolet,192.033. 17. (18)DavidRagan,Toyota,191.496. 18. (10)Danica Patrick, Chevrolet,191.291. 19. (16)GregBiffle, Ford,190.935. 20. (17)RickyStenhouseJr., Ford,190.692. 21. (13)CaseyMears, Chevrolet,190.653. 22. (55)Brett Moffitt, Toyota,190.646. 23. (43)AricAlmirola, Ford,190.424. 24. (95)MichaelMcDowel, Ford,189.558. 25. (15)Clint Bowyer,Toyota,189.513. 26. (38)DavidGigiland, Ford,189493. 27. (32)MikeBliss, Ford,189.351. 28. (34)JoeNemechek, Ford,189.183. 29. (6)TrevorBayne,Ford, 188.906. 30. (23)J.J.Yeley,Toyota,188.187. 31. (62)BrendanGaughan, Chevrolet,188.117. 32. (33)BrianScott, Chevrolet, 187.837. 33. (98)JoshWise,Ford,183.881. 34. (30)RonHornadayJr., Chevrolet,181.147. 35. (24)JeffGordon,Chevrolet. 36. (20)MattKenseth, Toyota. 37. (48)JimmieJohnson,Chevrolet, Owner Points. 38. (41)ReganSmith, Chevrolet, Owner Points. 39. (14)TonyStewart, Chevrolet, Owner Points. 40. (26)JebBurton,Toyota, Owner Points. 41. (35)ColeWhitt, Ford,Owner Points. 42. (7)AlexBowman, Chevrolet, Owner Points. 43. (40)LandonCassig, Chevrolet, OwnerPoints. Failed toQualify 44. (66)MikeWallace,Chevrolet. 45. (83)MattDiBenedetto, Toyota. 46. (46)MichaelAnnett, Chevrolet. 47. (29)ReedSorenson, Toyota
DEALS Transactions BASKETB ALL National Basketball Association NBA —Suspended GoldenState CFestus Ezeli one game for initiating analtercation with Toronto F-C TylerHansbroughbygrabbinghis throat duringaFeb. 27 game. FOOTBALL
Arena Football League ORLANDO PREDATORS— Agreed to termswith DB James Johnson HOCKEY National HockeyLeague CHICAGOBLACKHAWKS — AcquiredFAntoine VermettefromArizona for DKlas Dahlbeckanda2015 first-rounddraft pick.ReassignedDKyle Cumiskeyto Rockford(AHL). COLUMBUSBLUEJACKETS — Activated G Sergei Bobrovskyoff injuredreserve.AssignedGOscar Danskto Springfield (AHL). DETROIR TEDWINGS—RecalledDXavierOueget fromGrandRapids (AHL). FLORIDA PANTHERS— AcquiredFDanyHeatley and a 2015third-round draft pickfromAnaheimfor FTomasFleischmann. ReassignedFGarrett Wilson to theSanAntonio (AHL). Activated FBrandonPirri frominjuredreserve.PlacedFDaveBoffandon injured reserve,retroactivto e Feb.21. WASHIN GTON CAPITALS — Acquired D Tim GleasonfromCarolina for DJackHilen anda2015 fourth-round draft p>ck.
SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
NBAROUNDUP
Beaverswin 1st Pac-12 regularseason title
Utah forward Jakob Poeltl, right, guards
Arizona center Kaleb
Tarczewski in the second half of Saturday
night's game in Salt Lake City. Tarczewski led the Wildcats with 13 points.
By Anne M. Peterson The Associated Press
CORVALLIS — After Oregon State cut down the net to
Rick Bowmer/The
Associated Press
celebrate the school's first Pac12 regular-season title, coach
Scott Rueck hung it around the neck of his lone senior, guard Ali Gibson. "Our goal all year was to cut
The No. 7 Beavers went into
o. rizona ra ies o ea o.
ship. With the 73-55 win over
the No. 24 Golden Bears, they claimed it outright. Sydney Weise had 23 points, including a season-high seven 3-pointers, for Oregon State
(26-3, 16-2), which had already claimed the top seed in next
Washington in a matchup
we'd win th e t i tle outright.
past No. 13 Utah 63-57 on
That was all on our minds,"
Saturday night.
Weise said. "But I think ulti-
Brandon Taylor made a 3-pointer with I:57 remain-
ing to give Utah a 57-55 lead. York then drew Jakob
clinched the Southeastern completed an undefeated Conference regular-season season at home in the Big
Poeltl's fifth foul and made
title.
of us and how hard we worked
in the offseason, during practices and every single game. This one is just for us.'... I think that we showed that today.
We rallied with each other. We celebrated. I mean, it was
picture-perfect." Oregon Statehad already won the most games this sea-
son in program history. "Give credit to Cal, they came out strong, they saw a
weakness in us and they exposed it — and I'm glad they did — right off the bat because
then we started to step up our game and we never looked back from there," Weise said.
S ALT LAK E
CITY
Gabe York scored five of his 12 points in the final 2 min-
utes as No. 7 Arizona scored the last eight points to rally
one free throw and then rebounded his miss on the second attempt and put it in
Ten.
No. 2 Virginia 69, Virginia
No. 15 North Carolina
Tech 57: CHARLOTTESV ILLE, V a . — Malcolm
73, Miami 64: CORAL GABLES, Fla. — Brice Johnson had five dunks and 22 points
to give the Wildcats a 58-57 Brogdon scored 19 points, lead with 1:39 to play. and Virginia assured it- to help North Carolina end Hollis-Jefferson, who had
s elf at l e ast a s h ar e o f
-
ings by two games with two games remaining. After dominating Ut ah
NCAA tournament.
No. 4 Duke 73, Syracuse 5 4: DURHAM , N . C . Freshman Justise Winslow
69-51 earlier in the season scored a season-high 23 thanks to a big rebounding points in D u ke's ninth advantage, the W i ldcats straight win. again bullied the Utes on the No. 6 Villanova 78, Xavier boards, 44-35, to overcome
33-percent shooting. D elon Wright had 17 points and J ordan L ove-
ridgescored 10 before fouling out as the Utes finished the season 16-1 at home.
Also on Saturday:
Pac-12 Mark Ylen /Albany Democrat-Herald
(15) gets double teamed by California's Courtney Range, back,
and Gabby Green on Saturday in Corvallis.
a streak of four consecutive
10 points, made 3 of 4 free the Atlantic C oast C on- losses against Miami. throws in the final minute ference re g ular-season No. 16 Oklahoma 67, TCU and York hit two more to championship. 60: NORMAN, O k l a. clinch the Wildcats' 13th BYU 73, No. 3 Gonzaga Buddy Hield had 21 points straight win over Utah (22-6, 70: SPOKANE, Wash. and a career-high 13 re12-4 Pac-12). Kyle Collinsworth scored 20 bounds for Oklahoma. Kaleb Taczewski led Ar- points and BYU beat GonNo. 17 Louisville 81, Florizona (26-3, 14-2) with 13 zaga, ending the Bulldogs' ida State 59: TALLAHASpoints while Stanley John- school-record 22-game win- SEE, Fla. — Wayne Blackson had 12 points and 11 re- ning streak and likely cost- shear scored 18 points, and bounds. The Wildcats now ing them a No. 1 seed in the Montrezl Harrell added 16 lead the conference stand-
Oregon State's Jamie Weisner
Texas
scored 20 points, Rico Gathers had 17 points and 10 rebounds and Baylor won its Commonwealth 55: RICHMOND, Va. — Jordan Sib-
ert scored 19 points to lead Dayton.
No. 8 Kansas 69, Texas 64: No. 23 Butler 67, DePaul LAWRENCE, Kan. — Perry 5 3: ROSEMONT, I l l . Ellis had 28 points and 13 re-
bounds to lead Kansas.
Kellen Dunham scored 24 points to lead Butler.
No. 10 Northern lowa 60:
Boise State 56, No. 24 San Diego State 46: SAN
WICHITA, K a n. — Ron
DIEGO — Derrick Marks
GELES — NikolaJovanovic scored 15 of his 16 points
Baker scored 17 points, and scored 18 points and James
No. 11 Wichita State 74,
Wichita State wrapped up
Webb III added 16 for Boise
in the second half and last- the Missouri Valley Con- State, which outscored San place Southern Califor- ference reg u lar-season Diego State 24-7 in the final nia defeated short-handed championship 11 minutes.
GOLF ROUNDUP
The Associated Press
NASHVILLE, Tenn. Tomas Tatar broke a tie on
a power play at 9:06 of the
Arizona to its ninth straight
third period as Detroit beat
loss. Canadiens4, Maple Leafs
his first NHL goal, and Bren- Malhotra scored hi s f i r st dan Smith and Drew Miller goal with Montreal, and
rington is a 36-hole leader Stacy Lewis has a 1-over 73 on the PGA Tour for the first for a one-stroke lead over time in nearly five years and South Korea's Amy Yang afhe knows he has a long way ter the third round at Honda to go. LPGA Thailand. A vicious storm Saturday Ko breaks course record:
also scored to help Detroit
at the Honda Classic made
Alexey Marchenko scored
0: MONTREAL — M anny Carey Price made 30 saves for his sixth shutout of the
win its second straight game. Also on Saturday: season. Panthers 5, Sabres 3: Wild 3, Avalanche 1: DEN-
birdies in the 12 holes he
SUNRISE, Fla. — Scottie
played Saturday morning
VER —
J u s ti n F o ntaine
Upshall scored the go-ahead broke a second-period tie, goal with 5:58 left, and Ja- and Devan Dubnyk stopped romir Jagr played a little 33 shots, leading Minnesota more than 17 minutes in his over Colorado. debut with Florida. Blues 2, Oilers 1: EDHurricanes 5, Islanders 3: MONTON, Alberta — Paul UNIONDALE, N.Y. — Jay Stastny scored the winning McClement scored t w i ce, goal with 5:40 left and added and Carolina won its third an assist as St. Louis edged straight. Edmonton. Devils 2, Blue Jackets 0: Senators 4, Sharks 2: SAN COLUMBUS, Ohio — New
JOSE, Calif. — Mike Hoff-
Jersey's Andy Greene scored, Travis Zajac added an empty-net goal, and Cory Schneider made 33 saves for his
man scored a power-play goal to break a tie midway through the third period,
fourth shutout of the season.
and Ottawa rallied from a pair of deficits to post its fifth
Bruins 4, Coyotes 1: BOS- straight win, beating reeling San Jose.
TON — Milan Lucic, Patrice
Bosh will miss at least the
— The Associated Press
rest of the season. His condition was diagnosed last week after he Wizards 99, Pistons 95: played with pain in his side WASHINGTON — John Wall and back for several days. His scored 22 points, Nene added final on-court appearance 21 and Washington ended its was the NBA All-Star contest six-game losing streak with a
Also on Saturday: Lewis up by 1: CHONBURI, Thailand — A merican
CHRISTCHURCH,
New
his weekend even longer. Zealand — Top-ranked LydH arrington made s i x ia Ko broke the course-rein the rain-delayed tournament to complete a 4-under
cord w it h a car e er-best 11-under 61 to take the sec-
ond-round lead in the New Zealand W omen's O p en.
66 and take a one-shot lead The 17-year-old New Zeaover Patrick Reed, with Ian lander, coming off a victoPoulter and Brendan Steele ry Sunday in the Women's another shot behind. Australian Open, broke the The third round ended 51 Clearwaterrecord of 63 set minutes after it started be- last year by Mi Hyang Lee cause of a storm that packed in her victory. 50 mph gusts and dumped Coetsee leads in home about 5 inches of rain on PGA National. The plan is to return at 10 a.m. today to resume the
win over Detroit.
and he went to a hospital for Grizzlies 101, Timberwolves evaluation after being strick- 97: MINNEAPOLIS — Marc en by severe pain while vaca- Gasol had 27 points and 11 tioning with Dwyane Wade in rebounds, and Mike Conley Haiti several days later. hit a big 3-pointer with 30 secThere is no t imetable for onds left to lift Memphis over when Bosh — who averaged Minnesota. 21.1 points and 7 rebounds this Spurs 101, Suns 74: PHOEseason — is expected back at
NIX — Kawhi Leonard had 22
games, even if only home ones. points and 10 rebounds, and In Saturday's games: San Antonio dominated from H awks 93, Heat 91: M I - the opening tip in a rout of AMI — Paul Millsap scored 22 points, Dennis Schroder
Phoenix.
and intentionally depleted At-
scored 25 points and Thadde-
Nets 104, Mavericks 94: added 16 points and 10 assists DALLAS — Deron Williams lanta still had enough to beat us Young had 16 points and Miami. eight rebounds off the bench Knicks 103, Raptors 98: in Brooklyn's victory over NEWYORK — Tim Hardaway Dallas. Jr. scored 22 points, Langston Jazz 82, Bucks 75: SALT Galloway made a clinching LAKE CITY — Trey Burke 3-pointer and New York hand- had 23 points and six ased Toronto its season-high fifth sists to help Utah hold off straight loss. Milwaukee.
NBA SCOREBOARD Standings
Hawks 93, Heat91
All Times PST
EasternConference d-Atlanta
d-chicago
d-Toronto Cleveland Washington Milwaukee Miami Brooklyn Indiana Charlotte Boston Detroit Orlando Philadelphia NewYork
W L 47 12 37 22 37 22 37 23 34 26 32 27 25 33 24 33 24 34 23 33 23 33 23 36 19 41 13 45 12 46
WesternConference W L d-Golden state 45 u d-Memphis 42 16 Houston 40 18 d-Portland 38 19 LA. Clippers 38 21 Dallas 39 22 SanAntonio 36 23 Oklahoma City 32 27 NewOrleans 31 27 Phoenix 31 29 utah 23 35 Sacrame nto 20 36 Denver 20 38 LA. Lakers 16 41 Minnesota 13 45 d-divisionleader
Pst GB
797 627 10 627 10 617 t0'/r 567 13'lr 542 15 431 21'A 421 22 414 22ta 411 22'/r 411 22'lr 390 24 317 28'A 224 33'A 207 34'A
Pst GB 804 724 4 690 6
667 7ta 644 8'/r 639 8'lr 610 tota 542 14'A 534 15 517 16 397 23 357 25 345 26 281 29'A 224 33
Saturday'sGames
Bergeron and Brad Marchand each had a goal and an assist, helping Boston send
P ALM B E A C H GA R DENS, Fla. — Padraig Har-
112 loss to Portland. He will
ing him nuts." The team has not released any specifics about Bosh's condition, other than saying he had clots on a lung.
— Taurean Prince
fourth straight. 6 6: CINCINNATI — K r i s Dayton 59, No. 22 Virginia Jenkins hi t b a c k-to-back 3-pointers to start a late 17-7 run, and Villanova won its 10th straight.
Oklahoma City's Russell Westbrook had surgery Saturday to repair a fracture to his right cheeksuffered Friday night in a115miss at least a game. The Thunder said the surgery took place in Los Angeles, where they will play the Lakers today, and that Westbrook would be re-evaluated next week. Westbrook was hurt when teammateAndre Roberson's kneecrashed into Westbrook's face, leaving a noticeable imprint on his right cheek.
No. 19 Baylor 78, No. 20 West Virginia 66: WACO,
Wings beat Predators Harrington inunfamiliar for 2nd straight win spot with 3rd-roundlead Nashville 4-3 on Saturday.
The Miami Heat forward
was discharged Friday from a South Florida hospital where he was treated for blood clots on one of his lungs. Bosh was hospitalized for just over a week and will still be monitored closely, but simply being released is a major step on his road back to health.
Westdrook tomiss time after injury
for Louisville.
Southern California 70, Washington 55: LOS AN-
NHL ROUNDUP
The Associated Press
plete. He's home.
in New York two weeks ago,
The Associated Press
Kansas State 70, No. 12 of the worst teams in the lowa State 69: MANHATPac-12. TAN, Kan. — Wesley Iwundu capped a 22-9 run with Top 25 a two-handed slam to lift No. 1 Kentucky 84, No. 18 Kansas State. Arkansas 67: LEXINGTON, No. 14 Maryland 66, MichKy. — Andrew H a rrison igan 56: COLLEGE PARK, and Trey Lyles each scored Md. — Melo Trimble scored 18 points, and K entucky 19 points, and Maryland
mately we just told each other: 'This is for us. This is for the 12
MIAMI — Chris Bosh's first steptoward recovery iscom-
to get out of there. It was driv-
body," Gibson said.
Following the game, Weise wore Gibson's warmup jersey. "It was her senior day, and there were a lot of emotions. We knew if we won this game
The Associated Press
"That was his first goal,"
down the nets, and we didn't want to share it w it h a ny-
week's c onference t ournament in Seattle.
Heat's Boshreleasedfrom hospital, out indefinitely
Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. "He's been very anxious
Saturday's game against California guaranteed a share of the league's season champion-
D3
country: JOHANNESBURG — South Africa's Wallie Co-
etsee shot a 2-under 70 on Royal Johannesburg and Kensington's East Course to
round, and continue with the same pairings to play as take a two-stroke lead into much as possible. The tour- the final round of the Joburg nament now is t o end on Open. Coetsee had a 14-unMonday. der 201 total.
Washington 99, Detroit 95 Atlanta93, Miami91 NewYorkI03, Toronto 98 Memphist01, Minnesota97 Brooklyn104,Dalas 94 SanAntonio101,Phoenix 74 Utah82,Milwaukee75
Today'sGames LA. Clippers atChicago,10a.m. Cleveland atHouston, t2:30 p.m. Portlandat Sacramento, 3p.m. Charlotte atOrlando, 3t.m. Philadelphiaat Indiana,3 p.m. GoldenStateatBoston,3 p.m. Oklahoma City at LA. Lakers, 3:30p.m. NewOrleansatDenver, 5p.m. Msnday'sGames TorontoatPhiladelphia, 4p.m. PhoenixatMiami, 4:30p.m. GoldenStateatBrooklyn, 4:30p.m. LA. Clippers atMinnesota, 5p.m. NewOrleansatDallas, 5:30p.m.
Summaries
Wizards 99, Pistons 95 DETROIT (95) Prince 4401 8, Monroe8-155 621,Drummond 5-8 3-1013,Jackson4-120-0 9, Caldwel-Pope2-8 0-0 5, Meeks 3-7 0-18,Tolliver 3-80-09, Dittwiddie 8-14 3-3 20,C.BUtler 1-20-02, Wiliams0-10-0 0.
Totals 38-7911-2195. WASHINGTON (99) Pierce5120214, Nene8145621, Gortat7-12 2216, Wall8-146722,Beal2-10348, Temple1-2 0-2 3, Porter1-20-0 2, Goodett 4-80-0 9, Seraphitt 0-1 0-00,Sessions1-32-24. Totals37-7818-25 99. OetroII 27 17 26 25 — 95 Washington 37 23 20 19 — 99
Knicks103, Raptors 98
ATLANTA (93) Bazemore 6-101-215, Milsap8-154-522, Brand 3-71-2 7, Schroder5-145-6 16, Korver2-91-1 7, Jettkitts 4-61-1 12,Muscala2-61-1 5, Scott 4-51-2 9, Mack 07 000. Totals 3479152093.
MIAMI (91)
Deng 2-72-2 8,Walker3-16 2-2 10,Whiteside
6-8 2-214, e.oragic2-72-2 6, Wade9-17 4-4 22, Chalmers5-134-516, Beasley4-120-0 9, Haslem 1-1 4-46.Totals 32-8120-21 91. Atlanta 17 26 21 29 — 93 Miami 12 21 20 38 — 91
Griulies101, Timberwolves 97 MEMPHIS (I01)
Je.ereen3-5 6-713, Randolph3-I 1-t 7, Gasol 11-14 5-927, cottley5-13 5-5 17, Lee2-3 0-05, Allen 5-91-211, Kottfos2-2 0-04, Udrih 3-52-28, calathes2-3 0-14, Leuer2-31-2 5. Totals 38-64 21-29101.
MINNESOT A (97) Wiggins10-225-625, Garnett3-40-0 6, Pekovic 0-51-21, Rtibio 3-126-813, Martin 5-180-013, Dieng4-65-613, Payne2-7 0-0 4, Neal4-85-516, Lavine3-6e-06.Totals 34-8822-27 97. Memphis 18 30 24 29 — 101 Minnesota 24 22 24 27 — 97
Nets104, Mavericks 94 BROOKLYN (I04) Anderson 2-62-2I, Johnson6-130-015, Plttmlee 5-8 4-9 14,williams9-143-4 25, Brown2-5 c-0 5, Lopez3-7 1-27, Jack6-112-214, Bogdanovic O-t 1-2 1,Young7-121-216.Totals 40-7714-23104. DALlAS (94) Barea3-9 1-27, R.Jefferson2-7 0-0 5, Nowitzki 8-14 2-3 20,Rondo4-10 0-0 8, Ellis 4-163-3 12,
Stoudemir3-7 e 3-49, Aminu4-4 2-212, Harris 5-7 22 14, villanueva 28005, James0022 z Totals 35-82 15-1894.
Brooklyn Dallas
Spurs101, Suns74 SAN ANTO NIO(101) Leonard9-184-4 22,Duncan3-6 0-0 6, Splitter 4-5 0-2 8, Parker3-130-0 6, D.Green4-7 2-212, Ginobili1-4002, Diaw6140012, Mills31022 9, Baynes3-36-612, Belinelli 2-60-0 4,Ayres0-0 0-0 0, Joseph 2-5 I-I 5, Bonner 1-t 0-0 3. Totals 41-92 15-17101. PHOENIX (74) Tttcker1-72-25, Mark.Morris4-92-310,Len2-9 236, Bledsoe 3967 t2, Knight 06 1-2 t, GGreen 2-7 0-0 4,Wright0-3 3-4 3, Marc.uorris 7-142-2 19, Barron0-20-00, Goodwin2-70-05, Warren4-7 1-1 9,Thornton03000, Bullock 01 ce 0. Totals 25-84 19-24 74. Satt Atttonio
Phoenix
24 27 2 4 26 — 101 13 11 17 33 — 74
Jazz 82, Bucks75 MILWAUKEE (75) Antetokounmpo 4-5 0-08, lyasova4-13 3-412, Pachulia1-80-02,Carter-Wiliams6-104-416,Middleton8-160-0 18,Henson2-6 5-6 9, Bayless O-t 0-0 0, Mayo3-90-0 8, O'Bryattt 0-2 0-0 0, Plumlee 0-2 0-0 0,Enttis1-2 0-0 zTotals29-74I2-14 75.
UTAH(82)
Hayward 4-18 5-614, Favors7-112-216, Gobert 3-3 6-912,Exum0-3 0-00, Ingles1-30-0 2,Milsap 0-63-43, Burke8-192-223,Hood0-40-00,Booker 690012. Totals29-76182382. Milwaukee 18 22 15 20 — 75 utsh 26 21 11 24 — 82
TORONTO (98)
Leaders
lanciunas e-e4-6 16,vasquez5-130-0 t4, DeRozatt 3-15 7-813,Patterson4-7 0-0 10, Ross0-20-0 0, Williams 6-168922, Hansbrough011-21. Totals 34-81 22-2898. NEWYORK(103)
ThroughFriday Scoring G FG FT PTS AVG Harden,HOU 58 467 477 1564 27.0 westbrook,OKC 45 406 338 094 26.5 James,CLE 49 452 289 1274 26.0 Anthony,NYK 40 358 189 966 24.2 Davis,NOR 48 443 261 t148 23.9 Cousins,SAC 43 358 301 1018 23.7 Curry,GO L 55 450 224 1300 23.6 AldrIdge,PO R 50 455 227 062 23.2 Griffin, LAC 51 448 245 1149 2z5
J.Johnsott6-112-3 t4, A.Johnson4-80-0 8,va-
Early 2-105-e 9,Amttndsott 3-6 3-6 9, Bargnatti
6-12 e-719,HardawayJr 8-154-722, Gallowayr-5 0-06, Aldrich2-35-59, Smith1-40-02,Thomas3-8 2-2 8, Larkin2-5 0-0 4,Shved4-7 5-5 15.Totals 33-75 30-38103. Toronto 15 32 24 zr — 98 New York 22 28 25 28 — 103
D4
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2015
PREP WRESTLING:STATE CHAMPIONSHIPS
err oins a erason a By Grant Lucas
i nec am ions
The Redmond High sophomore ran up the score in the 145-pound final, posting a 16-4 major decision victory and preserving his first individual
The Bulletin
PORTLAND — David Kerr knows thereisno obstacle he
cannot overcome. That mindset might be etched next to his name in what he showcased at Veterans Memorial Coliseum on
points. "Greatest feeling I've
Saturday night. Trailing by three points
ever had. Nothing compares."
with less than five seconds to
emphasized. No longer will he be referred to as simply a
The past is just that, Willett
go in the Class 3A 106-pound final,Kerr recorded a takefall. The clock struck zero, and the La Pine sophomore and awarded Kerr those third and fourth points, and Kerr leaped
Joe Kline/The Bulletin
La Pine coach Dave Kerr hugs his son, David, after David won the 106-pound Class 3A championship match against Warrenton's Colton Walker on Saturday night at Memorial Coliseum in Portland. clock ticked down to five sec-
on ever — joining his father, onds and still behind 8-5, Kerr Dave, who won in 1989 and knew he had to act fast. He is now the La Pine wrestling
many as five points in the third and final period, recorded consecutive escapes. As the
195-pound semifinals apparentlyhad no effecton Jordan
Redmond's Willett wins 1st state title
Gentner.
entered the Class 5A state tour-
knew he had to throw his op-
nament asa freshman, and he
settled for a fourth-place finish at 138. A s the to p
s eed i n t h e
145-pound bracket, and facing off against district foe Grant
record this season.
"It just goes to show," Kerr said, "that if you work hard, you're going to get rewarded."
Leiphart of Summit on Satur-
day, Willett was not going to settle for anything.
Lava Bears place 11th with 56
Bulldogs
Culver's
Joshua
Continued from D1 "We're going to celebrate. We're going to celebrate like
Hendrix celebrates after winning his 285-pound state cham-
te: egllet eteteeeEeetu/
it's the first one.... Just make
sure every one (is) special and unique, so that you don't get
pionship match against Monroe's
stuck in that rut where it's not
fun anymore." This has been Culver's goal since the beginning of the season, said Clay McClure, the 160-pound champ. On the first day of practice, coaches asked the Bulldogs what they wanted out of this season. " Everybody across t h e board said they wanted to win
e
Ben Baker
in the consolation bracket, he
Marco Retano kicked off Culver's run to the team state championship, def e ating Oakridge's Joseph Fine 8-2 in the 126-pound final. The
f i f th-place match, in the 5A standings. Hermiston
however, Winebarger, a senior, daimed its eighth 5A title in capped his high school career nine years, with 161 points. with what he described as the
La Pine, which tied for 10th
most emotional victory in his life, securing a 10-4 win.
in the 3A standings with 57
son (160) and Gage Yeager onship," said Winebarger, who (220) as state placers. Nyswas sidelined for six weeks with a broken thumb and re-
Cowboys
victorywas made sweeter for the now two-time Culver state
champ, considering Retano
. 6qCeit ~: '
: tttt.< it
/
C rook
bested runner-up Henley
believe that the strenuous work he put himself through this season would pay off, to itsseasoned seniors,adeter- wrestle with the confidence by 161.5 points, powered to another team title, behind mined acrobatand a depth
that could not go unnoticed.
"I've had a great season. It's
first-round Class 4A state play-
A year after falling in the second consecutive and ca132-pound state final, Bates reer-capping state title with s t rong a gainst a 7-3 wln.
Girls basketball
McKenzie 45, Trinity Lut heran 33: FINN RO CK Tenth-seeded Trinity Luther-
E Boat/RV Show® in Redmond March 5-8, 2015 Bank of the Cascades Center and Deschutes Fair R Expo Center Show Hours
an came up short in the second round of the Class IA state quarter and 21-10 at halftime, playoffs. Katie Murphy scored Sisters made a point to come 14 points and grabbed eight out strong in the second half, rebounds, and Emily Eidler
Thursday & Friday • Noon - Bpm Saturday • 10am - Bpm Sunday • 10am - 4pm
coach Julianne Horner said.
Adults $10 • Juniors (6-16) $5
had 11 points and 11 rebounds in the loss. The Saints hit their
The Outlaws did just that, and they were especially effective stride late in the game, but they had to foul to conserve
they allowed only three points the clock. In the fourth quarter while Haylie Hudson scored 10 Trinity Lutheran came withof her 17 points.
in four points, but McKenzie
Sisters (11-13) outscored Phi- cemented its win at the freelomath 18-3 in the final frame
"It's insanely emotional," Libolt said. "I've been crying this whole time. I'm just hon-
ored to be a part of this team. It's amazing ... the best way
you could end. I'm so glad I could end with that."
Two other Cowboy seniors m u c h polished off their high school
motivation last year's run- wrestling careers in similar ner-up finish provided. "It's fashion. all I thought about all year. After two straight seasons It's all I ever think about. It's of placing second, Crook a dream come true.Since I
was a baby, it's everything I wanted. It means everything to me. Wrestling's my life."
County's Gunnar R o birts defeated Austin Mitchell of
Douglas 11-3 at 195 pounds to capture his first state title.
throw line.
Continued next page
Joe Kline/The Bulletin
The Class 4A champion Crook County Cowboys celebrate their state team title Saturday night at Memorial Coliseum in Portland.
'I i
CENTKRL OREOON
to secure the comebackvictory. "We c ontrolled the t h i rd
off road game next Saturday. Trailing 16-1 after the first
in the fourth quarter, when
m ate Kurt M ode, now o f Banks, as Libolt sealed a
I .I I ' -'
found itself down 15 points af- and fourth quarters offensiveter the first quarter Saturday ly," said Horner. "The team is night, but the Outlaws man- peaking at the right time." aged to leave Philomath High Also on Saturday: School with a four-point win girls basketball season. The Outlaws will play in a
former Crook County team-
senior Bulldog finished up a dominant run to the heavyweight state championship. Hendrix pinned Monroe's
Outlaws girlscomeback to win state play-in game
— 38-34 — and new life in the
final, and it came against
planned for some time.
PREP ROUNDUP
Si s t ers
Libolt did in the 126-pound
sitting on the podium in third place thinking t hat w a sn't
where they wanted to be," Alley said. "But we wouldn't have gotten ourselves a (firstplace) trophy if they hadn't Ben Baker in I minute, 34 sec- pulled themselves up by the onds in the final, earning Hen- bootstraps and got that done." drix the 285-pound crown, All of this added up to yet one he spent a total of 6:27 another 2A/I A t e a m s t ate over three matches to attain. championship for Culver. "It was abigpart of the year, "As you go on, you grow wanting tocome back and closer and closeras a team. win," Hendrix said. "I worked It just means that much more that capped a perfect run this Hendrix. my tail off last year and was every year," Hendrix said. season against 2A/IA compeLast season, Hendrix set- just really excited about com- "We're just a family." tition, which did not score a tled for a runner-up finish at ing back this year and doing — Reporter: 541-383-0307, single point on McClure. 285 pounds. On Saturday, the the best I could. glucas@bendbulletin.com.
—
that a victory is in order. That was exactly w h at
"We had several seniors
The Class 2A/1A champion Culver Bulldogs.
keeping his quest for four just topping on the cake," the alive, Retano, a sophomore, senior Bulldog said. "It's pretadded: "The only thing bigger ty meaningful. I'm going to than my title is the team title." remember this for the rest of McClure brought the Bull- my life. I think a lot of these d ogs closer t o t h a t t e a m younger guys look up to me championship, as the Culver ... and I think it gives them senior logged a 9-0 shutout of something to work for." Oakridge's Brody Edmunds at Yet it was the older wres160 pounds — McClure's third tlers who led the way for individual state crown, one Culver, including J oshua
PHILOMATH
Trayton Libolt's coaches
have long instructed him C o u nty, w h i c h to trust in hi s abilities, to
B ates, noting ho w
Culver's MacKyle Little was fourth at 195.
— Reporter: 541-383-0307, glucas@bendbulletin.com.
Continued from D1
prepare for what I think I need to do and just go out there and w a s th e
points.
The exclamation point
son long to get to this point. I wanted it so bad," said
1 70-pound runner-up f o r the Bulldogs, while Tucker Davis (138 pounds), Johnny Espeland (145) and Levi Vincent (152) each placed third.
sa took the 3A title with 185
turned to action just three weeks ago. "I know it wasn't
"I don't expect anything when I go into a match. I just
Kyle E asterly
' RETAYO /o . OLIUER4 e -.'cuLt/Etr '
points, boasted Tanner Han-
"This was my state champi-
Hayden B a te s had that celebratory backflip
do it."
match to settle for fourth place
dropped a three-point decision at 170 pounds for Summit, in the consolation semifinals. which took 16th with 42 points
"I worked hard all sea-
means a helluva lot."
recorded a fifth-place finish at
loss in Friday's quarterfinals 285. Jacob Thompson fell 2-1 in derailed him, and after a win a tiebreaker of the third-place
at Memorial Coliseum in Portland.
,,:> Hi
ship, state championship.' It
Bulletin staff report
brother Caleb took fifth in the
state champ. But a two-point
came out
ttt" ', ll
52 points, while his younger
two-time defending champ Conner Noonan of Henley before holding on for a 5-4 victory and the 138-pound state title for Crook County.
we repeated: 'State champion-
ond state crown was for him,
Mountain View's Winebarger places 5th
The backflip
Photos hy Joe Kline /The Bulletin
said. "And every day, coach asked us what our goal was for the season, and every day
plain it. It's freakin' awesome." As noteworthy as his sec-
at 106 pounds for Mountain View, which was 13th with
on Saturday
a state team title," McClure
fell to Fine in the district final a week earlier. "That makes it awesome," Retano said. "I can't even ex-
er at285.
In th e
The Bend High junior, who suffered the quick pin to eventual champion Sam Colbray of Hermiston, rebounded for a 7-0 decision in the consolation semis before pinning Lebanon's Arien Craggett in 3:40 to place third overall. "It's huge, really impressive," said Gentner, who helped the
Last season, Mitch Willett
coach. ponent and get on top of him "Unbelievable," an emotion- quickly. al David Kerr offered. "AmazHe did just that, recording ing. I can't believe it." a lightning-fast four points to With less than 20 seconds seal the title and a perfect 39-0 left, Kerr, who trailed by as
Bend's Gentner rebounds for 3rd-place finish A 33-second fall i n t h e
into the air as the second La Pine wrestling state champi-
finals and it didn't happen. But
Kaleb Winebarger was same weight class. state placer. He is now a state poised to make a run toward Matthew M cCain (132 champion. a state title as the 152-pound pounds) and Brennan Yates "Like I said," he echoed, "it's top seed, potentially to become (182) each took fourth for Redindescribable." Mountain V i ew's f i r st-ever mond, while Jacob Brauchler
down and a two-point near
stood on edge. The referee
year, too."
J oining Gentner on t h e I had to make that as best as I state crown. podium were Bend's Damar- could." "It's indescribable," said Wil- ea Dunnigan, who was fifth lett, whose team was seventh at 113, and the Bears' David Also ... in the final 5A scoring with 94 O'Connor, a sixth-place finishConner Duhn placed fourth
the LaPine record book after
Warrenton's Colton W alker
points. "This is one of my big- (a state final), but I had to go in ger accomplishments so far, thinking that. You go into this and I hope to do better next tournament hoping to be in the
Regular Price Admission
I
'I t
Children 5 ft under FREE
www.thesportshows.com
•
t
*CouponvalidforS3elf regularadultpriceadmission andvalidaii days.Maynotil combinedwith otherdiscounh. Saleofmuponis unlawful.
