ServingCentral Oregonsince1903 75
THURSDAY January 2,2014
en oar er's m ic aim Dress-upskiing SPORTS • C1
LOCAL• B1
bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
LOCAL ECONOMY
Health law —Consumers start using coverage.A2 PltlS —Both sides of the debate ramp upefforts to woo the young andhealthy. D1 Antl —To lower costs, insurers restrict access to some hospitals.D2 DuCk reVieW —Mark Helfrich's firstyear in charge had its highs and lows.C1
• Forecasters predict the weather for January-Marchwill more closely match norms
FitneSS —Perhaps the biggest lesson of the past year: Intensity matters.D1
rones ma rin By Andrew Clevenger The Bulletin
WASHINGTON — Central
Oregon is well-positioned to benefit from the economic
FOrgOtten grain —Ideas
benefits of the burgeoning unmanned aerial vehicle market
for enjoying millet, a nutritional powerhouse.D3
within the aviation industry after the Federal Aviation
Administration announced Monday that Oregon will host
three highly sought-after test ranges. One of the ranges will be based on a roughly 900-square-mile areaon the
Trophy cars — Highrollers
Confederated Tribes of Warm
are shelling out big bucks, shedding any lingering reluctance left from the recession.C6
Springs reservation near Madras. The others in Oregon will be in Tillamook and at
the Eastern Oregon Regional Airport in Pendleton. More than a dozen compa-
In national news — coiorado's legal pot experiment kicks off to waiting crowds.A2
nies have expressed interest in opening a satellite facility in Central Oregon because of its proximity to the Warm
And a Web exclusive-
Springs site, said Roger Lee,
Trend in China: ajob in a city, but a family left behind. beuttbunetiu.cum/extras
the executive director of Eco-
nomic Development for Central Oregon. Joe Kiine/The Bulletin
EDITOR'5CHOICE
Loan monitor's legal tactics scrutinized
we could generate 200 to
Rock, offered guided hikes with a ranger andwaived day-use parking fees as part of a nationwide program called First Day
400 jobs here in the next five
Hikes. While hikers enjoyed temperatures in the 50s, and daily highs are forecast to remain in the 40s through the weekend, climate models suggest the higher-than-average temperatures won't continue all winter.
years or so in Central Oregon based on the availability of test areas," he said. "We've got
about 15 companies who said they would set up satellite op-
By Megan Kehoee The Bulletin
hough the snow drought is expected to continue into next week, the new year may bring
erations here and work with UAVs."
new hope for snow enthusiasts in Central Oregon. "It's looking like it will be pretty close to what we would normally see this time of year,"
be a little low, he said, because of the location of the other
said Alan Polan, a forecaster with the National Weather Service in Pendleton. "It's not going to be
Stacy Jorgensen fought her way through pancreatic cancer. But her struggle was just beginning. Beforeshe became ill,
Jorgensen took out $43,000 in student loans. As her payments piled up along with medical bills, she took the unusual step of filing for bankruptcy, requiring legal proof of "undue hardship." The agency charged with monitoring such bankruptcy declarations, a nonprofit with an exclusive
governmentagreement, argued that Jorgensen did not qualify and should pay in full, dismissing her con-
The predi ctionsarebased on dimatological models released in three-month
to cancel its New Year's celebrations because of low snow levels that have pre-
segments by the National Weather Ser- vented the ski resort from opening. vice. The High Desert's weather for this In the more immediate 10-day foremonth,February and March are expect- cast, Polan said a ridge ofhigh pressure ed to keep with seasonal norms of past is expected to continue to slowly move years. Average rainfall and snowmelt in above the High Desert, extending the Centml Oregon for the month of Janu- dry spell. Polan said a weak disturary,basedondatataken atthe Redmond bance may pass through the area TuesAirport, is about 0.97 inches. Average day, and there's a slight chance of rain
advance, but said the arctic blast that
sent temperatures plummeting below zero in the High Desert this December is not expected to return this winter.
"Hopefully that was just a one-shot thing, and we got it out the way early in the season," Polan said. "I don't
want to see that happen again." Polan said a long-term outlook at the first few months of the new year sug-
gests the months of April and Maycould inches, while February generally sees 4,000 feet on Tuesday. But for the most be cooler than average in theHigh Des3.2inches and March generall y gets 1.3 part, Polan said the high pressure is ert, but that prediction could change. "It hints that Central Oregon might inches. Avemge snowfall numbers vary likelyto persist inthe days ahead. "It's not looking very good for the see below-normal temperatures for greatlythroughout Central Oregon. Thus far this winter, the areahas seen next eight days, and that's because of those months, but I wouldn't jump on higher-than-average temperatures com- the high pressure," Polan said. "Janu- that bandwagon just yet," Polan said. "Nothing is completely set." bined with a dry spell that has left sno- ary is starting out fairly dry." parks and ski resorts like Mt. Bachelor As for winter storms, Polan said — Reporter; 541-383-0354, hungry for snow. Hoodoo recently had it's difficult to predict anything far in mkehoe@bendbulletin.com snow accumulation for January is 4.1
at lower elevations and snow above
"The mere possibility of
a lawyer representing the agency said. "Survival rates for younger patients tend to be higher," another wrote, citing a study presented in court.
