Bulletin Daily Paper 04-01-14

Page 1

Serving Central Oregon since190375

TUESDAY April1,2014

DIY croutons SPORTS • C1

AT HOME• D1

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD

MEDICAL POT

College footdall-

Redmond

Spring practice gets rolling with the Ducks and the Beavers.C1

to vote on

marijuana dispensaries

Backup cameras — By 2018, the technology will be a requirement in newvehicles. CS

OpeningDay —Sure, there's been MLBgames already, but Mondaywasthe real deal. All the action from the day.C3

Texas rattlers —Usinggas fumes to capture the snakesis a tradition in Texas, to the outrage of animal activists. Now the activists have anewally: the state itself.A3

By Monicia Warner

• Experts

Tonight, Redmond may become the second Central Oregon city to ban medical marijuana dispensaries

preach

within city limits, as the City Council is expected to

caution

everywhere

vote for a second time on a one-year moratorium on the dispensaries. The council failedto secure the unan-

By Dylan J. Darling

imous vote

p~%

type of place where avalanches canhappen,as

neededtopass ' More marijuana the ordinance news,B3 at its March 25 meeting because Councilor Ginny

a fatal snow slide proved

McPherson was absent and

Sunday.

Councilor Ed Onimus voted

"It is pretty evident that it is avalanche ter-

against the ban.

The Bulletin

The upper reaches of Paulina Peak are the

In national news — The

rain," said Chris Sabo, trails specialist with

CIA misled about interrogation, a Senate report concludes.A2

the Deschutes National Forest.

Avalanches occur

And a Wedexclusive — Under health law, rural residents confronting higher insurance premiums. bendbulletin.cnmIletrrn

EDITOR'5CHOICE

Federal health care site falters at deadline By Amy Goldstein and Lena H. Sun The Washington Post

The first six-month win-

dow for Americans to gain health insurance under the Affordable Care Act closed

The Bulletin

,

r

when there is the right

mix of slope and snow. Sabo said avalanches typically occur on slopes between 30 and45 degrees, where there has been a loading of layers of snowby sporadic storms 01wllld. The avalanche that

killed La Pine 28-yearold Kyle James Thomas occurred about 7,300

feet up Paulina Peak, which at 7,984 feet towers over Paulina Lake in Newberry National Volcanic Monument.

Courtesy Karen Brown

Kyle Thomas "was alwayssmiling. Everybody loved him," says his mother, Karen Brown.

• Snowmobiler who died recalled as enthusiastic andexperienced Area avalanches in2014 An avalanche on Paulina Peak Sunday killed a La Pine man driving a snowmobile. The avalanche was just one of many reported this year to the Central Oregon Avalanche Association by backcountry users.

A La Pine man killed Sunday in an avalanche while

snowmobiling near Paulina Lake Lodge was a veteran rider who loved the sport, his mom said. on Monday morning said her son was wonderful man and a fantastic father. "He was a vibrant, happy young man," Brown said. "He was always smiling. Everybody loved him." Thomas, who wouldhave turned 29

snowfall and fluctuating temperatures likely primedthepeak foran avalanche, said Trevor

iIUrrd r: Y' , C~oi

Miller, a member of

theboard ofdirectors for the Central Oregon 'I

'~

-+g 8 J

• . Fe d/26

SISierS , tP,'

• A Q&A

stumbled

on what's on and off next,A6 th r oughout the day. Union halls, shopping-mall kiosks and insurance company lobbies across the country were jammed with people racing to get insurance on the

final day before the law required most Americans to

choose health insurance or risk a financial penalty. "It's like going into the mall on Christmas Eve,"

said Brian Lobley, senior vice president of Independence Blue Cross, which set up a "Countdown to Coverage"withextra

desks and phone lines in the usually empty lobby of its headquarters four

blocks from city hall in Philadelphia's Center City. Employees whose jobs have nothing to do with sales were pressed into ser-

Planning Director Phil Sten-

K

' '

.

The othertwo riders, who

were also experienced on snowm o biles, were able to

:

.

,

avoid the avalanche and

,

alerted Thomas' family,

with a plan to adopt an ordinance placing a moratorium on dispensaries within city limits and is currently processing the paperwork. SeeDispensaries/A6

GM Cobalt was seen as a lemon all along By Danielle Ivory nnd Rebecca R. Ruiz New Yorh Times News Service

Iled 911 and imm

them encountered obstamain enrollment website,

Th o mas

this month, was riding his snowmobile with two friends near the top of Paulina Peak east of La Pine in a popular area called Paulina Peak Playgroundwhen an avalanche buried him and his snowmobile around 3:30 p.m. Brown said Thomas had been riding snowmobiles since he was 9 years old and knew the area

recent combination of

at the last minute. Some of

Inside

for ayear, as long as they begin the process by May 1. According to Prineville Council has moved forward

on Monday with large numbers of consumers speeding to get coverage cles as HealthCare.gov, the

ments to ban dispensaries

beck, the Prineville City

The slope where the avalanche occurred is around 35 degrees. The

Avalanche Association in Bend. SeeRisks /A4

Other cities are following suit by drawing up ordinances banning medical marijuana dispensaries in compliancewith Senate Bill 1531. The bill, passed by the Oregon Legislature in early March, allows local govern-

i Lt,f~~"',.: ~~ ~~ ~

'

.

, i-

.

Cobaltbecame known for having a deadly ignition de-

SeeSnowmobller/A5

fect, it was already seen as a

Fatal avalanches aroundtheU.S. The fatal avalancheSunday on Paulina Peak,which killed asnowmobiler from La Pine, brought the total number of people killed by avalanches in the 2013-14 winter sports season to 26 nationwide, according to the Colorado Avalanche Information Center. Of the deaths, 11 weresnowmobilers.

ie,'„.-,-er~' + ,

lemon. Owners complained aboutpower steeringfailures, locks inexplicably opening and dosingand doors jamming shut.

Bend

"' i , . ene~h: th: j~ .

In more than 120 in-

stances, General Motors was forced under state lemon laws to buy back faulty Cobalts, pay settlements to

, Tum~al O o,~ MO ru 1nta~i n~

owners or let them trade in .

the cars, an analysis by The New York Times of state

' OiEs c'I-I,IU I-;TliEB

databases and court rer..

• 2013-14

cords shows. The buybacks came asdozens ofclaims were filed separately at GM

Iareh 33 tatat aeatanehe ' '

26 killed, 11 snowmobilers • 2012-13

24 killed, 1 snowmobiler

LaIPine

• 2011-12

34 killed, 9 snowmobilers

'

'

Source: Colorado Avalanche Information Center

' =. ,

'i

--.- Qanw jj2 .;

• 2010-11

25 killed, 4 snowmobilers • 2009-10 36 killed, 17 snowmobilers

Longbefore the Chevrolet

diatelybegan searching

from 2005 to 2009 that fit a

specific pattern — moving

, Jan. 13"

cars, sometimes traveling

at high speeds, would suddenly stop working.

<P'aurlina ciPea~k~

"There were transmission issues, issues with the dutch,

~

source:

K L-/AA[M ],AT HYII

;jLL;~A KQ E ', 'iCC03 .ru tgNITT'LY «P

Il75 / w /

Andy Zeigert

The Bu l letin

engine issues, air-conditioning issues," James Gonzales of Riverview, Flan saidofhis

2006Cobalt.

/

SeeCobalt/A5

vice, and customers were

triaged as they walked in, with priority given to peo-

TODAY'S WEATHER

ple who had not even be-

gun to shop for insurance before Monday. SeeHealth care/A6

<» dh>

Rain and snow High 45, Low29 Page B6

INDEX D6 Ob ituaries B5 At Home Df- 6 C lassified Ef -6 Dear Abby B usiness C7-8 Comics/Puz zles E3-4 Horoscope D 6 Sports Cf- 6 Calendar B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State B 1-6 N '/Movies D6

The Bulletin AnIndependent Newspaper

Q I/i/e use recycled newsprint

Vol. 112, No. 91,

34 pages, 5 sections

0

IIIIIIIIIIIIII

88267 02329


A2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 2014

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R e ort in st att e I A mis e oninterro ation By Greg Miller, Adam Goldman and Ellen Nakashima

as getting unique, otherwise were convinced that prisoners unobtainable intelligence that

had no more information to

The Washington Post

helped disrupt terrorist plots give. W ASHINGTON — A r e - and save thousands of lives," The report describes preport by the Senate Intelligence said one U.S. official briefed viously undisclosed cases of Committee concludes that the on the report. "Was that actu- abuses, including the alleged CIA misled the government ally true? The answer is no." repeated dunking of a terand the public about aspects Current and f ormer U.S. rorism suspect in tanks of of its brutal interrogation proofficials who described the re- ice water at a detention site gram for years — concealing port spoke on the condition of in Afghanistan — a method details about the severity of anonymity because of the sen- that bore similarities to waterits methods, overstating the sitivity of the issue andbecause boarding but never appeared significance of plots and pris- the document remains classi- on any Justice Department-aponers, and taking credit for fied. The 6,300-page report in- proved list of techniques. critical pieces of intelligence cludes what officials described U.S. officials said the comthat detainees had in fact sur- as damning new disclosures mittee refrained from assignrendered before they were about a sprawling network ing motives to CIA officials subjected to harsh techniques. of secret detention sites that whose actions or statements The report, built around de- was dismantled by President were scrutinized. The report tailed chronologies of dozens Barack Obama in 2009. also does not recommend new of CIA detainees, documents Classified files reviewed administrative punishment or a long-standing pattern of un- by committee i nvestigators further criminal inquiry into substantiated claims as agen- reveal internal divisions over a program that the Justice cy officials sought permission the interrogation program, of- Department has investigated to use — and later tried to de- ficials said, including one case repeatedly. Still, the document fend — excruciating interro- in which CIA employees left is almost certain to reignite an gation methods that yielded the agency's secret prison in unresolved public debate over little, if any, significant intel- Thailand after becoming dis- a period that many regard as ligence, according to U.S. of- turbed bythe brutal measures the most controversial in CIA ficials who have reviewed the being employed there. The re- history. document. port also cites cases in which A spokesman for the CIA "The CIA described (its officials at CIA headquarters said the agency had not yet program) repeatedly both to demanded the continued use seen a final version of the rethe Department of Justice of harsh interrogation tech- port and was, therefore, unand eventually to Congress niques even after analysts able to comment.

WASHINGTON SEEKS MUDSLIDE AID

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Sofia Jaramillo/The Associated Press

Workers and volunteers search for articles and belongings Monday at thescene of the deadly March 22 mudsli deinOso,W ash. Estimated financial losses from the deadly mudslide have reached$10 million, Gov.Jay Insleesaid Monday in a letter asking the federal government for a major disaster declaration. In seeking additional federal help following oneof the deadliest landslides in U.S.history, Inslee said about 30 families needassistance with housing, along with personal andhousehold goods. Theestimated losses include nearly $7 million in structures andmore

than $3 million in their contents, Inslee's letter said. The Snohomish County medical examiner's office said Monday afternoon that it has received atotal of 24 victims, and 18 of those havebeen positively identified. Previously, the official death toll was 21,with15 victims identified. The county sheriff's office released alist Monday evening of 22 people believed missing following the March 22 slide that destroyed a rural mountainside community northeast of Seattle. That's down from the 30 people officials previously considered missing. — The Associated Press

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

MEGABUCKS

U.S., Israeldiscussreleaseof U.S.spy By Mark landler and Michael R. Gordon

cussingprivate deliberations.

ised, he will not consider any extension past the April target date for negotiating the outlines

of a comprehensive treaty. But Israeli leaders, who assert that make meaningful concessions, have threatened to halt the prisoner release unless the talks are extended — creatinga chicken-

and-eggproblem for Kerry. "The Israelis would say to

Kerry, 'You're asking us to allowthereleaseofprisonerswho have 50 deaths on their hands.

whether Israel will release a Surelyyou can release one man passing dassified documents to fourth and final batch of Pales- who means a lot to the Israeli his Israeli handlers. But the U.S. tinian prisoners. people,'" said Daniel Kurtzer, has steadfastly refused, in part The president of the Palestin- a former U.S. ambassador to becauseofthevehement oppo- ian Authority, Mahmoud Ab- Israel. srtion of the nation's intelligence

Secretary of State John Kerry arrived in Jerusalem on Mon-

Q 10 QtaQ ao Q 37Q 40Q46

day for urgent talks to try to

Focusing on the individual needs of seniors and people with disabilities •

resolve a dispute over Israel's release of Palestinian prison-

No decision has been made

yet on Pollard, said one official, who asked not to be identified because the person was dis-

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roadblock to high-stakes peace talks that began last summer progress and now face an April 29 deadline.

I~n -

Hibernate by Elizabeth Eslami 4 2614 N 5 P M

ers. That dispute is the latest but appear to have made little

SPRIiNG B<REAI(

the Palestinians have yet to

in a North Carolina prison for

lard is again on the table, as

— From wire reports

releasesthe prisoners as prom-

Netanyahu of Israel has pushed WASHINGTON The for Pollard's release for many Obama administration is dis- years. Granting it now would cussing the release of an Amer- be a political gift that could give ican convicted of spying for him the cover to make tougher Israelmore than a quarter of decisions in pursuit of a peace a century ago as it struggles to agreement later on. But it might avert a collapse in peace talks raise complicated political isbetween Israel and the Palestin- sues on Capitol Hill and could ians, U.S. officials said Monday. still provoke the intelligence The Israeli government has agencies. long sought the release of the Raising Pollard's case now spy, Jonathan J. Pollard, a for- carries extra resonance bemer Navy intelligence analyst, cause this round of talks is in who is serving a life sentence danger of breaking down over

agencies. Now, however, freeing Pol-

Reef diSPute — China accusedthe Philippines on Mondayof illegally occupying Chineseterritory after a Philippine vessel outmaneuvered theChinesecoast guard and resupplied a ship that has been stranded for 15 years on atiny reef in the South China Sea.Chinese ships prevented the Philippines from resupplying the boat and its eight-man military crew in early March, but on Saturday aPhilippine vessel manned bytroopsmanagedtokeeptheChineseatbay.The Philippines also filed a case onSunday over the reef with the Permanent Court of Arbitration in TheHague,Netherlands.

bas, has said that unless Israel

Prime Minister Benjamin

New York Times News Service

The numbers drawnMonday nightare: The estimated jackpot is now $3.8 million.

arrested in December at their temporary studio at Cairo's Marriott hotel were summoned to court Monday, wherethey face charges of consorting with terrorists and passing on false information about Egypt. Onceagain, the prosecution failed to produce the video that it has said will prove they falsified newsaccounts to make Egypt look bad. Onceagain, the judge refused their requests for bail.

a former senior military official on Mondaywith a litany of criminal charges, including bribery, embezzlement andabuse of power, presenting a first glimpse of what could bethe biggest corruption scandal to ever engulf the Chinesearmed forces. The charges against the officer, Lt. Gen. GuJunshan, arethe outcome of afar-reaching inquiry under President Xi Jinping. His goal, military analysts said, is to transform a service larded with pet projects and patronagenetworks into a leaner fighting force, while tightening his own control over the army.

REDMOND BUREAU

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Egyptian jaurnaliStS — Once again, threeal-Jazeera journalists

ChineSe general ChargeS —Chineseprosecutors accused

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KOreateilSIOhS —North Korea on Mondayheld military exercises near the maritime border with the South, drawing response fire from Southern troops, Seoul's Defense Ministry said Monday. Around100 artillery shells from the North landed onthe other side of the Northern Limit Line, a disputed maritime border off the west of the peninsula, the South's Joint Chiefs of Staff said. South Korea fired 300 self-propelled howitzer shells in response, aimed atopen water on the North's side, and dispatched F-15fighter jets to the area, the report said.

FCC deCiSiOn —The Federal Communications Commission approved measures Mondaythat will free up more airwaves for Wi-Fi and wireless broadband. Theagency also moved to help curb increasing cable rates for consumers, but in doing so crackeddown hard on the ability of broadcast stations to negotiate jointly in competition with cable systems. Perhaps themost significant move bythe commission was to allow a broadswath of airwaves to beusedfor outdoor unlicensed broadband, clearing the wayfor a newgeneration of Wi-Fi networks and other uses of freely available spectrum.

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Ukrainian darder — Russia said Monday it was pulling a battalion of several hundred troops awayfrom the Ukrainian border but kept tens of thousands in place, prompting a worried response from the Kiev government about what the U.S.warned wasstill a "tremendous buildup." Russia movedquickly to strengthen its economic hold on Crimea, with Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedevarriving in the newly annexedpeninsula with promises of funds for improved power supplies, water lines, education andpensions for the elderly. Russia's takeover of the strategic Black Searegion, its troop buildup near Ukraine's border and its attempts to compel constitutional changes in Ukraine havemarkedly raised tensions with the West and prompted fears that Moscow intends to invadeother areas of its neighbor.

San FranCiSCOflight CraSh —While the world has beenfixated on the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, the Korean carrier involved in the crash of another Boeing 777,the Asiana flight into San Francisco last July, raised design issues Mondaythat put another question mark over the model of jetliner. According to the company, badsoftware design "led to the unexpected disabling of airspeed protection without adequatewarning to the flight crew" and that a system to warn the crew of low airspeed did not sound soon enough. Threepeople died andscores were injured in the crash, but most peoplewalkedaway.

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CORRECTIONS

MiSSing jet — Although it has beenslow, difficult and frustrating so far, the search for the missing Malaysia Airlines jet is nowherenear the point of being scaled back,Australia's prime minister said Monday. The three-weekhunt for Flight 370 hasturned up nosign of the Boeing 777, which vanishedMarch 8 with 239 people boundfor Beijing from Kuala Lumpur.Tenplanes and11 ships found no sign of the missing plane in the searchzone in the southern Indian Ocean,about1,150 miles west of Australia, officials said. Thesearch areahas evolved as experts analyzedFlight 370's limited radar andsatellite data, moving from the seasoff Vietnam, to thewaters west of Malaysia and Indonesia, and then toseveral areas west of Australia. Thesearch zoneis now 98,000 square miles, about a2~/~-hour flight from Perth.

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'•


TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

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

It's Tuesday,April1, the 91st day of 2014. Thereare274 days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS APril FOOI'S —Today's the day for jokes andpranks. Be skeptical.

Venezuela —In aneffort to prevent hoarding andkeep price controlled food off the black market, Venezuelabegins registering the biometric information of customers who use state-run grocery stores.

HISTORY Highlight:In1789, the U.S. House of Representatives held its first full meeting in New York; Frederick Muhlenberg of Pennsylvania waselected the first House speaker. In1653, Cincinnati, Ohio, established a fire department made up of paid cityemployees. In1912,the city of Branson, Mo., was incorporated. In1924, Adolf Hitler was sentenced to five years in prison for his role in the BeerHall Putsch in Munich. (Hitler was released in December1924; during his time behind bars, he wrote his autobiographical screed, "Mein Kampf.") In 1933, Nazi Germany staged a daylong national boycott of Jewish-owned businesses. In1939, the United States recognized the government of Gen. Francisco Franco in Spain, the sameday Franco went on radio to declare victory in the Spanish Civil War. In1945, American forces launched the amphibious invasion of Okinawaduring World War II. In1963, NewYork City's daily newspapers resumedpublishing after settlement was reached in a114-day strike. The daytime drama"General Hospital" premiered onABCTV.

CULTURE

BIRTHDAYS Baseball Hall of FamerPhil Niekro is 75. SupremeCourt Justice Samuel Alito is 64. Singer SusanBoyle (TV: "Britain's Got Talent") is 53. Political commentator Rachel Maddow is 41.Actor David Oyelowo is 38. Singer Bijou Phillips is 34. Actor AsaButterfield is 17. — From wire reports

Test accuratelyrulesout heart attacks inthe ER

esna ewran ers, arme wi a soine

By Marilynn Marchione The Associated Press

W ASHINGTON —

A

simple test appears very good at ruling out heart attacks in people who go to emergency rooms with chest pain, a big public health issue and a huge worry for patients. A large study in Sweden

Sweetwater, Texas, is home to the country's largest rattlesnake roundup. To encourage the snakes to slither out and join in on the roundup, snake hunters use gasoline — but now the state is proposing to ban the practice altogether.

having expensive care they'll have to pay a share of, plus unnecessary tests. The study included nearly 15,000 people who went to the

Karolinska University hospital with chest pains over two years. About 8,900 had low

scores on a faster, more sensitive blood test for troponin, a substance that's a sign of

heart damage. The test has plus the usual electrocar- been available in Europe, found that the blood test

By Manny Fernandez New York Times News Service

diogram of the heartbeat

Asia and Canada for about

were 99 percent accurate three years, but it is not yet at showing which patients available in the United States.

SWEETWATER, Texas-

At the foot of a rocky cliff here, Riley Sawyers knelt down and peered into a small, dark hole, on the prowl for rattlesnakes. One had already lunged at him and bitten his Kevlar-re-

inforced boot. The venom was still drying, as was the blood on his arm from where the thorny terrain had scratched him,

could safely be sent home

The patients were 47 years

rather than be admitted for observation and more diagnostics. Out of nearly 9,000 patients judged low risk by

old on average and 4 percent had a previous heart attack.

t he blood test and w i t h

normal

gasoline. It was not for his dusty SUV.

gle one died. " We believe that w i th

It was for the snakes.

To encourage the rattlePhotosby Dylan Hollingsworth/New York Times News Service snakes to slither out, Sawyers Snake wrangler Alex Newman, right, and his uncle Riley Sawyers, and his nephew slipped a thin capture a rattlesnake near Sweetwater, Texas. Snakes fromthe copper tube into the hole and town's annual roundup are supplied by wranglers, the majority of hand-pumped gas fumes into whom use gassing, the pumping ofgasoline fumes, to get their it. In West Texas, as infested prey in the rugged, dry terrain nearby. with western diamondback

A bout 21 percent of

t h em

wound up being admitted. Researchers later l o oked back to see how the blood test

ele c trocardio- and electrocardiogram would have predicted how t hey

grams, only 15 went on to suffer a heart attack in the next month, and not a sin-

when Sawyerswent to fetch the

fared over the next month.

They figured that in order to find one heart attack in patients like this, 594 would

this strategy, 20 to 25 per-

have to be admitted — a huge

cent of admissions to hos-

waste of resources.

pitals for chest pain may A test like this would be be avoided," said Dr. Nadia "enormously useful," and the Bandstein of the Karolins-

study's results are " almost

ka University Hospital in too good to be true," said Dr. Stockholm. Judd Hollander, an emergenShe helped lead the cy medicine specialist at the study, published in t he University of Pennsylvania. Journal of the American He believes the test should College of C a r diology be available in the U.S. and and presented Sunday at that the amount of evidence the cardiology college's that regulators are requiring annual c o n f erence i n to approve it is too high. Washington. Dr. Allan Jaffe,a cardiChest pain sends more ologist at the Mayo Clinic,

rattlesnakes as New York City is with rats, snake hunters like

Sawyers have been using gas fumes to flush out their prey for

decades. The practice, known as gassing, has outraged animal rights activists and reptile researchers who say that spraying a toxic substance in

than 15 million people to

emergency rooms in the United States and Europe each year, and it usually turns out to be due to anxiety, indigestion or other

wildlife habitats hurts the envi-

ronment, thesnakes,and other animals and insects that live

underground or use the same Snake wrangler Riley Sawyers, right, and his nephewAlex Newburrows. man use a gassprayer as they hunt for rattlesnakes near Sweetwa-

said the problem is not what the test rules out, but what it

might falsely rule in. It's so sensitive that it can pick up

troponin from heart failure and other problems and cause

state of Texas. The state's wild-

economy every March as thou-

less-serious things than a heart attack. Yet doctors don't want to miss oneabout 2 percent of patients

life agency is considering banning the use of gas fumes to

sands of people travel to Sweet-

having heart attacks are

in the U.S. are needed to show

water to shop, eat and visit. The Sweetwater Jaycees, the non-

mistakenly sent home.

that, he said.

In recent months, the oppo-

In1972, the first Major League Baseball players' strike began; it lasted 12 days. In1976,Apple Computer was founded by SteveJobs, Steve WozniakandRonaldWayne. In1964, recording star Marvin Gaye wasshot to death by his father, Marvin GaySr. in Los Angeles, the daybefore his 45th birthday. (The elderGay pleaded guilty to voluntary manslaughter, and received probation.) In1992, the National Hockey League Players' Association went on its first-ever strike, which lasted10 days. Ten years age:President George W.Bushsigned into law new protections for the unborn that for the first time made it a separate federal crime to harm afetus during an assault on the mother. Five years age:President Barack Obama, in London for an economic crisis summit, sought to rally the world's top and emerging powers to help cope with a global downturn; chanting protesters clashed with riot police in the British capital. Sixteen people, most of them oil workers, were killed when aSuper Pumahelicopter crashed into the North Sea off Scotland's northeast coast. One year ago:Prosecutors announced they would seek the death penalty for James Holmes should he beconvicted in the July 2012Colorado movie theater attack that killed 12 people. Acast member of the MTV reality show "BUCKWILD," Shain Gandee,21, was found dead in asport utility vehicle in aWest Virginia ditch along with his uncle anda friend; they hadsuccumbedto carbon monoxide poisoning after the SUV's tail pipe became submerged.

STUDY

ter, Texas.

nents of gassing have gained a powerful, unlikely ally: the

capturerattlesnakes — a move that would add Texas to the list of more than two dozen states

that have partly or completely outlawed the practice, induding Arkansas, Louisiana, New

profit group that organizes the roundup, uses the proceeds to finance community projects, induding feeding needy families on Thanksgiving; buying

Mexico and O k lahoma, all

equipment for the fire depart-

of which share borders with A rattlesnake coils up as it prepares to strike. Texas' wildlife

dents, Little League teams and disabled adults.

small government and has

agency is considering banning the use of gas fumes tocapture rattlesnakes, a commonprac-

Though state wildlife officials have been examining the issue of gassing for years,the primary catalyst for the pro-

dunes sagebrush lizard and otheranimals as endangered tice in the city that hosts the species, the agency's involve- country's largest rattlesnake ment in snake wranglers' roundup. affairs and its attempt to safeguard a creature that bites and frightens ranchers and others strikes some as anti-Texan. If

the ban goes through, snake hunters noted, it will be illegal

to use gas to chase out a rattlesnake, but legal to use it to

catch a gopher. The debate over the proposed ban has mushroomed into a larger, stranger battle that has attracted the attention of Gov. Rick Perry and

other Republican leaders and underscored the cultural divisions between urban and rural Texas.

"A lot of people that's bring-

ing this to issue have never en-

countered a snake," said Sawyers,46,a state-licensed snake hunter, tile layer and Marlboro

chain-smoker who has a cheerful quote from Davy Crockett next to the snake tattoos on his

arm: "You may all go to hell, and I will go to Texas."

"I think the strategy long-

term w il l b e p r o ven," but more studies underway now

People may feel reassured by being admitted to a hospital so doctors can

keep an eye on them, but that raises the risk of picking up an infection and

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who signed the petition oppose high stakes in the matter. not onlygassing, but the roundEvery March, Sweetwater up as well. "The behavior that occurs at puts on the country's largest rattlesnake roundup. (The the traditional roundups is anibillboard on the highway into mal abuse," said Kristen Leigh town claims it is the biggest in Wiley, curator of the Kentucky the world.) The snakes for the Reptile Zoo and one of those event are supplied by wran- who signed the petition. "Just glers like Sawyers, the majority because it's a rattlesnake and of whomuse gassingto capture not any other animal does not rattlesnakes in the rugged, dry mean that it cannot experience terrain nearby. Hunters are pain or suffering." paid bythe pound; at this year's Officials at the Parks and roundup, they brought in hun- Wildlife Department said their dreds of live western diamond- goal was not to end roundups, backs, totaling about 3,900 but to protect the various spepounds. A ban would make it cies besides rattlesnakes that harder for hunters to collect a are exposed to the fumes. They large number of snakes, and pointed to a 1989 study that some believe the hunters would showed that a 30-minute vapor not bother to take part because exposure impaired or killed there would be no financial seven species of snakes, lizards incentive.

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"I liken this to fishing with Town leaders and organizers of the roundup said a ban on dynamite," said John Davis, "If you're into th e B ible, gassing would end the round- director of the department's snakes have intimidated peo- up and its 56-year tradition, wildlife diversity program. "It's ple from the beginning, and I or shrink an event that pumps about a means of take, a means don't think that's changed to millions of dollars into the local of collection." this day. If they were on your land, would you want restric-

tions on how we can get them off, or would you want them removed'?" In Houston and other cities,

people have barely noticed the proposal to prohibit gassing. When the agency considering the ban, the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, held

hearings in Fort Worth and San Antonio, just 21 people attended. No one showed up to the one in Houston.

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A4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 2014

IN FOCUS:PUERTO RICO

e s w05e In WOU

Currentstatusofa U.S.territory

By Lizette Alvarez New Yorrr Times News Service

Puerto Rico, which cameunderAmerican control in1898 following the Spanish-AmericanWar, is anunincorporated commonwealth of theUnited States. Its roughly 4 million residents areU.S.citizens. Puerto Ricans, whospeak both English andSpanish asofficial languages, havevoted against becoming aU.S.state in manypast referendums and plebiscites, but support for statehood is strong (asis, in somecircles, support for full independence).

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico-

Alexis Sotomayor has many reasons to stay in Puerto Rico:

l~

his two children, his gossip with his mother, and the balm of salt and sun that leavens his

life on the island. But the artisanal soap busi-

ol

ness that Sotomayor built is

barely hanging on amid rising costs and taxes, and sales that

have sunk by 40 percent in five years. Crime is rampant; his girlfriend was nearly carjacked at gunpoint recently. So a couple of months ago, he boarded a flight to Orlando, Fla., to interview for a job at a rum distillery in the

OOI'eS .. S 2 e

v

Size:5,325 square miles (about three times the size of RhodeIsland). Demographics:Theisland's population is around 4 million, but it has beendropping for years. Between 2011and 2012,almost 80,000 people moved from Puerto Rico to reside in themainland United States, thoughthe island has become a permanent homefor hundreds of thousands of people from elsewhere inthe Caribbean, including the U.S.Virgin Islands, Cubaand Haiti. Asof 2012, more people ofPuerto Ricandescentalmost 5 million — lived in the 50 states than in

"I don't see it improving," said Sotomayor, a 47-year-old chemical engineer. "I see it getting worse. It's the uncertainty.

What am I going to do — wait until it gets worse?" Puerto Rico's slow-motion

economic crisis is hitting a new low, with all three major cred-

it-rating agencies downgrading its debt to junk status, brushing aside a series of austerity measures taken by the new governor, including increasing taxes and rebalancing pensions. But that is only the latest

in a sharp decline leading to widespread fears about Puerto

Rico's future. In the past eight years, Puerto Rico's ticker tape of woes has stretched unabat-

ed: $70 billion in debt, a 15.4 percent unemployment rate, a soaring cost of living, pervasive crime, crumbling schools, and a worrisome exodus of professionalsand middle-dass Puer-

to Ricans who have moved to places like Florida and Texas. The situation has grown so

dire that this tmpical island, known for i t s b r eathtaking beaches, salsero vibe and tax

breaks, is now mentioned in the same breath as Detroit, with one

significant difference. Puerto Rico, a U.S. territory of roughly 4 million people that is treated

in large part like a state, cannot dedarebankruptcy. From bottom to top, Puerto

Ricans are watching it unfold with a mixture of disbelief and stoicism.

Alejandro Garcia Padilla, w ho waselected Puerto Rico's governor by a sliver of a margin in 2012, said that after he began to wade deeply into the island's economic and social quagmire, his f ight-or-flight instincts kicked into high gear. "I thought about asking for a recount," Garcia Padilla, 42, said with a grin during a recent interview in La Fortaleza, the

500-year-ol d government residence,recalling,among other things, the $2.2 billion deficit. "But nowit's too late."

A sense of pessimism pervades. Streets are lined with

empty storefronts in San Juan and in smaller cities like Mayagiiez. Small businesses, hit

hard by high electricity, water and tax bills and hurt by drops in sales, have closed and stayed dosed. Schools sit shuttered either

because of disrepair or because of a dwindling number of students. In this typically convivial capital, communities have erected gates and bars to help thwart carjackers and home

invaders. Illegal drugs, including high-level narcotrafficking, are one of the few growth mdustrres.

An extendedrecession Puerto Rico, about 1,000

miles from Miami, has long been poor. Its per capita in-

come is around $15,200, half that of Mississippi, the poorest state. Thirty-seven percent

Risks Continued fromA1 The avalanche Sunday

• Po ce 25

v.s.'

cua

"Until you are walking on dirt that potential is still there."

nations with the potential for

avalanches this time of year includeBroken Top, Tumalo

— Trevor Miller, a member of the board of directors for the Central Mountain, Ta m M c A r t h ur is the second fatal slide on Oregon Avalanche Association Rim and Paulina Peak, MillPaulina Peak in the past five er said. But he and Sabo were years. In 2010 an avalanche quick to warn that avalanchkilled Wesley Bryan Amos, sends and receives radio sig- have avalanche centers that es may happen anywhere who, like Thomas, was 28, nals, allowing members in a offerregular avalanche fore- there is snow on the ground. "Until you are w alking from La Pine and driving a group to find someone buried casts, there isn't one in Censnowmobile. in an avalanche. The probe is tral Oregon. on dirt that potential is still Sabo and Miller cautioned a collapsible pole used to pinThis puts more responsibil- there," Miller said. anyone looking to recreate point the location of the per- ity on the people going into Earlier this year an avain the backcountry — snow- son found by the beacon. The the backcountryto check the lanche in the bowl at Tumamobilers, skiers, snowshoers, broad-bladed shovel is then weather and evaluate the av- lo Mountain gave a telemark mountaineers and othersused to dig the person out. alanche danger, Miller said. skier a scare. Zach Violett, to go in with the ability to recThe Central Oregon Av- The association maintains 31, of Bend was buried up to

ognize when and where an alanche Association offers avalanche may occur and the free monthly classes about tools to react to one. Those avalanches throughout the tools are a beacon, a probe winter sports season. While and a shovel. The beacon

,Mayaguez

Puerto Rico. At 9 percent of the Latino population in the U.S., Puerto Ricansarethe second-largest Atlantic (Fjoridi) Hispanic group nationwideandcomprise 1.5 perOcean sales are driving him out of business. On this Caribbean island, cent of the entire U.S.population. B ' MAS which is American territory, he's not alone. Economy:Puerto Rico's main industries are tourism, pharmaceuticals, apparel andfood WOMINliCAN is $16,300 of allhouseholds receive food most middle- and upper-dass products, but all are struggling. GDP REPUBLIC person (comparedwith $50,700 in the U.S.), stamps; in Mississippi the total Puerto Ricans, he long ago lost per and the island' s debt is rated as junk. A U.S. goveis 22percent. failh in the island's tmubled pub- ernment report in 2011 found that economic and But the extended recession lic schools. Public school enrollPIAICAdevelopmentwas being hindered bythe has hit the middle dass hardest ment has ptummeled in recent social island's unresolved territorial status. Resi d ents of all, economists said. Jobs are years,i npartbemmofdedinhg - HAITI do not pay federal incometaxes on wages 200 miles still scarce, pension benefits for birtlirales but also beaum of the earned in Puerto Rico; they pay only Social Sesome are shrinkingandbudgets schools'poorqualily. AP "Many parents, even low- curity and Medicaretaxes. contmue to tighten. Even many er-middle-class parents, put all people with paychecks have STATEHOOD? chosen simply to parlay their their money into their children's PATH To A contnry ofheingAmerican: The Puerto Current citizenshipslntns: U.S. citizenship into a new life private school, even if someRican flag Puerto Ricans onthe island on the mainland. times they have to live in rented In1917, almost 20 yearsafter copies the don't enjoy thesamerights Puerto Rico's drop in popula- houses," said Nilsa Velazquez, Puerto Rico's U.S.acquisiCuban banner, that Puerto Ricansand tionhas far outpaced that of U.S. an economics professor at the tion, islanders becameU.S. whichitselfis citizens, and thousands of other citizens onthe mainstates. In2011 and2012, the pop- University of Puerto Rico who modeled on land UnitedStatesdo. ulation fell by nearly 1 percent, plans to move to Virginia with people were (controversially) the lj S. flag. conscripted to fight alongside Islanders elect adelegate to according to census fi gures. her familythis summer. Voting on stnlnhood: In four votes since Congress, but that person From July 2012 to July 2013, it For many, the high rate of U.S. soldiers in World War I. 1967, Puerto Ricanshavechosen to remain a cannot vote onfinal legisladedined again by 1 percent, violent crime has been the cap- In 1952, the island becamea commonwealth over aU.S. state. In 2012, tion. And Puerto Ricans or about36,000 people. That is per. There were 1,136 murders self-governing commongovernor. Puerto Ricansagainvoted on their island's who reside onthe island more than seven times the drop in 2011, a record and far higher wealth, headed by a status, narrowly preferring anend to U.S. tercannot vote in thegeneral in West Virginia, the state with than the mainland's rate. It fell This shift to semi-sovereignty occurred during a tensetime: ritory status. Early this year, a bill in Congress election for president, but the steepestpopulation losses. to 883 homicides last year, a Members of a radical indepen- funding a full referendum onstatehoodwas can in theDemocratic and Coupled with a falling birth- point of pride for the governor. signed by President BarackObama;the referRepublican party primaries. rate, the dedine is raising worBut the damage had been dence group hadattempted endum can beheld at any time. In the end, (Both national parties supries about how Puerto Rico will done. Life here has always been the assassination of President Congress would have toapprove admitting port Puerto Ricanstatethrive with a rapidly aging pop- fulloftrade-offs,indudingahigh Harry S. Trumantwo years any new state to the union. (For the record: All hood in their plafforms.) ulationand such a large share cost ofliving. Now, though, there earlier; others openedfire on the U.S. Houseof Representa37 territories that haveasked tojoin the union Puerto Ricanscanserve in of jobless residents. One million is little left to trade. tives two years later. as states havebeenaccepted.) the U.S. military. of the island's population — onefourth — work in the formal 'Uve here just to survive?' "Between making less mon- PROSAHD CONS OF STATEHOOD economy.The island hasone of the lowest labor participation ey and not knowing when Statehood critics describe PuertoRico's current relationship with theUnited States asa bilateral pact that allows the rates in the world, wilh only41.3 someone will jump you, that island someautonomy while reapingthe benefits of being apart of the U.S. Somesupporters say it is a colony under percent of working-age Puerto pushed the quality of life very the completeauthority of Congress. Butthecurrent governor opposesstatehood, saying it would becomea"Latin Ricans in jobs; 1 in 4 works for low," Alexis Sotomayor said. American ghetto." Andonecon, at least for the GOP,is political: More than 80 percent of Puerto Ricansliving on the "To live here just to survive'? No, mainland votedfor Obamain 2012. Andadding two senators, five representatives (asmanyas lowa andNevada) the government. After Coca-Cola laid Alexis thanks." and sevenpresidential electoral votes —all leaning Democratic — could be anightmare for those Republicanswho Sotomayor off in 2001, he startFor Velazquez, the tenured oppose asimilar push to givethe District of Columbiastates' rights for many of thesamereasons. ed experimenting with distill- professor who lives in MayDavid Wray / The Bulletin ing plant extracts. He found agiiez, and her husband, who Sources: %e New York Times, U.S. Census, McClatchy-Tribune,The Hill, USA Today, The Associated Press, he couldmake naturalsoaps works for the Air Force Re- Re Economist, Reuters, CNN and decided to go into business serve, the mental calculations for himself, a move that would were similar. She is 50, shesaid. thing in Puerto Rico," she said. to approve incentives to entice a bookkeeping mentality as opallow him more time to spend The last thing she wanted to do "Nowthat is gone." wealthy investors, likethe hedge posed toan economic developwith his children. was give up her job as an ecoIn 2006,the government shut fund billionaire John Paulson, ment mentality," said Pedro PierBusiness boomed for years. nomics professor, move her two down for two weeks because who has invested in an exclusive luisi, Puerto Rico's nonvoting So much so that he moved his teenage children and uproot it lacked the cash to meet ex- beachresort and condocomplex. representative in the U.S. Conhomespun facility out of his her 76-year-old mother, who penses. The governor moved A number of businesses have gness and a political opponent house in 2005 and into a small speaks no English and has nev- to raise taxes. In 2010, the next left the island, scared away by of the governor. "Here you find building he purchased in San er left the island. governor reduced taxes and laid the groaning economy and the Puerto Rico with an underlying Juan. He found that he was But she has gmwn so disil- off 33,000 government workers. highcostof electricity. Butothers economic problem charging its earning more money making lusioned with the University of But Puerto Rico's governors be- have ~ or e x panded, like corporations — its job creators soap than working as a chemi- Puerto Rico Mayagiiez — one of gan borrowing even more heav- Eli Lilly, Seaborne Airlines and — 39percent. Hello!" cal engineer. the cmwn jewels of the island's ily to get out of the economic CooperVision. Perhaps the most maligned Then in 2008, the recession higher-education syslem, where logjam. Four days before the junk is the new lucrative gross repounded at his door. she has worked fbr nearly three status dedsion, Garcia Padilla ceipts tax, which some ownFor five years, he has tried to decades — that she no longer Painful corrections announced that he would pres- ers of small- and medium-size lift his business. He went to fairs views it as a viable option for her Last year, Gania Padilla, the ent a balanced budget for next businesses say threatens to put around the island, set up booths children. Inthefaceofcontinuing first governor fmm the country- year, one year ahead of his own them out ofbusiness. in shopping malls, promoted his economic stms, the University side, took over. With the island's schedule. But his job just got Jose Revuelta, the president flower-inhmd soaps, candles of Puerto Rico has suffered large economy in shambles, and credit harder. AnalyW said the cred- of SuperMax grocery stores in and lotions on television. He budgetculs,andwiththattheloss agencies ttueafening a down- it downgrades would make k Puerto Rico, said he managed divvied up his store last year of a steadystream ofvaluedpro- grade to junk status, he had no harder to impmve the economy. to expand during the recession. and decided to rent out half the fessors and imporlant research choicebuttotakeswiftaction. The governor ordered agencies But now, with the gross receipls building. He let go two of his projects. Eventenumlprofessors Economists have given him to cutbudgetsby2percent. andcorporatetaxcuttingintohis "I've done everything I can to business, he is holding back on four employees. have left, Velazquez said. credit for acting to remedy "The most important thing problems that have festered for avoid a downgrade," Gania Pa- capital investments, raises and But his expenses mounted, induding $600 a month in pow- for me is my children's educa- decades. In one year, he moved diila said in an inhmriew, calling bonuses. Hesaidhewantedreaser bills, more than double what tion, and the second is my qual- toreform threemajorpensions, the move"unjust." Maybe I can't surance that the taxhikes would consumers pay on the main- ity of life," she said. "You see all induding for teachers, that were detain the winds right now, but I be temporary. "I can understand land. The sky-high cost is a con- of these fees and taxes goingup, on a pace to run out of mon- can build the windmills. I am an doing this on a short-term basis. sequence of Puerto Rico's ineffi- but the ~ s are temble." ey soon. Two of them are still incurable optirrust.e But thereneedstobeaplan." dent government-run monopoly This summer she will try to pending final court approval. But not everyone is applaudNot many a r e c o nfident on electricity and its 67 percent rent out her house rather than He reduced the deficit by 70 ing. His tax increases have hit that a long-term plan exists to dependency on petroleum for selling it and take a loss, and percent. And he is holding the some businesses hard, which lift the island from such a suselectricpower. Other utilities are will moveto Fairfax County, Va., four main debt-laden govern- could pose a further drag on tained crash. But it cannot get exorbitant, too. Last year, water whereherhusbandwillworkfor ment-run companies more ac- the economy. Among the many much worse, they say. "Sometimes you have to hit bills rose 60 percent in a bid to the federal government and her countable and insisting on more taxes he initiated, the governor help cutthestate-runwatercom- children will attend a top public transparency. raised the corporate tax rate to rock bottom to restore yourpany's debt. high school. As an economist Vowingnot tolayoff anymore a maximum of 39 percent. Last self," said Mke Soto, the presiThe cost of ~ tui t i on fbr with a law degree, she is hoping workers, he ~ t a xes sharply year, the economy continued dent of the Puerto Rican Center his kids, atotalof $2,000amonth, to find some kind of job. to pmvide much-needed reve- on a slide. for a New Economy. "I'm hoping "I thought I could do any- nue and then got the legislature "The new administration has that's what's happening." is not negotiable for him Like Dennis Rivera / New York Times News Service

Alexis Sotomayor closes his store, which sells artisanal soaps, in hope of joiningthe ever-growing San Juan, Puerto Rico. Sotomayor says rising costs snd sinking Puerto Rican diaspora.

PUERTQ RicQ San Juan

other parts of

t h e c ountry

a website where people can post information about recent

avalanches,for others to use in planning their own trips. Popular backcountry desti-

his knees by the slide on Feb. 8 but was able to dig himself out. "I got pretty lucky," he said in the week after the ava-

lanche. "I lost a pair of goggles, that's all."

trails on the road to the top of the peak, the SUV eventually

bogged down in the snow and ing with two others, said the was buried up to its axles. A group skipped the normal towing company had to use a a valanche p r ecautions o f bulldozer to pull it out. digging test pits in the snow Low snow along the Casbefore skiing. He said he cade Lakes Highway last Violett, who had been ski-

wouldn't do that again and

month le d

planned to get more avalanche training. Checking conditions and following advisories is good

following GPS directions, to

f o u r m o t orists,

drive sports utility v ehicle

wintertime.

get stuck on the road, Sabo

said. While a gate along the highway was open to allow advice, not just fo r s k i ers, for grooming, he said the Sabo said. About a week ago highway closes every year someone in a four-wheel- to cars and trucks during

and nearly made it to the top

"(It's) real important for folksto do some research," Sabo said.

of Paulina Peak. Traveling over groomed snowmobile

ddarling@bendburretin.com

drove around a gate at 10 Mile Sno-park in Newberry

— Reporter: 541-617-7812,


TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN A 5

Snowmobiler

ima e crisis roLi a i era ens

Continued from At Karen Brown and her husband, Todd

Brown, were part of a rescue group that found Thomas around 5:50 p.m., she said. Thomas is survived by his parents, one brother,one sister and his 5-year-old daughter. Karen Brown said the family has not yet

made plans for a memorial service. Thomas was riding near 7,300 feet when the avalanche occurred,according to De-

schutes County Sheriff's Special Services Coordinator Lt. Scott Shelton. The avalanche tumbled down the north face of Pau-

lina Peak on a slope of about 35 degrees. Investigators estimate it was approximately 200 yards wide and 75 to 100 yards long. The debris field was estimated to be between 3 and 5 feet deep.

By Richard Perez-Pena

"The Carbon Diaries 2015," by

New York Times News Service

Saci Lloyd. Well-known writers

EUGENE — University courses on globalwarming have become common, and professor Stephanie LeMenager's new class at the University of Oregon has all the expected, alarming elements: rising oceans, displaced populations, political conflict, e ndangered animals. The goal of this class, however,

have joined the trend, including Barbara Kingsolver, with "Flight Behavior," and McEwan.

And with remarkable speed — Kingsolver's and Rich's books were published less than a year ago — those works have landed on syllabuses at colleges. They have turned up in courses on lit-

erature and on environmental issues, like the one here, or in a

is not to marshal evidence for cli-

similar but broader class, "The

mate change as a human-caused crisis or to measure its effects-

Shelton said the number of avalanches in

Political Ecology of Imagination," partofam aster'sdegreeprogram

the reality and severity of it are

Central Oregon is usually fairly small, but

taken as givens — but how to think about it, prepare for it and respond

fluctuating weather conditions this year

have triggered more of them than usual. "We had the nicer weather for a little while

to it. Instead of scientific texts, the

class, "The Cultures of Climate Change," focuses on films, poetry, photography, essays and a heavy dose of the mushrooming subge-

and the sun began to melt the snow, then we

got more snow on top of that," he said. "We usually have a pretty regular snowpack, but the changing weather creates layers in the

in liberal studies at the University Thomas Patterson/ New YorkTimes News Service

A student gives a presentation in Stephanie LeMenager's class, "The Cuitures of Climate Change," at the University of Oregon in Eugene. Instead of scientific texts, the class focuses on the arts, including a heavy dose of speculative fiction known as climate fiction, to think of ways to respond to

climate change.

with some working on degrees in environmental studies, others of a literature seminar. Fueled by

Shelton said a team of investigators on

like "Odds Against Tomorrow," by

both literature and environmental

Monday went to the area to try to determine

Nathaniel Rich, and "Solar," by Ian McEwan.

studies.

what triggered the avalanche. He said the two riders Thomas was with Sunday gave searchand rescue personnel good information about what happened, which should aid in the investigation.