FIND EXPERT ADVICE & GREAT VALUES ON GEAR
Bl-NART SPORTSMEN'SSHOW BOOTH Get Ready for ~ Sea son...for Less gR ke~ m Lamiglas Kenai
Alaskan
Kwik Fishing Rod
Blade Trader
• Everyday Low 229.99 • Show price 179.00
• Everyday Low 39.97 • Show price 19.00
SAVE
SAVE
SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
PREP SCOREBOARD Wrestling OBAA state championships At Memorial Coliseum,Porlland Saturday's results Class6A Teamscores—Roseburg234, David Douglas 170, NorthMedford116, McMinnville 111,Glencoe 92, Sunset87, Sprague85, Century64.5. Barlow64, WestLinn59.5, ForestGrove54, Aloha50, McNary 45.5, Cleveland40,Gresham 39.5,Westview39,Jefferson36.5, New berg 35, Centennial 34, Clackam as 32,North Salem 32,SouthSalem 25.5,Sheldon24, Tigard20,West Salem19.5, GrantsPass19, Lincoln 19, Southridge17.5,Sherwood17, Canby16, Thurston 15,WestAlbany 14rBeaverton 13, Reynolds 11.5, SouthMedford11, Wilson11,LakeOswego7.5, OregonCity7,Tualatin 7, Roosevelt 6, McKay3,South Eugene1, Benson0,Franklin0,Madison0. ClassBA Teamscores—Hermiston161, Higsboro154.5, Sandy147.5,Churchill 145,Dallas141.5, Crater110, Redmond94,EaglePoint88.5,Central85,Lebanon 72, Bend 56, St. Helens54,MountainView52, Silverton 50,CrescentValey 49, Summit 42, Corvallis 40, Putnam 38, HoodRiver Valey 36.5, Liberty 36,South Albany14,Pendleton7.5, Parkrose6, Woodburn 6, Wilsonvige 4, Milwaukie3, Springfield1, Ashland0, NorthEugene0, Ridgeview0, TheDalles0. 106 — 1st, JaivenRodriguez,Hil, def. Zeth Brower,Cra,11-4. 3rd, BrawleyLamer, CV,def. Caleb Duhn, MV,5-4. 5th, CalebDuhn, MV,pins Jacob Whitehead, Sil, 1:45. 113 — 1st, PeytonBell, Hil, def. LiamTarvin, Herm,8-1. 3rd, NoahSickles, Dal, def. CadeEzell, Chu,11-4.5th, Dam area Dunnigan, Bend,pinsJosephWolf, Chu,3:59.120 —1st,Jake Ayers,Chu,def. Matt Peterson,Hil, 12-9.3rd, Andy Wagner,Herm,def. DonavanMorreg, San,5-1. 5th, NolanMiler, Dal,pinsJasonShaner, HRV,2:40.128 —1st,ZacWigzel, San,def.EthanWendell, Lib, 5-4. 3rd, AustinReed,Sil, def.BrodyDiazdeLeon, San, 11-7. 5th, HaidonAllen, StH,def. Samm y Chung, Dal, 5-1.132 —1st, MathewHofenbredl, Dal, def ChristianMarquez,HRV , 7-1. 3rd, KyleGrahn,San, def. MatthewMcCain, Red,8-4. 5th, MichaelBowen, StH, pins AJ.Tuia, Herm,559.138 — 1st,AlexRich, CV,pinsCoginSwinehart, Cen,:29.3rd,GabeBlough, Chu,def.TannerEarhart, Dal, 5-2. 5th, LoganMeek, Cra, maj. dec.LorenDenn, EP , 14-3. 145 — 1st, Mitchell Wigett,Red,MDover Grant Leiphart, Sum, 16-4. 3rd,NateWalters, Cra,maj.dec.BryanO'Neil, EP,10-2.5th,GabeSchade,Hil, def.Levi Rotzien, San, 15-10.162 — 1st, JamesMcCoy, EP,def. Gavin Carroll, Chu,1-0. 3rd, Garrett Riotzien,San,def. Jason Comer,Cra,2-1.5th, KalebWinebarger, MV,def. Treve Earhart, Dal,10-4.160 —1st, RileyJaramilo, Chu, MD over ColtonSalee, Leb,12-4. 3rd,C.J.McKinnis, San, def.Tomm yWinningham, Cra, 7-2. 5th, Brock McDonough ,Herm,def.JeffDunagan,Dal,5-2.170 — 1st, TannerSwinehart,Cen,def. BobColeman, Herm,3-2.3rd,Hunter Morse,Hil, def.JacobThompson, Sum, 2-1 (TB-1).5th, TysonJanssen,Dal, def. Ethan Pomeroy,EP,7-6.182 —1st, MylesTerry,StH, def. TJ.Cavender, Hil,3-3(UTB).3rd, CavinGilispie, Cra, def. Brennan Yates, Red,4-2. 5th, John-Henry Line, Herm, def.Wyatt Brink, Chu,9-6. 196 —1st, SamColbray,Herm,pins AlbertoMeza,Cen,3:56.3rd, Jordan Gentner, Bend,pins ArienCraggett, Leb,3:20. 5th, BlaineCloney,EP,def.RyanHewes,Cor,7-3.220 — 1st, JuanHernandez, Put,def. BenKociemba, Hil, 7-3.3r d,JesseWynn,Leb,def.CodyGubbels,Sil,4-1 (TB-1).5th,JeseeRodelo, Herm,def.JeffD'Auvergne, Put, forfeit.286 —1st, Andrewlademarco, Cor, def. MarlonTuipulotu,Cen,3-2 (UTB). 3rd, BlayneBurnett, Chu,def. LuiseRodriguez, Lib, 7-1. 5th,Jacob BrauchleRed, r, def. David O'Connor, Bend,3-1. Class 4A Team scores — CrookCounty327, Henley 165.5, Marshfield 124.5, Scappoose121.5, McLoughl in100.5,Cascade89,Banks84,SweetHome 74, Tigamook 61.5, Elmira61, NorthMarion 47, CottageGrove45,Gladstone42,Phoenix 39,Douglas 35, Hidden Valley 30, KlamathUnion 30, Sutherlin 30, Ontario29, Corbett28, La Grande 25, Newport 19, Mazama 16, Baker15, Molaga14, Philomath 14, Astoria12, Estacada10, Madras 10, Sisters7, Siuslaw7, Stayton6, North Bend5, NorthValley 3, SouthUm pqua2, Brookings-Harbor 0,Junction City 0, Yamnig-Carlton 0. 106 —1st, ColeSmith,Mar,def. ColeLohan, LG, 6-4. 3rd,MichaelBresser, Hen,pins Cole Morgan,CC, :48. 5th,IzaakGrubbs, Mar,def. CameronReeves,Til, 9-5. 113 —1st,Francisco Barrera, Ont,def.TerranLibolt, CC,8-3. 3rd,A.J. Lira, Mar,MDover KobeOlson, SH,13-3.5th,Ryder McKee,Mar,def. Pacer Quire, CC, 5-3 (SV-1). 120— 1st, JerryMealey,Cor, def.Justin Coon,Til, 3-1. 3rd,TylerCampbell, Mar,def. Logan Humphr ey,Cas,5-4.5th,BraxtonSue,Scap,pinsBryce Allen,CG,:53.126—1st, TraytonLibolt, CC,def. Kurt Mode,Ban,7-3. 3rd,TylerSchiling, SH,pins Quinton Hook,Hen,1:17.5th, Cade Hite, Mar,def. Casey Roberts, NM,3-0.132 —1st, CoginPurinton, Ban,TFover BlakeMcNag, Gla, 25-10, 5:05. 3rd,TreyShores, CC, def. TyrelMiler,SH,5-0. 5th, RichardOrndorff, Pho, def. Cedar King,Pho,4-3(TB-1). 138—1st, Hayden Bates,CC,def. Conner Noonan, Hen, 5-4. 3rd, Kyle Kintz,Gla,MDover EliGarrard, Dou,19-10. 5th, Trevor Thiessen, Ban,def. Patrick Wiliams,KU,4-2. 1461st, Lane Stigag, NM,MDover ColeOvens, CC,15-7. 3rd, A.J.Munoz,HV, def. Daine Taylor, Hen,7-2. 5th, Cole Skram stad, McL, def. Davin Nichols, Maz,5-0. 162 — 1st,Travis Wittlake,Mar,def. Cogbran Meeker, CC, 5-1.3rd,AlyxanderShaw,McL,def. Austin Tigery, Hen,9-2. 5th,BenGadbois, Scap,def.AlanBordeaux, CG, 3-2.160—1st, JefferyJones, McL,def.James Jones,Hen,5-3. 3rd,BrendanHarkey, CC,def. Andrew
Bordeaux,CG,7-2. 5th, NateBurkus, Phi, pinsJustin Knight,Pho,5;26.170— 1st, GaryJantzer,Hen, def. RyderShinkle,CC,6-3. 3rd, JohnathanTardif, Sca,MD overHaydenAubut, Hen,11-2. 5th, ChristianMata, Til, def. Vince Roff, McL, 9-7(SV-1). 182— 1st, Spencer Crawford,Cas,def.ClarkWoodward, CC,5-1. 3rd, ChaseAnderson, KU,TFover Hayes VanDeHey, Cas, 19-4.5th,CarsonRaymond, CC,pinsHayesVanDeHey, Cas,5:27.196— 1st, Gunnar Robirts, CC,MDover Austin Mitchell, Dou,11-3.3rd, MattEngholm,Elm, def. Tyson Broadbent,Sca,2-0.5th,DanielRegan, New,def. TraceVega, Pho, forfeit. 220 —1st,Trevor Rasmuss en,CC,pins Devin Ray, Sca,5:01. 3rd,Jacob Podolski,McL,def. MalachiGonzalez, Cas,6-3. 5th, JoshRaichl,Ast,def.Twister McComas, Ban, 4-3. 285 —1st,ZaneWardweg, Elm, pins ColtonWheeler,Sca, 1:26.3rd,Casey Cobeit, Suth,pins,Rosendo Moreno, McL, 3:48.5th,Zachary Smith, CC,def. JesseKing, HV,5-2.
Class3A Team scores —Nyssa185, Vale 164,Glide 159.5, Scio 122,Riverside108, Rainier 94.5, Willamina94.5, Harrisburg73.5, glinois Valley60, La Pine57,Warrenton 57,Jefferson56, Pleasant Hil 40, Gervais38,Sheridan37, Colton36, SantiamChristian 36, Lakeview 34,Coquile 24.5, CascadeChristian 23, Dayton19,RogueRiver17, Clatsakanie10, Creswell 5, De La Salle North Catholic 3, Taft3,Amity 2. 108 —1st, David Kerr, LP,def. ColtonWalker, War, 9-8. 3rd,AndrewDeleon,Nys,pinsRicardoFlores,Ger, 1:42. 5th,Garrett Lefebvre,Rai, def.RemyTapia-Bravo, Sher,5-3.113— 1st, Heath Hartley, Nys,def. Rogue Bergerson,War, 9-4. 3rd,JordanCombs,Wil, MDover IsaiahVazquez, Rai, 11-2. 5, JacobSobel, Jef, def. Jorge Juica,Vale,74.120 —1st,JusticeLarson, Rai, def. AristotleRockwel, Riv,7-5.3rd,JoseRayo-Landa, Vale, def.Justin Davison,Har,9-5. 5th, Esiel Clark, Nys, def.CalebPrater, Har,4-1. 128— 1st, Michael Reyes,Wil, MDover ElijahConlon, Riv,14-2. 3rd,EmmettEarlywine,Rai,def.LukeVale, CC,9-7. 5th, Kody Courtright, Coq,def. RylandParazoo, Gli, 7-2.132 —1st, HansRockwell, pins EricMiler, IV,1:45. 3rd, JustusArlandson,Jef, def. CristobalRojas, Cla, 8-3. 5th, Mack Crandall, LV,pinsBradyJarret, Coq,3:21. 138 —1st, JustinAcuff, She,pinsJavier Gonzalez, Vale,3:21.3rd,JimPray, PH,pins Devin Sheldon, Gli, 2:52. 5th,BrysonBegior, Gli, def.EnriqueMenchaca, Nys, 8-6 (SV-1).146 — 1st, ShaneBearden, Har, def. DevinFreeman, Gli, 8-6. 3rd, JoseLopez,Nys, def. JoshuaBongiorno,Nys,6-5.5th,MichaelSuppa, War,pinsStevenHedlund, LV,5:02. 182— 1st, LaneCummings,Vale, pinsLoganMiler, IV,3:16.3rd, TrevorLefebvre,Rai,def. NikitaKalugin, Ger,7-6.5th, WyattMcCarthy,Coq,def.Austin Zeiher,Scio,16-10. 160 — 1st,Austin Howard, Wilr def.DylanPotter, Gli, 7-2. 3rd,CharlieGilpin, Col,pinsLoganUsher, Rai, :53. 5th,DennisCook,Scio,pinsTannerHanson,LP, 5:00.170—1st, AlexHolland, Gli,pinsGarretDeVos, Vale,3:28.3rd,Tanner Butler, SC,pins JoseCandelas, Nys,4;54.5th,Gerardo Mendez,Nys,def.Anthony Johnson, Scio,9-2. 182— 1st, Bily Montano,Jef, pins AveryMcDaniel, Scio,1:21.3rd,WiliamBeard, Gli, pinsBrennanMoody, RR , 3:12.5th, TraceCummings,Vale,pinsTyler Clark, Day,:56. 198 —1st, SageDelong,Vale,pins Dilon Robison,Scio, 1:35. 3rd, KevinBeard, Gli, def,JesseHegar, Riv, 6-4. 5th, PhoeniWa x lker, Wil, def. JakeNelson, IV,forfeit. 220 —1st, JustinParazoo, Scio, def.BrandonSundquist, Nys,8-4.3rd,NoahCasarez,PH,def.ScottGermany, Col, injury,3:25.5th,TommyBennet, Har,pinsGage Yeager,LP,3;25. 286—1st, Osiris Tapia, Nys,def. Kye Yraguen,Vale, 3-2 (TB-1). 3rd, JacobYruegas, Nys, pinsJamesChristianson, Scio, 3:43.5th,Brian Mendoza, Riv, def.DrenHils, SC,forfeit.
Nordic skiing OHSNO state championships At Mt. Bachelor BkiArea
Boys Final teamscores (top3) —Summit 23,Bend 45, HoodRiver Valley48. BK ClassicRace Individuals (top 10) —1. CaseyShannon, Sum,16:13.9.2.ZebMilslagle, Sum,16:29.3. TheodoreWidmer,B,1656.0.4. Damo nIraggi, 8,17;46.4. 5. DanielFisher,HRV,17:49.6.6. Samuel Schoderbek, Sum,17:52.0. 7. ClaytonAas, Red,17:55.0. 8. Jesse Wiley,HRV , 18:03.3. 9. MathewFinney-Jordet, B, 18:20.3.10.LeifBergstrom,HRV,18:21.8. Other Central Oregonplacers — 11.Joseph
•
•
•
•
i
•
Schwarz,B,18:37.8.13. IanChurchill, B, 18:48.2.14. RemingtonWiliams, Red,18:55.2. 16.Matt Hecker, Sum,19:35.7.17.TristanFischer, Sum,19:40.4. 45.
Treyson Conley, Red,22:52.2.62. JordanPollard, Sis, 26:35.6.70.EzraRost, Red,29:31.2.
Wed, 3/4 Lm 12:00pm vs. SAN DIEGO Thurs, 3/5 @12:00pm vs. SAN DIEGO Mon, 3/9 @1:00pm vs. CLEVELAND Wed, 3/11@1:00pm vs.COLORADO Fri, 3/13 @1:00pm vs. MILWAUKEE Sun, 3/15 O 1:00pm vs. LA DODGERS Wed, 3/18 @1:00pm vs. OAKLAND
Girls Final teamscores(top3) —Summit 23,Bend 37, HoodRiverValley62. BK ClassicRace Individual (top 10) —1, Emily Hyde,Sum, 18:02.4. 2.AlexandraHeisler, Sum,20:23.0. 3. Valerie Fischer,HRV , 20:32.9. 4. SienaBrody-Heine, B, 20:54.1.5.RebeccaChristensen, Sum,20:59.1.6. Sadie AnnGorman, Sum, 21:06.7.7. GemmaMunck, B, 21:11.1. 8.OliviaColton, 8, 21:11.8.9. AshleyBruce, 8,21:177.10.ElizabethMcKnight,8,22106. Other Central Oregon placers — 14.Meri Smiley,Sum,22:26.0. 17.KaileyFineran, Ridgeview, 23:21.1. 23. ShaylaCurtis, Sis, 24:40.8. 29.Maya Wieland, Sis, 25:55.0. 30. MorganWiliams, B, 26:11.1.48.SerenaSalisbury, Sis,29:28.2.49.Emmaline Fievet,Sum,29:34.0. 55. Engraci Diez,Sis, 31:00.8.57.RebekahDevelter, Redmond, 32:00.2. 60. Marissa Young,Sis, 32:46.7.
Boys basketball Class 3A playoffs Round 1 Saturday'sGame No. 6BlanchetCatholic 80,No.11 PortlandAdventist 69
Girls basketball Class4A State play-in
Sisters 38, Philomath 34 Sisters (38) —Haylie Hudson17, Mann9, Stewart 5, Horner4, Moore2, Arruda1. Totals 12 13-26 38. Philomath(34) —Molly Klipfel 8, BrennaMarshall 8, Davis 7,Ecker7,Grimer2, K. Marshall 2. Totals14 6-1834. Sisters 1 9 10 18 — 38 Philomath 16 5 10 3 — 34 Three-point goals — Sisters: Horner;Philomath: None. Class 3Aplayoffs Round1 Saturday'sGames No.16Ranier46, No.1PleasantHil 37 No. 2Vale70,No.15SantiamChristian 41 No. 3Dayton53,No.14 Colton38 No.4Salem Academy48,No.13Glide39 No. 5Amity57,No. 12Umatila 52 No. 7PortlandAdventist 44,No.10Creswell 34 No. 8St. Mary's, Medford44, No.9Scio 34 No.11 PortlandChristian61, No.6Lakeview53
Thurs, 3/19 © 7:00pm vs. CLEVELAND Sun, 3/22@1:00pm vs. TEXAS Wed, 3/25 @ 7:00pm vs. CHICAGO CUBS Thurs, 3/26 L5 1:00pm vs. KANSAS CITY Set,3/28 @ 1:00pm vs. SAN FRANSISCO
Class2A/1A Team scores—Culver147.5,Loweg127, Monroe98,GolfBeach73,Crane69,Dakridge48,Heppner39,Burns38.5, Central Linn36,Elgin 32,Knappa 27, MyrtlePoint26,Wagowa24,Riddle23,Union22, PineEagle18,Chiloquin14, GrantUnion14, Nestucca Class 2A playoffs 14, NorthLake9, Imbler8, Reedsport 7, Bonanza4, Crow 3,Neah-Kah-Nie 3, Joseph2, Oakland 2, Siletz Round 1 Valley1, Adrian0, Glendale0, HosannaChristian 0, Saturday'sGames Vernonia0. No.1 Western Mennonite 64,No.16City Christian43 106 — 1st, RyanSmith, Hep,MDover Justin No. 2Kennedy64, No.15 GoldBeach36 Doyle, Mon,13-4. 3rd,MikeDay,CL,pins Taylor No.3Vernonia55,No.14Weston-McEwen45 Bright,GB,4:58. 113—1st, DerrickHargraves,Rid, No. 4Union76,No.1 Bonanza13 def. Blake Butler, PE,5-1. 3rd, DallonHiggins, Bur,TF No. 5Monroe37,No.12Grant Union33 overWyattWaldronr NL,18-1, 2:28.120—1st, Aar- No. 6Burns55, No.11 FaithBible42 on Blanchard,CL,pins WesTurner,GB,3:50.3rd, Clay No. 8MyrtlePoint42, No.9Lost River37 Johnson ,GU,pinsKyleBateman,Mon,1:48.126No.10Regis26, No.7Pilot Rock23 1st, MarcoRetano, Cul, def.JosephFine, Dak,8-2. 3rd, TJ.Lilly, GB,pinsDamian Hernandez, Elg,3:02. Class1A playoffs 132 —1st,JoshuaConnor, Low,def. DustinRamge, Round 2 Cra, 5-1.3rd, KalebBalard, Mon,def. TrevorFullerSaturday'sGames ton, MP,4-3.138 — 1st,JakeClark,Cra,pinsJustyn No.1Damas cusChristian 63, No.16 Lowell 29 Bart on,Low,4:42.3rd,TuckerDavis,Cul,pinsRyan No. 2NorthDouglas58, No.15Sherman27 Leslie,Nes,:16.146—1st, Tielar Murray,Mon,def. No. 3Country Christian 76,No.14Portland Lutheran25 RockyLily, GB,8-6. 3rd,JohnnyEspeland, Cul, def. No.4 Cond onIWheele53, r No.13Powder Valley37 ElijahEpling, Cra,8-3. 162—1st, ThomasHarvey, No. 5Chiloquin68,No.12CamasValley40 Low,pinsCaleEdmunds, Dak,5:15. 3rd, LeviVincent, No.11 Elkton57,No.6Crane56,OT Cul, MD over Austin Roath, Cra, 12-4.180 — 1st, No. 7McKenzie 45,No.10Trinity Lutheran33 Clay McClure,Cul, MDover Brody Edmunds, Dak, No. 9Adrian60,No.8 Echo 39 9-0. 3rd,HaydenTrimble,Low,def.JaydonMcKay, Elg, 8-6.170 —1st, Garrett Blackburn,Bur,def.Kyle Easterly,Cul,7-4.3rd, KennyLane,Low, MDover Jor- MCKOIIZie45, Trinity Lutheran33 dan Vermilion,Elg,10-1.182—1st, Tanner Harvey, TrinityLutheran(33) —KatieMurphy14,Eidler Low,pinsChadWitty, Uni, 3:46.3rd, SamWilliams, M.Murphy4.Totals1110-1233. Cra, pinsAndrewGooze, Kna, 3:23.196 —1st, Mi- 11,Cowan4, McKenzie(48) —BuggyHiddleston18, Totten cah Fuller,Wal,pinsThoma s Keeler, GB,3:06. 3rd, Nathan Truax,Kna,pins MacKyle Little, Cul,3:10.220 10, Smith9, Hayes4, Glynn2, Ringler2. Totals 16 — 1st, Joseph Bagard, Mon,pinsSamuel Thurman, 11-19 48. 7 8 12 — 3 3 Low,4; 57.3rd,JaredChamley,MP,pinsTaylorTandy, T rinityLutheran 6 Imb,1:37.286—1st, JoshuaHendrix, Cul,pinsBen McKenzie 4 13 8 20 — 46 Baker,Mon,1:34.3rd,JohnPropheter, Hep,pins Da- Three-poingoal t s—Trinity Lutheran;Eidler; McKenvid Morris,Chi,4:42. zie: Hiddleston, Smith.
Sun, 3/29 © 1:00pm vs. SAN DIEGO
Mon, 3/30 © 1:00pm vs. LA ANGELS
From previous page In the ensuing match, at 220
"It's not about the
and in a rematch of last season's championship final, the Cowboys' Trevor Rasmussen pinned Scappoose's Devin Ray
records. It's justing coming here and reaching your
in 5 minutes, 1 second for a second straight title.
individual goal. All
"All the blood, sweat and
tears I put into both of these
(championships), you can't count 'em," Rasmussen said. "It's a great feeling, and it's way different from last year, definitely."
The arsenal
our Cowboys are just wrestling their hearts out. That's all that matters."
been with the last fouryears."
Wed, 4/1 © 1:00pm
Thelegacy
vs. WHITE SOX Fri, 4/3 O 7:00pm vs.COLORADO
The Cowboys rang up their third straight Class 4A team
championship. And though no staterecords were set, there
was no taking away from what Crook County accomplished, including the 327 points it piled up this weekend, which ranks second only to the 405.5 points
the Cowboys scored here in 2014. "What we did was amazing," Trevor Rasmussen Rasmussen said oflast season's — Crook County's
Of the 20 wrestlers Crook
the Cowboys, while Cole Mor-
County brought to Portland,
gan took fourth at 106. Carson
15 went on to place, including Raymond and Zach Smith the four champions and five finished fifth at 182 and 285, runners-up — Terran Libolt respectively, and Pacer Quire at 113 pounds, Cole Ovens at was sixth at 113. "This team, my brothers that 145, Collbran Meeker at 152, Ryder Shinkle at 170 and Clark I get to go to war with every Woodward at 182. day, it's a once-in-a-lifetime Not only that, Trey Shores group of young men," Ras(132 pounds) and Brendan Har- mussen gushed. "There's not key (160) each placed third for another group I'd want to have
points record. "Even if it does get beat down the road, we'll still know how much work we
put in to get that record." "It's not about the records," Libolt conceded. "It's just com-
ing here and reaching your individual goal. All our Cowboys are just wrestling their hearts out. That's all that matters." — Reporter: 541-383-0307, glucas@berzdbulletirz.com. x
OHSNO 8
Continued from D1 Hood River Valley finished third in the girls competition
with 62 points. After decisive victories in
Friday's freestyle race, Summit's Emily Hyde and Casey Shannon defended their 2014
,!Iiil
individual titles by winning their classic races Saturday. Hyde crossed the line at 18
minutes,2.4 seconds, more than two minutes before her
II
17
Gene Hyde I Submitted photo
teammate Alexandra Heisler,
Summit won the Oregon High School Nordic skiing champion-
who finished second.
ships held at Mt. Bachelor ski area Friday and Saturday.
Shannon won with a time
of 16:13.9, enjoying a much smaller lead over f ellow who trailed by just 16 seconds The individual title was the Storm skier Zeb Millslagle, to finish in second place. fourth straight for Hyde.
ri /'rl
II
I
D5
D6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2015
Pace of play Contlnued from D1 Consider the package of initiatives announced last week
by Major League Baseball that is designed to pick up the pace of play by trying, among other line items, to keep dallying hitters in the batter's box. A pitch
clock could be next. Consider the NBA's preseason experiment in
O c tober
with 11-minute quarters and a 44-minute game instead of its usual 12-minute quarters
and a 48-minutegame. Or golfs ongoing fight against slow play. Or look at FIFA's adoption of vanishing spray at last year's World Cup; one of its biggest selling points was how quickly it did away with much of the interminable stall-
er intro and proper ending to during that window. What football does ofaddress their needs, what we dow," Lima said. "Today, lots of fer along with cultural heft need to see more of, and what I things are around two hours. is plenty of those bite-sized think alot of properties are do- Most films and movies are two bursts of action, along with ing, is looking at the different hours. More than that, I think, ample time for replays, social platforms, the second-screen and we are challenging peo- media commentary and trips experience, and looking at ple's patience today, because to the kitchen for more chips content in smaller bites that with all the new media and and dip. "The NFL is t h ree hours are ultimately going to drive all the content that exists right people back to their core now, it's very difficult to keep long, but when there is a play, pr'oduct. people's attention." it's a quick pace," said George ently and consume content differently," Kristick said. "To
That, at least, is the hope.
While the digital world already seems overstocked with images of touchdowns, dunks and goalkeepinggaffes,some sportsand federations remain late to the approach and the
technology. Volleyball is among them, e ven though i t
w a s o nce
ahead of the curve. In 1998, it became one of the first of the global sports to adjust its for-
ing and haggling before free kicks. mat when it altered its scoring "The longer the ball is in system to allow teams to score play, the more entertainment pointsafter every exchange value for the fans," said Jeff instead of only when serving. Agoos, the former U.S. na- The change was an attempt tional team player who is now to make match lengths shortvice president for competition er — and more predictable for for Major League Soccer. "So television. we've done some analysis on Fernando Lima, a Brazilian not only how often the ball and former TV Globo execuis in play but how we can im- tive who recently became the proveand increasetheamount first secretary-general of the of time the ball is in play." International Volleyball FedThe league's next objec- eration, said more change was tives'? Strict enforcement of
the six-second limit on a goalkeeper's handling the ball and cutting down on the dead time before goal kicks and corner kicks. "I think all sports constantly
the match in a two-hour win-
than alter his deliberate ways. Golf, faced with declining youth participation in many markets, has made pace of play a major focus, both for
BBC last year when asked about the plummeting partici-
pation rates in England. Tennis, too, has tried to enforce time limits between
the weekend duffers and the
points in the past two seasons professionals. Public courses even while it is faced with the and tour events all track play-
i nherent challenge that it i s
ers' progress — either through officials or emerging technologies — and a Japanese player was even penalized a stroke at Two hours certainly works Pye, a former president of IMG the 2013 British Open, infuriwell for the world's most pop- Sports an d E n t ertainment ating his playing partner and ular game: soccer. "I think who now runs the investment other pros. that's a huge advantage for us," firm Bruin Sports Capital. The USGA grew so con"But I think with the younger cerned about the problem in Agoos said. It also works for Formula demographic in social media, 2013 that it mounted a "CaddyOne, the globe's most popular the pace of play is probably shack"-inspired ad campaign racing series. weighted more than the length poking fun at it, hoping humor might drive home a point that B ut the paradox from a of game." Baseball intends to address on-course marshals could not. North American perspective "Everything's s o in s t ant is that the undisputed king both despite initial resistance of televised sports remains from stars like David Ortiz, now, and everyone doesn't football, where games rou- the Boston Red Sox slugger have as much time as they tinely exceed three hours and who told reporters last week used to," Rory McIlroy, the feature very little actual play that he would risk fines rather world No. 1 golfer, told the
a sport with no set time limit: A men's singles match at a Grand Slam can last little
more than an hour, or, in the record case of John Isner and Nicolas Mahut at Wimbledon
in 2010, extend to 11 hours and 5 minutes over three days.
The Fast4 format, begun by Tennis Australia this year, is an attempt to provide a modern alternative: a p o tential
way to stay relevant in a landscape featuring ever more diversions.
"Evenwhen Icame up in the '70s, there were starting to be
a lot of options," McEnroe said. "Now it's 10 or 20 times more."
I
NO
I
VALUE
vital.
"We haveto adapt the way we break down the sport," he
said in a telephone interview from Lausanne, Switzerland. "In American football, you
have to be looking at format, particularly pace," said John Kristick, the global chief executive of the sports consultancy
create a lot of value for touchdowns, or in baseball a lot of value for home runs. Volleyball has never really created this basic unit, because it's a
GroupM ESP. "I think the real-
sport where on average the
g
4"~
game has 180 ralliesper ity is that there's a lot of sports m en's with tradition and history that limit what in fact they can do.
match. "But within those 180, we
a situation where suddenly the matches are no longer 90 min-
ly exceptional that would correspond to a touchdown or a
I don't see soccer ever going to have four or six that are real-
M
IW 'I
utes, but clearly pace is some- home run. So now we are going to try to bring this vision to the audience. The long rallies MLB is doing, it's certainly the are really the great moments right area to be focusing on." in volleyball, and we have Such measures look cos- been using them and promotmetic compared with more ing them on social media." radical changes such as crickLima said that v olleyball et's successful adoption of the was also focused on its pace Twenty20 format. A comple- of play, particularly the time
*
thing easier to address. And I think when you look at what
mentary 21st-century version
I •
between serves, which he said grown to 25 seconds because
HEAD 8 HORNS
q000+
bration and commiseration be"We estimated that just with
"They put their heads together and found a way," Kri-
the embracing by the players, we are adding around half
stick said. "For me, that's a
an hour to the duration of the
step change, and that certainly is going to speak to a wider and newer audience and, by default, a younger audience. I honestly don't know if baseball reducing a few minutes here or there will address
match," he said. "Half an hour without anything happening.
youth issues without address-
the average tim e b etween serves to 15 seconds and thus
ing the bigger challenges." But then reaching youth is not just about streamlining the product. It is about break-
reducethe average length ofa match from about two hours to about one hour 45 minutes: an
Qllehrll ~
~ B ACK BY POPVlAR DFNAND g ll'
I I e
e
I
'
e
II
COUPONat participating BaxterAuto
television broadcasts.
shared on social media. "Really, the issue with youth
"Right now, two hours of playing time does not allow
is they consume sports differ-
for a broadcaster to do a prop-
FREE KIDS' oosoredby mpgy ppgp sp
FRESH WATERDENO TANK SEMINAR SERIES Bl'IMART
" "' ~
~r
Boating seminars
ing up the main meal into bite- ideal window, in his view, for size portions that can be easily
THE OFFICIAL CRAFT BEER
SPORTSMEN'S LOUNGE
RED THEATER sp m~ XXam~
Parls stores, Les SchwabTire Centers, Bi-Mart stores or by using your Fred Meyer Rewards card. Discounts may not be
Bl MA R T
4 f C'0$ l l
HHIIINIK$ GERBER 12 II under, all gear provided
NEEKDAY D/SCOUNT
1 ( 1l
Hunting and fishing seminars
H KXHR f i t RKQII I , I '
*
BLUEE GREEN THEATERS
You could win valuable prizes from
Our problem is that unless the
fans enjoy watching players embracing each other, that doesn't help the game." He said the goal was to cut
Mt
CONPETITION
even as the longer, traditional tween points. Over 180 rallies, versions of cricket continue to those seconds add up. be contested.
•
&ecfiNeyIL'CANP COOKING SEMINARS
THEBEST OF THE WEST
hours instead of multiple days. of the players' increasing tenIt has radically altered the per- dency to commune for celeception of the slow-paced sport
I
Boat/RV Sale
of the game, it was begun in used to average about 10 sec2003 and allows matches to onds in men's matches but had be completed in about three
I
mtansnm
SHOW HOURS
ADMISSION'
Thurs-Fri .......12 noon — 8 p.m Saturday ........ 10 a.m.—8 p.m Sunday...........10 a.m.-4 p.m
Adults................................. $10
FREE PARKING!
Children 5 & under...........FREE
nfa asepet
2-day pass ........................$15 Juniors (6-16) ......................$5
cC44~/
'cmdit cards welcome.$1ree will be charged per tnrnsaction.
/
I
MOTOR SPORTS ROUNDUP
;Qi
Stolen NASCAR car found abandonedbut unharmed
~
'
l
h
•
~
,
•
t
The Associated Press
Presented by
HAMPTON, Ga. — The No. 44 racecar returned to its N ASCAR shop in North Carolina
S EL C O
CONMIINITT CEEOIT UNION
SELCQ
Presented by
on Saturday after it was recovered alonga remote road in
•
• •
I
•
I'
suburban Atlanta, apparently
•I'
'
I
'
•
•
•
'
CONNUNITT CiEOIT UNION
I
•
I I
• •
I
' •
I'
abandoned by the thieves who
• I'
I
'
•
•
'
•
I
I I
s tole it f rom a
NeXt uP
ho telparkinglot.
I
While the dis-
Sprint Cup, p,tlanta
covery d i d n't occur in nearly enough time for Team XTREME t o compete i n
TV:Fox Ralio: K RCO 690-AM, 96.9-FM
o
Las Vegas. In Saturday's races: Harvick wins Xfinity race: K evin H a r vick
t u r ne d i n
another dominating
o
•
I I '
tl
•
BOATS 8 RVs
I
'I
3 99%AI R.
l l • •
I
I
IFVOU PRE-QUALIFY" FORABOATOR RV LOANWITH SELCO.
as lowas
o
•
I I
•
.
•
$
•
Visit your local branch.
I
•
hlcle was found early Saturday
Mot or S peed-morning. The car was taken way, i t w a s a from a hotel In Morrow, Georhuge boost for gla, on Frlday morning. the small-budget operation in its
bid to make the next event at
I '
I
FREE
•
ADNISSI0III
Team Xtreme via Tha Associated Press
this weekend's The stolen No. 44 NASCAR verace at Atlanta
' '
s II '
•
Harvick has won the Atlanta race in NASCAR's second-tier
series three years in a row and four times overall. Crafton gets trucks win: Matt
p e r- Crafton took over the lead on formance at A t lanta M otor lap 59 and led the final 72 laps Speedway, holding off Day- to win the NASCAR Truck tona 500 winner Joey Loga- Series race at Atlanta Motor no in the Xfinity Series race. Speedway.
SHOflVHOVRS
ADNISSION
SHOIYHOVRS
Thurs-Fri......12noon-sp.m. Adults.............................$10 Saturday.......10a.m.-8 p.m. 2-day pass ....................$15 Sunday.......... 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Juniors (6-16) ..................$5
FREE PARKIN61
ADNISSION
Thurs-Fri ......12 noon -8 p.m. Adults.............................$10
Saturday ....... 10 a.m.-8 p.m. 2-day pass ....................$15 Sunday.......... 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Juniors (6-16) ..................$5
Children 5 & under.......FREE
FREE PARKING1
cnditcardswelcome.$1fee wil be chargedper tnrnsaction.
Children 5 & under.......FREE creitcards welcome. $1fee wil be chargedper tnrnsacb'on.
|IualifiedborrowersDnlyllembershiprequirementsapplyRangeDfrates399%-1724%ApRbasedDncreditqualifications, repaymentpeiiod, Rv/boatage,laantovalue, automa ticpaymentsandeStatementenrollment.Otherrestiictionsmayapply.Offersubjecttochangeatanytime,withoutnotice.SeeSELCOfordetails. I
I
'r
r
I I
I
I
I
I
I I
I
r
I
I
'
I
I I
® eIgg I
@
March 2015 Weekly Hotline • NaturalGrocers.com
,I
1I(
)
3TUR~A~
Justin's'
1'
'ce"
gc&~gggS
Peanut Butter Jars A l mond Butter Jars
h„
e
s e I
•
/
e
e
/
rfer rth •
I
I •
•
I
•
e
]
•
e
h
•
•
•
• I
NuGo Dark'
Lundberg'
rtlett
Dark Chocolate Protein Bars
Organic Whole Grain Quinoa Blends or Rice Mixes
USDA
• I
@ $0 10 grams of protein in each of these gluten free, vegan bars!
%HQLK GRAIN
INM RICP
Pefii , rfi
i
o
IISIIA
Solaray
4
1,P'ELL RIN©
• • •
•
• I
Milk Ihistle Extract 175 rng
Do
'pSSr-Shc
D ' ~ := . = . = -
. 4. As .
N
Cr
-
,
~ % ' r '„ .
.
„I 4
4
II5ljIIIS
I
,)kv i ~t ri I
I e
%HQILGRAIN rx
g!cK,'4 DIETAay/SDPPLEMENO
i Uilh Thisir'
EEE 50NCE,EANRusoaaotsaa
4
I
•
Lirl~ l lm ii 1samaeNA~ r adt~llNEIM vaa
•
• I
Simply Organic'
h orm o n e s o r a nti b i o t i c s i n ou r m e a t s
P 0% SELECT @Fir I T E M S
Parkling
AEPteral Irir t GlamBottl
99e 8
I
Milk thistle promotes healthy liver function, in part by neutralizing harmful free radicals that are produced when the liver breaks down toxic substances.*
DO
s a IIE
el
8
Amy's'
Alexia'
Select Pizzas
Select Frozen Potatoes
o EM.IRTECEPiV,
With so many cheesy, tasty varieties, it's hard to choose just one.
We've got just the right spud for every occasion.
Almond Flour
4
4
4
'i
I /
•
•
f •
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
.' ~I) I 7, 7,'Ag •
•
•
organic
D
tp' IISOA ~
I
L
j ' ssa
fries
Natural Factors'
e
•
•
s
•
+n
OsteoMove Joint Care
/
s
., gr
•
•
OsteoMove. EXTRA STRENGTH
Joint Gne
Earth Friendly'
Mamma Chia'
Clffcoramine, Chondroltln 0 jjfgt AdvancedFormulation
Dishmate Soaps
Organic Chia Vitality Beverages
I • I
120 Tabhts
A joint support blend complete with collagen, hyaluronic acid,and compounds that support a healthy inflammatory response.*
•
•
IISIIA nongmoproiect.org
Powerful hand dish
washing soaps that are tough on grease but not yourhands.
Full of heart and brain-healthy omega-3s, powerful antioxidants and dietary fibers, as well as complete protein, calcium and magnesium *
s
'4 1 ' 1"
SI TIIII
IS
APPLEGATE Ol"gBQlCS
•
INITIJRKFY~ CHICKiH 8REAST
•
All items are available while supplies last. Offers end April 11, 2015
NATURAL ISROCERS
gd~
r l -J) ~ 5~ I
'Theseslatemantshave notbeenevalusl edbyIheFDA.Theseproduds
Ne not intendedlodiegnose,heet, cure, or prwent anydisemm.
Gluten and casein free cold cuts for that perfect sandwich or salad.
~elect p«ganic hced Turkey or Chicken Bremt
«
SUS.
J XD
1his periodical is intended to present information we fed is valuable to our customers. Artides are in no way to be used as a prescription for any specific person or condition; consult a qualified health practitioner for advice. These artides are either original artides written for our use by doctors and experts in the fidd of nutrition, or are reprinted by permission from reputable sources. Artides may be excerpted due to this newsletter's editorial space limitations. Pricing and availability may vary by store location. All prices and offers are subject to change. Not responsible for typographic or photographic errors.
tutcrtaaa
EOAfs se ye
"Ihsss statemsatshaveaot bese evatuatsdbythe PDA. Thssepradacmme eot iateedsd lo4agaose.treat.care,orprevsataar diseea
~R~S E JJR~A~LJ O Rg4C~' 2 ~~ NJANTZU
ti'ition
Life-Flo' Pure Argan Oil
Pure cold-pressed oils to rejuvenate and replenish
© Jack Challem
QIL
~
OIL
a
~
Fish Oil Supplements Reduce the
l
It
Risk of Prostate Cancer TAMANUQl
4g4gy uaca
Mineral Fusion' Lengthening Mascara All natural mascara, nonirritating formula that defines and conditions lashes while
supporting lash health.
•I
found that the consumption of omega-3 fish oils (EPA 4 DHA) reduces a woman's risk of developingbreast cancer.
An incredibly nourishing and nutrient-dense food, bone broth is suddenly in vogue among the health conscious masses, and there's good reason why. Discover the many health benefits of bone broth and explore vadous techniques for making different types of broths, from a simple chicken broth to clear consomme, with a variety of broth-based recipes for breakfast, lunch, and dinner.
, g.1'-s+IlIy~
•
•
cr<'~o TII Q
•
Natural Factors' Ultra Strength RxOmega-3Factors 900 mg
~
s'
ACIDOPHILUS • Helps tosuppcut microaorabalance"
EMIQ 50 mg
*
inflammatory response in the body.
s
s
s •
•
s
Enginsrlc •
I
ioactive Querceth
'99
•
Amazing Grass'
EMIQ II'RMESGREATERAasoaprllt THAN QUERCERN
60 Vegetarian Capsules
Select Green Superfood
rc-
SAVE 3
SAVEs2
Trace Minerals Research'
Get your daily dose of greens with added antioxidant support from goji and acai berries!*
•
•
•
Babyd Me
Collagen with Ceramides
A whole food prenatal vitamin that provides all the basic nutrients to support a growing baby and a healthy mother.*
Magnesium is involved in more than 300 chemical reactions that keep the body working properly. Supplement daily with this easy-to-take liquid.*
n Superfood
I
Reserveage'
•
Select
6tr yeap E 0 Apa20s
MegaFood'
Mega-Mag 400 mg
cNow Berror ruui
ew Finer Grind
EOApaadpg
Protect and replenish your skin's collagen and protective lipid banier with Collagen Hydra Protect.*
sssuuauvvos
<eseryeage. oraaaics gap
Sl~ToM fteshFidmFarm rsraJJJI
ssuase
Baby8Me "
*csiha
c
t',ERAMIDES==
Nounsh • Gantle • Sa$9'
e.aaE
fssasssa cssellnbsginslsr ~ hisslslsrtuselrs' Prmstuttuitlguusn
lss I.I
snasrpurs™
12 s
AR items are avaaable whlle suppaea last. ORara end Apra 11, 2015
tadoinusislsnh! unsslhssrrls slln'
a I
'lhsss slslsmsnbSss nslbeensvslsslseb r tas Fua These psescbus nslblsnese lsSisansss beat oss, crpsvsnlanyasssss
•
•
•
•
SAVE s3
0 reqon
Bend 3188 North Highway 97 Bend • 541-617-0200
Isckamss 11424 SE 82nd Ave Happy Valley o503-659-0100
Corvallis 1235 NW 10th Street Corvallis • 541-758-0200
Gresham 407 Northwest Burnside Road Gresham o503-465-0130
Eugene 201 Coburg Road Eugene • 541-345-3300
Salem 4250 Commercial St SE Salem o503-588-1600
Medford 1990 North Pacific Highway Medford • 541-245-0100
I
•
Bioactive
Querceftn g~~Q
Ieg
SAVEs3
• A
•
This bioflavonoid helps stabilize the cells that release histamine, the substance that causes allergy symptoms like sneezing and itchy eyes. *
A comprehensive blend of vitamins, minerals, amino acids, and other nutrients to support thyroid function and metabolism. *
•
ta 0
Bioactive Quercetin
150 Enteric CoatedSoftgels • • c
O ispports digestive hsatthss
Metabolic Advantage 'Ihyroid Formula
The omega-3 fats support a healthy
Good health starts with a healthy gut. Probiotics like acidophilus support a healthy balance of bacteria in the intestinal tract.*
Natural Factors'
Enzymatic 'Iherapy'
IhOmega-3Factotr,
Reference: Zheng JS, Hu XJ, Zhao YM, et al. Intake of Esh and marine n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids and risk ofbreast cancer: meta-analysis of data fmm 21 independent prospective cohort studies. BMJ,2013;366: doi 10.1136/bmi.f3706
02uTTtry"
'12>6
~a v sas
Ultra Strength
Li and his colleagues also examined the relationship between plant sources of alphalinolenic acid — the "parent" molecule of the omega-3s EPA and DHA — but they found no significant reduction in breast cancer risk.