There is $1 trillion in federal student debt today and the possibility of default on those taxpayer-backed loans poses an acute risk to the economy's recov-
ery. Congress, faced with troubling default rates in
sites selected by the FAA. SeeDrones/A5
Sharing idle assets proliferates By Aki Ito andJeff Keams Bloomberg News
Rayshauna Gray makes frequent trips around New En-
gland from her home in Cambridge, Mass. The 27-year-old doesn't own a car and says she
can't imagine ever wanting to.
It takes two minutes for her to type relayrides.com into her
Internet browser and arrange to rent one of many vehicles
cerns about the cancer's return.
recurrence is not enough,"
Those estimates may even
too warm or too cold, and it's not going to be too dry in terms of precipitation."
By Natalie Kitroeff New York Times News Service
"Our estimates were that
Hikers ascend the Misery Ridge trail at Smith Rock State Park on New Year's Day. Statewide, several parks, including Smith
At14, deadlifting twice hisweight By DeNeen L. Brown
Jake Schellenschlager
powerlifting aficionados and
The Washington Post
blends in with other
worries pediatricians who
eighth-graders, but here at the York Barbell Com-
believe the sport poses risks to developing bodies. On this day, Jake is hoping to set world or personal records.
The freckle-faced Wonder
Kid moves through a gym packed with powerlifters, gliding past the grunting, straining, muscle-bound adults. In his middle school hall-
way outside of Baltimore,
petition in York, Pa., the
14-year-old with a shock of red hair and toothy grin is a star. The Wonder Kid can lift more than twice his weight
— a feat that impresses
Jake admits he is nervous
as he waits for the announcer to call his name. The com-
petition will pit Jake against himself. Although powerlifting is attracting increasing numbers of teens, there are no other competitors on this
Saturday morning in his category — 14- to 15-yearolds at a weight class of 123
pounds. SeePowerlifter/A5
sitting unused in her neighbors' garages. "It's super easy," said Gray, a residential manager at the Cambridge Institute of International Education. "I get a
car only when I need it, maybe every month and a half or so." Emerging online services are connecting consumers such as Gray to a previously untapped universe of idle assets, enabling them to squeeze more value out of cars, designer dresses, baby toys and bedrooms that belong to other people or businesses. SeeSharing/A4
the past, has made it espe-
cially hard for borrowers to get bankruptcy relief for student loans and so only
some hundreds try every year. SeeStudent debt/A4
TODAY'S WEATHER Mostlycloudy High 52, Low34 Page B6
INDEX BusIness Calendar Classified
D1-6 Obituaries B5 C6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Health C1-5 B2 Crosswords E 4 H o roscope D6 Sp orts E 1 - 6Dear Abby D6 Local/State B 1-6 N '/Movies D6
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By Robert Pear andAbbyGoodnough New York Times News Service
WASHINGTON — Kathy Hornbach of 'Ittcson, Ariz., is not wasting
lower premiums and deductible.
"It's a better policy — lower out-ofpocket,more choice of doctors," she
said. "This is a very happy day." Consumers around the country
"We might at some point down the road, since we have spent a lot of
time informing uninsured patients of their options under the exchange and expanded Medicaid," Holtzman
began using coverage provided by said in an email. "But it depends on fect on New Year's Day. Hornbach, the new health care law Wednes- if those patients chose plans that in57, has an appointment with a cardi- day, the same day that Medicaid ex- dudeus." ologist today for a stress test. panded to hundreds of thousands of In San Antonio, at a 24-hour Wal"I've had some heart palpitations, people in about half the states. Many greens store, only a fewvehicles were and my mom's side has a history of provisions of the 2010 health care lined up at the drive-through winheart problems starting early," she law offering new benefits and protec- dow at midday, and no one was waitsaid Wednesday in a telephone in- tions to consumers, including those ing in line to pick up prescriptions at terview. "So it's mostly just to dou- with pre-existing conditions, also the indoor pharmacy counter. "It's dead," said Leslie Castillo, a ble-check that everything is OK." took effect. Hornbach, a breast cancer surviHospitals said they were getting pharmacist on duty. "We've had a vor who retired early from the tech- ready for an influx of newly insured few regulars come by, but no one has nology industry, said that insurance patients, but many health care pro- come in today with a new insurance companies in Arizona had refused to viders said the pace was slower than card or wanting us to look up their cover her until about two years ago, usual because of the New Year's benefit sunderObamacare." when she got a policy with monthly holiday. In a typical report, Clay One reason, Castillo said, was premiums of $285 and a deductible Holtzman, a spokesman for Swedish that most doctors were not seeing of $5,500 a year. Last month, using Medical Center in Seattle, said the patients on the New Year's holiday. the federal insurance exchange, she system's hospitals were not seeing an But she added, "We'll probably be bought a midlevel silver plan with immediate surge. packed tomorrow." insurance coverage, which took ef-
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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites
m /
John VVark/The Associated Press
A line of buyers stretches from astore selling marijuana W ednesday in PuebloW est,Colo. The nation's first recreational pot industry opened inColorado on Wednesday, kicking off an experiment that will be followed closely around the world andonethat activists hope will prove that legalization is a better alternative than the costly American-led drug war. In Denver, waiting crowds wereserenaded by live music and vendors offered food andsmoking pipes. Sometourists even rode around in a limo, eager to try weedbut not so eager to be seen buying it. And when thesalesbegan,thosewho boughtthedrug
©
Q >sQ z4Q co Q 4sQ sz
The estimated jackpot is now $60 million.