For now, LeMenager's class is open only to graduate students,

in English and one in geography, and it can have the rarefied feel

nre of speculative fiction known as climate fiction, or cli-fi, novels

snow that can be unstable."

of Wisconsin at Milwaukee.

share her activist bent, eagerly discussing in a recent session the role

that the arts and education can play in galvanizing people around an issue. To some extent,the course is feeding off a l a rger literary trend. Novels set against time isn't to reflect on the end of a backdrop of ruinous climate the world but on how to meet it. We change have rapidlygained in want to apply our humanities skills to the cyclist and inconvenient to number, popularity and critical pragmaticallyto this problem." the motorist, where ordering cof- acclaim over the last few years, The class reflects a push by uni- fee in a disposable cup can elicit works like "The Windup Girl," versities to meld traditionally sepa- disapproving looks. Oregon was a by Paolo Bacigalupi; "Finitude," rate disciplines; LeMenager joined pioneer of environmental studies, by Hamish MacDonald; "From the university last year to teach and LeMenager's students tend to Here," by Daniel Kramb; and

d iscuss the meaning of

safe. "We've had a low snow year, and the con-

Cobalt

took yearsforasafety defectto be

ditions are worse right now," she said. "The

Continued from A1 "Everything went wrong with

"Speculative fiction allows a kind of scenario-imagining, not only about the unfolding crisis but also about adaptations and survival strategies," LeMenager said. "The

"We should know more about what happened after today," he said."I think it was

just a series of unfortunate events." Shelton said he doesn't think Thomas or

theothertwo riderswere carrying beacons, probes or shovels. "We try to remind folks as much as we can

to beas prepared as possible when riding in the backcountry," he said.

Her course also shows how broadly most of academia and a younger generation have moved beyond debating global warming to accepting it as one of society's central challenges. That is especially true in places like Eugene, a verdant and damp city, friendly

readings from Susan Sontag and Jacques Derrida, the students t e r ms

like "spectacle" and "witness," and debate the drawbacks of cultural media that approach cli-

mate change from the developed world's perspective. Climate novels fit into a long

tradition of speculative fiction that pictures the future after assorted catastrophes. First came

external forces like aliens or geological upheaval, and then, in the postwar period,came disasters of

our own making.

Vera Riser, president of the Oregon State

Snowmobile Association, said her group regularly holds avalanche training seminars in an attempt to educate riders about staying

lack of snow means that riders have to go higher. Probably up high is where the best

lects data on repurchased lemons

that car, and everything that went

snowis."

Riser said some riders do what is known as "high-marking," which means trying to drive their machines as high up the mountain as possible, though she didn't know if Thomas and the other two riders were doing that.

"I know there are a certain number of riders who go high-mark," she said. "They may not have been, but it's a challenging thing that some young guys do. He was an experienced rider and a wonderful young man."

and some other buybacks, the Cobalt was the second-most-repurchased small vehicle manufactured in 2005, the first year the

wrong needed a big fix. Mechanically, it was a huge nuisance." General Motors declined to disclose how many Cobalts have been bought back under lemon laws, saying, "It is very difficult to answer questions about claims

model went on sale. And in May 2005, GM was so

that may be more than adecade

to reopen an investigation into

alarmed by the early number of buybacks, according to a GM filing with federal regulators, that the automaker's brand quality division urged its engineers

old." That makes it impossible to the car's faulty ignition switch, calculate a precise nationwide which was one source of buyback total because reporting and dis- complaints. "It's a vehicle with a poor track closure rules differ from state to state, and federal regulators do record, with deep concerns about not compile such data. its safety and performance," said But in Florida, a state that col- Rick Soletski, executive director

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

of the International Association of Lemon Law Administrators, a

announced."

group of American and Canadian The Times review of the lemon officials that acts as an advocate law databases shows the Cobalt for lemon programs. had problems well beyond the igniThe flawed switch, and GM's tion switch. Complaints from buyfailure to correct it for more than ers included such bizarre occura decade,willbe the focus of a rences as the engine running after congressional hearing t o day, the key had been removed. At least when Mary Barra, the GM chief, four of the repurchased cars in and David Friedman, acting head Floridawere resold to new owners, of the National Highway Traffic The Times found, including one Safety Administration, are sched- that was identified as potentially uled to testify. having an ignition switch problem. The automaker has linked 13 There is no law against reselldeaths to the defect in Cobalts ing lemons, and a GM spokesman, and several other models. In her

prepared remarks, filed with House investigators Monday, Barra said, "I cannot tell you why it

Greg Martin, said the automaker

"complies with all state lemon law requirements, including the resale of repurchased vehicles."

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A6

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 2014

Health care

What comesnext after the health careenrollment deadline?

Continued fromA1 In Los Angeles, the local affiliate of the Service Em-

ployees International Union began an enroll-athon at 5

a.m. and,by the end of the day, had attracted more than

700 people to a lively scene with food trucks, music and more than 50 staffers and volunteers. By t h e ti m e P r e sident

Barack Obama appeared Monday evening on

eCBS

Evening News," he sounded relieved. "We admittedly had just a terrible start because

the website wasn't working," Obama said, referring to the site's rocky beginnings. "But given how gloomy I think

basic numbers. TheObama administration said more than 6 million people andcounting have After six long months of ensigned up for private plans in rollment for insuranceunderthe the health insuranceexchanges, Affordable CareAct, Monday was or marketplaces, since Oct. 1. the final day —sort of — to sign More than 8.9 million havebeen up for health insurancethis year. determined eligible for Medicaid Enrollment turned outbetter than (that includes people re-enrolling many expectedafter HealthCare. and previously eligible), and more gov stumbled badly out of the than 3 million young adults have gate. It will take moretime to assess the first-year performance, stayed on their parents' health plans during that time. but here's what weknow now. Is the federal website workWho's actually signed up? •ing now? • The federal government's • We don't have the full data • website had been running • yet, but we have some By Jason IIliillmen

The Washington Post

Q•

Q•

A

state's technology problems.See isn't expected to enforce the manstory, PageB3. date all that strongly. • If I don't have insurance, will • What does this all mean for • I get penalized? • my insurance rates next • You could, but not neces- year? They're going up just as • sarily. The penalty per person this year is $95 or1 percent • they do every year. It's not of income, whichever is higher. clear yet, though, by howmuch. However, there areexemptions to Insurers will start filing 2015 the mandate for people whoearn rates in just a couple of months, too little, would struggle to afford and rate increases will depend insurance or haveother reasons. on a number of factors. Insurers The administration has spelled will be working with just a few out14 hardship exemptions in all. months of claims from this year, The penalty won't be assessed so 2015 rates could also depend until you file your taxes next year, on how accurate insurers' predicbut the Obama administration tions this year turned out to be.

pretty smoothly since early December, but it ran into trouble Monday, when it was knocked offline for several hours. Aside from this late-hour stumble, HealthCare.gov hadheld up through someheavy traffic in the final weeks of enrollment, including 8.7 million visits in just the past week. I don't have insurance

A•

Q •• yet but want it. What do I do? • Mondaywasthelastday • to sign up for coverage nationally, but Oregonians have an extra month because of the

everybody's assessment was b ack in th e m i ddle of N o -

vember, I'd say that we're on our way to making sure that

no American ever has to go without health care." Late in t h e d ay, f ederal

officials could not say how many people had signed up. But health officials said that,

by 4 p.m., 840,000 people had phoned in to a network of call centers across the countryabout 300,000 morethan the

total for any other day since the federal insurance mar-

Low Prices.

ketplace and 14 similar state ones opened on Oct. 1. The ou t p ouring of l ast-minute

i n t erest r e i n -

f orced arguments by t h e Obama administration and

its allies, made since the law was enacted four years ago, that it w o uld become pop-

ular once Americans had a chance to get the new health plans that it spawned — and,

in most cases, with federal subsidies to help pay for them.

Still, a s

t h e d e adline

s•

arrived, fr e s h evi d e nce emerged that the law, which

has set in motion the broadest changes to the U.S. health-

~50 ar

care system in nearly half a century, remains mired in a wide partisan divide. A new

mere

Washington Post poll indicates that three in four Democrats support the law — a rise

*

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"We only agreed (to the moratorium) if we were going

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The ballot measure will be

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Allen said that w h ile most

Central Oregon cities have ordinances banning business-

es that violate federal, state or

• II

local laws, La Pine's business ordinance doesn't take effect

.•s

. •

until July 1, so the sooner it

can pass a medical marijuana ordinance, the better. "I have had two inquiries in the last two months. We've

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marijuana dispensaries and 13 waiting for state approval. Deschutes County banned dispensaries in u nincorpo-

Limit : 1FREE

early March. Crook County will likely do the same, with

limited by law. Quantity rights reserved. SOME ADVERTISING ITEMSMAY NOTBEAVAILABLE INALL STORES. Some adverssed prices may be even lower in some stores. On BuyOne, Get OneFree ("BOGO'1 offers, customer must purchasethe first item to receive the seconditem free.

the first ordinance reading on

BOGOoffers are not l/2 price sales. Ifonly asingle item purchased,the regular price applies. Manufacturers' couponsmaybe usedon purchased items only — not on free items. limit one coupon per purchaseditem. Customer will be responsible for tax and deposits as required by law on the purchasedandfree items. No liquor sales in excessof 52 gallons. Noliquor salesfor resale. Liquor salesat licensedSafeway storesonly. © 2014 SafewayInc. Availability of items mayvary by store. Onlineand In-store prices, discountsand offers maydiffer.

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rated areas of the county in

— Reporter: 541-633-2117, mwarner@bendbulletin.com

a.„.

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suspect that we will have an ordinance up for a vote in the

io$gp

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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6

© www.bendbulletin.com/local

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 2014

BRIEFING Fire in northeast Bend ruled arson

Ruling a

Following up onCentral Oregon's most interesting stories, even if they've been out of the headlines for a while. Email ideas to news@bendbulletin.com. Q»To follow the series, visit bendbulletin.cnm/updntes

HAPPENED TO ... •

snag for planned

The fire that burned

anRVandaskiboatat a home on Northeast Lynda Lane onSaturday night has beenruled an arson, according to the Bend Police. When law enforcementand BendFire Department personnel arrived on sceneat 10:21 p.m. Saturday, they discovered vehicles in the areahad been broken into during the fire and concluded the fire was likely arson, according to the release. A neighbor contacted Bend Police to report a suspect, later identified as Lee Helms, fleeing the area shortly before officers arrived. The neighbor notified police of Helms' residenceand he was arrested on a warrant for probation violation. Through a search warrant, police later found evidenceat Helms' home allegedly connecting him to the arson andseveral vehicle break-ins in the neighborhood. There was also allegedly a small amount of methamphetamine found at his residence, according to police. Helms is being held at the Deschutes County jail on suspicion of arson, criminal mischief, burglary, reckless endangerment, reckless burning, unauthorized entry to a motor vehicle and probation violation.

'Dollars for aDog' beginsWednesday The Crook County Sheriff's Office hopes to raise $25,000 to purchase atrained drug detection dog andtrain its handler to assist tri-county law enforcement agencies with the detection of illegal

drugs. The office will kick off its "Dollars for a Dog" fundraising campaign at a press conference at2 p.m.Wednesday inthe Prineville City Hall Plaza. The campaignis in partnership with Crestview Cableand the Prineville Police Department and events will run through May. — Bulletin staff reports

en e ins testin its water or cancer-causin c romium-

resort By Elon Glucklich The Bulletin

A Deschutes County hearings officer has dealt a major blow to a developer's planned resort west of Redmond. To move ahead with Thorn-

burgh destination resort, developer Terrence Larsen

,'g9

will have to resubmit most of

his planning documents and start a land use process from scratch, county hearings officerKaren Green ruled in late March. That process could take years, though Larsen has appealed the ruling. At issue is whether any recentdevelopment has

taken place at Thornburgh. Deschutes County code says a developer with a permit has

to show some effort toward building a project within two years, or seek an extension.

Otherwise, the permit can be voided. Thornburgh's case is complex. Kameron DeLashmutt, Thornburgh's original developer, submitted a master

planin2005 for950 homes, 475 overnight lodging units and three golf courses on the 1,300-acre property about 8

Joe Kline i The Bulletin

Will Milligan, a water system operator for the city of Bend, fills a container with a sample of untreated water for a routine city test in the control room of the city's Outback water treatment and storage facility March 25. The city is also in the middle of a special round of testing for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, which asked municipal water providers to test for hexavalent chromium and dozens of other currently unregulated substances.

miles west of Redmond.

Deschutes County approved DeLashmutt's plan, but opponents appealed it to the state Supreme Court,

• Back in 2010,environmental group found the substance incity's tapwater

o

See how the city is testing Bend's water at: bendbulletin.cnm/wntertesting

By Hillary Bonud

contaminants in drinking

The Bulletin

water.

Bend and other municithe nation are in the midst of testing for hexavalent

chromium, a cancer-causing heavy metal that is currently unregulated in U.S. drinking water. That could change, as a result of the tests cities and other water utilities are

completing at the request of the U.S. Environmental

Protection Agency. Bend Water Quality Manager Steve Prazak said the EPA

The substance also known as chromium-6 was made infamous by the activist Erin Brockovich, who drew attention to industrial pollution in the Southern California town of Hinkley in the early 1990s. Bend gained attention for the chemical in 2010, when it was among the 31 cities across the United States where the Environmental

Working Group found the substance in tapwater. The Washington, D.C.-

uses these rounds of tests, which look for an array of based nonprofit tested the currently unregulated sub- drinking water of 35 cities; stances, to decide whether the Bend tapwater sample to adopt new limits on

ing have been built.

SeeResort/B5 by the private utility Avion

pal water providers across

and the 2008 housing market crashderailedtheproposal. No homes or overnight lodg-

came from a home served

Water Co. Bend officials acknowl-

edge there is also chromium in city drinking water, although historically the city only tested for the

far, the city has only tested water from Bridge Creek. Early results revealed city water contains hexavalent chromium, although

DESCHUTES

officials are quick to point out the amount found so far in Bend would fall below a proposed cap in California.

total amount of all forms of chromium, because that is what the EPA regulates. Under current federal guidelines, the amount of

Commission

may expand

California is in the pro-

cess of adopting a limit on

total chromium in drink-

the amount of hexavalent chromium allowed in

ing water cannot exceed

100 parts per billion, or ppb.

definition

drinking water this year, and the state already adopted a public health goal in 2011 for the amount of

Prazak said the city

of a church

began collecting samples for the EPA tests in

the metal in water sourc-

December, and more are scheduled for later this

es. Oregon officials said the state is not pursuing a

By Elon Glucklich

month. The city expects

local limit on hexavalent chromium.

Deschutes County may alter the definition of a church in

to complete the series of federal tests in October. So

The Bulletin

SeeChromium/B6

its development code to allow m ore services to be held on

STATE NEWS

private property. The county's legal staff advised county commission-

ers Monday to broaden its definition of a church in order

Salem

Eugene

to meet federal standards out-

March2014weatherfor Bend

lining where services are held and when local governments

DAILY HIGHS AND LOWS Average temperature: 41.6' (2.9' above normal)

HR RH K RH K I H 38 49 4 9

• Eugene:Oregon's pot business is moving into the mainstream,

tRH R R K IEtIEHEEIEEIEHEEIEtIEHEHKIKBKHEIKHKHKHKIKRKIEIK3

5 2 5 5 5 7 47 5 9 61 N

48 51

65 62 5 6 58 58 44 49 5 8 45 46 55 60 59 54 48 50 52

50 52

can forbid them based on any

concern for building standards and public safety. The issue is relevant for De-

schutes County. On March 18, the county sent a code viola-

B3

tion notice to John Shepherd, a

• Salem:Oregon's new congressional map has left both parties relatively happy,B6

Sistersareapastorwho hosts small Sunday gatherings in FREEZING

his home. Community Devel-

opment Department staff have since said they won't take any

other action against Shepherd while they work on a solution. County leaders said Mon-

Well shot! Reader photos

• We want to see your photos showing "spring in full swing" for another special version of Well shot! that will run in the Outdoors section. Submityour best work at bendbulletin.cnm /spring2014and we'll pick the best for publication. Submission requirements: Include ae much detail ee possible — when and where you took lt, end any special technique used — ee well ee your name, hometown end phone number. Photos must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpl) end cannot be altered.

I

2 7 3 8 2 6 35

39

40

36 33

38

m

2 4 2 3 za

31 35

35 29

20

19

27

19 17

im 17 2 8

30

32 34 36

PRECIPITATION TOTAL: 1.08" Historical average precipitation for the month: .82" tNutH

H K 3D R E IR H R E I R R R R R R I

SNOW TOTAL: 0" Historical average snow total for the month: 3.24" twutH H R H R R R R R R R R H R

iiIR H

29

27

T= Trace

R H R H R H D

Kiilmii IR R D

H R H R H R H R R R R R R R R H H

ALMANAC

Deschutes County's definition

of a church from"an institu-

Highest temperature

lowest temperature

Average high

Average low

Highest recorded temperature for the month:

Lowest recorded temperature forthe month:

Monthly average high temperature through the years:

Monthly average low temperature through the years:

51'

26.5'

78' on March 12, 1934

day's conversation wasn't in response to the Shepherd case. "This is something we've been looking at revising for a number of months," Deschutes County Counsel Laurie Craghead said. The proposal would modify

6

0

on March 1, 1960

* Monthly averages calculated from 1928 through 2005, Western Regional Climate Center Sources: NOAA, Western Regional Climate Center, Bend Public Works Department

Andy Zelgert i The Bulletin

tion that has nonprofit status as a church established with

the Internal Revenue Service," to "meeting areas for religious activities, Sunday school fa-

cilities, parking and related incidental uses." But the proposed change also states an applicant would need a separatepermitforservices in his or her home. SeeChurch /B2


B2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 2014

E VENT TODAY NO EVENTSLISTED

WEDNESDAY OREGON STATEUNIVERSITY PRESIDENTIALADDRESS: OSU President Ed Ray provides an update on the university's accomplishments in the past year; free; 5:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. CRAIG CAROTHERS: The Nashville singer-songwriter performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. mcmenamins.com.

THURSDAY REPAIR CAFE: An event to bring together people who like to fix things and people who have things that need fixing; bring broken items and a replacement part if you have it; visit website for full list; free; 6-8 p.m.; Pakit Liquidators, 903 S.E. Armour Road,Bend;541-385-6908 ext. 14 or www.rethinkwasteproject.

or'g.

OREGON OUTDOOR SPEAKER SERIES:Featuring multimedia presentations highlighting outdoor sports and adventure related to theBend community;proceeds benefit Bend EnduranceAcademy; $5 minimum donation suggested; 7 p.m., doors openat6 p.m .;Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W.Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. volcanictheatrepub.com. "HELEN ONWHEELS": Cricket Daniel's play about a gun-totin', whiskey-drinkin' granny in Oklahoma; $19, $16 for students and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626 or

ENDA R

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

www.2ndstreettheater.com. LIVECOMEDY SHOWCASE: Featuring Portland funny man Will Woodruff, with local comedians; $5;8 p.m.;TheSummit Saloon 8 Stage, 125 N.W.Oregon Ave., Bend; 541-419-0111 or www.bendcomedy. com. REBELUTION:The California reggae band performs, with Common Kings; $22.50 in advance, $25 at the door; 9 p.m., doors open at 8 p.m.; Midtown Ballroom, 51 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-4084329 or www.randompresents.com. (•

I

FRIDAY BADLANDS/SPRINGBASIN Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin file photo BIRTHDAYBASH:Celebrate the fifth Volunteer Allison Murphy sews a torn garment during a Repair anniversary of the Oregon Badlands Cafe held in the fall. Pakit Liquidators will host another Repair Cafe and Spring Basin designation as Thursday, to whlch people can bring items In need of fixing. wilderness with appetizers and live music; free for program; 5-8 p.m.; Oregon Natural Desert Association, advance, $12 at the door, dinner 50 S.W. Bond St., Suite 4, Bend; SATURDAY available for additional purchase; 541-330-2638 or www.onda.org. 7 p.m., doors open 6 p.m.; Bend REDMOND HIGHSCHOOL Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed FIRSTFRIDAY GALLERY WALK: SOFTBALLPANCAKEBREAKFAST: Event includes art exhibit openings, Market Road; 541-388-1133 or Featuring unlimited pancakes, www.bendparksandrec.org. artist talks, live music, wine and link sausage, syrup, butter and a foodindowntown Bend andthe "HELENON WHEELS": Cricket beverage; proceeds benefit the Old Mill District; free; 5-9 p.m.; Daniel's play about a gun-totin', Redmond High School Softball throughout Bend. whiskey-drinkin' granny in Team; $8; 8-10 a.m.; Applebee's Oklahoma; $19, $16 for students AUTHORPRESENTATION:Bob Neighborhood Grill 8 Bar, 3807 and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Welch, author of "American S.W. 21st St.; 541-948-9501 or Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Nightingale: The Story of Frances coachtom©bendbroadband.com. Slanger, Forgotten Heroine of Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626 or "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: Normandy," will give a presentation www.2ndstreettheater.com. LA BOHEME":Puccini's story of of his work; free; 5:30 p.m.; Warm HIGH DESERTCHAMBER MUSIC young love starring Anita Hartig; Springs Library, 1144 Warm Springs SERIES:The Pasadena, Calif.-based opera performance transmitted St.; 541-475-3351. Crown City String quartet performs; live in high definition; $24, $22 "RADIO STAR":Sunriver Stars $35, $10 students and children18 seniors, $18 children; 9:55 a.m.; and younger; 7:30p.m., doors open Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX, Community Theater presents a at 6:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 play produced as a radio program; 680S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 541-312-2901. proceedsbenefitscholarships or www.highdesertchambermusic. to Fastcamp for Three Rivers AUTISM WALK:A walk, raffles, com. schools; $5; 6:30 p.m.; Sunriver face painters, crafts, bounce Homeowners Aquatic 8 Recreation BEATSANTIQUE:The electrohouse, entertainment and more; Center, 57250 Overlook Road; 541world-jam band performs; $20 plus $12-$14, $9-$11 for children ages 593-4150 or www.sunriverstars. fees in advance, $25 at the door; 9 2-12, free for children ages 2 and org. p.m., doors open 8 p.m.; Midtown younger, registration requested; IMPROV COMEDY NIGHT: Triage Ballroom, 51 N.W.Greenwood Ave., 10 a.m.-2 p.m.; Highland Baptist improv troupeperforms; $8 in Bend; 541-408-4329. Church, 3100 S.W. Highland Ave.,

Redmond; 888-288-4761 or www. autismsocietyoregon.org. JINGLE"SPRINGLE" BELL RUN/WALK FORARTHRITIS: Runners and walkers don holiday costumes for a 5K run and walk, a one-mile walk and a kids' fun run; rescheduled from 2013; proceeds benefit the Arthritis Foundation; free for spectators and 2013 registered participants, $25 for new participants; 10 a.m. kids' fun run, 8:30 a.m. event check in and new registration; Pine Nursery Park, 3750 N.E. Purcell Blvd., Bend; 503-245-5695 or www. bendjinglebellrun.org. SPRING BOOK SALE: The Friends of the Bend Public Libraries hosts a sale featuring books, CDs, audio books and more; free admission; 11 a.m.-4 p.m.; Deschutes Library Administration Building, 507 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-617-7047,

foblibrary©gmail.com orFOBL.org/ booksales. "RADIO STAR":Sunriver Stars Community Theater presents a play produced as a radio program; proceeds benefit scholarships to Fastcamp for Three Rivers schools; $5, $25 for dinner theater; 6 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic 8 Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road; 541-593-4150 or www. sunriverstars.org. AUTHORPRESENTATION:Diane

Hammondspeaksandreads

from her book, "Friday's Harbor," followed by a video clip of orca whales; $5;6:30 p.m.;Paulina Springs Books, 252 W. Hood Ave., Sisters; 541-549-0866. BEND COMEDY:Featuring Portland comedian Will Woodruff; $10; 7 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive; 541-323-1881 or www.volcanictheatrepub.com. GEORGE WINSTON: The California pianist performs; $23-$51 plus fees; 7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. "HELEN ONWHEELS": Cricket

Daniel's play about a gun-totin', whiskey-drinkin' granny in Oklahoma; $19, $16 for students and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626 or www.2ndstreettheater.com. ASPECIALSOLOSPEAK SESSION:Portland storyteller Lawrence Howard tells the tale of polar explorer Ernest Shackleton; appropriate for ages14 and older; $15 in advance, $20 at the door; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse,148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 503860-5733 or www.solospeak.com. AUTHORPRESENTATION:Bob Welch, author of "American Nightingale: The Story of Frances Slanger, Forgotten Heroine of Normandy," will give a presentation of his work preceded by a reception; free; 8 p.m., 7 p.m. reception; Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County Library, 134 S.E. E St., Madras; 541-475-3351. DUSU MALI BAND: The Portlandbased African blues-rock band

performs; $8 inadvance, $10at

the door; 8 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122 or www.belfryevents.com. THE POLISH AMBASSADOR: The Bay Area electro-pop artist performs, with Liminus, Wildlight, Saqi andAyla

Nereo; $12plusfees in advance, $15

atthedoor;8 p.m.,doorsopen7 p.m.; Domino Room, 51N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-408-4329 or www. facebook.com/slipmatscience. THE BACKALLEYBARBERS: The Oregon punkabilly band performs, with Avery James and the Hillandales; $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W.Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. volcanictheatrepub.com. GIFTOF GAB:The hip-hop artist performs, with Landon Wordswell with Tim Hoke, Northorn Lights and MoStafa with C-Legz; $10; 10 p.m.; Dojo, 852 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 541-706-9091 or www.dojobend. com.

1VEwsOF REcoRD p.m. March 20, in the 2600 block of North U.S. Highway 97. Northeast U.S. Highway 20. Burglary —A burglary was reported Criminal mischief —An act of at10:23 p.m. March 27, in the 2100 The Bulletin will update items in criminal mischief was reported at block of Northeast Professional the Police Log when such arequest 5:17 p.m. March 20, in the1100 block Court. is received. Any newinformation, of Northwest Bond Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 5:25 such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more Theft —Atheft was reported at10:42 p.m. March 28, in the southern area a.m. March 26, in the 2400 block of of the Deschutes River Trail. information, call 541-383-0358. Northwest Drouillard Avenue. Criminal mischief —Anact of Theft —A theft was reported at1:24 criminal mischief was reported and BEND POLICE p.m. March 27, in the 20100 block of an arrest made at 2:20 a.m. March Pinebrook Boulevard. 29, in the 700 block of Northwest DEPARTMENT Columbia Street. Burglary —A burglary was reported Theft —A theft was reported and an and an arrest made at1:48 p.m. Theft —A theft was reported at 3:21 arrest made at12:56 p.m. March18, March 27, in the 300 block of p.m. March 9, in the 2600 block of in the 2600 block of Northeast U.S. Northwest Georgia Avenue. Northwest U.S. Highway 20. Highway 20. Theft —A theft was reported at 8:28 Theft —A theft was reported at 2:19 Theft —A theft was reported at1:44 p.m. March 27, in the 63400 block of p.m. March 27, in the1200 block of

POLICE LOG

Northeast First Street. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 3:26 p.m. March 27, in the 20100 block of Pinebrook Boulevard. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at1:29 p.m. March 28, in the63400 blockofU.S.Highway97. Theft —A theft was reported at12:47 p.m. March 29, in the 300 block of Northeast Hawthorne Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at11:02 a.m. March 30, in the1900 block of Northeast Veronica Lane. Theft —Atheft was reported at 6:37 p.m. March 27, in the 400 block of Northwest Georgia Avenue.

JEFFERSON COU5ITY

U.S. Senate

66S.E. DSt., Madras, OR97741 Phone: 541-475-2449 Fax: 541-475-4454 Web: www.co.jefferson.or.us

• Sen. JeffMerkley, D-Ore. 107 Russell SenateOffice Building Washington, D.C.20510 Phone: 202-224-3753 Web: http://merkley.senate.gov Bendoffice: 131 N.W.Hawthorne Ave., Suite 208 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-318-1298 • Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore. 223 Dirksen SenateOffice Building Washington, D.C.20510 Phone:202-224-5244 Web: http://wyden.senate.gov Bendoffice: 131 N.W.Hawthorne Ave., Suite107 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-330-9142

U.S. House ofRepresentatives • Rep. GregWalden, R-HoodRiver 2182 Rayburn HouseOffice Building Washington, D.C.20515 Phone:202-225-6730 Web: http://walden.house.gov Bendoffice: 1051 N.W.Bond St., Suite 400 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-389-4408 Fax: 541-389-4452

DESCHtJTES COU5PPi7 1300 N.W.Wall St., Bend, OR97701 Web: www.deschutes.org Phone: 541-388-6571 Fax: 541-382-1692

County Commission

County Commission

• Mike Ahern CITY OF SISTERS • JohnHaffield • WayneFording 520 E. CascadeAvenue, P.O.Box39 Phone: 541-475-2449 Email: commissioner©co.jefferson.or.us Sisters, OR97759 Phone: 541-549-6022 Fax: 541-549-0561 CITY OF BEND 710 N.W.Wall St. Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-388-5505 Web: www.ci.bend.or.us • City Manager EricKing Phone:541-388-5505 Email: citymanager@ci.bend.or.us

City Council • Jodie Barram Phone:541-388-5505 Email: jbarram@ci.bend.or.us • Mark Capell Phone:541-388-5505 Email: mcapell©ci.bend.or.us • Jim Clinton Phone:541-388-5505 Email: jclinton@ci.bend.or.us • Victor Chudowsky Phone: 541-749-0085 Email: vchudowsky©ci.bend.or.us • DougKnight Phone:541-388-5505 Email: dknight©ci.bend.or.us • Scott Ramsay Phone:541-388-5505 Email: sramsay@ci.bend.or.us • Sally Russell Phone: 541-480-8141 Email: srussell@ci.bend.or.us

• TammyBaney,R-Bend Phone: 541-388-6567 Email :Tammy Baney©co.deschules.or.us • Alan Unger,D-Redmond Phone: 541-388-6569 Email: Alan Unger©co.deschutes.or.us CITY OF REDMOND • TonyDeBone, R-LaPine Phone: 541-388-6568 716 S.W.EvergreenAve. Email :Tony DeBone©o.deschutes.or.us Redmond, OR 97756 Phone: 541-923-7710 CROOK COUNTY Fax: 541-548-0706 300 N.E.Third St., Prineville, OR97754 Phone: 541-447-6555 Fax: 541-416-3891 Email: administration©co.crook.or.us Web: co.crook.or.us

County Court •MikeMcCabe,CrookCountyjudge Phone: 541-447-6555 Email: mike.mccabe@co.crook.or.us • Ken Fahlgren Phone: 541-447-6555 Email: ken.fahlgren©co.crook.or.us

Phone: 541-604-5402 Email: Camden.King©ci.redmond.or.us • GinnyMcPherson Phone: 541-923-7710 Emall:GinnyMcPhersor@ci.redmond.orus • Ed Onimus Phone: 541-604-5403 Email: Ed.0nimus@ci.redmond.or.us

City Council • MayorGeorgeEndicott Phone: 541-948-3219 Email:George.Endicott@ci.redmond.orus • Jay Patrick Phone:541-508-8408 Email: Jay.Patrick©ci.redmond.or.us • Tory Allman Phone: 541-923-7710 • Joe Centanni Phone: 541-923-7710 Joe.Centanni@ci.redmond.or.us • CamdenKing

City Council

• DavidAsson Phone: 503-913-7342 Email: dasson©ci.sisters.or.us • WendyHolzman Phone: 541-549-8558 Email: wholzman©ci.sisters.or.us • Brad Boyd Phone: 541-549-2471 Email: bboyd©ci.sisters.or.us • CatherineChildress Phone: 541-588-0058 Email: cchildress@ci.sisters.or.us • McKibben Womack Phone: 541-598-4345 Email: mwomack©ci.sisters.or.us

CITY OF LA PINE P.O. Box3055, 16345 Sixth St. La Pine, OR97739 Phone: 541-536-1432 Fax: 541-536-1462

City Council • KathyAgan Email: kagan©ci.la-pine.or.us • GregJones gjones©ci.la-pine.or.us • Ken Mulenex Email: kmulenex@ci.la-pine.or.us • Stu Martinez Email: smartinez@ci.la-pine.or.us • KarenWard kward©ci.la-pine.or.us

CITY OF PRINEVILLE 387 N.E.Third St., Prineville, OR97754 Phone: 541-447-5627 Fax: 541-447-5628 Email: cityhall©cityofprineville.com

Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 10:40 a.m. March 27, in the areaof Northeast Court Street.

JEFFERSOM COUMTY SHERIFF'S OFFICE Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at12:08 p.m. March 24, in the area of Northwest Glass Drive

Church

PUBLIC OFFICIALS CONGRESS

in Madras. Theft —A theft was reported at 3:05 p.m. March 24, in the 400 block of Meadowview Drive in Culver. Vehicle crash —Anaccident was reported at11:36a.m. March 28, in the area of the Culver Highway and Southwest Jericho Lane in Culver.

PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT

Web: www.cityofprineville.com

City Council • Betty Roppe Email: broppe@cityofprineville.com • Jack Seley Email: jseley©cityofprineville.com • StephenUffelman Email: suffelman@cityofprineville.com • Dean Noyes Email: dnoyes©cityofprineville.com • GordonGillespie Email: ggillespie©cityofprineville.com • JasonBeebe Email: jbeebe©cityofprineville.com • Gail Merritt Email: gmerritt©cityofprineville.com • JasonCarr Email: jcarr©cityofprineville.com

CITY OF MADRAS 71 S.E. DStreet, Madras, OR97741 Phone: 541-475-2344 Fax: 541-475-7061

OREGON STATE POLICE DUII —Benjamin Bradley PaceyHill, 39, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at10:10 p.m. March 29, in the area of U.S. Highway 20and Northeast 27th Street in Bend.

which was passed in 2000 and required cities and

Contlnued from B1 counties across the country Craghead said the change to re-examine where public would more closely align servicesare allowed. Deschutes C o unty

w it h

C ommissioners

coul d

the guidelines for church vote on the church definition services detailed in the Re- changeWednesday. ligious Land Use and Insti— Reporter: 541-617-7820, tutionalized Persons

Act,

eglucklich@bendbulletin.com

Find It All Online bendbulletin.com

City Council • Mayor MelanieWidmer Email: mwidmer©ci.madras.or.us • Tom Brown Email: thbrown@ci.madras.or.us • Walt Chamberlain Email: wchamberlain©ci.madras.or.us • RoyceEmbanksJr. Email: rembanks©ci.madras.or.us • Jim Leach Email: jleach@ci.madras.or.us • RichardLadeby Email: rladeby©ci.madras.or.us • CharlesSchmidt Email: cschmidt@ci.madras.or.us

CITY OF CULVER 200 W. First St., Culver, OR97734 Phone:541-546-6494 Fax: 541-546-3624

%ILSONSof Redmond 541-548-2066

Adjustablg

ItATTREss

G allery- B e n d 541-330-50$4

HWY 20E & Dean SwiftRd. (t block West of Costco)

541-823-S011 • slmrks.com

Mayor • ShawnaCtanton

CONSUNER

City Council • NancyDiaz • Laura Dudley • Amy McCully • SharonOrr • Shannon Poole • Hilario Diaz

InSuranCe ServiCeS AND RENTERS

BEND 541-383-1733

SR-22'S • SUSPENSIONS DUII'S • TICKETS

541 382-6447 j 2090 NE wyatt court j suite 101 Bend OR 97701jbendurology.com

REDMOND 541-504-2134

S~sndUmlo


TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

B3

RKGON COVER OREGON

AROUND THE STATE

Trou es mean extra time to app y as ast-minute a itz is aunc e • Cost of TV, social mediacampaign is $1M By Gosia Wozniacka

ple, Oregon is rolling out a last-minute $1 million ad camP ORTLAND — Th o u g h paign. It consists of eight new Monday marks the national television and cable spots, ondeadline to apply for health line banners, and paid posts insurance for this year un- on Facebook and other social der the Affordable Care Act, media. uninsured Oregonians have The goal of the campaign, an extra month to sign up be- said Cover Oregon's chief cause of the state exchange's communications officer Amy technology problems. Fauver, is to t arget deadThe 30-day extension, an- line-driven people, those who nounced last week, means might have been waiting for a residentscan apply for cover- fully functional website, and age until April 30. younger Oregonians. "We want to make sure to Cover Oregon's o nline portal still doesn't allow the get the word out that people general public to enroll from can still enroll in Oregon," start to finish in one sitting. Fauver said. The public and Cover Oregon The new federal health care staff must use a hybrid pa- law requires nearly all Ameriper-online process to enroll, cans to have health coverage. despite $134 million in federal Those who don't will be subfunding spent on building the ject to financial penalties. exchange. So far, 178,000 Oregonians To boost enrollments, es- have enrolled in coverage peciallyamong young peo- through Cover Oregon. About The Associated Press

55,000 of those enrolled in pri-

Oregonians who want to enroll for coverage can apply online at www.CoverOregon. egon Health Plan, the state's com and electronically submit version of Medicaid. a fillable PDF form. They can The enrollment figures still print a paper application, then fall short of the Obama ad- mail or fax it in. Workers will ministration's original projec- process the applications, detions,which assumed 237,000 termining whether the appliwould sign up for coverage by cant is eligible for financial asthe end of March — although sistance, then mail an enrolllower-than-expected e n roll- ment packet with information ment isn't limited to Oregon. about the available insurance Cover Oregon officials are plans. The applicant can then still trying t o d e cide what select his or her choice online technology to use for the 2015 and wait to receive a bill from enrollment period, which be- the insurance company. gins Nov. 15. They have narResidents can also get help rowed the options to three. from insurance agents and They can continue with the community o r g anizations current technology but hire a certified by Cover Oregon, new vendor to finish building who have access to an online it. The state and its current portal that lets them complete technology contractor, Ora- the entire application from cle Corp., have begun parting start to f i nish — t hough it ways. doesn't work with complicatThe state can also switch to ed family situations. the federal exchange or transPeople seeking coverage fer technology from another also can go directly to an instate where it's working well. surance company. vate health plans, while nearly 123,000 enrolled in the Or-

Happy Valley staddiug —TheClackamasCounty Sheriff's Office has identified a manfatally stabbed at a weekend party in the Portland suburb of HappyValley. A second manhas beenarrested. Lt. Robert Wurpes identified the victim in the Sundaynight violence as 21-year-old Marcos Fielder of Portland. Wurpessays 24-year-old George Gardea ofPortland hasbeenbooked into the county jail for investigation of murder, assault and unlawful use of aweapon. He's held without bail. TheSheriff's Office says witnesses identified a suspect who fled the party. Deputies found hehad barricaded himself in an apartment and aSWATteam was called in. The manwas arrested Monday morning. Thesheriff's spokesman saysthe two men did not know each other but reportedly met at the party and at somepoint got into a fight.

Police: Manfoundin ditch; death accidental —A33-yearold Salem manreported drunk and missing hasbeenfound dead ina drainage ditch. Thepolice say that family members were looking for Dustin Hill when theyfound his body Sunday evening in adrainage ditch near McNary Field. Police sayHill wasobserved to be, intheir words, "highly intoxicated" on Saturday night anddidn't come home. Theysaythedeathappearstobeanaccident.

Man who hurled firedomd sentenced —A26-year-oldman who apologized to afederal judge for hurling a firebomb at an unoccupied Portland police car in November2012 has beensentenced to 2~/~ years in federal prison. Sergey Turzhanskiy called his action "the greatest mistake I evermade in mylife." U.S. District Judge Marco Hernandezsentencedthe Portland manfor possession of an unregistered destructive device. Thesentence is part of a pleaagreement that called for dismissal of the moreserious charge of attempted arson. WOman eleCtrOCuted —Authorities believe a womanwho was fatally injured Sunday on hi agh-voltage tower in Beaverton committed suicide. Police sayshehadbeentaking medication for schizophrenia andhadbeenonanalcoholand methamphetaminebingeSaturday night. KGWreports she was electrocuted by wires on theelectrical tower and fell about 60 feet to the ground. Shewas pronounced dead at a hospital. — From wire reports

EUGENE

A quirky sport ot aScottishsort Pot businesstakes center stage By Kyle Odegard Albany Democrat-Herald

The Associated Press

With regulations now set, haps a full-time hemp farmdispensaries are opening, er. "Maybe I can find a little marijuana shops opening although some local govern- niche," he said. their doors in Oregon and the ments are taking advantage David Cox of Springfield prospect of a statewide legal- of the L egislature's action said he'd found one. ization vote this fall, the pot giving them authority to imUsing an initial $6,000 inbusiness is emerging from pose one-year moratoriums. vestment, he started a comunderground into the fluoresParticipants foresee even pany last year called Dr. cent light of hotel conference more opportunities if Ore- Vape that sells battery-powrooms. gon voters follow the lead of ered "dome vaporizers," also About 400 people attended those in Colorado and Wash- known as "pens." Resemthe opening day of a medical ington to legalize recreation- bling an electronic cigarette marijuana conference at the al marijuana. Two legaliza- with a bulbous glass attachHilton Eugene on Sunday. tion initiatives could be on ment, the device can be used Passes for the two-day event the ballot. to vaporize a potent marijua"You've got those who na-based wax concentrate. cost$349,theRegister-Guard "It's one of the trendiest reported. want to play the 'long game,' Participants were t h e re those who want to make a ways" to consume marijuana, for advice on topics such as quick buck, those who just said Cox. breaking into the business don't want to miss the boat The vaporizers are manuand government regulations. completely," said dispensary factured in China and sell in They were also checking out and business consultant Ben kits that cost $60 to $130. He and touting the latest goods: Mackaness of Corvallis as said Dr. Vape is already dohash oils and gels, marijua- he staffeda booth Sunday. ing $100,000 in annual sales. na-infused edibles and smok- "We've truly reached a tipRuss Belville, the host of ingor"vaping" accessories. ping point." a marijuana-focused online Medical marijuana dispenSome were like Steve talk radio show, told confersaries in Oregon have oper- Prinster, a 53-year-old Gold ence attendees the resistance ated in a gray area for more Beach resident and a medical to pot dispensaries among lothan a decade. Last year, the marijuana cardholder, who cal governments will subside Legislature put them on a le- was interested in becoming once officials start seeing tax gal footing. a grower or processor, or per- revenues.

WATERLOO — Lafe Jiricek was clad in a kilt, and he spun,

EUGENE — With medical

grunted and heaved a "hammer," which sailed through the air at Waterloo County Park.

The 38-year-old, who lives nearby, got involved in Scottish throwing contests last

year. Now he's trying to grow the sport in the mid-Willamette Valley. J iricek created th e L i n n

County Scottish Throwers, which m e ets

f o r pr a c tic-

es nearly every week in the spring at Waterloo. "There were n o

p r actice

groups nearby. So I decided to do things," Jiricek said Sunday. "People had wanted to get

involved in this area and didn't have an outlet," he added.

So far, about seven regulars, including Bull Oliver, 43, of Keizer, have come to try out the sport.

On May 31, the group is holdingthe Waterloo Highland Games at the park. Competi-

OI

tors need invitations to participate, but everyone is welcome to watch the action.

Oliver said his son suggested

' ©figtIf

he try the Scottish throwing,

and he gave the sport a shot because he was frustrated with his gym workouts. Both he and Jiricek also have Scottish heritage and are historybuffs.

State dropsproposedbanon pot munchies By Chad Garland The Associated Press

For 17 years, Jiricek was a

Celtic stick fighter, and he researched Celtic sword fighting styles. And at throwing Jesse Skoubo/ Albany Democrat-Herald contests, there's plenty of talk Lafe Jiricek, founder of the Linn County Scottish Throwers, tosses about Scottish clans. a hammer Saturday in Waterloo.

SALEM —

translate directly into m as-

sive throws. After tossing a

16-pound stone, Oliver was critical of his footwork and how his weight shifted forward too soon, for example. The most difficult event

S t ate offi- or candies.

cials are backing off their proposal to prohibit sales

They also require marijuana products to be sold in child-

of pot-infused treats at Or-

proof containersfree of car-

egon medical marijuana stores.

toons or bright colors. The rules take effect today, In a new set of r u l es but they could change based releasedMonday, the Or- on publiccomments received egon Health A uthority

The sport itself also is about

much more than strength, Jiricek said. "Technique plays into it quite a bit," he said. Strength helps, of courseJiricek is 6-foot-3 and weighs about 300 pounds — but being able to pump iron doesn't

are brightly colored or formed during a six-month rule-makin the shape of animals, toys ing process.

feet long is heaved end-overend. The goal is to get it to land in the 12 o'clock position.

mplements 1fse,e '3nkeri s ~a 70 SW Century Dr., Ste. 145 Bend, OR 97702• 541-322-7337 complementshomeinteriors.com

seeks only to ban m ari-

juana-laced products that are made or packaged in ways that might appeal to children. They prohibit drug-infused goods that

Women also can compete in

Scottish throwing games, and Jiricek's wife, Shauntae, said could be the caber toss, in she has given the sport a try as which a slender log nearly 20 well.

Bend Park @ Recreation D I S T R I C T

Missing hospital patient found was accused of shooting a S ALEM — Police sa y a man he had been harassing in 60-year-old patient missing Florence. from the Oregon State HospiAt the hospital, he lived in tal in Salem has been found in a group home on the grounds Corvallis. but outside the i nstitution's Gregory A. Page was re- secure perimeter. The Oregon ported missing S aturday Health Authority didn't conwhen hospital workers made sider him dangerous. hourly rounds. Police say In Corvallis, police said, there's no evidence he had medics got a call to a park help escaping. Sunday afternoon, and a docPage was found guilty ex- tor suspected Page had given a

GARDENING. Get good at it. Join OSU Master Gardeners for garden events this month

The Associated Press

cept for insanity in 1994 after

false name.

he was charged in Lane CounHow Page got to Corvallis ty with attempted murder. He wasn't immediately known.

Weekly Arts Sr Entertainment ••

t

The u e tm M] L GAZINE

Seed Stsrting,Sat. April 5, 1Q:30 a.m.-12 p.m., Bend Senior Center; register at bendparksandrec.org~~ ~

~

Growing Vegetables, Advanced Level;Sat. April 12, 10 a.m.-1 2 p.m., OSU Cascades Hall, Bend. Registration required at extension.oregonstate.edu/deschutes/garden-classes. Getting Down ln the Dirt,Tues. April 15, 12:15 p.m., OSU Extension Ofmce at Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center; free. Spring Gardening Seminar,Sat. April 19, 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m., Deschutes County Fair 5 Expo Center. Register at gocomga.com/ gardening-news.html. Community gardens open,Sat. April 26, 9 a.m. at Hollinshead Park, 9:30 a.m. at Northwest Crossing, Bend; plots $25-$35. 541-548-6088. <+gsia~ <

o

".

" ' '"

+

~er Gars

Central Oregon

Master Garde er

Associ tion

IsSeekingAt-large Advisory Committee Members For Riley Ranch Nature Reserve DevelopmentPlan The Riley RanchAdvisory Committee will include up to three at-large members, neighborhood representatives andtechnical experts. It will meet up to twice amonth betweenApril and July 2014. Qualifications: Experience/knowledge/interest in community planning andability to evaluate diverse viewpoints andmake recommendations based onwhat is best for the park and the broader community.

Deadline for submissions: April 18, 2014 Send letter of interest and qualifications to: Bend Park &Recreation District, Attn: Jim Figurski 799 SWColumbiaSt.,Bend,OR97702 Or email to Jim@bendparksandrec.org Forinformation ontheRlley RanchNature Reserve, tjo to wwtabendparksandrec.ortj.