Cartiaod Otutau-Fma
o
c
Duo Li, PhD, of Zheijiang University, China, and his colleagues analyzed data from the studies and determined that diets high in fish oils were associated with a 14 percent lower risk ofbreast cancer. When they looked at studies that measured blood levels of omega3s, they found virtually the same reduction in diseaserisk. The researchers calculated that each 100 mg of dietary omega-3s was related to a 5 percent reduction in the risk of breast cancer.
Acidophilus with Pectin • DAIRY-FREE •
0•
•
Country Life'
Mrrshing Broth
I
u
•
oil, with a recommended daily intake of 400 mg. Men who consumed fish oils (liquids or capsules) in later life had a 57 percent lower risk of advanced prostate cancer.
The most common types of fish consumed were cod and haddock,which are low in the omega3s EPA and DHA. However, many of the men also consumed fish oils, particularly cod liver
900 mg
u
u
u
A carefullyconducted study of fishand fi sh oil consumption in I c eland has found that eating salted or smoked fish increased the Torfadottir and her colleagues added: "High risk of prostate cancer, whereas taking fish oil intake of salted or smoked fish was associated with a two-fold increased risk of advanced supplements reduced the risk of the disease. prostate cancer both in early life and in later Johanna E. Torfadottir, PhD, of the University life." Reference Torfadottir JP Valdimarsdottir UA, Mucci LA, et at Consumption of Ssh of Iceland, Reykjavik, and he r c o lleagues pmducts acrossthe lifespan and pmstate cancerrisk PLoS One,2013;8:c59799. studied2,268 men, ages 67-96 years, of whom 410 had been diagnosed with prostate cancer. High Intake of Omega-3 Fish Oils The researchers asked the subjects to complete Lowers the Risk of Breast Cancer a food-frequency questionnaire to assess their eating habits in early life, midlife, and later An analysis of 21 studies, which included years. more than 1.2 mi llion participants, has
~re Rosehtp SeedOit
Pure
Pharmaceutical Grade FishOil
•
ROSEHIP SEEDOIL
sns
Pure «gcart Oft
u
u
the skin.
pfhsflpN"
pUFJE
•
eo er
Pure Rosehip
Pure Tamanu Oil
u
Spectrum Essentials' Decadent Blend Chia 6 Flax Seed with Coconut 6 Cocoa
This blend of ground chia and flax seeds has added coconut and fair trade cocoa powder for a delicious and nutritional addition to smoothies, oatmeal, baked goods, and more!*
Washington
NOW
L-'Iheanine
200 mg
An amino acid found naturally in green tea, L-theanine promotes relaxation without drowsiness.*
Vancouver 7604 NE 5th Ave; Ste 100 Vancouver • 360-694-1300
Beaverton 12155 SW Broadway St Beaverton • 503-520-9100
®
o u e t r en
• hll 200 mg
a s
9
60 Veg Capsules A nistsrr aspplssrsst
nrvss
SAVEs3 •
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
d-vsutft
Get the Health Hotline® in your inbox.
Visit NaturalGrocers.com to Sign Up!
All items are available while supplies last. Offers end April 11, 2015
'Insss sntcmun nss sn been sslssnd Sv IheFOA Thesepsacn ss Isl IllnsCNI lsCsvstss, usl, css, spsvul sllgdcsss
•
gr mssu
Market Recap, E4-5 Sunday Driver, E6
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2015
Companies turn down
'SharkTank' deals,still prosper By Joyce M. Rosenberg The Associated Press
COU
e wi
Si nSO l n i n ue
FO
SI
Tank" investor. But after theyhad time to think about
it, they changed their minds.
sel'vlces
prove profitable By Tim Barker St. Louis Post-Dispatch
ST. LOUIS — A little-known St. Louis-area
University ofOregonCentral OregonBusiness Index NATIONAL RECESSION
NEWYORK — Withthe
cameras rolling, Daniel and Stephanie Rensing accepted an offer from a"Shark
Prison
4TH QUARTER 2014
140
company has turned prisons into a business oppor-
NATIONAL RECESSION
tunity — and it's done so
130
by providing services that critics say come at too stiff aprice. The 40-year-old Keefe Group is one of the larger players in a cottage industry thatprovides inmates with everything from food
120
and condiments to music
Hihst: 2 6 2
Annual revenue for their
company, The Smart Baker, is close to $1 million, up from $130,000before their March 2012 appearance on
players andphone service. It handles deposits to pris-
the ABC reality TV show.
"Not doing the deal and havingthat exposure was probably the best scenario
oner accounts and runs an
operation that allows family and friends an easy way to send approved — as in containing no contraband
110 .
for us," says Daniel Rens-
ing,CEO oftheRoddedge, Florida, company which sells aprons, parchment
paper and otherbaking equipment.
or potential weapons-
care packages. Companies such as
100 2009'-
Keefe, which won a contract lastyear with the
iti '
Dreams of investor mon-
eyhave inducedmore than 150,000 businesses to apply to be on "Shark Tank,"
where entrepreneurs pitch to cast members including
Barbara Corcoran, founder of a prominent New York real estate brokerage; Day-
Missouri Department of Corrections, offer prisons artei3412 i 341234 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2'34 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4
'97 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
tt 1IL- 4 4.
M k
Source: University of Oregon College of Arts and Sciences and Department of Economics
Greg Cross I The Bulletin
dothing company FUBU; By Joseph Dltzler • The Bulletin
and Robert Herjavec, found-
er of the technology conglomerate Herjavec Group. Entrepreneurs may be
@ON 8g
not a precipitous one, either.
gotiations start soon after episodes are taped. Contes-
The index slid to 124.8 in the final quarter, down from the
tants can walk away if they don't like the terms.
revised 125.1 the previous quarter. The index, which is pegged
"When we shake hands on a potential deal on
to a 1998 benchmark of 100, was up 3.5 percent over fourth
'Shark Tank,' the romance runs high and everyone's
quarter 2013.
excited about what could
end, the entrepreneur is in
charge." During the first five seasons, 374 contestants ap-
peared on TV and investors made 190offers, according to ABC. Forty-eight contestants turned down offers
during taping, executive producer Clay Newbill says. Theyhaven't trackedhow
many deals fell apart during negotiations.
The producers ask entrepreneurs and investors to make their best efforts to
dose deals, Newbill says. "But we understand, just as in the real world, the realityis that not all deals will
he Central Oregon Business Index dipped in the last three months of 2014, not an unexpected decline and
deals aren't set in stone. Ne-
be," Corcoran says. "In the
Editor's note: The Bulletin has partnered with the University
and state economies." C ontinued impro v e-
Baker, and a 5 percent sales royalty, during the 2011 taping. During negotiations, the Rensings disagreed
pleasures of the outside world and, more importantly, a way to stay in touch But critics see the companies as profiteers, making money off the family and friends of a captive dientele. "They find so many ways to milkthese people for everypenny they can," said Michael Campbell, assistant professor of criminology at the University of Missouri-St. Louis. "You
are talking about people who are extremely poor." Clearly, that's an obser-
vation not shared by Keefe. "You've got a very high cost of doing business," said Jim Theiss, chief execuKeefe's parent holding company. "I can assure you we believe in providing a value." The company, now with $1billion in annual reve-
of Oregon's College
market an d
of Arts and Sciences and Department of Economics to produce the Central Oregon Business Index. The index provides a regular snapshot
dipped, but so did unemploymentclaimsinCentraloregon, ' ~ ' according to University of Oregon economist Tim Duy, who Duy compiles the data for the index.
that the quarter-to-quarter dip "is at- place when the unemployment rate
a small St. Louis firm that
of theregion's economy using
tributabletosomeexpecteddeclines r e aches 6 percent. The unemployin a few indicators" that experienced m ent rate in Oregon in December
economic models consistent with national standards. The index, exclusive to The Bulletin, appears quarterly in the Sunday Business section.
rapid gains earlier in the year. But, stood at 6.7 percent; in Deschutes
sold coffee to hotels around the country. It was purchased in 1974 by the Taylor family of Enterprise Rent-
t o u rism s ector l,i,
f,
'
ment also implies stronger growt h i n w ages, so far a missing element in t h e
broad e r labor market, he said Wednesday. Duy said
In a quarterly analysis, Duy wrote h e expects real wage growth to take
the winter slowdown does not pres- C o unty at 7.6 percent, according age "a fundamental change in the t o t h e O r egon Employment De-
nue, got its start in 1963 as
the Jack Keefe Coffee Bar,
underlying economy," he wrote.
part m ent. Unemployment rates in
A-Car fame. That was just two years before a Florida
"The recovery in Central Oregon remainsintact,"Duywrote."Expect
C r ook and Jefferson counties stood a t 1 0 .5 percent and 9.2 percent,
prison sent the company down its current path when
continued improvement on the back respectively. of ongoing growth in the national
it started buying the same SeeCOBI /E3
Second thoughts Corcoran offered $75,000
offer inmates a few of the
tive of the Centric Group,
Indicators in the housing
dose," he says.
for 40percent of The Smart
a way to be more than just rooms with cages. They
with society.
m ond John, founder ofthe
all smiles whenthey get an offer on the show, but the
.
"The recoveryin Central Oregon remains intact. Expect continued improvement on the back of ongoing growth in the national and state economies." — Timothy Duy, University of Oregon economist
with Corcoran about the
target market. SeeShark Tank/E5
single-s ervecoffeepacks Keefe sold to hotels. Seeing an opportunity, the company expanded rapidly into the corrections market, developing a series of packaged drink mixes and other commissary offerings. It quiddy proved adept at modifying popular foods for prison consumption.
See Prison/E5
rea in new ieino ownown a an By George Avaios
"It reminds me of San Fran-
The Oahland Tribune
cisco," said Alex Rota, a San
OAKLAND, Calif. — Boarded-up windows in the wake of street demonstrations have
Jose resident who works at a
become a familiar sight in
meal here yet." Oakland, with new leader-
downtown Oakland, but busi-
ness and civic leaders can tout a new set of images to define the city's urban heart: a grow-
ing crop of tech company offices, crowds for lunch and an emerging art and dining hub. Gone is the 8 to 5, Mon-
day-through-Friday downtown Oakland of the past,
when sunset triggered the door locks. Now, the downtown bustles after dark, and
game developer in downtown Oakland. "Ihaven'thad abad
supplement police, whose ranks have been cut because of the city's financial problems. Plenty of vacancy signs still hang from apartment
opment, an active developer in
windows and storefronts.
plan thatbegan in 1999under Oakland's mayor at the time,
City officials are still trying to woo big employers. And
ship, an influx of residents and businesses, and popular draws the current flash of interest in is starting to come into its own. Oakland — thanks in part to "I see real traction in what
is happening in downtown Oakland," Mayor Libby
priced-out residents from San Francisco — could diminish
with the next economic down-
Schaaf said in an interview with the Oakland Tribune just
turn or crime surge. But the shift in fortunes
before she took the reins from Jean Quan in January. Still, private guards and uniformed "security ambassadors" are stationed at key
for this city of 400,000 — and especially the downtown — is significant. "There is no question down-
a younger, hipper crowd has joined the mix, bringing ener- corners because of continugy, money and jobs to the area. ing issues with crime and to
town has turned the corner," said Michael Ghielmetti,
president of Signature Devel-
downtown Oakland.
The surge in downtown Oakland has its roots in an initiative known as the 10K
I
Jerry Brown. Now California's
governor, Brownbelieved that having people live downtown in the city's urban core would
bringlife to an area thatmost folks vacated at the end of their workday. One part of the plan was a development that forced out a Sears parking lot and auto center to make room for new
iillI
fII:
r
l; 'fv
0
• iaca -y •
or"t s
apartmentbuildings and condos. Similar revitalization with
housing, retail and office space has poppedup in nearby areas. See Oakland /E3
Ray Chavex/ Bay Area News Group
Withan influx of tech companies, dining establishments and a
growing art scene, downtownOakland is slowly moving awayfrom a time when the city streets were bare at night.
E2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2015
B USI1VESS
E1 V D AR
deschuteslibrary.org. Build Your Business Website with WordPress, Intermediate: Learn Free Tax Preparation Sessions: basicHTML and CSS, how to m ake Offered by the AARP Foundation customizations to your WordPress Tax-Aide and United Way of site and how to best protect your Deschutes County, walk-ins site from spammers, hackers available; free; noon-5 p.m.; and malware. Class runs through Downtown Bend Public Library, March 11; $179, registration 601 NW Wall St.; 541-323-8482 required; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon or www.cashoregon.org/taxprep. Community College, 2600 NW html. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270 or www.cocc.edu/continuinged. MONDAY Exit Career Night: Learn about the real estate profession; free; Social Services: Sarah Kelley is 6 p.m.; Exit Realty Bend, 354 NE available for one-on-one sessions Greenwood Ave., Suite 100; 541480-8835 or soarwithexit@gmail. to answer questions and provide community assistance for housing, com. mental health support, benefits and more. North tutor room; TUESDAY free; 10 a.m.-noon; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Employment Supervision: This Wall St.; 541-728-1022 or www. two-day seminar will include an
TODAY
Email events at least 10days before publication date to business®bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0323.
overview of at-will employment and its exceptions, wage and hour laws, civil rights protections, leave laws such as OFLA and FMLA, documenting performance issues and hiring and termination; $260 per person, two to five people $245 each, six or more $235 each; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Shilo Inn Suites Hotel, 3105 O.B. Riley Road, Bend; 971673-0824 or www.oregon.gov/boli. Computers for Beginners: This basic class is designed for those with very little or no computer experience. Practice mouse skills, scrolling and other basic tasks; free, registration required; 2-3 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; 541-6177085 or www.deschuteslibrary.
or'g.
BREW Networking Group Open House: BREW (Bend Referrals Every Week) is hosting an Open
House for those interested in building their business through word-of-mouth marketing; free; 5-6 p.m.; DoubleTree by Hilton Hotel Bend, 300 NW Franklin Ave; 541-408-5186. SCORE free business counseling: SCORE business counselors conduct free 30-minute oneon-one conferences with local entrepreneurs; check in at the library desk on the second floor; 5:30-7 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.;
www.scorecentraloregon.org.
3O Modeling with SketchUp II: Learn the strengths of using SandboxMode to model organic and complex objects, plot custom animation paths and install and configure third party lighting and rendering engines. Prerequisite: SketchUp I class. Class runs through March 17;
$79, registration required; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270 or www.cocc. edu/continuinged. Photeshop,Beginning on Macs CS6: Transform photographs with Photoshop CS5.5, the industry standard for manipulating digital photographs for Web production and for print. Class runs through March 10; $99, registration required; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Redmond campus, 2030 SE College Loop, Redmond; 541-383-7270 or www.
Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; 541-617-7080 or
www.scorecentraloregon.org.
SCORE free business workshop: Maximizing your marketing investment; free, registration required; 5:30-7:30 p.m.;
Business Startup Class: Cover the basics in this two-hour class and decide if running a business is for you; $29, registration required; 6-8 p.m.; COCCChandler Building, 1027 NW Trenton Ave., Bend; 541383-7290 or www.cocc.edu/sbdc. Project Management Fundamentals: Become an indispensable member of your project team by discovering and mastering the critical concepts you need to initiate, plan, execute, monitor, control, and close any type and any size of project. Class runs through May 6; $225, registration required; 6-8:30 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270 or www.cocc. edu/continuinged.
3-5, Lot 45, $337,000 • Robert G. and CarolJ. Patrick to J. HowardandDeborahA. Finck, HorseshoeAcres, Lot1, Block1, $649,000 • Oregon Conference Adventist Churches toTheFellowship at Bend, Township17, Range12,Section 23, $870,000 • Robert L. and Betty J. Wortheyto Charles M.Warnock, Deschutes River Woods, Lot27,BlockW W,$169,000 • Cambria R. andBarry Johnson to Paul SheehanandJennifer Baran, trustees of the Jennifer Baran &PaulSheehan Living Trust, Northwest Crossing Phases 9and10, Lot 459, $599,900 • Federal National Mortgage Association toTemujin A.andJulia L. Hicks, Township18, Range12,Section 17, $219,260 • Hayden Homes LLCto Preecha Tingakrau andNaruemonStephen, Megan ParkPhase1, Lot 8,$250,674 • Ralph J. Affatati to Charles P. Keegan, Pine TreeMeadowsPhase2, Lot 55, $190,000 • Pamela L. Seidel, trustee of the Pamela L.SeidelRevocable Living Trust, to CaraP.Townsend and Ruthanne I.Chazen, ParkAddition to Bend, Lot8and 9, Block27, $585,000 • Robert G. and Harriett 0. Heisey to Patricia Clark, Aspen Vilage at Mountain High, Lot23, $319,900 • Cushman Construction Inc. to Gary K. and Catherine M.Craven, Tetherow Phase 2,Lot40, $1,275,000 •Michael D.andSusan L.W estbeld to Patricia A.Kearney,trustee of the Patricia A. KearneyTrust, Carolyn F. Wall, trustee ofthe Carolyn F.Wall Trust, Jeffrey J. andJaniceLiming, trustees of the Jeff & JanLiming Living Trust, Starr Ranch, Lot 9,Block1, $223,000 • Choice OneBuilders LLCto Daniel J. Munoz, ChaseVilage, Lot14, $283,375 •James R.andJudithL.Mackey, trusteesofthe James R.&Judith L. Mackey FamilyTrust, to Richard C.and DonnaL.Stockton,SageMeadow,Lot 17, Block 5,$672,000 • Dennis N. Heater to RealTrust IRA Alternatives LLC, Wiestoria, Lot15,
Block15, $188,500 • Douglas F.andSonia M.Smith to Beverly J. andKarrie Meglitsch, ProvidencePhase5, Lot 22, Block 6, $333,000 •SFICascadeHighlandsLLCto Dwight A. Dudley IIandToni M. Dudley, Tetherow Phase1,Lot 74,$224,400 • William R. and Barbara G.Warner, trustees of theWilliam R. &Barbara G. WarnerFamilyTrust, to D.Michael and Pamela S.McKenna,Golf Course Homesite Section10th Addition, Lot 142, $455,000 • Charles E. andLynette A. Field, trustees of the CompleteRestatement of the Charles E. 8 Lynette A. Field Family Trust, to Nair Alamo-Hecht, Aspen Winds Phase1, Lot 9, $210,000 • Rick A. and Melody A. Russell to Bryan Ballreich, trustee of the Bryan Ballreich RevocableTrust, Deschutes River Recreation Homesites Unit 9 Part 2, Lot 85, Block 53, $530,000 • Patrick J. and Loretta E. Murphy to Carole M. Ekker,Township 20, Range 20, Section 29, $264,000 •HaydenHomes LLCto Kelly H. Sullins and Walter A. Sullins IV, Megan Park Phase1, Lot18, $178,370 •Pahli schHomesInc.toJamesE.and Barbara L. Hamlin, Stonegate P.U.D. Phase 1, Lot 78, $412,500 • A. Michael Gould andArthea J. Carr-Gould to Greg B.Daleand Anne B. Christmas, Township15, Range10, Section 26, $530,000 •JamesM.and MayaH.Gauvreauto Congress Center LLC,Kenwood, Lot 12 and13, Block1, $215,000 • Rebecca andEric Beaudin to Gerald A. Jayne andMerry Gourley, Awbrey GlenHomesitesPhase5,Lot84, $651,500 • 1843 NE 3rdCommercial LLC to Steven and LindaCalavan, Riverside, Lot 7, Block18, $299,900 • Holly E. Hesseto Connie J. and Anthony C.Parris andAlexander Parris, Goldenrain, Lot4, Block1, $243,000 •ShawnM.CadytoKathleen M.and Michael T. Love,First Addition to River Forest Acres, Lot 6, Block 4, $152,500
cocc.edu/ continuinged.
WEDNESDAY
DEEDS Oeschutes County • Sharon L. Nicholson to Lynn Kingrey, Skyline Ridge, Lot 4, Block 2, $172,000 • Deutsche Bank National Trust Company to Pacific Sky Northwest LLC, Mountain Village East1, Lot18, Block10, $190,000 • Donald L and Harriett J. Hamblin to Joshua K. andMarisa K.Bourdage, Westbrook Village Phase1, Lot12, $290,000 • William E. andBrendaE. Peck, trustees of the Bill & BrendaPeck Family RevocableTrust, to Cynthia R. Hardie, trustee of the W.Richard & Cynthia R. Hardie Living Trust, Bluffs at River BendPhase1, Lot10, $315,000 • Robert E. and Loriann Tadevicto Timothy and Kelly Taylor, Highland Addition, Lot18, Block 5, $420,000 • Lori K. Licht to Michael W. and Christina C.Jacobs, Starwood, Lot 6, Block 3, $206,000 • Elisa M. Felgen and Courtney Remund to PeterandJennifer Kelley, Providence Phase 6,Lot12, Block4, $229,000 • Brian S. and RandaM.Faivre, who acquired title as Randa M.Mirbaha, to Julie Hackney,CanalView Phases2 and 3, Lot14, $295,000 • Todd C. andRoberta A. Johnson, trustees of theTodd C.Johnson Revocable Trust and trustees of the Roberta A. JohnsonRevocable Trust, to Firehall 201 LLC,Firehall Condominiums, Unit 201 andParking Space P-6, $359,000 • Kenneth J. McCumber III and JanK. McCumber, trustees of the McCumber Trust, to Brad M.and Lorraine K. Kittredge, BrokenTopPhase3-C, Lot 353, $672,500 • Michael J. Tennantto Bethany C. Penhall, Northwest Crossing Phases9 and 10, Lot 437,$469,900 • Alan N. Stewart to Jo A. Jeffers, trustee of the Harold & Jo A.Jeffers Trust, Railway Addition, Lot 55 and56, $121,949.23 •W estBend PropertyCompanyLLC to Guy D.and Maureen C.Farris, Northwest Crossing Phase24, Lot
909, $306,000 • Mark F. andVirginia L. Offield to Kimberley A. Scott, Edge 0' the Pines Addition, Lot13, Block5, along with Covey Run,Tract A, $245,000 • Brook S. Poggi to Yvonne Peterson, Promise Lane, Lot6, $235,000 • Lois J. French, trustee of the Lois J. French Living Trust, to KarenSinclair and Alan H. Miller, High Pointe Phase 2, Lot 37, $244,000 • Deutsche BankNational Trust Companyto Kevin D.and Catherine A. Winslow, OregonWater Wonderland Unit 2, Lot 3, Block 22, $170,000 • Diana Bozarth to Jason A. Mendell, Deschutes River Woods, Lot4, Block KK, $210,000 • Kathy J. Kennerlyto Nancy J. Lochmann, trustee of the NancyJ. LochmannTrust,and StephanieL. Parker, trustee of the Stephanie L. Parker Trust, Westerly Subdivision, Lot 8, $257,000 • Douglas S. andJodi L. Smith to Donald G.Emmerich andGwynn Villegas, Fairway Crest Village Phase 4, Lot 22, Block 30, $485,000 • Paul Daumit, doing business as P.D. Construction, to David I. Koff, Northwest Crossing Phases20-22, Lot 841, $499,900 • Hayden HomesLLCto Zehn A. and Renee I. Staten, LawsonCrossing, Lot 4, $160,452 • Federal National Mortgage Association to William R.and Elizabeth A. Dougan,OregonWater Wonderland Unit 2, Lot15, Block23, $164,900 • H. Kevin and Stephanie Jordan to Gary L. andChristine J. Jewell, Township17, Range12, Section 2, $650,000 • Bruce L. and Sharie R. Peasley to Eric Tockstein, OregonWater Wonderland Unit 2, Lot13, Block35, $182,000 • Steven R. andMary C.Oester, trustees of the Oester Family Trust, to Cheryl Lynn, Bradetich Park, Lot 4, Block 2, $449,900 • JS Contracting Inc. and Stacey Sonne to WhyBecause LLC,Parkway
The Seattle Times
of the Michael D. &AnnLyonJoint Revocable Trust, BrokenTop Phase 2-C, Lot 131, $1,075,000 • Margie L. Dawson to Braden Harrison andJacqueline CooperHarrison, Township18, Range12, Section 3, $228,000 • Darrellene L. Myers and Patrick Carter, trustees of the Glenbrook R. Trust, to Debuki Properties LLC, Rivers EdgeVillage Phase1, Lot13-15, $249,900 • Monica T. Heynekerto Gary A. and Priscilla R. Duval, Shevlin Reserve, Lot 3, $499,000 • Ken Marks to Angela M. Drake, Tamarack ParkEast Phase7, Lot16, Block 9, $277,500 • Leisure Properties LLCto Mike Vannett, Fairhaven Phase 4, Lot 3, $432,000 • David and Peggy Halkola to Anthony R. and Annette F.Gilbertson and Sara C. Derenia, Stonehedge onRim Phase 4, Lot 2, $213,500 • Doreen C. Blome', trustee of the Doreen Blome' Revocable Living Trust, to Wilmington Trust, trustee to Citibank, First Addition to BendPark, Lot 20 and 21,Block102, $208,000 • Larry D. Kineto Robert Husel, Partition Plat 2014-25, Parcel1, $200,000 • Kent J. and Cathy L. Wilson to Thomas H. Klodin, Partition Plat 20019, Parcel 2, $320,000 • Jeffery S. Moore to KenL. Marks, Don Carlos Acres, Lot 8, $300,000 • Larry D. Kine to Robert and Beverly Graber, WoodRiver Village, Lot3, Block 2, $150,000 • Hayden HomesLLCto Kari A. and Trevor J. Lindsay, MeganPark Phase 1, Lot 20, $216,956 • DeannaR.Smithto Joshua D.Love, Obsidian Meadows, Lot11, $165,000 • Pacwest II LLCto Mercedes Nibler, Sundance Meadows, Lot11, $249,947 • Melisa M. Weishaupt to Timothy M. and Kacie L. Ryan,Riverrim P.U.D. Phase1, Lot13, $257,000 • Bradley J. Overlund to Matthew D. and Michelle 0. Catanzaro andBarbara Catanzaro McGill, Desert Skies Phases
ott e nature's o smre, se scents
Inie e By Tyrone Beason
Village Phases1-3, Lot 66, $195,000 • Pahlisch Homes Inc. to Brian J. Ladd, 8th Street Cottages, Lot 4, $239,838 • Thomas C. andVirginia Gilliard to Tim A. andNatalie L. Page,Wiestoria, Lot 12, Block 34, $201,000 • Kenneth N. andBilie J. Thomason to Jayne A.Scarcella, Township14, Range12, Section 36, $200,000 • John Pickles to John C.Sanborn, First Addition to Aubrey Heights, Lot 11-14, Block18, $799,900 • Hayden HomesLLCto Peter K. and Debra L. Barrett, Village Meadows, Lot 24, $315,000 • Caldera Springs RealEstate LLC to David F.andMichelle J. Cribbs, Caldera Springs Phase 2,Lot 247, $167,500 • Curtis J. and Shelby J. Utton to Scott C. andAmy R. Rowles, East Villa SecondAddition, Lot 4, Block 6, $325,000 • Elizabeth A. andGlennJ. Akins to Theodore M. andStephanie L. Church, Partition Plat 2008-43, Parcel 2, $173,000 • Beryl N. and Louise D. Rupp, trustees of the Beryl N. & Louise D. Rupp RevocableTrust, to Kathryn A. Miller, Pines atSisters P.U.D., Lot 49, $175,000 •W estBend PropertyCom panyLLC to Paul J. Bellaire Jr. andMary M.L. Peters, trustees of the Mary M.L. Peters Living Trust and trustees of the Paul J. Bellaire Jr. Living Trust, Northwest Crossing Phase24, Lot 886, $270,000 • West Bend Property Company LLC to Structure Development LLC, Northwest Crossing Phase24, Lot 889, $155,000 • Patrick G. andKathleen L. Bauer to William andCandace Ruland, Awbrey Butte Homesites, Phase12, Lot18, Block 8, $900,000 • C & M Retirement Properties LLC to Curtis J. andShelby J. Utton, Eaglenest Phase1, Lot12, $215,900 • Virginia A. deKat, trustee of the deKat Family RevocableTrust, to Michael D. andAnn Lyon, trustees
creations by hand in home studios, basements and tiny
SEATTLE — Nicole Miller and Aaron Way, the masterminds behind Seattle's Black-
storefronts.
gloom.
are sometimes downright offensive in their concentrat-
conjure imagination in all its er and nose behind the line sensuality, unsealing hidden House of Matriarch High worlds. An odor can imme- Perfumery, dips her finger diately evoke the details and into a jar of tobacco-leaf exmood of an old experience, as tract and rubs some on the if no time had passed at all." top of my hand, and in an inPerfumers insist that their stant I am transported back most popular fragrances are decades to my grandfather's ones that remind customers tobacco farm in K entucky. not just of things past but of Sticky-sweet tobacco leaves, their parents and grandpar- old barns, haylofts, manure — the scent-memory is unents, in particular. Marilyn Monroe famously blemished, like a perfectly told interviewers in the 1950s preserved photograph. that she wore nothing to bed It gives megoose bumps. but a few drops of the legendMeshell, with her flowing ary Chanel No. 5. Today, it's black ha ir, s umptuous silk still the wo rld's best-selling prints, sparkly platform heels perfume, with a bottlesold ev- and fairy goddessgrin, is an ery 55 seconds,according to agent provocateur of scent, Chanel. melding wildly intriguing eleBut Rebel & Mercury cus- ments into luxury fragrances tomers expect something with that defy easydescri ptions. familiar notes that's still "out She was raised in oil country — Port Arthur, Texasthere," Sherritt-Lewis says. "People are slowly finding but she's a Northwest hippie
They all seem to share a
stubborn love for the unexbird brand of edgy perfumes pected and, like the alcheand incense, work in an atmo- mists of old, a knack for marsphere redolent of beautiful rying natural essences that Blackbird, an international-
ly renowned indie fragrance ed form intofragrances that company Miller started as a shimmer on the skin. fashion-forward, bricks-and-
"It's that
f r o ntier spirit,"
mortar men's clothing bou- Way says, "that Northwest, tique about a decade ago, spe- do-it-yourself idea." "Do it wrong" is the duo's cializes in scents that take you places you didn't think you unofficial motto, Miller adds wanted to go that, once there, r efinement by way o f you feel you've visited before. rebellion. The fragrances, stripped Like H ansel an d G r etel of prettiness and predictabili- left to their own devicesin a ty, are just a little bit warped. mythical forest, Miller and And yet the smell of sea air Way spendtheir days plotting on a ferry ride home or burnt new ways to stokeus through matches after lighting candles the power of scent, in the form on a first date or grandpa's of bottled perfumes, soaps cracked-leat her reading chair, and intensely aromatic, black all of which find their way into incense pyres. " What gets us up i n t h e Blackbird's fragrances, tap into something deep inside of morning?" Miller asks one US. day over smoky black tea In that sense, Blackbird, spiced with licorice. "I want to which not only produces its make weird stuff." own fragrances but curates For sure, there's nothing and sells the work of other ordinary about scent componiche perfumers, is the ulti- sitions that bring to mind the mate symbol of the region's smell of fresh ink on paper, brooding, analytical, icono- kinky black leather, a basket clastic ethos. of greencinnamon-tree leaves Perhaps no industry flies rather than cinnamon bark, as deeply under the radar as or a misty rain forest strung luxury indie fragrances, a with moss. nascent but exploding niche The olfactory m embrane of the multibillion-dollar per- inside the human nose, with fume industry in the United its 50 million receptorcells caStates, according to the NDP pableof transmitting informaGroupretail-research firm. tion on some 10,000 different The handful of brands in odors, is the only part of our the region are mostly run central nervous system that by self-taught, mom-and- has direct contact with the expop perfumers making their ternal world.
out that they can have a signa-
medicine woman a t
ture scent, but it's not going to be Chanel No. 5," she says.
Every morning she drinks a glass of water infused with frankincense essence. "It's goodfor you," she insists. As Meshell shows off a wall-length bookshelf with hundreds of bottled ingredients, she says that some are derived directly from the Pa-
T he trend t oward Alan Berner / Seattle Times
more
distinctive fragrances gives indie perfumers an enviable
Christi Meshell at her House of Matriarch High Perfumery in Bellev-
freedom, and an unenviable
ue, Washington, says "perfume means 'through smoke."' Burning
challenge.
opulent tree resins, she says this is the original perfume used in
One extra drop of a partic-
hair, prayer, ceremonies and courtship. Every second of every day, that membrane is bombard-
ed by countless molecules floating around us, causing actual electrical sparks and
cascading chemical reactions that allow our brains to identify certain scents and conjure
feelings and thoughts based on them. The odors that stand out go
h e art.
ular ingredient, just one hundredth of a gram, can throw cific Northwest. A b l azingthe whole mixture off or ele- ly intense lavender essence ter Mandy Aftel's indispens- vate it, says Karyn Gold-Rein- comes from locally grown able book, "Essence and Al- eke, the sylphlike owner and plants. She makes seaweed chemy: A Book of Perfume," nose behind the perfumery essencewith washed-up kelp perfectly captures the mys- Pirouette in Seattle. she gatherson beach walks. "It's a lmost l i k e tery and stunning specificity th e Her favorite place to visit of smell: scent wants to tell a story," is a nearby rainforest with "Fragrance has the instan- Gold-Reineke says. "I let the hanging moss. "This is the last enchanttaneous and invisible power to blend open up and tell me penetrate consciousnesswith what it wants. ed forest, and we live in it," "Blend. Let it sit. Blend. Let Meshell says of the Northwest pure pleasure," she says in the book's opening passage. it sit. You have to be on their in general. "Scent reaches us in ways time schedule." "Nature," she says, "is the
right toour core. Natural-f ragrance trendset- that elude sight and sound but
Christi Meshell, the own-
ultimate luxury."
SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
Economicindicators ofthe University of OregonIndex Central Oregon Central OregonBusinesSIndex of EconomicIndicators(statewide) housing units sold The Central OregonBusiness Indexlooks at nine variables thattend to becyclical in nature. Theyreflect shifting patterns of the economyandareweighted to account for typical volatility that occurs throughoutthe year. After seasonaleffects aretakenout, the
CentralOregonmedian housingdaysonmarket
fIO 7 J
0 4a4
A
3%
variables tend to show the direction of the
100.3
economyandgivethe most extensive viewof the economythat is available, saysTimothy Duy, adjunct professor ofeconomicsfor the University of Oregonandauthor of the Central OregonBusiness Index. All figures are monthly averages for the quarter andare seasonally adjustedandestimated.
DeschutesCounty buildingpermits
412
246 2014 04
2II14 a4
192
E3
)50 168
201
2014 04
114 123
86.6
13
'98'99'00'01'02'03'04'05'06'07'08'09'10'11'12'13'14'15
DeschutesCounty initial unemployment claims
'98'99'00'01'02'03'04'05'06'07'08'09'10'1l'12'13'14'15
Deschutes County solid waste Bend MSAnonfarmpayrolls In tons
'98'99'00'01'02'03'04'05'06'07'08'09'10'11'12'13'14'15
'98'99'00 '01'02'03'04'05'06'07'08'09'10'11'12'13'14'15
Redmond Airport enplanements Bend lodgingtax revenue In millions of dollars, adjusted for inflation and deplanemetsn
In thousands of employees
0 4a4
15 89
71 5 2
44,1 1
9
1, 29
1,82
2014 0
41,42 21 94
1.94
1,681 '98'99'00'01'02'03'04'05'06'07'08'09'10'11'12'13'14'15
.92
17,65
,9 3 '98'99'00'01'02'03'04'05'06'07'08'09'10'11'12'13'14'15
'98'99'00'01'02'03'04'05'06'07'08'09'10'11'12'13'14'15
'98'99'00 '01'02'03'04'05'06'07'08'09'10'11'12'13'14'15
'98'99'00'01'02'03'04'05'06'07'08'09'10'11'12'13'14'15
Greg Cross/The Bulletin
Source: University of Oregon College of Arts and Sciences and Department of Economics
COBI Continued from E1
by mid-2014," wrote Daniel Aaronson, vice president and directorof microeconomic re-
"You should not have ex-
search, and Andrew Jordan,
pected any acceleration in
associate economist. "Instead,
rising tide has lifted only some vice sector wages grew when later this year if wage growth percent inflation, Duy said. larger boats while leaving tourism rebounded starting in accelerates according to Duy's "If they don't tighten policy most in shallow water. 2011, he said. expectations, he said. Federal accordingly when those condi"We can't make too many
That doesn't contradict Duy,
however, who said wages in wages until we got to a least real wage growth has been some sectors have increased: 6 percent," Duy said. "And relatively flat over the past few "very skilled workers, tech we really won't see that until years." people," he said. "There are 5 percent. We're just in that In Deschutes County, how- those sectors where you see range where we're likely to see ever, wages grew by 2.5 per- wage gains. On a broad sector, wage growth." cent between 2007 and 2014, it's not as dramatic." Wage growth across the said Damon Runberg, regionInterpreting th e s i gnifiU.S. has been lackluster in al economist with the Oregon cance of a 2.5 percent wage the post-recession recovery, Employment Dep a r tment. increase over seven years is according to an October re- The average hourly wage in problematic, Runberg said. port from the Federal Reserve the county, adjusted for infla- The continued expansion of Bank of Chicago. The "histor- tion, rose from $24.07 in 2007 the health care sector in Deical relationship between the to $24.76last year,according schutes County during the unemployment rate and real to data Runberg provided. Great Recession, for exam"We've actuallyseen some ple, could account for much wages would have predicted real wage growth to have been wage growth," Runberg said of those gains. On the other 3.6 percentage points higher Thursday. But, he agreed,the hand, data did not show ser-
Oakland
Reserve Chairwoman Janet
tions start to rise," that 4 per-
conclusionson those service Yellen said Wednesday the sector jobs," Runberg said. Federal Reserve Board of Gov"Are they moving above infla- ernors may raise interest rates tion? We have no idea." this year, provided job growth In 2013, about 45 percent of continues, p r ices c o ntinue
cent wage will result in 5 percent, and 2 percent (inflation) will result in 3 percent.
all jobs in Deschutes County
to rise and the rate of infla-
the week ending Feb. 20,
paid less than $15 an hour, another44 percentpaid between $15 and $39.99, and 11 percent paid $40 an hour or more, according to Runberg. Between
tion moves toward 2 percent annually. Too rapid growth in wages stimulates inflation, which
the prime loan rate at 3.25
The Federal Funds Rate s tood at 0 . 12 p ercent f o r
p ercent, according to t h e Federal Reserve w ebsite. "I think June is in play," Duy the Federal Reserve seeks said. "A number of Fed offi2007 and 2014, the number of to control by raising interest cials want to raise rates by middle-wage jobs fell by 4 per- rates and increasing the cost June; they really need strong cent, while those on the high to borrow money and expand wage growth to justify raising and low ends grew about 2 the economy. The Federal Re- rates in June. If not June, then percent each. serveconsidersan overallin- September." Finally, expect an interest crease in wages of 4 percent — Reporter: 541-617-7815, rate hikesooner rather than as healthy, consistent with 2 jditzler@bendbulletin.com
cous protest in July 2013.