B4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 2014

EDj To

The Bulletin

s

e insunse on o a e ousin ro ram

VoO 1b SE

WINP1?

end has lent nearly $6 million since 2006 to builders of affordable housing in the city. That money has come from a small fee — .025 percent of the cost of obtaining the necessary permits to build a house or apartment building. The feeadds about $300 to the cost of a home, says Andy High of the Central Oregon Builders Association. Money thus raised helped fund more than adozen projects in the affordable housing fund's first five years and more since, and it served to leverage federal dollars as well. The fee wasn't universally popular when it first was adopted, so much so that the ordinance putting it in place sunsetted after five years. Councilors approved extending it through June 2014. Since its inception, however, the fund has won over some of its harshest critics, including COBA. The builders' charitable arm, Building Partners for Affordable Housing, used money from the fund to help finance a small subdivision in 2011, at the height of the recession. A second BPAH subdivision is nearing completion. For at least one of the builders involved in the initial project, it was the first work he'd had in two years,according to Jim Long

of the city. Providing jobs may have been an unforeseen benefit of the fund, but it's an important one. Now the city i s considering making the fund permanent — it originally sunsetted in 2011 and was re-upped for three yearsand councilors discussed the idea in late March. Most seem inclined to remove the sunset clause in the current ordinance. Yet the sunset has an advantage that should notbe overlooked. It requires that the City Council review the fund at least every severalyears in a way they would not have to do otherwise. It gives the city a chance to decide if fund dollars are being wisely spent or might be better used someplace else. That's important. While the fund is doing what it was designed to do, and while we'd hate to see it go away, a bit of oversight now and then won't hurt it.

The pond, andtherefore the summer, issaved ummer is saved. The dam below Mirror Pond has been repaired and the pond itself is filling once again. Thank you, PacifiCorp. The dam, whichcreated Mirror Pond in the first place, is more than 100 years old. Built by the old Bend Water, Light 8 Power Co. in 1910, PacifiCorp's predecessor, Pacific Power & Light Co., took it over in 1926. It began to leak last fall, and that left Mirror Pond largely empty and, had the weather been warm enough, stinky. Smell was not the only problem, however. PacifiCorp has made its desire to get rid of the dam clear for several years. It seriously considered the idea as far back as 1995, when it appeared that a federal mandate to install fish ladders and screens would cost more than the revenue the dam generated each year, according to an article in The Bulletin. More recently when the dam began toleak, the power company said itwas ready to move ahead with decommissioning the facility, a position that changed a month

S

or so later. And, when push came to shove, PacifiCorp not only repaired the leak, but shored up two other sections of the dam that were in danger of failure. That's how summer was saved. With water behind the repaired dam, the pond is filling. As the pond fills, water depths increase well beyond what people think of as MirrorPond, into what's been called the upper pond south of the Galveston Avenue bridge. And that means floaters, canoers and others who define a perfect day as time spent on the river in hot weather will be able to do so again this year. Many of those folks will be people who live here. Others, however, will be tourists, people who dine in restaurants, stay in hotels and motels, and generally spend money with local merchants. They're good for business in Bend, and without the pond, they might decide to go elsewhere. The dam's — and the pond'sultimate fate is still up in the air. For now, however, Mirror Pond will retain its place of beauty in the heart of Bend.

M 1Vickel's Worth Reject NIMBY approach to OSU-CascadesCampus

Off-campus housing is another ob- district acquisition, the great usedjection raised by those not liking the bus fiasco, ad infinitum, the general chosen site. A thousand of the pro-

community has concerns about this

A group of citizens in Bend is try- spective5,000 students are already rush to development at this site. ing to set up a NIMBY regarding the here in town, and I have not heard What could be very helpful would site for OSU-Cascades Campus. In much in the way of police reports of be reporting the metrics of other case you aren't familiar with that ac- wild or destructive parties. campus sites. That is, what is the cost I'vebeen impressed at the com- per student for the physical assets of ronym, it stands for Not In My Back Yard. They profess to be in favor of a munity meetings with the care and eachcampus,theoperating costsper four-year university in Bend, but put research that has gone into the uni- student and other similar measures it somewhere — anywhere not near versity plans thus far. The objectors to try to evaluate what are the alterthem. From what I have read in the news-

seem to be making no effort to learn

natives in cost for a campus. Really

in depth about the plans and to put

paper and have learned attending community meetings, the city, the

it into a citywide context. Let's discard the NIMBY mentality and see

helpful would be good investigative reporting as to who are all of the principals of these transactions and

the positive projections for our new history of other campus development have worked long and carefully to university. issues. Perhaps The Bulletin could studythe available properties around AnnIs OetInger lead the community to make a wise town that might accommodate the Bend decision for thebest location andbest campus andhave decided, bythepronew university. Most national trends cess of elimination, that the 56 acres 'The Dump Campus' are for using the advantages of IT to near Century Drive and Chandler offset expensive hard asset costs and Avenue best meet their necessary Some in the community have ex- make accessibility to education the requirements. pressedconcerns as to the effects of key and not a physical monument. It Juniper Ridge has been mentioned the selected location for the devel- would be sad to hear students in 10 often as an alternative. Both the city opment of a college and the impact years referring to the current site as and the school have determined it is such use at this location will have on "The Dump Campus." not a viable prospect financially. It is the community adjacent. Much of John Bihary Jr. also too far from the assorted ame- the concern seems centered on the Bend nities to be attractive to prospective process whereby a select few seem university and citizen committees

Obama ispresident

students. Students want to be where

to have selected this site. Typically

activities outside the dassrooms are readily available. They will not be happy stuck out on the edge of town somewhere. Problems with traffic

in most places in the USA, when a because Bush was large public project is going to be developedthere isa process ofusing As a reply to "Be mindful of dictaan environmental impact report and tor-like control notions," in which Al allowing for community input before Phillips contends that the country any site is committed to. This partic- is worse off by almost any measure ular project seems to have a rush to since Obama became president:I push it through. Purportedly, an ad- guess that almost means besides the jacent site has contamination issues improving economy, among other andinactualitythe subject site forthe statistics. I would like to point out new campus had been a quarry and/ one factor that most conservatives or dump. In light of the history of the choose to ignore. Barrack Obama is nearby Summit High School devel- our 44thpresident because George

around the present location have

been cited as objections to the chosen location. What makes anyone think students driving all the way through the city from Juniper Ridge to get to the mountain or river would be preferable to the Chandler location from

a traffic standpoint? The university plans a l arge amount of o n-campus housing, opment on a site that later required W. Bush was our 43rd. which will make walking and bi- many millions to cure at taxpayer Greg Waddell cycles practical for getting around. expense, the bungling of the water Sisters

Letters policy

In My Viewpolicy How to submit

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

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

Please address your submission to either My Nickel's Worth or In My View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin.

Write: My Nickel's Worth / In MyView P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804

Email: bulletin@bendbulletin.com

OSU-Cascades planning process doesn't have to be divisive By Bjem Peterson our years ago next month, I tes-

F

tified at a hearing of the state Ways and Means Committee

ucational and training opportunities we desired, but fewer and fewer

IN MY VIEW

students and families will have to do that with the expansion of OSU-Cas-

we can only change our behavior and the posture we take toward one another. Our world is filled with examples of disagreements where one side critiques another for a behavior

great potential and amazing opportunities. My time at Central Oregon Community College and OSU-Cascades taught me to value transparency and civic participation. It also

that they themselves practice. I am not naive. I understand that

taught me that my education is not

considering closing the OSU-Cas- cades to a four-year university. And cades Campus. I told them that although I dream of global impact OSU-Cascades meant that I could with my scholarship and communilive where I wanted to and pursue ty work, technology means I can do the career that otherwise might take it from anywhere — including Bend. me away from Central Oregon. BeAs a practitioner and academic cause of the hard work and advoca- who works in and studies commucy of the community, OSU-Cascades nity development, I can tell you that survived that scare. experiencing political tension, misSince then, I moved to Washing- communication, evolving visions ton and received my Master of Arts and competing strategies during the from Seattle University. I am now a development process are common. Ph.D. student studying community It is the messiness of asking how to resources and development at Ari- best work together toward a shared zona State University. I continue to future. Patience and inclusiveness monitor OSU-Cascades on a regu- are key. lar basis because my wife and I still hope we can make a life in Central

Oregon. We had to leave to pursue the ed-

Not only that, but we must realize

From my view outside Central

can be embodied inthe "means" by

Oregon at the moment, I can see

which we work. I am grateful for that lesson.

my own, but it belongs to the com-

there are real and deep disagree- munity. For that reason, I wanted to ments with significant consequenc-

share what I am learning and invite

es at stake in these processes. But my neighbors into that continuous too often, cynicism masquerades as and reflective lifelong learning pro"realism" and robs from us the pow- cess that I try to engage myself. er to choose our own attitudes and The lesson I'm reflecting on today expectations. is that community is what we make

So, I wanted to write from Phoenix, from the largest student body in the country at Arizona State, to say thanks to those with the wisdom

and foresight to see that in a global world, you can have an impact from a small campus, in a small city. OSU-Cascades keeps the dreams of many alive, and dreams still change the world. I know that because I studied at

OSU-Cascades and it has opened doors to me around the world. The

In community development, we of it, not in the distant future, but should remember t ha t c o m mon in the next minutes, next hours and spaces and public institutions should next days. The benefits of a commu-

expansion of OSU-Cascades means the doors of world may open for me

be judgedby whom we include,not nity with a four-year university can

love.

just the economic impact or aesthet-

thatwhomever we deem our adver- ic and emotional value for insiders. I sary in a process, no matter how learned that in part from my time in deeply their behavior bothers us, Bend.

start now, in the way we plan with, include, critique and celebrate one another.

In this way the "ends" that we seek

to come back to Bend and the city I — Bjprn Petersonis an OSU-Cascades alum and a Ph.D. student at Arizona State University and livesin Phoenix, Ariz.


TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

B5

NORTHWEST NEWS

BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES Edward Len Whitlock, of Bend June 10, 1922 - Nov. 21, 2013 Arrangements:

George de

Niswonger-Reynolds is

Vincent

honored to serve the family. Please visit the online registry at www.niswonger-reynolds. com 541-382-2471. Services: Burial without service at Willamette National Cemetery, Portland. Contributionsmay be made

gained fame as a photographer for "The Shame of a Nation,' a1965 book

spotlighting thechalleng-

es facing people residing in

to:

Bend Moose Lodge,

metropolitan slums. He died March 13at theage of 94.

61357 S. Hwy 97, Bend, OR 97702.

Ernest John Gerloff, of Bend Feb. 7, 1945 - Mar. 22, 2014 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds is honored to serve the family. Please visit the online registry at www.niswonger-reynolds. com 541-382-2471. Services: No memorial is scheduled at this time. Contributions may be made to:

Alzheimer's Association Central Oregon office, 777 NW Wall St., Suite 104, Bend, OR 97701.

Calvin Gale Walker, of Terrebonne Oct. 25, 1941 - Dec. 13, 2013 Arrangements: Redmond Memorial Chapel 541-548-3219

please sign our online

guestbook www.redmondmemorial.com

Services: A potluck will be held April 7, 2014 from 12pm to 5pm at the Terrebonne

Grange.

Sidney L. Reed,of Bend Dec. 25, 1922 - Mar. 25, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com

Services: Sidney's urn will be placed at Willamette National Cemetery in Portland in a private

ceremony.

Contributions may be made to: Partners In Care 2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, Oregon 97701 www.partnersbend.org

Obituary policy Death Notices are freeand will be run for oneday, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. Theymaybe submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. TheBulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on anyof these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.

Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be receivedby5p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Fridayfor Sunday publication, and by 9a.m. MondayforTuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details. Phone: 541-617-7825

Email: obiis@bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254

Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR 97708

Kevin Mattingly via The New York Times

Sarah Gordon/The Tri-City Herald

In this aerial photo, the Williams Northwest Pipeline plant is seen after a large explosion and fire in Plymouth, Wash., on Monday. Benton County Sheriff Steven Keane said some gas leaked from

the tank to the ground in acontainment area and evaporated into the air, but it was only a small amount.

George deVincent was 4 injured ingasplant explosion "It wasjust a very photographerknownfor loud boom. I looked across the river 'The Shame of a Nation' and saw a giant By Adam Bernstein

in Appalachia.

The Washington Post

George de Vincent, a one- a C-SPAN interviewer, by seetime felon, boxer and aspiring ing families struggle on cents painter who went on to a career a day, parents who seemed igin photography, becoming a n orant of the social service syst e m and malnourished children

inent and a chronider of the who appeared far more aged impoverished, died March 13 at than they were. his home in the District of Co-

He s a i d he hoped the book's

lumbia. He was 94. pictures, which alternated beThe cause was congestive tweenthe starkandtheplayful, heartfailure,saidafriend,Eric

Ricks. By several accounts, de Vincent led arestless and adventurous early life.

w o ul d distill for readers one concept about the

FEAT U R ED

OBpUARy

He was known to tell friends, "I

poor : "We're warm, alive, gentle, loving human beings, but we're trapped."

The b o o k i ncluded a fore-

hadbeen a fast liver, and I don't word by Vice ~ s ident Humeantheorgan." bert H. Humphrey and was H e grew up in Detroit and

p u b lished around th e t i m e

left school after sixth grade, at President Lyndon B. Johnson which point the details of his launched his "war on poverearly life become blurry, either ty." The book was, in part, a because of fading memories or riposte to critics of the Johnson by his design. progfanl. At various times, he hitch-

The p o or had been the sub-

hiked around the country, ject of indelible photography worked asa driverfor a trav- since socialreformers Lewis eling carmrd, was a feather- Hine and Jacob Riis took their weight boxer and went to jail camerastoinner-cityghettosat for bank robbery. the turn of the last century. But, Artistically indined from a the photography authority Jayoung age, he also worked as cob Deschin wrote in The New a medical illustrator. He was

Y o r k Times, "The Shame of a

headed to Sarasota, Fla., to N ation" offered "enough fresh seek work as a painter for the examples ... to prove that new Ringling Bros. and Barnum & and stronger ways still may be Bailey Circus in the early 1950s found to show that the poor are

when he ran out of money in verymuchwithus." Washington. Deschin added that de Vincent "combines the eye of the He fell into photography. "I was a painter first, but a r tist with the reportorial sense things weren't that great," he

o f the competentphotojournal-

told The Washington Post i st. From the opening picture years later."ButIdid apastel o f the little boy silhouetted portrait for a woman of her a gainst the light illuminating son. I did it and traded it for a

h i s s o rdid environment, the

camera."

reader knows that he is in for

He soon began studio work

about a third of the way full.

A large explosion rocked a natural gas processing plant on the Washington-Oregon border Monday, injuring four workers, causing about 400

Swaner said the 14 employees working at the time were

by farms and homes, and emitting a mushroom cloud of black smoke that was visible

for more than a mile. The 8:20 a.m. blast at the Williams Northwest Pipeline

and the betrothed. Such clien- P a radox," a 1969 presidentially t ele became the bread-and-but- c o mmissioned study o f a n -

ter of de Vincent's professional ti-poverty programs, and in "0 life. But his ambitions grew Say Can You See By Dawn's elsewhere. Urban Blight," a 1965 book He said a transformative featuring contrasting pictures moment was seeing Edward of Washington'srichandpoor.

ven Keane said a relatively

She added it was too early to determine the extent of the

damage or thecauseoftheexplosion. The pipeline was shut down in the area of the stor— Cindi Stefani, age facility, but was still carwho lives near the Williams rying gas on other stretches. Video taken by a WashingNorthwest Pipeline facility ton State Patrol bomb squad

"At that point we were pret-

robot was being evaluated,

and plans were being developed to send up a helicopter for anaerialassessment ofthe

facility, authorities said. A pipeline engineer with the Washington Utilities and

have been a different story,"

Administration, the commis-

those without cars, and a shel-

Keane said. ter was set up across the rivThe fire at the facility about er in Oregon at the Umatilla 4 miles west of Plymouth was County Fairgrounds. As part extinguished within a couple of the evacuation, Highway 14 ofhours. and railroad tracks were shut One of the f our i njured down. workers was transported to a Deputy Joe Lusignan said Portland hospital specializing the v o luntary e v acuation in burns, he said. The oth- could last overnight. No one er threewere taken to Good was being prevented from Shepherd Medical Center in returning to the evacuation Hermiston, where s pokes- area, which was calculated man Mark Ettesvold said they based on the damage expectwere treated inthe emergency ed if one of the two storage room for injuries that did not tanks blewup. appear to be life-threatening. The facility provides supMore than a mile away plemental gas during times of across the Columbia River, high demand for a 4,000-mile the explosion shook Cindi Ste- pipeline stretching from the fani's home. Canadian border to southern "It was just a very loud Utah. Its two storage tanks boom," she said. "I looked for liquefied natural gas each across the river and saw a have a capacity of 1.2 billion giant mushroom cloud and cubic feet, Williams spokesflames at least a couple hun- woman Michele Swaner said.

Transportation Commission will investigate the cause of the explosion and communi-

cate with the western region of the U.S. Department of Transportation Pipeline and

Hazardous Materials Safety S1OnSatd.

Workplace safety investigators from the Washington D epartment of Labor & I n -

dustries will join the investigation, department officials satd.

The state Pipeline Safety Program regulates 28 pipeline companiesand inspectsmore than 24,000 miles of natural

gas and h azardous-liquid pipelines in Washington. Williams operates about 15,000 miles of interstate nat-

ural gas pipelines, according to its website.

The liquefied natural gas facility is owned by Williams Partners' subsidiary Northwest Pipeline LLC.

There was no pipeline rupture, and no customers were affected, company officials sald.

T h e text was by Stern and his

Resort

build an access road and pay fire protection. She voided for other site work. Petersen Thornburgh's master plan. Continued from B1 called that work a "good-faith Developers have appealed Larsen, a Philadelphia effort" to move forward. Green's decision, Petersen said banker, bought T hornB ut Green wrote i n h e r Monday, but he declined to say burgh out ofbankruptcy for March rulingthe developers what developers might do if $2 million in 2011, and has haven't taken any new action the appeal is upheld. tried to revive the project. on significant development — Reporter: 541-617-7820, At a county hearing in hurdles, like water rights and eglucklich@bendbulletin.com February, David Petersen, an attorney represent-

ing Larsen's development group, told Green that developers have pumped nearly $7 m i llion i nto Thornburgh since 2005, to

and brought to Washington's andwasraisedbyanuncle. At Corcoran Gallery of Art the s ome point, he started going by same year. The images depict- his middle name and, as his ined anarray of human experi- terestin artdeepened,headded ences — birth, death, love and t h e "de" as an homage to Leonwar. ardo da Vinci.

H si m a r riage to Shelley L a n gston, w it h w h o m he

thropist Philip Stern on "The shared a photography studio Shame of a Nation," a 1965 in Washingtonformanyyears, book that examined the plight

for. A total of 17 or 18 people work at the facility.

small amount of gas leaked ty scared. I was thinking, 'We from the tankto the ground in need to get out of here.'" a moat-like containment area. Deputies went door to door But it then evaporated, blow- to homes and farms withing away to the northeast, he in a 2-mile radius, evacuatsald. ing about 400 residents as a "I think if one of those huge precaution. tanks had exploded, it might Buses were provided for

first presented at New York's Hen r y G eorge Vincent was Museum of Modern Art in 1955 b orn in Detroit on July 7, 1919,

De Vincent collaborated with

mushroom c/oud and flames at least a couple hundred feet high."

facility near the Washington town of Plymouth, along the Columbia River, sparked a fire andpunctured one of the facil- dred feet high." ity's two giant storage tanks Animals on neighboring for liquefied natural gas. farms were running around, Benton County Sheriff Ste- she added.

of Man" photography show, then-wife, Leni.

j ournalist, author and philan-

allevacuated and accounted

s o mething better than the usu-

and, over time, developed a al fareinthisfield." strong trade in portraits of De Vi n cent's photographic Washington-based g overn- w ork also appeared in "Poverment leaders, chief executives ty Amid Plenty: The American

Steichen's celebrated "Family

The one that punctured was

The Associated Press

people to evacuate from near-

He was shaken, he later told

portraitist of the socially prom-

By Jeff Barnard

e n ded in divorce. Survivors in-

Get a taste of Food. Home Sr Garden In

Experience A Touch Of Scotland! Best Fish R. Chips in Central Oregon

AT HOME

of metropolitan slum dwellers clude their daughter, Ameena and those subsisting in poverty de Vincent of Paris, and a sister.

The

et m

DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deathsof note from around

2007, and remained a senior

rabbi even after he retired and Hobart "Hobie" Alter, 80: Rabbi Mashallah Golestani His designs for foam surf- took over. Died on Friday. boards and low-cost cataKate O'Mara, 74: The Britmarans helped popularize ish actress who played the surfing and sailing. Died Sat- scheming sister of Joan Colurday at his home in Palm lins' character on the 1980s Desert, Calif. prime-time soap opera "DyYousef Hamadani Cohen, nasty" and another schem98: Iran's former chief rabbi ing sister on the BBC sitcom and one of the cornerstones "Absolutely Fabulous." Died of its tiny Jewish community, Sunday in a nursing home in Cohen was the spiritual leader Sussex, England. the world:

of Iran's Jews from 1993 until

— From wire reports

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IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 College basketball, C4 Sports in brief, C2 NBA, C4 NHL, C2 Preps, C4 MLB, C3 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 2014

O www.bendbulletin.com/sports

PREP SPORTS

SKIING Bend freeskiers compete in Italy

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

"Wejust feel really fortunate that things worked out like they have.

We're the luckiest program around, given our situation. Everybody talks about Bend High baseball, Summit had a recent (state playoff) run.

VALMALENCO, Ita-

ly — Twoskiers from Bend havequalified for the 2014Freestyle Junior World SkiChampionships, which began Sunday andrunthrough April 6. Jacob Beebe,of Bend, finished fourth among 14 entries in themen's halfpipe competition on Sunday, posting ascore of 81.80. Beau-James Wells of NewZealand won the eventwith a score of 94.20. Beebe, 14, was thetop American placer. Mary Daubenschmidt, also of Bend,placed fifth among fiveentries in the women'shalfpipe competition on Sunday, netting a score of49.40. Sabrina Cakmakli of Germany won theevent, posting a mark of75.20. Daubenschmidt, 14, registered thesecond-best placing amongU.S. skiers. The Freestyle Junior World Ski Championships include halfpipe skiing, slopestyle skiing and ski-cross events. BeebeandDaubenschmidt, who both train with the Bend-based Mount Bachelor Sports Education Foundation, were two of 22freeskiers

But l can't think of a better person to rebuild the

Mountain View baseball program than Casey Powell." — Mountain View athletic director Dave Hood

Spring gives Beaversa c anceto in some answers By Kevin Hampton Corvallis Gazette-Times

Spring football practice is a time to sort through the roster and begin the process of molding a team for the upcoming season. There usually are quite a few questions, and Oregon State coach Mike

Riley started looking for answers on Monday. Brandin Cooks' eye-catch-

ing performance at the NFL combine just reinforced what most OSU fans already knew He is going to be a tough one to replace. Cooks decided to go pro after finishing last season with 128 catches for 1,730 yards

NM3 Oregon State Spring Game Saturday May 3 1pm Ty, Pac 12

and 16 touchdowns. He won the Biletnikoff Award as the

nation's toP receiver. "All we have to do is re-

place 128 catches," Riley said. "Where is all that going to come from and how all that is going to fit together?" Victor Bolden steps into the flanker spot left open by Cooks. Bolden showed last season that

he has the basic tools to pick up some of the slack, particularly as a running threat on the fly sweep. Richard Mullaney is back at split end after catching 52 passes for 788 yards and three

named to the 2014 U.S.

Freestyle Junior World Championships team. — Bulletin staffreport

scores.

SeeBeavers/C6

BIKING Bend cyclist finishesCapeEpic

Ducks start practices still

CAPE TOWN,South

Africa — Bend'sBrian Grossmancompletedthe Cape Epicmountain bike race on Sunday,along with riding partner Tom Turley, of Denver. The duo finishedthe eight-day, 500-mile race with a total time of55 hours, 9 minutes, placing 473rd overall out of 522 finishing teams.Grossman andTurleyfinished 142nd in the41-50 masters category. The CapeEpic includes 50,000feet of elevation gain intemperatures that cansoar above100 degrees.Pros andamateurscompete in the race, aswell as recreational masters riders such asGrossman and Turley. Morethan 1,200 cyclists competed in two-rider teamsalong dirt roads andsingletrack trails throughout Western Cape,South Africa. Grossman, 48, entered theCapeEpic to raise fundsand awareness for Kids intheGame,aBend nonprofit co-foundedby Grossmanthat provides financial support for underprivileged youths to help themget active and participate in sports. For more information, visit kidsinthegame.org.

looking for Joe Kiine/The Bulletin

Casey Powell talks about returning to his alma mater to coach baseball in the clubhouse at Mountain View High School on Friday in Bend.

By Ryan Thorburn The (Eugene) Register-Guard

EUGENE — A clock hanging inside the University of South Dakota football locker room is

counting down the days. A photograph of the Coyotes' motivational time-keep-

ing mechanism was posted recently on Twitter, including the sign below the numerals

that reads: Beat Oregon. Hope springs eternal in Vermillion, S.D.

More than 1,700 miles away in Eugene, there are lofty national expectations for the 2014 Ducks.

• Casey Powell returns to Bend to coachMountain View baseball asey Powell's eyes scan the walls of the club-

C house. The benches on which he and I sit, the lockers

COLLEGE BASKETBALL

Notre Dame Baylor

8 69

Today's Games N .4 Maryland v No. 3 Louisville 4 p.m.

Mark Helfrich's second University of Oregon team be- Ty, pac 12 gins on-field preparations for the season, which opens Aug. 30 against South Dakota, today with the first

ing through it to see how the

of 15 spring practices. SeeDucks/C6

The skinned portion of the

ing as a backstop of sorts to the Mountain View High baseball field some 20 yards away. "This was our practice field," recalls Powell, a two-

I was on varsity was Vince Genna (Stadium)." Powell's focus darts to the

clubhouse door, which stands ajar, allowing the fresh air of a rain-soaked spring afternoon to slip inside. His gaze fixates

infield was resurfaced just a fewweeks ago, a clay-dirt combination giving the baseball complexsomething of a facelift. This field makes what Pow-

ell practiced on back in the day seemlike anunkempt sandlot.

SeePowell/C6

MEN'S COLLEGEBASKETBALL

Washington St. hires l(ent asnew hoopscoach By Tim Booth

North Carolina 6p.m. All Times PDT More coverage of the Women's NCAA Tournament,CS

Satul'day May3,

to pelt the High Desert. 1993. "Our home field when

Cougars before graduating in

Oregon Spring Game

on the door, as if he is lookMountain View diamond is faring as the showers continue

was just a dirt hill then, serv-

year varsity standout for the

Women Monday's Games 54

GRANT LUCAS

that surround us, none of this was here 21 years ago. This

— Bulletin staff report

Texas A8 M

improvement

The Associated Press

Athletic director Bill Moos once hired Ernie Kent

new coach, giving him another shot at leading a Pac-12Conference program fouryearsafterhe was let go by Oregon. Kent's mission is signifi-

Kent to turn around the men's basketball pro-

cant: Try to revitalize a program that has gone

gram at the University of Oregon. Now he has done the same at Washington State.

downhill in the past five seasons, both in terms of record on the court and interest in the stands.

Kent, 59, was hired Monday as the Cougars'

See Kent /C5

Eric Gay l The AssociatedPress file

Quarterback Marcus Mariota returns to lead

Oregon after last year's11-2 season.


C2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 2014

ON THE AIR

COREBOARD

TODAY SOCCER UEFAChampions League, quarterfinal, Manchester United vs Bayern Munich UEFAChampions League, quarterfinal, Barcelona vs ClubAtletico de Madrid CONCACAFChampionsLeague,semifinal, Alajuelense vsToluca CONCACAFChampionsLeague,semifinal, Club Tijuana vsCruzAzul

Time TV/Radio 11:30 a.m. FS1 11:30 a.m. FS2 5 p.m.

FS2

7 p.m.

FS2

4 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m.

MLB P a c-12 Roo t MLB

BASEBALL

MLB, NewYork Yankeesat Houston College, Stanford at California MLB, Seattle at LosAngeles Angels MLB, Cleveland atOakland BASKETBALL

Women's college, NCAA Tournament, regional final: Maryland vs. Louisville Men's college,NIT,Clemsonvs.SMU NBA, Houston at Brooklyn Women's college, NCAA Tournament, regional final: Stanford vs. North Carolina Men's college, NIT,Florida State vs. Minnesota NBA, Portland at LosAngeles Lakers

4 p.m. 4 p.m. 5 p.m.

E S PN E SPN2 TNT

6 p.m. E S PN 6 p.m. E SPN2 7:30 p.m. T NT

HOCKEY

NHL, Philadelphia at St. Louis

5 p.m. NBCSN

WEDNESDAY SOCCER UEFAChampions League, quarterfinal, Paris Saint-Germain vsChelsea UEFAChampions League, quarterfinal, Real Madrid vs Borussia Dortmund Soccer, United States vs. Mexico

Time TV/Radio 11:30 a.m. FS1 1 1:30 a.m. F S 2

8:15 p.m. ESPN

BASEBALL

MLB, KansasCity at Detroit MLB, Philadelphia atTexas MLB, Seattle at LosAngeles Angels

1 0 a.m. ML B 5 p.m. E SPN2 7 p.m. Roo t

BASKETBALL

NBA, Brooklyn at NewYork Girls high school, MCDonald's All-American Game,East vs. West Boys high school, MCDonald's All-American Game,East vs. West HOCKEY NHL, Boston at Detroit

NHL, Phoenix at LosAngeles

4 p.m.

E S PN

4 p.m. E SPNU 6:30 p.m. ESPN 5 p.m. NBCSN 7:30 p.m. NBCSN

Listings are the most accurate available. TheBulletin is not responsible for late changesmadeby Tvror radio stations.

2013-14APAll-America Teams Statistics throughMarch16 Firsl Team Today Doug McDe rmott, Creighton,6-8, 225, senior, Baseball :RedmondatSouthSalem,4:30p.m.;MounAmes,lowa,26.9ppg,7.0rpg, 52.5fg pct,45.43-pt fg tain View atSummit, 4:30p.m. Soflbag: RedmondatSouthSalem,4:30p.m. pct, 86.6ft pct(65first-teamvotes, 325total points). JabariParker,Duke,6-8, 235,freshman,Chicago, Boys golf: Bend,Mountain View,Summit, Redmond, Ridgeview, CrookCountyat Mountain ViewInvite at 19.3 ppg,8.8rpg(55, 303). RussSmith, Louisvile,6-0,165, senior,Brooklyn, AwbreyGlen,noon Boystennis:MadrasatRedmond,4p.m.;Crook N.Y.,18.3ppg,3.4rpg,4.7apg,40.53-pt fg pct, 2.1 steals (54,298). CountyatStayton, 4p.m. Shabazz Napier, Connecticut,6-1,180, senior,RoxGirls tennis: Redm ond at Madras, 4 p.m.; Staytonat CrookCounty, 4 p,maCascadeat Mountain View, bury,Mass.,17.4ppg,5.9rpg,4.9apg,85.9ft pct,1.7 steals(37,254) 4p.m. SeanKilpatrick, Cincinnati,6-4, 210,senior,YonBoys lacrosse:MountainViewat McNary, 8:45p.m. kers, N.Y.,20.7ppg,4.4 rpg,2.6apg,84.7ft pct(37, Girls lacrosse:BendatSheldon,4p.m. 243). Track andfield: LaPine,Madrasat Culver,5p.m. SecondTeam Nick Johnson,Arizona,6-3, 200,junior, Gilbert, Wednesday Ariz., 16.2 ppg,4.0 rpg,2.8apg,(30,228). Baseball: Madras atBend,430 pmaCrookCountyat AndrewWiggins,Kansas,6-8,200,freshman, La Pine,4p.m.;SantiamatCulver,4:30p.m. Ontario,17.4 ppg,6.0 rpg(14,199). Soflball:Bendat Madras, 4:30p.m.; Sistersat Moun- Vaughan, NikStauskas,Michigan,6-6,205,sophomore, tain View (DH),3p.m.; LaPineat CrookCounty, 4 Mississauga, Ontario, 175ppg,3.1 rpg,3 3apg,44 9 p.m. Trackandlield: CrookCountyat Bend,TBD;Summit 3-ptfg pct,82.0ft pct,(5, 128). MelvinEjim,lowaState, 6-6, 220,senior,Toronto, at Ridgeview,3:30 p.maMountainViewatRedmond, 18.1 ppg,8.5rpg,1.8apg,50.6fg pct,(8, 127). 3p.m.;GilchristatSummit JV,3:30p.m. TJ. Warren,N.C.State, 6-8, 215, sophom ore, Boys lacrosse:SistersatRedmond,5 p.m. Durham,N.C.,24.8ppg,7.1 rpg, 52.5fg pct, 35.2 minutes,1.8steals,(7, 110). Thursday Third Team Baseball: Summitat HoodRiver Valley,4:30p.m. CleanthonyEarly, Wichita State,6-8, 219,senior, Soflbag: Summit atHoodRiverValley,4:30 p.m. Boys tennis: Sistersat Bend, 4 p.m.; CrookCounty Middletown,N.Y.,15.8ppg, 5.9 rpg,2.0apg,84.4 ft at Madras,4p.m. pct (3,104). KyleAnderson,UCLA, 6-9, 230,sophomore, FairGirls tennis: BendatSisters,4p.m.; MadrasatCrook County,4p.m. view,N.J.,14.9ppg,8.8 rpg,6.6apg,48.13pt fg pct, Track andfield: Sisters, CottageGroveat Swe et 1.8 steals(84). Julius RandleKen , tucky, 6-9, 250,freshman,DalHome, 4p.m.; Elmira,La Pineat Junction City,4 las,150 ppg,105rpg,502 fgpct(81). p.m.;CulveratSantiam,4p.m. C.J. Fair,Syracuse,6-8, 215, senior, Baltimore, 16.7 ppg,6.2rpg(3,65). Friday ScottieWilbekin,Florida,6-2,176,senior, GainesBaseball: SistersatBend,4:30p.m.; Mountain Viewat Madras ,4:30p.m.;Lakeview atLaPine,4:30p.mz ville, Fla.,13.0ppg,2.6 rpg,3.8apg,40.03-pt fg pct, 1.7 steals(3,59). CulveratWestern Mennonite, 4:30p.m. HonorableMention (in alphabetical order) Soflbag: LakeviewatLaPine,4pm.; CulveratWestern KarvelAnderson,Robert Morris; Cam eron Ayers, Mennon ite,4;30p.m. Boys golf: Ridgeview,Mountain View,Summit, Crook Bucknell; CameronBairstow, NewMexico; Billy County,Redmond at RavenRumblein theDesert at Baron,Canisius;JerregeBenimon, Towson; Davion Berry,WeberState; Taylor Braun,NorthDakotaState; EagleCrestRidgeCourse,8a.m. Brooks,Davidson;JohnBrown,HighPoint; Girls golt Bend,Mountain View,Summit, Redmond, De'Mon Ridgeview,Crook County at EagleCrest Ridge BryceCotton,Providence. Joel EmbiidKan , sas;Tyler Ennis, Syracuse;Aaron Course,noon Track andfield: Bendat East County Classic, TBD; Gordon,Arizona;Langston Hall, Mercer;GaryHarris, State; Tyler Haws,BYU;R.J. Hunter, Georgia Madras,CrookCounty in AaronandMarie Jones Michigan State;JordairJett, SaintLouis; ShawnJones, Middle Invite atMcKenzieRiverHighSchool,5 p.m. Tennessee;DeAndre Kane, lowaState(1 first-team Boys tennis:Summitat Saxon InviteinSalem,TBD Boys lacrosse:Valley Catholic atBend, 5p.m.; North vote). J.J. Mann,Belmont; JavonMccrea, Buffalo; DanEugene at MountainView,530 pmaMcNaryat Sisiel Mugings,NewMexico State; Aaric Murray,Texas ters, 7 p.m.;Summitat Sherwood, 8p.m. Southern;MarcusPaige, North Carolina; JacobParkGirls lacrosse:St. Mary'sat Bend,6p.m. er, StephenF.Austin; LamarPatterson, Pittsburgh; AdreianPayne,MichiganState (1); CaseyPrather, Saturday Baseball: West AlbanyatBend(DH), 1p.m.; Central Florida;WesleySaunders, Harvard. Catholic atMountain View(DH),1 pm. MarcusSmart, OklahomaState (1); JuwanStatSoflbag: LaPineat Chiloquin (DH), noon en, WestVirginia; KeiferSykes,GreenBay; Xavier Boys tennis: Sisters,Madrasat Madras Invite, TBD; Thames, SanDiegoState;FredVanvleet, Wichita State Summiat t OE STournament, TBD 1); JameelWarney, StonyBrook; AlanWiliams, UC Trackandfield: Sisters atMarist Invite, 10a.m.; RedantaBarbara;Pendarvis Wiliams, NorfolkState;Patric Young,Florida. mond,RidgeviewatSandyInvite,10a m.;Gilchristat Condon/Wh eelerInvite,11 a.m.;LaPineat Junction City Invitational, 10a.m.; Summit at Aloha Invite, Wo m e n's college 8;30a.m. Boys lacrosse:Churchil atBend,1 p.mcValleyCathNCAATournament olic atMountainView,1p.m.; SistersatSherwood, All TimesPDT 4:30 p.m.;Summit atClackamas, 1p.m. Girls lacrosse:RoseburgatBend,3p.m. LINCOLNREGIONAL RegionalSemifinals At Lincoln,Neb. PREPS Monday'sGame Regional Championship Monday'sGames Uconn69,TexasA&M54

ON DECK

Softball

Madras La Pine

Class4A Nonconference (6 innings) At Madras 803 034 x — 18 26 2 002 030 x — 6 2 3

Culver Toledo

Class2A/1A Special District 3 (5 innings) 281 20x x — 13 10 0 000 01x x — 1 3 1

SPORTS IN BRIEF BASKETBALL Cal COaChMOntgOmery retireS — WhenMikeMontgomery walked off the court last week following an NITloss to SMU, he had a sneaking suspicion that it was time to retire after more than four decades and1,000 games as abasketball coach. After waiting a few days to makesure his initial feeling wasn't solely about the normal fatigue that comes attheend of along season, Montgomery madeit official on Mondaywhen heretired after a remarkable coaching career. "It's all good, it's all positive," he said at anews conference. "It's all for the right reasons. I feel really good about mydecision at this

Baseball La Pine Madras

time. I just think it's time."

MCDermOtt leadS APAll-AmerICa team — Ooug MCO ermott of Creighton is a unanimous choice for TheAssociated Press All-America team, the first three-time selection in 29 years. MCDermott is the nation's leading scorer at 26.9 points a game.Thesenior was joined on the teamMonday by freshman Jabari Parker of Duke and seniors Russ Smith of Louisville, ShabazzNapier of Connecticut and Sean Kilpatrick of Cincinnati. Smith, Napier and Kilpatrick all played in the first-year American Athletic Conference, the first time a conference hadthree players on the first team since the Atlantic Coast Conference in 2000-01. McDermott finished his career with 3,150 points, fifth on the all-time list. He is the11th three-time AP All-American and the first since Patrick Ewing of Georgetown and Wayman Tisdale of Oklahomafrom1982-85. For a complete list see Scoreboard, right.

Culver St. Paul

SOCCER Work halted at WorldCupstadiummarked dy death — Labor officials are halting construction in part of the World Cup stadium where aworker died this weekend, creating a major headache for Brazilian organizers trying to get the venueready for the tournament's opening match in less than three months. FastEngenharia, the construction company in charge of the temporary seats, said in a statement that it received the notification from SaoPaulo's labor secretariat late Monday.Theofficials said the installation of the temporary seats must bestopped until additional safety measures are implemented by constructors. — From wire reports

100 021 0 — 4 12 0 201030x — 6 8 1

Class 2A/tA Special District 2 204 432 0 — 16 17 1 160 000 2 — 9 7 3

BASKETBALL

Today'sGame Stanford(32-3)vs.NorthCarolina(27-9), 6p.m. NOTREOAMEREGIONAL

At Notre Dame,Ind. Regional Championship Monday'sGame NotreDam e88, Baylor 69 LOUISVILLE REGIONAL

At Louisville, Ky. RegionalChampionship Today'sGame Maryland (27-6)vs. Louisville (33-4), 4p.m. National Invitation Tournament All Times PDT

Quarterfinals Monday'sGames Rutgers55,Bowling Green50 UTEP 70,Washington 63 Semifinals Wednesday'sGames Rutgers (26-9) atSouth Florida(23-12),4 p.m. SouthDakotaState(26-9) atUTEP(28-7), 6 p.m.

Men's college

HOCKEY

NCAATournament All TimesPDT FINALFOUR

At ATATStadium Arlington, Texas National Semifinals

Saturday'sGames Uconn(30-8) vs.Florida(36-2), 3:09p.m. Kentucky(28-10) vs.Wisconsin(30-7),5:49 p.m. National Championship Monday,April 7 Semifinalwinners,6:10p.m. National Invitation Tournament All TimesPDT

JayhawkS' WlgglnSOff tOIIIBA —KansasfreshmanAndrew Wiggins madeofficial Monday what he's beentelling folks all along: He's headed to theNBAafter his only season with the Jayhawks. The 6-foot-8 forward, who wasvoted second-team All-America earlier in the day, is expected to go in the top three picks in the Junedraft. Some believe hecould go first overall. Wiggins was the top-rated recruit when hearrived at Kansas, and his brief career was abit of a roller coaster. Hestruggled early in the season, caught fire midway through, and then flamedout when it mattered most in an NCAAtournament loss to Stanford.

Class 4A Nonconference

STANFORDREGIONAL At Stanford, Calif. Regional Championship

At Newyork Semifinals Today'sGames Minnesota(23-13)vs.FloridaState(22-13), 4p.m. Clemson(23-13) vs.SMU(26-9), 6:30p.m. Championship Thursday'sGame Semifinalwinners4 p.m.

Cogegelnsider.com Tournament All TimesPDT Semifinals Today'sGames Yale(22-12)at VMI(22-12),4 p.m. Pacific (18-15)atMurrayState(21-11), 6 p.m. Championship Thursday'sGame

TBD

College Basketball lavitational AH TimesPDT ChampionshipSeries (Best-of-3) (x-it necessary) Monday'sGame Siena 61,FresnoState57, Sienaleadsseries 1-0 Wednesday'sGame FresnoStateat Siena,7p.m. Saturday'sGame x-FresnoStateatSiena,TBA

NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE All TimesPDT

y-Boston Montreal TampaBay Detroit Toronto Ottawa Florida Buffalo

EasternConference Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA

75 52 17 6 110 241 158 7 6 43 26 7 93 199 189 7 5 41 25 9 9 1 223 201 75 35 26 14 84 202 213 7 6 36 32 8 80 220 239 75 32 29 14 78 218 250 7 6 27 41 8 6 2 182 250 7 4 20 45 9 49 142 222

Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA x-Pittsburgh 75 48 22 5 101 232 185 N .Y.Rangers 76 42 30 4 8 8 205 183 P hiladelphia 74 39 27 8 8 6 213 210 C olumbus 74 38 30 6 8 2 208 200 Washington 75 34 28 13 81 217 226 NewJersey 75 32 28 15 79 184 195 Carolina 75 3 2 3 2 11 75187 210 N.Y.lslanders 74 29 35 10 68 206 247 WesternConference Central Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA x-St. Louis 74 50 17 7 107 240 168 x-Colorado 74 47 21 6 100 227 202 x-Chicago 76 42 19 15 99 248 200 Minnesota 76 39 26 11 89 189 191 Dallas 74 36 27 11 83 214 212 Nashville 76 33 32 11 77 190 229 Winnipeg 76 33 33 10 76 212 225 Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA x-Anaheim 75 49 18 8 106 244 191 x-San Jose 76 47 20 9 103 232 184 L os Angeles 76 44 26 6 94 191 162 Phoenix 7 5 3 6 2 7 12 84206 212 Vancouver 76 34 31 11 79 184 206 C algary 75 3 1 3 7 7 6 9 192 223 E dmonton 75 26 40 9 6 1 184 249 NOTE: Two points for a win, onepoint for overtime

loss. x-clinched playoffspot y-clinched division

Monday'sGames

23. Clemson 24. MiamiFl , a. 25. ArizonaSt. 26. UCLA 27. Auburn 28. Indiana 29. Pepperdine 30. Oklahom a

Ottawa 2,Carolina1, SO NewJersey6, Florida3 Anaheim 5, Winnipeg4, OT Minnes ota3,LosAngeles2

Today'sGames NewJerseyatBuffalo, 4 p.m. CalgaryatToronto,4 p.m. Floridaat N.Y.Islanders, 4p.m. Carolinaat Pittsburgh,4 p.m. Dallas atWashington, 4p.m. Coloradoat Columbus,4p.m. MontrealatTampa Bay,4:30 p.m. Philadelphiaat St.Louis, 5p.m. N.Y.RangersatVancouver, 7p.m. WinnipegatPhoenix, 7p.m. Edmonto natSanJose,7: 30p.m.

Professional Family Circle Cup Monday

At The Family Circle TennisCenter Charleslon, S.C.

MLS MAJORLEAGUESOCCER

AH TimesEO T EasternConference W L T P l sGF GA 0

9

0 0 2 1 3 3 1 1

1 1

7 6 6 5 4 3 3

7 5 6 3 4 2 6 4 3 2

2 4 2 4 4 6 7 7 7 6

WesternConference W L T P l sGF GA

FC Dallas RealSaltLake 2 Vancouver Seattle ChivasUSA 1 Colorado Portland Los Angele s 0

3 0 1 10 9 0 2 8 8 2 0 2 8 7 2 2 0 6 5 1 2 5 6 1 1 1 4 5 0 2 2 2 3 1 1 1 1 SanJose 0 2 1 1 4 NOTE: Threepointsfor victory, onepointfor tie.

5 4 3 4 7 4 6 2 6

Saturday'sGames

Seattle FC at Portland, noon NewYorkatMontreal,1 p.m. Philadelphiaat Chicago,2p.m. TorontoFCat Columbus, 3 p.m. Colorado atVancouver, 3:30p.m. NewEnglandatD.C.United,4 p.m. FC Dallaat s Houston, 5p.m. RealSaltLakeat Sporting KansasCity, 5:30p.m.

Purse: 3710,000(Premier) Surface: GreenClay-Outdoor Singles First Round LaurenDavis, UnitedStates,def. DinahPfizenmaier, Germ any,6-1,6-4. LucieSafarova(9), CzechRepublic, def.Johanna Larsson,Sweden,6-2,6-3. Chanelle Scheep ers, South Africa, def. Alison Riske,UnitedStates,4-6,6-2, 6-3. TelianaPereira, Brazil, def.Patricia Mayr-Achleitner, Austria,6-1,7-6(5). MadisonKeys(15), UnitedStates, def. Mirjana Lucic-BaroniCroa , tia, 7-6(0), 7-6(3). VirginieRazzano,France,def. JuliaGoerges,Germany,6-0,5-7,6-2. Yaroslava Shvedo va, Kazakh stan, def. Zheng Saisai,China,6-2,3-6, 7-5. BelindaBencic, Switzerland,def.MariaKirilenko (10), Russia6-1, , 7-5. PetraCetkovska,CzechRepublic, def. VarvaraLepchenko,UnitedStates, 6-1,2-6, 6-0. Ajla Tomljanovic,Croatia, def. StefanieVoegele, Switzerland,6-7(4), 6-1, 7-5. Kiki Bertens,Belgium,def. PaulaOrmaechea, Argentina,7-5,3-6,6-3. Alla Kudryavtseva,Russia, def. ChristinaMcHale, UnitedStates,6-3, 7-5. JanaCepelova, Slovakia,def. MelanieOudin, United States,7-6(2), 6-2. Elina Svitolina,Ukraine,def.Jarmila Gajdosova, Australia,6-1,5-7, 7-6(5). GraceMin, UnitedStates, def. MichegeLarcherde Brito, Portugal6-3, , 1-6, 6-3. Monterrey Monday At Sierra MadreTennis Club Monterrey,Mexico Purse: 3600,000(Intl.) Surlace: Hard-Outdoor Singles Firsl Round NicoleGibbs,UnitedStates, def. AndreaHlavackova, Czech Republic,6-3r 6-4. Jovana Jaksic, Serbia,def. Karin Knapp(7), Italy,

Sunday'sGame Los AngelesatChivasUSA,noon

BASEBALL

6-3, 6-4.

College Pac-12 Standings All Times PDT

Conference Overall Washington 8 -1 20- 5 UCLA 6 -3 16 - 10 Oregon State 6 -3 21- 6 Oregon 6 -3 19- 7 Stanford 3-3 10 - 11 ArizonaState 6 -4 15 - 11 Washington State 3 -3 11 - 14 3-6 13 - 13 USC 3 -3 14 - 11 California Arizona 2 -7 12 - 18 0 -9 9-1 7 Utah Today'sGames OregonStateat Portland, 3p.m. Oregon atGonzaga,6p.m. LongBeachStateatUSC,6p.m. UCLAatLoyolaMarymount,6p.m. Stanford at California, 7p.m. Wednesday'sGame Oregon atGonzaga,3p.m. Friday's Games Arizona at Utah,11 a.m. Stanfordat OregonState, 5:05p.m. UCLAatLongBeachState,6p.m. Californiaat WashingtonState,6 p.m. USCatArizonaState, 6:30p.m. OregonatWashington, 7 p.m. Saturday'sGames Arizona at Utah,11 a.m. Stanford at OregonState,1:35 p.m. LongBeachStateat UCLA,2 p.m. Californiaat WashingtonState,2 p.m. USCatArizonaState, 6:30p.m. OregonatWashington, 7 p.m. Polls Baseball AmericaTop26 DURHAM, N.C. —Thetop25teamsin the Baseball Americapoll with recordsthrough March30 and previousranking(voting bythestaffof Basebal America): Record Pvs 22-5 1 1. FloridaState 24-3 2 2. SouthCarolina 3. Virginia 23-4 3 26-3 4 4. Louisiana-Lafayette 22-4 5 5. CalPoly 21-6 6 6. Oregon State 23-6 7 7. Vanderbilt 22-7 12 8. Texas 20-10 16 9. MississippiState 22-5 17 10. Houston 21-6 14 11. Louisville 21-9 10 12. Rice 19-9 NR 13. Florida 20-5 N R 14. Washington 19-8 NR 15. Alabam a 16. Clemson 17-9 20 19-5 15 17. UCSantaBarbara 18. CalStateFugerton 1 4-10 9 19. Oregon 19-8 11 20. Louisiana State 20-8 8 21. UCLA 16-10 18 22. Kentucky 19-9 19 23. Mississippi 21-8 13 24.lndiana 1 5-10 NR 25. UNLV

28 NR NR 23 20 NR NR NR

TENNIS

SOCCER

Columbus 3 0 SportingKansasCity 2 1 1 Houston 2 1 TorontoFC 2 1 Philadelphia 1 1 NewEngland 1 2 Chicago 0 1 NewYork 0 1 Montreal 0 3 D.C. 0 2

1 7-9 44 1 1 7-12 438 1 5-11 436 1 6-10 434 1 9-10 432 1 5-10 428 2 0-7 42 6 2 0-9 42 4

19-8

NR

Collegiate Baseball Poll TUCSON Ari,z. —TheColegiate Baseball pollwith records throughMarch30.Voting is donebycoaches, sportswritersandsportsinformation directors: Record Pts Prv 1. SouthCarolina 24-3 49 3 2 2. Louisiana-Lafayette 26-3 492 1 3. Virginia 23-4 49 0 4 4. FloridaSt. 22-5 48 8 3 5. Vanderbilt 23-6 48 6 5 21-6 48 3 8 6. Oregon St. 23-4 48 1 9 7. CalPoly 21-6 47 9 11 8. Louisville 2 2-7 47 6 1 5 9. Texas 1 0. MississipSt. pi 20 - 1 0 4 7 3 1 6 2 0-5-1 470 1 9 11. Washington 1 9-9 46 7 N R 12. Florida 1 3. U.C. SantaBarbara 19-5 465 1 0 19-8 46 2 7 14. Oregon 1 9-8 46 0 N R 15. Alabam a 20-8-1 458 6 16. LSU 2 2-5 45 6 1 8 17. Houston 21-9 45 3 14 18. Rice 19. CalSt.Fullerton 1 4 -10 4 5 0 1 3 20. Mississippi 2 1-8 44 7 1 2 1 9-9 44 4 1 7 21. Kentucky 22. Seton Hall 18-5 44 2 22

Agie Kiick,UnitedStates, def.TadejaMajeric, Slovenia,6-4,6-3. KristinaMladenovic, France,def. JohannaKonta, Britain, 6-4,6-2. Karolina Pliskova,CzechRepublic, def. Shahar Peer,lsrael6-3,6-3. , TimeaBabos,Hungary,def.Ximena Hermoso, Mexico,6-1,6-2. KimikoDate-Krumm,Japan, def. Flavia Penneta (1), Italy,7-5,6-2. AyumiMorita,Japan,def. MonicaNiculescu, Romania,6-4, 3-6,7-6(1).

DEALS Transactions BASEBALL

AmericanLeague BOSTONREDSOX— Pl acedOFShaneVictorino on the15-dayDL,retroactive toMarch 30.Recaled OF JackieBradleyJr.fromPawtucket (IL). CLEVEL ANDINDIANS— Agreed to termswith C YanGome s on a six-year contract. Agreedto terms with CGeorgeKottarasandRHPMarkLoweonminor

leaguecontractsandassignedthemto Columbus(IL). LOSANGELESANGELS—Agreed to termswith OF VladimirGuerrero ona one-daycontract in order to retire fromtheteam. MINNESOTA TWINS— PlacedLHP BrianDuensing onpaternityleave.Recalled RH PMichael Tonkin fromRochester (IL). OAKLAND ATHLETICS — Agreed to termswith RHPJoeBlanton ona minor leaguecontract andassigned himto Sacramento (PCL). TORONTOBLUEJAYS— PlacedSSJoseReyeson the15-dayDL.Selected thecontract of INFJonathan DiazfromBuffalo(IL). National League ARIZONADI AMONDBACKS — Announced the retirementof CHenry Blancoandadded himto their coaching staff. NEWYOR KMETS — Agreedto termswith OF BobbyAbreuonaminor leaguecontract.

BASKETB ALL National Basketball Association NBA — Suspended Philadelphia FArnett Moultrie five gamesfor violating the NBA /NBPA Anti-Drug Program. CHARLOTTE BOBCATS— SignedFD.J.Whiteto asecond10-daycontract. CLEVEL ANDCAVALIERS— Signed G-FScoty Hopsonfortheremainderof theseason. FOOTBA LL National Football League HOUSTON TEXANS— ReleasedSDaniealManning. NEW ENGLANDPATRIOTS — Re-signed C Ryan Wendell. NEWYORKGIANTS— SignedCBZackBowman. Re-signedDTMike Patterson. OAKLANDRAIDERS— SignedCBCarlosRogers to a one-year contract. WASHIN GTONREDSKINS—Agreedto termswith SRyanClark. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague BUFFALOSABRES— SignedcoachTedNolantoa

three-yearcontractextension. DALLAS STARS—RecalledDPatrik Nemethfrom Texas(AHL).

EDMON TON OILERS — Agreedto terms with

CMarkArcobegoona one-yearcontract extension. ReassignedGLaurent Brossoit to Bakersfield (ECHL). NASHVILLEPREDATORS — Reassigned F Mark VanGuilderto Milwaukee(AHL). NEWJERSEYDEVILS— RecalledDAdamLarsson from Albany (AHL) under emergencyconditions. NEWYOR KRANGERS—Agreedto termswith F ChrisMcCarthy. OTTAWASENATORS — Recalled FJean-Gabriel Pageau fromBinghamton(AHL) onanemergencybasis. COLLEG E CALIFOR NIA — Announcedthe retirement of men'sbasketball coachMikeMontgomery. HOLYCROSS — Named SteveCuly tight ends coachandEdwynEdwardsassistantsecondarycoach. KANSAS —AnnouncedfreshmanFAndrewWiggins will entertheNBADraft. NEWMEXICO— Signed mens' basketball coach Craig Nealto atwo-yearcontract extensionthrough the 2019-20 season. SOUTHFLORIDA — Named Orlando Antigua men's basketballcoach. ST.SCHOLASTICA—NamedKurt Ramler football coach. SUSQUEHANNA— NamedRoccoSalomonedefensivecoordinator. WASHINGTON STATE— NamedErnieKentmen' s basketballcoach.

NHL ROUNDUP

Devils start fast, bang onfor 6-3 victory over Panthers The Associated Press NEWARK, N.J. — Travis Zajac scored the

Jaromir Jagr had a goal and three assists, was credited with the win. and Ryane Clowe added a goal and two assists. Dmitry Kulikov, Brad Boyes and Brandon

firstof his career-best three goals just 12 sec-

Zajac also had an assist for the Devils, who are

onds in, and the New Jersey Devils held on for a 6-3 victory over the Florida Panthers on Monday night after nearly blowing a three-goal lead. Zajac opened the barrage against Dan Ellis

Pirri scored for Florida, which lost for the sixth

apart in the third period, and Zach Parise connected on a power play for Minnesota, which rallied and snapped Los Angeles' six-game winning streak.

hoping a late-season rally can get them into the time in seven games. Ellis faced 32 shots, inplayoffs. New Jersey has seven games left. cluding 18 in the first period. Ducks 5, Jets 4 : A N A H E IM, C alif. Jacob Josefsonscored the other Devils goal, In other Monday games: Stepharte Robidas scored 16 seconds into overand Cory Schneider stopped all 13 Florida shots Senators 2, Hurricanes 1: OTTAWA, Ontar- time, and Anaheim staged the biggest comehe faced after replacing Martin Brodeur in the io — Ales Hemsky scored the only goal of the back in team history by rallying from four goals and then netted his second midway through second period when New Jersey's lead was cut shootout, artd Ottawa edged Carolina. down to beat Winnipeg. Andrew Cogliano and New Jersey's three-goal first period. He com- to 4-3. Wild 3, Kings 2: LOS ANGELES — Matt Luca Sbisa assisted on Robidas' fifth goal of the pleted his first NHL hat trick at 9:37 of the third. Brodeur stopped only six of nine shots, but Moulson and Mikko Koivu scored 62 seconds season. -


TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

C3

OR LEAGUE BASEBALL Standings

Cuddyr rf 4 0 2 0 JeBakr2b 3 1 0 1 Ryan Braun drew astanding CGnzlzlf 4 1 2 1 Stantonrf 5 2 2 2 ovation in his return from a drug Tlwlz kss 4 0 0 0 McGeh3b 4 0 2 4 Mornealb 4 0 1 0 GJones1b 4 0 0 0 suspension, then was ruled out Rosario c 3 0 1 0 Sltlmch c 4 0 1 0 in the first call overturned under Arenad3b 3 0 0 0 Ozunacf 4 3 3 1 LeMahi2b 3 0 0 0 Hchvrrss 4 2 3 1 baseball's expanded replay system JDLRsp 2 0 0 0 Frnndzp 1 0 0 0 as Milwaukeebeat Atlanta in a WLopezp 0 0 0 0 Oobbsph 1 0 1 0 season opener. Braunwent1 for Barnesph 1 0 0 0 ARamsp 0 0 0 0 Bettisp 0 0 0 0 Handp 0 0 0 0 4 and stole a base inthefourth Totals 3 2 1 6 1 Totals 35 10 1410 inning that helped set up a two-run C olorado 000 00 1 000 — 1 Miami 001 061 03x — 10 double by Aramis Ramirez. OP —Miami 1. LOB—Colorado 5, Miami 7. 28 — Yelich (1), Stanton(1), McG ehee2 (2),Ozun a dez, Atlanta ab r hbi Milwaukeeab r hbi (1). HR —C.Gonzalez(1), Ozuna(1). S—Fernan Hand.SF—Je.Baker. Heywrdrf 3 0 1 0 CGomzcf 4 0 1 0 I P H R ER BBSO BUptoncf 4 0 0 0 Segurass 3 1 0 0 Colorado Fremnlb 4 0 0 0 Braunrf 4 1 1 0 J.Oe La RosaL,0-1 41-3 4 5 5 2 6 CJhnsn3b 4 0 1 0 ArRmr3b 3 0 2 2 2 2-3 6 2 2 0 4 J.Uptonlf 3 0 1 0 Lucroyc 3 0 2 0 W.Lopez Bettis 1 4 3 3 0 1 Uggla2b 4 0 0 0 KDavislf 3 0 0 0 Miami G attisc 4 0 0 0 LSchfrlf 0 0 0 0 Fernandez W,1-0 6 5 1 1 0 9 Smmnsss 3 0 2 0 Overay1b 3 0 0 0 A.Ramos 1 0 0 0 1 0 Tehernp 1 0 0 0 Gennett2b 3 0 2 0 Hand 2 1 0 0 0 1 JSchafrph 1 0 0 0 Gallardp 1 0 0 0 HBP —byJ.DeLaRosa(Je.Baker). T homsp 0 0 0 0 Kintzlrp 0 0 0 0 T—2:58.A—37,116 (37,442). Schlssrp 0 0 0 0 Weeksph 1 0 0 0 WSmithp 0 0 0 0 FrRdrgp 0 0 0 0 Cardinals1, Reds 0 Totals 3 1 0 5 0 Totals 2 82 8 2 Atlanta 0 00 000 000 — 0 CINCINNATI — Yadier Molina's Milwaukee 0 0 0 2 0 0 Bgx— 2 homer broke aseventh-inning tie E—J.Upton (1). OP—Atlanta 2. LOB—Atlanta 7, Milwaukee 4. 28—C.Johnson(1), ArRamirez(1). and drewanother round of loud

ONE AND DONE

All TimesPDT AMERICANLEAGUE

Baltimore Tampa Bay NewYork Boston Toronto

Chicago Cleveland Detroit Kansas City Minnesota Seattle Houston

East Division W L 1 1 0 0 0

0 0 0 1 1

Pct GB 1.000 1.000 .000 '/r .000 1 .000 1

1 1 1 0 0

0 0 0 1 1

Pct GB 1.000 1.000 1.000 .000 1 .000 1

1 0 0 0 0

0 0 1 1 1

1.000 .000 .000 .000 .000

Central Division W L

West Division W L

LosAngeles Oakland Texas

Da

pm GB '/r

1 1 1

Monday'sGames

Detroit 4,KansasCity 3 Philadelphia14,Texas10 Baltimore 2, Boston 1 Chicago WhiteSox5, Minnesota3 Tampa Bay9,Toronto2 Cleve land2,Oakland0 Seattle10,L.A.Angels 3

Today'sGam es N.Y.Yankees(Sabathia0-0) atHouston(Feldman0-0), 4:10 p.m. Toronto(Hutchison0-0) at Tamp a Bay (Cobb0-0), 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia(Burnett 0-0) at Texas(M.Perez 0-0),

5:05 p.m. Cleveland (Kluber0-0) at Oakland(Kazmir 0-0), 7:05 p.m. Seattle (Ram irez 0-0) at L.A.Angels(Wilson 0-0), 7:05 p.m. NATIONALLEAGUE

Miami Philadelphia

Washington Atlanta NewYork Milwaukee Pittsburgh St. Louis Chicago Cincinnati

SanDiego SanFrancisco Los Angeles Colorado Arizona

East Division W L 1 1 1 0 0

0 0 0 1 1

Pct GB 1.000 1.000 1.000 .000 1 .000 1

1 1 1 0 0

0 0 0 1 1

Pct GB 1.000 1.000 1.000 .000 1 .000 1

1 1 2 0 0

0 0 1 1 3

Pct GB 1.000 1.000 .667 .000 1 .000 2

Central Division W L

West Division W L

Monday'sGames

Pittsburgh1, ChicagoCubs0, 10innings Washington 9, N.Y.Mets7,10 innings Philadelphia14,Texas10 Milwaukee 2,Atlanta 0 St. Louis1,Cincinnati0 Miami10,Colorado1 SanFrancisco9, Arizona8

Today'sGames L.A. Dodgers(Greinke 0-0) at SanDiego(Kennedy 0-0), 3:40 p.m. Colorado (Anderson0-0) at Miami(Eovaldi 0-0),4:10 p.m. Philadelphia(Burnett 0-0) at Texas(M.Perez 0-0), 5:05 p.m. Atlanta(Wood0-0) at Milwaukee(Lohse0-0), 5:10 p.m. SanFrancisco(Cain0-0) atArizona(Miley 0-1), 6:40 p.m.

SB — Braun(1), Lucroy(1). S—Teheran, Gagardo.

Gene J.Puskar/The Associated Press

Pittsburgh Pirates' Neil Walker (18) is greeted by teammates after hitting a walk-off solo home run off Chicago Cubs relief pitcher Carlos Villanueva during the tenth inning of Monday's game in Pittsburgh. The Pirates won 1-0 in 10 innings.

cord10th straight opening loss. Nick Swisher added anRBIsingle against Johnson (0-1), whowas then pulled from hisA's debut.

the lineup. TheWhite Sox started the season with a win after losing 99 games last season.

ab r hbi ab r hbi Aokirf 5 0 0 0 Kinsler2b 4 0 0 0 I nfante2b 4 0 0 1 TrHntrrf 4 0 0 0 Hosmerlb 4 0 1 0 Micarr1b 3 0 1 0 BButlerdh 4 0 1 0 VMrtnzdh 4 1 1 1 AGordnlf 3 1 0 0 AJcksncf 4 1 1 0 S .Perezc 4 1 4 1 Avilac 2110 Mostks3b 4 0 0 0 Tycllnspr 0 1 0 0 L.caincf 4 1 1 1 Cstgns3b 4 0 2 0 AEscorss 3 0 0 0 AIGnzlzss 4 0 2 2 ROavislf 3 0 0 0 Totals 3 5 3 7 3 Totals 3 24 8 3 K ansas City 0 0 0 3 0 0 000 — 3 Detroit 0 10 000 201 — 4 Oneoutwhenwinningrunscored. E—TorHunter (1), AI.Gonzalez (1). DP—Detroit 1. LOB —Kansas City 8, Detroit 6. 28—Hosmer (1),

Minnesota Chicago ab r hbi ab r hbi Oakland Cleveland O ozier2b 4 0 0 0 Eatoncf 4 1 2 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi KSuzukc 4 0 2 3 Semien2b 4 0 0 0 M organcf 2 0 0 1 Crispcf 2 0 1 0 Mauerlb 4 0 0 0 Gigaspi3b 3 1 1 0 Swisher1b 4 0 1 1 Dnldsn3b 4 0 2 0 Wlnghlf 4 0 0 0 Abreu1b 4 1 2 1 Kipnis2b 5 0 1 0 Lowriess 4 0 0 0 Colaegdh 4 0 2 0 A.Ounndh 2 0 0 1 S antan3b 4 0 0 0 Mossdh 4 0 0 0 Plouffe3b 4 0 1 0 AGarcirf 4 0 2 0 Brantlylf 4 0 2 0 Cespdslf 4 0 0 0 rciarf 3 1 0 0 OeAzalf 4 2 2 3 R aburndh 4 0 1 0 Jasoc 3010 A A.Hic kscf 3 2 2 0 AIRmrzss 3 0 2 0 Acarerss 3 1 1 0 Reddckrf 4 0 0 0 Flormnss 1 0 0 0 Flowrsc 3 0 0 0 DvMrprf 4 1 1 0 Barton1b 3 0 1 0 EEscor ph-ss 1 0 0 0 YGomsc 3 0 1 0 Sogard2b 1 0 0 0 2 (2), Mi.cabrera(1). 38—AJackson(1), 32 3 7 3 Totals 3 1 5 11 5 S.Perez Puntoph-2b 2 0 0 0 Totals z HR —V.Martinez(1). M innesota 002 0 0 0 010 — 3 AI.Gonzale(1). Totals 33 2 8 2 Totals 3 1 0 5 0 IP H R E R BBSO 022 001 Bgx — 5 C leveland 000 0 0 0 002 — 2 Chicago Kansas Ci i y OP —Minnesota 2, Chicago1. LOB —Minnesota Oakland 0 00 000 000 — 0 6 1-3 5 3 3 1 3 5. 28—Colabego (1), Plouffe(1), A.Hicks Shields LOB —Cleveland 11, Oakland 9. 28—Brantley 2 4, Chicago CrowBS,1-1 2 3- 1 0 0 0 1 (1), Gilaspi(1), e Abreu(1). HR —OeAza2 (2). S(2), Jaso (1). S—Morgan,Crisp. SF—Morgan. W .Oavi s L,0-1 1 1 3 1 1 1 2 0 IP H R E R BBSO Florimon.SF—A.Ounn. 0 1 0 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO G,Hogand Cleveland Detroit Minnesota 7 3 0 0 1 4 Masterson 6 6 3 2 3 2 olascoL,0-1 6 10 5 5 2 4 Verlander Rzepczynski 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 N 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 E.Reed AllenW,1-0 2-3 1 0 0 1 1 Swarzak Alburquerque 1 1 0 0 0 0 Fien 2 -3 1 0 0 0 0 AxfordS,l-l 1 0 0 0 2 2 N athan W ,1-0 1 0 0 0 0 0 Thielbar 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Oakland G.Hogand pitchedto 1baterin the9th. Chicago Gray 6 5 0 0 3 7 Crow. 7 1-3 5 3 3 1 8 WP — Gregerson 1 0 0 0 0 2 SaleWr1-0 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 T—3:01. A—45,068(41,681). Doolittle 1 1 0 0 0 2 BelisarioH,l H,l 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Ji.Johnson L,0-1 1-3 2 2 2 1 0 Veal S,l-l 1 1 0 0 0 1 Abad 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 Lindstrom National Lea ue WP—Nol a sco. HBP— by Ji.Johnson (YGomes).WP— Masterson, T — 2: 3 5. A — 37,4 22 (40, 6 15). Allen. Giants 9,Diamondbacks8 T—3:15. A—36,067(35,067).

Rays 9, Blue Jays2

Orioies 2, RedSox1

PHOENIX —Buster Posey hit a two-run homer off new Arizona closer Addison Reed inthe ninth inning and SanFrancisco rallied from four runs down to beat the Diamondbacks. Itwastheseason opener for SanFrancisco andthe first true homegamefor the Diamondbacks.

BALTIMORE— Nelson Cruz celebrated his Orioles debut by Price tooka shutout into the eighth hitting a tiebreaking home run in Mariners10, Angels 3 inning and Matt Joycedrove in the seventh inning andBaltimore three runs to helpTampaBaybegin beat Jon Lester anddefending ANAHEIM, Calif.— Abraham AlWorld Series champion Boston monte hit a tiebreaking RBIdouble the season with a victory over Toronto. Price (1-0) allowed two before an appreciative sellout in the seventh inning andFelix runs and six hits over 7t/s innings crowd on opening day.Signed asa Hernandez struck out11 in the free agent in February, Cruz lined a San Francisco Ar i zona new-look Seattle Mariners' victory to beat R.A. Dickey in amatchup ab r hbi ab r hbi solo shot into the left-field seats to over the LosAngeles Angels. Jus- of 2012 CyYoungAward winners. Pagan cf 5 1 2 2 Pollock cf 6 0 0 0 The hard-throwing lefty walked put the Orioles ahead. B eltlb 5 3 3 1 Hill2b 4022 tin Smoak hit a three-run homer Sandovl3b 5 0 1 1 Gldschlb 5 1 2 0 one and struckoutsix beforea and Dustin Ackley had athree-run 5 1 2 2 Prado3b 5 1 1 0 crowd of 31,042 atTropicana Field Boston ab r hbi Baltimoreab r hbi Poseyc triple while the Mariners batted P encerf 4 0 0 1 Trumolf 5 2 3 2 — the Rays' ninth consecutive Nava rf-If 5 0 0 0 Markks rf 4 0 0 0 Morself 3 1 1 0 Monterc 4 2 3 1 around in the ninth inning, roaring Pedroia2b 5 0 2 0 Hardyss 4 0 1 0 J.Lopezp 0 0 0 0 Owingsss 5 1 3 0 sellout for a home opener. back from anearly two-run deficit O.Ortizdh 5 0 1 0 A.Jonescf 3 0 2 0 Machip 0 0 0 0 GParrarf 3 1 1 3 Napolilb 2 0 1 0 C.Oavislb 3 0 0 0 Romop 0 0 0 0 McCrthp 3 0 0 0 for their eighth straight victory on Toronto TampaBay Bcrwfrss 4 1 2 0 OPerezp 0 0 0 0 BrdlyJrpr-rf 1 0 0 0 N.cruzlf 2 2 1 1 opening day. ab r hbi ab r hbi Carplf-1b 4 0 1 0 Wietersc 3 0 1 0 Arias2b 3 1 0 0 Zfeglerp 0 0 0 0 American League

ST. PETERSBURG,Fla. — David

boos while he roundedthe bases, IP H R E R BBSO Atlanta leading St. Louis to avictory over TeheranL,0-1 6 7 2 2 1 2 Cincinnati. TheRedswere blanked Thomas 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 Schlosser 12-3 0 0 0 0 1 on opening dayfor the first time Milwaukee since1953, ending the second-lon- GallardoW,1-0 6 4 0 0 2 4 gest streak of scoring at least one KinlzlerH,1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 W.SmithH,l run in season openers in major Fr.Rodriguez S,1-1 1 1 0 0 0 2 league history. ThePhillies went 62 T—2:45. A—45,691(41,900). years without being blanked inan Pirates1, Cubs 0(10 innings) opener from1911-72. Cincinnati ab r hbi ab r hbi Mcrpnt3b 3 0 0 0 BHmltncf 4 0 0 0 Wong 2b 3 0 1 0 Phillips 2b 2 0 1 0 H ollidylf 4 0 0 0 Votto1b 4 0 0 0 C raigrf 4 0 0 0 Brucerf 3 0 0 0 YMolinc 4 1 2 1 Ludwcklf 4 0 0 0 MAdmslb 4 0 20 Frazier3b 3 0 2 0 JhPerltss 4 0 0 0 Cozartss 4 0 0 0 Rosnthlp 0 0 0 0 B.Penac 3 0 0 0 Bourioscf 3 0 0 0 Cuetop 2 0 0 0 Wnwrgp 2 0 0 0 Heiseyph 1 0 0 0 R oinsnph 1 0 0 0 MParrp 0 0 0 0 Neshekp 0 0 0 0 Ondrskp 0 0 0 0 Siegristp 0 0 0 0 Berndnph 1 0 0 0 CMrtnzp 0 0 0 0 Kozmass 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 2 1 5 1 Totals 3 10 3 0 S t. Louis 000 0 0 0 1 00 — 1 C incinnati 000 0 0 0 000 — 0

PITTSBURGH — Neil Walker homered off Carlos Villanueva leading off the 10th inning, and Pittsburgh benefited from an overturned call to beat Chicago. Walker's first career game-ending homer easily cleared theClemente Wall while his teammates rushed onto the field in celebration.

Nationals 9, Mets 7 (10 innings)

Marte(1).HR —N.Walker(1). SB—Bonifacio(1). SLake,Castilo.

NEW YORK — Anthony Rendon hit

Chicago Samardziia 7 5 0 0 Strop 1 0 0 0 1-3 0 0 0 Grimm Russell 2-3 0 0 0 VillanuevaL,0-1 0 1 1 1 Pittsburgh Liriano 6 4 0 0 Watson 1 0 0 0 Melancon 1 1 0 0 Grilli 1 0 0 0 Morris W,1-0 1 1 0 0 Villanueva pitched to1batter in the10th. T—3:16. A—39,833(38,362).

St. Louis

Chicago

Pittsburgh ab r hbi ab r hbi B onifaccf-2b 5 0 4 0 Martelf 3 0 1 0 L akeIf 4 0 1 0 Sniderrf 3 0 0 0 Villanv p 0 0 0 0 Mcctch cf 3 0 1 0 Scastro ss 3 0 0 0 PAlvrz 3b 4 0 0 0 E—Bourios(1), Wong(1), Ma.Adams(1). OP—St. Rizzolb 4 0 0 0 RMartnc 4 0 1 0 3 0 0 0 NWalkr2b 4 1 1 1 Louis l. LOB —St. Louis 6, Cincinnati 9.28—Ma.Ad- Olt3b Value nph-3b0 0 0 0 Ishikawlb 3 0 2 0 ams(1).HR—Y.Molina(1). SB—Frazier (1). IP H R E R BBSO Castilloc 2 0 0 0 Mercerss 3 0 0 0 Schrhltrf 4 0 1 0 Lirianop 2 0 0 0 St. Louis WainwrightW,1-0 7 3 0 0 4 9 Barney2b 2 0 0 0 Watsonp 0 0 0 0 Neshek 0 0 0 0 1 0 Sweenyph-cf 1 0 0 0 Melncnp 0 0 0 0 SiegristH,1 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Smrdzip 3 0 0 0 JHrrsnph 1 0 0 0 0000 C.MartinezH,1 2- 3 0 0 0 0 1 S tropp 0 0 0 0 Grillip RosenthalS,l-l 1 0 0 0 0 2 Grimmp 0 0 0 0 Morrisp 0 0 0 0 Russeg p 0 0 0 0 Cincinnati CuetoL,0-1 7 3 1 1 1 8 Kalishph-If 1 0 0 0 2-3 1 0 0 1 0 Totals 32 0 6 0 Totals 3 0 1 6 1 M.Parra 000 000 000 0 — 0 11-3 1 0 0 0 1 Chicago Ondrusek Pittsburgh 000 000 000 1 — 1 Neshek pitchedto1 batterin the8th. No outswhenwinning runscored. WP — Wainwright. E—Ishikawa (1). DP—Chicago 3, Pittsburgh 1. T—2:56.A—43,134 (42,319). LOB —Chicago 8, Pittsburgh5. 2B—Bonifacio (1),

a three-run homer in the10th inning and drove in acareer-high four runs, twice rallying Washington against NewYork's suspect bullpen for an opening-day victory. Denard Span hit a tying doublewith two outs in the ninth off closer Bobby Parnell, and lanDesmondput the Nationals in front for the first time with a sacrifice fly in the10th.

IP H

R E R BBSO

2 0 1 0 0

3 1 1 1 0

3 10 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1

Interlea ue

Washington New york ab r hbi ab r hbi Phiiiies14, Rangers10 Spancf 4 0 1 2 EYong2b-If 4 0 0 1 Zmrmn3b 5 0 1 0 Lagarscf 4 3 2 1 ARLINGTON,Texas— Jimmy Barrettp 0 0 0 0 OWrght3b 5 2 3 2 Reyes ss 1 0 0 0 DeJessIf 3 0 0 0 Sizemrcf 4 1 2 1 OYongdh 3 0 0 0 J.Perezlf 1 0 0 0 Pnngtnph 1 0 1 0 Blevinsp 0 0 0 0 Grndrsrf 5 0 0 0 Rollins hit a grand slamand Goins ss 3 0 0 0 Guyer pr-If 0 1 0 0 Seattle Los Angeles Bogartsss 3 0 1 0 Flahrty3b 3 0 0 0 Bmgrnp 0 0 0 0 Cgmntrp 0 0 0 0 W erthrf 5 1 1 0 ABrwnlf 4 1 1 3 Mecarrlf 4 0 1 0 Myersrf 5 2 3 2 ab r hbi ab r hbi pinch-hitter John Mayberry Jr. Przynsc 4 0 1 0 Schoop2b 3 0 1 0 Blancoph 1 0 0 1 A.Reedp 0 0 0 0 WRamsc 3 0 0 0 Pa r n e l l p 0 0 0 0 Bautistrf 4 0 1 0 Zobrist2b 2 2 0 0 Almont cf 5 0 2 1 Calhon rf 4 1 1 0 Mdlrks3b 3 0 0 0 Petitp 0 0 0 0 Echavzph 1 0 0 0 L oatonc 2 1 1 0 Familip 0 0 0 0 had a two-run double that put Encrnc1b 4 0 0 0 Longori3b 4 1 2 1 B Migerss 5 1 1 0 Troutcf 4 1 2 2 Totals 3 6 1 9 1 Totals 2 82 6 1 Adrianzph-2b2 1 1 1 H arperlf 4 0 1 0 Reckerc 0 0 0 0 Navarrdh 4 0 1 0 Loneylb 3 0 1 1 Philadelphia ahead tostay in awild Cano2b 4 1 2 0 Puiolslb 4 0 1 1 Boston 0 00 100 000 — 1 Totals 38 9 129 Totals 4 2 8 168 Osmndss 4 3 1 1 I.Oavislb 2 0 0 0 Lawrie3b 4 0 0 0 DJnngscf 4 2 2 0 S moak1b 4 3 2 3 JHmltnlf 3 0 1 0 — 2 Baltimore 010 0 0 0 1 0x San Franci s co 001 011 402 — 9 opening victory over Texas. Rasmscf 3 0 0 0 Joycedh 2 1 2 3 Morrsndh 3 1 0 0 Freese3b 4 0 0 0 OP — Boston 2. LOB —Boston 12, Baltimore3. Arizona 0 00 421 001 — 8 LaRoch1b 3 3 1 2 Valvrdp 0 0 0 0 I zturis2b 3 1 2 0 JMolinc 5 0 0 0 Rendon2b-3b5 1 2 4 Quntnll2b 1 0 0 0 Seager3b 3 1 1 1 Ibanezdh 4 0 0 0 2B — N apol i (1), Boga e rts (1). HR — S ize m ore (1), E —Sando val (1), Bel t (1), G. P arra (1). OP — S an Philadelphia Texas Tholec 2 0 1 0 YEscorss 4 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 dArnadc 3 1 0 0 MSndrsrf 3 1 0 1 HKndrc2b 3 0 0 0 N.cruz(1). Francisco 2. LOB —San Francisco 5, Arizona11. Strasrgp ab r hbi ab r hbi Frndsnph 0 0 0 0 Lannanp 0 0 0 0 A ckleylf 4 1 2 3 lannettc 4 0 0 0 Kralzph-c 1 1 1 2 IP H R E R BBBO 28—Pagan (1), B. c raw f o rd (1), Adri a nza(1), Hi l (1), R everecf 6 2 3 3 Choolf 4000 Totals 3 3 2 7 2 Totals 3 29 117 Boston 0 0 0 0 Teiadass 4 0 1 0 Zuninoc 5 1 1 1 Aybarss 4 1 1 0 Goldschmidt(2),Prado(1). HR —Belt(1), Posey(1), McLothph Rollinsss 6 1 1 4 Andrusss 5010 Toronto S torenp 0 0 0 0 Geep 1 0 0 0 0 00 000 020 — 2 Totals 3 6 101110Totals 3 4 3 6 3 LesterL,0-1 7 6 2 2 1 8 Montero(1). SB—Goldschmidt(1). CS —P enni n gt o n Utley2b 6 0 3 1 Fielderlb 5 1 1 0 Clipprdp 0 0 0 0 CTorrsp 0 0 0 0 Bay 1 2 1 0 2 0 03x— 9 Seattle 010 001 206 — 10 Tampa 1 0 0 0 0 1 (1). S —Bumgarner,G.Parra. E—Bautista (1), Jeffress(1). DP —Tampa Bay 1. Tazawa 0 0 0 0 Howardlb 5 1 2 0 ABeltre3b 4 3 2 0 L os Angeles 20 1 000 000 — 3 IP H R E R BBBO E spinosph-2bl 0 0 0 Ricep Baltimore B yrdrf 6 1 2 1 Riosrf 5 3 3 3 —Toronto 5, TampaBay11.28—Myers(1), De. Tillman O udalb 2 0 0 0 E—Seager (1), H.Kendrick (1). LOB —Seattle 8, LOB 1 1 1 4 San Francisco DBrwndh 5 1 1 0 Morlnddh 3 0 0 0 Totals 38 9 9 9 Totals 3 5 7 7 7 —Kratz (1). SB—Loney BrittonW,1-0 2 5 7 Los Angeles6. 28—Almonte (1), Cano(1), Smoak Jennings(1), Joyce(1). HR 1 0 0 0 0 Bumgarner 4 6 4 0 2 3 Washington 3 1 0 Choiceph-dh 2 0 1 0 0 2 0 000 201 4 — 9 Ruizc 3 —Loney,Joyce. 1), ) Seager(1),, Puiols (1). 38—Ackley (), (1), Zunino (1). SF 2-3 0 0 0 2 1 Petit MeekH,1 2 6 3 3 1 2 310 0 00 010 2 — 7 Asche3b 4 4 3 2 Arenciic 4 2 1 0 IP H R E R BBSO MatuszH,1 1). HR —Smoak (1), Trout (1). SB—Morrison(1), 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 Newyork 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 J.Lopez GwynJlf 1 1 0 0 LMartncf 4 1 2 2 LOB —Washington 6, NewYork3. 2B—Span(1), Toronto J.Hamilton(1). CS—Almonte(1). SF—M.Saunders. Tom.HunterS,l-l 1 1 0 0 0 1 MachiW,1-0 12 - 3 1 0 0 0 3 Rendon(1). HR —LaRoche(1), Rendon(1), Lagares Mayrryph-If 2 0 1 2 JoWilsn2b 3 0 2 3 5 5 6 6 6 4 HBP IP H R E R BBSO DickeyL,0-1 — b y T om .H un t e r (Mi d dl e brooks). Romo S, 1 -1 1 2 1 1 0 1 Adduciph 1 0 1 1 Rogers 2 3 0 0 1 2 T—2:53.AM6,685 (45,971). (1), O.Wright(1), A.srown(1). S—Gee. SF—OesSeattle Arizona mond,E.Young. DMrph2b 0 0 0 0 1 3 3 3 1 0 F.Hernandez W,1-0 6 4 3 2 1 11 Jegress Mccarthy 62-3 6 5 5 1 4 IP H R E R BBSO Totals 4 4 141713 Totals 40 10149 MedinaH,1 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 TampaBay O.Perez 0 3 2 2 0 0 Washington Philadelphia 0 6 0 1 2 4 010 — 14 71-3 6 2 2 1 6 Tigers 4, Royais 3 Furbush H,l 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 PriceW,1-0 ZieglerBS,1-1 1 - 3 1 0 0 1 1 Strasburg 6 5 4 4 2 10 Texas 043 010 200 — 10 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 WilhelmsenH,l 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Jo.Peralta Collmenter 1 0 0 0 0 0 Storen E—Andrus(1). OP —Philadelphia1. LOB —Phila1 0 0 0 0 2 s 1 1 0 0 0 2 DETROIT Farquhar 1 0 0 0 0 1 B.Gome — AlexGonzalezdrove A.Reed L,0-1 1 2 2 2 0 1 Clippard 1 1 1 1 0 1 delphia9,Texas7.28—Utley(1), Asche(1), Mayberry HBP—byJeffress(OeJesus,Joyce). WP—Dickey. Los Angeles O.Perez pi t ched to 3 b att e rs i n the 7t h . in the winning run in his Detroit deB arrett W,1-0 1 0 0 0 0 2 (1), A.Beltre(1), Arencibia(1),Jo.Wilson(1). HR WeaverL,0-1 6 1 - 3 6 4 3 3 6 T—3:04. A—31,042(31,042). WP — Machi. Blevins 1 1 2 2 1 3 Rollins(1),Byrd(1), Asche(1), Rios (1). SB—Revere 2-3 1 0 0 1 0 Salas but, lining a single to left off Greg T—3:25. A—48,541(48,633). New york (1), O.Brown ( 1 ). Kohn 1 0 0 0 1 2 White Sox 5,Twins 3 Holland in the ninth inning that 62-3 4 4 4 2 5 IP H R E R BBSO Gee 2-3 3 5 5 2 2 Jepsen Marlins10, Rockies1 CrTorres 0 0 0 0 1 0 Philadelphia 1-3 1 1 1 1 1 Maronde gave the Tigers anopening-day Rice BS,1-1 0 0 0 0 1 0 Lee W, 1 -0 5 118 8 1 1 HBP—byFHernandez (H.Kendrick). WP —FHernan- CHICAGO —Alejandro De Aza victory over KansasCity. Acquired 11-3 0 0 0 0 3 Diekman 1 1 2 2 1 2 Valverde dez 2. hit two homers, and Jose Abreu MIAMI — Jose Fernandez struck 2-3 2 0 0 1 0 ParnellBS,1-1 1 2 1 1 1 1 Rosenberg T—3:17.A—44,152 (45,483). by Detroit following an injury to B astardo H,l 113 0 0 0 1 0 had two hits in his major league amilia L,0-1 2-3 2 2 2 0 1 shortstop Jose Iglesias, Gonzalez out nine andallowed one run in six FLannan 1-3 1 2 2 1 0 Papelbon 1 0 0 0 0 1 debut to back Chris Saleand lead innings, and Marlins newcomer Indians 2, Athletics 0 made a costly error in Kansas CrTorres pitchedto 1batter inthe7th. Texas Chicagotoaseason-openingvic- City's three-run fourth but made Casey McGeheedrove in four runs Ricepitchedto1 batter inthe7th. Scheppers 4 8 7 7 3 2 PB—d'Arnaud. FigueroaL,0-1 1 2-3 4 4 4 1 1 OAKLAND, Calif.— Nyjer Morgan tory over Minnesota. Salegot the up for that with a tying triple in the with two doubles to help Miami T—3:47.A—42,442 (41,922). 11-3 3 2 2 2 3 Ogando hit a go-aheadsacrifice fly in the win, pitching five-hit ball into the beat Colorado. Togeson 1 1 1 1 0 1 seventh. Hethen singled with men Rosin 1 1 0 0 0 1 ninth inning against newAthletics eighth. Paul Konerko got a loud Brewers 2, Braves 0 on first and third in the ninth. Colorado Miami Diekman pitchedto 2battersin the7th. closer Jim Johnsonand Cleveland ovation before what was likely his ab r hbi ab r hbi WP—Scheppers. sent Oakland to its major league-re- final opener, although hewasn't in KansasCity Detroit B lckmncf 4 0 0 0 Yelichlf 5 2 2 1 MILWAUKEE — Brewers star T—3:36. A—49,031(48,114).

I

Upstart Huskies riding nation-best10-game winning streak By Eric Olson

for a team picked to finish 10th out

The Associated Press

of 11 teams in the preseason coaches'

The hottest college baseball team in the nation resides in the Pacific Northwest. And no, it is not Oregon

State or Oregon. It is the Washington Huskies, who own a 10-gazne winning streak that

is currently the longest in Division I. They are also in first place in the Pac12 Conference,two games ahead of

both the Beavers and the Ducks. A three-game sweep at Southern California gave Washington (20-5-1 overall) a 16-1 record in March. The 8-1 start in the Pac-12 is a shocker

COLLEGEBASEBALL

out homer in the bottom of the ninth Fry's the guy: Oregon State left- to give Florida a 2-1 victory Saturday, poll; the Huskies have not been bet- four home runs and 21 runs batted in, hander Jace Fry flirted with a second and freshman Kirby Snead pitched 4 ter than.500 in the Pac-12 since 2004, and Robert Pehl has 10 doubles. no-hitter in 22 days when he pitched 2-3 scoreless innings Sunday for his when future major-leaguers Tim Nos. 2 and 3 starting pitchers TtJr- seven hitless innings in an 11-0 win first college win. The Gators have Lincecum and Brent Lilkbridge led ler Davis (5-1, 1.38 ERA) and Jeff at Arizona on Sunday. Fry struck out won 13 of 16 and are tied for first in them to a second-place finish. That Brigham (4-0, 1.59) lead the team in fiveand faced three batters overthe the SEC East with South Carolina. also was the last year Washington wins, and the Huskies have gotten minimum. He left after he gave up a Fantastic finishes: South Carolina made the NCAA tournament. solid relief. Troy Rallings and Trev- single to open the eighth inning. Fry (24-3) had back-to-back walkoff wins The toughest part of the schedule or Dunlap have combined for seven (5-1, 1.81 ERA) no-hit Northern Illi- against Tennessee.Jordan Gore hita is still to come, starting with Oregon saves. nois on March 8. one-out homer in the bottom of the in Seattle this weekend. The momentum under fifth-year Gators chomp on Tigers: Florida 14th inning for a 3-2 win Saturday. Washington is second in the Pac-12 coach Lindsay Meggs started in 2013. (19-9) had the most impressive week Grayson Greiner's grand slam highin batting average (.298), with Brian The Huskies were 24-32 overall and of any team, following a 'Dzesday win lighted a six-run ninth to complete Wolfe and Andrew Ely each hitting tied for sixth in the Pac-12 at 15-15, over Florida State with a weekend the Gamecocks'comeback from a .370. Wolfe leads the Huskies with but they won 15 of their last 22 games. sweep of LSU. Justin Shafer hit a two- three-run deficit in a 9-6 win Sunday. A look around the nation:


C4 T H E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 2014

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TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

C5

PREP ROUNDUP

Bulldogs posts first win this season Bulletin staff report Culver resumes league play Friday at over four innings of work and reliever TOLEDO — Cheryl Aldred struck out Western Mennonite in Salem. Alec McDonald kept the Hawks at bay in four and allowed just three hits to lead In other prep events Monday: the fifth and sixth. Cody Shepherd was a Culver to a 13-1 softball victory over Class SOFTBALL triple short of the cycle, going 3 for 3 with 2A/IA Special District 3 rival Toledo on Madras 18, La Pine 5: MADRAS — The a doubleand a solo home run. McDonald Monday, helping the Bulldogs register White Buffaloes, who played as the visi- added three hits and Broc Sanders went 2 their first win of the season. tors, recorded 26 hits in the six-inning for4 and scored a run forMadras, which Jaymie Brown paced the Bulldog of- nonconference victory, nine of which improvedto 3-6overalL fense with two hits and three RBIs in the Nati Harhik/The Associated Press

Connecticut's Moriah Jefferson (4) drives past Texas A&M's

Jordan Jones (24) during the second half of Monday night's regional final in Lincoln, Neb.

UConnmakinganother trip to Einal Eourafter beating TexasARM The Associated Press LINCOLN, Neb. — Music City i s t h e n ex t s t op

WOMEN'S COLLEGE

BASKETBALL: NCAA TOURNAMENT for a C onnecticut women's team that just k eeps

humming along in search of a record ninth national championship. Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis continued her splendid

Spurs beat Pacers,cruise to 18th straight victory The Associated Press

the nation can't say they've made it once to the Final

I NDIANAPOLIS — S a n A ntonio is s teamrolling it s

Four or having the opporand UConn advanced to the tunity to play for a national women's Final Four for the championship. For me to seventh straight year with a have the opportunity to play 69-54 victory against Texas for a national championship. A&M on Monday night. For me to have the opportu"It's not easy to beat any- nity four times, and this bebody at this time of the year ing my senior year, I'm very because everybody is play- excited." ing their best basketball," Courtney W a l ke r led UConn coach Geno Auriem- Texas AkM (27-9) with 14 ma said. "We beat a pretty points. Courtney Williams good team today,and I' m had 13 and Jordan Jones 12. proud of my team. I thought Mosqueda-Lewis t u r ned we were really, really good in another great perforwhen we needed to be really, mance and was named the really good." regional's most outstanding The d efending n a t ion- player. al champion Huskies (38Also on Monday: 0) won their 44th straight Notre Dame 88, Baylor 69: game. Their semifinal op- SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Jewponent Sunday in Nashville ell Loyd scored 30 points

way into the playoffs. Indiana can't even figure out what's wrong. And a game that might have been billed as an NBA Finals preview just a week or two ago demonstrated just how wide the disparity is now.

will be either Stanford or North Carolina.

S tefanie Dolson, w h o made her 150th career start to tie the NCAA record, had

and unbeaten Notre Dame advance to the Final Four

for a fourth straight season. Natalie Achonwa added 19 points and 15 rebounds for

14 points and 10 rebounds the top-seeded Irish (36-0), and blocked a career-high who will face either Louiseight shots. Bria Hartley had ville or Maryland in the na14 points, Breanna Stewart tional semifinals on Sunday added 13 and Moriah Jeffer- night in Nashville.