LI " ¹ 9 l
"All of these protests have
5,000 residents had moved
"Oakland sent a bad mes- had abad impact on Oakland," sage with what happened with Tagami said. "The prior maythe Occupy protests," Schaaf ors, Dellums and Quan, ensaid. "Free speech is part of couraged these protests. But Oakland's history and its fu- we have high hopes for Mayor
into the downtown, according
ture. But there is a clear line
to estimates of the number of units built under the 10K plan.
between peaceful protests and In S c haaf's i n augural vandalism and violence." speech, she even extended an
Continued from E1
8
By 2009, when the art deco Fox Theater reopened, about
Schaaf made crime reduc-
At present, most observers estimate at least 10,000 new res-
Schaaf." invitation to Google to open
tion a key platform. For 2014, an office — and there would the citywide crime tally in- be space available in t he cluded 80 murders, down 11.1 now-vacant Sears building on percent from the year before; Broadway. "The cool, smart people are 2,657 aggravated assaults, up 4.9 percent; 194 rapes, up alreadyhere," Schaaf said of 12.1 percent; 3,349 robberies, Oakland. "You wouldn'tneed down 30.8 percent; and 11,316 all those buses if you would burglaries, down 6.3 percent. just open an office here." Vehicle burglaries rose 6
idents live downtown, helping to spur a revival of retail, en-
tertainment, art galleries and restaurants. "You can see there is a real
surge going on around here," said Joe Delgado, manager of Flora and Fauna, two
restaurant-bars near both the
percent.
Fox and the Paramount theaters in O a kland's Uptown
Phil Tagami, a prominent neighborhood. Oakland developer who renoTOUCHMARK slNcs 1980 Quan didn't oversee major Photos hy Ray Chave / Bay Area News Group vated the Fox Theater and the downtown projects during her Patrons mix andmingle at Make Westing on Telegraph Avenue in uptown Oakland, California. Make Rotunda building near City mayoral term from 2010-14 but Westing features bocce ball and is one of several bars and restaurants located near the Fox Theater. Hall, gained notoriety in 2011 was a key player in bringing a when he brandished a shotgun China-based investor into the to deter Occupy protesters who mix to get the Brooklyn Basin Murmur." way, serving the influx of of- festival in 2013, vandalism is had attempted to invade the project near the waterfront off Nevertheless,a series of fice tenants who are shifting a constant battle and protests office and retail complex. He the ground. And now Schaaf is protests marked by vandalism into the d owntown d istrict have sometimes turned vio- believes the primary problem pushing for a specific develop- and violencehave marred the and joining hubs like Pandora, lent, like when a waiter got is that vandals and violent proment plan for the broad down- improvements in Oakland's which already towers above hit in the face with a hammer testers piggyback onto ostensi•3 town area. downtown. E n trepreneurs,the skyline; Kaiser Permanen- during one particularly rau- bly peaceful demonstrations. "This approach can poten- restaurant owners and retail- te, which dominates the west tially save significant time and ers who have been jolted by side of the city's Lake Merritt; money for the developer, and the destructive marches say and a variety of digital technolit also ensures that the growth the upheaval has harmed Oak- ogy firms such as Cerexa and that occurs in Oakland has the land and undermined the mo- cleantech company Sungevity. "We are seeing more leasing support of the people who live rale of merchants. "During the Occupy pro- activity in downtown Oakland here now. It's a way to preserve Oakland's secret sauce that tests, for weeks on end, I would than we have seen in well over makes us unique," Schaaf said. have dinersin our restaurant, a decade," said Ryan HattersBusinesses and residential and allof a sudden, there were ley, director of the Cushman & development w or k to g eth- armed police and protesters Wakefield commercial realty er, giving a boost to arts and directly in front of our place," brokerage in Oakland. e ntertainment events in t h e said Kevin Best, who until2012 The vacancy rate in downdowntown, accordingto Steve operated the B Restaurant & town Oakland was 14.9 perSnider, district manager of the Bar in the Old Oakland section cent at the end of September, Downtown Oakland Associa- of the downtown. compared with a level of about "We were going to close the 16 percent a year earlier, action and the Lake Merritt-Uptown District Association. restaurant anyway," Best said, cording to a reportreleased "About 18 years ago, it was to focus on th e c ompany's in October by Colliers Intertumbleweeds along Broadway restaurant in San Francisco. national, a commercial realty Corne learn the ABC's and 0's of Medicare and the often confusing on nights and weekends," he "The protests weren't a nail firm. process of the Nledicare system. You'll find the inforrnation you need said, referring to one of the in the coffin. But they didn't Key new developments into rnake the right decisions about Medicare health insurance. city's key thoroughfares. "You help." clude the planned restoration are (now) seeing success with Despite the civic disrup- of a Sears building and The our arts scene and the First tions and other uncertainties, Hive project on Broadway, Free classes open to the public: F riday events and th e A r t more restaurants are on the with a mix of 104 residential •
•
units, 50,000 square feet of of-
ficesand 50,000 square feetof retail and restaurants.
"There is a lot of good energy, a lot of good vibes, in
•
BEND — Thursday, March 5, 4:30 p.m. Bend Senior Center 1600 SE Reed Market Road
d owntown O a k land," s a i d Christopher Pastena, owner
and manager of Lungomare, an upscale restaurant in Oak-
land's Jack London Square, which is preparing to open
Sponsored by:
For more information call 541-241-6927
w ww.Medtcsre.ascificaource.com Paa j t C S O u r Ce Medicare
a new place, Calavera, this
I Pedestrians stroll along Telegraph Avenue as the Fox Theater host a Pandora event.
spring in The Hive. To continue the momentum, many say, Oakland needs to deal with the crime problem. One person was fatally shot following a First Friday street
This event is only for educational purposes. Noplan-specific benefits or details will be shared. PacificSourceCommunity Health Plans, Inc. is an HMO/PPOplan with a Medicare contract. Enrollment in PaciflcSource Medicare depends oncontract renewal. Y0021 MRK2699 CMSAccepted
SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
Prison
spokeswoman said, is that Keefe seldom has dealings
Continued from E1 Because oftheir poten-
tial as weapons, bottles and cans are nonstarters in prison. So the company pioneered the use of pouches for pretty much everything — macaroni and cheese,
roast beef, chili and refried beans. "StarKist in a pouch'? We had it first," Theiss said.
By 1982, the prison side of the business had become
so strong that the company David Goldman/The Associated Press
ons, the other on hotels. In
Daniel Rensing and his wife, Stephanie own The Smart Baker, which boasts an apron with upside down measurement conver-
the late 1990s, both units were spun off from their
sions as one of its products. Annual revenue for their company
Enterprise parent to be-
is close to $1 million, up from $130,000 before their March 2012 appearance on the reality TV show "Shark Tank."
come the Centric Group,
Shark Tank
for both a cash infusion and
Continued from E1 "We w ere sticking t o
says Harvard Business School professor Noam Wasserman.
our guns on the market we
But the money doesn't guar-
control of
t h eir c ompanies,
served," Rensing says. antee success, and having an Corcoran says she was dis- investor may be an unpleasant appointed, but she knows a experience. "You could end up with the rejection is an occupational hazard on "Shark Tank." "Nobody likes to be turned
worst of both worlds," he says.
T he S m ar t B a k e r ha s thrived without her m oney.
W hen Mona W eiss a n d Scott Shields pitched their
In the following year, revenue grew to $600,000. The episode also helped the company get noticed by Food Network and other media. Reruns provide a sales bump. But a "Shark Tank" deal isn't just about money; it also
company, Eco Nuts, on an episode that aired in Octo-
ifs,' but we don't let that get to
from berries, was on track for
down, especially me," she says. Not afraid to say no
ber 2012, Herjavec offered
$175,000for 50 percent.We iss and Shields, who wanted to sell a 15 percent stake for that
amount, said no on the spot. "It was a terrible deal, realbrings expertise and mentor- ly awfuL No one would give ing from a pro. The Rensings up half their company for less don't dwell on what they might than they make in a year," have missed by not sticking Weiss says. The Lawndale, with Corcoran. California, company, which "There is always the 'what makes laundry detergent us," Daniel Rensing says.
$250,000 in revenue in 2012. A spokeswoman for Herjavec, Erin McLean, says he does not comment on deals or
The right move? Some contestants may turn
down offers because they
offersthat are closed. Some people told Weiss and
feel there are more important
things than getting investors, Oklahoma State University who has studied "Shark Tank"
Shields they were foolish. "They said, 'it was a lot of money, you should have taken that,'" Weiss says. But being on "Shark Tank"
pitches.
put Eco Nuts on a faster track
says Matthew Rutherford, an entrepreneurship professor at
divided into tw o d i stinct units, one focused on pris-
"What they crave over ev- to its current success. Reveerything including money and nue, now over $1 million, grew wealth is autonomy," Ruther- so muchthe company moved ford says. to manufacturing space five Entrepreneurs who appear times bigger than its original on the show are likely hoping factory.
which has 2,800 employees. The company is still owned by the Taylors. Enterprise Holdings Executive Chairman Andrew Taylor, who once served as a Keefe
vice president and treasurer, is one of the company's directors, as was his father, Jack Taylor, in the 1990s.
and outside the prison. "That's price gouging," said They compare deposit acwith the public or the media Alex Friedmann, managing tivity against email traffic and and doesn't have its own staff. editor of Prison Legal News, information from public dataSince Keefe and its parent an advocate for prisoners' bases to establish relationships Centric are private companies, rights. "I would submit that and social networks involving it's difficult to gain a clear pic- this kind of business is kind of prisoners and people on the ture of their finances. The veil like printing your own money." outside. Anything suspicious is was lifted somewhat last year, Still, Keefe points out that reported to prison officials, acwhen the Missouri Depart- it won the Missouri contract cording to the bid documents. It's the part about watching ment of Corrections insisted by offering rates considerably that Keefe include a variety of lower than t hose proposed people outside the prison that financial information as part by several competitors. De- raises concerns among privaof its bid. posit industry leader JPay, cy advocates, even if those usKeefe has six subsidiaries for example, submitted a bid ers are told that their activity and 17 distribution centers on which it was expected to may bemonitored. "They're overreaching by around the country, shipping make $17 million — double more than 25 million pounds Keefe's rates — from deposit invading the privacy of peoof goods and supplies each fees each year, according to ple who have committed no month. In 2 0 12, it s K e efe the Office of Administration's crimes and have done nothing Commissary Network, along evaluation. wrong," said Sarah Rossi, diIt's probably not surpris- rector of advocacy and policy with two other subsidiaries, recorded a robust $41 million ing that technology offerings for the American Civil Libernet income on $375 million in geared toward prisons and ties Union of Missouri. It's unclear, though, whethsales. jails would take into account The company has contracts the possibility that these ser- er the Data Detective service with more than 800 public and vices could be used for illegal will be used in Missouri, even private prisons, with the bulk activities. though the Department of Corof its business in commissarKeefe's bid includes infor- rections asked for something ies. In Missouri, for example, mation on the measures it uses like it when it sought bids. Keefe has contracts to provide to watch for fraud and hints of A corrections spokesman everything from strawberry criminal activity. It has a team said in an email that it's not beTwizzlers and precooked long of 12 investigators, combined ing used and is under review. grain rice to creamy peanut with a data mining service As for the privacy concerns, market.
Lr •
Outgrown your current space~
to work for you. Creative solutions and proactive representation are my specialty.
And when it comes to more of a deposit, that draws public r e l ations, E n ter- the ire of t h ose who cr itiprise handles those duties cize the small group of prifor Keefe. The reason, a vate firms serving this niche
ASSURANCE
• Office SUN FoREsT
iswhatyougetwhenEVERGREEN managesyour lovedone's medications
• Retail • Industrial
CoNSTRUCTION
DESIGN 0 BUILD 0 REMODEL
Call Dan Steelhammer, Broker 541-389-4212 54 1 - 585-2446
PAINT
803 sw Industrial way, Bend, OR
EVERGREEN
dan®colmcommercial.com
In-Home Care Services 541-389-0006 www.evergreeninhome.com
15 BEST LARGE-CAP STOCKS
LicensedBroker in theStateof Oregon since 1997
Pharmacyclics Monster Beverage Valeant Pharma Avago Technologies AES corp Cheniere Energy Salesforce.com Inc Ross Stores W algreen Boots Alli H olly Frontier Corp Medivation Inc Agriijm Inc
Qorvo Inc Kohls Corp Expeditors Intl
FRIDAY C LOS E
$CHG %CHG %CHG 1W K 1W K 1MO
PCYC
2 1 5 .9 3
38. 3 7
21. 6
28.0
MNST
1 4 1.12
19. 8 6
16 . 4
20.7
VRX
197 . 4 8
24. 2 2
14. 0
23.4
AVGO
1 2 7.62
15.56
13 .9
24.0
AES
12.97
1.08
9.1
6.1
L NG
80.6 3
6.63
9.0
13.0
C RM
69.3 8
5.64
8.8
22.9
ROST
1 0 5 .8 1
7.89
8.1
15.4
WB A HC F M DVN AGU QRVO K SS EXPD
83.08 43.99 1 1 7.53 115 . 5 3 69 . 4 0 73.80 48. 3 0
5.95 2.88 7.53 7.07 4.23 4.30 2.80
77 70 6 .8 6.5 6.5 6 .2 6.1
12.7 22.5 8.0 8.3 -6.1 23.6 10.6
10 WORST LARGE-CAP STOCKS Chesapk Engy Wynn Resorts Ltd Hewlett Packard sthwstn Energy Workday Inc ONEOK Concho Resources Alcoa Inc Tesla Motors lnc Delta Air Lines
-3.62
-178
-13.0
WYNN 1 4 z 50 H PQ 34.8 4 S WN 25.0 8
-15.97
-10.1
-3.7
-3.55
-9.2
-3.6
-z47
-9.0
1.2
85. 5 0
-7.24
-78
7.6
OKE
44.26
-3.41
-72
0.5
CXO
108 . 92
-8.30
-z1
-1.7
W DAY
AA
TSLA DAL
% RTN 1YR CO M P A N Y
TICKER
49.0 Cytori Therapeutics 75.7 second sight Medical 37.5 Oneida Financial Cp 110.8 Benefiffocus Inc
FRIDAY C L OS E
INDEX
$CHG %CHG %CHG % RTN 1WK 1WK 1MO 1YR
14.79
-1.00
-6.3
-5.5
20 3 . 34
-13.77
-6.3
-0.1
44.52
-z92
-6.2
-5.9
LAST FRI. CHG 21 04.50 -6.24 11401.66 +74.47 -3.07 6946.66 24823.29 -78.77 4951.48 +40.86 18797.94 +1 z15
FRI. CHG WK MO QTR YTD -0.30% L +2.21% +0 66'/ L L %16.28% -0 04% +5.80% +5.16% 0 32% +0.83% i15.89% +0.06% +7.72%
1.12
0.57
103.6
1 33 . 3
EYES
16.17
7.42
84.8
84.2
0.0
ONFC
19.54
6.42
48.9
48. 4
59.3
BNFT
3 2.56
10. 6 1
48.3
34.6
-53.4
ARQL
1.88
0.53
39.3
62.1
-14.3
58.3 Amyris Inc AMRS 1 0.2 SFx Entertainment SF x E 39.3 Tracon Pharma TCON 24.8 Autobytel lnc ABTL 1.3 Bellerophon Therap BLPH 40.7 CheggInc CHGG 28.2 Cerulean Pharma CERU 0.0 Emulex Corp ELX 34.6 Lion Biotechnologies L BI O 26.7 Aurinia Pharma AUPH
2.70
0.70
35.0
57. 0
Aires M erval 9606.04 +261.27 +2.80% X X -37.6 Buenos -0.51% L Mexico City Bolsa 441 9 0.17 -226.32 -42.2 sao Paolo Bovespa 5 1 583.09 -177.45 -0.34% 0.0 -6.82 -0.04% L Toronto S&P/TSX 152 34.34 -34.8 /AFRICA 0.0 EUROPE
-9.1 ArQijle Inc
4.76
1.23
34.8
44.7
13. 4 3
3.29
32.4
42.9
12. 8 9
2.89
28.9
32.2
12. 0 0
2.58
274
33.8
8.12
1.68
26.1
22.5
8.23
1.60
24.1
6.1
7.95
1.54
24.0
27.0
8.98 4.70
1.68 0.86
23.0
0.0
22.4
40.3
-27.6 Weight Watchers
WTW
-37.0 CymaBay Therapeutics CBAY 15.8 Hansen Medical HNSN -38.0 Paragon Offshore PGN -11.6 EnerMOCInc ENOC -21.6 sandRidge Energy SD -4.1 Clayton Engy CWEI 26.4 Walter Inv Mgmt WAC -18.1 Daktronics Inc DAKT 38.0 Vitae Pharmaceutical VTAE
-65.7
s&p 500 Frankfurt DAX London FTSE100 Hong KongHangseng Paris CAC-40 Tokyo Mikkei 225
CYTX
10 WORST SMALL-CAP STOCKS
16.68
CHK
Globalmarkets
15 BEST SMALL-CAP STOCKS
T ICKER
"That's their
Enterprise referred ques- butter and vanilla iced oatmeal called Data D etective, that Theiss said, cookies. keeps an eye on activity inside opinion." Taylors to Theiss, who said In recent years, however, the family has no involve- the company has increasingly ment in day-to-day opera- looked for new opportunities, tions, and that there is no pushing into financial seraffiliation with the rental vices, portable music players car empire. and, next up, tablets. Still, it's clear that ties Cash deposits made through remain. the company's network of reFor example, in its suc- tail partners cost $2.50. Deposcessful bid last year to pro- iting money by phone or comvide email and deposit ser- putercosts anywhere from 95 vices to Missouri prisons, cents to $5.75, with the largest Finding the right place for the company referred to it- fees attached to deposits of self both as an affiliate and $50 or less. Money orders sent your business is not easy. a subsidiary of Enterprise. directly to the corrections deWhether you are leasing Asked about it, Theiss partment are still free. or buying, let me put my It's that fee structure, one said, " That's a habit w e knowledge and experience need to stop doing." that can claim 20 percent or tions about Keefe and the
Wmhly Stock Winners and Losers COMPANY
E5
25.6 Amsterdam 0.0 Brussels Madrid 7.3 Zurich 0.0 Milan 43.6 Johannesburg Stockholm
11.33
-7.71
-40.5
-31.6
-18.7
8.45
-4.25
-33.5
-1 5.5
1.1
0.78
-0.31
-28.1
-1 2.9
2.06
-0.72
-25.9
-1.4
13.49
-4.37
-24.5
-21.7
483.93 +1A6 3714.44 +0.60 1132.91 +3.45 9014.53 -34.96 22337.79 +172.66 53344.20 +1 3.04 1691.03 +6.20
+0.30% L +0.02% L +0.31% L -0.39% +0.78% +0.02% +0.37%
1.77
-0.55
-23.7
25.5
-14.51
-22.8
-1 2.2
16.67
-4.21
-20.2
10.6
10.23
-z45 -z58
-19.3
-1 7.4
-25.2
-18.2
-20.2
0.0
A
V V
+11. 97% +2.42% 0/
A
V
L L
+4.11%
+14 01'/ +13.06% +8.68% +0.35% i17.49%
+7.18% +1 5.46%
ASIA
-7.28 -0.37% X Seoul Composite 1985.80 singapore straits Times 340z86 -23.32 -0.68% T -6z2 Sydney All Ordinaries 5 8 98.50 + 20.60 0 35% 0.0 Taipei Taiex 962z10 -13.2 Shanghai Composite 3 3 10.30 + 11.94 +0.36% -69.7 Quotable -46.3 -33.0 "It's a very beautiful thought."
49.06
11.62
SOUTHAMERICA/CANADA
X
V
+3.67% +1.12% +9 46% 3 38% 2 34%
— Arnaldo Alfonso,a Havana tobacco shop worker, on the potential gains in cigar sales as US eases rules on travel, imports in Cuba
Note: Stocks classified by market capitalization, the product of the current stock price and total shares outstanding. Ranges are$100 million to $1 billion (small); $1 billion to $8 billion (mid); greater than $8billion (large).
The competitive I s'der skies Title: Analyst Cowen and Co. Outlook: Investors in the airline industry should keep an eye on fares.
Heiane Becker
The three biggest U.S. airlines are asking the federal government to renegotiate treaties with two Middle Eastem nations to stop what they see as unfair competition from rapidly growing state-owned airlines in the Gulf. The Gulf carriers are a threat because of their aggressive growth plans in the U.S., says Helane Becker, an analyst with Cowen and Co. Still, she expects the government will deny the U.S. carriers' request. Becker shared her outlook on Middle Eastern competition and other issues facing the industry.
The three biggest U.S. airlines have complained to the Obama administration about unfair competition from Emirates, Qatar Airways and Etihad
Airways. Do they have a case? limit the open-skies agreements that The threat is real. The airlines would tell are helping the Gulf carriers? you that it's real, and certainly their I do not. The U.S. airlines are certainly behavior would tell you the threat Is real. being heard, but on the other side you The Gulf airlines fly into the U.S. with have FedEx, UPS and others who need fares that are very competitive but aren't open skies to ... fly freight efficiently. necessarily covering theIr cost of capital. What should airline investors watch In The claimsaren'tnew. Why make a the short term? federal case out of It now? The thing that we're focused on Is price The biggest reason for "why now?" Is for fares — what's happening with respect because these guys are getting more to pricing, what's happening with respect and moreaggressIve aboutexpanding to passenger-carrying capacity. The into the U.S. You're really seeing question I get a lot is, "Oil piices have capacity on intemational routes to the come down a lot; why haven't ticket U.S. going up In a lot of different markets. prices?" Why should ticket prices go Every time you add service that wasn't down when demand is still fairly strong? there before, it puts pressure on price. All airlines are trying to keep pricing high eventhough fuelprices have come down Do you expect the U.S. government to because flights are still pretty full.
What happens to airline stocks If fares come down? If eamings don't go up, it's really hard for stock prIces to outperform. Are we back to the old days, when airline stocks rose If oil fell, and they fell If oil rose? Yeah, for somereasonthat correlaIIon has come back. It had goneawayfor a while and now, for whatever reason it's back. What are your favorite airline stocks? Analysts always have top picks. Our top pick this year is United. They are just turning the corner after having done their merger with Continental in 2010. Interviewed by David Koenig. Answers edited for clarity and length. AP
Index closing andweekly net changes for the weekending Friday, February 27, 2015
+
NASDaa ~
S&P500
4,963.53
2,104.50
RUSSELL2000 ~ I,233.37 ~
1 58
WILSHIRE 5000 ~ - 6 6 . 21 22,212.34
E6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2015
UNDAY D
R
as isanun el's a emen By David Undercoffler Los Angeies Times
Forget th e
Why amburni I ng through headlamps?
T e sla M o d el
S P85D's jaw-dropping zero-to-60 mph time of 3.2 sec-
By Paul Brand
onds, though that's as fast as a
Q
Star Tribune (Minneapotis)
• I have a 2006 Hon• d a C R-V w h i ch I
Porsche 911'Ibrbo. It's the face-distorting zero-
purchased new. I
the car is moving once you've turned the wheel? If it occurs as you are turning the steer-
ing wheel, check the rubber h ave mounts for the steering rack
to-30-mph blast that truly sets
replaced the driver's side
the car apart.
headlamp eight times and ing shaft. the passenger side six In checking my ALLDATA times since purchase. They automotive database I found do not go out at the same Nissan recall bulletin PC012
The P85D isn't entirely new. It's a faster version of the elec-
tric automaker's Model S sedan that first appeared in 2012.
time, and there is no warn-
and NHTSA recall 0935800
ing or early signs such as identifying a potential safety flickering or dimming. I issue caused by cracked front drive with my headlights strut insulators. These parts
In addition to the
REVIEW
and the couplers on the steer-
or i ginal electric motor powering
the rear wheels, the D desig-
on at all t imes but even
are located just below the up-
nation denotes a second drive unit (D stands for "dual") be-
so, I have never had a car go through so many headlamps. I currently have around 139,400 miles on the car.
per strut mounting tower in the engine compartment and can be replaced by removing and safely disassembling the
A • five primary causes of lamp failure are: over-
may be allowing tire rub on the coil spring.
tween the front wheels.
Because the electric motors offer up all of their combined 686pound-feet of torque imme-
Myung J. Chun/Los Angeles Times
diately — there's no waiting for The new Tesla Model S P85D produces extra power with the addition of a second electric motor puta combustion engine to rev up ting out the equivalent of 691 horsepower. — the car takes off like a rock from a slingshot. The effect is further aided driver that can smoke nearly winds, and without using the air-conditioning. by pavement-biting all-wheelanything in the next lane. S PSSD drive, as the two electric The original Tesla Model S Our test car achieved about motors push all that power Base price:$105,670 was an esteemed effort that ri- 150 miles on a charge in agthrough both axles. valed anything from a German gressive driving. As tested:$129,820 The dual-motor feature is brand in terms of build qualThe D portends the much-deType:four-door full-sized available on the two models ity or execution. That hasn't layed arrival of the Model X, sedan with the larger battery pack, changed. The interior is quiet an all-electric crossover SUV Engine:ACinduction the 85D and the high-perforand comfortable, the ride qual- expected to have the same allmotor front and rear, 85 mance P85D we tested. It costs ity is serene. The touchscreen, wheel-drive underpinnings as kWh lithium-ion battery, an extra $5,000, bringing the a masterpiece of clarity, is un- the D. all-wheel drive price to at least $86,070 for matched in the industry. Tesla now says it will start Mileage:86 mpg city, the 85D and $105,670 for the The list of complaints is delivering the X this fall, al94 mpg highway P85D, before adding options short and trivial. The small- most two years after its first or subtracting government ish rear doors are a little tight predicted launch date. The subsidies. for tall people, but there's still p rice will be similar to t h e The D makes the equivalent the P85D in a straight line. plenty of room inside. The cen- Model S. of 691 horsepower, which comThe Tesla, however, might ter console and doors could Next on the list of delayed petes well with the elite ranks find it to hard to follow those use some storage pockets. The promises is the Model 3, the afof gasoline-powered perfor- cars through turns. At just un- cruise control display is con- fordable mass-market electric der 2'/z tons, the battery-laden fusing. The back seats have no car onwhich Tesla'slong-term mance cars. Our test car, in brilliant red, P85D is a very heavy car. center armrest. viability depends. Pegged for came to $129,820.(Government All Model S cars have their As with al l e lectric cars, the $35,000 to $40,000 range, incentives could rebate buyers lithium-ion battery packs inte- charging the battery is the Musk wants the 3 to hit the as much as $10,000.) That in- grated into the floor of the car main challenge. But Tesla's market in 2017, but concedes it cluded a technology package to keep the center of gravity as network of 165 superchargers couldtake yearslongerforTeswith radar-based cruise con- low as possible. That helps. The nationwide, including 13 in the la factories to reach full capacitrol, 19-inch wheels, a high-end height-adjustable air suspen- Southern California area, pro- ty for producing the 3. sound system, panoramic roof sionalsodoesa greatjob keep- vide a stiff jolt of juice. As the original Model S and upgraded leather seats. ing the car flat. Tesla estimates an EPA rat- shows, and this subsequent D That's certainly not chump But the steering is vague and ing on the P85D at 253 miles version reiterates, Tesla can change, but it's in line with thehandlingis numb whenyou of range on a full charge. But produce beautiful, groundloaded versions of the Audi really push it. Not that many thoseesti mates are based on breaking cars. RS7 or Mercedes CLS63 AMG Tesla drivers will. Instead, traveling at a constant 65 mph Now if only it were that good — rivals that can't keep up with they'll enjoy a high-tech daily on flat ground, with no head- at meeting deadlines.
2015TeslaModel
Mysteriouslysinking brakepedal easily fixed By Brad Bergholdt
growl like it doesn't want to
Tribune News Service
of a sudden lost brake power. I came to a stop sign, and the brake pedal went half way down. I was able to pump the brakes and build up pressure,
start and the radio will begin One is a load test. The fully playing loudly and the dock re- charged battery is subjected to sets to noon. What could cause a very strong load for 15 secthis electrical problem'? onds, checking to see if it holds • It sounds like your bat- acceptable voltage. A more • tery may be failing or is techie test is cell conductance, becoming discharged because which has become the more of either a charging system common method due to high
but at subsequent stops, the
fault or a parasitic drain. The
Q
• I have a 2001 Chevrolet • Suburban 1500 that all
pedal went to the floor. There radio and dock are resetting was a smell of burned brake due to low system voltage as fluid, but no fluid was seen un- you crank the engine. Dirty der the hood nor on the ground battery terminals are anothafterthecarwa sparked.Ihad er possibility that could cause it towed to the shop the next
these symptoms. Testing a bat-
tery can be done in two ways.
accuracy. Whether the battery
trunk light remaining on or a body control module failing to fall asleep. An easy test for dirty battery terminah is to
voltagedrop test across each cable damp and its battery
post asthe engine is cranked. More than a tiny difference between the two indicates a faulty connection. These tests are all
passes muster or not it's still a quick to perform and ensure a good idea to check for proper single trip to the shop will be all charging system performance that's needed. and the possibility of a key-off — Bergholdt teaches automotive parasitic drain. Examples of technology. Email questions to a drain are the glove box or under-the-hood@earthlink.net.
• Neither have I. The
strut. Movement of the strut The bulletin and recall were
voltage, poor-quality con- issued in the fall of 2009, and nections that lead to arcing if you are the original owner and burned contacts, me- of the vehicle you should have chanical shock from loose received this recall notice. A mounting or excess vibra- Nissan dealer should be able tion, cooling shock from to check the status of the rewater/moisture hitting the call for your specific vehicle. halogen lamp while it is hot and skin oil contamiI have noticed that very nation from touching the
Q •• few newer vehicles have
glass envelope during installation. Plus, of course, old age — halogen lamps have an average life expec-
a recommended interval for
tancy of 450-1,000 hours. If
ters on them. How do I know
fuel filter replacement. Both of my vehicles, a Corolla and a Grand Cherokee, have fuel fil-
you averaged 35 mph for when to replace these? Should all your driving, the head- I do this annually or based on lamps could last roughly mileage driven? I change the 35,000 miles.
boat, mower, snowblower fil-
Carefully check the individual pins/sockets in
ters each season, so why not the cars? the headlamp connectors. • Because many no longer If any are burned or dam• have replaceable fuel aged, repair or replace the filters. The filter for the fuel connector. Make sure they system is an integral part of snap together and seal the fuel pump assembly inside properly. A dab of dielectric the fuel tank and is not easily grease can prevent con- serviceable. tamination and corrosion If your vehicle did have a in the connectors. Also, serviceable fuel filter, changmake sure there is no mois- ing it every 30,000 miles would ture or water trapped inside be practicing good maintethe headlamp housings. nance. But neither of your ve-
A
hicles does, so no worries.
Q•
I have a 2009 Nis• san Altima that has
a rubbing noise coming from the front of the car. It's most pronounced when backing out and turning the steering wheel clockwise, but you can hear it turning in either direction
Motoring note As a follow-up to my comments about the Infiniti I30
skipping or hopping over large bumps, reader Bobby Schnitzer offered another possibility. "That car had a solid rear axle suspension. If
and when moving forward the tires were overinflated, as well. We've had several it could demonstrate that exshops look at it over the
act behavior. It is something
last couple of years but no I have experienced with my one sees any evidence of Alfa." Good point, Bobby, rubbing. What are your thanks for sharing it. thoughts? — Brand is an automotive • Does the r u bbing troubleshooter and former race • n oise o c cur w h i l e
you are actually turning the steering wheel, or as
car driver. Email questions to paulbrand@startribune.com. Includea daytime phone number.
Weekly Arts Sr Entertainment
day. The brakes were tested and noted to be fine. The res-
••
t
The B ulletinllQLG/LZINE
A Free Public Service
ervoir was full and did not
require any additional fluid. What could cause this'? • Wow. This is a creepy • occurrence! I'm at a loss to explain the odor you mentioned, but the sinking pedal rings dear. In a follow-up messageyou indicated the brakes
A
were not hot. The most likely
cause of a sinking pedal with no external leakage is a faulty brake master cylinder that's
leaking internally. Were the brakes hot we might consider boiling fluid due to moisture contamination or friction mate-
rial gassing. Try pressing and holding the pedal (one time, continuously, engine not running — the hard pedal is easier to evaluate) and see if the pedal slowly sinks to
Over 80 Oregon Newspapers, from 36 Counties
the floor.Repeat as needed,
pressing softer or harder, and perhaps with the engine running to tempt a symptom reoccurrence. If the pedal sinks, this confirms a faulty master cylinder. Another possibility is crud at the bottom of the fluid
reservoir is preventing consistent take-up of fluid by the cylinder. Perhaps the odor was the
result of a minor oil or coolant leak? Fortunately the master
cylinder is a fairly inexpensive and easi lyrenewed component. • My 2002 Mustang has • begun to do some strange things when I start it. It will
I
0 © Kggh o~
I
I
~ i or use the
® gg ) service to be automatically
emailed of notices that match your needs.
®g]
i
,
,
gg .
I
INSIDE BOOKS W Editorials, F2 Commentary, F3
© www.bendbulletin.com/opinion
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2015
SUNDAY READER
JOHN COSTA
Due process is not the media's job o be very honest, due process is not, nor should it be, the obli-
gation or goal of a spirited and independent press. This misimpression of press obligation is one of the byproducts of the ongoing John Kitzhaber-Cylvia Hayes nightmare. As you have probably read, Kitzhaber resigned as governor after months of stories — initiated by Willamette Week — looking into the
shenanigans of Hayes, the fiancee of the ex-governor. While referring to herself as the First Lady of Oregon, she was financially rewarded for her work as a consultant with businesses that had policy interests with the state of Oregon. That is as tame a description as you'll read of the multiple outrageous
By Andrew Pollack • New York Times News Service
here were no known eyewitnesses to the murder of a young woman and her 3-year-old daughter four years ago. No security cameras caught a figure coming or going. Nonetheless, the police in Columbia, South Carolina, recently released a sketch of a possible suspect. Rather than an artist's rendering based on witness descriptions, the face was generated by a computer relying solely on DNA found at the scene of the crime.
examples of Hayes' activities uncov-
ered by the press. The crux of this tragedy, however, rests in the role of Kitzhaber in al-
lowing or abetting Hayes' misdeeds, the facts of which the press has a
solemn obligation to report. A reader last week took me to task for defending the press in a previous column, writing, "... this is a country
with due process of law and the presumption of innocence until proven
guilty. This basic right seems to have been obscured inthiscaseandthe investigations, yet to be concluded, will determine whether Kitzhaber's
resignation was justified or not." Since the investigations — by the state attorney general, U.S. Department of Justice and the Internal Revenue Service — are just getting underway, itseems premature, at best, to suggest that they or the court system have abrogated their responsibility to due process, which is a legal right articulated in the Magna Carta and embedded in the Fifth Amendment to our Constitution.
In fact, the news Thursday was that Hayes, citing a Fifth Amend-
ment right against self-incrimination, is exercising her due process right to go to court to block the re-
lease of emails involving state activities, according to The Oregonian. Whether or not she wins that ar-
gument, it is her right to assert it, a right that is integral to our concept
of justice. In a court, or legal proceedings, the goal is admissible evidence, assembled through an investigative process and presented or challenged by lawyers under long-standing rules. That is the heart and soul of
due process. That's not what the press does.
We chase information guided by a commitment to factual accuracy and the willingness to let those written about in a story — be it Kitzhaber,
Hayes or anyone else in a similar circumstance — comment.
Many peopledo respond,butsome don't — often on the advice of their attorneys — which is certainly their
right. Not offering the opportunity for comment is unacceptable in our business.
And the press has been diligent in offering Kitzhaber, Hayes and anyone else involved in these stories
— including state government and investigating agencies — the opportunity to respond to the stories.
That they do or don't respond is their choice. But their choice can't stop publica-
tion of important stories. A very good case can be made that had the pressstopped reportingthe storybecause neither Kitzhaber nor
Mark Allen Miller / New York Times News Service
Hayes would comment or voluntari-
It might be the first time a suspect's face has been put before the public in this way, but it will not be the last. Inves-
ly release public information, there would be no investigation today.
tigators are increasingly able to determine the physical characteristics of crime suspects from the DNA they leave
And the historic expectation of a
press that diligently watches and reports on the activities of government
behind, providing what could become a powerful new tool for law enforcement.
would be over in our society if we did
not report news until all official investigations were complete. By that standard, Richard Nixon,
a manwho came perilously dose to destmying our Constitution, would
Already genetic sleuths can determine a suspect's eye and hair color fairly accurately. It is also possible, or might soon be, to predict skin color, freckling, baldness, hair curliness, tooth shape and age. Computers might eventually be
ology at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis who recently won a $1.1 million grant from the Department of Justice to devel-
president of the United States and been given the time to finishhis igno-
op such tools. But forensic DNA phenotyping, as it is able to match faces generated from DNA with called, is also raising concerns. Some sciena database of mug shots. Even if it does not im- tists question the accuracy of the technology, mediately find the culprit, the genetic witness, especially its ability to re-create facial images.
ble pursuit.
so to speak, can be useful, researchers say.
likely have served two full terms as
— John Costais publisher of The Bulletin. Contact: 541-383-0337, jcosta@bendbulletin.corn.
"This is another of these areas where the technology is ahead of the popular debate and discussion," said Erin Murphy, a professor of law at New York University. DNA, of course, has been used for more than two decades to hunt for suspects or to
convict or exonerate people. But until now, that meant matching a suspect's DNA to that
found at the crime scene or trying to find a "That at least narrows down the suspects," erbate racial profiling among law enforcement match in a government database. said Susan Walsh, an assistant professor of bi- agencies and infringe on privacy. SeeDNA/F6 Others say use of these techniques could exac-
F2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2015
EDj To
The Bulletin
s
rri a ioncana's vaueisinwa er, no inscene
"IT'S A TWISTED VERSION OF ISLAM THAT YOU FANATICS OF ISIS BELIEVE IN!"
"NO IT'S NOT."
"WE MODERN MUSLIMS ARE THE FUTURE OFTHE FAITH!"
eei5
M 4HSL%15&j
"NO YOU'RE NOT."
rrigation ditches play an important role in the history of Central Oregon. And as important as they are, we don't
"PlT!FUL!
tend to think about them very much, because, well, they
YOU CAN'T WIN A RELIGIOUS ARGUMENT
are ditches.
II NOz ll
"THEN I'LL WIN BY
JUST BY SAYING NO!"
That changed recently for a stretch of canal in the Central Oregon Irrigation District. This is no mere ditch, we are told. It is "an assemblage ofman-made and natural features joined together by a 'thread' of space and time that recreate a 1904 experience." And there's more: "The essence of this linear corridor; however, is more than an experienceofa'sense ofplace.'Itpresents a multitude of sights, sounds, motions, and emotions." Andalso: "The pioneer spirit can be felt." Those overwrought passages are from a very serious application to nominate more than a mile of the Pilot Butte Canal for national designation as historic. It is, of course, historic in its way. There are 113 pages of thorough researchbacking that up on the website of the State Advisory Committee on Historic Preservation. But hold on. This possible historic designation is not so good for
Central Oregon. What makes any irrigation ditch important is that water is so important here.Water is scarce. Water must be carefully shepherded to provide enough for people to drink, crops to grow and wildlife to thrive. Ditches leak. They lose water through seepage and evaporation. Central Oregon Irrigation District has estimated that piping an additional 0.85 miles in this stretch would save another 7.95 cubic feet per second of water. To give you an idea of how much water that is, I cubic foot of water is more than 7 gallons of water. Neighbors along this stretch of canal don't want it piped. They would lose a beautiful water feature, part of the year. Their new view would be a lump of pipe garnished with landscaping. It's no accident that the historic designation could delay or prevent piping. But that should not be allowed to happen. Water matters more than the ditch.