C ulver 15, St. Paul 9: ST. PAUL -

NBA ROUNDUP

son 11. "It feels amazing and is really unexplainable," Dolson said. "A lot of people around

r un t h r ough t h e N C A A tournament with 17 points,

went for extra bases. Keely Brown led

game that only went five innings because Madras on offense, going 5 for 5 with two Adam Knepp earned the Class 2A/1A of the 10-run mercy rule. Marie Schum- doubles and a triple while scoring four Special District 2 victory in relief, strikacher added two hits and two RBIs and runs. Shelby Mauritson also went 3 for ing out eight while allowing just three Shealene Little knocked in two runs her- 4 with a triple. Jasym Reese earned the hits and two runs — both unearned — in self to help Culver (1-0 SD3, 1-9 overall) victory for the Buffs (5-5 overall), striking 5'/s innings of work. The Bulldogs (1-0 end a nine-game losing skid. out 10 while holding the Hawks to just two SD2, 3-2 overall) pounded out 17 hits "Great pitching and great defense," hits. against the Buckaroos and scored in Bulldog assistant coach Curt Dix said BASEBALL all but two innings. Knepp went 3 for 3 about Culver's first victory. "Everyone Madras 6, La Pine 4: MADRAS — The with a pair of RBIs and three stolen basplayed really solid defense." White Buffaloes scored three runs in the es, Colton Tanner added a double and a Dix pointed out the infield play of third bottom of the fifth inning to break a 3-3 home run,and Joe Daugherty turned in baseman GabbyMoore and Brown' glove tie and secure the nonconference victory. a 3-for-5performance that included a in left field. Starter Ethan Short allowed just one run double and a triple.

T ony Parker

deficit to beat Washington, preventing the Wizards from clinching their first playoff berth since 2008.

Hawks 103, 76ers 95: ATLANTA

first winning streak in nearly

s c ored 2 2

three months.

points, Boris Diaw added 14 and the Spurs broke the fran-

Clippers 114, Timber wolves 104: MINNEAPOLIS — Darren Collison had 28 points and

chise record with their 18th

consecutive victory, 103-77 over the Pacers on Monday night. "Great streak right now, this was a good win for us tonight,"

seven assists, and Los Angeles didn't miss a beat with Blake

Griffin out with a back injury against Minnesota. Bulls 94, Celtics 80: CHICAGO — Mike Dunleavy had

Tim Duncan said. "To contin-

ue the streak, all that is good. We'll worry about a couple of things, staying healthy, finishing the season strong and hopefully going into the play-

22 points to lead five Bulls in

offs with the confidence we're

Boston. Pistons 116, Bucks 111: AUBURN HILLS, Mich. — Greg Monroe had 28 points and 14

double figures and Chicago broke open a close game with 13 straight points at the start

of the fourth quarter to beat

playing with now." It seems nothing can derail

the Spurs (58-16) right now. On a night Duncan went 3 of

rebounds and Detroit ended a three-game skid with a victory

10 from the field and Manu Gi-

nobili managed only six points and two assists in 16 minutes,

over Milwaukee.

San Antonio's Big Three add-

NEW ORLEANS — DeMarcus Cousins had 35 points and

ing the franchise record on the trip to the NCAA tourney in

Kent's final year. During 13 seasons at Oregon, his alma mater,

Continued from C1 "When WSU is having success, Beasley Coliseum is Kent took the Ducks to five one of the best environments in the West," Kent said in a

N CAA t o u r naments, i n cluding two trips to the Elite

release from the school. "The Eight. He is the winningest students are so passionate, I coach in Oregon history, gosaw 5,000 of them out there ing 235-173 during his time ready to go during warm- there. ups, one of the few places Under Kent, the Ducks I've ever witnessed that. were fast and exciting. He When you've seen that arena was able to recruit some of full and the program was at the top players in the country its best and nowyou have the to Eugene, including Luke opportunity to lead that pro- Jackson, Aaron B rooks, gram and you understand L uke Ridnour an d M a l i k the potential that exists, that

18th anniversary of the only previous 17-game winning

Kings 102, Pelicans 97:

This was not just another

trait he would want in his next coach.

T urned out

that M o os

understands the situation he is inheriting. Kent replaces Ken Bone, who was fired on March 18 after five seasons during which the Cougars were unable to match the success they had under his predecessor, Tony Bennett. Bone was

sought more than just counsel from Kent during the hiring process.

80-86 at Washington State and just 29-61 in the Pac-12,

that he can win championships in our conference. To-

never making the NCAA

gether we saw tremendous

tournament. But while the record was

success at his alma mater and I have every reason to

glaring, the empty seats in

expect to see the same at mine."

the arena stood out even more to Moos. The Cougars

"I am excited that Ernie

will be the leader of our men's basketball program," Moos said in a statement. "I

have witnessed firsthand his many talents. He has proven

Washington State did pur-

averaged fewer than 3,000 sue Boise State coach Leon fans per game at home this Rice, a Cougar alum. Rice past season as apathy over- eventually decided over the took the program. Kent's job weekend to remain at Boise will be to re-engage those State after agreeing to a new fans who have given up on contract with th e Broncos the Cougars. that increased his salary to Moos saw firsthand at Or- $596,573 for the 2015 season egon that Kent could create

the kind of buzz and excitement he wants for the Cougars. Moos hired Kent in 1997 to take over the Duck program aftersix seasons at Saint Mary's that included a

The result: San A n tonio handed the Pacers their worst home loss of the season and

with increases in the future. It was unclear what Wash-

ington State was offering as a salary, but the buyout

on the final two years of Bone's contract paid him $1.7 million.

Heat 93, Raptors 83: MI-

14 rebounds, and Sacramento snapped a three-game skid by beating New Orleans. Knicks 92, Jazz 83: SALT LAKE CITY — Carmelo Anthony scored 34 points on 11-

AMI — LeBron James scored

of-19 shooting, and New York 32 points, Chris Bosh added pulled away from Utah to stay tip-off, the Spurs blunt-speak- dropped them p ercentage 18 and Miami moved into the one game back of the final ing coach, Gregg Popovich, points behind Miami for the top spot in the Eastern Con- Eastern Conference playoff told reporters that sometimes Eastern Conference's top ference with a victory over berth. when a team wins a lot, it just seed. Toronto. Grizzlies 94, Nuggets 92: "I think he'll be happy if we needs to get "slapped." Bobcats 100, Wizards 94: DENVER — Zach Randolph Popovich's players followed lose anytime soon," Parker CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Kem- had 20points and 11 rebounds, a different track — taking con- said of Popovich. "I'm pretty ba Walker and Al Jefferson Mike Conley added 19 points trol early, fending off every sure because he's going to rest each had a d ouble-double and Memphis kept pace in challenge along the way and like half of the team." and Charlotte rallied from the playoff race with a victory wrapping it up late. Also on Monday: an l l - p oint, f o urth-quarter over Denver. win. About 75 m inutes before

Hairston. When a nnounc-

at a press conference on the "Ernie has proven during Washington State campus on Wednesday. The hiring our time together at Oregon may not bring the headlines that he can do all the things Washington State got when I'm talking about," Moos said Moos hired Mike Leach as on March 18. his football coach, but Kent

center Tiago Splitter in the second half of Monday night's game in Indianapolis. The Spurs defeated the Pacers103-77.

streak in Spurs' history.

NBA SCOREBOARD

is very special to me." ing Bone's firing earlier this Kent agreed to a five-year month, Moos was asked contract to leave behind his about his former coach at current job as a n a n alyst Oregon and he cited Kent's for th e P a c-12 Networks ability to produce a winner and re-enter the coaching in a place like Eugene as a ranks. He will be introduced

Pa u l Mi l l s ap

that denied Philadelphia its

ed one more line to its already Michael Conroy/The Associated Press impressive resume by break- Indiana Pacers center lan Mahinmi, top, fouls San Antonio Spurs

Kent

scored 28 points and Lou Williams added 22 off the bench, rallying Atlanta to a victory

Standings All Times PDT

EasternConference y-Miami

y-Ittdiana

x-TorItnto x-Chicago Brooklyn Washington Charlotte Atlanta NewYork Cleveland Detroit Boston Orlando Philadelphia Milwaukee

Pct GB .699 .693

W L 58 16 54 19 53 22 49 23 48 27 45 28 44 30 44 30 44 30 36 37 32 42 32 42 26 48 25 48 23 52

Pct GB .784

WesternConference

x-SanAntonio x-Oklahoma City x-L.A. Clippers Houston Portland Golden State Dallas Memphis Phoenix Minnesota NewOrleans Denver

Sacrame nto L.A. Lakers Utah

W L 51 22 52 23 42 32 42 32 39 33 38 36 36 38 32 41 32 43 30 45 21 47 23 5t 21 53 16 58 14 60

x-clinched playoffspot y-clittcheddivision

Monday'sGames

SanAntottio t03, Indiana77 Charlotte100,Washington94 Miami93,Toronto83 Detroit 116,Milwattkee111 Atlanta103, Philadelphia95 Chicago 94, Boston80

L.A. clippers04, Minnesota104 Sacramento102,NewOrleans97 Memphis94,Denver 92 NewYork92,Utah83 Today'sGames HoustonatBrooklyn,5 p.m. GoldenStateatDalas, 5:30p.m. PortlandatL.A.Lakers, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday'sGames Clevelandat0rlando,4p.m. Detroit atIndiana,4p.m. Bostonat Washington, 4p.m. Charlotteat Philadelphia,4 p.m.

.568 9'/t .568 9t/t

BrooklynatNewYork, 4p.m. HoustonatToronto, 4p.m. Milwaukee atMiami,4;30 p.m. ChicagoatAtlanta, 4:30p.m. Memphisat Minnesota,5 p.m. GoldenStateatSanAntonio,5:30 p.m. NewOrleansat Denver,6p.m. L.A, Clippers at Phoenix, 7p.m. LA. Lakers atSacramento, 7p.m.

.542 0'/t .514 13'/r

Summaries

,486 15i/t

Mottda y' sGames

.438 I9 .427 20 .400 22 .365 24'/t .30 28'/r ,284 30'/t .216 35'/t .189 37tr't

740 31/2 7p7 51/2

.681 8

.640 10'/t .616 12'/t

.595 14 .595 I4 .595 t4 .493 21'/t .432 26 .432 26

Grizzlies 94, Nuggets 92 MEMPHIS(94) Prince0-41-21, Z.Rartdolph8-154-8 20, Gassl 6-191-313, Conle9-15 y 0-019, Lee6-12 4-619, Calathes 4-7 0-09, Davis1-11-13, M.Miler1-20-0 2, Kottfos2-72-3 6, Allen1-3 0-0 2 Totals 38-85 13-23 94.

DENYER I92) Q.Miller 1-20-0 3, Faried6-14 5-917, Mozgov 9-15 5-723,Lawson3-9 2-4 8, Foye6-13 0-0 13, Arthur2-5 0-05, Fournier2-30-0 5, Brooks4-80-0 tO, Vesely3-42-48. Totals36-7314-2492. Memphis 25 22 28 19 — 94 Denver 16 29 23 24 — 92

Knicks 92, Jazz83 NEWYORK(92)

Smith 5-140 013,Anthonyu-t9 8 834, Chandler 6-73-815,FeltotI5-81-212, Shttmpert1-50-0 .342 32'/r 2, Hardawa Jr. y 3-93-410, Prigioni0-30-00, Aldrich .307 35Y2 2-4 2-2 6,Tyl erO-t 0-0 0,Brown0-0 0-00. Totals 33-7017-24 92. .351 32

UTAH(83)

Jefferson5-9 0-011, Wiliams2-5 0-0 5, Favors 6-14 1-313,Burke2-80-05, Hayward 5-145-818, Kanter5-112-212,Bttrks7-12t-217, Garrett0-80-0 0, Clark0-30 00,Gobert1-I 0-02, Evans0 00-00. Totals 33-859-1583. New York 21 27 31 13 — 92 utatt 27 22 20 14 — 83

Kings102, Pelicans 97 SACRAME NTO(102) Gay7-187-8 22, R.E vanst-t 1-2 3, Cousins1318 9-1235,McCallum9-193-522, McLemore 5-0 3-4 14, Outlaw1-60-0 2, Wiliams1-2 0-02, Cunrti ngham1-30-02,Thompson0-20-00,Acy0-00-0 0. Totals 38-8023-31102. NEw ORLE ANSI97) Amittu 1-12-2 4, Davis5-1312-14 22, Stiemsma t-t 2-34, Roberts4-120-0 9,TEvans7-15 t-215, Miller 3-40-0 6, AIinca0-3 0-00, Rivers2-5 2-46,

Morrow9-131-1 23, Withey4-4 0-0 8, Babbitt 0-2 002, vasquez60 23 tT,Hayes00000, De colo 1-30-02, Fields0-00-00. Totals 35-705-10 83. 0-00. Totals 36-7320-2697. Sacramento 29 2 4 27 22 — 102 MIAMI (93) New0rleans 22 3 321 21 — 97 James11-209-11 32, Haslemt-3 0-0 2, Bosh 8-162-318, Chalmers 4-81-1 12,Douglas2-40-0 5, Lewis1-40-02, Cole0-1 1-21, Jones2-52-28, Bulls 94, Celtics 80 Andersen 5 53-313. Totals 34-6618-2293. Toronto 23 28 14 18 — 83 BOSTON (80) Miami 24 30 20 19 — 93 Green 4-13 0-0 9, Bass7-104-418, Httmphries 5-71-211, Bayless 6-142-2 18, Bradley0-5t-t 1, Sitllittger 1-60-02, Johnson1-73-45, Piessey4-8 Bobcats100, Wizards 94 0-29,0l ynyk3-60-07,BabbO-10-00.Totals317711-15 80. WASHINGTO NI94) CHICAGO (94) Ariza490011,Booker25004,Gortat37006, Dunleavy7-125-522, Boozer7-122-216, Noah Wall 4-162-310,Beal8-122-320, Gooden5-12 2-2 9-191-1 19,Hinrich0-61-2 I, Butler 8-132-2 I8, 12, Webster 5-72-214, Harrington4-51-311, Miler Aitgttstin1-9 2-2 4,Gibson6-9 2-214, Sttell 0-00-0 2 50 04,Seraphin1-10 02.Totals387991394. 0,Mohammed0-00-00.Totals38-8015-1694. CHARLOTTE (100) Boston 24 26 20 10 — 80 Kidd-Gilchrist0-53-43, McRoberts 1-20-02, JefChicago 25 23 23 23 — 94 ferson8-193-3 19,Walker6-229-1021, Henderson 3 73 49, Zeller447815,6iyombo2 2004, Neal 2-2 9, Ridrtotir 0-2 0-0 0,Douglas-Roberts7-9 Clippers114, Timberwolves104 3-6 2-318. Totals34-78 29-34100. Washington 20 40 20 14 — 94 L.A. CLIPPERS (114) 25 19 26 30 — 100 Barnes 7142219, Dudley6-102216,Jordan4-6 Charlotle 3-811,Paul6-168-822, Collison9-178-828, Tuikoglu2-50-06,Green3-90-06,BullockI-50-03, Hollins Spurs 103, Pacers77 001-21, Davi0 s022z Totals 38 822632114. MINNESOTA (104) SAN ANTO NIO(103) Brewer 4-8 0-09, Love8-212-320, Pekovic 0-3 Leonard5-91-2 13, Duncan3-10 3-49, Splitter 0-0 0, Rttbio 1-6 0-0 3, Martin 4-142-2 12, Dieng 2-5 5-6 9,Parker10-I8 2-2 22,Green2-5 0-0 5, 4-4 6-6 14,Barea2-t0 0-0 4,Cunningham4-8 0-0 Diaw5-82-2 14, Ginobili 2-62-26, Mills 3-52-210, 8, Bitdinger5-81-1 t2,Hum mel4-80-011, Muham- Belirtelli2-7 2-2 7,Daye0-2 0-0 0,Ayres2-2 2-36, mad5-61-211. Totals 41-9612-14104. Joseph 1-30-02 Totals 37-8021-25103. L.A. Clippers 26 2 8 34 26 — 114 INOIANA (77) Minnesota 22 29 15 38 — 104 George5-135-816, West2-63-4 7, Hibbert5-13 5-615,G.HIII3-60-07, Stephenson6-130-015, Turner 0 20 00,Scolat-60 02, Mahittmi t-t 0 02, Sloan Pistons 116, Bucks111 1-62-24, Butler2-32-27, Allen0-02-22, Copeland 000 00,SHill00000.Totals2669192477. MILWAUKEE (111) 25 23 2 1 34 — 103 Middleton6-160-0 14,Adrien 7-132-216, Pa- Satt Antottio 15 20 24 18 — 77 chulia 6-130-012, Knight7-2111-1425, Sessions Indiana 5-109-0 20,Antetokounmpo4-64-514, Henson3-8 1-2 7,Udoh1-1I-23. Totals 39-88 28-36111. Hawks103, 76ers 95

DETROIT (116)

Smith 0-19 2-326,Monroe12-2t 4-628, Drummond 5-90-010, Jennings7-171-320, Singler5-10 2-2 14,Stuckey2-50-1 4,Jerebko0-40-0 0, Caldwell-Pope1-40-0 2, Bynum3-66-6 12, Vilantteva 0-20-00. Totals46-9715-21116. Milwaukee 30 31 21 29 — 111 Detroit 34 18 29 35 — 116

Heat 93, Raptors 83 TORONTO (83) Ross1-6 0-0 2, Johnson2-3 0-24, Valanciunas 7-90-014,Lowry4-0 2-311,DeR ozan8-140-1 16, Patterson1-40-0 2, Novak4-61-1 13,Salmons1-3

PHILAOELPHIA (95) Thompson 2-30-1 5, Young7-104-423, Sims3-8 2-3 8, Carter-Wiliams7-14 2-2 16,Anderson 8-16 0-019, Wroten 3-8 0-06, Varnado2-3 t-r 5, E.Williams 3-83-310, Ware0-50-0 0, Davies1-2 0-03. Totals 36-7712-2095. ATLANTA I103) Carroll 4-90-09, Milsap9-159-1328, Antic1-8 0-02, Teague 4-0 3-312,Korver 3-104-5 u, L.williams 7-126 622,Brand2 50-04, Scott2 62 36, Schroder 25 004, Mttscala1-200 2, Mack1-1 00

3. Totals 36-8424-30103. Philadelphia 31 2 2 20 22 — 95 Atlanta 18 25 32 28 — 103


C6 T H E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 2014

Ducks

fense, which will be needed to help and DeForest Buckner. fill the void without the fiery Aliotti Continued from C1 The nation will learn a lot about coaching the outside linebacker/deThe coaching staff went through the Ducks' defensive line on Sept. 6 fensive end position group. a quality-control process during when Michigan State visits Autzen The Ducks return senior Tony the winter to i dentify areas in Stadium. Washington, who led the team with 7 t/z sacks and 12 tackles for loss last which the program can improve 4. Mariota's go-to guy after an 11-2 season. season. Chinander is also familiar "Obviously we need to do some When the Civil War was on the with potential starter Tyson Colethings better up front offensively brink of a historic upset, Mario- man and eager to develop younger and we need to do some things bet- ta looked to Josh Huff to save the players like Torrodney Prevot. ter up front defensively," Helfrich day for the Ducks. Bralon Addison noted. "There's going to be some certainly has the skill and swagger 8. Who DAT? roles to fill at receiver. There's go- to take the baton from Huff and Oregon's rushing attack, which ing to be some roles defensively in emerge as a clutch receiver. During led the Pac-12 again last season, a lot of places." an explosive sophomore season he is in great shape with the return Here are 10 n oteworthy sto- finished with 890 yards receiving of Byron Marshall and Thomas rylines entering Oregon's spring and seven touchdowns. Tyner, who combined for 1,749 practices, which conclude with the Steady starter Keanon L owe yards and 23 touchdowns in 2013. annual spring game on May 3: also returns this falL Another faThe Ducks will have to replace miliar face returns to the fold in De'AnthonyThomas, the dynamic 1. The franchise quaderback Dwayne Stanford. The 6-foot-5, running back who averaged 135.3 There are coaches in import- 197-pound redshirt sophomore will all-purposeyards per game last ant new roles and plenty of key be a tantalizing target for Mariota season before taking his talents to position battles to m onitor, but

after sitting out last season to re-

the return of quarterback Marcus cover from a knee injury. Mariota makes Oregon one of the The Ducks are loaded with qualfavorites to participate in the first ity players at tight end with PhaCollege Football Playoff. raoh Brown, Johnny Mundt and Mariota completed 63.5 percent Evan Baylis all getting meaningful of his passes for 3,665 yards, 31 experience last season. touchdowns and four interceptions last season as a third-year sopho- 5. Help for Ifo island more. He also ran for 715 yards and Typically, losing three outstandnine touchdowns. ing starters in the secondarywould If not for a torn knee ligament be a major concern for a team, sustained against UCLA on Oct.

26, Mariota would have remained on the short list for the Heisman Trophy and may have led the Ducks to a fifth consecutive BCS bowlappearance. Instead, Oregon finished 2-2 for the month of November as Mariota gritted through the injury. After the

especially in the Pac-12. The fact that the lone returning starter is

strength at Oregon. Secondary coach John Neal, considered one of the best in the

of greatness as a true freshman. Incoming freshman Royce Freeman is a bigger back who could help move the chains in short-yardage situations and punch the ball across the goal line in the red zone.

Thomas' all-around versatility will be missed.

9.justforkicks Oregon announced last week that punter Dylan Ausherman, who redshirted last season after trans-

ferring into the program from the College of the Sequoias, has left the

an Jackson and Avery Patterson,

as well as cornerback Terrance the roster — Ian Wheeler. Mitchell, who left his final year of Offensive coordinator Scott Frost

Don Pellum, Oregon's longtime with Erick Dargan in position to fill linebackers coach, replaces the re- Patterson's shoes. tired Nick Aliotti as defensive coordinator, and it will be interesting to

6. In case of emergency

the Ducks with one true punter on does not plan to punt often with

team's best option at quarterback

doing his best to solve the Stan- on that fateful Thursday night. ford problem. Oregon was pushed It is time for reserve co-pilots around at the point of attack last Jake Rodriguesand JeffLockie, season against the Cardinal and now redshirt sophomores entering again during the loss at Arizona. their third spring in the program, The primary defensive scheme to prove tothe coaches they can will remain a 3-4. Pellum, who must lead the Ducks to victory in the fall. replace experienced and productive After a redshirt season, Damion players on the defensive line and Hobbs will also be in the mix for in the secondary, planned to visit the No. 2 quarterback spot. The peers at other colleges and in the returnees will have a head start on NFL seeking new wrinkles to add incoming freshman Morgan Mato Oregon's philosophy this spring. halak, who will be eyeing the starting gig in 2015 after serving as an

3. Push it real good

Pellum acknowledged that Oregon's defensive line will have to start pushing the pile the other way in order to beat Stanford, which has won back-to-back Pac-12 championships after knocking the Ducks off the national championship path. The task will not be easy with

understudy to Mariota this year.

7. New sack attack Oregon'splayers were excited

Powell

Ducks' 30-7 victory against Texas.

10. Protecting the blind side Oregon returns all five starters

on the offensive line, including all-America center Hroniss Grasu, but left tackle Tyler Johnstone will

not participate in spring practices while continuing to recover from a torn knee ligament sustained

during the Alamo Bowl. Andre Yruretagoyena and Matt Pierson will get the first crack at

filling in on the first-team offense in Johnstone's absence. This spring will also be an opportunity for junior-college transfer Haniteli Lousi to challenge incumbent Hamani Stevens at left guard. last year as a true freshmen. Now

his highly touted classmatesDoug Brenner, Elijah George, Jake Pisarcik and Evan Voeller — will

have their opportunity to play after redshirting.

He remembers how former Cou-

served for four years as an assistant

corporate grounds maintenance into

coach at Seattle U. About a month after he was let go from the coaching

the team's conditioning routine. " 'All right, fill your gloves with staff, the Powells were on the move. "We had to get out. It was just too rocks,' " Powell recalls Spurgeon ordering his players. "We had to fill up expensive," Powell says of living in our gloves with just handfuls of rocks. the Seattle area. "My parents had a Two glovefuls of rocks, that was our place that we knew we could get into conditioning. We did that for four eventually. We've got family down years, and I was still picking rocks off here, we've got some people we know that we can lean on a little bit, kind

even dose — to what I was playing on of go through the job search and that then." Powellhas been away from Moun-

kind of thing."

tain View for more than 20 years now. He played baseball at NCAA Division-III Linfield College in McMinnville for four years and followed that with another 15 years of coaching in the college ranks, mixing in a few summers on the coaching staff of the

calls from Summit coach Alan Em-

Bend Elks summer collegiate team.

Riley and Cavanaugh will get to evalspringdepth chart. Sean Harlow (6-foot-4, 288 pounds) will get time at guard and tackle and Gavin Andrews (6-5, 340) will step into

gars coach Sid Spurgeon would in-

that field. This field is waybetter — not

Continued from C1 The Beavers are loaded at tight end

place-kicking duties as a t r ue freshman, will look to build on a

Powell — along with his wife, Jen, and their daughters Morgan, 8, and Cailyn, 5 — relocated to Central Oregon from Washington, where Powell

Continued from C1

Beavers

uate transfer Bobby Keenan, who is penciled in as the starter at left tackle on the

Right guard Cameron Hunt was nander, a former intern and gradu- an important part of the rotation

staff after he spent last year working for Kelly with the Philadelphia the graduation of T aylor H a r t, Eagles. Wade Keliikipi and Ricky Heimuli. Chinander, 34, will bring some However, there are some emerging youthful enthusiasm to the de-

Amanda Cowan / Corvallis GazetteTimes

Matt W ogan, wh o e v entuall y beat out M aldonado for t h e

when Helfrich added Erik C h i-

ate assistant in the program, to the

Merritt Truax Indoor Center in Corvaliis.

duties when called upon.

see if Pellum can build on Aliotti's Even though Mariota could remarkable run during this golden barely walk leading up to the loss solid performance in the Alamo era. at Stanford last season, the injured Bowl when he made three field Pellum said he will stress dis- star was still deemed to be the goals and three extra points in the cipline and f undamentals while

morning at

chance to show their skills. End Scott Crichton is gone from the

Last fall, Powell received phone bree andfrom Joe Dominiak, who was preparing to enter his first season as the Mountain View coach.

Both were interested in his services as an assistant coach or, as Hood notes, potentially a subvarsity coach with the Cougars. At the time, Powdid not pique his interest. He contin-

ued applying for college jobs and exreturned to his high school alma plored the possibility of becoming a mater to become the head baseball big league scout. coach. And honestly, he says, it is reBut in January, Powell received anally odd. Not in a bad way, mind you, other call from Dominiak, who told but strange nonetheless. him hehad accepted a coaching job "I was talking to my brothers (he with a small college in North Dakota. has two younger brothers, both also Soon after that conversation, MounMountain View graduates), just tell- tain View a t hletic director Dave ing them how weird it was walking Hood got ahold of Powell. Talks with through the halls," says Powell, who the high school then ensued, leading serves as an education assistant at to an education assistant position for the high school, providing help to stu- Powell starting in early February. dents with learning disabilities. Hood, who had been given short "Some of the stuff from practic- notice to find a new varsity basees I remember, just being out on the ball coach, considers himself lucky field," adds Powell, whose father, to have landed the former Cougar Clyde Powell, was the first football standout. "We just feel really fortunate that coach at Mountain View. "Driving by the football stadium is weird a little things worked out like they have," bit. I spent so much time in the lock- Hood says. "We're the luckiest proer room as a kid growing up. Coming gram around, given our situation. Evout to daily doubles and those kinds erybody talks about Bend High baseof things. It's a little different. Neat, ball, Summit had a recent (state playthough." off) run. But I can't think of a better

Steven Nelson holds down the left

side, and safeties 7yrequek Zimmerman and Ryan Murphy both return. One question at linebacker for the

Beavers is Joel Skotte. A graduate of Bend's Mountain View High School, Skotte opened last season as OSU's

starting middle linebacker as a sophomore. He was replaced in the starting bout of mononucleosis set him back at lineup by the fourth week, and his playthe start oflast season. ing time was reduced further followGrant Bays and Roman Sapolu ing toe and neck injuries. He finished should get plenty of workin the interior. the season with 23 tackles in 11 games Getting the line situation sorted out played and underwent surgery on his is a big step toward developing a strong neckinthe offseason. Skotte's prognosis running game. is still uncertain. The Beavers want more balance to Still, the Beavers appear to be loaded their offense and want to allow quarter- with experience at linebacker. back Sean Mannionmore comfortinthe D.J. Alexander returns on the outside, pocketbyrunningtheball effectively. and Jabral Johnson moves inside along Oregon State struggled in losses to with Rommel Mageo to make room for Stanford, USC and Arizona State last the return of Michael Doctor. season, in part because of a lack of ofDoctor has been granted a fifth year fensive balance. of eligibility after missing most of the OSU rantheball for231 yards in a36- season with an ankle injury. "I think Michaelwillbe poised tohave 35 lossatOr egon and for 195 in a 38-23 win against Boise State in the Hawaii a great year," Riley said. "He's already Bowl. proven tobe one of ourbestplayers. He's "The last two games of the season aperfectoutside'backerfortheBeavers were a better picture of who we want to with his speed and ability to make plays. be," Riley said. I think he will be very, very hungry for "Those were two good-looking foot- a good year and I think he'll have one." ball games offensively. That is a way The Beavers' annual spring game is better picture of our ideal look." set for May 3. Their 2014 season openStorm Woods and Terron Ward both er is Aug. 30 at home against Portland the right tackle spot he held before a

return atrunningback, butexpect Chris

GAME OF THEWEEK With the score tied at 8-8 in the bottom of the seventh inning on Wednesday,Cody Shepherd smacked atwo-out, walk-off grand slam to sendMadras to a 12-8 win over La Pine at the White

Buffalo Spring Classic baseball tournament. TheBuffs blew a7-1 lead late in the game,but Shepherd belted his clutch home runto salvage the victory. ATHLETE OFTHEWEEK In her first-ever heptathlon, Summit junior Miranda Brown racked up 3,819points to claim top honors at the SweetHomeDecathlon/Heptathlon on Fridayand Saturday. During the meet, Brown logged four first-place finishes out of seven events to defeat overall runner-Up Michaela Miller of Sisters by 225 points.

But this season, after being let go ell says, coaching high school ball by Division-I Seattle University last summer, the 38-year-old Powell has

Brown and Damien Haskins to get a

fit into that top five."

season, and 7I/ner showed flashes

his decision to return to finish his degree and the business of getting the Duck football program back in

2. The defensive Don

tice Monday

still have to prove he can handle the

Marshall rushed for more than 1,000 yards as the steady starter last

business, has groomed candidates program. With the graduation of to replace graduated safeties Bri- Alejandro Maldonado, that leaves

eligibility on the table for a shot at the NFL. Dior Mathis and Troy Hill are the next men up at cornerback,

takes a snap during prac-

Mariota and a loaded lineup back. Wheeler, a redshirt freshman, will

the NFL draft.

all-American Ifo Ekpre-Olomu still makes cornerback a position of

Sean Mannion, center,

defensive line, but Miami transfer Jalen with Connor Hamlett (40 catches for Grimble (6-2, 300) will be available to 364 yards and five touchdowns), Caleb play at tackle. Smith (25-343-4), Kellen Clute (19-159-2) Grimble beefs up the depth at a spot and Tyler Perry (7-58). where the Beavers also return Siale Riley and offensive line coach Mike Hautau and Edwin Delva. Cavanaugh will be taking a long look at Sophomore Noke Tago and junior the situation up front. Brandon Bennett-Jackson provide The Beavers lost starting left tackie depth. "He's big, he's explosive and very Michael Philipp and guards Josh Andrews and Grant Enger. strong," Riley said of Grimble. "He's got "We're losing three starters on the of- those physical attributes to play in the fensiveline," Rileysaid."We needto find middle. He was very disruptive on the out who can play in the Pac-12 and then scout team against our first-string line. get that line put together. That will be a I thought he was really good, hard to big issue." block." To make matters even more difficult, Dylan Wynn returns at right end, the Beavers will be without starting while Riley said he was encouraged center Isaac Seumalo and guard/center by the speed of Titus Failauga and the Josh Mitchell for the spring as they reha- late-season play of Jaswha James, who bilitate injuries. are at the top of the depth chart on the "You'd like to start developing the left side. chemistry with the starting five as soon Rashaad Reynolds is now preparing as you can," Riley said. "Because of for ashot at the NFL, but the Beavers are competition reasons and because of the deep inthe defensivebackfield. injuries, we're not going to be close to Larry Scott and Dashon Hunt will that during spring ball. We just have to compete for Reynolds' old spot at right develop players and find out who might cornerback.

season, the humble star announced

the national title hunt.

Quarterback

stars up front in A rik A r mstead

STAT OF THEWEEK Three. At the 28-teamSalt River Classic baseball tournament in Scottsdale, Ariz., on Saturday, Sisters not only booked three victories but secured the tourney championship for the second straIght season andthethird time in the past four years. Justin Harrer's10 strikeouts in five innings pitched combined with Ryan Funk's three RBls helpedSisters defeat North Rim (Ariz.) 13-4 in the title game.

person to rebuild the Mountain View

baseball program than Casey Powell. "We have found a passionate, phenomenal teacher of the game," Hood

same way." When Powell was in high school, and even into his first two years at

Linfield, he planned to become a high school history teacher and coach. But, as he points out, things change. After finishing up his collegiate playing career — he was the Northwest Conference player of the year as a second baseman for Linfield in 1996 — Powell returned to Linfield as

an assistant coach. He immediately fell in love with coaching the college game. "I really didn't (think he would coach high school ball)," Clyde Pow-

State.

situation.") All that matters is the here and now, and that after 21 years, Powellcan once again wear the red and

black of Mountain View High — and it comes with a bit of relief, considering he coached at Division-III Whit-

man College in Walla Walla, Wash., from 2003 to 2009.

"Whitman is blue and gold, and that was kind of hard for me, actually," Powell says through laughter, referring to the colors of intracity

archrival Bend High. "I just remember putting on some of that dark blue and that gold stuff, and it's like, 'Man,

ell recalls. "I remember talking to

this feels so wrong to me right now.'" Casey about that his senior year in Clyde Powell agrees: "It's better college. He was just adamant that he than blue and gold." wanted to try the college level first." After only a few weeks at the But Casey Powell has now come Mountain View baseball helm, Cafull circle, back to Mountain View. sey Powell senses the similarities "I knew he was missing baseball," between collegiate and high school Clyde Powell says. "I wasn't sur- coaching. "It's just the skill level's different," prised by it. I was a little surprised how fast it happened. But I also think Powell says. "The D-I college kid, with the passion he has for the game he pretty much knows how to play and the understanding he has for the catch. There's still some flaws, maygame andthe knowledge he has to be, in some of his mechanics ... but impart on these kids, he can teach the college kids still have to learn them how to play at a winning level." some things. They're still working ev"It's special for me, for my family," ery day and doing those little things." Casey says. "Talking to some of my Powell sits across the clubhouse buddies that still live in town that I

from me, no more than 15 feet away. I

played with and talking to my broth- wonder how much smaller all of this ers, we laugh about it sometimes be- must seem to him after spending 20cause it's weird. It's just so different." plus years at the collegiate level, esPowell sees familiar faces in the pecially considering the clubhouse's classrooms — teachers who have modest size for a facility shared by 36 been on the Mountain View staff Mountain View ballplayers. "The only thing that's smaller is since he was in school — as well as on the ball field. His current center the players," Powell says. "Some of fielder, for example, is Devin Haney, the freshmen, it's just kind of like, whose uncle is a former youth base- 'Was I that small? Did I walk that ball teammate of Powell's. gangly sometimes?' I'm sure I did. Casey Powell is not exactly sure We all did. Throwing (batting pracwhat the future holds, if he will retice), I'll throw a few by a kid and it's main in Bend or move back to the col- like, 'Oh yeah, I'm throwing to high lege ranks. ("I'm going to do what's school kids. I've got to shorten up a best for my girls," he says. "They're little bit here.'

continues. "Casey's organized, the kids are fired up, he's teaching the right things. He's just a character what's most important to me." Any guy. He's everything you'd expect move from his current position, he of a Powell, because his dad was the says, "would have to be a pretty ideal

"But," he adds, "it's still baseball." — Reporter: 541-383-0307, glucas®bendbulletin.com.


C7 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 2014

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EURO +.0024 1.3775+

StoryStocks Stocks ended broadly higher on Monday as traders closed out their first-quarter positions. Fund managers typically sell their worst-performing stocks at quarter's end and buy more of their best-performing stocks in an effort to make their portfolios look better in quarterly statements. The market also digested fresh commentary from Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen, who said she thinks the struggling U.S. job market will continue to need the help of low interest rates for some time. Investors have grown anxious that the Fed might raise short-term rates starting in mid-2015. Nine of the 10 sectors in the Standard 8 Poor's 500 index posted gains. Lions Gate Ent.

NorthwestStocks

16

-.04

Dow jones industrials

Close: 1,872.34 Change: 14.72 (0.8%)

Failing grades?

SILVER+

GOLD ~ $1 28340

10-YR T-NOTE 2.72% •

LGF

Close:$26.73L1.53 or 6.1% J.P. Morgan suggested investors ignore a sell-off in the studio's shares this year, calling the steep decline a buying opportunity. $35

Edwards Lifesciences

Ew

Close:$74.17L3.01 or 4.2% A randomized trial shows that the health technology company's heart valve worked better than one from rival Medtronic. $75 70

30

65

J F 52-week range $$$.$$~

M $37.81

60

J F 52-week range

$$$.$2~

Vol.:4.3m (2.0x avg.) P E: 15.6 Vol.:4.1m (2.9x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$3.69 b Yie l d : 0.7% Mkt. Cap: $7.95 b

Am. EagleEnergy

A MZG

Close:$7.15%0.15 or 2.1% In addition to an earlier land acquisition in North Dakota, the energy investor announced the purchase of another 7,700 acres.

M $ $$ 11

P E: 21.6 Yield: ...

Novartis NVS Close:$85.02 A3.43 or 4.2% The pharmaceutical company will cut research into a chronic heart failure treatment because the drug has proven so effecttve. $90

Alaska Air Group A LK 50.31 ~ 93.95 93. 3 1 + 2.58+2.8 L L L + 27. 2 +4 2 .9 62 7 1 3 1 . 00f Avista Corp AVA 25.55 — 0 30.34 30 .65 + . 7 1 +2.4 L L L +8.7 +13. 8 80 4 16 1. 2 7f Source: Faotaet Bank of America BAC 11. 23 t -t 18.0 3 17 . 20 + . 2 2 +1.3 L L L + 10. 5 +3 9 .7 59471 17 0 .20f $9 Barrett Business BB S I 4 8 .08 ~ 102. 2 0 5 9 .57 +1.58 +2.7 L V V - 35.8 +11.3 86 25 0. 7 2 85 Boeing Co BA 8 3 .80 ~ 144. 5 7 12 5.49 +1.03+0.8 L w v -8.1 +47.5 2884 21 2.92f Auto sales 80 Cascade Bancorp CA C B 4 . 3 1 ty 6.95 5.6 0 +. 0 8 + 1 .4 L L L +7.1 -18.3 27 5 Investors find out today whether ColumbiaBnkg COLB 1 9.85 tt - 30.36 28.52 +.53 +1.9 L L L +3. 7 + 29.3 150 23 0.48f J F M J F M auto sales rebounded in March Columbia Sportswear COLM 55.58 ~ 88.25 82 . 6 5 + . 8 8 +1.1 L W L +5.0 +43 . 0 91 31 1. 1 2f 52-week range 52-week range after a weak start this year. CostcoWholesale COST 103.20 ~ 1 26 .12111.68 +.02 ... W V -6.2 + 6 . 4 2 040 2 5 1 . 24 $$40 ~ $12.00 $67.67 $65.23 Sales were slower than Craft Brew Alliance B R EW 7.13 ~ 18.70 15. 2 7 +. 3 4 +2.3 L W W -7.0 +100.7 6 7 cc Vol.: 365.4k (2.0x avg.) P E: . . Vol.:2.3m (1.2x avg.) P E: .. . F LIR 23.00 ~ 35.66 36.0 0 +. 7 5 $ .2.1 L L L + 19.6 $. 3 6.9 1 329 23 0 . 40f expected in January and February FLIR Systems Mkt. Cap:$126.62m Yield : .. Mkt.Cap:$206.27 b Yield: 3.2% Hewlett Packard HPQ 19 . 07 — 0 33.12 32 .36 + . 3 2 +1.0 L L L + 15.7 +36 .8 8 6 47 1 2 0 . 64f as extremely cold temperatures 6.0 3 15.56 +.01+0.1 L L L + 4. 4 + 23.4 45 dd 0.24 kept many potential customers at Home FederalBncp ID HOME 11.54 ~ 1 Prana Biotechnology PR AN BioFuel Energy BIOF Intel Corp I NTC 20.75 ~ 27.12 25.8 1 +. 1 9 +0 .8 L L V -0.5 +21.5 28665 14 0 .90 home. A J.D. Power and LMC Close: $2.60 V-7.06 or -71.6% Close: $7.30L4.16 or 132.5% Keycorp K EY 9 .29 ~ 14.70 14. 2 4 +. 1 0 +0.7 L L L +6.1 +44 . 2 9 4 32 1 5 0 . 2 2 Automotive forecast calls for The Australian drug developer said Greenlight Capital revealed a 35.5 L +10.4 +34 . 5 3407 15 0 .66 Kroger Co K R 3 1 .52 ~ 45.25 4 3. 6 5 -.30 -0.7 V L March sales to be up modestly its most advanced drug missed the percent state in the one-time alternaLattice Semi LSCC 4.17 — o 8.00 7 . 8 4 + . 2 9 +3.8 L L L +42. 8 +3 8 .4 1 988 c c main goal in a study of patients with tive fuel company and proposed a from a year ago, hitting a seasonLA Pacific L PX 14.51 ~ 21.70 16.8 7 +. 3 1 +1 .9 L V V -8.9 -23.3 171 9 14 Alzheimer's disease. real estate investment. ally adjusted annual pace of 15.8 — o MDU Resources MDU 23 .37 35.10 34 .31 + . 44 +1.3 L L L +12. 3 +3 8 .3 48 9 2 4 0. 7 1 $15 $10 million units. MentorGraphics ME NT 17.06 ~ 2 4.3 1 22.02 +.44+2.0 L L V -8.5 +2 0.6 5 3 7 1 7 0 . 2 0f 10 Microsoft Corp MSFT 2 8.11 — o 40.99 40 .99 + . 6 9 +1 .7 L L L +9.6 +44. 5 45747 15 1 . 1 2 Nike Inc 8 N KE 57.98 ~ 80.26 73.8 6 +. 3 2 +0 .4 L V V -6.1 + 2 6.1 3 126 25 0 . 9 6 NordstromInc J WN 54.33 ~ 63.72 62. 4 5 +. 6 2 +1.0 L L L +1.1 +14 . 2 1 1 76 1 7 1 .32f F M F M J J Nwst Nat Gas N WN 39.96 ~ 45.89 44.0 1 +. 3 3 +0 .8 L L L + 2.8 +3.9 141 20 1.8 4 52-week range 52-week range PaccarInc PCAR 47.12 — o 68.81 67 .44 + . 88 +1.3 L L L +14.0 +3 5 .0 2 552 20 0 .80a $$. $ 2 ~ $13.29 $$7$~ $7 $0 Planar Systms PLNR 1.55 ~ 2.93 2.04 +.0 1 + 0 .5 L W W -19.7 +8 . 0 40 dd Vol.:23.6m (9.4x avg.) PE: . . Vol.:18.1m (23.5x avg.) PE: . . . Plum Creek PCL 40.73 o — 54.6 2 42 . 04 + . 40+1.0 L w v -9.6 -16.9 1188 32 1 . 76 Mkt. Cap:$116.61m Yield : .. Mkt. Cap:$39.73 m Yield: ... Prec Castparts PCP 180.06 ~ 274. 9 6 25 2.76 +5.18 +2.1 L V V - 6.1 +30.6 8 0 8 2 2 0 . 1 2 L +13. 4 +4 4 .6 8 21 6 3 0 . 80b Panera Bread Safeway Inc SWY 22.26 ~ 40.25 3 6. 9 4 -.36 -1.0 v w PNRA BlackBerry BBRY $ Schnitzer Steel S CHN 2 3 .07 ~ 33.32 28. 8 5 +. 3 0 +1.1 L L V - 11.7 + 9 . 9 3 2 2 d d 0 . 7 5 v at Close:$176.47L2.47 or 1.4% Close:$8.08V-0.33 or -3.9% Sherwin Wms SHW 162.22 ~ 208. 6 3 19 7.13 +2.44 +1.3 L W L $-7. 4 +1 6 .5 3 9 2 2 7 2 . 20f Wedbush issued an upgrade, saying Analysts are all split on the smartStancorpFncl SFG 40.32 — 0 69.51 66 .80 +1.75 +2.7 L L L +0.8 +54. 7 17 9 13 1. 1 0f the restaurant will beat estimates phone maker, with Credit Suisse and Evercore downgrading, and NeedStarbucksCp SBUX 56.65 ~ 82.50 7 3. 3 8 -.32 -0.4 V L V -6.4 +31.1 3733 3 1 1 . 04 based on very favorable trends for comparable-store sales. ham upgrading. Triquint Semi TQNT 4.72 — O 13.62 13 .39 + . 33 +2.5 L L L + 60.6 + 1 58.1 3509 d d $200 $12 UmpquaHoldings UM PQ 11.45 ~ 1 9.6 5 18.64 +.60+3.3 L L W -2.6 +41.0 1428 20 0.60a US Bancorp USB 31.99 — 0 43.66 42 .86 + . 5 6 +1 .3 L L L + 6.1 +27. 4 6 0 34 1 4 0. 9 2 10 180 WashingtonFedl WA F D 15.79 ~ 2 4.5 3 23.30 +.46+2.0 L L . .. +32.7 2 8 5 1 6 0 . 40 Pickup in construction? Wells Fargo & Co WF C 3 6 .19 — o 49.97 49 .74 + . 4 5 +0.9 L L L +9.6 +36. 5 17371 13 1 . 2 0 60 Economists expect that U.S. Weyerhaeuser W Y 2 6.38 ~ 33.24 29. 3 5 +. 1 7 +0.6 L L W -7.0 -4.3 2294 26 0 . 88 J F M J F M construction spending increased 52-week range 52-week range $1$0.$$ ~ $1$$.77 $$,44~ $ 1$.$$ slightly for the second month in a row in February. DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, trut are not included. tr - Annualrate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. e -Amount declaredor paid in last t2 months. f - Current Vol.:726.6k (1.2x avg.) PE: 2 5.9 Vol.:41.2m (1.5x avg.) P E: 1. 5 rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafter stock split, so regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent Mkt. Cap: $4.65 b Yield: ... Mkt. Cap: $4.25 b Yield: ... Construction spending edged up annual dividend wasomitted or deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend 0.1 percent in January as strength announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding 12months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash SOURCE: Sungard AP in housing helped offset declines value on ex-distritrution date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc —P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last12 months. in nonresidential building and InterestRates NET 1YR government projects. The increase TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO was significantly lower than December's 1.5 percent gain. The 3 -month T-bill . 0 3 .0 4 -0.01 w v w .07 care giant had said in January that © ~ I~AQ+ Commerce Department reports its Shares of Johnson & Johnson climbed further into record territory Washington, D.C.-based Carlyle 6-month T-bill . 0 6 . 06 ... w v w .10 latest construction spending data Monday after the company accepted Group had offered $4.15 billion for 5 2-wk T-bill .11 .11 ... V L .12 today. an offer of about $4 billion for its the business, and that it would talk jja I 2-year T-note . 4 2 .4 5 -0.03 V L L .25 y Vl<R P + eN Construction spending Ortho-Clinical Diagnostics business. to works councils and trade unions $~~ The yield on the 5-year T-note 1.72 1.75 -0.03 w L L .78 percent change, seasonally adjusted 10-year J&J hasaccepted an off erfrom representing its employees before 10-year T-note 2.72 2.72 ... V L V 1.85 Treasury note 1.5% the private equity firm The Carlyle making a decision. 30-year T-bond 3.56 3.55 +0.01 w 3.11 held at 2.72 Group and said the deal for the The Ortho-Clinical business donated blood for HIV, hepatitis C 1.2 percent blood-testing unit should close by serves hospitals, testing laboratoand other serious diseases. It also Monday. Yields NET 1YR mid-year. ries and blood banks. It supplies makes technologyforadvanced 0.9 affect rates on BONDS YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO The New Brunswick, N.J., health equipment and chemicals to screen testing of blood. consumer Barclay s LongT-Bdldx 3.37 3.35+0.02 W L W 2 .81 0.6 loans. Total return * t o-YR* Y TD 5 - Y R JOhnSOn & JOhnSOn (JNJ) Monday's ciose:$96.23 Bond BuyerMuni Idx 4.75 4.74 +0.01 w w w 4. 1 5 0.3 est 8 .0% 17. 2 10. 0 Barcl aysUSAggregate 2.39 2.37 +0.02 W L W 1.85 52-wEEK RANGE P/E ratio" Di v . yield 0.1 PRIME FED Barcl S&P 500 1.0 21.0 7.3 ay s U S Hi gh Yi e l d 5 . 2 6 5 . 2 8 0 . 0 2 W L W 5.67 $80 99 20 : 2.7% 0 RATE FUNDS M oodys AAA Corp Idx 4.31 4.29 +0.02 w w w 3 . 87 0 N D .: J F S *Annualized AP T o t al returns through March 31 "Based on trailing 12 month results Source: FactSet YEST3.25 .13 '13. :'14 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.90 1.90 .. . W L L 1.04 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Source: Factaet Barclays US Corp 3.10 3.07 +0.03 W L W 2. 7 6 1 YRAGO3.25 .13 AmdFocus SelectedMutualFunds