Don't force workers to be social media mouthpieces t might not be a constitutional right, but most Americans assume that they have at least some right to privacy, even in the era of social media. Some employers, it seems, draw the line far more narrowly than their employees or even would-be employees might like. Sen. Brian Boquist, R-Dallas, hopes tomove the line back He's the sponsor of Senate Bill 185, which would baremployers from requiring employees and job applicants to set up accounts on such social media asFacebook, Twitter and YouTube and then allowthe employer to advertise on it. An employer might think requiring Facebook accounts is a dandy idea. Consider this: About 58 percent of all Facebook users have 100 or more "friends" on Facebook, according to the Pew Research Center,and each one ofthem would be likely to see advertisements posted on an employee's page. There ar e e m ployees who wouldn't thinktwice aboutarequest to post the boss' advertising, no doubt. Others, however, might not
t
be sohappy. With good reason they might believe that deciding what's on a person's page — or whether even to have a page — should be a decision made by the individual, not a thirdparty. Even the most casual user knows the Internet has a huge impact on privacy.Search for anything, and the next day you'll find advertisements for it on many of the sites you visit. Moreover, the individual has little control over the gathering of such information, andit doesn't simply disappear in a matter of hours, months or days. It's there forever. Neither the employer nor the employee orwould-be employee can control the gathering of information on the Internet, but this state and others can work to assure that employers cannot use social media either as a tool for spying on workers or as a tool for free advertising. Two years ago, Oregon lawmakers made it illegal for employers to demand workers' Facebook passwords. Thisyear, Boquist would extend workers' privacy rights with SB 185. It's alogical extension, and it should be approved.
CHOPPINC OFF YOUR HEAD!"
A common-sense Medicare solution: Site-neutral payment By Barry Brooks
ambulatory setting. In his proposal, the president states, "Evidence suggests that in recent years, billing of many ambulatory services has been shifting from physicians' offices to the usually higher paid hospital outpatient department setting, increasing Medicare spending and beneficiary cost-sharing." The White House estimates this reform alone could save $29.5 billion over 10 years. Under current Medicare policy,
CQ-Roll Call
Imagine this basic scenario: You
are out of milk. You could go to your local convenience store and purchase a gallon for $3. But instead, you drive 25 miles to buy the identical gallon of milk for $5 at a large chain grocery store.
If this sounds absurd, that's because it is. It's analogous, however, to current health care payment policies
receiving community-based cancer care. The negative result of these policies goes beyond the fiscal impact. Particularly in rural areas, many patients are losing access to their trusted health care providers due to clo-
sure and consolidation of community-based health care centers as they are forced to join hospitals or dose.
Closures are only one troubling byproduct of payment disparities.
that allow significantly higher reimbursements for health care services for example, a c olonoscopy that provided in certain settings, when costs $625 in the office setting is identical, more convenient and less reimbursed more than double that expensive care in alternative settings amount —$1,383— when performed
Another is the perverse higher re-
exists.
the name on the door and double the
in an HOPD. An MRI scan to diagnose or monitor a patient's disease
After years of ostensibly trying to reign in unnecessary health care spending and maintain Medicare sustainability for future generations, misguided policies on site of service
imbursement incentive that encourages hospitals to buy up physician practices in order to increase their profits. Theybuythepractice, change
prices. progressioncosts $600 ata commuThe solution is dear — neutralize nity-based imaging facility but totals payments across sites of service. Pay $900 or more when conducted by an the same fee for the same service identical scanner in ahospital. regardless ofw hereit is performed. It's not just Medicare; this problem This policy reform has the bipartisan extends to private insurers as well. support of lawmakers, the Medicare The National Institute for Health Payment Advisory Commission and Reform studied private insurance a broad group ofhealth care stakeclaims of nearly 600,000 workers and holders including providers, insurers foundthatincreased HOPD spending Blldconsumers. is leading to overall spending growth To advance such reforms in cancer among privately and publicly insured care, Congress should adopt a poliindividuals because of higher prices cy to secure site-neutral payments to charged by hospitals. keep costs down. Most troubling of all, data reveal We owe our patients, taxpayers that these disparities adversely af- and the nation's health care system fectpatients.Data from researchers common-sense solutions that protect at Milliman show that patients re- patient choice and reduce costs. ceiving cancer treatments in HOPDs — Dr. Barry Brooks is chairman of the spend $650 more in out-of-pocket Pharmacy & Therapeutics Committee
reimbursement have perversely been
doing the exact opposite. Medicare continues to pay more for services
provided in Hospital Outpatient Departments, ranging from blood work to radiology to chemotherapy administration, while other doctors and fa-
cilities in the community providing the same servicesare paid far less. This unfortunate practice for Medi-
carehas increased health care costs bybillions. This month, wewerepleasedto see President Barack Obama's fiscalyear 2016 budget proposal recommend incentives to encourage the delivery of efficient care in the most appropriate copayments compared with patients
at The US Oncology Network.
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 appro-
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.
priate for other sections of The BUtte-
tin. 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: lelters©bendbulletin.com Write: My Nickel's Worth / In MyView P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804
Bemmin aware 0 our unconscious iases upermarket shoppers are more likely to buy French wine when French music is playing and to buy German wine when they hear German music.That's true even though only 14percent of shoppers say theynoticed the music, a study finds. Researchers discovered thatcandi-
S
a series last year, "When Whites Just
received 50 percent more callbacks
Don't Get It," the reaction from white
than the same resume with a name such as Lakisha or Jamal. Having a white-sounding name was as beneficialaseightyears'workexperience. Studies using male and female
men was often indignant. Yet the evidence is overwhelming that unconscious bias remains wide-
NICHOLAS
KRISTOF
spread in ways that systematically benefit both whites and men. So white men geta double dividend, a payoff of the students, a male teacher claimed dates for medical school interviewed fromboth racial and genderbiases. tobe female and vice versa. on sunny days received much highConsider a huge interactive exWhen students were taking the er ratings than those interviewed on ploration of 14 million reviews on class from someone they believed to rainy days. Being interviewed on a RateMyProfessors.com that recently be male, they rated the teacher more rainy day was a setback equivalent to suggestedthat male professors are highly. The very same teacher, when having an MCAT score 10percent low- disproportionately likely to be de- believed to be female, was rated siger, according to a newbook called"Ev- scribedasa "star"or"genius."Female nificantly lower. eryday Bias," by Howard Ross. professorsare disproportionately deSomething similar happens with Those studies are a reminder that scribed as "nasty," "ugly," "bossy" or race. Two scholars, Marianne Berwe humans are perhaps less rational "disorganized." trand and Sendhil Mullainathan, sent than we would like to think and more One reaction from men was: Well, out fictitious resumes in response to prone to the buffeting of unconscious maybe female professors are more help-wanted ads. Each resume was influences. That's something for those disorganized! given a name that either sounded steof us who are white men to reflect on But researchers at North Caroli- reotypically African-American or one when we're accused of "privilege." na State conducted an experiment that sounded white, but the resumes White men sometimes feel besieged in which they asked students to rate were otherwise basicallythe same. and baffled by these suggestions of teachers of an online course (the stuThe study found that a r esume systematic advantage. When I wrote dents never saw the teachers). To some with a name such as Emily or Greg
names have found similar biases. It's not that we white men are inten-
None of these examples mean exactly that society is full of hard-core racists and misogynists. Eduardo Bonilla-Silva, a Duke University sociologist, aptly calls the present situation "racism without racists", it could
equally be called "misogyny without misogynists." Of course, there are
tionally doing anything wrong, but we die-hard racists and misogynists out do have a penchant for obliviousness there, but the bigger problem seems to about the way we are beneficiaries of be well-meaningpeoplewhobelieve in systematic unfairness. Maybe that's equal rights yet make biased decisions because in a race, it's easy not to no- inadvertently. tice a tailwind, and white men often So, come on, white men! Let's just go through life with a tailwind, while acknowledge that we're all flawed, women and people of color must push biased and sometimes irrational, and a~ a h eadwind. that we can do more to resist unconWhile we don't notice systematic
scious bias. That means trying not
unfairness, we do observe specific efforts to redress it — such as affir-
to hire people just because they look like us, avoiding telling a young girl
mative action, which often strikes
she's "beautiful" while her brother is
white men as profoundly unjust. Thus "smart." It means acknowledging sysa majority of white Americans sur- tematic bias as a step toward correctveyed in a 2011 study said that there is ingit. now more racism a~
against blacks.
whit es than
— Nichotoas Kristofis a columnist for The New York Times.
SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
F3
OMMENTARY
Fight the illiberal immigration approach
THOMAS
FRIEDMAN federal judge has temporarily blocked ~sident Barack Obama's executive order that overrode existing immigration law. The result is more acrimony and chaos.
A
VICTOR
DAVIS HANSON
It is a good time to remember that
there are more than just two types A president by fiat would nulliof immigration — legal and illegal. fy existing laws and order federal There also exist liberal and illiberal agencies to ignore them. Or he would approaches to immigration. issue executive orders contrary to Take liberal immigration. It is both his prior promises and to the governed by laws passed by Con- Constitution. gress and signed and executed by President Obama did not, as he althe president. Nearly all Americans leges,override Congress because it accept that no individual can pick failed to act on immigration. Instead and choose which federal statute he he ignoreditbecause Congress would chooses to obey, depending on his not act in a particular fashion that he own perceived self-interest. found ideologically akin to his beliefs. Liberal immigration would be enIlliberal immigration would also tirely legal, meritocratic and ethnical-
mean that new arrivals could ignore
ly blind. Skills and education would the cost, time and inconvenience matter more than proximity to the of applying for visas. Instead, they border or political dout. would simply enter the U.S. illegally The numbers of immigrants would and not be transparent about their be balanced by liberal considerations: illegal status. Illiberal immigration the need for skilled newcomers to would turn policy away from ethniavoid dependency on American so- cally blind considerations to focus on ciety, and concern that their arrival not harm the economic aspirations of
ethnic criteria. It would assume that the enforce-
poor working citizens. Liberal immigration would aim at rapidly integrating and assimilating immigrants in accordance with further classical liberal principles.
ment of federal immigration law and the making of immigration policy should react to particular ethnic and
political lobbying groups. Illiberal immigration would not America is not a multicultural society concern itself with the impact of arw here appearance isessentialto our rivals on the host country, especially characters, but a uniquely multira- the costs incurred by the public or the cial nation bound by common values effect on the wages and services of where race becomes secondary. the poor and working classes. In contrast, illiberal immigration Also, illiberal immigration would seek — both explicitly by political inwould be the opposite of the above.
tent and implicitly by sheer numbers origin or ethnic background of the — to undermine easy assimilation, in would-be immigrant. hopes of creating bloc constituencies What is holding up legislative comwith group concerns rather than indi- promise and what drove President vidual concerns. Obama's executive order is illiberal Illiberal immigration would en- opposition to what most Americans courage romance for, not disappoint- see as a liberal compromise. ment with, the country left behind. The advocates of open borders apAnd it would result in demands on, parently do not wish an end to easy rather than gratitude to, the newly entrywithout regardto the law. adopted country. The reason immiThey do not wish to deport foreign gration is now a mess is not because nationals who have broken U.S. laws, there are no liberal solutions, but or who have no history of productive because there are so many illiberal employment, or who have just arrived stumblingblocks. in anticipation of amnesty. Many Americans are willing to alThey do not wish to reform legal low some sort of exemption to the im- immigration to a completely meritomigrants residing here illegally. Such cratic system that might not necesan exemption would offer a pathway sarilyfavor the current preponderto permanent legal residency to the ance of arrivals from Latin America majority of immigrants here illegally and Mexico — and thus might not if some liberal criteria were first ap- enhance the political dout of ethnic plied. First, dose the border to illegal operatives. immigration to prevent recurrence And they most certainly do not of these problems. Texas authorities wish to end admission to the U.S. report that 20,000 foreign nationals on the basis of cheap labor. To do have crossed the state's southern that would i n crease the w a ges border with Mexico in the last two and bargaining power of working months. Americans. Ensure that those who have comThe solution to the immigration mitted crimes in the United States, or mess is not to threaten militancy if a who have no history of work but in- particular political agenda is jeoparstead only a record of dependency on dized. It is not to slam a federal judge entitlements, return to their nations of w ho demandsadherence to the law. origin. And it is certainly not to scapegoat a Those who have just illegally ar- generous host for not agreeing to porived in cynical anticipation of amlitical demands of guests. nesty should likewise return home to The answer instead is simply to act go through the process legally. legally — and liberally. Make immigration a meritocratic
system that does not take into consideration the particular country of
— Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist and historian at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University.
ISIS and the road to Rome he Italians got this one right. This month, The Washington
Post's Adam Taylor helpfully collected tweets that Italians put out after a murderous video issued by the
Islamic State, or ISIS, warned: "Today we are south of Rome," one militant said. "We will conquer Rome with Al-
lah's permission." As the hashtag ¹We Are Coming 0 Rome made the rounds in Italy, Rome residents rose to the challenge. Their tweets, Taylor noted, included: "¹We Are Coming 0 Rome ahahah Be careful on the highway-Ring Road: there's too much traffic, you would remain trapped!" "¹We Are Coming 0 Rome hey just a tip: don't come in train, it's every time late!"
" ¹We Are Coming 0
Rome
You're too late, Italy is already been
destroyedby theirgovernments." ISIS'smurderous ways aren't a joke, but the Italians' mocking of ISIS is rather appropriate. While we agonizingly debate ISIS's relationship to Islam, we've forgotten a simple truth
about many of the people attracted to such groups. It is the truth uttered by Ruslan Tsarni on CNN after his two
A giant leap for commercializing the moon By Dominic Basuito
ever a company brmgs to the moon
Special To The Washington Post
and whatever it does on the moon. It
aybe plans for the commercial exploration of the moon
pays homage to the 1979"Moon Trea-
M The FAA, in a carefully worded poli-
~OVg~
aren't so far-fetched after all.
cy statement, has essentially outlined a scenario by which a U.S.-based company — Bigelow Aerospacecould stake future claims to lunar property. That could be huge. For nearly 50 years, ever since the 1967 UN Outer Space Treaty (signed by more than 100 nations, induding the United States), there has been unanimous international agreement 2016, deadline. that no nation could stake a sover-
It's not just U.S. innovators who
eign claim to the moon for any rea- are getting involved — competitors son. Moreover, every nation's govern- from Italy, Japan, Malaysia, Spain, ment has also been responsible for Germany, Hungary,Brazil, Canaany "nongovernmental entities" (i.e. da, Chile, India, China, Romania corporations or citizens) that wanted and Russia are also coming up with to do so. And, as if that weren't clear their own plans for moon missions. enough, the so-called "Moon Treaty" In short, we're coming up against an of 1979 (signed by nine nations, but international space law scenario that not the United States) clearly states everyone's been dreading: "A private that private ownership of the moon is launch system based on the Isle of forbidden. Man, launching somebody into orbit But fast-forward 50 years, and who would then be transferred to Ll we're suddenly having a serious dis- on a tug that was run out of Dubai, cussion about returning to the moon. and then to a lander operated by Eighteen entrants are still alive in the
ty" by stating that the ruling does not
somebody in Australia." To make sure that the United
Google Lunar X Prize competition, which will award a $20 million grand States gets first dibs on whatever's prize to any team that develops a ro- out there — maybe helium-3 or valubotic device capable of landing on the able rare earth elements — there's moon, crawling 500 meters on, above been a lot of discussion already about or below the moon's surface and how to create the right legal framesending back HDTV "mooncasts" for work to get around that pesky 1967 people on Earth to watch. If all goes UN Outer Space Treaty. The best opaccordingto plan,we could even see tion for now is the claim that a "loopa winning Google Lunar X Prize mis- hole" exists whereby sovereign ownsion to the moon before the Dec. 31, ership rights to the moon might be
imply "ownership of the moon." It dives into the Law of the Sea Treaty
There's a lot of truth in that. ISIS is
made up of three loose factions, and we need to understand all three before
by establishing a provision for mining and exploration rights, provided some baseof operation has already
we get deeper into another war in Iraq
been established on the moon's sur-
volunteers. Some are hardened jihad-
face. And it keeps America's legal options open to take on China at a later date by suggesting that the "national regulatory framework is ill-equipped
is, but many are just losers, misfits, adventure seekers and young men who've never held power, a job or a girl's hand and joined ISIS to get all three.
to enable the U.S. government to ful-
banned, but private ownership rights fill its obligations" under the 1967 UN are not banned. (Remember, we nev- Outer Space Treaty. er signed the 1979 Moon Treaty.) AcSo what exactly did the FAA give cording to one piece of proposed leg- Bigelowo. A "landing spot" on the islation known as the Space Settle- moon? The right to set up an inflatment Prize Act, the first private ven-
able habitat on the moon? Pre-ap-
ture to establish a moon base would
proval for a future moon payload? If you're not a space law expert, it's
be able to claim up to 600,000 square
nephews, Dzhokhar and Tamerlan Tsarnaev, were accused of the Boston Marathon bombing. They were just two "losers," he said, who resented those who did better than them and dressed it up in ideology. "Anything else, anything else to do with religion, with Islam, is a fraud, is a fake."
miles of the moon's surface.
hard to tell. Maybe Robert Bigelow,
Other arguments have made the case that the commercial exploration
the founder of Bigelow Aerospace, put it best when he told Reuters: "It
and Syria. One faction comprises the foreign
ISIS's second faction, its backbone,
is made up of former Sunni Baathist army officers and local Iraqi Sunnis and tribes, who give ISIS passive support. Although Iraqi Sunnis constitute a third of Iraq's population, they've ruled Iraq for generations and simply can't accept the fact that the Shiite majority is now in charge. Also, for many Sunni villagers under ISIS's control, ISIS is just less bad than the brutal-
of the moon should follow the logic of just means that somebody else isn't the Law of the Sea Treaty, which can licensed to land on top of you or land be basically described as "finder's on top of where exploration and proskeepers" when it comes to activities pecting activities are going on, which such as mineral extraction. And, last may be quite a distance from the lu-
ization and discrimination they re-
but not least, there's the 'Well, China
mating the power of religious ideology and underappreciating the impact of misgovernance. Sarah Chayes, who long worked in Afghanistan
is going to do it anyway, so we should
nar station." So here's the deal: Companies are
going to the moon, and they don't opting out of the parts of the UN Out- want tocome back empty-handed. er Space Treaty that would block U.S. They are not getting much money commercial enterprises from freely from the government, so they need to commercializing the moon. make every moon visit commercialSo that's why the FAA ruling on ly viable. The easiest way to do that the moon is so clever — it bends the is by making some aspect of moon ball around the 1967 Outer Space exploration relatively routine, while Treaty by clearly stating that the U.S. letting NASA figure out all the hard government must still approve what- stuff — such as howto get to Mars. do it first" argument for selectively
ceived from Iraq's previous Shiite-led government. The U.S. keeps repeating the same mistake in the Middle East: overesti-
and has written an important book
— "Thieves of State: Why Corruption Threatens Global Security" — about how government corruption helped turn Afghans away from us and from the pro-U.S. Afghan regime, argues that "nothing feeds extremism more
than the in-your-face corruption and injustice" that some of America's closet Middle East allies administer daily
Solution to extremism lies in nationalism
to theirpeople. The third ISIS faction is composed of the true ideologues, led by Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi. They have their own apocalyptic version of Islam. But it would not be resonating were it not
he struggle against Islamic extremism has been crippled by a failure of historical awareness and cultural understanding. From the very beginning, we have treated the problem of terrorism through the prism of our own assumptions and
T
able talking about.
be alienated young men fueled by
At the summit meeting, Obama
gave the conventional materialistic explanation for what turns people into terrorists. Terrorism spreads, he
DAVID BROOKS
argued, where people lack economic opportunity and good schools. The our own values. We have solipsisti- way to fight terror, he concluded, is of The New York Times profiled a cally assumed that people turn to ex- with better job-training programs, young Egyptian man, named Islam tremism because they can't get what more shared wealth, more open po- Yaken, who grew up in a private we want, and fail to realize that they litical regimes and a general mes- school but ended up fighting for the don't want what we want but want sage of tolerance and pluralism. Islamic State and kneeling proudly something they think is higher. In short, the president took his by a beheaded corpse in Syria. He T he latest example of t h i s i s secular domestic agenda and pro- was marginalized by society. He the speech that President Barack jected it as a way to prevent young seems to have rejected the whole calObama gave at the recent Summit men from joining the Islamic State culus of what we call self-interest for on Countering Violent Extremism. and chopping off heads. the sake of an electrifying apocalypIt was a bad speech, but its badness But people don't join the Islamic tic worldview and what he imagines is no reflection on Obama, for it was State because they want better jobs to be some illimitable heroic destiny. the same sort of bad speech that all with more benefits. The Islamic This heroic urge is combined, by U.S. presidents have been giving for State is one of a long line of anti-En- Islamist extremists, with a vision of the past generation. lightenment movements, led by peo- End Times, a culmination to history Religious extremism exists on ple who have contempt for material- brought about by a climactic battle three levels. It grows out of econom- istic goals. These people don't care and the purification of the earth. ic and political dysfunction. It is fu- if their earthly standard of living Extremism is a spiritual phenomeledby perverted spiritual ardor. It is improves by a few percent a year. enon, a desire for loftiness of spirit organized by theological conviction. They're disgusted by the pleasures gone perverse. You can't counter U.S. presidents focus almost exclu- we value, the pluralism we prize and a heroic impulse with a mundane sively on the economic and political the emphasis on happiness in this and bourgeois response. You can level because that's what polite peo- world. counter it only with a more compelple in Western capitals are comfortOn Thursday, Mona El-Naggar ling heroic vision. There will always
for the fact that"both religion and pol-
spiritual ardor. Terrorism will be de-
itics have been hijacked" in the Arab
feated only when they find a different fulfillment, even more bold and
world and Pakistan, creating a "toxic mix," says Nader Mousavizadeh, who co-leads the global consulting firm
self-transcending. In other times, nationalism has offered that com-
pelling vision. We sometimes think of nationalism as a destructive force, and it can be. But nationalism tied
to universal democracy has always been uplifting and ennobling. It has organized heroic lives in America, France, Britain and beyond. Young Arab men are not going to walk away from extremism because they can suddenly afford a Slurpee. They will walk away when they can devote themselves to a revived nationalism, some call to serve a cause
Macro Advisory Partners. Without
the prospect of a legitimate politics "that genuinely responds to popular grievances," no amount of top-down attempts to engender moderate Islam will succeed, he added. So, to defeat ISIS and not see an-
other emerge, you need to: wipe out its leadership; enlist Muslims to dis-
credit the very real, popular, extremist versions of Islam coming out of Saudi Arabia and Pakistan; stem the
injustice, corruption, sectarianism
that connects nationalism to dignity
and state failure now rampant in the Arab world and Pakistan; and carve
and democracy and transcends a lifetime.
out for Iraqi Sunnis their own autonomous region of Iraq and a share of
Extremism isn't mostly about Is-
its oil wealth, just as the Kurds have.
lam. It is about a yearning for righteousness rendered malevolent by apocalyptic theology. Muslim clerics can fix that. The rest of us can help redirect the spiritual ardor toward humane and productive ends. — David Brooks is a columnist for The New York Times.
I know: Sounds impossible. But this problem is very deep. This is the only route to a more moderate Arab Islam
— as wellasto feweryoung men and women looking for dignity in all the wrongplaces. — Thomas Friedmanis a columnist for The New Yorh Times.
© www.bendbulletin.com/books
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2015
BEST-SELLERS Publishers Weekly ranks the best-sellers for the weekthat ended Feb.22 HARDCOVERFICTION 1. "The Girl on theTrain" by Paula Hawkins (Riverhead)
New York Times News Service
See" by Anthony Doerr (Scrib-
NEW YORK — C u r i ous strollers in early-16th-century
2. oAII the Light We Cannot
ner) 3."Obsession in Death"by J.D. Robb (Putnam) 4. "The Nightingale" by Kristin Hannah (St. Martin's) 5. "Private Vegas" by James Patterson and Maxine Paetro (Little, Brown) 6. "A Spool of BlueThread" by Anne Tyler (Knopf) 7. "The Whites" by Richard Price (Holt) 8. "Motive" by Jonathan Kellerman (Ballantine) 9. "The Accidental Empress" by Allison Pataki (SBS/ Howard) 10. "Gray Mountain" by John Grisham (Doubleday) HARDCOVER NONFICTION 1. "The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Upo by Marie Kondo
(Ten Speed) 2. "Killing Patton" by Bill O'Reilly and Martin Dugard (Henry Hold) 3. "The 20/20 Diet" by Phil McGraw (Bird Street) 4. "Being Mortal" by Atul Gawande (Metropolitan) 5. "The FoodBabeWay" by Vani Hari (Little, Brown) 6. "Majora's Mask 3D Collector's Edition" (Prima Games) 7. "Believer" by David Axelrod (Penguin Press) 8. oYes Please" byAmy Poehler (Morrow/Dey Street) 9. "Money: Master the Game" by Tony Robbins(Simon & Schuster) 10."God, Guns, Grits, and Gravy" by Mike Huckabee(St. Martin's)
By Jennifer Schuessler
Venice might have paused by the shop of the great printer
By Alexandra Alter New York Times News Service
Jill Abramson, a former executive editor of The New York Times, has sold a book
about the future of the media industry to Simon & Schuster.
The book will explore the challenges that traditional media organizations are facing as they seek to survive and flourish in the digital age and how online mediacompanies arechanging the way news is gathered
A
e: i :.
'
.
- .
: -
:
-
.
n I A L 9 0 Pr0 MANUXIrc Ioc r o o a EoII c'rl o L I'v o rlo
DEIIE RETPERE SEECf@e E RlivEINN I N R IE N E E I A I D E I 1' r 8 '
A ldus Manutius only to b e
scared off by a stern warning posted over the door. "Whoever you are, Aldus asks you again and again
vellum and held by Princeton University. "It was immediately obvious," Clemons said. "It
DA IROMENEOO MAEIA kl SSÃX,mi Prossom iri Lcrrere Tormae oet Rooorlrasa hvcivcfcavale Piarearloo, e Errsiomcario Resa cclebrc EIRrorio Eooaiaoa rii PlrORro.
was Frenchy."
-.;:;- /
what it is you want from him," it read. "State your business
arS
To state the current busi-
ness at hand briefly, Aldus is the subject of a new exhibition commemorating th e
5 0 0 th
duce some important editions,
PRRaco erooroa'roaoa Nooooaa
including the first printed Greek Bible, the Septuagint, in
e o m alcarvo
1518, and the official proceed-
Aldus has attracted some
ings of the Council of Trent. Aldus' grandson, known as
pop-culture attention in recent years, at least among those
Aldus the Younger, took sole Philip Greenberg l New York Times NewsService
A likeness of Aldus Manutius is included in an exhibition at The Grolier Club in New York, titled Aldus Msnutius: A Legacy More Lasting Than Bronze. It commemorates the 500th anniversary of the death of Manutius with a display of nearly 150 books from the press he founded in Venice in 1494.
the first to use the semicolon in its modern sense. And then there were the
unwitting firsts, such as what Podable library might be the earliest known The exhibition that opened version of "This page left inlast week at the Grolier Club tentionally blank," preserved in a 1513 edition of the Greek orators included in the show,
tius: A Legacy More Lasting Than Bronze," gathers nearly along with instructions to the 150 Aldines, as books from the binder to remove the extra press Aldus founded in Ven- leaf. "He printed the instructions ice in 1494 are known, for a more sober tribute. Gutenberg in Latin and Greek," Clemons invented the movable-type said. "But of c ourse bookprinting press, used to create binders couldn't read Latin or anyone who has ever sat in
Greek."
a cafe, or in the bath, with a
A printing revolution
paperback owes a debt to Aldus and the small, cleanly de-
Aldus, born in th e Papal States around 1452, trained as a humanist scholar and
signed editions of the secular
classics he called libelli por- worked as a tutor in aristotatiles, or portable little books. cratic households before tak"It's become a cliche to call ing up printing in the 1490s. them the forerunners of the It was a moment of upheaval Penguin Classics," G. Scott in reading roughly equivalent Clemons, the president of the to our own digitally disrupted Grolier Club, said during a re- age. And Venice was the Silicent tour of the installation in con Valley of printing, home to progress. "But the concept of dozens of shops locked in cutpersonal reading is in some throat competition. ways directly traceable to the The Aldine Press, in its innovations of Aldus' portable startup phase, emphasized library." Greek and Latin lexicons and The exhibition, organized grammar manuals. In 1495, by Clemons and H. George Aldus began publishing the Fletcher,a former curator of first printed edition of Aristotrare books at the New York
Public Library and the Morgan Library, is a gallery of bragging rights. Aldus was the first to print Aristotle, Thu-
cydides, Herodotus and Sopho cles, among others in t h e
Greek canon. He was possibly
control in 1574, but "the gene pool had run very shallow," Fletcher said.
By 1579, Aldines carried a list of still-available titles printed in the back. "You can
t reatment i n 2 0 0 4 . T h e re was also Robin Sloan's 2012 the first printer to compare best-seller, "Mr. Penumbra's manuscripts to arrive at the 24-Hour Bookstore," which most reliable text. He was the turned Aldus into the founder first to use italic type. He was
in Manhattan, "Aldus Manu-
Paulus. The center of printing
IN VraÃS S I Ao CI~i~CCArX
knowit.
of a shadowy secret society headed for an apocalyptic showdown with Google.
press was taken over by his father-in-law and then by his son had begun migrating north, but the press continued to pro-
anniversary of his deathand the birth of reading as we
with a geekish taste for printing history. The novel "The Rule of Four" gave his most famous book, the enigmatic "Hypnerotomachia Poliphili," an upmarket "Da Vinci Code"
A business'failure Aldus died in 1515, and the
briefly, and then immediately go away."
his monumental Bibles. But
Former N.Y. Times editor inks book deal
V'- ' I T
kept printing fakes," Clemons said. While putting together the show, Clemons identified one previously unknown counterfeit, a 1501 Virgil printed on
almost imagine him looking li portatiles, all bearing Aldus' printer's mark, a dolphin curled around an anchor. (The colophon is still used today by Doubleday) Some of the books were treated as trea-
a man to death with an iron
over his shoulder at the un-
printed. The book, a densely allegor-
bar before reputedly meeting sold books piling up," Clemons his own demise at the end of a said. hangman's rope. Italics, which In a last-ditch effort to save were intended to mimic the the press, Aldus the Younghumanist handwriting of the er accepted a commission day, first appeared in a modest from Pope Sixtus V for a new five words in a 1500 edition of Latin Bible, only to produce the letters of St. Catherine and a rush job so riddled with ersoon spread to other Aldines rors — about 4,900, Fletcher and beyond. n oted grimly — that it w a s And then there was the ro- suppressed. "Sixtus died, and the new man typeface devised for a 1496 book by the humanist pope said, 'You've got to be scholar Pietro Bembo — the kidding me,'" Fletcher said. inspiration for the modern (The book, which includes font Bembo, still treasured by carefully pasted-in printed book designersfor its grace corrections, is now among the and readability. rarer Aldines.) "The book itself is almost The press closed for good in frivolous," Clemons said of the 1597. But Aldines, which sur-
ical erotic love story attribut-
sures and customized with magnificent decoration that
harked back to the tradition of illuminated manuscripts. 0th-
ers were workaday volumes, filled with marginal scribbles. The exhibition also includes
examples of A l dus' l arger-format work, including the "Hypnerotomachia Poliphili" (1499), sometimes said to be the most beautiful — and the most unreadable — book ever
text, which recounts a trip to
vive in the tens of thousands,
ed to Francesco Colonna, is Mount Etna. "But it launched celebrated for its integration that very modern typeface." of gracefully shaped typography and elegant woodcuts. Copyright attempts
have exerted an unflagging hold oncollectors,from Jean
But visitors to
named, to the two curators, whose personal loans make
t h e G r olier
The libelli portatiles also
would be forgiven for letting their eyes go straight to the famously excited ithyphallic (to use the scholarly term) god Priapus standing at attention,
attracted less flattering imitations. Aldus, who had se-
cured special printing privileges from the Vatican, was plagued by counterfeiters, deas it were. The book is disspite the warnings on his title played cracked open a modest pages that those who made halfway to that page, directly unauthorized copies would be acrossthe room from a 1547
excommunicated.
medical encyclopedia open to a passage discussing the uses
1503 he printed a broadside
Things got so bad that in
Grolier, the Renaissance bib-
liophile for whom the club is up the bulk of the show. Clemons, a ma n aging partner at the financial firm Brown Brothers H arriman,
bought the first of the roughly 1,000 Aldines in his collection
while an undergraduate classics major. "It may now finally be worth what I paid," he joked.
warning consumers of the Fletcher, who acquired the telltale marks of fake Aldines, first of his 125 Aldines when have both sex and drugs," including specific textual er- he was 16, summed up their Clemons explained. rors, low-quality paper with "a a llure with w hat m i ght b e le. In 1501, he released the first Most of A l dus' contribu- heavy odor" and typography called Aldine understatement. "Aldus was a person with of his small octavo editions tions to the art of printing are that exuded, as he put it, a sort of the classics, books "that more subtle, such as that first of "Gallicitas," or "Frenchi- a strong aesthetic sense who could be held in the hand and italic typeface, which he creat- ness." (Many c ounterfeits was also able to work with learned by heart (not to speak ed with the type cutter Fran- came from Lyon.) common sense," he said. "This "The counterfeiters just is an almost completely unof being read) by everyone," as cesco Griffo, a shadowy fellow he later wrote. who broke with Aldus acri- said, 'Thank you very much,' known phenomenon, even The show includes 20 libel- moniously and then slugged corrected their e rrors, and today." of cannabis. "We wanted the show to
and consumed.
In a statement released by Simon & S c huster, Abramson said that after
having wrestled with the rapidly changing media landscape as an editor, she
was eager to tackle the subject as a reporter. "I've been a frontline
combatant in the news me-
With Lou Reed, any interviewcouldbe a battle "Lou Reed: The Last Interview would anyone want to be inand Other Conversations" terviewed? Anybody in their (Melville House, 128 pages, right mind? Why would you, $15.95) if the position was reversed,
dia's battle to remain the
bedrock of an informed society," Abramson said. "Now I'm going to wear my reporter's hat again to tell the full drama of that story in a book, focusing on both traditional and new media
players inthe digital age." Abramson, the first fe-
male executive editor of The Times, led the paper from September 2011 until May
2014, when she was dismissed by the paper's publisher, Arthur Sulzberger. She's since taken a position as a visiting lecturer teaching n a rrative n o nfiction writing at Harvard Univer-
sity and announced plans for a long-form journalism startup. Abramson has published several other books, includ-
ing "Strange Justice: The Selling of Clarence Thomas," written with Jane May-
er, and"The Puppy Diaries," her memoir about training
her dog Scout.
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
When I saw the latest entrant in Melville House's "Last Interview" series, I almost did
a spit take. In a seriesthat offers the
thoughtful, provocative and impish responses of such great writers as Jorge Luis Borges, James Baldwin, Roberto Bolano and Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Melville House
now presents Lou Reed. That Melville House, a nim-
ble Brooklyn publisher, would publish a book about Lou Reed, the quintessential New York rocker, is no shock. But
a book of interviews with Lou Reed, a notorious interview hater and journalist basher
(just ask Robert Christgau's toes)? But don'ttake my word on
that. Let the man speak for himself, as he did in a 1989 interview wit h D a vid F r i c-
ke in Rolling Stone: "I don't like being interviewed. Why
Awake," a piece of gonzo journalism that depicts their conversation as the equivalent of two exhausted street fighters
Gaiman. A Reed fan since his youth, Gaiman casually
Auster than Reed. It's minor stuff, from a music fan's point
mentions at a lunch that he wished he'd interviewed Reed
of view, but Reed offers a wonderful quote from Patti Smith on the need to keep living after a loved one has died: "Because the other person can't
while he was still a music trading low blows without re- journalist. The starmaker ma'What was it like, this failure ally hurting chinery lurches you had when you were twen- each other into action. After ty-two, David?'" — except for several false posIi,' Unsurprisingly, Fricke's dis- Bangs' hateitives, Reed calls cussion with Reed is the only f ul wo r d s him for a t alk truly successful journalistic about Raminutes b e fore interview in this collection chel, R eed's he goes onstage of six; it was published a few transsexual for a European months after the release of paramour in c oncert. I t' s a "New York," his finest album those days. If f riendly c on""I 8z~" and one Reed had a strong de- this were the v ersation w i t h sire to promote. The other five only piece by Reed riffing on pieces here can be described Bangs a pertopics generatas interview-basedencounters son ever read, ed by Gaiman's with Reed displaying varying one would be questions about R eed's b o ok levels of intransigence. Reed hard-pressed devotees will want to read and to understand ooa OIIIBICDIVBISITliNS of lyrics, "Beown this book; music publi- w hy B a ngs tween Thought cists might want to use parts was considered an i m portand Expression." "Lou Reed and Paul Auster: of it in professional develop- ant music writer. His writing ment training. comes across as low-grade A Conversation," which ap"Lou Reed: The Last Inter- Hunter S. Thompson without peared in Dazed & Confused view" features a prominent the insight or humor. in 1996, came out of Reed's degree of celebrity on the In contrast to Bangs' batter- participation in "Blue in the interviewers' side. It o p ens ing, Neil Gaiman's "Waiting Face," a largely ad-libbed comwith Lester Bangs' notorious for the Man" (Reflex maga- ic movie that Wayne Wang 1975 Creem article, "Let Us zine, 1992) is a fanboy em- and novelist Auster directed Now Praise Famous Death brace — we all should have in Brooklyn. The discussion Dwarves: Or, How I Slugged It fanboys who write as well as is as much, if not more, about want to sit here and have me
By Jim Higgins
Out With Lou Reed and Stayed
ask questions about you?
NllREE B IHELASTItENlEI
be there, you owe it to them to
enjoy yourself twice as much." Battling Lou returns in a 2008 Spin interview con-
ducted by David Marchese. Reed finds reasons to dislike much of what Marchese asks
him. He bristles at a question about whether listeners have changed their mind about his gloomy "Berlin" album. He balks when Marchese brings up the Velvet Underground. He declines to tell Spin what younger bands he likes. Finally, he decides Marchese isn't really interested in music and ends the conversation. Farida Khelfa conducted the final interview with Reed less than a month before his death
from liver disease in 2013, as part of a photo shoot for Parrot Zik headphones, for whom Reed had consulted. "Sound
for me is like a dress for you," he tells th e
Khelfa.
f o rmer m odel
SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
F5
'Lincoln'sGreatest Case'explores president's 1stcareer as alawyer "Lincoln's Greatest Case"
McGinty's fascinating "Lin-
gued that both railroads and
by Brian McGinty (Liveright,
coln's Greatest Case" makes
272 pages, $26.95) By Elizabeth Taylor
clear, in defending the Rock Island Bridge's owners, Lincoln was forecasting his belief
bridges would bind the sections of the country together and, as McGinty explains, "help to unite people and com-
Chicago Tribune
in the ultimate power of the
merce in far-distant parts of
On the Mississippi River, between Rock Island, Illi-
Union.
the nation, and ultimately help to preserve the Union of the
Before the Civil War, sys-
tems of transportation bisect- United States." a st e amboat c r a s h e d ed the nation. As McGinty In the end, Lincoln and the i nto t h e fi r s t w rites, r i v e r railroads prevailed — with railroad bridge traffic led from i mportant i m plications. A s built across the the n o r thern McGinty w r ites: "The stor iver. The i m p arts o f th e ry of the Effie Afton adds a pact caused the country measure of real history to the I boat, known as from St. Paul, heroic Lincoln mythology. the Effie Afton, M inne s o t a , It reminds us that before he to explode into and Pittsburgh went to Washington, Lincoln f lames a n d — to the south, was a resourceful lawyer who, s ink i nt o t h e through slave- in a crowded Chicago courtI river. holding St. Lou- room in 1857, helped to bind Not one peris to New Orle- the nation together with iron son was killed ans, the largest rails, to bridge the mightiest in the disaster slave-trading river on the continent, and to of 1856, yet market in Amer- turn the nation toward an ecothis e pisode ica. At the same nomic future of strength and ended up pitt ime, the M i s - vitality." ting the future sissippi R iver, Sometimes, while the future nois, and Davenport, Iowa,
against the past, with r a il-
from Minnesota into the Gulf
seems to lie in the establish-
roads representing the future. of Mexico, divided the country ment of invisible connections, The steamboat owners filed into east and west. it can be rewarding to look to a lawsuit against the bridge In his closing arguments the past, when it was infraowners, who hired the tall and in the lawsuit, officially titled structure that held the promreedy lawyer Abraham Lin- Hurd et al. v. The Railroad ise of unity. McGinty enlivens coln to defend them. Bridge Co. but known as the this history of pre-Civil War In a sense, though, as Brian Effie Afton case, Lincoln ar- America.