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PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 AmericanFunds BalA m 24.6 6 + .14 +1.5 +15.6 +11.9+16.6 A A A CaplncBuA m 58.77 +.31 +1.9 +11.1 +9.3+14.1 8 A 8 CpWldGrlA m 45.89 +.41 +1.6 +19.2 +10.5+17.3 C 8 D EurPacGrA m 49.37 +.35 +0.6 +17.6 +6.4+15.5 8 8 C FnlnvA m 51. 5 2 +.37+0.4 +21.4 +12.5+19.9 C D C iShEMkts 686348 41.01 +.27 GrthAmA m 43.40 +.37 +0.9 +24.4 +13.7+19.5 8 8 D SiriusXM 659462 3.20 +.05 DFA EmgMktl DFEMX IncAmerA m 21.03 +.12 +2.7 +13.9 +11.0+16.8 8 A A iShJapan 651426 11.33 InvCoAmA m 37.39 +.32 +2.3 +24.0 +13.8+18.8 8 C D BkofAm 594711 17.20 +.22 VALUE B L EN D GR OWTH NewPerspA m37.66 +.25 +0.3 +19.7 +10.9+18.8 8 8 C Facebook 519234 60.24 +.23 WAMutlnvA m39.99 +.30 +1.9 +22.6 +15.0+20.3 8 A 8 Microsoft 457466 40.99 +.69 Oracle 444068 40.91 +1.34 Dodge &Cox Income 13.69 .. . + 2.3 +2 . 4 + 4.7+7.6 A 8 B iShR2K 414538 116.34 +2.05 Intlstk 44.23 +.33 +2.8 +25.3 +8.8+20.5 A A A MktVGold 401535 23.61 -.50 Stock 171.81+1.51 +2.4 +28.8 +16.7+24.1 A A A Fidelity Contra 95.61 + . 67 +0.5 +23.5 +14.2+20.4 C 8 C Gainers GrowCo 122 . 26+1.50+2.6 +30.1 +15.9+24.1 A A A NAME LAST CHG %CHG LowPriStk d 50.46 +.40 +2.0 +24.1 +15.2+24.2 B A B Fideli S artan 500 l dxAdvtg 66.66 +.53 +1.8 +21.8 +14.6+21.1 C 8 B BioFuelEn 7.30 +4.16 +132.5 Energous n 14.75 +4.17 + 39.4 «C FrankTemp-Frankli n IncomeC m 2.52+.01 +4.0 +12.5 +9.4+16.9 A A A HarvAppR 9.07 +1.78 + 2 4.4 $$ IncomeA m 2. 4 9+.01 +4.2 +12.8 +9.7+17.4 A A A Vimicro h 4.97 +.89 + 2 1.8 Oakmark Intl I 26.53 +.14 +0.8 +23.8 +12.3+23.7 A A A Reliv lntl 2.62 +.45 + 2 0.7 ro Oppenheimer RisDivA m 19 . 89 +.19+1.0 +17.0 +12.1+17.1 E D E Atlanticus 2.45 +.40 + 1 9.4 RisDivB m 17 . 79 +.17+0.8 +16.0 +11.1+16.0 E E E Moroingstar OwnershipZone™ NV5 wt 3.15 +.50 + 1 8.9 RisDivC m 17 . 68 +.16+0.8 +16.1 +11.2+16.2 E E E Cleantech 6.41 +.98 + 1 8.0 OeFund target represents weighted SmMidValAm 45.76 +.60 +3.4 +25.2+10.7+21.0 B E E EKodk wtA 17.04 +2.37 + 16.2 average of stock holdings SmMidValBm 38.54 +.50 +3.2 +24.2 +9.8+20.0 B E E OncoMed n 33.65 +4.61 + 15.9 • Represents 75% of fund's stock holdings T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 33.16 + .21 +1.6 +18.5 +13.2+21.3 D C B Losers CATEGORY Diversified Emerging GrowStk 51.9 2 +.41 -1.2 +27.6 +15.5+22.0 A A A NAME L AST C H G %C H G MORNINGSTAR HealthSci 61.2 6+1.18+6.0 +39.4 +27.9+30.1 B A A RATING™ * ** * t y Newlncome 9. 4 3 ... +2 .4 0.0 +3 .9 +6.0 C C C -7.06 -71.6 PranaBio 2.80 Whiting Tr 2.53 -.97 -27.7 ASSETS $3,574 million Vanguard 500Adml 172 .63 +1.36 +1.8 +21.8 +14.6+21.1 C 8 8 -2.36 -16.8 Momenta 11.65 500lnv 1 72. 6 3+1.36 +1.8 +21.7 +14.5+21.0 C 8 8 EXP RATIO Mkts MarmKd 4.02 -.81 -16.8 CapOp 4 8.62 +.77 +5.3 +29.3 +16.6+22.4 A A A MANAGER 0.57% -.45 -13.9 GuanwRcy 2.78 Eqlnc 30.23 +.25 +2.3 +19.6 +16.2+21.7 D A A SINCE Jed Fogdall IntlstkldxAdm 28.03 +.19 +0.8 +12.8 +4.4 NA D E -0.3 RETURNS 3-MO Foreign Markets StratgcEq 31. 3 8 +.48 +4.6 +30.2 +17.2+26.9 A A A YTO -0.3 TgtRe2020 27 . 60+.16 +1.8 +12.0 +8.7+14.9 A A B NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR -1.3 Tgtet2025 16. 0 3 +.10 +1.8 +13.4 +9.3+16.1 8 8 D -19.76 -A5 Paris 4,391.50 3-YR ANNL -2.3 TotBdAdml x 10.69 +1.9 -0.2 +3.7 +4.7 C C E London 6,598.37 -17.21 -.26 5-YR-ANNL +15.0 Totlntl 16.76 +.11 +0.8 +12.7 +4.3+15.4 D E C -31.28 -.33 Frankfurt 9,555.91 TotStlAdm 47 . 4 3+.45 +2.0 +22.7 +14.6+22.1 8 8 A Hong Kong22,151.06 + 85.53 + . 39 TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT TotStldx 4 7.41 +.45 +2.0 +22.5 +14.5+21.9 8 8 A Mexico 40,461.60 +413.40 +1.03 2010-02-28 Milan 21,655.01 +1 56.77 + . 73 USGro 2 8.88 +.22 +0.7 +24.4 +14.8+20.3 8 A C Samsung El e ctronics Co Ltd 2.87 Tokyo 14,827.83 +1 31.80 +.90 Welltn 38.59 +.21 +2.4 +14.4 +11.2+15.9 8 A 8 Stockholm 1,364.97 +18.49 +1.37 Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co Fund Footnotes: tr - Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, or redemption 2.4 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or Sydney 5,403.00 + 26.20 + A 9 Ltd Zurich 8,453.82 +80.59 + . 96 OAO GazpromADR 1.58 redemption fee.Source: Mornirgstar.

DFA Emerging Markets has minimized losses enough over MarhetSummary the last three-year period to earn Most Active a ranking in the top half of the NAME VOL (00s) LAST CHG diversified emerging-markets S&P500ETF 858763 187.01 +1.52 fund category.

FAMILY

Commodities The price of oil declined slightly Monday as markets kept on eye on talks between the U.S. and Russia over the crisis in Ukraine. Among metals, gold and silver fell. Crops were mixed.

Foreign Exchange The U.S. dollar fell against the Euro and the British pound. The ICE dollar index, which measures the strength of the U.S. currency against six currencies, declined.

55Q QD

FUELS

CLOSE PVS. 101.58 101.67 Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) 3.50 3.27 Heating Oil (gal) 2.93 2.96 Natural Gas (mmbtu) 4.37 4.49 UnleadedGas(gal) 2.91 2.94

%CH. %YTD - 0.09 + 3.2 +1.10 +82.9 -0.88 -4.7 - 2.54 + 3.3 - 0.90 + 4 .5

CLOSE PVS. 1283.40 1293.80 19.73 19.77 1418.50 1404.70 3.05 3.06 777.50 774.10

%CH. %YTD - 0.80 + 6 . 8 - 0.19 + 2 . 0 + 0.98 + 3 .5 -0.41 -11.5 + 0.44 + 8 .4

METALS

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

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.46 1.47 - 0.44 + 8 . 4 Coffee (Ib) 1.78 1.81 -1.50 +60.7 Corn (bu) 5.02 4.92 +2.03 +1 9.0 Cotton (Ib) 0.94 0.94 -0.23 +1 0.5 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 335.80 334.40 +0.42 -6.8 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.55 1.51 +2.99 +1 3.6 Soybeans (bu) 14.64 14.37 +1.91 +11.5 Wheat(bu) 6.97 6.96 +0.25 +1 5.2 1YR.

MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.6673 +.0028 +.17% 1.5196 Canadian Dollar 1.1 0 47 -.0008 -.07% 1.0173 USD per Euro 1.3775 +.0024 +.17% 1.2823 JapaneseYen 103.22 + . 4 3 + .42% 9 4 . 22 Mexican Peso 13. 0536 -.0284 -.22% 12.3127 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.4873 -.0139 -.40% 3.6452 Norwegian Krone 5 . 9868 -.0218 -.36% 5.8469 South African Rand 10.5284 -.0602 -.57% 9.2330 Swedish Krona 6.4 7 14 -.0301 -.47% 6.5218 Swiss Franc .8840 -.0028 -.32% . 9487 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.0784 -.0026 -.24% . 9602 Chinese Yuan 6.2169 +.0047 +.08% 6.2155 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7566 -.001 8 -.02% 7.7633 Indian Rupee 60.025 +.130 +.22% 54.290 Singapore Dollar 1.2581 -.0006 -.05% 1.2411 South KoreanWon 1062.28 -4.93 -.46% 1112.57 -.03 -.10% 2 9.85 Taiwan Dollar 30.44


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 2014

BRIEFING ATST is testing 4G LTE inBend Local AT&T customers may have noticed their smartphones tapping the next-generation LTE system the past few days. Turns out the telecommunications giant started testing its 4G LTE service Wednesday, according to company officials. But a company spokesman offered no timetable for the permanent upgrade. In the parlance of mobile devices, experts say 4G, or fourth generation, provides network download speeds faster than the previous, or third, generation. LTE, for long-term evolution, is attached to significant advances in technology over incremental improvements. "Preparing our network to offer 4G LTE in Bend is a direct result of a $350 million investment in our Oregon network during the last three years, and 446 network upgrades in Oregon last year," wrote Andy Colley, AT&T spokesman for the Pacific Northwest, in an email Monday. Those upgradesinclude new cell sites, additional wireless and wired network capacity,and new broadband network connections, he wrote. — Bulletin staff report

BEST OF THE

BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • What's Brewing?Bend Chamber ofGommerce: Speaker Kirk Schueler, "What I learned about the health care business during my three years at St. Charles"; networking starts at 5 p.m.; $15 for members, $20 for nonmembers; 5:30 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive; 541-323-1881 or www. bendchamber.com. • Project Management information meeting: Learn more about gaining these skills and whether you might benefit from certification; registration recommended; free; 5:30-6:30 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270. WEDNESDAY • Digital Liability in a Regulated World, Risks and Solutions:Learn about the growing liability involved with accessing and handling private information; registration required; free; 9-11:30 a.m.;Mt. Bachelor Village Resort Conference Center, 19717 Mount Bachelor Drive, Bend; 541-3895900 or www.westontech.com/seminar. • Business Startup Class: Learn what it takes to run a business, how to reach your customer base, funding options, money needed to get started and legalities involved; registration required; $29; 6-8 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7290. THURSDAY • Managing Diversity in the Workplace: Develop strategies to capitalize on diversity as an asset in your work group; registration required; $95; 8 a.m.-noon; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270. • Beginning Access 2010:Learn to use thisdatabase program to store and automate access to information; registration recommended; $75; 9 a.m.-noon; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visitbendbulletin.com/bizcal

c cameras

EXECUTIVE FILE What:Made ToOrder Woodworks LLC What it does:Makescustom wood products Pictured:Co-owners Brian Nordlund, left, and Mike Lockling Where:1470 N.E.First St., Suite 1200, Bend Employees:Eight Phone:541-382-5814 Wehsite:www.madetoorderwoodworks.com

re Lll

Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

Q •• Whatwas your biggest challenge in getting your business up and running? • Brian Nord• lund: Finding work, finding people that would use us and just getting people to give us a chance.

A

By Rachael Reese The Bulletin

Nordlund had two choices: find another cabinetmaking job or start their own manufacturing business.

spent every dime that we had. I

ture and antiques."

think when we were done and

Lockling said one cabinetmaker will work on a project from

moved in, he and I didn't have $100 bucks left in the bank. "If we failed, we were going to fail hard." The duo started with one job lined up. Now, nearly four years

start to finish, which ensures

quality control. "We don't haveanyfancycomputerized equipment," Lockling said. "We have skilled craftsmen

later, home entertainment centers,

that do the work with traditional

bathroom cabinets and kitchen

wood-working tools." Despite the economy's steady recovery, Lockling said, wood

islands fill Made to Order Wood-

works, as the scents of fresh-cut alder, oak and mahogany perme-

Nordlund: Ideally, in the next five years I'd like to have our company doing probably150 to 200 projects a year, maybe grow a

NHTSA estimates that, on average, 210 fatalities and

15,000injuries eachyear were caused by these back-overs,

and that childrenyounger than 5accountfor31percentofbackover fatalities eachyear. The

new vehicles less than 10,000

agency saidit tookextratime onthe regulationto ensure that

pounds gross vehicle weight, includingpassenger vehicles,

it was flexible and achievable. According to a statement

buses and trucks, to have this

issued Mondaybythe Alliance

technology in place by May

of Automobile Manufacturers,

2018.

automakers currently provide

In 2008, Congress passed a law requiring the Transpor-

rearviewcameras as eithe ra standard or optional feature on two-thirds of the nation's 50

tation Department to issue a

Transportation Department to issue the standard.

fast.

requirements in the near term.

and serious injuries causedby a driver backing over a person, particularly a young child, who cannotbe seenbehind a vehide. The final rule requires all

be, but it's hard to

say with the economy and the building industry.... We're a little bit skeptical of growing too big too

in-vehide displays to meet the

to significantly reduce fatalities

A

company in the next five years? • Mike Lockling: • We know where we want it to

Facing layoffs in 2010, Mike Lockling and Brian

issued a long-awaited final rule Monday requiring vehides to be equipped with what regulators call rear visibility technology. The technologyis expected

federalsafety standard onthe issue by 2011. The rule was delayed several times, spurring a coalition of safety advocates to sue the agency over the delays. A federal appealscourtwas scheduled toheararguments today on whether to order the

Q •• Wheredo you see the

"We'll build a shelf, a huge kitchen, golf shop. There isn't much we won't do. (We'll) fix people's furni-

includingthe size of the image displayed for the driver. According to the safety regulators, automakers will use rearview video systems and

Traffic Safety Administration

i

"We decided starting our busi-

other requirements as well,

New Yorft Times News Service

The National Highway

(

ness would be the best gamble," Nordlund said. "We pretty much

By Cheryl Jensen

The final rule amends the current federal motor vehicle

standard by expandingthe area behind a vehide that must be visible to the driver when the vehide is shifted into reverse. That field of view must include a 10-foot-by-20-foot

top-selling vehides. The new rule satisfies the

mandate of the Cameron Gulbransen Kids Transportation Safety Act of 2007, which was

named for a 2-year-oldboy who was run over and killed by his father, Dr. Greg Gulbransen, in his driveway in 2002. In a statement issued

Monday by Public Citizen, a consumer advocacy group, Gulbransen said: "It's been a long fight, and this rule took too long, but we're thrilled this day has finally come. It's a bittersweet day, because this rule

shouldhave been inplace three zone directlybehind the vehiyears ago at the latest. But this de. The systemused must meet rule will save lives."

little bit. We would

hope eventually we could pick up one more unit (of space) and have 10 to12 employees andoffer benefits that maybe other companies aren't offering.

costs are still about 20 percent

Yellen:Feddetermined to improvejobs picture

ate the air in the shop on Northeast First Street in Bend. To date,

higher than before the recession, but Made to Order Wood-

the company has completed about 475 projects, shipping to customers in 42 states. The business has surpassed

works' prices have not increased work, the price of those projects

By BinyaminAppelbaum

eringa faster retreat from their

Nordlund's expectations. And the

is still recession pricing," he said. "We've got some hurdles to

New Yorft Times News Service

CHICAGO — Janet Yellen,

economic stimulus campaign. Yellen said that even now,

overcome."

theFederalReserve chairwom-

almost five years after the offi-

an, devoted more than an hour

cial end of the Great Recession,

last weektalkingby telephone with three Chicago area residents struggling to find jobs. On Monday, she made their stories the centerpiece of the first public speech in her new job, delivering a strong statement about her concern over

it remains harder for Americans to find jobs than in the midst of a typical downturn.

secrettoM ade to order'ssuccess, he said, is diversity. "Our catch line is no project is too big or too small," he said.

accordingly. "Though we're doing a lot of

— Reporter: 541-617-7818, rrees@bendbuttetn.c i om

3-D printing market set to grow "This is a market with

By Andrea Chang Los Angeles Times

enormous growth potential

After a slow start, 3-D

printingis poised for a huge growth spurt in the next few years. The size of the market,

including3-D printer sales, materials and associated services, reached $2.5 billion worldwide lastyear, according to research firm Canalys. That figure is expected to

grow to $3.8billion this year and soar to $16.2 billion globallyby 2018. Canalys senior analyst Tim Shepherd said falling prices and advances in technology are makingthe printers an increasingly feasible option for

now that the main barriers to

up-take arebeing addressed," Shepherd said. "As it matures, there is clear and substantial

potential across numerous sectors, such as engineering and architecture, aerospace and defense, and me dical (particularly in the fabrication of custom prosthetics), for 3-D printing to have a dramatic impact within five years." When 3-D printers entered

the mainstream consciousness a fewyears ago, they were dismissed as too expensive and impractical. Then they became thought of as enterprise and consumer uses. noveltyitems that couldbe

used at home to print trinkets such as cheap jewelry or toys. Usually about the size of a microwave, the machines "print" three-dimensional

objects by melting material — typicallyplastic but sometimes metal and even

chocolate — and depositingit layer by layer according to a computer-generateddesign. 3-D enthusiasts have long touted the endless possibilities and say that as prices drop, the printers could one dayuproot traditional manufactur-

ing and become as ubiquitous as television sets ortablets. Soon consumers may be able

to print food and clothing and from their homes.

DEEDS Deschutes County • Don P. andJudith E. Deal to Gregory D. Corbin and Margaret M. Frey, Rock Ridge Cabin Sites of Black Butte Ranch, Lot16, $250,000 • David B. Vanloo to Mattie E. Towle andScott Geddes, Shevlin Meadows, Phases 1 and 2, Lot 24, $316,500 • Timothy and Allison Sternberg to Kristin and Ray Coleman, Larkspur Village, Phases 3and4, Lot 96, $256,000 • Jodi S. Emehiser to Alexander M. Di Rienzo, Paulina Peaks, Phase2, Lot 22, $175,000 • Bruce N. Davis, William Services and Dunlap Fine Homes Inc. to Otto F.Rabe, Obsidian Meadows,Lot28, $150,000 • Fannie Mae andFederal

National Mortgage Association to Kristi L. and Aaron J. Demoisy, Sunburst Park, Lot 3, $313,000 • Dan and Tina Hohman to Ashley L. Phelps and Brian E. Hall, Northwest Townsite COS Second Addition to Bend, Lot 2, Block15, $283,500 • Jesse L. and Betty A. Scott, trustees for the JesseL. Scott Trust and the Betty A. Scott Trust, to Michael and Margaret Boll, Fairway Crest Village, Phase1, Lot1, Block3, $228,000 • Joanne Buzunisto Anne B. Christmas, Timber Creek, Lot1, $240,000 • Dorothy B. Smith to Walter B. and Judith S. Christmas, Aspenwood, Lot 5, $199,500

• Leslie Yudin to Kirk Schlemlein, Township 15, Range10, Section 20, $530,000 • Scott J. and Leslie J. Cartwright to Blarne and Barbara C. Holm, First Addition to Bitterbrush Subdivision, Lot 6, Block1, $210,000 • Albert G. and Janice A. Kozeliski to Gary M. and Joyce E. Pickersgill, trustees forthe Pickersgill Family Trust, Pine Canyon, Phase 4, Lot 51, $610,000 • Nicholas A. Di Spaltro to Tuma Enterprises LLC, Marea 2, Lot 40, $275,000 • Keith C. and Cecilia Moore to Leslie Morgan, Northwest Townsite COS Second Addition, Lot 8, Block 28, $360,000 • Karen Hemmingsen and

Henry N. Goldstein to Schnapper Family Limited Partnership, Caldera Springs, Phase1, Lot124, $180,000 • Stephen W. Ruff and Ronald G. Fishman to Patricia Ackley, trustee for the Daveand Patricia Ackley Revocable Trust, Willow Creek at Mountain High, Lot 5, $305,000 • 3J Realty Investment 1 LLC to Donand Diane Saba, trustees for the Saba Trust, Highland, Lot 4 and 5, Block 3, $1,230,000 • David M. O'Keefe to William S. Rocco Jr., Highland Addition, Lot 7, Block 5, $306,014 • PahlischHomeslnc. to Otto K. Uyehara, Bridgesat Shadow Glen, Phase1, Lot 88, $512,525

unemployment, her conviction that the Fed has the power to

For those who are working, wages are rising more slowly than usual.

"There remains no doubt

that the economy and the job market are not back to nor-

mal health," Yellen said. "The

help, and her determination to

recovery still feels like a reces-

do so.

sion to many Americans and it also looks that way in some

"It is my hope," Yellen told a conference hosted by the

economic statistics."

She said the Fed's commitcago, "that the courageous and ment to economic stimulus determined workingpeople remained "strong." I have told you about today, The core of Yellen's speech and millions more, will get the was devoted to a central issue chance they deserve to build confronting Fed officials as better lives." they seek to calibrate their The speech offered a rebutefforts to stimulate the econtal to economists, including omy. Employmentdropped some Fed officials, who see sharply duringthe recession evidence that the central bank and has barely recovered. The is approaching the limits of its unemployment rate has fallen ability to improve labor marbecause it counts only people ket conditions. It also leaned who are looking for work, and against recent indications that a lot of people have given up Fed officials might be considentirely. Federal Reserve Bank of Chi-

Target: Monitoring offer is not enough,experts say By Claudia Buck The Sacramento Bee

It was the databreach that

shook the retail world. When Target Corp. announced in December that110million of

its customers' payment and personal records had been

In its biggest mea culpa, the company has offered Target customers free credit monitoring for a year. But for those who sign up, it's

no guarantee that cybercrooks won't steal your identity and wreak financial havoc in other

breached, the news was unset-

tling — bothbecause Target is

ways, such as using stolen credit/debt card info to siphon

an iconic brand and because

money fromyour accounts.

thebreach was so invasive. According to Minneapo-

"The service Target is giving away only monitors one

lis-based Target, about 40 mil-

of yourthree creditreports,

lion customers' debit and credit card information was exposed. Target has been working to quell anxieties and rebuild theconfidence ofitsshoppers.

which is like locking one of the three doors to your house," said John Ulzheimer, a longtime

identity theft and credit reporting expert.


IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Food, Recipes, D2-3 Home, Garden, D4-5 Martha Stewart, D4 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 2014

O www.bendbulletin.com/athome

GARDEN

This year, cucumbersare

especia ycoo By Liz Douville For The Bulletin

Each year the National Garden Bureau names one edible, one annual and one pe-

rennialasfeatured crops fora year. 2014 is the year of the cucumber, the petunia and the echinacea. Photos by Ryan Brennecke i The Bulletin

John and ArleneWatkins' master bathroomcontains a 4-foot-deep Japanese soaking tub.

Cucumbersare my second favorite summer indulgence — first is tomatoes — so it seemed only natural to read the history fact

sheet the NGB provided on its website. I remember all the excitement when we learnedthat cucumbers were grown by the

Russian cosmonauts aboard Salyut 7. What

HOME

I did learn from the fact sheet was that cu-

cumbers were also grown a mile underground in a nickel mine in Canada, a food project sponsored by the Canadian government. That should be an encouragement to

all who claim they can't grow cukes in Central Oregon. SeeCucumbers/D4

Far East detail By Penny Nakamura eFor The Bulletin hen John and Arlene Watkins decided to build their second home in Bend, they specifically told architect David LiaBraaten from

DesignHaus that they wanted "a modern, contemporary design with Japanese flair," said John Watkins. The Watkinses aren't new to homebuilding and remodeling, having remodeled and added onto their first home in Sunriver. The Watkins family also built a 4,900-square-foot home on a 2.5-acre lot in Bend, but

Courtesy National Garden Bureau

2014 is the year of the cucumber.

as the couple looked toward being empty-nesters, they decided to downsize in Tetherow.

With a half-acre lot, the Watkinses decided they wanted a single-story home that's easy to care for and would be energy efficient by using passive solar heating in the

FOOD

winter.

"This house has slab grade heating, including in the garage," said John. "The passive solar heating warms the concrete slab floors in the winter. It's 45 degrees outside now, and yet it's 70 degrees inside the house now and we haven't turned on our heat in

weeks." SeeModern/D5 Editor's note:The At Home section features a profile of a local home each month. To suggest a home, email athome@bendbulletin.com.

Customcroutons

ready to shine By Jan Roberts-Dominguez For The Bulletin

A croutonby any othername? How about Delightful Bites of Awesomeness'? Toasty Is-

lands of Sublime'? Crunchy Cooks' Surprise? Now obviously, I'm not referring to the overpriced, underflavored commercial

brands. Or the little dry cubes of ho-hum that you encounter at your average salad bar. But custom-made beauties, incorpo-

rating artisan breads and flavorful cheeses, along with a sprinkling of fresh herbs and garlic, and a drizzling of butter or olive oil? Well, they're capable of taking your soups and salads to a whole new level of delicious. And yet, how often do you involve them in your salad and soup construction? SeeCroutons/D2

TODAY'S RECIPES

e II

4%II,©,

®QS Jan's HouseCroutons:Goodforway more than just salad ... although they're really good there, as well,D2

Lilio LF

More recipes with croutons:Almost-a-Reuben Soup with Swiss-on-Rye Croutons, Creamy TomatoSoupwith Brown Butter Garlic Croutons, Spinach Saladwith 5-Minute Egg and ParmesanCroutons, Caesar Salad with Jan's HouseCroutons, D2 Rethinking casseroles:Beet, Greensand Cheddar Crumble, Black BeanChorizo Casserole with Pickled Onions, Indian-Spiced Tomato and EggCasserole, D3

The kitchen has a Wolf commercial oven and range with an all-stainless-steel backsplash

for easy cleaning. The cabinets are beechwood.

Recipe Finder:A cheesespread better than the original,D3


D2 THE BULLETIN• TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 2014

FOOD Croutons

Next week: Desserts for vegans

recommend it, because the re-

jan's House Croutons

sulting croutons will be inher-

Continued from D1

entlymore tender at their center. Makes1 quart of croutons. The trick is to use bread These zesty-garlicky wonders are easy to makeand complement a vast range of salads and soups. They freeze croutons I ever encountered with substantial structure. A fabulously, so when you havethe time, just make up a big batch and toss 'em in the freezer for future hits. Use was at the Carson Peak Inn on light-texturedbreaddoesn'thold these croutons to jazz up atossed greensalad or simple soup. June Lake, south of Mammoth up under salad conditions; it Lake on the east side of the Si- gets too soggy too quiddy. And 1 loaf of a good quality artisan 4 to 6 Ig cloves fresh garlic, ~/4 tsp Tabasco or your favorite erras. My pals and I would end avoid pre-sliced breads because bread, such as ciabatta, minced or pressed hot pepper sauce up there after a full day of hik- most of them are sliced too thin olive, Italian or French 2 tsp Worcestershire sauce ~/4 tsp salt ing the high country. First thing toproduce adecent crouton. ~/2 C (1 stick) butter 1 tsp soy sauce the waiter would do is return Whether or not you trim to the table with a small bowl away the crust is up to you. Cut a portion of the bread into enough1-inch (or slightly smaller) cubes to measure1 quart. Place the cubes of their house croutons — ba- There's a lot of flavor to be had of bread in a largebowl. sically, chunks of sourdough in the crust, but it will brown Melt the butter with the garlic, Worcestershire sauce, soy sauce,Tabascoand salt. Slowly drizzle the melted bread deep-fat fried to the color faster, so you've got to keep an butter over the cubes of bread, tossing the cubes in the bowl so that they all get a dose of the seasoned butter. of aSierra sunrise.Like toss- eye on things. Spread the cubesout evenly on alarge rimmed baking sheet. Bake in a375 degree ovenfor about10 minutes, or ing a chunk of raw meat into The shape of your croutons until richly golden. Removefrom oven and cool. Store unused croutons in a plastic container for several days, or a den full of tiger cubs, those is also up to you. The dassic freeze for up to 3 or 4months. tasty morsels were gone in mo- French crouton is sliced from Variations abound: Sprinkle on a bit of Parmesan cheese ... outstanding! I've used different forms of bread ments. But it was a bottomless a day-old baguette and is used and gotten terrific results, including sourdough English muffins, baguettes, Asiago cheese bread, rye bread and bowl, because those amazing to float on top of a soup or sit roasted garlic bread. The trick is to make sure that whatever bread you usehassubstantial texture. A light-texchunks of bread complemented below a juicy piece of meat. tured bread doesn't hold up under salad conditions; it gets too soggy too quickly. so many elements of our meal, Americansare more used to fromappetizer, to soup, to salad. cube-shaped croutons. Which My basichomemade crou- is fine. Just don't make them tons are not deep-fat fried,of too uniform — keep the edges course. But they are heavily a bit ragged. As for size, I inch dosed with a garlicky, zesty is an average dimension, but butter before they hit the roast smaller is OK too, although if cyde in my oven where they'll you gomuch below '/zinch then achieve that same gorgeous it's easy to overcook them (and blushofaSierra sunrise. I like a little tenderness in the Once you're on board with center, which really shouts out making your own croutons, "homemade!"). you'll suddenly become aware With acache of homemade of all the potential ingredients croutons in the freezer, you'll that can come into play. First find yourself reaching for them of all, consider the vast array to jazz up dishes beyond simple of breads to work with. Each tossed green salads and soups: one, beita ciassic French, sour- Crumblethem overcookedvegdough,English muffi n,ciabat- etables for a toasty finish; incorta, olive or rosemary, is going porate them into stuffings; and to produce a uniquely flavored layer with cheese and eggs for One of the most decadent

and textured crouton. And even

a most extravagantly flavored

though I'm sure that the crouton strata. concept began with one frugal — Jan Roberts-Dominguez cook faced with a whole lot of is a Corvallis food writer, stale bread, it's perfectly legal to cookbook author and artist. use a ftesh loaf. In fact, I highly

Contact: janrd@proaxis.com.

Almost-a-Reuben Soup with Swiss-on-Rye Croutons

r

Makes 6 servings. All the components of a Reubensandwich — from the Swiss cheese and Russian dressing to the sauerkraut and rye bread — in a bowl of soup. I've opted for pastrami over corned beef because it's a little spicier, with a subtle smokiness that works well in the soup. But if you've got some leftover corned beef, don't hesitate to use it instead! 1 med yellow onion, diced

3 to 4 Ig cloves garlic, peeled and minced 2 TBS butter 4 C beef broth 4 C chicken broth 1 TBS Worcestershire sauce 2 C sauerkraut, drained and rinsed

2 C shredded Jarlsberg cheese

-

.

Join OSU Master Gardeners- for

Spring Gardening Seminar Saturday, April 19,2014, 8 a.m. —4:30 p.m. Deschutes County Fair 5 Expo Cen)er, Redmond Event offers 16 classes, featuring: • Vegetable Gardening • Native Plant• Hardscapes • Greenhouse Management plus a Garden Market with plants, books,worm castings, landscape products, silent auction and more Register today: gocomga.com/gardening-news.html or call 541-548-6088 $10 per class (pre-registrationdeadline April 12); $15 on event day <~nslon > 4

0

p

Association

(or 4 "hearts of romaine") Salt and freshly ground black

pepper to taste Caesar Salad Dressing (recipe follows) Jan's House Croutons (see recipe) 1 C freshly shaved(somewhere between coarsely shredded and grated) Parmesancheese Wash the lettuce leaves, dry them thoroughly, then break into 2to 3-inch-long pieces. Placethem in a bowl and cover with damp paper towels and return to therefrigerator. When ready to serve, add the lettuce leaves to a large salad bowl and sprinkle them generously with salt and freshly ground pepper. Toss with most of thedressing. Add the Parmesan and fresh croutons and toss until all the lettuce and croutons are evenly coated, adding more dressing if necessary. Caesar Salad Dressing:Bring a fresh egg to room temperature for about15 minutes, then place it in a small bowl. Pour boiling hot water over the eggandallow it to stand for 90 seconds in the hot water (this is called "coddling"). Drain the water off the egg, thencrackthe egginto a bowl and combine with'/4cup freshsqueezed lemonjuice, 1 tablespoon of minced fresh garlic, 1 tablespoon Dijonmustard,2 teaspoons Worcestershire sauce, several dashes of Tabasco. Whisk until well blended, then whisk 1 to 2 teaspoons of anchovy puree(or1 smashed anchovy fillet) into the mixture. Slowly whisk in s/4 cup extra-virgin olive oil. The dressing may be prepared several hours aheadandrefrigerated (whisk well before using).

~iyW Spinach Salad with 5-Minute Egg and Parmesan Croutons

i

Makes 6 servings. When the diner cuts into the ivory white egg, its rich yellow yolk gently flows out over the crunchy croutons and salad. Heavenly! 6eggs, at roomtemperature Alandra Johnson/The Bulletin

Croutons spice upeven the simplest of salads.

Creamy Tomato Soup with Brown Butter Garlic Croutons Makes 4 to 6servings. 1 yellow onion, chopped

5 cloves finely minced fresh garlic

2 TBS olive oil 2 TBS butter ~/z tsp salt ~/2 tsp ground white pepper 1 tsp dried basil (or1 TBS finely

'/4 C tomato paste

2 (28-oz) cans whole, peeled tomatoes 4 C chicken or vegetable broth

~/z C mascarponecheese

chopped fresh basil)

~/2 C freshly grated havarti cheese

~/2 tsp dried oregano (or1 scant

TBS fresh) ~/z tsp thyme (or 1 scant TBS

FOR CROUTONS: ~/4 C butter 3 cloves garlic, minced

3 C bread cubes (preferably a cheese bread, such as Asiago, cut into s/4-inch

cubes) Additional mascarpone for

garnish

fresh) In a large, heavy-bottomed pot, saute the onion in the olive oil and butter over medium-low heat until the onions are soft and translucent, about 6 minutes. Stir in the salt, pepper, basil, oregano, thyme andgarlic, and continue to cook another minute or so. Addthetomato paste, spreading it out in the pan with a spatula, so that it can brown slightly in the pan(to produce somewonderful flavor). Stir in the tomatoes and broth, and cook at a slow simmer, covered, for an hour. Every now andthen, as the whole tomatoes soften anddissolve, pokeand flatten them. While the soup is cooking, prepare the croutons: Preheat oven to 375 degrees. In a heavy-bottomed skillet, heat the butter over medium heatand gently saute the garlic until the butter begins to brown; removefrom heat. Place the bread cubes in a large bowl and pour the garlic butter mixture over them, tossing to coat the cubes thoroughly. Spread the cubes on a baking sheet and bakeuntil golden brown, about10 minutes; remove from oven and set aside. When the tomato mixture has cooked, remove the pot from the heat and let the mixture cool slightly. Blend the soup either in the pot with a hand-held blender, or in batches in an blender or food processor. Continue heating the soup over low heat. Stir in the mascarpone andhavarti, stirring until completely melted. Adjust the seasonings, adding salt and pepper if necessary. To serve, ladle agenerous portion into each soup bowl, then garnish with a dollop of mascarponeand handful of croutons.

Where Buyers And Sellers Meet

Central Oregon

Master Gardener 'Wer Gaib4

4 Ig heads of romaine lettuce

Because theegg inthe Caesar Salad Dressing above and SpinachSalad below is not thoroughly cooked, there is avery small risk of salmonella, so theUSDA advises against serving it to anyone with acompromised immune system, pregnant women andsmall children.

Russian Dressing (see recipe)

Over medium heat, in alarge heavy-bottomed pan,saute the onion and garlic in the butter until the onions are soft and translucent. Add the beef and chicken broth, Worcestershire sauce, pepper flakes, potatoes and sauerkraut. Bring the mixture to a boil, then reduce the heat, cover and simmer for 10 minutes. Add the pastrami and continue simmering, covered, until the potatoes aretender, about15 additional minutes. While the soup is simmering, prepare the Swiss-on-Rye Croutons: butter one side of each slice of bread with some of the butter. Place the slices, buttered side up, on abaking sheet and broil until well toasted and golden brown. Turn over the slices and butter the untoasted side with some more butter, then return to the oven and broil until lightly golden brown. Remove from oven. Trim the croutons so each one will fit within the diameter of the oven-proof soup bowls you areserving the soup in. When ready to serve, ladle a generous portion of the soup in each oven-proof soup bowl. Spread about1 tablespoon of the Russian Dressing on each crouton and place it on top of the soup. Layer agenerous amount of the shredded cheese over the crouton and surface of the soup, then arrange all of the bowls on a baking sheet and broil until the cheese has melted and turned a light golden brown. Serve immediately. Note sn pastrami:Even though a traditional Reuben Sandwich uses corned beef, I prefer using pastrami in this soup because it imparts a spicier and smokier flavor. If you prefer to usecorned beef, that's perfectly OK. When purchasing pastrami at the deli counter, have them slice it ~/z-inch thick (I usually end up with 4 slices measuring ~/z-inch thick). To prepare for the soup, chopeach~ /z-inch slice into'/4-inch pieces (don't be precise; it looks better in thesoup if thepastrami piecesareirregular in sizeandshape). Russian Dressing:In a small bowl, whisk together s/4cup good quality mayonnaise, ~/3 cup chili sauce (similar to ketchup, only spicier), 2 tablespoons sour cream, 3 tablespoons finely chopped sweet onion, 2 tablespoons finely chopped garlic dill pickle, 1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice, 1 tablespoon prepared horseradish (not cream-style) and ~/z teaspoon Worcestershire sauce.Refrigerate until ready to use. May bemadeupto 7 days ahead.Makesabout1~/2cups.

Makes 8 servings. If you want a dynamite Caesar salad, remember to use only the very crisp and tendercenter portions (the heart) of the romaine lettuce. This means that for a saladserving more than four people, you'll have to buy two or moreheads. Reservethe dark green outer leavesfor another meal.

Cautionarynote

,'I

3 C (14- to16-oz) chopped pastrami (see note)

~/z tsp red pepper flakes

Op k~

T P~P ' ,

4 med Yukon Gold potatoes, peeled and cut into ~/z-inch dlce ~/4 C butter, softened 6/2 inch thick (or slightly thicker) slices good quality rye bread

GARDENING.

a

Caesar Salad with jan's House Croutons

'

• • Cl™ass ifteds

www.bendbulletio.com

1 Ib fresh spinach, washed, dried and toughstems removed, brokeninto bite-sizedpieces 1 C pittedblack olives 3 strips crisp-fried bacon, crumbled

Tarragon Vinaigrette (recipe follows) Jsn's HouseCroutons(see recipe) Grated Parmesancheese Gently place eggs into a pan of simmering water and cook for exactly 5 minutes (do not let the water stop simmering). Remove from heat, drain carefully (don't crack eggs), then fill the panwith cold water and let theeggscool completely. When cold, gently peeltheeggs. Place the spinach leaves in a large salad bowl, along with the olivesand bacon.Tosswith someof the vinaigrette, then arrange on 6 dinner plates. Place ahandful of the croutons in thecenter of eachsalad. Layeachoftheeggs on top,then drizzle on a small amount of vinaigrette over each egg and sprinkle with Parmesancheese.Serve. Note:To make sure you end up with beautifully peeled eggs, avoid just-purchased eggs. If eggs are extremely fresh, the white usually sticks to the shell whenpeeled. TarragonVinaigrette: In a small bowl, combine 1 tablespoon Dijon-style mustard, 3 tablespoons red or white wine vinegar, 2 tablespoonsgood-qualitymayonnaise,~/~ teaspoon salt, '/4 teaspoondried tarragon, / teaspoonpowderedsavory and N teaspoonwhite pepper; blend well with wire whisk. Add '/4 cup oil

in a slow stream,whisking constantly, until the dressing is thick and blended. Adjust seasonings andset the dressing aside. If you're making the dressing ahead of time, refrigerate it. Yields1'/4 cupsdressing.


TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

F OO D

D3

RECIPE FINDE Looking for a hardto-find recipe orcan answer a request? Write to Julie Rothman,

Recipe Finder,The Baltimore Sun,501 N. Calvert St., Baltimore, MD 21278, oremail baltsunrecipefinder@ gmail.com. Namesmust accompany recipesfor them to bepublished.

A bygone Photos by Andrew Scrivani/ New York Times News Service

A Beet, Greens and Cheddar Crumble is bound with a bechamel sauce — think mac and cheese with vegetables instead of noodles.

eatery's cheese spread By Julie Rothman The Baltimore Sun

By Melissa Clark

Beet, Greens and Cheddar Crumble

New York Times News Service

Casseroles have an image problem. The word itself conjures canned cream of mushroom soup and fried onions, limp green beans and rubbery noodles, the stuff of uninspired potlucks and Grandma's house.

Makes 6 to 8servings. 1 Ib med beets

11 TBS cold unsalted butter,

3 sprigs fresh thyme branches plus /4 tsp fresh thyme

leaves 2 garlic cloves, peeled /4 tsp black peppercorns Kosher salt and ground black

pepper

more for greasing pan 150 g all-purpose flour (1'/s C) 2C milk

9 oz sharp cheddar, preferably clothbound, grated (2/4 C) 2 to 3 TBS English mustard

powder, to taste

1/4 Ibs beet greens, Swiss chard or a mix of both

/2 tsp Tabasco sauce, more as

needed

Amy Dickman f r om Owings Mills, Md., was hoping someone would have the recipe for the garlic herb cheese that was served wit h

t h e b r e ad-

25 g rolled oats (/4 C) 20 g toasted hazelnuts,

sticks at Harvey's restaurant, which used to be

chopped (3 TBS)

located at Green Spring Station in Baltimore County. The restaurant and its

1/2 tsp grated Parmigiano-

Reggiano /4 tsp freshly grated nutmeg

1 tsp Worcestershire sauce

adjacent gourmet shop closed some years ago, and since then she has attempted to re-create the spread

A casserole of tomatoes, potatoes and Indian spices is topped with eggs. This isn't to say you don't

have a soft spot for a good homey casserole, perhaps a

were taught to rely on cans for ease and what was said to be good health, since the cans

Combine beets, thyme branches, garlic and peppercorns in a largepot. Cover with cold salted water. Bring to a simmer over medium-high heat; cook until beets are tender,15 to 30minutes depending onsize. Remove with a slotted spoon.Addgreens andcook for 2 minutes (do this in batches if necessary); removewith tongs and transfer immediately to abowl of icewater. Drainwell. Once beets are cool enough to handle, peel them and slice crosswise intot/4-inch-thick slices. Roughly chop greens' leavesandstalks. Prepare thebechamel: In asmall saucepanover low heat, melt 5 tablespoonsbutter. Stir in 75 gramsflour (Irs cup). Cook, stirring constantly, for 2 minutes; roux should smell cooked but remain white. Slowly whisk in milk until mixture forms a thick, smooth sauce.Stir in 8 ounces of cheddar (2 cups)until melted. Stir in mustard powder, Worcestershire andTabasco. Seasonwith salt to taste. Make the crumbletopping: In asmall bowl, stir together remaining 75 grams of flour (Yscup), the oats and the hazelnuts. Useyour fingers to work in 6 tablespoons butter, the remaining 1 ouncecheddar (/4cup) andthe Parmigiano-Reggiano. It should be a mixture of large andsmall pieces.Seasonwith a pinch of salt, pepper andthe nutmeg. When you are ready to assemble the dish, heat oven to 350 degrees. Butter a 2-quart gratin or baking dish. Spread a layer of bechamel on the bottom. Top with a layer of beets, followed by a layer of greens and stalks. Season generously with salt and pepper, and sprinkle with thyme leaves. Spreadanother layer of bechamel on top and repeat process to fill dish (you will end upwith 3 or 4 layers). Cover entire surface with crumble topping. Transfer dish to ovenand bakeuntil bubbling and golden brown in spots, 45 minutes to 1 hour. Note:Measurements for dry ingredients are given by weight for greater accuracy. The equivalent measurements by volumeare approximate.

time and time again, but it never tasted exactly right. Barbra Ros e nberg from Baltimore also was a big fan of the Harvey's cheese spread, and when

the restaurant closed she launched her own search

for a recipe. In one of her favorite cookbooks, she came across a recipe for a "boursin substitute." She

said she tweaked the recipe a bit and came up with a spread she thinks is as good as the one served at Harvey's and is always a hit when she entertains.

She said she usually doubles therecipe and freez-

es half so she always has some on hand for snacking

nostalgic tuna noodle number set out on the kitchen table.

containedfactory-produced, sterile ingredients. This gave

But the coziness of the casserole may have eclipsed the culinary virtues of the dish, which is not dowdy in

birth to the likes of the famous "cream of" soup, evaporated

fore dinner with some mel-

its DNA. It is not inherently

milkand canned chow mein

bland or one-note. It does not

noodles. Compare this with what

ba toast and raw vegetables. It was a huge hit with everyone in my house, and

have to contain even a single strand of melted cheese,

eight-can casserole with canned chicken, two kinds of

clever details and a vivid pal-

Floyd Cardoz, the chef of North End Grill (and formerly of Tabla), was eating in Bombay as a child. You wouldn't necessarily think of a fragrant baked rice dish with cardamom, cinnamon, golden fried

etteofflavors.

onion and browned meat as a

or be dusted with crushed potato chips. Quite the opposite. The casserole can be

nuanced and urbane, with room for fresh ingredients, After all, there's nothing

wrong with baking assorted ingredients together in a dish, which is essentially what a

casserole is. When done just right, the elements merge in the oven's heat, building on one another until the flavors

unite into a delicious whole, preferably one with a golden top and appealingly moist center. Then there is the mat-

ter of how amply a casserole feeds a crowd, and how once it is in the oven, it can be ignored until dinnertime.