~'® gf~w Gilles Sabrie/New YorkTimes News Service
Photographer Xu Yong holds an iPhone with one of his images next to its negative version printed in his latest book, "Negatives," in Beijing. The book features images of the protests that convulsed Beijing in the spring of 1989.
' e atives'isanew ens on ina's isto By Andrew Jacobs BEIJING — The latest
e e ou'isas ar satire on race in merica
book by photographer Xu Yong is filled with the images of young Chinese idealists clamoring for democracy and denouncing the Communist Party, but he insists that there is nothing political about his decision
to publish this trove of snapshots he had kept hidden for more than two decades.
"This is an art book," said
Xu, 60, who has more than "The Sellout" by Paul Beatty (Farrar, Straus
not quotable here. regular meetings of the Dum Most basically, " The Sell- Dum D o nu t In t e llectuals, out" is about a young black he Id in a local doughnut shop, man born in the "agrarian m eetings that are a gift to an ghetto" of Dickens, a neighbor- au thor primed to send up the hood on the southern outskirts pr etensions of some black of Los Angeles, who becomes in tellectuals. His dad never
20 photography books to
four novels and two books of a n artisanal watermelon and d oes get around to writing the poetry, all of them worthwhile. w eed dealer. One of the fin- b e st-selling memoir he hopes But the book of his that I re- e r pot strains he develops is t o write, which he considered turn to most is one he edited. called Anglophobia. calling "I'm Ai'ight. You're It's called "Hokum: An AntholHe ends up before the Su- A i'ight." ogy of African-American Hu- preme Court because he isPrick the satire in "The Sellmor" (2006). w ait for it — reinstating slav- o ut," and real blood emerges. In his introduction to "Ho- ery, at least in his own house, T he narrator's father is shot kum," Beatty speaks about a nd segregating the local d ead by Los Angeles police reading the canonical black middle school, boxing whites offr cers for, basically, driving writers as a young man and out. His sidekick and erstwhile w hile black. There's a surreal "welcoming the rhetoric but c hattel is an old man named b ut aching scene in which the over time missing the black H ominy, the last surviving Lit- n a r ator r drapeshis father's bon mot, the snap, the bag, tle Rascal. Hombody over the the whimsy upon which" — I iny says things horse he keeps on his urban am working around a perfect- such as, "You farm and clops ly detonated vulgarity here know, m a s sa, — both righteous anger and Bugs B u n ny home through 'r H E freedom take flight. "It was as wasn't nothing ' the streets, a if the black writers I'd read," but Br'er Rabbit pageant I'd love he declared, "didn't have any with a b e t t er to see f ilmed friends." agent." by Cha r les
in the spring of 1989 is likely
and Giroux, 288 pages, $26) By Dwight Garner New York Times News Service
Paul Beatty is the author of
Beatty ended his introduc-
tion by making a kind of promise, one his anthology kept. "I hope 'Hokum' beats you down like an outclassed club fighter," he wrote. "Each blow plastering that beaten boxer smile on
your face, that ear-to-ear grin you flash to the crowd to convince them that if you're laughing, then you ain't hurt." Beatty's introduction was audacious on many levels, one
of them being that he writes funny himself. His declarations in "Hokum" can't help
but read, in part, like Babe Ruth pointing to the bleachers in anticipation of pounding a ball straight out there. They read like the declarations of a man intent on standing, chuck-
ling and delivering. Deliver Beatty has. The first
100 pages of his new novel, "The Sellout," are the most caustic and the most badass
first 100 pages of an American novel I've read in at least a decade. I gave up underlining the killer bits because my arm began to hurt. "Badass" is not the most precise critical term. What I mean is that the first third of "The Sellout" reads like the
most concussive monologues and interviews of Chris Rock, Richard Pryor and Dave Chappelle wrapped in a satirical yet surprisingly delicate literary and historical sensibility.
Beatty impastos every line, in ways that recall writers such as Ishmael Reed, with shifting densities of racial and political meaning.The jokes come up through your spleen. So much happens in "The Sellout" that describing it is like trying to shove a lemon tree into a shot glass. It's also hard to describe without quoting the nimble ways Beatty deals out the N-word. This novel's best lines, the ones that either puncture or
tattoo your heart, are mostly
Broad satirical vistas are
Burnett. A lmost
a novelist t o sketch. What's
s s A TT
i can
h ard i s t h e close-up work, the bolt-by-bolt
the
entirety of black A m e r-
not so hard for
III
cul t u r e
and stereotypes a re car v e d u p under
Ng
this
driving home novel's microof your thoughts and your sen- sc ope: Tiger Woods, Clarence s ibility. This is where Beatty T homas (given a memorable lin e), Oreo cookies, fairy tales shines. "Like most black males ( "Rapunzel, Rapunzel, let raised in Los Angeles, I'm ¹i down your weave!"), Bill Coslingual only to the extent that by , cotton picking, penis size, I can sexually harass women Saturday morning cartoons, o f all ethnicities in their native George Washington Carver, l anguages," our narrator de- l a wn jockeys, Mike Tyson. p oses. He's bluffing, mostly. The "do-gooder condescenH e's a sensitive soul, at- s on" i of Dave Eggers comes tuned to the way the sunlight i n for a hazing. The American f loods over his g irlfriend, l i b eral agenda is folded into " turning the edges of her o rgarlll. r A b o wdlerized version frizzy undone hair into a flaming corona of split ends and of "Middlemarch" for black s hame." His favorite color is s t udents is retitled, "Middle"the soft light-blue of a pool lit m arch Middle of April, I'll H ave Your Money — I Swear." up at night." The son of a single father, A television crew asks a riotwho is a maniacal social sci- er if the looting and madness e ntist (the narrator's absent w 'r Il change anything. The rem other was once "beauty of sp onse, when it arrives: "Well, the week" in Jet magazine), I'm on TV, ain't I, b--'?" The riffs don't stop coming he had a weird childhood. His allowance was called restitu- i n this landmark and deeption. He was the subject of odd ly aware comicnovel.About experiments.
Stevie Wonder,the narrator
"When I was seven months," sa ys his Latin motto should he tells us, "Pops placed objects be "Cogito, ergo Boogieum. like toy police cars, cold cans I think, therefore I jam." Ditto of Pabst Blue Ribbon, Richard th isbook. "The Sellout," I am sad to Nixon campaign buttons, and a copy of The Economist in my sa y, falls into a holding pattern b assinet, but instead of con¹i i n its final two-thirds. Beatty tioning me with a deafening st ill writes vividly, and you're c lang, I learned to be afraid a l r eady up there at 30,000 feet. of the presented stimuli be- B ut the sense of upward thrust causethey were accompanied is mostly absent. Yet this slashing novel puts by him taking out the family .38 Special and firing several yo u down in a place that's w indow-rattling rounds into r r'les n from where it picked you the ceiling, while shouting, up . It suggests, as the narra'N--- go back to Africa!' loud to r's father tells him one night, enough to make himself heard hal f-wasted on Scotch whisover the quadraphonic console ky "The real question is not stereo blasting 'Sweet Home w here do ideas come from but Alabama' in the living room." w here do they go." That's not ,
,
His dad takes him to th e
hokum at all.
his name. "I have no inter-
est in discussing what they mean."
But the simple act of publishing images of the protests that convulsed Beijing to be viewed as a provocation by the hard-liners who
currently rule China. In the ensuing years they have tried, with much success, to
impose a collective amnesia on the nation by censoring photos and news accounts that are part of the historical record in the rest of world. At a t ime the govern-
triguing is Xu's
de to get elevated views — and breaking two cameras when he
decision to print
tumbled to the ground.
But more in-
New York Times News Service
only the
r a w,
Xu would not say how many photographs he took, but the Xu book features 64 images, a coy negatives he took numeric allusion to the way with his dunky Konica that many Chinese refer to the date spring. There is something im- of the crackdown — June 4penetrable about the images, to circumvent the country's Inwith their muted colors and the ternet censors. The final photo ghostly, X-ray-like silhouettes in the book, a blurry image of of protesters. a tank, is the only nod to the The negatives, it turns out, brute force that brought the are just a visual feint. Armed peaceful protests to an end. with an iPhone or iPad — and In the months that followed, after making a simple adjust- party leaders declared the ment to the settings by choos- demonstrationsa "counterreving the "invert colors" option olutionary riot" and sent many under the "accessibility" tab of the youthful organizers to inside "general" — viewers can jail. unlock the original color of Perry Link, a China expert Xu's images by viewing them at the University of California, through their camera lens. As Riverside, who helped transthe faces of determined hunger late "The Tiananmen Papers," strikers and frightened young a compilation of government soldiers come to life, it is as if documents about the events the reader had stumbled upon a of June 4, said the party's conlost world. tinuing effort to bury any disIt is hard not to assume that cussion of the upheavals unby printing only negatives, Xu derscores its insecurities about was trying to inoculate himself its legitimacy. By showing jubiagainst potential retribution lant and peaceful protests that from the authorities. Sitting at brought millions to the streets unadulter ated 3 5-mil l i m e t e r
a cafe in the north of the capital
ment is seeking to silence its perceived ideological foes, it is easy to view Xu's latest book, "Negatives," as
this month, he insisted otherwise, saying he was trying to educate millennials about the chemically-dependent world of a brave, if somewhat fool- photography that predates the hardy, venture. After all, digital age. "Unlike digital photographs, scores of people, induding
— among them Communist
Party stalwarts and army veterans — Xu's images refute the official claims that the protests
were a dangerous insurrection, Professor Link said. "It is a wonderful way of capturing that underside of inse-
several of Xu's friends in the
which can b e
art world here, have been detained in recent months, some for simply sharing online photographs of the pro-democracy protests that roiled Hong Kong late last year. One of China's bestknown civil rights lawyers, Pu Zhiqiang, has been in police custody since last spring. What p rompted the arrest? Joining a private gathering, at a friend's
negatives never lie," he said. men issue and that, in a larger In the spring of 1989, Xu had sense, haunts much of official just quithis job at a state-owned China today," he said. "The artadvertising company, having ist seems to be saying: 'Here's been encouraged by the mar- the reality that no one looks ket-oriented policies of China's at squarely but that everyone paramount leader, Deng Xiaop- knows is there.'" ing. When throngs of Chinese Bookstores in mainland Chistudents took to the streets that na will not be stocking "NegaApril with their demands for tives" any time soon, and Xu lesscensorship,more freedom has had trouble getting cop-
m a nipulated, curity that attends the Tianan-
and an end to rampant offi-
ies. Last week, a box of books
cial graft, Xu knew the nation sent to his home via FedEx was approaching a dangerous was seized by customs and apartment, to discuss the vi- crossroads. destroyed. "I sensed it was a critical olent crackdown on protestXu acknowledged the daners in Tiananmen Square moment and felt that every mo- gers of his latest project but of25 years earlier. ment had to bedocumented," fered an equivocal shrug, say"Xu is under no illusions he said. ing the negatives were starting about the risks, but this is During the next six weeks, to yellow with age. "I am getting old," he said his choice," said Renee Chi- he spent every day in and ang, a founder of New Cen- around Tiananmen Square, with a faint smile. "If I don't tury Press, the Hong Kong standing on the seat of his bicy- publish these now, then when'?" publisher that this month
began shipping copies of "Negatives" to bookstores
outside mainland China. Until now, Xu's work has steered clear of content that
could be construed as outwardly political. A prolific documentarian, he is best
known for his moody blackand-white prints, taken in the late '80s, that captured
the beauty of Beijing's ancient lanes before many were bulldozed in the city's sprint t o m o d ernization.
More recently, he earned plaudits for a series depict-
ing a day in the life of a Beijing prostitute. He is also credited with
helping pioneer the 798 Art Zone, a f o rmer m i litary
manufacturing c o mplex that has been repurposed as a crowd-pleasing collection of art galleries and cafes. "Negatives" is not a con-
F riday, M a r c h 6 , 2 0 1 5 7sOOp.m., Bend High • R
R
•
R
ventional retrospective of
the protests that spring. For one,there are no im ages of
Foundatlon
the bloody June 4 denouement that left hundreds, if
e ch o f u n d
not thousands, of unarmed civilians dead after Chinese
troops blasted their wayinto the heart of the capital.
JACKSON INSVRANCE F INAN C I A L
SERVICES
MCHE9D I~
www.dplfoundation.org ( 541) 3 1 2 - 1 0 2 7 Oregon Humanities
o ssceUTss pv s Ll c
TheBuBstin
soUNoATION
L I BRA R Y
F6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2015
DNA
Vets, back from the battlefield,
Continued from F1 DNA phenotyping is differ-
produce asurgeof great fiction
ent: an attempt to determine
physical traits from genetic material left at the scene when
no match is found in the conventional way. Though the science is still evolving, small companies such as Parabon NanoLabs, which made the
By Chris Vognar The Dallas Morning News
sec Maled'
image in the South Carolina
Eyes: Brown/Black
services tolaw enforcement
agencies. Illumina, the largest manu-
lHair: Brown i Slack Fmckles: None
has just introduced a forensics product that can be used to
Ancestry: 9296West African
to perform conventional DNA profiling.
c sslmhn cmlchr, r" sdMa sawr
has submitted DNA from 29 cases dating from the early
any analysis to be done. In a number ofother cas-
lloe Red ar Blan
Ma e Fsw, soms, ar Msrit
Now researchers are closcolor. A system called HIris-
Plex, which was developed at Erasmus University MC Medical Center in the Netherlands,
is about 94 percent accurate in determining if a person has blue or brown eyes, but less so
with intermediate colors such as green, said Walsh, who helped develop the technology. HIrisPlex, which analyzes 24 genetic variants, is about 75
httpVI PIrabon-Ianotahlcarn/Snapebot
The Columbia, South Carolina, Police Department issued this rendering of what it called "a possible person of interest" based on DNA phenotyping of a sample collected from the scene of a double slaying in 2011.
Scientists look fo r
g enet-
ic variants associated with physical traits the same way they look for genes that might cause disease: by studying the genomes of people with or without the trait or the disease
and looking for correlations. But this can be a complex task.
Many genetic v a riants might be associated with a trait, but each might make just a small contribution. Studies
had helped blunt concerns that forensic use of DNA would violate the Fourth Amendment
protection against unreasonable searches, said Murphy. But the use of DNA to determine physical traits "comp letely dissolves that f i r m
boundary," she said. based on the person's sex and It also opens up a new set of ancestry mix, as determined questions: What traits are off from his D NA . T hey t h en limits? Should the authorities adjust that face based on 24 be able to test whether a susgenetic variants in 20 genes pect has a medical condition shown to be involved in facial or is prone to violence should variation. such testing be possible? T he researchers said i n Belgium and Germany do their papers that their ances- not allow forensic DNA phetry and gender analysis ex- notyping. The Netherlands genetic variants did not really
add much detail. But the techpercentaccurate for hair color, nique is in early development,
which can change as a person ages, she said.
other than sex. Until now, that
create a sort of generic face
plained about 23 percent of the variation in faces and that the
"I was thinking, 'They're out there,'" Fountain says from his Dallas home. "Those
It would be several years
es, "It's enabled us to actually
ing in on specific physical traits, including eye and hair
erary future.
next generation are out there in that sandstorm right now."
Columbia, South Carolina, Police Department/Submitted image
change the direction we were laborator, Peter Claes of KU focused on originally," said Leuven inBelgium, have deDetective Sgt. Stacy Gallant, veloped a complex mathea cold-case homicide investi- matical method to represent gator. But there have been no faces, based on measuring arrestsor convictions as a re- the three-dimensional coorsult, he said. dinates of more than 7,000 points on the face. Physical traits They developed a way to
U.S. invasion of Iraq, when he caught a glimpse of the lit-
men and women who are going to write the novels of the
sNA PHEN'OTYPINI
The Toronto Police Service
of the sample was too poor for
~
8% NW European
predict some traits as well as
1980s through 2014 to Identi-
I
ICoeSlusor ~
III 1
>
v
25,0
facturer of DNA sequencers,
tas. In 10 instances, the quality
noL veFsir@Fa lr, ~
Skin: Dark/ DarkOlive
case, and Identitas have begun offering DNA phenotyping
Ben Fountain was driving to Galveston, Texas, in March 2003, about a week after the
restricts it to predicting traits
that are publicly visible, such as hair and eye color. In the United States, some
states prohibit testing to deterand they have since added mine if a person has a medical many more genetic variants condition or propensity for to try to improve the accuracy. a disease, Murphy said. But Some of the images generated those laws mainly pertain to look similar to the actual face samples taken from a known of the DNA donor, others less person, such as those in a so. DNA database. But law-enforcement agenCrime-scene DNA, howevcies sometimes have few good er, is legally considered abanoptions in homicide cases. In doned material. "There's pretty much no law the Columbia, South Carolina, case, the police were at a on what you can do to a crimestandstill in their investigation scene sample," Murphy said.
before he would conceive and
Ackerman, who dedicated and adjust to a world without the book to two of the Afghan kill-or-be-killed combat: "As friends he made in his bat- glad I was to be in the States, talion, does a masterful job and even though I hated the putting us in Aziz's shoes and past seven months and the opening a door to the war as only thing that kept me goseen from native combatants. ing was the Marines I served He also allows us to experi- with and the thought of comence a war that exists seem- ing home, I started feeling ingly to keep itself going. like I wanted to go back. Be"The war was being fought cause (expletive) all this." for every reason but the endAll of these books caring of the war," Ackerman ry the sting of authenticity said by phone from a cafe and the sensory expression in Istanbul, where he's re- of experiences lived. They searching his next novel and also reflect the power of storeporting on the Syrian civ- ry to get at larger truths and il war for The New Yorker. probe painful emotion. As "I wanted Ackerman sees
create his own award-winning war-themed novel, "Billy Lynn's Long Halftime to trace the Walk." But give him points anatomy of for foresight. The last few a p e rpetuyears have seen a steady a l war a n d
it, that pain be-
longs not just to the veteran writers but to
the country as
stream of f i r st-rate fiction s how th a t written by veterans of the paradigm." Iraq and Afghanistan wars. F ount a i n The latest is Elliot Acker- was amazed man's "Green on Blue," which a t Acke r takes its title from the code man's ability
awhole.
used for an Afghan police or to step outside military attack on coalition of himself and forces. Ackerman served into a n o ther five tours of duty in Iraq and culture. "Elliot's a Afghanistan and was a primary combat adviser to a v ery smar t 700-man Afghan commando cat," Fountain battalion. said. " By a l l Ackerman's book is hard- accounts he was an excellent ly the only searing fiction to soldier, but he never stopped come out of the wars. Other thinking for himself." highlights include Phil Klay's The b o ok' s c h a racters "Redeployment," the winner include the types of peoof the 2014 National Book ple Ackerman encountered Award for fiction; "The Yel- repeatedly. "There's a militia leader, low Birds," by Kevin Powers (a graduate of the Michener the militant commander, the Center for Writers at the Uni-
"We're at a r eckoning right now with what's happened over the last 14 years, and with the i dentity of our country," A ck e r m a n
said. "People are starting to look for answers, and a lot of times we look for the deeper truth in fiction." He
also thinks there's a lot more to come. The first great Vietnam novel, Ti m O ' Brien's
"The Things They Carried," he notes, wasn't published until 1990.
One thing about perpetual
village elder stuck between
versity of Texas, Austin); and the militants and the Taliban, "Fives and Twenty-Fives," by and the American commandMichael Pitre. er, playing puppet master "Green on Blue" stands to the best of his ability and apart in one crucial respect: trying to influence events on The story is told in the voice the ground," Ackerman says. of Aziz, an Afghan orphan "It's the war in miniature." It's also a departure from s wept into the ranks of a U.S.-funded Afghan militia. the war-at-home theme that As Aziz explains early on, surges through many other "the militants fought to proIraq and Afghan war fiction. tect us from the Americans The first short story in "Redeand the Americans fought to ployment," for example, fol-
wars: They have no definitive
protect us from the militants,
lows an Iraq veteran back to the U.S., where he tries to get
to make our own separate
reacquainted with his wife
war is over for us."
and being so protected, life was very dangerous."
ending. The next great war novelist might be finishing a final tour and deciding, as Ackerman did as his time in Afghanistan wound down, to capture some of those greater
truths with pen and paper. "That's one of the unique things with this generation of vets," Ackerman says. "Because the wars haven't ended, each of us have had peace and decide when the
of the January 2011 murder
of 25-year-old Candra Alston and her 3-year-old daughgest that height is 80 percent ter, Malaysia Boykin, in their determined by genetics, said apartment. Manfred Kayser, a professor There were no signs of of forensic molecular biology forced entry, s u ggesting at Erasmus. Alston knew her killer. More But whereas one study than 100 acquaintances volunfound about 700 genetic vari- tarily provided DNA samples, ants linked to height, they ex- but none matched that found plained only about 15 percent at the crime scene. of variation from person to So four years later, on Jan. person, he added. 9, the police released an imOn the other hand, eye and age developed by Parabon of a hair color have proved rela- "person ofinterest." "We thought it was worth tively easy to ascertain from DNA samples, Kayser said, a shot," said Mark V i nson, because one gene has a large a police investigator, who influence on these traits. said the department paid Predicting a suspect's age is Parabon $4,200 and had not of twins, for instance, sug-
not out of the question, either,
i ndependently
v e t te d the
by analyzing markers that technology. shut off certain genes as peoThe release of the image ple grow older, he said. generated a couple of leads, he Many of these techniques said, but neither panned out. were developed by studying Europeans and might not Privacy issues work as well elsewhere in the Law enforcement authorworld, said Kenneth Kidd, a
ities say
professor ofgeneticsatYale. He and other experts are
about physical traits derived
t h a t i n f o rmation
from DNA is not permitted in
skeptical that faces, which are courtbecause the science is very complex, can be deter- not well-established. Still, the mined from DNA. Although prospect of widespread DNA inheritance clearly plays a big phenotyping has unnerved role — identical twins look some experts. alike, obviously, and people Duana Fullwiley, an assoresemble their c l ose r e l a- ciate professor of anthropoltives — some experts say not ogy at Stanford University, enough is known about the re- said that she worried that use lationship between genes and of such images could contribfacial features. ute to racial profiling. She "A bit of science fiction at noted that Shriver developed this point," said Benedikt Hall- his system by analyzing the grimsson, the head of cell biol- DNA and faces of people with ogy and anatomy at the Uni- mixed West African and Euversity of Calgary, who stud- ropean ancestry. "This leads to a technoloies the development of faces. The critics noted that Parabon, which is based in Reston,
Switch now to an overall 5-star"
Providence MedicareAdvantage Plan.
i
i i
i
Our overall 5 stars mean you can switch
plans anytime without penalties. Attend one of our meetings to learn more or to enroll,
call 1-855-210-1588 or visit us at www.ProvidenceHealthPlan.com/centraloregon. Service is available between 8 a.m. and 8 p.m. Monday through Friday (Pacific time).
Redmond Senior Center 325 NW Dogwood Ave., Redmond Wednesday, March4, 1:30 p.m.
Bend Senior Center 1600 SE Reed Market Road, Bend Thursday, March 19, 1:30 p.m.
gy that is better able to make
faces that are African-AmerVirginia, and has received ican," she said. The image grants from the U.S. Defense produced in the South CarD epartment, had n o t p u b - olina case, Fullwiley added, lished information in peer-re- "was of a generic young black viewed journals validating its man." methods, even though such Shriver said he i nitially a publication would increase studied people of mixed Eusales. ropean and African ancestry, Parabon announced last many of them from Brazil, month that a well-known outside expert would conduct a validation study t hat c ould
l
PROVIDENCE Health Plan
because that made the analy-
siseasier.Hismore recent research has involved people of
be published. Ellen McRae many different ethnicities, he Greytak, Parabon's director of bioinformatics, said the com-
sald.
partly on the work of Mark
civil liberties into uncharted
Some legal experts, too, say pany's technique was based that DNA phenotyping takes Shriver, a professorofanthro- waters. pology and genetics at Penn Conventional DNA p r ofilState University, who p u bing, used for matching, does lished his methods last year. not rely on DN A l i n ked to Shriver and his main col- characteristics of the person,
" Medicare evaluates plans based on a 5-star rating system. Star ratings are calculated each year and may change from one year to the next. Providence Health Plan is an HMO and HMO-POS plan with a Medicare contract. Enrollment in Providence Health Plan depends on contract renewal. A sales person will be present with information and applications. For accommodation of persons with special needs at sales meetings, call 1-855-210-1857 (TTY:711). H9047 2015PHP129
ON PAGE 2: NYT CROSSWORD M The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2015 • •
i
i
•
• i
i
•I•
,Ieeiw
contact us:
hours:
Place an ad: 541-385-5809
Fax an ad: 541-322-7253
Business hours:
Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the
Includeyour name, phone number and address
Monday - Friday
businesshours of8 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Subscriber services: 541-385-5800
7:30 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Classified telephone hours:
Subscribe or manage your subscription
Monday - Friday 7:30 a.m. - 5 p.m.
24-hour message line: 541-383-2371 Place, cancel or extend an ad
On the web at: www.bendbulletin.com
T h e • Qu I I e t I n:
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,Huntingend 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
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,RabbitsendSupplies 341 - Horses andEquipment 345-Livestockand Equipment 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 350 - Horseshoeing/Ferriers 358- Farmer's Column 375 - Meat andAnimal Processing 383- Produce andFood 208
00
. W .
C h a np
lg
208
• P ets & Supplies
Bichon Frise AKC reg'd puppies, 5 female,
$900/ea. 541-953-0755 or 541-912-1905.
Chihuahua Toys (3), 6 mos to 1 year, $150 Poodles, Standard AKC, each. 541-977-7766 4 Males, Dews/Tails 202 Docked. F-1 LabraDog crates: 1 medium Want to Buy or Rent plastic; 1 med-large wire, doodles, 1 Female, 3 Males. Vaccines, Deworming. $1000-$1300. Wanted: $Cash paid for $25 ea. 541-598-0061 541 -848-0217 vintage costume jew- Donate deposit bottles/ elry. Top dollar paid for cans to local all vol., Queensland Heelers Gold/Silver.l buy by the non-profit rescue, for Standard & Mini, $150 Estate, Honest Artist feral cat spay/neuter. & up. 541-280-1537 Elizabeth,541-633-7006 T railer a t Jak e ' s www.rightwayranch.wor Diner, Hwy 2 0 E; dpress.com Wanted- paying cash Petco in Redmond; for Hi-fi audio & stu- donate M-F at Smith dio equip. Mclntosh, Sign, 1515 NE 2nd, J BL, Marantz, D yBend; or CRAFT in naco, Heathkit, San- Tumalo. Can pick up sui, Carver, NAD, etc. large amts, 389-8420. Call 541-261-1 808 www.craftcats.org SAINT BERNARDS Brandy & Bruno's 6 WANTEDwood dress- Donate deposit bottles/ cans to Iocal all vol., beautlfui full-mask pupers; dead washers. non-profit rescue, for pies, 1 male, 3 females, 541-420-5640 feral cat spay/neuter. born Jan. 11; ready for T railer a t Jak e ' sadoption 3/8 (photo taken 208 D iner, Hwy 2 0 E ; 2/27). Dew claws rePets & Supplies Petco in Redmond; moved, 1st shots. $500. For appointment, call donate M-F at Smith 541-548-3520 Sign, 1515 NE 2nd, The Bulletin recomBend; or CRAFT in Siberian Husky champion mends extra caution when purc has- Tumalo. Can pick up bloodline Stud Service. large amts, 389-8420. Call 541-977-7019 ing products or serwww.craftcats.org vices from out of the Yorkie AKC tiny pups, 2 area. Sending cash, German Shepherds Fs, 1 M, 12 wks old, UTD checks, or credit in- www.sherman-ranch.us shots, health guar, pics. f ormation may b e $1900+. 541-281-6829 $1100. 541-777-7743 subjected to fraud. For more informa- Labrador mix, chocolate Yorkie mix, 8 wks, beaution about an adver- male, free to good home. tiful, shots 8 dewormed, tiser, you may call 541-977-7439 after 2pm $300. 541-977-0035 the O regon State Malemute/Husk 210 t pups, Attorney General's blue-eyed ma es. Can Office C o nsumer send photos. $500 & Furniture & Appliances Protection hotline at up. 541-977-6150. 2 dark blue swivel/rocker 1-877-877-9392. arm chairs, exc cond,
Av e
, • Bg n d • 0 r e g g n
9 7 7 0 2
210
242
246
253
257
260
Exercise Equipment
Guns, Hunting & Fishing
TV, Stereo & Video
Musical Instruments
Misc. Items
Frigidaire front loading washer, red, 5 yrs, needs part. $175. 541-390-4478 G ENERATE SOM E EXCITEMENT in your neighborhood! Plan a garage sale and don't forget to advertise in classified!
on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to 541-385-5809. your ad, please conus ASAP so that Hutch, oak 5'x6', leaded tact corrections and any glass doors & mirror adjustments can be at back, 3 cupboards below. Exc. c o nd. made to your ad. 541 -385-5809 $400. 541-318-8797 The Bulletin Classified NEED TO CANCEL 246 YOUR AD? The Bulletin Guns, Hunting Classifieds has an & Fishing "After Hours"Line Call 541-383-2371 5 boxes shotgun lead 24 hrs. to cancel ammo, 320ga-212qa, $25 your ad! 541-678-5303 (Bend) Refrigerator compact Bend local pays CASH!! Sanyo SR4433S, 4 cf, for firearms & ammo. $50. 541-504-5532 541-526-0617 CASH!! Sleep Comfort Twin For Guns, Ammo 8 XL adjustable bed Reloading Supplies. with vibrator, with or 541-408-6900. without mattress& foundation, clean, ION'MIS THIS needs new air pump. $400 cash 541-382-7072 or DO YOU HAVE 541-410-5165 SOMETHING TO SELL Wingback chairs (2), FOR $500 OR dark green, matching LESS? footstools, like new Non-commercial $199, 541-382-6013 advertisers may place an ad The Bulletin with our recommends extra ' "QUICK CASH l caution when purSPECIAL" chasing products or s 1 week 3 lines 12 services from out of I oi' the area. Sending lI ~2 e e k s 2 $ cash, checks, or ' Ad must l credit i n f o rmation include price of may be subjected to s~il e it e o f 8500 l FRAUD. For more or less, or multiple information about an l items whosetotal advertiser, you may l does not exceed i call t h e Ore g oni $500. ' State Atto r ney ' Call Classifieds at l General's O f f i ce 541-385-5809 Consumer Protec- • tion h o t line at i www.bendbulletin.com i 1-877-877-9392.
r
l
I
Switch 8 Save Event from DirecTV! PackSmith & Wesson a ges s t a rting a t M&P15-22 with $ 19.99/mo. Fre e 4x1 6x44 BSA Cats 3-Months of HBO, Eye scope, Fieldline Starz, SHOWTIME & Yamaha E-flat Alto Sax, 'l Tactical carrying CINEMAX. FREE 1977, excellent cond, case. Excellent conGENIE HD/DVR Up- only played senior year in dition, was used in g rade! 2 0 1 5 NF L college, $1000 obo.AND Chainsew-carved National Finals Sunday Ticket. I nMomma and Baby Rodeo for target cluded with S e lect Bear. Momma is competition. Comes Packages. New Cusover 5-ft tall; baby is with original sights tomers Only IV Sup23" tall. May conand 25-round magaport Holdings LLC- An sider selling sepaauthorized D i recTV zine. $850 obo. rately both$850. 541-410-0841 Dealer. Some exclu- King Trombone,1941 Can be seen in sions apply - Call for HN White, 7-1/2I bell, Prineville. details $500, obo. 541-388-2045 Call 541-447-7820 Wanted: Collector seeks 1-800-410-2572 or 541-280-1912 eves high quality fishing items (PNDC) & upscale fly rods. Call 260 541-678-5753, or Yamaha AV receiver, 5Get your Misc. Items 503-351-2746 CD disk player, 2 speakbusiness ers, $75. 541-504-1197 Are you in BIG trouble with the IRS? Stop TURN THE PAGE 255 wage & bank levies, e ROW I N G For More Ads liens & audits, unfiled Computers The Bulletin tax returns, payroll iswith an ad in T HE B U LLETIN r e - sues, 8 resolve tax The Bulletin's debt FAST. Seen on Winchester mdl 12, 20 quires computer ad- CNN. A B BB. Call "Call A Service gauge, MOD, exc. vertisers with multiple 1-800-989-1278. cond $590. R uger ad schedules or those Professional" 10-22 with laminate selling multiple sys- (PNDC) Directory s tock a n d sc o p e tems/ software, to disCheck out the close the name of the $460. 541-419-9961 classifieds online business or the term Cyclops flashlight 15 "dealer" in their ads. www.bendbulletin.com million c andlepower 247 Updated daily Private party advertisw/charger, $25. Sporting Goods ers are defined as 541-480-'I 337 Buyfng Dlamonds - Misc. those who sell one /Gofd for Cash computer. Just bought a new boat? Saxon's Fine Jewelers Sell your old one in the G uide-gear below 0 541-389-6655 classifieds! Ask about our mummy sleeping bag, 257 Super Seller rates! $65. 541-480-1337 BUYING Musical Instruments 541-385-5809 Lionel/American Flyer trains, accessories. 253 Drum Kits:Specializing DID YOU KNOW 7 IN 541-408-2191. in High Quality New 8 TV, Stereo & Video 10 Americans or 158 Used Drum Sets! BVYfNG & SE L LING million U.S. A d ults Kevin, 541-420-2323 DISH T V Ret a iler. All gold jewelry, silver read content f r om The Drum Shop Starting at and gold coins, bars, n ewspaper m e dia $19.99/month (for 12 rounds, wedding sets, each week? Discover mos.) & High Speed class rings, sterling silthe Power of the PaFor Sale: I nternet starting a t ver, coin collect, vin- cific Northwest NewsPiano Technician $14.95/month (where tage watches, dental paper Advertising. For tools & supplies, available.) SAVE! Ask gold. Bill Fl e ming, a free brochure call with rolls of piano About SAME DAY In541-382-9419. 916-288-6011 or string, $725. stallation! CALL Now! Call 971-219-9122 CB Radio (small), $20. email 1-800-308-1563 ceceliaocnpa.com in Redmond Bend area. (PNDC) (PNDC) Call 760-486-6860
l l
I
iigQQ
i
l
I
l TheBulletin l Servin9 CentralOre9on since f903
212
Antiques & Collectibles Antiques Wanted: Tools, furniture, marbles, sports equipment, beer cans, pre-'40s B/W photography. 541-389-1578 Professionally filed 42"
D-handle cross-cut saw. $50. 541-815-7330.
The Bulletin reserves the right to publish all ads from The Bulletin $20 / pair. 541-548-6642 newspaper onto The The Bulletin serving centrel 0 eyon sinceraa Bulletin Internet webA1 Washerss Dryers P eople giving p e ts site. Full warranty, FREE away are advised to Adopt a rescued cat or be selective about the delivery! Also, used kitten! Altered, vacci- new owners. For the washers/dryers wanted. servlny ceneal oregon slncesta 541-280-7355 nated, ID chip, tested, protection of the ani240 more! CRAFT, 65480 mal, a personal visit to 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, the home is recomCrafts & Hobbies 1-5. 541 - 389-8420 mended. www.craftcats.org
The Bulle6n
The Bulletin
r
Furniture & Appliances
Computer cabinet, white, Power Plate machine, with doors, like new, exercises for muscle$139. 541-382-6013 strengthening, stretching, & relaxation, 264- Snow Removal Equipment Dining table, hardwood, massage $500. 541-504-3869 265 - BuildingMaterials 6 chairs, $65 obo. 266- Heating and Stoves 541-306-0677 245 267- Fuel and Wood Fridge, Frig i daire Golf Equipment 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers Stainless sxs, $195 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment cash. 541-408-4733 CHECK YOURAD
Pets & Supplies 0
1 7 7 7~
serving central oregonsince r9re Adopt a rescued cat or Ponshers • Saws kitten! Altered, vacci- POODLE or POMAPOO Armoire nated, ID chip, tested, puppies, toy. Stud also Upright DresserRepair & Supplies more! CRAFT, 65480 541-475-3889 Custom quality, excel78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, i lent condition, crafted 1-5. 541 - 389-8420 What are you walnut & swirly walnut www.craftcats.org burl, 2 upper shelves, 2 241 looking for? cedar-lined drawers plus Bicycles & You'll find it in 3 other drawers (2 partiAccessories tioned for socks). Size: Aussie/Mini puppy Blue The Bulletin Classifieds 73"H x 36"W x 16" D. Merle male, 7 wks, Yakima hitch bike rack, If new, $5,500; $320 cash. Now Reducedto $980! 2-4 bikes, used little 541-385-5809 541-678-7599 541-312-2393 $60. 541-912-8388
Want to impress the relatives? Remodel your home with the help of a professional from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory Gun & Knife Show March 28-29 Deschutes County Fair/Expo Center $5.00 Admission (under 14 FREE!) Sat. 9-5; Sun. 9-3 Info: 541-610-3717 REDUCED PRICES! Win. Mdl 12 (1959) 20 ga. - immac., 28" full choke, field mdl $650. Win. Mdl 12 (1955) 12 ga. immac., 30" full choke field mdl SOLD! 7mm Rem. mag HVA action. improved Mauser 98 M o n te Carlo stock, Leupold 4x scope $450. Win. mdl 43 - .218B (1952) Weaver 2.5X scope SOLD! Win. Mdl 75.22 LR (1942) Exc. cond., Weaver 2.5x s cope $600. W i n. Pre-64 Mdl 70 "featherweight" .243, (1955) E xc., Bushnell 3 x scope, SOLD! 1944 Mauser Mdl 98K-44, Military rifle w/sling, good cond., SOLD. Call Bob, 541-419-5126.
I 'I
I
•
Btlte
s»
@t ooo ooo
•
Jbci
Item priced ar: Your Tofzrl Ad Cost on . • Under $500 $29 • $500 fo $999...................................................................$39 $l QOOfo $2499-------------------------------$49 • $2500 and over............................................................... $59 Includes: 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold headline and price. Some restrictionsapply
The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since 1903
541-385-5809
Your ad will also appear iru
• The Bulletin • Central Oregon Marketplace
• The CentralOregonNickel Ads a bendbullefin.tom
*Prlvatepartymerchandiseonly- excludespets& livestock, autos, Rvs, motorcycles,boats, airplanes,andgaragesale categories.
G2 SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
T HE N E W
YO R K TIMES CR O S SW O R D
FLIP-FLOPS
1
2
3
4
6
6
6
7
0
to
11
12
13
14
16
16
17
18
47
48
40
60
76
76
77
78
BY PATRICK BERRY / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ ACROSS
108Finnish outbuilding 109Control of one's actions [fall in great quantities] 114Granite dome in Georgia [moderate] 117Converses 5 la Tracy and Hepburn [pay in advance] 119Athens landmark 64 Storied voyager [intimidate, in a [arise] way] 6$ What each group of 120Retro music shaded words in this 23 Narrator of collection puzzle does "Amadeus" [go to 121Do without a 6$Dark looks bed] radiator 73 Get some Z's 24 Pet food brand 122Over there [recover lost 74 Subtle emanation 123Brought on ground] 75Concert poster info 124Stan of Marvel 26 Compassionate 7$ Comic actress Comics [finally become] Catherine 125Lectures 28 City of Light creator 80 Four-legged orphans at the 1893 World's 83 Activity done in front DOWN Fair of a mirror [clearly I Super Bowl 29 Welles of "The Third define] highlights, to Man" 85 Office trash [resign] some 30 Dunderhead 87 Start ofm any rapper 2 House on campus 31 Attaches, in a way names 3 Precamping purchase 32 Barbershop sound 89 Upset stomach 4 Luxury hotel chain [consume] 36 Dealer's enemy 5 Barrel racing venue 90Loud and harsh 38 Ridicule [startcrowding the 6 Printmaker Albrecht 41 Country with the 7 Mixes up crotch] longest coastline 91 Tr e e State 8 Appetizer with purtted 44 Comic strip dog (Maine) olives 45 Skateboarder's 92 Like March Madness 9 Fuego extinguisher safety item teams 10 Balustrade location [salaam] 93 Contentment ll Physicist Rutherford 51 Goodbyes [abate] $5Theater giant? after whom 52 Flagman? rutherfordium is 96 Establishes named Online subscriptiontc $7 Release tension, Today's puzzle and more 12 Radiation shield possibly than 4,000 past puzzles, material nytimes.com/crosswords 102 Big tank ($39.95 a year). 13 Hosts, for short 104 What sarongs lack 53 Point at the ceiling? [misbehave] I Furnishes 55 She's not light-headed 8 Bit of body art, for [amass] short ll"St. Fire" (Brat 57 Embarrassingputts to miss Pack film) 59 Cosmic balance? 16Book reviewer? 60 Lit group 19Expel,as from a club 61 Film library unit 20 Historical chapter 63Guy's partner 21 Turnpike turnoffs
14 Muesli tidbit 15 Electoral map dfvlslon 16 Settingfor a castle 17Painter Uccello 18 City on the Nile 22 They're all in the same boat 25 " Late" (Ricky Nelson hit) 27 Banquet V.I.P.'s 31Wild guess 32 Strikers' replacements 33"Taxi" character Elaine 34Greenlandic speaker 35Glazier's supply 37 Estrangement 39Detach (from) 40Misfortunes 42 Fitting 43 Team with a mascot named Orbit 46 Firth of "The King's Speech" 47M attresssize 48 Mr. (soft drink) 49 Gillette brand 50Like a dull party
53Go across 54Actress Swinton 56 Hanes purchase, informally 58 Slack-jawed 62 Big leap forward 64Courters 6$ Woodsypicnic spot 66 Brace 67 Divided houses 68 ¹4 for the Bruins 69Plants in a field
f0
20
23
24
26
21
22
26 28
27 30
32
33
34
36
36
31
38
37
30
40 46
61
62
66
63
66
60
67
61
62
64
68
69
63 66
69
70
71
67
73
72
70
80
86
68
74
81
82
86
87
83
84
88
91
90 93
07
08
09
94
100 101
96 104
114
1 06 106
110
1O0 116 116
107 111 112 1 1 3
117
ff0 123
70I.M.'ing session 71 Longship propellers 72 Summons, e.g. 75Bamboozles 76 Brief digression 77 Fundamental principle 78 Quaint oath 80 Writer Richard Henry 81 Goes (for)
96
102 103
108
122
92
82 Nicknamefora lanky cowboy 84 Jem i son, first African-American woman in space 86 Sport with double touches 88 Toone wayof thinking 91 Unseen danger 94 Nevertheless
120
121
124
126
118
97 Englishassignment 98 Knife brand 99 Iroquoian tribe 100Before long 101Boutonniere's place 103Keyboard abbr. 105Swinging occasion? 106"West Side Story" heroine 107Unfriendly dog sound
109One of a bridge foursome 110Smelly 111Check mark 112Book of Mormon prophet 113Brisk pace 115Brother of Shemp 116Getting on 118 -pitch
PUZZLE ANSWER ON PAGE G3
5 41-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 AD PLACEINENT DEADLINES
PRIVATE PARTY RATES
Monday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri. Tuesday... . . . . . . . ... . Noon Mon. Wednesday.. . . . . . . ... Noon Tues. Thursday.. . . . . . . . . ... Noon Wed. Friday.. . . . . . . . . . . Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate .. ... 11:00am Fri. Saturday.. . . . . . . . . ... 3:00 pm Fri. Sunday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri.
Starting at 3 lines *UNDER '500in total merchandise
or go to w w w . b e n dbulletin.com
Place 8photo in your private party ad for only $15.00 perweek.
OVER '500in total merchandise 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 0 .00 4 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 8 .50 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 6.00 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 2 4 .00 *Must state prices in ad 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 3 3 .50 28 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 6 1 .50
Garage Sale Special
4 lines for 4 days .. . . . . . . . . . $ 2 0.00 (call for commercial line ad rates)
A Payment Drop Box i s CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: available at Bend City Hall. MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW MARKED WITH AN*() REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since 1903 reserves the right to reject any ad is located at: at any time. 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave., Bend, Oregon 97702
The Bulletin
PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracythefirst day it appears. Pleasecall us immediately if a correction is needed. Wewill gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reservesthe right to accept or reject any adat anytime, classify and index anyadvertising basedon the policies of these newspapers. Thepublisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for anyreason. Private Party Classified adsrunning 7 or moredayswill publish in the Central OregonMarketplace eachTuesday. 260
265
Misc. Items
Building Materials
How to avoid scam and fraud attempts
Bend Habitat RESTORE Building Supply Resale
269
Gardening Supplie • 8 Eq u i pment
282
325
454
Sales Northwest Bend
Hay, Grain & Feed
Looking for Employment
Moving Sale! Farm & household - Sun. 3/1, 1 0-2, 65120 Collins Rd., Tumalo. Frig, freezer, couches, chairs, stock tanks, much MORE!
Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 541-385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
Woman willing to erCan be found on these pages: rands for the elderly for s light f e e in Bend/Redmond. EMPLOYMENT FINANCEAND BUSINESS
BarkTurfSoil.com er'Be aware of interna541-312-6709 tional fraud. Deal lo541 -280-0892 224 NE Thurston Ave. 410 -Private Instruction 507- Real Estate Contracts cally whenever posPROMPT DELIVERY Open to the public. 542-309-9663 421 - Schools and Training $14 - Insurance sible. av'Watch for buyers 286 4$4- Looking Ior Employment $28- Loans and Mortgages 470 who offer more than Need to get an ad 470- Domestic 8 In-Home Positions 543- Stocks and Bonds Sales Northeast Bend Domestic & your asking price and Fornewspaper 476 - Employment Opportunities $58 - Business Investments in ASAP? In-Home Positions who ask to have delivery, call the 486 - Independent Positions $73 - Business Opportunities money wired or Circulation Dept. at ** FREE ** Exp. caregiver, will work handed back to them. Fax it to $41-322-72$3 541 -385-5800 Garage Sale Kit 476 476 476 priv. & state pay, exp. Fake cashier checks To place an ad, call Place an ad in The with end of life & reand money orders Employment Employment Employment The Bulletin Classifieds 54f -385-5809 Bulletin for your gaspite care. Avail. most are common. Opportunities Opportunities Opportunities or email rage sale and rehrs. 541 -41 9-4343 YNever give out percleeeitied@bendbulletin.com ceive a Garage Sale sonal financial infor- Cedar siding 5" T&G Add your web address D ID Y O U K NOW Kit FREE! 43x20', 63x1 6', 1 Oxf 2' The Bulletin East Cas c ades malion. to your ad and readNewspaper-gener476 $750.541-306-0677 YTrust your instincts a ted content is s o Nrorkforce In vesters onThe Bulletin's KIT INCLUDES: Employment and be wary of web site, www.bendvaluable it's taken and ment Board Transi266 • 4 Garage Sale Signs Prompt Delivery Opportunities someone using an repeated, condensed, tion Project lkfan• $2.00 Off Coupon To bulletin.com, will be Heating & Stoves escrow service or Rock, Sand & Gravel able to click through broadcast, t weeted, ager use Toward Your Multiple Colors, Sizes agent to pick up your Next Ad discussed, p o sted, Provide T e chnical automatically to your NOTICE TO CAUTION: and Instant Landscaping Co. • 10 Tips For "Garage merchandise. website. copied, edited, and Assistance ADVERTISER Ads published in 541-389-9663 Sale Success!" emailed co u ntless management of the "Employment Op Since September 29, The Bulletin Assistant Director o f throughout the activities related to Sereng Cenvaf Oregon since r9IB 1991, advertising for portunities" include Marketing Co mmu- times 270 day by others? Dis- the creation of the used woodstoves has employee and indePICK UP YOUR nications — Oregon cover the Power of newly formed East KIDS GOLF BAG Los t & Found been limited to mod- • GARAGE SALE KIT at pendent positions. W o rkState University, ColAdvertis- C ascades 341 like new $10. els which have been Ads fo r p o sitions lege of Engineering, Newspaper 1 777 SW Chandler force In v estment ing in SIX STATES 541 -480-1 337. Found: 1 (one) ring on Horses & Equipment certified by the Orthat require a fee or Ave., Bend, OR 97702 invites applications a with just one phone Board serving a 10 egon Department of 1/2S/15, area of Mary upfront investment for full-time (1.0 FTE), call. For free Pacific c ounty region i n Reduce Your Past Tax Environmental Qual- Rose Place & Watt Way. The Bulletin must be stated. With 1 2-month, p r o fes- Northwest Newspa- Central Oregon. EnBill by as much as 75 ity (DEQ) and the fed- Please call 541 -848-f 657 servrne cenvat oregon sincessos any independentjob sional faculty position. per Association Net- sure the timeline leto identify. ,I® Percent. Stop Levies, eral E n v ironmental opportunity, please To review posting and work brochures call gal requirements of Liens and Wage Gar- Protection A g e ncy 290 i nvestigate tho r apply, go to http://or- 91 6-2SS-601 1 or WIOA, policies and nishments. Call The (EPA) as having met Found large chain saw oughly. Use extra processes are adegonstate.edu/jobs, email Tax DR Now to see if smoke emission stan- bar, west side in Bend. Sales Redmond Area c aution when a p dressed. I n s tate posting ¹ 0 0 1 3975. cecelia©cnpa.com Call to ID: 541-383-5825 you Qualify dards. A 3-horse Silverado cer t ified travel and excellent 2nd annual indoor ga- 2001 29'xa' 5th wheel plying for jobs onClosing d a t e is (PNDC) 1 -800-791-2099. woodstove may be Found stamp collection rage sale at Eagle line and never procommunication skills 03/31/15. OSU is an (PNDC) trailer. Deluxe showidentified by its certifi- book in Sunriver area. Crest Resort, a porvide personal inforDrivers required. G o to AA/EOENets/Disman/semi living cation label, which is Call Sunriver police to tion of proceeds domation to any source GTI NOW HIRING! http://www.locowa.org abled. SOCIAL S E C URITY permanently attached quarters, lots of exyou may not have Top Pay for CDL A u nder About T O D ISABILITY BEN - to the stove. The Bul- identify. 541-593-391 1 nated to Ronald Mctras. Beautiful condiresearched and Drivers! COWA for more info. Donald House. Sat. E FITS. U nable t o letin will not k nowtion. 621,900. OBO Banking deemed to be repuDry Van or Reefer you March 7, 10-3, Eagle work? Denied ben- ingly accept advertis541 -420-3277 table. Use extreme choose! Crest Con v ention efits? We Can Help! ) first communit Frequent for the sale of c aution when r e time at home. Center, 1 522 Cline WIN or Pay Nothing! ing 358 Need to get an uncertified REMEMBER:If you s ponding to A N Y Well-appointed trucks. Falls Rd, Redmond. Contact Bill Gordon 8 woodstoves. have lost an animal, Farmers Column We are excited to ad in ASAP? online employment EOE. Associates at don't forget to check ad from out-of-state. announce an 866-435-8590 You can place it 1 -800-879-3312 to 267 The Humane Society 10X20 Storage Buildings We suggest you call available position for GordonCareers.com start your application online at: for protecting hay, Fuel & Wood Bend the State of Oregon a full-time teller in today! (PNDC) Call The Sulletin At www.bendbulletin.com firewood, livestock etc. 541-382-3537 Consumer Hotline Bend, Oregon. $f 61 6 Installed. 541-385-5809 Redmond at 1 -503-378-4320 The Bulletin Offers WHEN BUYING (other sizes available) 54f -923-0SS2 For Equal OpportuSalary Range: Place Your Ad Or E-Mail 541-385-5809 FreePrivate Party Ads 541 -61 7-1 1 33. FIREWOOD... Madras nity Laws c ontact $11.00 - $10.00 At: www.bendbulletin.com • 3 lines - 3 days CCB ¹173684 541 -475-6889 Oregon Bureau of To avoid fraud, • Private Party Only kfjbuilders©ykwc.net Prineville Labor 8 I n d ustry, First Community The Bulletin • Total of items adver54f -447-71 78 Civil Rights Division, Credit Union is an recommends pay375 tised must equal $200 or Craft Cats 971 -673- 0764. equal opportunity ment for Firewood The Bulletin is seeking a Pressman with expe316 or Less Meat & Animal Processing 541 -3S9-8420. employer of only upon delivery rience in the Printing industry. Two years of FOR DETAILS or to Irrigation Equipment The Bulletin protected Veterans and inspection. Servine Central Oreeon sinceSaet prior web press experience is beneficial, but PLACE AN AD, Buermann's Ranch 280 and individuals with • A cord is 1 2S cu. ft. 54f -385-5809 training can be provided. At The Bulletin you Call 541-305-5809 M eats. Annual Hog Sale FOR SALE disabilities. For more 4' x 4' x S' • Estate Sales can put your skills to work and make our Fax $41-385-$802 /2 hog fully processed Tumalo Irrigation details please • Receipts should products and services jump off the page! In delivered to your area Water apply online: include name, addition to printing our 7-day a week newspaAdvertise your car! $240. Call 54f-573-2677 Accounting Assistant $5,000/acre Cash only estate www.myfirstccu.org. phone, price and per, we also print a variety of other products Add APicture! Call 541-419-4440 s ale. Looking t o Reach thousands of readers! kind of wood Look at: for numerous clients. The Bulletin utilizes a 3 if/fcMenamins m ove ASAP a nd s/e tower KBA Comet press that a Pressman Call 541-385-5809 purchased. City Engineer-City of 325 Bendhomes.com Old St. Francis have items includThe Bulletin Cla68ifieds • Firewood ads Klamath Falls, OR. must become knowledgeable and familiar for Complete Listings of Hay, Grain & Feed NOW HIRING ing: chairs, beds, MUST include Salary: working with. Area Real Estate for Sale side tables, applispecies 8 cost per We put a premium on dependability, timeli262 McMenamins historic $74, 1 00-$1 03,740 First Quality, 2nd cutting ances, and o ther cord to better serve annually, DOE. Comness, having a positive attitude and being a Old St. Francis hotel Commercial/Office grass hay, no rain, f urniture ite m s . our customers. team player. We offer a competitive compenprehensive benefits properly located in barn stored, $225/ton. 2 /28/1 5. 520 N W quipment & Fixtures package. Apply at sation plan and career growth opportunities. downtown Bend, is e a Call 541 -549-3831 Trenton. 9am-1 pm. This position primarily works nights, with a The Bulletin now hiring a PT www.ci.klamath-falls.o F irst c om e f i r st Patterson Ranch, Sisters Serving CentralOregon sinceSaaa 1 0-hour shift, 4 days per week. ( 20-25 hours p e r r.us (PNDC) serve. Premium orchard grass, If you are interested in fostering your talent as week) Accounting As541 -701-9559. People Look for Information All YearDependable barn stored no rain, a pressman in beautiful Bend, OR we encoursistant. Qualified ap1st & 2nd cutting. Del. About Products and age you to apply. Please contact Al Nelson, Firewood: Seasoned; plicants must have avail. 5 41 -420-91 58 Pressroom Manager, at Lodgepole, split, del, Services Every Daythrough previous related expe282 or 541 -948-701 0. anelson@wescom a ers.com B end, 1 f o r $ 1 95 rience an d e n j oy The Bulletin Classifisris 5-drawer Hon with your resume, references and salary hisor 2 cords for $365. Sales Northwest Bend Quality orchard mixed working in a b u sy, 421 tory/requirements. No phone calls please. Industries Multi-cord discounts! customer service ori- Dental Assistant avail grass hay, $1 90-$235 541 -420-3484. Drug testing is required prior to employment. commercial file 2-Houses, Sat., S-1. ton, Schools & Training ented e n vironment. for our general densmall bales. Deliv. The Bulletin is a drug free work place and cabinet, Furniture, ga m e s, avail.541-280-7781 Please apply online tistry office in Bend, EOE. 43" wide, 66" high. kitchen, e lectronics, betwn Bend/Redmond O www. m cme- OR. Must have a Pine & Juniper Split HTR Truck School clothes, lizard, toys, REDMOND CAMPUS namins.com. Please, working knowledge of Originally $1000; The Bulletin b ooks, TV , m o r e . Wheat Straw for Sale. Our Grads Get Jobs< no phone calls to indi- clinical chair side asasking 3450. Sernng Cenrna Oregon since 1903 PROMPT D ELIVERY I-888%38-2235 N W K noxville C t . Also, weaner pigs. vidual loca t ions. sisting. Call Jeniffer at 541-948-1824 541-389-9683 541 -390-7859 541-546-61 71 WWW.DTR.EDU E.O.E. 541 -241 -1 299. '
•
.
Pressman
THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2015 G3 THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWER
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 General
Central Oregon Community College has openings lis t e d bel o w . Go to https://jobs.cocc.edu to view details & apply online. Human Resources, Newberry Hall, 2600 NW College Way, Bend OR 97701; (541)383 7216. For hearing/speech impaired, Oregon Relay Services number is 7-1-1. COCC is an AA/EO employer. Office Specialist, Recruit - Admissions & Records Provide customer service support in-person, multi phone-lines, and ongoing correspondence to students. 2-yrs high volume office exp. req. $2,300-$2,740/mo. Closes Mar 1. Custodian andCampus Grounds Specialist (Bend and Redmond) Dual function position serving both Custodial and Grounds duties. Perform general cleaning and maintenance of the college. 40hr/wk and 30hr/wk. $11.73-$13.97/hr. Closes Mar 1. ExecutiveDirector for COCC Foundation Responsible for providing leadership for Foundation activities, fundraising opportunities, and development of grant applications. Provide management for Foundation staff. Represent the Foundation to the public, donors, College staff, media, and volunteers. Bachelor's deree + 5 - yr s m anagement with d irect und-raising experience req. $61,000-$73,000/yr. Closes Mar 16 AssistantProfessor l of Chinese Provide foreign language instruction in Chinese to first and second year language sequences. Advising and student assistance. Masters in Chinese required + 2-yrs teaching college level Chinese or other foreign language req. $42,722-$49,202 for 9mo contract. Closes Mar 16. Assistant Professor i, Nondestructive Testinrf Provide classroom and lab instruction and program leadership in the NDT Program, on the Redmond Campus. AAS + Level II Certification in RT and PT + 5 -yrs industry exp. $42,722-$49,202for9mo contract. Open Until Filled.
Part-TimeInstructor Positions Looking for talented individuals to teach part-time in a variety of disciplines. Check our employment Web site at https://jobs.cocc.edu. Positions pay $543 per load unit (1 LU = 1 class credit), with additional perks.
General
CROOK COUNTY EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES
CROOK COVNTY SHERIFF'SOFFICE Criminal/Patrol Deputy Salary: $3,346AO- $4,813.82 Closing: March 13, 201 5 @5r00pm (Must use Sheriff's Office Application)
Crook County Sheriff's Office is seeking a Criminal/Patrol Deputy. Must have prior Law Enforcement experience and either have current DPSST Certification, or be able to obtain DPSST Certification with Career Officer Development Course. Contact Human Resources or Crook County Treasurer's Office at 200 NE 2nd, Prineville, OR 97754, (541)447-6554 for an application, or visit our web site at www.co.crook.or.us to download the application. General
Jefferson Coun Job0 o r tunities Patrol Deputy Sheriff - $3,226.00 to $4,731.00per month -DOQ Open until Filled — First Review Date: Illlarch 11th, 2015
For complete job description and application form go to www.co.'efferson.or.us click on Human Resources, then Job Opportunities; or call 541-325-5002. Mail completed Jefferson County Application forms to Jefferson County Human Resources, 66 SE D Street, Suite E, Madras, OR 97741 . JeffersonCountyisan Equal Employment Opportunity Employer
Digital Advertising Sales Manager The Bulletin is seeking a goal-oriented Digital Advertising Sales Manager to drive online advertising revenue growth. This position will manage the department's digital projects, and will: • Study the local market and make recommendations on best opportunities for online revenue growth. • Work in collaboration with department management in the ongoing training and coaching of Bulletin advertising salespeople. • Contribute to building local digital revenue by regularly going on joint sales calls with advertising staff. • Direct Digital Advertising Coordinator to ensure that the online ad scheduling, trafficking, and customer reporting functions are performed in a timely and accurate fashion. • Assist in the development of online and cross/sell advertising packages and attendant sales collateral. Qualifications include a bachelor's degree, at least 3 years' experience and a proven track record of success in selling multi-plafform or digital advertising to major accounts and agencies. Managementexperi ence a plus, with the ideal candidate being able to demonstrate a history of success in implementing innovative ideas and developing the skills level of sales team members. The Bulletin is a drug free workplace and pre-employment drug testing is required.
Please email your resume to: jbrandtObendbulletin.com No phone calls please.
The Bulletin
Serving Ce//r/al Oregon since 1//03
The Bulletin is an equal opportunity employer General The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Saturday night shift and other shifts as needed. We currently have openings all nights of the week. Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpositions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. Starting pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay a minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of loading inserting machines or stitcher, stacking product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup and other tasks. For qualifying employees we offer benefits i ncluding l if e i n surance, short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. Drug test is required prior to employment. Please submit a completed application attention Kevin Eldred. Applications are available at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chandler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be obtained upon request by contacting Kevin Eldred via email (keldred@bendbulletin.com). No phone calls please. Only completed applications will be considered for this position. No resumes will be accepted. Drug test is required prior to employment. EOE.
The Bulletin
Servi//// Central Oregon since /9IB
476
476
573
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Business Opportunities
T A T E L M O S C P A WARNING The Bulletin A F F O R D S recommends that you D R U M O U T RESTAURANT A G E R E C A T C H A S Fire Chief i nvestigate ever y HIGH SCHOOL The Alfalfa Fire P U R I N A S T A R E 0 W phase of investment S A E N D R I District will be taking JUNIORS ONLY opportunities, espeapplications for a T L I E E R H E A R T E D T E S L A If you're a junior in high c ially t h ose f r o m part-time Fire Chief. school, you can join out-of-state or offered O R S O N A S S S E W S O N The announcement the National Guard by a person doing closes March 31, t hrough t h e Sp l i t S N I P N A R C T W I T business out of a lo2015. Go to Training Option and cal motel or hotel. In- C A N A D A Pastaria O D I E E L A C T P A D be back from Basic www.alfalfafiredistrict.or in Pastini o ff e rings theOld Mill District is vestment Combat Training in to view a full copy of AR U N U S R E F S T A L B O W I T E must be r e gistered hiring talented time for your senior the employment with the Oregon De- B D I E E T T E ear. Next year, you'll Line Cooks T A P I N S L I B R A agreement, job's partment of Finance. to join the team. e back in time for description and how We suggest you conS 0 T S R E E L G A L S I N B A D college. Joining the to apply. sult your attorney or Apply online at Guard will open many G O E S U P A N D D O W N call CON S UMER www. astini.com/careers doors for you with The Bulletin HOTLINE, benefits like college or stop by between S C OW L S N A P A U RA D A T E To Subscribe call 1-503-378-4320, 2pm-4pm daily. tuition assistance and O H A R A D O G I E S P R I M U S E G 8:30-noon, Mon.-Fri. excellent tra i ning. 541-385-5800 or go to Plus, it's one of the www.bendbulletin.com W A R I D E A P E R L I L N A P I N A TELEFUNDRAISING best part-time jobs Call a Pro S T S T E P N T P I N E S E E D E D ou can have while in FIRE Whether you need a Tele-funding for igh school. Establishment of E A S E I M A X S E T S fencefixed,hedges The 2015 Split Training Employment List for •Meals On Wheels Option season ends E X H A L E V A T S E A M S trimmed or a house •Defeat Diabetes April 30. Applicants CrookLieutenant Fire and built you'll find S A U N A S E L F R E S T A N T E T must be 17 years old RescueCounty is establishing an •Foundation and have p arentale mployment list fo r Veterans (OPVA) professional help in S C R O P M O U N T A I N B R A I N R S consent prior to ob- Lieutenant. Individuals The Bulletin's "Call a taining a contractual who meet the minimum Seniors and a/l A T O N E O L I S L P S A I R C O O L Service Professional" obligation. E l igibility qualifications are invited others welcome. Y O N L E D T O L E E T A L K S T O r estrictions ap p l y.to apply and take the exDirectory Contact your l o cal amination. A complete Mon-Thur. 541-385-5809 PUZZLE IS ON PAGE G2 National Guard Rep- job description for Lieu4:30-8:30 p.m. resentative and se- tenant is posted on the $9.25/hour. DID YOU KNOW that cure your future now. district's website. The 732 747 not only does newsSSG Jason Bain salary range is f rom Call 541-382-8672 Commercial/Investment SouthwestBend Homes Re dmond Homes paper media reach a (541) 325-1027 5,230-$5,950 per Properties for Sale HUGE Audience, they Ore on uard.com $ month. Applications must Broken Top Townhome! also reach an ENbe delivered in person or 19425 Ironwood Circle Looking for your next GAGED AUDIENCE. employee? The Bulletin by mail to CCF&R no 2003 2-story, 2310 sq Discover the Power of a Bulletin help later than 5:00 p.m. ft. Enjoy 3 pnvate suites Place The Bulletin's Newspaper Advertiswanted ad today and Tuesday, March 3, 2015. w/own bath, library, of"Call A Service ing in six states AK, Contact: chasing products or l reach over 60,000 fice, large private Professional" Directory readers each week. Crook County services from out of • ID, MT, OR, UT,WA. wood deck. Comfy, For a free rate broFire & Rescue Your classified ad is all about meeting f the area. Sending chure quiet, convenient! call Woodsman Country 500 NE Belknap Street will also appear on c ash, checks, o r your needs. Sam Rawlins, Broker, 916-288-6011 or L odge. A A A A p Prineville, OR bendbulletin.com f credit i n f ormation email Rim Rock Investments, proved. Unique 15 97754-1932 which currently reCall on one of the • may be subjected to 541-620-4242 unit motel in CresceceliaOcnpa.com (541) 447-5011 I FRAUD. ceives over professionals today! cent, OR on busy www.crookcount (PNDC) 749 1.5 million page For more informaHwy 97, 45 miles fireandrescue.com tion about an adver- ~ views every month n orth o f Cra t er Southeast Bend Homes at no extra cost. f tiser, you may call Lake. T o tally rethe Oregon State Bulletin Classifieds CUSTOMER SERVICE modeled w/ log furGet Results! I Attorney General's $519,000 By Owner: REPRESENTATIVE niture and log cabin Office C o n sumer g Fabulous SE home Call 385-5809 or decor. F u lly fur- on manicured parkhotline at l place your ad on-line Immediate opening in our Classified Advertis- i Protection nished 3 Bdrm, 2 l ike .58 a c re. 4 at 1-877-877-9392. ing department for an entry level Customer 1/2 bath o w ners B drm, 2. 5 B a t h, bendbulletin.com Service Representative. quarters. DownsizMaster Main, 3 car ing. Eve r ything garage all h a rdLooking for someone to assist the public with stays. Call for apwood and tile ac771 632 their placement of classified ads, either over pointment cents, AC, Gas, RV the phone or in person at the Bulletin office in VETERINARY 1-541-433-2710. Lots AptiMultiplex General Pad, Electric Dog 2 positions: downtown Bend. $1,250,000 OBO. fence and so much Veterinary Awbrey Butte .48 acre CHECKYOUR AD more. Call ( 541) Essential: Positive attitude, strong service/ Technician 736 lot withCascade Mtn. 420-1777 for your 3275 NW Horiteam orientation, and problem solving skills. and Veterinary Multiplexes for Sale private s h o wing. views, zon Dr. $249,900. Must be able to function comfortably in a View at Tech Assistant Call 714-510-7388 fast-paced, performance-based customer call www.21030kellerct. center environment and have accurate typing, • P/T to F/T, depending com phone skills and computer entry experience. on experience and 775 on the first day it runs Strong communication skills and the ability to availability to make sure it is corManufactured/ 750 multi-task is a must. • Salary commensurate rect. "Spellcheck" and Mobile Homes with experience/ability Redmond Homes human errors do oc- DUPLEX by owner SE Full-time, Mon-Fri. Pre-employment drug test- • Must have experience cur. If this happens to Bend. 2 bdrm, 1.5 bath ing is required. to qualify for Vet Tech Custom 3 bdrm, 2.5 bath List Your Home your ad, please conposition ea., 14yrs old. Great on 1.48 ac with canal & JandMHomes.com tact us ASAP so that cond. Please send resume to: Banfield, Pet Hospital, $219,900 .karenMtn view! 2450 SF home We Have Buyers corrections and any michellen ©hotmail.com. has bonus rm & shop; on shawes© bendbulletin.com ask for Carrie Get Top Dollar adjustments can be 541.330.1462 541-815- 7707 rivate setting. 1075 NW Financing Available. made to your ad. ewell Ave., Terrebonne. 541-548-5511 541-385-5809 Serving Central Oreyon since1903 By owner $359000 Call 541-923-4995 to see. EOE/Drug free workplace Wastewater D i v isionThe Bulletin Classified • O p en Houses Manager-City of Kla634 Find It in FIND IT! math Falls, OR. Sal- AptiMultiplex NE Bend The Bulletin Classiffeds! BUY ITS Maintenance 8 Broadband ary: $62,000-$87,000 Open 12-3 541-385-5809 annually, DOE. ComSELL ITr 1820 NW Hartford Technician Call for Specials! prehensive benefits Limited Ave. The Bulletm Classifieds numbers avail. package. Apply at Crestview Cable Communications seeks an NorthWest Crossing 1, 2 & 3 bdrms www.ci.klamath-falls.o experiencedCATV Maintenance & Broadband Mid-Century Modern w/d hookups, r.us (PNDC) Tech in Prineville, Oregon. Janis Grout, ~CEs O patios or decks. Broker o~ Mountain Glen Responsible for preventative maintenance of Cg 541-948-0140 541-383-9313 Wildland Firethe 140 mile hybrid fiber coax plant and distri0 Cooper Contracting Professionally managed by bution system. Full time job with competitive Norris & Stevens, Inc. has limited opensalary and benefits. ings for exp. timber 646 Thesarnersroup.com fallers, engine Send complete resume to Houses for bosses and squad agautney@crestviewcable.com or Rent General bosses for the 2015 350 NE Dunham St., Prineville Oregon 97754. Find exactly what fire season. Not enEOE, mandatory pre-employment drug testing, PUBLISHER'S you are looking for in the try level positions. physical, criminal background check, Must be q ualified, NOTICE and a good drive record required. CLASSIFIEDS All real estate adverwe will be hiring entry level firefighters tising in this newspaDeschutes County job per is subject to the Digital Advertising Sales soon. Please wait for Open 12-3 ad. Call Sean at F air H ousing A c t 19175 Coordinator/Trafficker Chlloquin opportunities are listed online. 5 41-948-7010 f o r which makes it illegal Dr. more info. to a d vertise "any The Bulletin is seeking an individual experiPlease visit www.deschutes.org Shevlin Pines preference, limitation enced in the role of digital advertising schedMany Luxury or disc r imination for currentopenings, to sign up uler, utilizing inventory systems (AdJuggler, Features based on race, color, OAS, or DFP) to deliver ad exposures for the Looking for your next Phyllis Mageau, for recruitment notifications, and religion, sex, handiBulletin's online commercial accounts. This employee? Broker cap, familial status, position will: Place a Bulletin help 541 -948-0447 BPP>3' marital status or nawanted ad today and tional origin, or an in• Prepare scheduling, creative requests, and reach over 60,000 Deschutes County is an Equal Opportunity tention to make any review billing for each order. readers each week. such pre f erence, • Employ the ad inventory system (DFP) to inYour classified ad Employer. Women, minorities, veterans and Thesarnersroup.com limitation or discrimidividually and collectively ensure that all onwill also appear on the disabled are encouraged to apply. nation." Familial staline ad impression requirements are met in bendbulletin.com tus includes children the allotted timeframes. which currently Deschutes County provides reasonable under the age of 18 • Review contracts for completeness, correctreceives over 1.5 Open 12-3 living with parents or ness, and deliverability. million page views 61057 Ruby Peak accommodations for persons with legal cus t odians, • Assist Digital Sales Manager in responding every month at Ln. disabilities. pregnant women, and New 3-Bdrm Home to RFP's. no extra cost. people securing cus• Work closely with both in-house salespeople Bulletin Classifieds In Hidden Hills tody of children under and outside clients to gather information and Get Results! Shelley Griffin, 18. This newspaper assets necessary for campaign fulfillment. Call 385-5809 Broker • Deliver accurate tracking and reporting of will not knowingly acor place 541-280-3804 • g • cept any advertising online ad performance to our advertising cliyour ad on-line at for real estate which is ents. bendbulletin.com in violation of the law. NetworkTechnicianO ur r e aders a r e TheGarnersroup.com Qualifications include experience with online hereby informed that ad inventory and placement systems, camAdministration all dwellings adverpaign performance reporting, and Google Rmmes tised in this newspaAnalytics. The successful candidate must be OPEN HOUSESII Network Technician assists with ® I%~(jI)(SW per are available on committed to exceptional customer service Sunday, March 1st monitoring, troubleshooting, and an equal opportunity and quality, and be able to balance multiple 1pm-4pm basis. To complain of Houses for sale on SW projects with equal priorities. High degree of repair of networks and related d iscrimination cal l Sarasoda C t . , accuracy, foresight, and follow-through rein HUD t o l l-free a t Redmond. Situated in equipment. Technician works closely quired. The Bulletin is a drug free workplace 1-800-877-0246. The quiet cul-de-sac and and pre-employment drug testing is required. with the Network Administrator and toll free t e lephone both over 2,200 sq.ft., number for the hear- 3 bdrm, 2 . 5-3 bath Please email your resume to: a cohesive team of IT specialists. See 526 ing i m p aired is Large lots, tile counter jbrandt©bendbulletin.com website for more details. New Loans & Mortgages 1-800-927-9275. No phone calls please. tops, gas fire places, close t o d o w ntown deadline: 2:oo on Thursday, March 5. WARNING and schools! Serving Ce//val Oregon since 1903 The Bulletin recomBsdl RaMn LeAnne Guinn, mends you use cauThe Bulletin is an equal opportunity employer Broker 541-788-1308 Materials Service Specialists IRe ©nlb tion when you proJohn L Scott vide personal Do you like to work in a positive information to compaGeneral environment while processing high nies offering loans or • H omes for Sale credit, especially Jefferson Count Job0 ortunities volumes of materials and occasionthose asking for ad— FSBOally interacting with customers in vance loan fees or Emergency Management CoordinatorMotivated & Ready! 732 companies from out of $2,861.67to $3,946.72 a month DOQ person, via phone, and electronically? state. If you have Commercial/Investment 3bdrm 2bath 1400sqft SHERIFF'S OFFICE Quality home, It's a great chance to grow in a ftm concerns or quesCloses March 6th, 2015 Properties for Sale Quality price! tions, we suggest you $205K. 541-279-8783 environment and to make a difFerconsult your attorney For complete job description and application or call CONSUMER ence in the lives of children, teens, form go to www.co/efferson.or.us click on HuHIGH PROFILE HOTLINE, NOTICE man Resources, then Job Opportunities; or LOCATION IN and adults. Two part-time positions 1-877-877-9392. All real estate advercall 541-325-5002. Mail completed Jefferson DOWNTOWN tised here in is subCounty Application forms to Jefferson County are available. Deadline: 2:oo on REDMOND ject to th e Federal Human Resources, 66 SE D Street, Suite E, BANK TURNED YOU This commercial March u. DOWN? Private party F air Housing A c t , Madras, OR 97741. building offers exwill loan on real eswhich makes it illegal cellent exposure tate equity. Credit, no along desirable NW to advertise any prefJeffersonCountyis an http://www.deschuteslibrary.org/ problem, good equity erence, limitation or Equal Employment Opportunity Employer 6th Street. is all you need. Call discrimination based Currently housing employment for more details, Oregon Land Morton race, color, reliThe Redmond gage 541-388-4200. application, and supplemental Executive Director gion, sex, handicap, Spokesman newsBrightSide Animal Center familial status or napaper offices, the questionnaire. Or call (54t ) 312-1025 tional origin, or intenseeks key leader. Ideal 2,748 sq. ft. space is Take care of candidate has history of tion to make any such for assistance. EOE perfect for your investments success in fundraising, preferences, l i mitaowner/user. Two donor development, tions or discrimination. private offices and with the help from We will not knowingly managing staff, volunteers; excellent commugenerous open The Bulletin's nication, problem-solving, management and accept any advertisspaces. Three ing for real estate analysis skills; loves animals, supports our "Call A Service parking places in high-save mission; experienced in animal which is in violation of D ESCH U T E S P U B L I C back + street parkProfessional" Directory this law. All persons welfare. Willing to work evenings or weeking. $259,000. ends when needed. Society of Animal Welare hereby informed that all dwellings adfare Administrators cert a plus. Salary DOE. LOCALfI/fONEyrWe buy Call Graham Dent Visit brightsideanimals.org/executive-director vertised are available secured trust deeds & 541-383-2444 on an equal opportufor details. Submit letter of interest and renote, some hard money COMPASS sume to brightsideboard©gmail.com . loans. Call Pat Kelley nity basis. The BulleCommercial 541-382-3099 ext.13. tin Classified
I
f f f f f
I
LThe'~~~ J
The Bulletin
Q IZLlijjH
Deschutes County Career Opportunities
<j
•
•
•
•
•
The Bulletin
LI BRARY
G4 SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
)
s
I •
•
•
RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605- RoommateWanted 616- Want ToRent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648- Houses for RentGeneral 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for RentSunriver 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663- Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RVParking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space
fe
•
•
I
Boats & Accessories
00 850 Snowmobiles
I'
I' 4-place enclosed Interstate snowmobile trailer w/ RockyMountain pkg,
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, fishing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. only 786 mi., new mirFor all other types of rors, covers, custom please go skis, n e w rid e -on watercraft, to Class 875. r ide-off t r ailer w i t h 541-385-5809 spare, + much more. $ 6,995. Call for d e tails. 541-420-6215 SCICI'n Central OIC on SinCe 19O3
YAMAHA 700 2000 3 cyl., 2300 mi.; 2006 Polaris Fusion 9 00,
The Bulletin
Motorcycles 8 Accessories
Just too many collectibles? Sell them in The Bulletin Classifieds
541-516-8684
541 -385-5809
Bayliner 185 2006 open bow. 2nd owner — low engine hrs. — fuel injected V6 — Radio & Tower. Great family boat Priced to sell. $11,590. 541-548-0345.