In the U.S., casseroles swerved toward convenience, especially in the postwar years, when newly introduced lines of canned food had an air of modern glamour. Cooks

— Adapted from Nicholas Wilber, the FatRadish, New York

pany-worthy. My son liked it so much that he even put

a big dollop on his baked potato. No need to buy those expensive cheese

spreads from the store anymore. This is as good, v

Other New York chefs have put casseroles on their menus,

Bernie Moran from Bal-

timore is looking for the recipe for the butter cake

tions of macaroni and cheese

(yes, a casserole) to gnocchi gratins covered in pecorino to

that was sold at Brown's

bakery on Belnord Ave-

baked ratatouilles.

Nicholas Wilber, the chef

made as a sheet cake. Becky Holborn f r om

Black Bean Chorizo Casserole with Pickled Onions Makes 8 servings. 1 C Mexican crema, creme

fralche or sour cream Zest of1 lime and /4 C fresh lime juice 1 red onion, halved root to tip and thinly sliced into half

1/2 Ibs fingerling potatoes Kosher salt /s C vegetable oil 1 yellow onion, diced

1 tsp ground cumin 1 tsp ground garammasala

1 poblano pepper, seeded if desired, finely chopped 2 jalapeno peppers, seededif

tomatoes '/4 C chopped fresh mint, more

desired, finely chopped

2 TBS finely chopped peeled ginger 3 garlic cloves, finely chopped

2/4 tsp kosher salt, more as

needed 2'/s tsp sugar

Makes 6 servings.

/2 tsp ground coriander

1 (28-oz) can whole peeled for garnish 2 TBS chopped cilantro or basil,

more for garnish 6eggs Black pepper, as needed

Place potatoes in a large pot and cover with generously salted water. Bring to a boil; cook until potatoes are tender, about 20 minutes. Drain. When just cool enough to handle, slice into /t-inch-thick rounds. While potatoes cook, heat oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add onion and cook until almost tender, 5 to 7 minutes. Stir in peppers and cook 3 minutes. Add ginger, garlic, cumin, garam masala and coriander; cook1 minute. Stir in tomatoes andt/t teaspoon salt. Simmer over medium-low heat, breaking up tomatoes with a fork, 15 minutes. Stir in mint and cilantro or basil. Tasteandadjust seasonings. Heat oven to 375 degrees. Place potatoes in a single layer in a 9-inchsquare baking dish. Pour the hot tomato sauce over potatoes. Transfer pantoovenand bake20minutes. Make six wells in the tomato mixture. Crackeggsinto wells and season with salt and pepper.Bakeuntil egg whites are set but yolks arestill runny, 8to13minutes,dependingonhow much thepotatoesand saucecooled before baking. Serve garnished with herbs. — Adaptedfrom FloydCardoz

nue in East Baltimore in the late '50s. He said it was

A black bean chorizo casserole is topped with lime crema.

moons

Indian&piced Tomato and Egg Casserole

if not better, then any of them.

Requests

from the highbrow interpreta-

crumbles to an appreciative, stylish throng. "Making a casserole is easy," he said. "You just toss everything into a dish and bake it all together. But making a good casserole is much harder. You have to really think about how the ingredients are going to meld as they cook."

I whipped up a batch quickly and served it be-

I certainly think it is com-

casserole. But biryani meets the definition with panache.

at the Fat Radish, has served cassoulet, potpies and savory

or unexpected guests.

2 oz dried pasilla (also called

3 C cooked or canned black

negro) chilies, rinsed, seeded beans, rinsed anddrained and stemmed (6 to 8chilies) 4 C chicken stock 6 TBS vegetable oil 8 garlic cloves, unpeeled 1 Ib cured (cooked) chorizo, 12 6-inch corn tortillas finely diced 12 oz Monterey Jack cheese, 1 white onion, diced grated (3 C) 1 sm bunch cilantro, leaves and

stems separated 2 tsp ground cumin

C astle Rock, W a sh., i s

searching for the recipe forthe cream of broccoli soup that was served at the Spaghetti Works Iir. Deli in

Longview, Wash. Since the restaurant closed, Holborn

said, she misses the cream of broccoli soup as well as the freshly made rolls and breadsticks.

/2 C roasted pumpkin seeds

(optional)

Make the lime crema:In a small bowl, whisk together sour cream and lime zest. Cover and refrigerate until ready to use. Make the pickled onions:In a separate bowl, combine red onion, lime juice, 1 teaspoon salt and /2teaspoon sugar. Let the onion pickle at room temperature for at least1 hour. Meanwhile, toast the chilies for the sauce: Heatavery large skillet (or use aDutch oven)over medium-high heat until hot. Lay chilies flat in skillet and toast until fragrant and pliable and color darkens, 10 to 15seconds a side; do not let them burn and turn bitter. Transfer chilies to a large bowl, cover with hot water and let stand 30 minutes. Wipe out skillet. Make the beau-chorizo mixture:While chilies soak, heat 2 tablespoons oil in the skillet over medium-high heat. Add chorizo andcook until golden, about 5 minutes. Transfer to a paper-towel-lined plate. Stir white onion into skillet and cook until softened, about 7 minutes. Finely chop /4 cup cilantro stems and add to pan, along with cumin. Cook1 minute. Return chorizo to pan. Stir in beans,1 cup stock ands/4teaspoon salt. Bring to a simmer; reduceheat to medium-low and cookgently10 minutes. Tasteand addmore salt if needed. Make the chili sauce:Heat broiler. Place garlic cloves (in skins) on a baking sheet. Broil, turning once, until very tender, 5 to10 minutes. Peelgarlic when cool enough to handle. Drain chilies and place in ablender or food processor. Add peeled garlic and 2cups stock. Pureeuntil smooth. Heat 4 tablespoons oil in alarge skillet over medium-high heat. Add chili puree andsimmer vigorously, stirring often, for 5 minutes or until sauce has thickened. Add remaining 1 cup stock, reduce heat to medium-low, and simmer gently, stirring often, until sauce reduces to 1/t cups, about 25 minutes. Stir in remaining 2 teaspoons sugar and/2teaspoon salt and remove from heat. Assemble the casserole:Heat oven to 350 degrees. Spread a quarter of the chili sauce over bottom of a 9-by-13-inch baking dish. Place alayer of 6 overlapping tortillas on top of the sauce, followed by another layer of sauce, half the beanmixture andhalf the cheese. Cover with another layer of 6 tortillas, a layer of sauce, remaining bean mixture and remaining cheese.Spoon remaining sauce ontop. Cover pantightly and bake 20 minutes. Uncover and continue baking until casserole is bubbly around edgesand cheese is melted, 20 minutes more. Let casserole rest10 minutes, then serve topped with dollops of lime crema, some pickled onion, pumpkin seeds and cilantro leaves. — Adapted from Sally Swift's recipein "Pati's Mexican Table," byPati Jinich

Barbra's Boursin Makes about1 cup. 8 oz cream cheese (regular or light, but not fat-free), slightly softened 2 TBS butter, room

temperature /2 tsp fresh lemon juice 1 clove garlic, finely minced

1 TBS oregano /s tsp cayenne pepper /4 tsp freshly ground black

pepper /4 tsp salt 2 TBS fresh Italian parsley,

very finely minced Be sure to allow the cream cheese and the butter to soften and come to room temperature before mixing all ingredients together either by hand or with an electric mixer. Refrigerate for at least an hour. Thenserve at room temperature with breadsticks, good crackers or crudites. Spread keeps well ln the refrigerator for several days or can be frozen.


D4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 2014

H OME ck Cucumbers Continued from 01 The native cucumber traces back 3,000 years to India. Evidence seems to indicate it was

a small andverybitternative of the Himalayas. The bitterness that many

c omplain about

even to this day comes from a naturalprotective device called cucurbitacins meant to ward

off certain insects. Cucumbers are 96 percent water and as such were con-

sidered in ancient Egypt and Greece more as a source of drinking fluid than a food source. Early caravans carried supplies of cucumbers to quench their thirst, although

Egyptians did enjoy dipping them in brine. Sounds like the

beginning of the cucumbers in vinegar side dish. NGB's research did find a

recipe for a weak liquor. The directions begin with "cutting a hole in the ripe fruit, then stirring the insides with

a stick. The hole was then plugged and the fruit buried in the earth for several days.

A RDEN

When dug up, 'the pulp converted to an agreeable liquid.'" Do I see a rash of "cukepubs" on the horizon to add to our brewpub and specialty tea establishments? The Romans were more aggressive in the culinary use of cucumbers and served them raw or boiled with oil, vinegar and honey. Emperor Tiberius demanded cukes daily, which eventually forced his garden-

to the New World and grew

theminanexperimentalgarden in 1493. By 1806, eight varieties of cukes were growing in Colonial gardens. Herbalist John Gerard advocated that cucum-

Next week: Meet the local seed exchange

ASK MARTHA

ers produce the fruit and male flowers the pollen. Female flowers have ovaries, which

look like a tiny cucumber at the base of the bloom. Male flowers are attached directly to

a short stalk. Hopefully polli"otemeal porridge," would heal nation will take place if necesred noses and pimples of the sary and you will enjoy a crop. face. Dr. Samuel Johnson apThere are four terms used parently found no use for them in seed catalogs that apply to and wrote "they should be well production and could help you sliced, and dressed with pepper m ake a seed selection. ers to design portable contain- and vinegar, then thrown out." I Gynoecious GY:Has all feers that they moved fromplace canhear someofyouvoicingan male flowers. to place to follow the sunlight amen to that. Hermaphrodite HE:Flowers for the continued production We certainly have proof that contain both make and female out of season. During the first somewhere along the way cu- reproductive parts. century A.D., Roman garden- cumbers became a common Monoecious MO:Has sepaers fashioned what we would summer vegetable. Both John- rate male and female flowers call cold frames. The frames ny's Select Seeds and Territorial on the same plant. were covered with glazed, Seeds offer more than 20 variParthenocarpic PAT: Has translucent panes of silicates. eties of cucumbers. Selections the ability to set fruit withMy thoughts: Container gar- range from slicers, burpless, out pollination. Triggered by dening for vegetables and the picklers, container varieties, low temperatures, short day use of cold frames goes back miniatures and a big favorite length and plant age. further than we ever thought. in Central Oregon — the round I feel like Catherine of AraCatherine of A ragon is lemon cucumber, which is al- gon and Tiberius; I'm ready for credited with bringing them ways available at the annual a crunchy, tasty, homegrown to England during the reign Oregon State University Master cucumber, and every day of Henry VIII. She demanded Gardeners Plant Sale in June. would be just fine. them for her Spanish salads. The sex of the flower is im— Reporter: douville@ Columbus brought the cukes portant since the female flowbendbroadband.com bers eaten three times a day in

Tony Cenicola/New YcrkTimes News Service

Each variety of tea has its own optimal temperature and length of time for steeping.

e e ectcLi

o tea:someti s

LIVING SMART

Interior painting —pickingthe right color and finish for your project ANGIE HICKS

t

FOr aCOZy mOOd, SuCh aS fara fam ilyroom, ChOOSe deePCOIOrS.FOr an airy,OPen moOd, Select lighter COIOrS. Ina dining rOOm, aChieVe

n the spring, many a homeowner's fancy turns to thoughts of fresh paint,

because what else renews a room as quickly? That doesn't mean interior painting is a breeze. There are defined steps to a quality job, and they start with picking the right color and paint finish. To avoid becoming over-

a formal mood with warm neutrals, deep tones and dark shades. For a spirited feel ina playroom, combine bright, high-energy colors.

The next step is to match

the paint finish to the room's purpose. Here

a r e e x p ert

guidelines: color options, follow advice Flat: Often used by paintthat highly rated decorators ing pros because it doesn't and painters gave our team and reflect light and hides imstart by considering the mood perfections well. However, it you want tocreate.For examdoesn't wash easily; cleaning ple, bold, bright colors work reduces paint saturation. well in high-activity rooms, Eggshell: Features an unsuch as a kitchen, while softer derstated shine and is somewhat easier to clean than flat,

you relax, such as abedroom.

and material sand areinsured. • Ask if the company uses subcontractors, as that could

mean work done by inexperienced or uninsured laborers.

Semi-gloss and high-gloss: jobs, and ask for and check Good for kitchens, bathrooms, references. Confirm whether high-traffic areas, baseboards the crew cleaned up properly. • Include important deand other trim because they can handle high humidity and tails in the contract, such as frequent washing. Won't hide how much wall preparation wall imperfections. is included, how many coats To get an idea of what will be applied, what brand of painting will cost, consider paint will be used, how much that an average bedroom will extra wall repairs and coats of require two or three gallons paint will cost and when the of paint, which can cost $30 job will be done. or more each. A full set of • Be aware of tactics used materials — including paint, by d i sreputable painters, brushes and wall-prep mate- which include using cheap rials — can cost around $200. paint while charging for such If you'd rather hire a pro premium brands, watering to more quickly, and proba- down paint, using old paint bly more expertly, transform and low-balling estimates in a room, plan to pay around order tocharge more later. $100 to $300 an hour for la— Angie Hicks is the founder

while hiding imperfections less well. for a family room, choose Satin:Has a medium gloss deep colors. For an airy, open and smooth finish that can mood, select lighter colors. work well in bathrooms and In a dining room, achieve a kitchens. Won't hide imper- bor, in addition to supplies. formal mood with warm neu- fections but is washable and To hire well: For a cozy mood, such as

trals, deep tones and dark

who offer a warranty on labor

• Review photos of p a s t

shades. For a spirited feel in a playroom, combine bright, high-energy colors.

whelmed by the thousands of

colorsare bestforrooms where

been in business five or more years, who have good online reputations or recommendations from people you know,

withstands humidity.

• Look for painters who've

of Angie's List, which offers consumer reviews on everything from home repairto health care.

Experts warn of thedangersof detergent packets By Mary Beth Breckenridge Ahron Beacon Journal

out with this new video aimed at parents and caregivers. It's

place where children can't get

usingthedetergent,m ake sure the bag or container is tightly • Never let children handle sealed.

access to them.

Liquid l a undry d e t er- also urging people to take its gent packetsare convenient. Key Pledge to keep laundry the packets. They're also brightly colored, rooms safe. • Be careful not to puncture and to a child they can look The institute offers these the packets or pull them apart. like candy or toys. safety recommendations: • Keep the packets dry. But they can cause serious • Treat detergent packets They can quickly dissolve harm if they're ingested or if as you would any other haz- upon contact with water, wet the packets' contents get into ardous product. hands or saliva. eyes. Keep them out of sight so • Keep the container closed The American Cleaning In- children aren't tempted by and dry, even while you're dostitute is trying to get the word t hem, and store them in a ing laundry. Whenyou're done

• Keep the packets in their

original container, with labels intact. In an emergency, you will need the information they

provide. • If you think a child has been exposed to a l i quid laundry packet, immediately call the Poison Center at 800-222-1222.

- MARTHA STEWART

says Kim Reiss of the Missouri Botanical Garden, in Saint Louis. Do so with either gar-

den lime or soil acidifier (such as aluminum sulfate), both available at the Home Depot.

• How can I make the

• perfect cup of tea?

A suit of Tea, explains how • Sebastian Beckwith, • co-founder of In Pur-

best to brew your leaves:

1. Fill an electric or stove-

Lime, which is a base (and has a high pH) will turn flowers pink; aluminum sulfate, an

acid (with a low pH), will turn flowers blue.

Preventing cloudy glasses

top kettle with water, ideal-

Q

pot and swish to warm pot

reversible scratches, which

• Why do my glasses look ly filtered. • cloudy right out of the 2. Heat water (see be- dishwasher? low f o r tem p erature • A common reason for recommendations). • cloudy glass is hard 3. Pour / cup hot water water, but there may be aninto a 10- to 12-ounce tea- other culprit: minuscule, irup, about 5 seconds; dis- can result from a reaction becard water. tween glass composition, wa4. Spoon 4 grams tea ter and detergent, says Beth leaves (1 to 3 rounded tea- Robinson, brand experience s poons, depending o n manager at KitchenAid. If density of leaves) directly the film r emains after you into teapot or into a basket rub the glass with distilled strainer inside pot. white vinegar, which r e5. Fill teapot with hot wa-

moves hard water's calcium

ter and let steep (see below for brewing times).

and magnesium buildup, it's likely due to this fine etching. 6. When tea is r eady, If not, you likely have hard decant itor remove bas- water; add a rinse aid (such ket strainer to stop the as Finish) to the dishwasher's steeping. dispenser. Heat and steep:All times are for 12 ounces of water

Using agrill's indirect zone

Q

• What does an indirect

with 4 grams of leaves. • zone on a grill do? Does it • Black tea: 3 minutes; only work with charcoal grills? 205 degrees (just off a boil) • An indirect zone is one • Green tea: 2 minutes; • without coals right be180 degrees (when you see neath it. Its medium-low temsteam) perature (with the lid closed) • Tisane: 3 to 4 minutes; lets you cook large items205 degrees (just off a boil) such as a whole chicken or • White tea: 2 minutes; a rack of ribs — all the way 180 degrees (when you see through without blackening steam) the outside. To create one • Pu-erh tea: 3 minutes; on a charcoal grill, build the 205 degrees (just off a boil) fire as you normally would; • Oolong tea:2 minutes; then, once the coals are hot, 190 to 205 degrees (just off use tongs to push them to one aboil) side. The side without coals will be your indirect zone. Changinghydrangeas' With a gas grill with two color or more knobs, turn on one • Can I change the col- knob. Use the unheated area • or of hydrangeas? to cook on.

A

Q

A • color of blue mophead hydrangeas (Hy• You can switch the

drangea macrophylla) by altering the soil's pH level,

— Questions of generalinterest can be emailed to mslletters® marthastewart.com. For more information on this column, visit www.marthastewart.com.

Your potting soil's important minerals By Barbara Damrosch Specia/ To The Washington Post

and absorptive, it holds water, so you don't have to water a

plehave,to some degree,made

container had been chopped

the switchtoperlite.

into bits and stirted in. But it's a harmless mineral and, like vermiculite, sterile and inert.

container so often. This is esPerlite is made from a mined ulite" in Henry Beard and Roy pecially important with plug volcanic glass of the same McKie's hilarious "A Garden- trays or soil blocks into which name. As a raw material it coner's Dictionary" and you'll see it seeds are sown, where the mix tains water, trapped by the rapdefined as an "obscure order of can dry out quickly and put id cooling of lava. The moisture nuns devoted to gardening." In tiny seedlings at risk. Organic vaporizes explosi vel y when fact (as opposed to in fun), it is a matter plays a similar role in heat is applied. The result is a silicate material similar to mica soil, but vermiculite, mineral much-expanded mineralpopthat is sometimes found in the by nature, is sterile and inert, corn, white in color thanks to potting mixes gardeners use to thus protecting the seedlings light reflecting off tiny bubbles start seeds in spring. The word, against a fungus that caus- on the surface of its partides. It from Latin, means "breeds es sudden collapse — damp- has a texture that retains waworms. ing-off — and other ills. ter on that surface (though not Look up the word "vermic-

I think I can explain that. When my sisters and I were

little, we would take a handful of our parents' vermiculite,

' 1'

pour water on it and watch in Courtesy Barbara Damrosch via The Washington Post

Perlite might look like bits of foam, but it's really a natural mineral that has the ability to store lots of water. It gained popularity over vermiculite after product from a primary vermiculite mine was found to be tainted with asbestos.

awe as the dry, compressed f lakes expanded t o fo r m w ormlike columns. This i s

what vermiculite does in potting soil: Because it is spongy

Each material has its uses. For seed-starting, I go with a vermiculite mix for my germination but a perlite mix for growing in pots. A mix containing both can also be valuable. It is easyto mixyour own, but make sure you buy horticultural-grade vermiculite and perlite. Both are available from places that sell gardening Gardenersdon'tuse vermic- in the volume that vermiculite supplies, bricks-and-mortar ulite quite as much as they used does) but retains air in the spac- and online. If you are using to, in part because of an envi- es between. That lightens your either in quantity — to lighten ronmental disaster. Vermiculite potting mix considerably, as soil in large containers or even mined at aplantin Libby, Mont., well as providing valuable oxy- in small garden beds — you'll once the main source of the gen for plant roots, along with want toshop forprices. material, was found to be con- better drainage than vermicu— Barbara Damrosch's latest taminated with asbestos fibers. lite. Most potting mixes contain book is "The Four Season Farm Though the plant was dosed at least 25percent perlite, which Gardener's Cookbook"; her website and theindustry reformed, peo- is why they look as if a takeout is www.fourseasonfarm.com.


TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

The front courtyard also serves as an expanded entryway for the Watkinses' home in Bend.

D5

Arlene and John Watkins with their dog, Dino, in their Bend home.

Modern

See additional photos on The Bulletin's website: bendbulletin.com/athometour

O

Continued from 01 "Our electric and heating bill went from about $10,000 a year

to about $1,600, or a little more than $100 dollars a month,"

so the piano would fit in this

said Arlene.

Arlene said that in order to gain more space in that area,

space," said John.

This modern home has three bedroomsand threeand a half s

bathrooms in 3,250 square feet.

they had to sacrifice space in the entryway. "That didn't really bother me

The home is steeped in daylight thanks to the floor-to-ceiling windows in the living room.

because I like to think our entryway is really on the outside

From the front exterior of

in the courtyard area," she said.

this house, it takes on a Usonian style. Usonian was a term famed architect Frank Lloyd Wright used to explain his vision for

From the piano area, we opened the door to another interesting space, which was originallybuilt tobe a huge hisand-her master doset.

and built in an L-shape to fit

used to carve out a small, cozy office space for Arlene, with a

around a courtyard.

full-si zed desk and computer.

The front courtyard of the Watkins home incorporatesa

Open the pocket door in this of-

flat-roofed, practical homes that were usually single story

Instead, pocket doors were

rock sculpt ure water feature.

fice and you're inside the Watkinses' doset, which is still very

Its simplicity and minimalist

large. Stepping out of the clos-

style evoke a Japanese sensibility and welcome visitors to the

et, we walked into the master bathroom, another space that

front door.

is light, bright and full of crisp,

The maple door has opaque green-foam colored rectangular insert windows. Those same opaque windows are The dining and living rooms are open to each other, with plenty of light from south-facing windows. uniformly used in the garage doors and above the garage in the derestorywindows. Clutter in this home is non-

clean lines. Photos by Ryan Brennecke I The Bulletin

A tankless water heater in the closet fills the tub nearly instantly withhot water.

Next to the Japanese soaking tub is an oversized walk-in tiled shower.

existent, and decor is kept at a

minimum, while style is maximized in the subtle details. The large floor-to-ceiling south-facing windows in the living room bring the outdoors inside. The green golf fairway adds bright color to the muted, earth-color tones

I

The Watkinses thought out

"It's 16 feet in that corner, and 12 feet in this corner," said

"This is a room we didn't build in our last house," says John Watkins of the mudroom, "and it's the one room I wouldn't be without

now.

thetic they wanted to create.

"We bought this painting in China when we adopted Rae Anne there," said Arlene Watkins. "We tell her when she moves away from us, this painting will go with her.n

A built-in curio cabinet near the entryway displays Arlene's Japanese family heirlooms, which include Japanese dolls and Japanese tea ceremony bowls.

The house is imbued with

John, pointing to the ceiling's most interesting feature. "It crete twice and used two colors plays to all the angles on the of paint, and then splattered it outside." with paint; he was a real artist." "We decided to put the wood There are no doors in the above us, so the dogs wouldn't main living areas of this house, ruin the wood floors," joked Ar- with the exception of the entry lene. "I think the two angles of door. The living room opens this ceiling is very innovative, up to the dining area, which is and the architect Dave wanted open to the large, bright kitchto minimize any waste, so he en. Oversized south-facing came up with this idea for the

every detail in this house to cater to their lifestyle and the aes-

(

In the living room, the eye-catching focal point is the angled, acacia wood-paneled ceiling that has two different opposite corner.

We exited the bathroom into the master bedroom, and back

out to the living room, having made a half-cirde journey.

of the home.

anglesfrom one corner to the

The Japanese flair in this bathroom is the round Japanese soaking tub, a luxurious 4 feet deep, with a seating area.

kitchen windows continue the

room, which is connectedto the the kitchen bar. "The stainless garage. Inside the mudroom is steel gives it a more commer- the stacked washer and drycial feel, plus it's a lot easier to er, cleverly hidden behind a clean than tile — there's no maple wood door that matchgrout." es the custom-built mudroom He also pointed to the back- cubbies. splash of the Wolf commercial Along the opposite wall is an the cool steel that sits just below

stove and oven in the kitchen. Below the stove hood is an

all-stainless-steel backsplash,

extra sink, with an extra long

counter. "This is a room we didn't

separate shower room. On the otherside of the shower room

sculptured design and the use is anothertoilet and sink for the of different textures of various guest bedroom. woods, metalandstone. "We really feel our designOutside this hallway is a large framed Chinese painting, er got it exactly right; we got which holds much sentimental our contemporary modern value to the Watkinses. home with Japanese flair," said "We bought this painting in John as he looked around the China when we adopted Rae open living room with obvious Anne there," said Arlene. "We

inside." panoramic views from the liv- which the Watkinses say is Putting the most expensive ingroom. very simple to dean.

build in our last house, and tell her when she moves away it's the one room I wouldn't be from us, this painting will go

wood on the ceiling turns this

without now," said John. Down the hall is the bed-

The kitchen is John's favorite

house upside down, allowing room, as he is the primary cook the couple to think out of the in the house. Arlene, a teachbox. er at Cascade Middle School, The Watkinses loved the jokes that she's forgotten how idea of using only concrete slab to cook. floors throughout the house, John hadvery specific ideas which they say is both practi- about this kitchen. "I used three different texcal and economical, while still

John pointed to a new drawer microwave under his stain-

less-steel prep counter. He openedthe microwave, which does indeed open just like a drawer.

Several natural woods are used throughout the house, and inthekitchenthe Watkinses se-

a pocket door that leads to a

satisfaction. — Reporter: pnakamura@ bendbulletin.com

with her."

Back in the living room, the room for their teenage daugh- Watkinses pointed out another ter, Rae Anne. It features a area where they had to think unique space-savingbathroom. outside of the box in order to On her side of the bathroom fit in Rae Anne's baby grand is the toilet and sink area, then

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The Watkinses went with concrete slab floors throughout the house as apractical, economical surface. "But we think it's beautiful, too," says John Watkins. "The man who did our floors sanded the concrete twice and used two colors of paint, and then splattered it with paint; he was a real artist."

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Hai tot emisc ie ma er,Timot Simons TV SPOTLIGHT

Los Angeles with his wife, Annie, hoping to find work in film or television. He was optimistic, eventhoughhe hadneitherajob

By Robert lto New Yorh Times News Service

LOS ANGELES — Jonah on the HBO series "Veep," is show's first two seasons, his

colleagues have coined several unaffectionate nicknames for him, including crude mashups of his first name and various parts of the male anatomy. In one episode last season, Vice

President Selina Meyer (Julia Louis-Dreyfus) ordered him off Air Force Two, despite the

fact that the plane was already taxiing down the runway, or perhaps because of it. "As dysfunctional as Selina and her staff are," Louis-Dreyfus said, "the one thing that

binds them together is their global disdain for Jonah Ryan." As played by actor Timothy Simons, Jonah has become so loved and reviled that the character has attained a life of his

own outside the show. In Washington, people wonder how many Jonahsaregoingtobeata party; online, fans make GIFs of his creepiest moments, from his

lurchirg, drunken dance moves to come-on lines duected at the vice president'syoung daughter. "I think one of the joys of playing a character like that is thatyou're not bound by human

decency in any way," Simons said."If somebody's uncomfortable, you can just ignore it."

The actress is quick to point

out Simons'real-life charms. "He is earnest, sensitive and thoughtful, a guy who is withoutairs,"she said. "He has none of that doofus arrogance that

nor contacts nor even a passing familiaritywith the town. "I came out here the wrong

Ryan, the presidential liaison the insufferable toady you love to hate.Over the course ofthe

Louis-Dreyfus describes him, a "total slimeball."

way," he concedes. Although he had never acted he has as Jonah." on TV outside of a few comAnna Chlumsky, who plays mercials, Simons was cast in the vice president's chief of HBO's "Veep" in 2010. "It wasn't staff, agrees. "It defies logic, because he's just that I hadn't been a co-star on a television show, I had nev- such a kind person," she said. er even been on a television "Some of the stuff he comes up show, ever," he said. with, I'm like, 'Oh my God, who Working alongside Lou- knew that such a disgusting is-Dreyfus, who would later perv lived inside Tim.'" New York Times News Service file photo "Veep" co-stars Timothy Simons, right, Gary Cole andJulia win her third and fourth EmWhile there are big changes Louis-Dreyfus attend the HBO Emmy after-party last year in West mys, the actor went back and in store for Simons on the show, Hollywood, Calif. The character Jonah Ryan, played by Simons, forth early on between feeling there are equally big things in star-struck and ill. has become so loved and reviled by viewers that he's attained a the works for the actor outside "On the first day, I immedi- of it. This month, he'll appear in life of his own outside the show. ately thought I was going to get two films: "Draft Day," an NFL fired," he said. "I said one line, tale starring Kevin Costner, and The third season of the Nattily attired in a yellow and I was like, 'You're going to "Beneath the Harvest Sky," an award-winning series, which blazer and striped blue tie, Si- be replaced before lunch, be- indie drama set in Maine. Later details the misadventures of mons, 35, is nothing like the cause you're garbage."' this year, he has roles in "InherSelina and her put-upon aides, character he plays on TV. He is Rather than being canned, ent Vice," Paul Thomas Anderbegins Sunday, bringing with soft-spoken, for one, his smile Simons, now a father of twins, son's black comedybased onthe itmajor changes forJonah and as congenial as his character's has thrived in the role of Jo- Thomas Pynchon novel, andthe more than a few plot twists that is punchable. nah. As first envisioned by the Seth Rogen comedy "The Interwill propel his character to new Over lunch at a coffeehouse, show's producers (induding view," in which he plays a "foulheights of villainy. In the first the actor describedthe path that its creator, Armando Iannuc- mouthed egomaniac." few episodeshis career is up- brought him from his native ci), the character of Jonah was So much has gone his way ended, allowing viewers to see Maine to the set of 'Veep." After short, fat and bearded, a heavy in such a relatively short time, more of this sycophant's home laboringas a video store derk drinker and chain smoker who Simons hasn't had time to think life and making him even more near his hometown, Winthrop, "was 23 but looked 38.e That much about dream roles. "Maybe one will come up in unpalatable to his colleagues in and studyingtheater at the Uni- version was based on a real the administration, not to men- versityof Maine, Simons moved person, Simons said, a man the future," he said. "But if you tion dangerous. to Chicago, where he appeared who had burned out on politics were to ask me to write it down "He's grown from a nuisance in theater productions with a at 24. On the show, Jonah is four years ago, I would have that canbe ignored to an actual small troupe called the Hyp- tall — Simons is 6 foot 5 — slim said, 'Sweary political satire on political animal that has to be ocrites. In 2008, the aspiring and dean-shaven, and has no HBO, with an English writing dealt with," Simons said. actor drove a moving truck to real vices other than being, as staff."'

TV TODAY 10 a.m. on 6, "The Price Is Right" —Fans of "The Drew Carey Show" might have a flashback upon seeing who's hosting this new episode. It's Craig Ferguson, who played Drew's boss on his self-titled sitcom. He's taking Carey's place as the game show's host today, while Carey takes over on "The Late Late Show With Craig Ferguson" tonight. If you're wondering why, it's just a little April Fools' Day fun. 8 p.m. on (CW), "The Originals" —Locked in the sanatorium where she worked in1919, Rebekah (Claire Holt) learns that a vengeful witch named

Genevieve(Elyse Levesque)

is after her in "Long Way Back From Hell." Elijah (Daniel Gillies) realizes one of his decisions has put Rebekah and Klaus (Joseph

Morgan) in dangerandseeks help from Marcel and Hayley (Charles Michael Davis, Phoebe Tonkin). Marcel has some information that could help, but revealing it could be deadly. 9:01 p.m. sn 5 8, "About a

Boy" — Marcus (Benjamin Stockham) has an accident with a knife while home alone in this new episode. Will (David Walton) takes him to the emergency room and becomes instantly smitten with the pretty doctor (Adrianne Palicki) who treats the boy. Minnie Driver and Al Madrigal also star in "About a Buble." 9:31 p.m. on 58, "Growing Up Fisher" —"Brady Bunch" fans, remember when Greg insisted he was just holding those cigarettes for a friend? In this new

episode, Mel(J.K. Simmons)

finds marijuana in Katie's (Ava Deluca-Verley) bag, but it isn't hers — really! It belongs to

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Dear Readers:It's April Fools' Dear Abby: I have this really Day, the one day I can share some hot, sexy latex dress in lilac. I can't of the unique letters that come my decide which color 6-inch stilettos way — clearly, more than a few of to wear with it, black or white. I which were written in an attempt

don't want to look trashy. — Fashionista in The East Dear Fashionista: With latex in

to have some fun with me. Enjoy! Dear Abby: Many times when I would wake up in April, wear flats and the morning, I'd find a LONG overcoat. toothpaste already Dear Abby:I marDFP,R on my toothbrush, ried a w o nderful ABBY courtesy of my for m an last w eek. I t eign-born girlfriend, was the wedding of "Inger." Because I my dreams except am chivalrous, I figured I would for one thing: My husband's sister return the favor. So at night before brought six birds with her and ingoing to bed or in the morning, sisted it was perfectly acceptable I'd tiptoe to the bathroom and put to keep them in the reception area. toothpaste on her toothbrush. My new in-laws all said I was "unWell, the other day Inger told reasonable" for not allowing the me, "DON'T put toothpaste on my caged birds in the reception area. toothbrush!" I was flabbergasted. I was strong and stood my And if that's not enough, she no ground. After ayear of preparation, longer preps my toothbrush, either. I didn't want our nuptials spoiled I know, I k n o w — I s h o u ld by uninvited birds. Has anyone have asked a simple "Why?" but ever written to you about uninvited I wasn't in the mood for drama. birds being brought to a wedding? Now it's eating at me and I just —Ruffled Feathers in Reno don't get it. Dear Ruffled: The only ones I — Confused in Connecticut can recall were a few cuckoos, but Dear Confused:I'm sorry to be I'm not sure they were of the avian the bearer of bad news, but here it variety. is: Inger appears to be giving you Dear Abby: I have a dear old the brush-off.

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is I have an overactive bladder and sometimes must rush to the bathroom. It's very embarrass-

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specific'? — Leaking in Las Vegas

Dear Leaking:Yes. Tell her to hang on, you'll be back in a flush. Dear Abby: All t h e l e tters you have printed about pennies brought back the memories of what happened in our family when I was very small. My mother won a $10 gold piece for her sponge cake, but our family dog swallowed the coin.

You are probably wondering if we got the coin back. No, we didn't. Turned out the coin was

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Joyce (JennaElfman), who's using her new single status to try some new things. Henry (Eli Baker) fears he'll go blind like his dad when he turns12, and there's one thing he wants to see first in "Drug/Bust." 10 p.m. sn 7, "The Story ofthe Jews With SimonSchama"The five-part series concludes with "The Return," in which Schama discusses how the Holocaust and the creation of Israel have shaped modern Jewish identity — and how Israel has shaped world events. Contributors include writer David Grossman, photographer Micha Bar-Am, kibbutz founder Freddie Kahan, West Bank settler Zvi Cooper and Palestinian villager Yacoub Odeh. © Zap2it

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YOURHOROSCOPE

APRIL 1, 2014:This yearyouarevery willful. In fact, you will try to rule your world with an iron fist. Your efforts will succeed most of the time, but remember to be reasonable and recognize your limits. You might be weighing the pros andcons of certain expenditures. Know that your decision will be important. If you are single, your charisma atStars showthe kind tracts many potensf day you'll have tial admirers. You ** * * * D ynamic need to decide what kind of relationship

By Jacqueline Bigar

this point, you will need to exercise this skill. Comments need to be few and far between. Your sensitivity could change a situation dramatically for the better. Tonight: A serious talk over dinner.

CANCER (June21-July 22) ** * *

Keep an eye on your long-term

goals whenmakingkeydecisions.You

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21) **** Youcoul dfeelchallengedonce more by a close associate or loved one. Not everyone looks at a situation as you do. Justbecausesomeone thinks differently does not mean you are being opposed. Make it OK to have different values. Tonight: The only answer is "yes."

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Oec. 21) ** * You might want to switch gears and do something different. Whenever this need for change hits, you won't be able to resist it. The question is: How dramatic of an adjustment is needed? Open up to new potential and a deeper friendship. Tonight: Do not push too hard.

could be taken aback by a situation that seems like it will be difficult to handle. you can choose the Honor a change of pace. You will want * Difficult right person for that more feedback than you've received in the type of bond. If you past. Tonight: Go where your friends are. GAPRICORN (Oec.22-Jan. 19) * ** Staying closeto home and/orhanare attached, your sweetie can't seem to get LEO (July23-Aug.22) enoughofyou.Oneofyou could become dling personal priorities will feel like the ** * Do not get stuck on details, or you quite possessive. If you are the possessive could lose your momentum. Think before most comfortable option. Others seem one, ask yourself why you are so insecure. you leap into action. Understanding will to be more than willing to pitch in and TAURUScan't see asfar ahead asyou can. help. Your perspective on a private matter evolvebecauseofan associatewho is seems to transform nearly daily; beopen ARIES (March21-April19) willing to express his or her ideas, even to the process. Tonight: Happy at home. ** * You have much more to offer than if they seem rather silly or outrageous. you realize. Your ability to know when to Tonight: Burn the midnight oil. AQUARIUS (Jan. 26-Feb.18) reverse direction will guide you. Your con- VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) ** * * * You are full of energy, and cern with a situation could transform rad- ** * * You might want to approach a you're willing to do whatever feels right. ically because of your knack for knowing noticesyourmood,he situation differently from how you initially W hen someone when a transformation is needed. Tonight: thought you would. A partner or associate or she might ask you to pitch in and help Where you want to be. with a project. Stay true to yourselfappears to have a better grasp of details TAURUS (April 20-May20) than you do. Allow this person to take the only choose whatyou want to do. Tonight: ** * * * You might feel as if the tide lead. Tap into your creativity. Tonight: Be Hang out with your friends. finally has turned. A meeting will provide with a favorite person. PISCES (Feb.19-March20) a lot of insight into a certain choice, direc- LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ** * Look at your costs before you jump tion or change. You will be open to others' ** * * You could be exhausted by what in and say "yes" to an invitation; otherideas to the extent that you can be. You wise, you could live to regret it. Your creis happening. You might not feel as if constantly seem to be changing your per- you have the ability to change a difficult ativity keeps engaging others' attention spective. Tonight: Anything you want. and perhapsevenencouragesthem to ask scenario. Make it OK to be realistic. You won't be able to handle everything all at you for help. Keep your priorities in mind. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) ** * * Your ability to listen more than once. Listen to what someone is sharing. Tonight: All smiles. talk does not get tested frequently. At Tonight: Get together with a friend. © King Features Syndicate

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The Bulletin

Serving Central Oregon since 1903


ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 2014 • •

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Fax an ad: 541-322-7253

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Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the

Includeyour name, phone number and address

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businesshours of8 a.m. and 5 p.m.

Subscriber services: 541-385-5800

7:30 a.m. - 5 p.m. 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

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Furniture & Appliances

Exercise Equipment

Misc. Items

Building Materials

Fuel & Wood

Sales Northeast Bend

Hay, Grain 8 Feed

3 piece display cabinet w/lights, glass shelves, faux finish looks like stone, end s ections 7 0 " tal l , middle section 80" tall, 72" width. $450. Call after 11 a.m.

ProForm 380CSX stationary bike, all digital read-out, like new, $200 obo. 541-548-0324

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

245

Golf Equipment

541-330-8177.

Want to Buy or Rent

Wanted: $Cash paid for vintage costume jewelry. Top dollar paid for Gold/Silver.l buy by the Estate, Honest Artist

CHECKYOUR AD

• Chandelier, 22" diameter x 17" high, 12 lights, bronze & crystal, has 6 arms (2 lights on each arm), $300 obo. 541-923-7491

Elizabeth,541-633-7006 208

Pets & Supplies

The Bulletin recomDining table mends extra caution Beautiful round when purc h as- oak pedestal table ing products or serwith 4 matching vices from out of the chairs, table is 42" area. Sending cash, in diameter and in checks, or credit inbrand new condiformation may be tion, as are the subjected to fraud. chairs. Priced at For more informa$400. 541-447-3342 tion about an advertiser, you may call the O r egon State Dining table, glass & Attorney General's brass, glass pedestal, Office C o n sumer 60"x40". $450. Call Protection hotline at after 11 a.m. 1-877-877-9392. 541-330-8177.

The Bulletin

G ENERATE SOM E EXCITEMENT in your Plan a Just bought a new boat? neighborhood! garage sale and don't Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our forget to advertise in

on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified 246

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Guns, Hunting & Fishing CASH!! For Guns, Ammo & Reloading Supplies. 541-408-6900.

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g»ftgng Central Oregon sincefggg

DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL FOR $500 OR LESS'?

BUYING &r SE LLING Sisters Habitat ReStore All Year Dependable Mixed Grass Hay, 1st All gold jewelry, silver Building Supply Resale Firewood: Seasoned; ** FREE ** quality, big bales, 3'x3'x8', and gold coins, bars, Quality items. barn stored, $230/ton. Lodgepole 1 for $195 Garage Sale Kit rouncfsr wedding sets, Patterson Ranch Sisters, LOW PRICES! or 2 for $365. Cedar, Place an ad in The class rings, sterling sil541-549-3831 150 N. Fir. split, del. Bend: 1 for Bulletin for your gaver, coin collect, vin541-549-1621 $175 or 2 for $325. rage sale and retage watches, dental Open to the public. 541-420-3484. ceive a Garage Sale Looking for your gold. Bill Fl e ming, Kit FREE! 541-382-9419. 266 next employee? New 70-pound Dry, split Juniper, Heating & Stoves Place a Bulletin $190/cord. Multi-cordFAST TREES KIT INCLUDES: Compound help wanted ad Grow 6-10 feet yearly! discounts, & g/gcords • 4 Garage Sale Signs Liberty Bow NOTICE TO today and $16-$21 dehvered. avail. Immediate de- • $2.00 Off Coupon To with 29.9 draw and ADVERTISER www.fasttrees.com Use Toward Your reach over livery! 541-408-6193 case. Asking $400. Since September 29, Next Ad or 509-447-4181 60,000 readers Call 541-771-2080 1991, advertising for • 10 Tips For "Garage each week. ifinterested. Pine & Juniper Split Sale Success!" used woodstoves has Your classified ad Natural gas Ruud been limited to modwill also tankless water els which have been PROMPT DELIVERY Ruger SR9 9mm, (3) appear on heater, brand new! PICK UP YOUR certified by the Or542-389-9663 17-rnd clips, c ase, 199 Btu, $1800. bendbulletin.com GARAGE SALE KIT at egon Department of clean, excellent cond, Also brand new 80 1777 SW Chandler which currently Environmental Qual$400. Ruger 10/22, gal. electric water Ave., Bend, OR 97702 receives over ity (DEQ) and the fed- Seasoned Juniper s imulated stoc k , heater, $500. 1.5 million page eral E n v ironmental $150/ cord rounds; Simmons 3x9 scope, In Sunriver area. The Bulletin $170/ cord split. views every Protection A g e ncy Serv>ngCengal Oregon srnce l903 $150. 541-419-0438 530-938-3003 in Central month at no (EPA) as having met Delivered OR, since 1970! Call smoke emission stanextra cost. Swiss 1889 SchmidtPeople Lookfor Information dards. A cer t ified eves, 541-420-4379 Bulletin Rubin sporter rifle in About Products and w oodstove may b e Classifieds 7.5 x 53.5 mm, very 269 Services Every Day through identified by its certifigood cond i tion, Get Results! The Bulletin Clnssifieds Call 541-385-5809 cation label, which is Gardening Supplies comes with 84 rounds permanently attached custom ammo, $350 gggggglgg & Equipment or place your ad to the stove. The Bulfirm, 541-233-9936 on-line at Sunvision Pro letin will not knowbendbulletin.com Wanted: Collector seeks 28LX Tanning Bed ingly accept advertisBarkTurfSeil.cem Has only 300 hours, high quality fishing items ing for the sale of (lamps have average & upscale bamboo fly uncertified PROMPT DELIVERY 345 hfe of 800-1000 hours rods. Call 541-678-5753, woodstoves. 542-389-9663 Livestock & Equipment of effective tanning or 503-351-2746 267 usage). 1 owner, FREE Saanen Buck, 7 255 great condition, Fuel & Wood 270 includes manual, m o., for b r eed o r Computers Lost & Found goggles & head butcher, 541-390-5211 308 pillow. $900. WHEN BUYING T HE B ULLETIN r e Farm Equipment Cail fosee! LOST Cat 3/12, white & FIREWOOD... quires computer ad- 541-385-9318in Bend Find exactly what ray/tan male, OB Riley/ 8 Machinery vertisers with multiple len Vis t a-Cooley? To avoid fraud, you are looking for in the ad schedules or those Wanted: crew memThe Bulletin Bingo is missed! Call (4) 5'x12' horse panels, CLASSIFIEDS selling multiple sysrecommends pay- 541-531-3699 to sail Winchester $75/ea. Assorted watems/ software, to dis- bers ment for Firewood Bay, OR to San Franter and feed tubs, call close the name of the cisco and return, aponly upon delivery Lost Kitty, 6 mo. recently for prices. 383 business or the term prox. 3 wks this sumneutered male, "Scooter, ' 541-923-9758 and inspection. Produce & Food "dealer" in their ads. • A cord is 128 cu. ft. black & white, blind in left mer. Call Mark, Private party advertis4' x 4' x 8' eye. 6 mi out Juniper N ew H o lland 2 5 5 0 541-233-8944 Farm Eggs ers are defined as Canyon, Prineville 3/16. swather, 14' header • Receipts should Call Irven those who sell one Wanted- paying cash include name, REWARD! 541-447-9866 with conditioner, cab for Hi-fi audio & stuheat/A/C, 1300 orig. 541-388-3535 computer. or 541-604-1994 phone, price and dio equip. Mclntosh, hrs. $29,000 obo. kind of wood JBL, Marantz, Dy1486 International, cab 257 purchased. Have an item to heat/A/C, 5 4 0/1000 naco, Heathkit, San- • Firewood ads Musical Instruments sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Pto, 3 sets remotes, sell quick? MUST include REMEMBER: If you Call 541-261-1808 nice tractor. $18,000. species 8 cost per have lost an animal, If it's under 541-419-3253 WHEN YOU SEE THIS cord to better serve don't forget to check our customers. The Humane Society USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! '500 you can place it in Bend The Bulletin 541-382-3537 Bulletin Door-to-door selling with Classifieds for: More PixatBendbjletij,com The Serving Cen0rel Oregonsince lggg Redmond On a classified ad fast results! It's the easiest 541-923-0882 Beautiful Lowrey go to '10 -3 lines, 7 days way in the world to sell. Prhe gle TURN THE PAGE Adventurer II Organ www.bendbulletin.com 541-447-7178; '16 - 3 lines, 14 days Absolutely perfect to view additional For More Ads The Bulletin Classified or Crag Cats condition, not a (Private Party ads only) photos of the item. 541-389-8420. The Bulletin 541-385-5809 scratch on it, about 261 4-feet wide, does everything! Includes Medical Equipment a nice bench, too. $1 600obo. 541-385-5685

classified! Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809. 541-385-5809 Non-commercial clock, Adopt a rescued cat or Grandfather advertisers may teen k itten! F i xed, Tempus, 7' high, Buplace an ad shots, ID chip, tested, lova in-laid black walwith our more! 65480 7 8 th, nut/ebony clock w/ba"QUICK CASH rometer, weather Tumalo, T h urs/Sat/ SPECIAL" Sun 1-5, 3 8 9-8420 gauge. Antique oak 1 week3lines 12 www.craftcats.org pendulum clock; misc. OI' plates. make ~g e eks 2 N Aussie Mini AKC par- collectible offer. 541-647-1276 Ad must ents on site. Shots/ include price of wormed. Sta r t ing hle tem ot ggog The Bulletin s~ $350. m/f blue merle or less, or multiple 541-598-5314 recommends extra I c a ton n e n p r items whose total Cairn Terriers, 8 wks, 1st chasing products or • does not exceed shot, wormed twice, $500 services from out of I $500. cash. 503-501-0462 or f the area. Sending f 541-419-8676 Call Classifieds at • cash, c hecks, o r • 541-385-5809 i credit i n f o rmation www.bendbulletin.com may be subjected to i FRAUD. For more information about an s Fishing camp on North g advertiser, you may i 10 Mile Lake. See ad l call t h e Ore g onl Recreation ProperDACHSHUND PUPS ' State Atto r ney ' in ties .541-404-7595. AKC Mini longhaired i General's O f fi ce M$500/ F$600 Consumer Protec- • 541-598-7417 G XLE A T tion h o t line at I Donate deposit bottles/ i 1-877-877-9392. cans to local all vol., TheBulletin > Large amount of non-profit rescue, for > serving central oregon since rgog 12-gauge reloadferal cat spay/neuter. ing equipment, DRUM SETS: Cans for Cats trailer 212 including: Ludwig drum set, at Bend Pet Express Flatscreen MagniMEC 9000G E; or donate M-F at d rums o nly, n o Antiques & fier Optlec ClearSmith Sign, 1515 NE reloader, lead, powhardware, 26" base Collectibles view+ viewer, mag2nd; or a t C R AFT, der, primers, hulls, drum, 13", 16", and nifier for reading, Tumalo. Call for us to wads & electric 18" toms, 14" snare, oa k 2- d rawer scale. Retail for over writing and viewing pick up large quant- Dark $500. REMO Masdresser, curved front, for those who have ites, 5 4 1-389-8420. $2000; ter Touch drum set, $250. White wicker vision loss. $900 www.craftcats.org for$1 200. drums o nl y no baby crib, u n ique selling obo. (other items 541 420-3474 hardware, 22" base Free barn/shop cats, $250. Large dark oak listed previously drum, 8", 10", 12", fixed, shots. Will de- roll top desk, $800. have been sold) 1 3", 16" an d 1 8 " liver! 541-306-4519 Iv Surveryor's tr a nsit In Bend, call toms, 14" s n are msg. 1930-1940, orig. box 541-480-6162 drum, $800. Both in C ASH Labrador Puppies, $300 $350. excellent condition. 541-923-5960 & $350. 1st shots. vet 541-410-4983 266 checked. 541-416-1175 The Bulletin reserves Building Materials the right to publish all 260 Bend Habitat ads from The Bulletin Left Handed Stag AR15, Model Misc. Items RESTORE Mini Aussie Toy pups, newspaper onto The Arms tag 15, L-3 E OBuilding Supply Resale toy size, assorted col- Bulletin Internet web- S Tech ESPS2 red dot Quality at LOW o rs, $ 3 3 0 ca s h . site. scope w/quick dePRICES 2012 Sim p licity 541-678-7599 The Bulletin tach mount, over Gusto Hepa canis740 NE 1st g»ftgng Central Oregon sincefmg Norwich rare AKC male 2000 rounds of high 541-312-6709 ter v acuum with quality Federal 62 pup, 11 wks, house attachments, extra Open to the public. 215 raised; 3 J/g-year-old g rain g r een t i p filter and bags, exc. Coins & Stamps Norwich male, house 5 .56/223 am m o . cond. Retail $1500, Get your r aised & g ood o n $2500. Asking $ 700. leash. $1800 each. Private collector buying 541-350-7017 business 971-221-8278 (cell) 541-487-4511, or postagestamp albums 8 sharonm © peak.org collections, world-wide and U.S. 573-286-4343 Need to get an Buying Diamonds POODLE pups, toy. (local, cell phone). ad in ASAP? iGold for Cash 12-20 wks. $175-$250 Saxon's Fine Jewelers with an ad in & up. 541-475-3889 You can place it 242 541-389-6655 The Bulletin's online at: Queensland Heelers Exercise Equipment "Call A Service Standard & Mini, $150 BUYING www.bendbulletin.com & up. 541-260-1537 Pilates XP297; Pilates Lionel/American Flyer Professional" www.rightwayranch.wor chair, fluidity bar, call trains, accessories. Directory 541 -385-5809 dpress.com for info. 541-408-0846 541-408-2191.

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The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since 1903

541-385-5809 Some restrictions app/y

Item Priced af: • Under $500.................. • SSOO fo Sg9g.............. • $1000 fo $2499....... • $2500 and over........

your Tofol Ad Cosfonl: ...........................$29

...........................$39 ...........................$49 ...........................$59

Includes: 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold headline and price. • T e Su elin, • enlral Oregon Marketplace

• T e Centra Oregon Nic e A s

• bendbulleiin.com

*Prigate party merchandise only - excludespets 8 livestock, autos, Rvs, motorcycles, boats, airplanes, and garage sale categories.


E2 TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

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

541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com

Boats & Accessories

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES

•8

Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. Rooms630for Rent Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Large mstr bdrm, prib a th , w a l k-in Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. vate closet, use of house & appliances, f e nced Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri.

Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •

• . 3:00pm Fri. • • 5:00 pm Fri • Place a photo inyourprivate party ad for only$15.00par week.

PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines

*UNDER '500in total merchandise

OVER'500 in total merchandise

7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00

Garage Sale Special

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

4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00

(call for commercial line ad rates)

*illiust state prices in ad

backyard for

p ets.

$500. 541-815-1171

BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS Search the area's most comprehensive listing of classified advertising... real estate to automotive, merchandise to sporting goods. Bulletin Classifieds appear every day in the print or on line. Call 541-385-5809 www.bendbuffetin.com

The Bulletin ServingCentral Oregonsince tgte

850

Snowmobiles •

Arctic Cat 580 1994, EXT, in good condition, $1000. Located in La Pine. Call 541-408-6149. 860

Iiilotorcycles & Accessories

632

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rect. nSpellcheckn and

human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified

PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right 634 to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party AptJMultiplex NE Bend Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. Call for Specials! Limited numbers avail. 476 476 476 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. Employment Employment Employment W/D hookups, patios or decks. Opportunities Opportunities Opportunities MOUNTAIN GLEN, 541-383-9313 FIRE/PARAMEDIC Caregiver TRUCK DRIVER Professionally Prineville Senior care Establishment of WANTED managed by Norris & Must have doubles h ome looking f o r Employment List for Stevens, Inc. Caregiver for multiple Firefighter/Paramedic endorsement. Local run. s hifts, part-time t o Crook County Fire and 687 full-time. Pass Rescue is establishing an Truck is parked in 470 Commercial for criminal background employment list for Fire- Madras. 541-475-4221 check. 541-447-5773. fighter/Paramedic. IndiDomestic & Rent/Lease viduals who meet the In-Home Positions minimum qualifications RmliljKI Fenced storage yard, Concrete Finishers are invited to apply and building and o ffice Companion Care for Wanted! take the examination for trailer for rent. In conSenior - Do you need Roger L a n geliers Firefighter/Paramedic. A venient Redmond lohelp with transportation, Const. Co is looking complete job description shopping/errands, light for experienced ce- for Firefighter/Paramedic cation, 205 SE Railroad Blvd. Reduced to housekeeping, meals & ment finishers. Full is posted on the district's med reminders? Call benefit $700/mo. Avail. now. pa c kage, website. Th e s a lary Stephanie,541-408-6190 EOE. We E-Verify, range is from $4,248541-923-7343. d rug screen r e - $5,002 per month. Appli693 Check out the 528 quired. Applicants cations will be accepted classifieds online Office/Retail Space m ay come bythe of- until Monday, April 14, Loans & Mortgages wwvv.bendbulletin.com fice at 62880 Mer- 2014. Contact: for Rent Crook County Updated daily cury Place to fill out WARNING Fire & Rescue an application, or The Bulletin recom- Office s pace a v ail. 500 NE Belknap Street Immediate opening for call Steve 300-500- sq. ft., primends you use cauPrineville, OR caregiver in the Sisters 5 41-318-6200, o r vate bath and confertion when you pro97754-1932 area. 541-598-4527 541-948-0829 ence room, all util. vide personal (541) 447-5011 information to compa- paid. $300-$450 mo. Looking for home health www.crookcoun nies offering loans or + dep. C all Jim at aide, part time. No fireandrescue.com 541-480-4744 Just too many credit, especially experience n e c esthose asking for adsary. 541-647-1276 collectibles? Housekeeper wanted vance loan fees or art time, apply at companies from out of 476 BanH Sell them in he Pines at Sunriver. state. If you have Employment 541-593-2160. Vcu Mh The Bulletin Classifieds concerns or quesOpportunities tions, we suggest you consult your attorney Livestock Truck Driver 541-385-5809 Add your web address or call CONSUMER Must have CDL, 2yes to your ad and readHOTLINE, exp., progressive co., ers on The Bulletin's 1-877-877-9392. 401k, $50,000/yr, inweb site, www.bend- EMPLOYMENT bulletin.com, will be Now taking applications! surance 541-475-6681 BANK TURNED YOU 745 able to click through A new Behavioral DOWN? Private party Homes for Sale automatically to your Health Centeris will loan on real esThe Bulletin opening in the Bend/ website. tate equity. Credit, no NOTICE La Pine area. All posiproblem, good equity caution when purAuto Parts tions available, including: is all you need. Call All real estate adverCounterpersonchasing products or I Oregon Land Mort- tised here in is sub• Counseling Staff services from out of e Some automotive and • Dietary ject to th e F ederal computer experience • Housekeeping i the area. Sending gage 541-388-4200. Fair Housing A c t, c ash, checks, o r required. We can train • Maintenance which makes it illegal LOCAL MONEY:We buy from there. Starting • Support staff i credit i n f ormation to advertise any prefsecured trustdeeds & • Clencal pay based on experii may be subjected to note,some hard money erence, limitation or ence. Send resume to Competitive benefits and FRAUD. loans. Call Pat Kellev discrimination based For more informa- I 541-382-3099 ext.13. PO Box 960, La Pine, wages. Please email on race, color, reliOR 97739. Ordrop off your letter of interest and tion about an adver- • ion, sex, handicap, resume to at Napa Auto Parts, i tiser, you may call Where can you find a jamilial status or naEmil @kleancenter.com the Oregon State tional origin, or inten51477 Hwy97, in La helping hand? i Attorney General's Pine. tion to make any such From contractors to Office C o n sumer e preferences, l i mitaProtection hotline at l yard care, it's all here tions or discrimination. Clerical/Office I 1-877-877-9392. We will not knowingly in The Bulletin's We are looking for a full-time employee that is accept any advertis"Call A Service resourceful and self-motivated to assist a ~ The Bulletin ing for real estate large staff and write daily clerical reports. This Professional" Directory which is in violation of person should like working in a fast-paced this law. All persons environment and be able to meet tight deadare hereby informed lines on a daily basis. Prior writing or editorial Delivery that all dwellings adexperience preferred. vertised are available

FXSTD Harley Davidson 2001,twin cam 88, fuel injected, Vance & Hines short shot exhaust, Stage I with Vance & Hines fuel management system, custom parts, extra seat. $10,500 OBO. Call Today 541-516-8684 Harley Davidson 2009 Super Glide Custom, Stage 1 Screaming Eagle performance, too many options to list, $8900. 541-388-8939

00

I

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Ability to work for long periods of time doing detail-oriented work is necessary. This person must understand the importance of accuracy and thoroughness in all duties.

Excellent customer service and interpersonal skills are required. Must enjoy working with the public. College degree or previous office experience preferred. Pre-employment drug screening is required prior to hiring.

To apply, please send a resume to: Box 20473443, c/o The Bulletin, PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708 EOE

. gsseswls Administrative Assistant Provides administrative support to the IS department. Duties include data entry; answering phones; responding to questions and request for information; accounts payable; education and travel coordination; scheduling meetings and taking minutes; assisting with vendor communication and contracts; office organization; and maintaining records.

Requires 3 years administrative experience; knowledge of Microsoft Office; experience making education and travel arrangements; strong written and verbal communication skills; excellent customer service skills; ability to work independently, ability to manage time and multiple priorities; and ability to work with all staff levels. Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent customer service and over 400 stores in the Northwest. We offer competitive pay, excellent benefits, retirement, and cash bonus. Please go towww.lesschwab.com to apply. Applications will be accepted through April 9, 2014. No phone calls please. EOE

2007 Winnebago Outlook Class "C" 31', solar panel, Cat. heater, excellent condition, more extras. Asking $58K. Can be viewed at Western Recreation (top of hill) in Prineville.

Monaco Lapalma,

Dodge Brougham 1978, 15', 1-ton, clean, 69,000 miles. $4500. In La Pine, call 541-602-8652 n Say ogoodbuy

to that unused ds published in the item by placing it in "Boats" classification include: Speed, fish- The Bulletin Classifieds ing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. 5 41-385-580 9 For all other types of watercraft, please go to Class 875. 541-385-5809

he Bulletin

ervin CentralOre on since 1903

Wanted: crew memDiscovery bers to sail Winchester Fleetwood 40' 2003, diesel, w/all Bay, OR to San Franoptions - 3 slide outs, cisco and return, apsatellite, 2 TV's, W/D, prox. 3 wks this sumetc., 32,000 m iles. mer. Call Mark, Wintered in h eated 541-233-8944 shop. $84,900 O.B.O. 875

Harley Davidson 2011 Classic Limited, Loaded! 9500 miles, custom paint "Broken Glass" by Nicholas Del Drago, new condition, heated handgrips, auto cruise control. $32k in bike, only $20,000or best offer. 541-318-6049

$17,000

G R E AT

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National RV

Tropical, 1997, 35-ft, Chevy Vortec engine, new tires, new awnings, 12-ft slide-out, queen bed, Italian leather couch and recliner, excellent condition. Ready to travel„ towing hitch included. $19,900. 541-815-4811

Watercraft Navion RV 2008, tercraft" include: Kay Sprinter chassis 25'. aks, rafts and motor Mercedes Benz diesel, Ized personal Forest River Sunseeker 24,000 miles, pristine watercrafts. Fo Class C, 24-ft -Double cond., quality through"boats" please se bed, roorny bath/shower, out, rear slide-out w/ lots storage, oak wood, Class 870. queen bed, deluxe dining area slide-out w/ captain swivel front 41-385-5809 new awning. Micro, air, seats, diesel generator, new flat screen TV & RV awning, no pets/ batt. On-board gen/low no smoking hrs, arctic pkg, full cover. $75,500. Ford 450 V10, 36,300 mi, 541-382-2430 880 tow pkg, leather seats, no Motorhomes smoking/pets, sleeps 5-6 $31,500. 541-419-6176

The Bulletin

Beaver Marquis, 1993 40-ft, Brunswick floor plan. Many extras, well maintained, fire suppression behind refrig, Stow Master 5000 tow bar, $24,995. 541-383-3503

Bigfoot Diesel 32' 2006, Su per C Duramax di e s el, Allison trans., only 37K mi., do u b le slide, 5500 Onan diesel gen., to many options to list. Vin¹ 534032, $79,995. BeaverCoach Sales & Service, Bend 541-914-8438 DLR ¹3447

HONDA XR650L 2002

genr, 2 slides, 4 dr. refrig w/icemaker, micro/convection oven, water purifier, hydraulic jacks, power pilot seat+ more options. Exceptionally clean.$59,900/make offer.541-504-1008

ds published in oWa

Gulfstream S u nsport 30' Class A 1988 new f r idge, TV, solar panel, new refrigerator, 4000W generator, w h eelchair lift avail. Good cond. $11,500 obo

HDFat Bo 1996

541-548-4807

horse 8.1i Less than 18,000 mi, 5.5 Onan

541-447-8664

541-447-5504

Completely Rebuilt/Customized 2012/2013 Award Winner Showroom Condition Many Extras Low Miles.

2002, 34'10n - Work-

KOUNTRY AIRE 1994 37.5' motorhome, with awning, and one slide-out, Only 47k miles and good condition.

$25,000.

541-548-0318

iphoto above is of a similar model & not the actual vehicle)

Providence2005 Fully loaded, 35,000 miles, 350 Cat, Very clean non-smoker 3 slides, side-by-side refrigerator with ice maker, Washer/Dryer, Flat screen TV's, In motion satellite. $95,000 541-480-2019

Want to impress the relatives? Remodel your home with the help of a professional from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit

approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond:

541-548-5254

Nice bike, $2900.

541-480-4744.

Call54i 385 5809tsprcmcteyourservice• Advertise for 28dap stortingatsl4I fffasiteticf~ate'rs ttgtitrrgtafeeaoartntgtel

Building/Contracting LandscapingNard Care Landscaping/Yard Care

Triumph Daytona NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon Land2004, 15K m i l es, law requires anyone scape Contractors Law perfect bike, needs who con t racts for (ORS 671) requires all nothing. Vin Zdped gua/reI construction work to businesses that ad¹201536. be licensed with the vertise t o pe r form Zacv< gitr e I,. $4995 Construction Contrac- More Than Service Landscape ConstrucDream Car tors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: Peace Of Mind Auto Sales active license p lanting, deck s , 1801Division, Bend means the contractor fences, arbors, Spring Clean Up DreamCarsBend.com is bonded & insured. water-features, and in•Leaves 541-678-0240 Verify the contractor's stallation, repair of ir•Cones Dlr 3665 CCB l i c ense at rigation systems to be •Needles www.hirealicensedl icensed w it h th e • Debris Hauling contractor.com Landscape Contracor call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit WeedFree Bark The Bulletin recomnumber is to be in& Flower Beds mends checking with cluded in all adverthe CCB prior to contisements which inditracting with anyone. Lawn Renovation cate the business has Some other t rades Aeration - Dethatching a bond, insurance and re q uire addiOverseed workers compensaon an equal opportu- V ictory TC 9 2 ci also tional licenses and tion for their employCompost nity basis. The Bulle$upplement Your Income 2002, rune great, certifications. ees. For your protecTop Dressing tin Classified tion call 503-378-5909 40K mi., Stage 1 Custom Remodel & Tile Call The Bulletin At or use our website: Performance Kit, Landscape Schellworth, Gen. www.lcbistate.or.us to Now taking bids for an Independent Contract 541-385-5809 n ew tires, r e a r T.Contractor/Builder Maintenance check license status Hauler to deliver bundles of newspapers from Place Your Ad Or E-Mail brakes. $ 5 0 0 0. Full or Partial Service CCB ¹t 86631 before contracting with Bend to LaGrande, Oregon (with some deliv- At: www.bendbulletin.com 541-771-0665 • Mowing oEdging 541-588-0958 the business. Persons ery drops en route) on a weekly basis. Must •Pruning .Weeding doing land scape have own vehicle with license and insurance 750 Sprinkler Adjustments maintenance do not 870 and the capability to haul up to 6000 lbs. USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Redmond Homes r equire an LC B l i Candidates must be able to lift up to 50 lbs. Boats & Accessories Fertilizer included cense. Door-to-door selling with with Selected candidate will be independently monthly program contracted. 12'1969 Searsalumi- fast results! It's the easiest Aeration/Dethatching Looking for your next To apply or for more info contact 1-time or Weekly Services num fishing boat, emp/oyee? way in the world to sell. Weekly,monthly Ask about FREEadded James Baisinger at low hours on new 8 Place a Bulletin help or one time service. svcs w/seasonal contract! jbaisinger© bendbulletin.com hp engine, with trailer wanted ad today and The Bulletin Classified Bonded & Insured. and extras. Good reach over 60,000 541-385-5809 EXPERIENCED COLLINS Lawn Maint. shape!$1600. readers each week. Commercial Ca/l 541-480-9714 541-382-2599 Your classified ad & Residential Debris Removal will also appear on Allen Reinsch Yard Serving Central Oregon since 1903 bendbulletin.com Maintenance & Mowing 15' Alaskan which currently reJUNK BE GONE (& many other things!) Senior Discounts Home Delivery Advisor Smokercraft ceives over Call 541-536-1294or I Haul Away FREE 541-390-1466 Spring is upon us! 1.5 million page 541-815-5313 For Salvage. Also The Bulletin Circulation Department is seeking Like new, 15hp Same Day Response views every month Cleanups 8 Cleanouts a Home Delivery Advisor. This is a full-time Yamaha electric Villanueva Lawn Care. at no extra cost. Mel, 541-389-8107 Maintenance,clean-up, position and consists of managing an adult start, always in the Bulletin Classifieds carrier force to ensure our customers receive thatching + more! garage, very very Get Results! superior service. Must be able to create and little use, lots of Domestic Services Free estimates. Call 385-5809 or 541-981-8386 perform strategic plans to meet department extras. Special Serving Central place your ad on-line objectives such as increasing market share Home is Where the Dirt Is Oregon Since 2003 tongue so it fits at 9 yrs exp. in housekeepResidental/Commercial Painting/Wall Covering and penetration. Ideal candidate will be a in the garage. bendbulletin.com ing. Refs & rates to fit self-starter who can work both in the office When new was Sprinkler your needs. Julie & WESTERN PAINTING and in their assigned territory with minimal $9200; Hovana, 541-410-0648 Activation/Repair supervision. Early a.m. hours are necessary 763 CO. Richard Hayman, selling$4500 firm. or 541-728-1800 Back Flow Testing a semi-retired paintwith company vehicle provided. S t rong Recreational Homes Call 541-504-8484 customer service skills and management skills ing contractor of 45 any time! 8 Property Maintenance Handyman are necessary. C o mputer experience is years. S mall Jobs oThatch & Aerate required. You must pass a drug screening Welcome. Interior & • Spring Clean up Fishing camp: dock, I DO THAT! Exterior. c c b¹51 84. and be able to be insured by company to drive wave breaks, electric .Weekly Mowing vehicles. This is an entry-level position, but Home/Rental repairs 541-388-6910 & Edging to dock, f ully f u rSmall jobs to remodels we believe in promoting from within, so 8 Monthly nished, extra bunks advancement within company is available to Honest, guaranteed •Bi-Monthly Tree Services Maintenance in pump house, by work. CCB¹151573 the right person. If you enjoy dealing with water only on North • Bark, Rock, Etc. 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, Dennis 541-317-9768 MR. STUMP BUSTER people from diverse backgrounds and you are 10 Mi l e Lake . inboard motor, g reat Professional Stump & Tree energetic, have great organizational skills and Landaoa in 54'I -404-7595. ~ Removal• 24 yrs exp. interpersonal communication skills, please cond, well maintained, ERIC REEVE HANDY •Landscape Insured - Free estimates! SERVICES. Home & Construction send your resume to: $8995 obo. 541-350-7755 775 Call 541-213-9103 Commercial Repairs, oWater Feature The Bulletin Manufactured/ Carpentry-Painting, Installation/Maint. Take care of c/o Kurt Muller What are you Pressure-washing, •Pavers PO Box 6020 Mobile Homes your investments Honey Do's. On-time •Renovations Bend, OR 97708-6020 looking for? with the help from promise. Senior or e-mail resume to: FACTORY SPECIAL •Irrigations Installation You'll find it in Discount. Work guarkmugerobendbugetin.com New Home, 3 bdrm, The Bulletin's anteed. 541-389-3361 No phone calls, please. $46,500 finished Senior Discounts The Bulletin Classifieds "Call A Service or 541-771-4463 on your site. Bonded & Insured The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace. EOE J and M Homes Bonded & Insured 541-815-4458 Professional" Directory 541-385-5809 541-548-5511 CCB¹t 81 595 LCB¹8759

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Organization, flexibility and a high level of computer proficiency are essential. A solid knowledge of keyboard short-cuts and a typing speed of at least 50 WPM is required.

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Generator Kubota 3500 as, 60 h rs, $1000 ASH. 541-923-5960

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1989 Yamaha Exciter, 2,000 miles, original owner, always garaged, $600. 541-480-7517

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CHECK YOUR AD

A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ada. The Bulletin The Bulletin bendbulletin.com reserves the right to reject any ad at any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702

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The Bulletin



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

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DAILY BRI DG E C LU B Tuesday,April1,2014

Who's the victor?

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By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency

It's not unusual that in a given deal, the victor is the player who makes the next-to-last error. In a t eam match, both Souths played at five clubs doubled. At one table, West led the ace of spades and sat back to wait for his two trump tricks. The other West led his singleton diamond. South won with the ace and took the A-K of hearts to pitch his spade. He next led a trump, but after West took the queen and ace, he led the queen of hearts. South had to lose a diamond to East, down one again.

two clubs. What do you say? ANSWER: Since a club response by partner would be unwelcome, not everyone would have doubled with y our hand. No w t h a t y o u h a v e d oubled, y o u m u s t a c c ept t h e consequences of partner's response. P ass. A f urther bid such as t w o diamonds or 2N T w o uld promise extra strength that you don't have. West dealer Neither side vulnerable NORTH

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DIAMOND RUFF I couldn't say t hat th e second West's opening lead was an error. North could have held the king of trumps instead of South, and East could have had the king of spades as an entry to give West a diamond ruff. South made the final — and fatal — error. After he takes the top hearts, he can ruff a heart and lead the king of trumps. After West takes the A-Q, he is end-played. If he leads the ace of spades, South ruffs and discards

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By Gail Grabowski and Bruce Venzke (c)2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

04(/01/1 4


THE BULLETIN• TUESDAY APRIL 1 2014 E5

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 880

881

882

908

933

935

975

975

Motorhomes

Travel Trailers

Fifth Wheels

Aircraft, Parts 8 Service

Pickups

Sport Utility Vehicles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Dodge Ram 1500 SLT uadcab 1999

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ...

TIFFIN ALLEGRO BUS 2010 - FULLY LOADED 40QXP

Powerglide Chassis / 425HP Cummings Engine / Allison 6 Spd Automatic Trans / Less than 40K miles /Offered at $199K. Too many options to

list here( For more information go to ~ mee ~eee eeue.cem or email

trainwater157iN

gmeeeem

or call 858-527-8627

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

~e • @ i

You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond:

OPEN ROAD 36' 2005 - $25,500

881

Travel Trailers Euroway by Fleetwood 1996 27' trailer,

excellent condition, 5 new tires, electric lift, A/C, micro, aluminum construction, fiberglass exterior, always garaged. $5100. 541-549-0805

KeystoneLaredo 31'

RV 20 06 with 1 2'

slide-out. Sleeps 6, queen walk-around bed w/storage underneath. Tub 8 shower. 2 swivel rockers. TV. Air cond. Gas stove & refrigerator/freezer. Microwave. Awning. Outside sho w er. Slide through stora ge, E a s y Lif t . $29,000 new; Asking$18,600 541-447-4805

Orbit21' 2007, used only 8 times, A/C, oven, tub shower, micro, load leveler hitch, awning, dual batteries, sleeps 4-5, EXCELLENT CONDITION. All accessories are included. $14,511 OBO. 541-382-9441

BMW X3

Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 1 96 8

A ero

Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time, full panel. $23,000 obo. Contact Paul at T-Hangar for rent at Bend airport. Call 541-382-8996.

5 .2L V 8 aut o . , 1 43,659 mi. R W D Vin ¹628726 Bargain Corral. $5,977 ROBBERSON m ee. ~

maaaa

RV

CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do the Work, You Keep the Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254

obo. 541-647-2640 932

Antique & Classic Autos

Look at: Bendhomes.com Canopies & Campers for Complete Listings of 2009 9~/a' Arctic Fox, Area Real Estate for Sale en., exlnt, reduced to Ford F150 1983, Nice, 22,900. 541-410-1312 original Thunderbird canopy. needs motor $350. 541-410-3425 o 885

on black, sport/prem packs, leather, 3.5i turbo, nav., 20k miles, 19" wheels, cold weather pkg, Xenons, warranteed to 9/2015.$38,000 One owner, 503-769-9401

(Portland)

Aircraft, Parts

8 Service

L82- 4 speed. 85,000 miles Garaged since new. I've owned it 25 years. Never damaged or abused.

LINcoLN ~

R

I M ROR

541-312-3986 DLR ¹0205

CORVETTE COUPE Glasstop 2010

Grand Sport - 4 LT loaded, clear bra hood & fenders. New Michelin Super Sports, G.S. floor mats, 17,000 miles, Crystal red. $42,000.

Porsche 911 Carrera 993 cou e

1996, 73k miles, Tiptronic auto. transmission. Silver, blue leather interior, moon/sunroof, new quality tires and battery, car and seat covers, many extras. Recently fully serviced, garaged, looks and runs like new. Excellent condition $29,700 541-322-9647

2006 XLT 4-door Crew Cab 6.0L Turbo diesel, full power, a u t omatic, 6-disc CD, cruise, fog 541-598-3750 lights, running boards, www.aaaoregonautotow pkg, bedliner, grill source.com guard, folding rear seat. Tan cloth interior, metallic tan exte- T oyota Highlander 2012 Limited, 30,500 mi. rior. 91,400 miles.

Ford Thunderbird 2002 c o nvertible with brand new tonneau cover, white with grey i nterior, loaded, 68,600 low miles, choice condition, everything works. Great fun car to d r ive. I l l ness forces sale $13,950 cash. C all Bi l l 541-604-9307

get Committee. LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SEIZURE FOR CIVIL FORFEITURE TO ALL POTENTIAL CLAIMANTS AND TO ALL UNKNOWN PERSONS READ THIS CAREFULLY

Garage Sales Garage Sales Find them

in The Bulletin Classifieds

541 -385-5809

with hard & soft top, silver with black interior, all original, very low mileage, in premium condition. $19,900. 702-249-2567 (car is in Bend)

Porsche 911 Turbo

2003 6 speed, X50

added power pkg.

530 HP! Under 10k 541-598-3750 www.aaaoregonautosource.com

miles, Arctic silver, gray leather interior, new quality tires, and battery, Bose p remium so u n d stereo, moon/sunroof, car and seat covers. Many extras. Garaged, p e r fect condition, $59,700.

Need to get an ad in ASAP?

"~Ok

I4 ~

Pacific Ridge by Komfort 2011 Mdl P 27RL 31', 15' Super slide, power jack, electric awning, solar panel, 6-volt batteries, LED lighting, always stored inside. Must see to appreciate.Asking $28,000. Call Bill, 541-460-7930

If you have any interest i n t h e s e i zed property d e s cribed below, you must claim that interest or you will automatically lose that interest. If you do not file a claim for the property, the property may be forfeited even if you are not convicted of any crime. To claim an interest, you must file a written claim with the forfeiture counsel named below, Th e w r itten claim must be signed by you, sworn to under penalty of perjury before a notary public, and state: (a) Your true name; (b) The address at which you will a c cept f u t ure m ailings from t h e court and f orfeiture

counsel; and (3) A

s tatement that y o u have an interest in the seized property. Your The Bulletin Classifieds 541-306-1961. deadline for filing the Leave message. claim document with forfeiture cou n sel Plymouth B a rracuda Good classified adstell 541-322-9647 Kia Soul+ 2012 eee n amed below is 21 CHECKYOURAD 1966, original car! 300 the essential facts in an days from the last day 1/3interestin hp, 360 V8, center- interesting Manner. Write of publication of this lines, 541-593-2597 Porsche Carrera 911 Columbia 400, 4.7L V8, 4WD, auto., from the readers view -not notice. Where to file 2003 convertible with Financing available. 16 mpg Hwy Vin¹ the seller's. Convert the hardtop. 50K miles, a claim and for more 66902 Bargain CorCall a Pro $150,000 facts into benefits. Show new factory Porsche i nformation: D a i na ral $11,977 (located I Bend.) Whether you need a the reader howthe item will motor 6 mos ago with Vitolins, Crook County 541-286-3333 2.0L 4 cyls, FWD, on the first day it runs help them in some way. 18 mo factory warDistrict Attorney Offence fixed, hedges ROBBERSON automatic, 43k to make sure it is corranty remaining. This fice, 300 N E T hird trimmed or a house LINcoLN~ I M ROS miles, 28 MPG Hwy, rect. "Spellcheck" and $37,500. advertising tip Street, Prineville, OR vin¹436072 541-322-6928 human errors do ocbuilt, you'll find brought to you by 97754. 541.312.3986 $12,977 cur. If this happens to Notice of r easons professional help in DLR¹0205 your ad, please conThe Bulletin for Forfeiture: The ROBBERSON Serving Cent el Oregon sleee eaa The Bulletin's "Call a Toyota Ceiica tact us ASAP so that property d e s cribed m ~a ae a a a Convertible 1993 corrections and any Service Professional" 940 below was seized for 1/3 interest in welladjustments can be forfeiture because it: Directory 541.312.3986 Vans equipped IFR Beech Bomade to your ad. DLR ¹0205 (1) Constitutes the nanza A36, new 10-550/ 541-3BB-5BOB 541-385-5809 proceeds of the violaprop, located KBDN. The BulletinClassified tion of, solicitation to $65,000. 541-419-9510 v iolate, attempt t o Mazda3 2012 www.N4972M.com Ford Supercab 1992, violate, or conspiracy GT 2200 4 cyl, 5 brown/tan color with to violates, the crimispeed, a/c, pw, pdl, m atching full s i z e laws of the State nicest c o nvertible nal c anopy, 2WD, 4 6 0 Chrysler Town & of Oregon regarding around in this price over drive, 135K mi., the manufacture, disRolls Royce 1992 SilCountry LXI 1997, range, new t ires, full bench rear seat, beautiful inside 8 tribution, or possesver Spur II,excellent! wheels, clutch, timFleetwood Prowler slide rear w indow, Sport, 5 spd, leather sion of controlled subMidnight Blue exterior, out, one owner, noning belt, plugs, etc. 32' - 2001 seats, hatchback, 1/5th interest in 1973 Parchment leather inte- bucket seats, power smoker,. Ioaded with stances (ORS 111K mi., remark2 slides, ducted FWD. 68,398 mi. Chapter475); and/or Cessna 150 LLC rior, 15-inch chrome RR seats w/lumbar, pw, options! 197,892 mi. able cond. i nside heat & air, great HD receiver & trailer Service vin¹532262 150hp conversion, low wheels, Alpine Sirius (2) Was used or inrec o rds and out. Fun car to condition, snowbird $17,977 time on air frame and DVD/CD/AM/FM/GPS brakes, good tires. available. $4 , 950. t ended for us e i n drive, Must S E E! ready, Many upGood cond i tion. navigation system, committing or f aciliengine, hangared in Call Mike, (541) 615$5995. R e dmond. $4900. 541-389-5341 ROBBERSON y grade options, fi77,200 miles, dealerBend. Excellentpertating the violation of, 6176 after 3:30 p.m. 541-504-1993 nancing available! ship maintained, ale I e e e ee ~ I M ROR formance & affordsolicitation to violate, ways garaged. New, $14,500 obo. attempt to violate, or able flying! $6,000. 541.312.3986 about $250,000; sell 541-4'I 0-6007 conspiracy to violate Honda Odyssey Call Dick, $19,500.541-480-3348 DLR ¹0205 the criminal laws of 1999. Very good 541-480-1687. the State of Oregon WHEN ONLY THE cond. Runs well, regarding the manuBEST WILL DO! Two sets of tires on facture, distribution or FORD XLT 1992 rims - summer and V olvo S40 T 5 2 0 0 5 possession of conwinter. $2500. 3/4 ton 4x4 su b stances AWD sunroof lux/winter trolled 541-593-2312 matching canopy, pkgs, new tires, more! (ORS Chapter 475). 172 Cessna Share or 541-977-7588 30k original miles, $6775 obo.541-330-5818 IFR equipped, new possible trade for avionics, Garmin 750 Nlazda Nliata 1997 WHEN YOU SEE THIS IN THE MATTER OF: classic car, pickup, Buick Skylark 1972 975 Keystone Challenger touchscreen, center M-Edition motorcycle, RV 17K odig. miles. Please (1) One 1993 Toyota 2004 CH34TLB04 34' Automobiles Mica Green, 5-spd, stack, 160hp. $13,500. see Bend Craiglist for OLN Tacoma, fully S/C, w/d hookups, Exceptionally clean All power options, In La Pine, call details. $18,900. KH036, Case N o new 16' Dometic awleather, convertible MOreP iXatBejdbjletij.COm U13-1739 926-561-9190 & economical! 541-323-1698 seized OctoOn a classified ad ning, 4 new tires, new boot, Tonneau $13,500. b er 3, 2 0 1 3 f r om Kubota 7000w marine Hangared Cover, synthetic go to 933 in KBDN diesel generator, 3 oils, small alum. www.bendbulletin.com Carolyn Orrell. Pickups trailer, extra set slides, exc. cond. in- Call 541-728-0773 to view additional (2) One 2008 Silver tires and rims s ide & o ut. 27" T V photos of the item. * Toyota Tundra, OLN dvd/cd/am/fm enter$5995. Corvette Coupe 5 11GFG, Case N o 8 tain center. Call for 541-548-5648 Looking for your 1996, 350 auto, 13-276305 se i z ed more details. O nly GMC 2500 2003 135k, non-ethanol next employee? D ecember 6, 2 0 13 used 4 times total in HD SLE Crew Cab fuel/synthetic oil, Place a Bulletin help f rom Andrew Van NfercedesBenz last 5~/a years.. No 4-wheel drive, 6.6 garaged/covered. wanted ad today and Nest. C220 1996 pets, no smoking. High liter V8 Turbo DieBose Premium Gold reach over 60,000 1974 Bellanca retail $27,700. Will sell 2012 Chevrolet sel Duramax engine, LEGAL NOTICE system. Orig. owner readers each week. 1730A for $24,000 including The following units Silverado LT 4x4Allison transmission, manual. Stock! Your classified ad sliding hitch that fits in many options, will be sold at Pub5.3 V6, Flexfuel, 14K $10,500 OBO. will also appear on your truck. Call 8 a.m. 2160 TT, 440 SMO, lic Auction on Tuesmiles, Extended 107,000 miles. bendbulletin.com Retired. Must sell! to 10 p.m. for appt to 160 mph, excellent Very good condition, day, April 8, 2014 at Cab, tow pkg, Per541-923-1781 which currently resee. 541-330-5527. condition, always 11 a.m. a t B e nd formance 20" $21,500. ceives over 1.5 mil2.2L 4 cyl. auto, hangared, 1 owner 707-484-3518 Mini Storage, 100 wheels, Sirius XM, lion page views 104k miles, 29 MPG B MW 3 Series 328i for 35 years. $60K. SE 3rd St., Bend, OnStar, bedliner, (iocated in Bend) every month at Hwy, Gray, Laredo 30' 2009 2007,sedan,dark OR 97702. U nit¹ Snug Top, no extra cost. BulleVin¹391666 C196 Melissa tin Classifieds In Madras, like new!$28,500. $5,998 Banks, Unit¹ B39541-923-8868 Get Results! Call call 541-475-6302 Sierra Brown, Unit¹ 365-5809 or place ROBBERSON y C162 - Timothy your ad on-line at LINcoLN ~ I M ROR Lester Cottrell, Unit¹ bendbuiietin.com C262 Richard 541-598-3750 aaaore541-312-3986 overall length is 35' Giffels, Unit¹ B30GMC Sonoma 2001 4x4 DLR ¹0205 gonautosource.com has 2 slides, Arctic Ext Cab, 4.3L V6, 87,650 I The Bulletin recoml Andria Hattenhauer, package, A/C,table miles, very good cond. mends extra cautionI U nit¹ C13 4 & chairs, satellite, $5500. 541-368-1714 BuickLacrosse CX when p u r chasing • Steven Rondeau. Nissan Aitima 2010 'iol . Arctic pkg., power 2008 Cessna 182Q, 1977, 2005 Diesel 4x4 f products or services awning, in excellent mid-time engine/ Chev Crewcab dufrom out of the area. condition! More pix ally, Allison tranny, f S ending c ash , Tick, Tock prop, custom panel, at bendbulletin.com S-Tec 30 + altitude tow pkg., brake conchecks, or credit in- I I nternational Fla t troller, cloth split $28,000 hold, Garmin 430, formation may be I Tick, Tock... Bed Pickup 1963, 1 541-419-3301 front bench seat, GPSS, oversized [ sublect toFRAUD. ton dually, 4 s pd. only 66k miles. 2.5S 4cyl., FWD, tires, digital fuel flow, For more informa...don't let time get trans., great MPG, FWD automatic, Very good condition, CVT, 76k mi., 32 excellent paint & f tion about an advercould be exc. wood Monaco Lakota 32' 2002, away. Hire 8 Original owner, 4-Spd, 75,999 mi. mpg„Tuscan Sun interior. Must see to tiser, you may call hauler, runs great, 2 slides, AC, recliners, Vin¹343933 Metallic, vin¹443776 I the Oregon StateI appreciate. $34,000 new brakes, $1950. professional out walk-around queen bed, $9,977 $11,997 Asking $66,000. or best offer. Attorney General's g 541-419-5480. sliding glass door closet, 541-408-7826 of The Bulletin'8 Bill, 541-480-7930 Office C o nsumer I new tub & 10-gal water ROBBERSON y ROBBERSON y f Protection hotline at heater, good tires. Brand "Call A Service Lllleeee ~ ~ ueeeer ~ ~ 1-877-677-9392. Hangar for sale at C h e vy Ext. Cab 1991 Need helP fixing stuff. new 20' screen room available. Super clean, 1 Redmond Airport - not with c amper shell, Call A Semice Professional Professional" 541.312.3986 541-312-3986 owner, n o n-smokers. a T Hangar -$39,000. ao od c o nd., $ 1500 find the help you need. DLR ¹0205 DLR ¹0205 Serving Central Oregon sinceraa Directory today! www.bendbulletin.com 541-420-0626 QBO. 5 41-447-5504. $11,999. 541-447-7966

ToyotaLandcruiser

Fax it ts 541-322-72%

VX 1999

g5

,

<j-,-,' ~ >'-

I

LEGAL NOTICE Notice of Budget Committee Meeting

place. An y person may appear at this meeting and discuss the proposed programs with the Bud-

Garage Sales

Ford Thunderbird 2004 Convertible

1000

Legal Notices

A public meeting of the Budget Committee of the High Desert Education S e r vice District, D e s chutes County, State of Oregon, will be held at 145 SE Salmon Avenue., Suite A, Redmond, Oregon. The m eeting w il l ta k e place on the 15th day of April, 2014 at 5:30 P.M. The purpose of the meeting is to receive t h e bu d get message. A copy of the budget document may be inspected or obtained on or after April 16th at 145 SE Salmon Ave., Redmond, Oregon 97756 between the hours of 8:00 A.M. and 5:00 P.M. This is a public meeting where deliberation of the Budget Committee will take

FWD, V6 auto., 90k mi., 29 mpg Hwy, Vin¹572967 Bar ain Corral 6,977 ROBBERSON

Ford Bronco 1990, 5.9 351, 134k miles, exc. cond. inside and out. $3,295 or make offer. 541-550-6328

Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390

908

Pontiac Grand AM SE1 2003

Corvette 1979

503-358-1164.

Ford Bronco II 4x4, 1989Automatic, power steering, stereo upgrade, set-up to tow, runs good. $1700. 541-633-6662

Priced to sell $21,500 541-350-6925 engine, power everything, new paint, 54K orig. miles, runs great, Ford Ranger 1990 exc. cond.in/out. $7500 K ing Cab, g o od obo. 541-480-3179 cond, new m otor, tinted windows, bed liner, 2 sets tires, dual pipe. Must see to appreciate. $4000 obo. 541-946-9061

541-389-9377

BMW X3 2011black

ma gaa

Ford F-350 4x4,

Olds 98 Regency 1990 exc. shape, runs as new, one owner, 20 mpg in town. New battery, stud snow tires. $2000.

$12,900.

Barqain Corral $18,977 ROBBERSON u eeeer~

000

Dave, 541-350-4077

4WD Vin¹D74407

541.312.3986 DLR¹0205

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

2 0 07, 99K

miles, premium package, heated lumbar supported seats, panoramic moo n roof, Bluetooth, ski bag, Xenon headlights, tan & black leather interior, n ew front & re a r brakes © 76K miles, one owner, all records, very clean, $16,900. 541-388-4360

541.312.3986 DLR¹0205

King bed, hide-a-bed 916 sofa, 3 slides, glass SPRINGDALE 22' 2010 shower, 10 gal. waTrucks & Exlnt cond, Q-bed+ diter heater, 10 cu.ft. Heavy Equipment nette/small bed; bathfridge, central vac, room w/tub/shower (not a s atellite dish, 2 7 " ewet e bathroom), ceramic TV/stereo syst., front toilet; AC, gas heat, gas front power leveling Dodge Ram 2500 cook stove w/oyen; gas jacks and s cissor 2008 Diesel, water heater; micro, large stabilizer jacks, 16' exc. towing vehicle, 115v AC/gas fridge/ awning. Like new! 2WD, 55,000 freezer; 2 hanging clos- 541-419-0566 Peterbilt 359 p otable New batterets, 2 mirrors; cable TV & water truck, 1 990, miles. ies, rear air bags, rooftop antenna hookups; 3200 gal. tank, 5hp e Roll-n-lock bed stereo CD/radio,Ig rear p ump, 4 - 3 hoses, cover, spray-in window; roller awning; camlocks, $25,000. liner. 5th wheel load level hitch. 541-820-3724 By owner$10,000. hitch available, too. 931 541-647-8214(Sisters) $19,000. Automotive Parts, 541-604-1285 Recreation by Design Service & Accessories 2013 Monte Carlo, 36-ft. Top living room, 2 Ford F-250 XLT American Racing wheels bdrm, has 3 slideouts, 2 2006 SuperCab (4), cast aluminum dish A/Cs, entertainment e style, 15x7, 5 lug, 4.5 ,,me ' center, fireplace, W/D, spacing. $250. garden tub/shower, in Tango 29.6' 2007, great condition. $36,000 541-604-0963 Rear living, walkobo. Call Peter, Michelin P225/45R-18 around queen bed, 307-221-2422, low profile radials central air, awning, ( in La Pine ) mounted on 5spoke,5 6.0L V6, auto.,diesel, WILL DELIVER lug Chevy rims, $600

„s

Winnebago Suncruiser34' 2004, 35K, loaded, too much to list, ext'd warr. thru 2014, $49,900 Dennis, 541-589-3243

exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, Irg LR, Arctic insulation, all options $35,000 obo. 541-420-3250

541-447-5184.

Winnebago Adventurer 2005 35~/a', gas, less than 20,000 miles, 541-815-4121 excellent condition, 2 slide-outs, work horse chassis, Banks power Looking for your brake system, sleeps next employee? 5, with al l o p tions, Place a Bulletin help $69,000 / negotiable. wanted ad today and Call 5 4 1-306-8711or reach over 60,000 email aikistu © bend- readers each week. cable.com 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 Winnebago Aspect Classifieds Get Re2009- 32', 3 slidesults! Call 365-5809 outs, Leather inteor place your ad rior, Power s eat, on-line at locks, win d ows, bendbulletin.com Aluminum wheels. 17 e Flat Screen, Surround s o u nd, 882 camera, Queen bed, Fifth Wheels Foam mattress, Awning, Generator, Inverter, Auto Jacks, Air leveling, Moon roof, no smoking or p ets. L ik e n ew, $74,900 541-480-6900 Aipeniite 29' 1993, with goo s eneck. $4500 obo. Needs new ref r igerator

• 34D, 2 slides • Tires 80% • Just completely serviced • 39,000 miles • No trades • $48,000 firm 541-815-3150

MONTANA 3585 2008,

541-548-5254

1 large slide, $12,000. 541-280-2547 or

WINNEBAGO BRAVE 2003

//ee//Z/z

Cadillac Deville DHS 2000. Most options, exc. cond. 93,000 mi.. New tires. $4,600. 541-233-6944.

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E6 TUESDAY APRIL 1 2014 • THE BULLETIN

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

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lllonaco Dynasty 2004 - LOAOED! solid Features include rs 4-dr

surface counte, d e convection micro, ,/d„„'e-

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$149,000 541-000-000

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p o 40 word length, with border, full color photo, bold headline and price. • Daily publication in The Bulletin, an audience of over 70,000. • Weekly publication in Central Oregon Marketplace — DELIVERED to over 30,000 households. • Weekly publication in The Central Oregon Nickel Ads with an audience of over 30,000 in Central and Eastern Oregon • Continuous listing with photo on Bendbulletin.com

541-385-5809 * A $290 value based on an ad with the same extra features,publishing 28-ad days in the above publications. Private party ads only.


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FOSTER FARIS SPUTCHICKEN BREAST Northwest Grown

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