HD Fat Bo 1996
Four Winds 32' 2010 Triton V-10 with 13,000 miles. Large slide, Sleeps 7. Lots of storage. 5000lb hitch. Like new. $51,900 541-325-6813
875
Freightliner 1994 Custom Motorhome
16' Cata Raft 2 Outfitter oars, 2 Cataract oars, 3 NRS 8" Outfitter blades and l ots of gear, all i n "very good to exc. condition plus custom camp/river tables and bags, more!. $2,700 541 318 1322. Additional information and photos on request, too! ds published in CWa tercraft" include: Kay aks, rafts and motor Ized personal watercrafts. Fo "boats" please se Class 870. 541-385-5809
The Bulletin
Serving Central Oregonsince 1903
880
Completely Rebuilt/Customized 2012/2013 Award Winner Showroom Cond. Many Extras Low Miles. $15,000 54'I -548-4807 870
Boats & Accessories
Motorhomes
Will haul small SUV or toys, and pull a trailer! Powered by 8.3 Cummins with 6 speed Allison auto trans, 2nd owner. Very nice! $53,000. 541-350-4077
Automotive Parts, Service 8 Accessories
Pickups
Sport Utility Vehicles
Laredo 31'2006, 5th wheel, fully S/C one slide-out. Awning. Like new,
hardly used.
HOLIDAY RAMBLER VACATIONER 2003 8.1L V8 Gas, 340 hp, workhorse, Allison 1000 5 speed trans., 39K, NEyl/ TIRES, 2 slides, Onan 5.5w gen., ABS brakes, steel cage cockpit, washer/dryer, firelace, mw/conv. oven, ree standing dinette, was $121,060 new; now, $35,900. 541-536-1008
Need help fixing stuff? Call A Service Professional find the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com 2007 Winnebago Outlook Class "C" 31', clean, nonsmoking exc. condition. More info 541-447-9268
.Rk •
I• I
24' Mercedes Benz Prism, 2015 Model G, Mercedes Diesel engine, 18+ mpg, auto trans, fully loaded with double-expando, and only 5200 miles. Perfect condition only$92K. Call 541-526-1201 or see at: 3404 Dogwood Ave., in Redmond.
Heartland P rowler 2012, 29PRKS, 33', like new, 2 slides-livi ng area & la r g e closet. Large enough to live in, but easy to tow! 15' power awning, power hitch 8 stabilizers, full size queen bed, l a r ge shower, porcelain sink & toilet. $26,500. 541-999-2571 RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit
approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!
Redmond: 541-548-5254
Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com 882
JAYCO 1993 27' 50k miles, excellent condition. $9300 obo. RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit
approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond:
541-548-5254
Ameg
FordF350 2002
Pacemaker Snow Tracker tires on 6-hole GM alloy rims, (4) P265/70Rx1 6, $300. 541-475-4887 Studded snow 0t i r es 235/70R16 on 17 rim, good cond. $ 3 00.
Buick LeSabre 2005 custom, exc. cond., tires 40%, 3800 Series 113.8 V-6, 69,300 mi., $13,999 or $175/mo., 2nd owner. $7700 obo 541-430-7400 or $2900 down, 72 mo., Honda CRI/2007, (exp. 3/1/15) Vin ¹064947 Stock ¹44696A
7.3 Powerstroke 4x4 ¹A90623. $12,977
541-312-7042 932
ROBBERSON
Antique & Classic Autos
I I 0 C 0 I II ~
4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title i ncluded in payment.
IM RO R
541-312-3986 www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 3/01/15
. as 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
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
975
Auto m obiles
© s un mu
Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
541-815-8487
Garage Sales Garage Sales Garage Sales Find them in The Bulletin
Isuzu Rodeo 2001, V6, 102K Mi. $6000. Scott 541-390-8681
Classifieds
935
Jeep Grand
Sport Utility Vehicles
Cherokee 2003
BMW X3 35i 2010
Well cared for Vin¹613798$6,977
Exc cond., 65K miles w/100K mile transferable warranty. Very clean; loaded - cold 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
ROBBERSON I I II C 0 I 0 ~
IM ROR
541-312-3986 www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Good thru 3/01/1 5
541-385-5809
Chrysler 200 LX 2012, (exp. 3/1/1 5) VIN ¹292213 Stock ¹83014
$13,979 or $195/mo.,
$2000 down, 72 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title included in payment.
® au mau.
Subaru Forester 1998 170k miles., red, two 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. sets tires, daughter 877-266-3821 moved to Sweden Dlr ¹0354 needs $. Clean, no pets. Dependable car. $4200. 541-647-0657
FordEsca e 2005
Mercedes 380SL 1982 Roadster, black on black, soft & hard top, excellent condition, always garaged. 1 55 K m i l es, $11,500. 541-549-6407 4x4 ready for Check out the adventure! ¹D11893. classifieds online Bargain Corral www.bendbuffefin.com priced O $5,977 Updated daily ROBBERSON i
ToyotaHighlander
g5,
ChryslerPaclf/ca 2005, (exp. 3/1/1 5) Vin ¹315989 Stock ¹44375A
2008 Sport, 3rd row, lots more! ¹024803 $19,977 ROBBERSON
msam ~
•~
I ICCOLC ~
541-312-3986
541-312-3986 www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 03/01/15
www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 03/01/15
1950 Mercury 4-dr Sedan Ground-up restoration, beautiful! Call for details. $35,500 or best offer.
J
~
I
J
I
$10,733 or $135/mo.,
$2500 down, 72 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title included in payment.
©
s u a a a LL 000000000000.000
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
I
Coll 54I3853809 io promote yoursenice• Advertise for 28daysstorting at'If(I paiscrcc0/ptKiCrct corctm 'Ciiccc000Cci0rc!
-=
541-892-3789
541-385-5809
BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495
541-573-7131
17.5' Seaswirl 2002 Wakeboard Boat I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, tons of extras, low hrs. Full wakeboard tower, light bars, Polk audio speakers throughout, completely wired for amps/subwoofers, underwater lights, fish finder, 2 batteries custom black paint job. $12,500 541-815-2523
Fifth Wheels
The Bulletin Classifieds
Watercraft
0
Harley Dyna Wide Glide 2003 custom paint, extras, 13,000 orig miles, like new, health forces sale. Sacrifice $10,000 obo. 541-633-7856.
935
Motorhomes
RV PACKAGE-2006 Must sell $20,000 Monaco Monarch, 31 ', or take over payFord V10, 28,900 miles, ments. Call auto-level, 2 slides, 541-410-5649 queen bed & hide-a-bed sofa, 4k gen, conv microwave, 2 TV's, tow Reese 20,000-lb 5th wheel receiver hitch, package, $66,000. OPTION - 2003 Jeep $400 obo. 541-610-3119 Wranglertow car, 84K miles, hard & soft top, 5 RV speed manual,$11,000 CONSIGNMENTS 541-815-6319 WANTED We Do the Work, You Keep the Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Ready to make memories! Top-selling Winnebago BIG COUNTRY RV 31 J, original owners, non- Bend: 541-330-2495 smokers, garaged, only Redmond: 18,800 miles, auto-level541-548-5254 ing jacks, (2) slides, upgraded queen bed, bunk 885 beds, micro, (3) TVs, Canopies 8 Campers sleeps 10! Lots of storage, maintained, very clean!Only $67,995!Ex- Adventurer2013 86 tended warranty and/or fi- FB truck camper, nancing avail to qualified $19,800. 2205 dry buyers!541-388-7179 weight, 44 gallons 881 f resh water. 3 1 0 watts rooftop solar, 2 880 Travel Trailers deep cycle batteries, Motorhomes LED lights, full size q ueen bed. n i c e '+ 1.II 0 ~H floorplan. Also availQ able 2010 C hevy Silverado HD, $15,000. 2007 Jayco Jay Flight 360-774-2747 29 FBS with slide out & No text messages! Allegro 32' 2007, like awning - Turn-key ready new, only 12,600 miles. to use, less than 50 toChev 8.1L with Allison 60 tal days used by current transmission, dual ex- owner. Never smoked in, 0 haust. Loaded! Auto-lev- no indoor pets, excellent eling system, Skw gen, cond., very clean. Lots of 0 0 power mirrors w/defrost, bonus features; many 2 slide-outs with aw- have never been used. nings, rear c a mera,A sking $16,500. C a ll trailer hitch, driyer door Lisa, 541-420-0794 fo r w/power window, cruise, more info / more photos. exhaust brake, central vac, satellite sys. Asking 908 Dutchman Denali $67,500. 503-781-8812 32' 2011 travel Aircraft, Parts trailer. 2 slides Ev& Service erything goes, all kitchen ware, linens etc. Hitch, sway bars, water 8 sewer hoses. List price Fleetwood D i scovery $34,500 - asking 40' 2003, diesel, w/all $26,800 Loaded. options - 3 slide outs, Must see to apprecisatellite, 2 TV's, W/D, 1/3 interest ln ate. Redmond, OR. etc., 34,000 m iles. 541-604-5993 Columbia 400, Wintered in h eated Financing available. shop. $78,995 obo. $125,000 What are you 541-447-8664 (located @ Bend) looking for? 541-288-3333 You'll find it in
0 Say Cgoodbuy
to that unused item by placing it in The Bulletin Classifieds
933
• e~ -
•
541-385-5809 Harlev Davidson 2001 FXSTD, twin cam 88, fuel injected, Vance & Hines short shot exhaust, Stage I with Vance & Hines fuel management system, custom parts, extra seat. $10,500OBO. Call Today
931
00
$8500. 541-379-3530
860
s
882
682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726- Timeshares for Sale 730 - NewListings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744- Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746- Northwest BendHomes 747 - Southwest BendHomes 748- Northeast BendHomes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson County Homes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land 870
: I.
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 880
Fifth Wheels
Landscaping/Yard Care Landscaping/Yard Care
Building/Contracting
1/3 interest in wellequipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. $65,000. 541-419-9510 www.N4972M.com HANGAR FOR SALE. 30x40 end unit T hanger in Prineville. Dry walled, insulated, and painted. $23,500.
NOTICE: Oregon state law requires anyone who con t racts for Zduer Qua/ieI V W CONV. 1 9 78 construction work to L'a~< C'~ r,. $8999 -1600cc, fuel be licensed with the injected, classic 1978 Construction ContracFull Service Volkswagen Converttors Board (CCB). An Landscape ible. Cobalt blue with active license Management a black convertible means the contractor top, cream colored is bonded & insured. Tom, 541.788.5546 interior & black dash. Verify the contractor's Spring Clean Up This little beauty runs •Leaves CCB l i c ense at and looks great and www.hirealicensed•Cones turns heads wherever contractor.com •Needles it goes. Mi: 131,902. or call 503-378-4621. • Debris Hauling Phone 541-504-8399 The Bulletin recommends checking with Weed Free Bark the CCB prior to con933 & Flower Beds Save money. Learn tracting with anyone. to fly or build hours Pickups Some other t rades Lawn Renovation with your own airalso req u ire addi- Aeration - Dethatching c raft. 1 96 8 A e r o Chevrolet Silverado tional licenses and Overseed Commander, 4 seat, 2006 diesel, 113K miles, certifications. Compost 150 HP, low time, ext'd cab, long bed, Top Dressing full panel. $21,000 excellent condition, Where can you find a obo. Contact Paul at $19,000. 541-548-4667 helping hand? 541-447-5184. Landscape From contractors to Maintenance Chev Sllverado yard care, it's all here Full or Partial Service T-Hangar for rent at Bend airport. • Mowing CEdging in The Bulletin's Call 541-382-8998. • Pruning 0Weeding "Call A Service Water Management Professional" Directory TURN THE PAGE
For More Ads The Bulletin
2005 crew cab great looking! Vin¹972932
916
$19,977
Trucks & Heavy Equipment
Fertilizer included with monthly program
Debris Removal
ROBBERSON y I ICCCC C ~
~
541-312-3986 www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 03/01/15
GA L LW TODAY fmb
M.F. 230 DIESEL CASE 200 GAS FORD 2N GAS BEND 541-382-8038
Will Haul Away
~: FREE g
For Salvage ~ . .
Any Loastfon I@RemOVal,
I
:~
•
0
•
I
THURS - SUN 12PM - 4PM Popular Pahlisch Homes community featuring resort-like amenities: pools, clubhouse, gym, hot iub, sports center, 2 miles of walking trails. Tour a variety of single level and 2 story plans.
Hosted 6 Listed by:
TEAM DELAY Principal Broker
EDIE DELAY
541-420-2cy50
I I •
Handyman/Remodeli ng Residential/Commercial sznauJobs ro E~sire Rooie Rnmodels Garage Organizalios
Aeratiea/Bethatching
Senior Discounts 541-390-1466 Same Day Response
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 you by
Hwne lnspecriow Repairs Quality, Howesr work
oeaais 541-31 7-9768 ccensssvsBoirded/Insxef
Managing Central Oregon Landscapes Since 2006
The Bulletin
20878SEGoldenGatePlace,Bend Dlrectioss:East on Reed /ifarfet /Id 0 firSI eX/I ai rOundabOu/ OntO
15th, at Road Detour Sign turn le ft on Ferguson. Right at SageCreek Dr/ve, left ai /Ifanhae Lane, righi a/ Go/den Gate.
H omes St~ g Mid-$200S
Cudglllg
• Pnantng CWeedeattoa • Fertutxtsg CHauttng
• Grounds Keeping
oes-rrms or
• Interior and Exterior • Family.Owned • Residential & Commercial • 40 years experience • Senior Discounts • 5.year Warranties /tskaboutour SPRlNG SPBCr/U,l
Call 541 337 6149 CCB8204918
CCNICQCCCCCI OICICN IICIC ISB
I
I
• sprtng clean-up • MOWltlg
'10 - 3 lines, 7 days t16 -3 lines, 14 days (Private Party ads only)
929
Keystone Everest 5th Automotive Wanted • 0 Wheel, 2004 8 t Model 323P - 3 slides, DONATE YOUR CAR, rear island-kitchen, TRUCK OR BOAT TO Meet singles right now! fireplace, 2 TV's, HERITAGE FOR THE No paid o perators, CD/DVR/VCR/Tuner w/surround sound, A/C, BLIND. Free 3 Day just real people like V acation, Tax D e - you. Browse greetcustom bed, ceiling fan, W/D ready, many extras. ductible, Free Towing, ings, exchange mesNew awning & tires. All Paperwork Taken sages and connect Excellent condition. Care O f. CALL live. Try it free. Call $19,750.More p/cs 1-800-401-4106 now: 8 77-955-5505. available. 541-923-6408 (PNDC) (PNDC)
COLLINS
ueekly serAcssoPBos
Chevy Pickup 1978, Ah Cleallowts v long bed, 4x4, frame up restoration. 500 Cadillac en g i ne, 925 fresh R4 transmisUtility Trailers sion w/overdrive, low no rust, custom F latbed t r ailer w i t h mi., Handyman interior and carpet, ramps, 7000 lb. can ew wheels a n d pacity, 26' long, 8'6 tires, You must see wide, ideal for hauling it! $25,000 invested. I DO THAT! hay, materials, cars, $12,000 0 80 . exc. cond. $2800. 541-536-3889 or 541-420-3788 e I' 541-420-6215. •
~~ CCN Cy
Weekly, monthly or one time service.
Have an item to FREE ESTIMATES Call now to scbeduk/ sell quick? 541-4807714 If it's under BONDED a IN URED '500 you can place it in The Bulletin Painting/Wall Covering Classifieds for:
Also Cleanups
•
NOTICE: Oregon Landscape Contractors Law (ORS 671) requires all businesses that advertise t o p e r form Landscape Construction which includes: p lanting, deck s , fences, arbors, water-features, and installation, repair of irrigation systems to be l icensed w it h th e Landscape Contractors Board. This 4-digit number is to be included in all advertisements which indicate the business has a bond, insurance and workers compensation for their employees. For your protection call 503-378-5909 or use our website: www.lcb.state.or.us to check license status before contracting with the business. Persons doing lan d scape maintenance do not r equire an LC B l i cense.
I I
I
THURS - SAT 12PM - 4PM Recently finished Pahlisch Homes Model in NE Bend. Homes feature quartz counters, laminate flooring, gas cooking, stainless steel 20802 NE Sierra Drive appliances and all the Directlom: North on Boyd Acres, quality Pahlisch Homes Is righi on Sierra OR north on 18ih known for, Now selling Pom Empire,le/I on Srerra. Lookfor Phase Two — stop by for SlgrK more information. Homes from the
Hosted 6 Listed by:
RHIANNA KUNKLER ABR
541-506-0959
$220,000s
THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 1 2015 G5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 • •
•
•
875
075
075
975
075
075
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
VyyBUG 1971
Looking for your next employee?
•
BOATS 8 RVs 805- Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats 6 Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 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
Subaru Legacy 3.0R Limited2008, (exp. 3/1/15) Vin ¹207281 Stock ¹82547
$21,979 or $259/mo., $3600 down, 84 mo., 4 .49% APR o n ap proved credit. License and title i ncluded in
payment.
©
S UBA R U
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
975
Subaru Legacy LL Bean 2006,
Toyota Corolla 2013, (exp. 3/1/1 5) Vin ¹053527 Stock ¹83072
VOLVO XC90 2007 AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L, power everything, on grey, leather $15,979 or $199 mo., grey heated lumbar seats, $16,977 or $199/mo., $2000 down 84 mo. 3rd row seat, moon4 .49% APR o n a p $2600 down, 84 mo. at roof, new tires, al4 .49% APR o n a p - proved credit. License ways garaged, all proved credit. License and title included in maintenance up to payment. and title i ncluded in date, excellent cond. payment. S US A R u A STEAL AT$13,900. S UBA R U 541-223-2218 SUSARUOP3lMD.OOM 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 (exp. 3/1/1 5) Vin ¹203053 Stock ¹82770
Fully restored Vin ¹359402
$7,998 ROBBERSON LlllcoLN ~
©
®
II IR W R
541-312-3986 www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Good thru 03/01/1 5
Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
Dlr¹0354 WHEN YOU SEE THIS Where can you find a Need to get an ad helping hand? Want to impress the USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Door-to-door selling with relatives? Remodel in ASAP? From contractors to Door-to-door selling with fast results! It's the easiest Look at: Advertise your car! your home with the yard care, it's all here On a classified ad fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell. Add A Picture! Bendhomes.com help of a professional Fax it to 541-322-7263 in The Bulletin's Reach thousands of readers! go to way in the world to sell. for Complete Listings of from The Bulletin's Call 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com The Bulletin Classified "Call A Service Area Real Estate for Sale "Call A Service The Bulletin Classifieds The Bulletin Classifieds to view additional The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809 Professional" Directory Professional" Directory photos of the item. 541-385-5809
Automobiles
USE THE CLASSIFIEDS!
oncord 00
MoreP ixatBendbulletin.com
A Lot of car for
$6,977!
Vin¹133699 ROBBERSON'L ~
mam a
541-312-3986
www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Good thru 3/01/1 5
Dodge Avenger 2013, (exp. 3/1/15) Vin ¹535474 Stock ¹83015
$13,979 or $195/mo.,
$2000 down, 72 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p -
proved credit. License and title i ncluded in
payment.
®
S UBA R U . SVBARUOPERHD.OOII
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821
Dlr ¹0354
HondaAccord 2005
Gorgeous and Priced fo se//!
¹O'I 8628 $1 1,977
ROBBERSON LINcoLN~
IM Z OR
541-312-3986 www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 03/01/15
Honda Accord L
1995. auto., 4 cyl 2.2L, dark blue Vin061167$5,977 ROBBERSON LINCOIII ~
II IBRDB
541-312-3986
www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 03/01/1 5 Ni
n Alim 2
7
Looks & runs great! Vin¹ 176487 $6,977 ROBBERSON LINCOIII ~
II IBRDB
541-312-3986 www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Good thru 3/01/1 5
Scion XB 2013, (exp. 3/1/15) Vin ¹034131 Stock ¹83065
$15,979 or $199/mo.,
$2000 down, 84 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p -
proved credit. License and title i ncluded in
payment.
®
S UBA R U
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
Subaru Forester 2012, (exp. 3/1/1 5) VIN ¹466408 Stock ¹83037
$18,399 or $225/mo.,
$2500 down, 84 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title i ncluded in
payment.
®
S UBA R U
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
Subaru lmpreza Sedan2010, (exp. 3/1/1 5) Vin ¹506346 Stock ¹82961 $12,999 or $175/mo.,
$2200 down, 72 mo., 4 .48% APR o n a p -
proved credit. License and title included in payment.
®
S UBA R U
SUBARUO188tlD.OOM
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE O F SALE File N o . 7236.25635 R e f e rence is made to that
c ertain trust d e ed made by Danna K Frint, Del R Frint, as g rantor, t o Firs t American Title Insurance Company of Oregon, as trustee, in favor o f M o rtgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as nominee for American Brokers Conduit, its successors and assigns, as b eneficiary, dated 05/18/07, recorded 05/23/07, in the mortgage records of Deschutes County, Oregon, as 2007-29230 and subsequently assigned to U.S. Bank National Association, as trustee for J.P. Morgan Mortgage Trust 2007-S3 by Assignm ent recorded a s 2013-019856, covering the following described real property situated in said county and state, to wit: A tract of land located in the South half of the Northwest quarter (S 1/2 NW 1/4) of Section 13, Township 14 South, Range 13 East of the Willamette Meridian, Des c hutes County, Oregon, more particularly described as follows: Beginning at a point from which the West quarter corner of said Section 13 bears South 89 degrees 30' 18" West, 1330.63 feet, thence North, 630.68 f eet; thence South 66 degrees 34' 52" East, 153.77 feet; thence South 52 degrees 00' 37" East, 463.30 feet; thence South 0 degrees 29' 42" East, 280.00 feet; thence South 89 degrees 30' 18" West, 508.69 feet to the point of beginning. Exce p ting therefrom the Northeasterly 25 feet and the Easterly 25 feet which is reserved for roadway p u rposes and that portion lying within the right of way of the Lambert Road. PROPERTY ADDRESS: 3800 Northeast Xenolith Street Terrebonne, OR 97760 Both the beneficiary a n d the trustee have elected to sell the real property to satisfy the obligations secured by the trust deed and a notice of default has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revlsed Statutes 86.752(3); the default for which foreclosure is made is grantors' failure to pay when due t h e fo l lowing sums: monthlypayments of $ 2,715.42 beginning 06/01/09; plus late charges of $135.77 each month beginning 08/16/09; p lus advances o f $6,672.00 that represent property preservations, property inspections and paid foreclosure fees and costs; together with title expense, costs, t rustee's fees a n d a ttorney's fees i n curred herein by reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of t h e a b o ve described real property and its interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. By reason of said default the beneficiary has d eclared al l s u m s owing on the obligation secured by the trust deed mmediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to wit: $532,000.00 with interest thereon at the rate of 6.125 percent per annum beginning 07/01/09; plus l a te charges of $ 135.77 each monthbeginning 08/1 6/09 until paid; p lus advances o f $6,672.00 that represent p r operty preservations, property inspections and paid foreclosure fees and costs; together
with title e x pense, costs, trustee's fees and attorneys fees i ncurred herein b y reason of said default; any f urther s u ms advanced b y the b eneficiary for t h e protection o f the above described real property a n d its interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. WHEREFORE, notice hereby is given that the undersigned trustee will on May 26, 2015 at the hour of 10:00 o'clock, A.M. in accord w i t h the s tandard o f tim e established by ORS 187.110, at t he following place: inside the main lobby of the Deschutes C o u nty Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond, in the City of Bend, C o unty of Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the described real property which t he grantor had or h ad power to convey at the t i m e of the execution by grantor of the t r ust d eed, t ogether wit h a n y i nterest which t h e grantor or grantor's successors in interest a cquired after t h e execution of the trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the cos t s and
expenses of
s a le,
including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that for reinstatement or payoff quotes requested pursuant to O RS 6 6 .766 a n d 86.789 must be timely c ommunicated in a written request that complies with t h at statute addressed to the trustee's "Urgent Request Desk" either by personal delivery to t he tru s t ee's physical offices (call for address) or by first class, certified mail, return receipt requested, addressed to the trustee's post office box address set forth in t his n otice. Due t o pot e ntial conflicts with federal law, persons having no record legal or equitable interest in the subject property will o n l y re c eive information concerning the lender's estimated or actual bid. Lender bid i nformation is a l s o available a t the trustee's web s ite, www.northwesttrustee .com. Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.778 has the right, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the sale, to have this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the e ntire a m ount then due (other than such portion of t he principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any other default complained of herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the
performance required under the obligation or t rust deed, and i n addition to paying said sums or tendering the performance necessary to cure the default, by paying all
costs and expenses
actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and t rust deed, together with trustee's and a ttorney's fees n ot exceeding the amounts provided by said OR S 8 6 . 778. Requests from p ersons named i n ORS 6 6 .776 fo r reinstatement quotes received less than six days prior to the date set for the trustee's sale will be honored only at the discretion of the beneficiary or if required by the terms
of the loan bid a t c o n tractor's to 279C.670. LEGAL NOTICE documents. In p reference). Bid s NOTICE OF PUBLIC construing this notice, shall be clearly la- Scope of Work: The HEARING the singular includes beled: North Canyon work consists of rethe plural, the word Drive Waterline Im- moval and r e con- The Desc h utes "grantor" includes any provements WA s truction of six ( 6 ) County Hearings Ofsuccessor in interest 14-02. ADA sidewalk ramps, ficer will hold a Public to the grantor as well a taper grind against Hearing on Tuesday, as any other person No mandatory pre-bid the curb/gutter and in- March 24, 2015, at owing an obligation, meeting will be held. stalling a n a s p halt 6:30 p.m. in the Barthe performance of No bid will be acoverlay on e xisting nes a n d Sa w y er which is secured by cepted by a general city streets. Rooms of the Dessaid trust deed, and contractor who is not chutes Serv i ces the words "trustee" on the plan holders Street Sections: Center, 1300 NW Wall "beneficiary" list. and 1.NW Dogwood Ave., St., Bend, to consider include their from NW 5th street to the following request: respective successors This is a Public Works N. Canal Blvd. FILE NUMB E RS: in interest, if a n y. Contract and subject (Taper grind & 1 1/2" 247-15-000061-A Without limiting the to the Oregon Bureau overlay paving) (247-14-000202-LUP) trustee's disclaimer of of Labor and Indus- 2.SW Quartz Ave., SUBJECT:An appeal representation or tries (BOLI) Wage from SW 27th St. to of an Administrative warranties, O r egon Rates, dated JanuSW 35th St. Decision denying a l aw r e quires t h e ary 1 , 2 0 1 5 a n d (ADA ramps, taper Type 2 Limited Use trustee to state in this amendments for re- grind & 1 1/2" overlay Permit for a commern otice t ha t so m e gion 10 as defined paving). cial events or activiresidential p r operty under ORS 279C.800 ties facility o n a sold at a trustee's sale to 279C.870. Contract Documents 38.61-acre parcel in may have been used may be examined at the Exclusive Farm in manufacturing Scope of Work: Im- the following locaUse zone. APPELmethamphetamines, provements generally tions: LANT/OWNER: James the chemical include installation of •City of Redmond En- R. B rown. L O CAcomponents of which 2120 lineal feet of 8" gineering Department TION:The property is are known to be toxic. ductile iron waterline, 243 NE A ntler Avlocated at 4691 SW Prospective and 345 LF of 6" duc- enue, Redmond, Or- Helmholtz Way, Redpurchasers of tile iron waterline, and egon. mond and is identiresidential p roperty 12,110 square yard of ~www.ciplist.com fied o n A s sessor's should be aware of street asphalt paveTax Map 15-12-25 as this potential danger ment overlay. Digital copies of the Tax Lot 2300. STAFF b efore deciding t o plans, specifications, CONTACT:Cynthia place a bid for this Contract Documents and bid proposal, in- Smidt, property at the may be examinedat cluding any future ad- Cynthia.Smidt@destrustee's sale. T he the following loca- denda or revisions to chutes.org. Copies of t rustee's r ules o f tions: the bid d ocuments, the staff report, appliauction m a y be •City of Redmond En- are available by go- cation, all documents accessed at gineering Department ing to www.ciplist.com and evidence subwww.northwesttrustee 243 NE A ntler Av- and signing up, by mitted by or on behalf .com a nd are enue, Redmond, Or- going to the Member of the applicant and incorporated by this egon. Login (It's f r ee). applicable criteria are reference. You may ~www.ciplist.com General Contractors available for inspeca lso a ccess s a l e who plan to bid on this tion at the Planning status at Digital copies of the project are required to Division at n o c o st www.northwesttrustee plans, specifications, r egister for an a c- a nd can b e p u r .com and and bid proposal, in- count on chased for 25 cents a www. USA-Foreclosur cluding any future ad- www.ciplist.com to be page. The staff ree.com. For f u rther denda or revisions to included in the Plan port should be made information, p l ease the bid d ocuments, Holder's list and to re- available 7 days prior contact: Kathy are available by go- ceive email updates of to the date set for the Taggart N o r thwest ing to www.ciplist.com any addenda or revi- hearing. Documents Trustee Services, Inc. and signing up, by sions t o t h e bid are also available onP.O. Box 997 going to the Member documents. No Pro- line a t ww w .desBellevue, WA Login (It's f r ee). posal will be consid- chutes.org. Des98009-0997 586-1900 General Contractors ered from a General c hutes Coun t y FRINT, DANNA F and who plan to bid on this Contractor to whom encourages persons DEL R (TS¹ project are required to a proposal form has w ith d isabilities t o 7236.25635) r egister for a n a c - not been issued by participate in all pro1002.277207-File No. count on the City of Redmond grams and activities. www.ciplist.com to be to registered bidders This event/location is LEGAL NOTICE included in the Plan from www.ciplist.com. accessible to people ADOPTION = LOVE. Holder's list and to rewith disabilities. If you We promise your ceive email updates of PUBLISH: need a c commodababy a happy, joyany addenda or reviBend Bulletin tions to make particiful, secure life. Exsions t o t h e bid Sunday, March 1, 2015 pation poss i ble, penses paid. Call documents. No Proplease call the ADA 1-800-943-7780. Coordinator at (541) posal will be consid330-4640. ered from a General LEGAL NOTICE In the D eschutes Contractor to whom LEGAL NOTICE a proposal form has C ounty Circ u it NOTICE OF PUBLIC not been issued by LEGAL NOTICE Court. In the matter HEARING the City of Redmond NOTICE OF PUBLIC of the estate of JoHEARING seph N . R e i nig. to registered bidders The Desc h utes from www.ciplist.com. Personal represenPla n ning The Desc h utes County tative: C ynthia M. Commission will hold PUBLISH: County Hearings OfKuykendall, 15970 on Bend Bulletin ficer will hold a Public a Public Hearing SW Barr ington March 12, Sunday, March 1, 2015 Hearing on March 31, Thursday, Terrace, Portland, 2015, at 5:30 p.m. in 2015, at 6:30 p.m. in the Deschutes County O regon 97224. I Daily Journal of the Barnes and Saw- Services Center, 1300 hereby give notice Commerce yer Rooms of the De- NW W a l l St r e et, to any person havSer v ices ing claims against Monday, March 2, 2015 schutes to take testiCenter, 1300 NW Wall Bend, the estate to present mony on the following LEGAL NOTICE St., Bend, to consider within them, FILE NUMBER: INVITATION TO BID the following request: item: four months of the File No. F ILE NUMB E R: 247-15-000065-TA. first publication of Sealed bids for the 247-15-000001-LUP. t he notice t o t h e SUBJECT: Text c onstruction of t h e SUBJECT:Limited personal represenCity o f R e d mond, U se Permit for a n Amendment to Dest ative at t h e a d County ZonS PRING 2015 A / C events facility in the chutes dress designated in ing Ordinance (Title O VERLAY 8c A D A Exclusive Farm Use the notice for the 16) to define, permit, ad- Zone. A P PLICANT: PROJECT, of presentation and establish standressed to the City Paul Cooper, Hana claims or they may fo r M e dical R ecorder, Cit y o f Cooper. O W N ER: dards be barred. P ubDispensaRedmond, Oregon will Paul an d Lo r een Marijuana lished on Feb. 15, ries i n c o n junction be received until 2:00 Cooper. LOCATION: with 2015. Any person State law. APPM local time at the 64655 Old PLICANT:Deschutes who's rights may be City Recorder's office, Bend-Redmond affected by the proCounty. STAFF City Hall, 716 SW Ev- Highway, Bend CONTACT: Matthew ceedings that addiergreen Ave n ue, County A s sessor's tional i n formation Martin, Ass o ciate may be o b tained Redmond, Oregon, on Map 16-12-32, tax lots Planner (541) March 12, 2015 and 3 14/301. STAF F 330-4620; matt.marfrom the records of then publicly opened CONTACT:Paul Blik- tin © deschutes.org. the court, the perand read at 2:00 PM stad, sonal r e presentaCopies of the staff rein Conference Room Paul.Blikstad@destive or the attorney port, application, all for th e p e rsonal A, City H all, Red- chutes.org. Copies of documents and evimond, Oregon. First the staff report, appli- dence submitted by or representative. tier subcontractor list cation, all documents on behalf of the appliLEGAL NOTICE is required to be sub- and evidence sub- cant and applicable mitted by 4:00 PM, mitted by or on behalf criteria are available INVITATION TO BID same day (Note: The of the applicant and for inspection at the first tier subcontractor applicable criteria are Sealed bids for the Division at c onstruction of t h e list may also be sub- available for inspec- Planning cost and can be City o f Re d mond, mitted with the sealed tion at the Planning no p urchased fo r 2 5 North Canyon Drive bid a t c o n tractor's Division at n o c o st cents a page. Waterline Improve- p reference). Bid s a nd can b e p u r - ments are alsoDocuavailments WA 14-02,ad- shall be clearly la- chased for 25 cents a able on l in e at: dressed to the City beled: SPRING 2015 page. The staff rehttp://www.deschutes. R ecorder, City o f A /C O V ERLAY & port should be made org/cd. Redmond, Oregon will ADA PROJECT. available 7 days prior be received until 2:00 to the date set for the LEGAL NOTICE PM local time at the No mandatory pre-bid hearing. Documents TRUSTEE'S NOTICE City Recorder's office, meeting will be held. are also available on- OF SALE. Reference City Hall, 716 SW Ev- N o bid will be a c - line a t ww w .des- is made to that cerergreen Ave n ue, cepted by a general chutes.org. Des- tain trust deed made Redmond, Oregon, on contractor who is not chutes County by Chris Kimmel, a Illlarch 24, 2015 and on the plan holders encourages persons married person and then publicly opened list. w ith d isabilities t o Patrick McMichael, a and read at 2:00 PM participate in all pro- s ingle person a s This is a Public Works in Conference Room grams and activities. grantor, t o F i d elity Contract and subject This event/location is National Title Ins Co A, City Hall, Redmond, Oregon. First to the Oregon Bureau accessible to people as trustee, in favor of tier subcontractor list of Labor and Indus- with disabilities. If you Wells Fargo Bank, is required to be sub- tries (BOLI) Wage need a c c ommoda- N.A. as beneficiary, mitted by 4:00 PM, Rates, dated Janu- tions to make partici- dated December 14, same day (Note: The ary 1 , 2 0 1 5 a n d pation poss i ble, 2009, recorded Janufirst tier subcontractor amendments for re- please call the ADA ary 4, 2010, in the list may also be sub- gion 10 as defined Coordinator at (541) mortgage records of mitted with the sealed under ORS 279C.600 330-4640. Deschutes C ounty,
Oregon, as D o c ument No. 2010-00051, covering the following described real property situated in said county and state, to wit: LOT 3, BLOCK 2,
ROMAINE VILLAGE, UNIT 2, DESCHUTES COUNTY, O REGON. PR O P ERTY AD D RESS: 60921 McMullin Drive, Bend, O R 9 7 7 02. There is a default by the grantor or other person owing an obligation or by their successor in interest, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, or by their successor in interest, with respect to provisions therein which authorize sale in the event of d efault of such provision. The default for which foreclosure is made is grantors' failure to pay when due the following sums: monthly of payments $1,061.10 beginning September 1, 2013; monthly payments of $1,052.49 beginning March 1, 2014; plus prior accrued l a te charges of $127.32; p lus advances o f $1,183.00; t o gether with t itle e x pense, costs, trustee's fees and attorney's fees i ncurred herein b y reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of t h e a b o ve described real property and its interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. By reason of said default, the beneficiary has d eclared al l s u m s owing on the obligation secured by said trust deed i mmediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to wit: $146,563.24 with interest thereon at the rate of 5.50000 percent per annum beg inning August 1 , 2013; plus prior accrued late charges of $ 127.32; plus a d vances of $1,183.00; p lus e s crow a d vances of $2,412.76; plus fees of $53.00; together with title expense, costs, trustee's fees and attorney's fees incurred herein by reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of the above described property and its interest therein;
and prepayment pen-
alties/premiums, if applicable. WHEREFORE, n o tice is hereby given that the undersigned trustee will on May 1, 2015, at the hour of 11:00 AM, in accord with the standard of time est ablished b y OR S 1 87.110, a t Des chutes County Courthouse Front Entrance, 1164 N W Bond S treet, B end, O R 97701, in the City of Bend, County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in th e r e al property d e scribed a bove, which t h e g rantor had or h ad power to convey at the time of the execution by grantor of the trust deed t ogether with a n y in t erest which the grantor or
(other than such portion of the principle as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any o t her d e fault complained of herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance required under t he o bligation o r tr u s t deed, and in addition to paying those sums or tendering the performance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and t rust deed, together with trustee and attorney fees not exceeding the amounts provided by ORS 86.778.Without li m i ting the trustee's disclaimer of representations or warranties, O r egon l aw r e quires t h e trustee to state in this notice that some residential property sold at a t r ustee's sale may have been used in manufacturing methamphetamines, the chemical components of which are known to b e t o xic. Prospective purchasers o f re s i dential property should be aware of this potential danger before deciding to place a bid for this property at the trustee's sale In construing this notice, the singular includes the p lural, t h e wor d "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by the trust deed, and the words "trustee" and beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. Robinson Tait, P .S., Authorized t o sign on behalf of the trustee, 710 Second Ave., Suite 710, Seattle, WA 98104. PUBLIC NOTICE T he Bend Park & Recreation D i s trict Board of Directors will meet in a work sess ion a t 5 ' 3 0 p m T uesday, Marc h 3,2015 at the district office,799 SW Col umbia, Bend, O r egon. Agenda topics include Shevlin Park Management Plan update, D e schutes River Trail South UGB Bridge update and a d iscussion on t h e City's affordable housing proposal. A regular bus i ness meeting will convene a t 7:00 pm fo r t he board to consider ratification of approval of vacation of a Riverhouse easement. The board will conduct an executive se s sion following the b u siness meeting pursuant to ORS 1192.660(2)(h) for the
purpose of consultatfon with legal coun-
sel concerning legal rights and duties regarding current litigation or litigation likely to be filed and ORS 192.660(2)(e) for the purpose of discussing real property transactions. T he a genda a n d s upplementary r e ports are posted on the district's website,
www.bendparksanFo r more in interest acquired drec.org. call after the execution of information 541-369-7275. the trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of the The Bulletin is your sale, including reaEmployment sonable charges by the trustee. Notice is Marketplace further given that any person named in ORS Call 86.778 has the right, at any time that fs not later than five days 5 41-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 before the date last to advertise. set for the sale, to have this foreclosure proceeding dismissed www.bendbulletin.com and the trust deed r einstated by p a y ment to the beneficiary of t h e e n tire Serving Central Oregon since 1%8 a mount the n d u e
grantor's successors
The Bulletin
G6 SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
Time to declutter? Need some extra cash?
I1 I
1 I '»I
II II
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 your FREE CLASSIFIED AD, call 541-385-5809 or visit The Bulletin office at: 1777 SW Chandler Ave. (On Bend's west side) *Offer allows for 3 lines oftext only. Excludesall service, hay,wood, pets/animals, plants, tickets, weapons, rentals andemployment advertising, andall commercial accounts. Must bean individual item under$200.00 and price of individual itemmust beincluded in the ad. Askyour Bulletin SalesRepresentative about special pricing, longer runschedules andadditional features. Limit 1 ad peritem per30days to besold.