MEGABUCKS The numbers drawn Wednesday night are:
22Q 26 Q 29Q 35Q 47 QsQ The estimated jackpot is now $1.5 million.
— The Associated Press
By Michael D.Shear andAshley Parker
position to the recent budget deal in
ers and provide an opportunity for New York Times News Service Congress, indicate that he is serious young immigrants who came to the WASHINGTON — House Speaker about revamping the immigration country illegally as children to beJohn Boehner has signaled he may system despite deep reservations come U.S. citizens. embrace a series oflimited changes to from conservative Republicans. Although the legislation would fall the nation's immigration laws in the
Aides to Boehner said this week that he was committed to what he
coming months, giving advocates for change new hope that 2014 might be the year that a bitterly divided Congress reaches a political compromise to overhaulthe sprawlingsystem. Boehner, R-Ohio, has in recent weeks hired Rebecca Tallent, a longtime immigration adviser to Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., who has long backed broad immigration changes. Advocates for an overhaul say the hiring, as well as angry comments by Boehner critical of Tea Party op-
ment will delay anexpected announcement of bids for new settlement construction for the next few days while Secretary of State JohnKerry is in the region, an Israeli official said Wednesday,avoiding a potential high-profile clash over the contentious issue. Kerry is scheduled to arrive today andto stay at least until Sunday onwhat will be his 10th visit to the Middle East assecretary of state in a push to advancedifficult Israeli-Palestinian talks. SharOn Cnnditinn —Ariel Sharon, the former prime minister of Israel who hasbeencomatose for nearly eight years, edgedcloser to death Wednesday evening, suffering from kidney failure. A spokesmanfor the hospital that has been treating Sharon, 85, said that"there has beena deterioration in his medical condition." Sharon, a controversial military commander who roseto hold many of his nation's top positions, suffered a stroke after shaking up Israeli politics at the height of his power.
far short of the demands being made
by immigration activists, it could calls "step by step" moves to revise provide the beginnings of a deal. immigration laws, which they have Aides continue to say that Boehner declined to specify. remains opposed to a single, compreBut other House Republicans, hensive bill like the Senate-passed who see an immigration overhaul measure that would tighten border as essential to wooing the Hispanic security, increase legal immigration voters crucial to the party's fortunes and offer an eventual path to U.S. in the 2016 presidential election, said
citizenship for an estimated ll mil-
they could move on separate bills that would fast-track legalization for
lion immigrants in the country illegally. Conservatives are staunchly agricultural laborers, increase the opposed to sweeping legislation that number of visas for high-tech work- would offer apath to citizenship.
three-story building with several apartments near downtownMinneapolisearlyWednesday,sending more than adozenpeople to hospitals with injuries — somecritical — ranging from burns to trauma associated with falls. An explosion was reported about 8:15 a.m., andwithin minutes a fire raged through the building, said Robert Ball, aspokesmanforHennepinCountyEmergency Medical Services. Paramedics, amid subzero temperatures, responded to find victims on the ground, somewith injuries that suggested they may have fallen multiple stories. NYC mayar —Claiming his place as the109th mayor of NewYork City, Bill de Blasio delivered an inaugural address Wednesday that focused on inequality. "We arecalled to put an end to economic and social inequalities that threaten to unravel the city we love," he said in his address on the steps of City Hall. "And so today, wecommit to a new progressive direction in NewYork." De Blasio, 52, was formally sworn in shortly after midnight in front of his family's rowhouse in Brooklyn. Later Wednesday, hewas ceremonially sworn in by Bill Clinton, in whose administration he had served.
Somaii domdingS — At least six peoplewere killed and manymorewerewounded after consecutive car bombings and anattack by armed militants at a hotel in Mogadishu onWednesday evening, officials said. A vehicle loadedwith explosives crashed into a police car outside the gate of the Jazeerahotel and exploded. That was followed, the authorities said, by another blast in the middle of the rescueoperation. No group claimed responsibility for the attacks. Syrian COnfliCt —At least 20 people were killed Wednesday inAleppo when aresidential building was hit by a rocket from awarplane as the government's daily bombardment of the northern Syrian city continued, activists said. More than 500 people havebeenkilled across Aleppo province in two weeks of afierce government offensive with rockets and destructive barrel bombs, doctors and human rights groups reported. — From wire reports
South Su an peace talks e in in Ethiopia The Associated Press
The numbers drawn Wednesday night are:
emerged from the stores, receipt held high andcarrying sealed shopping bags, to cheers. Business owners who threw their doors openfor shoppers at 8 a.m. are looking for the fledgling industry to generate as much revenue asstate officials hope it will. At least 24 pot shops in eight towns opened,after increasing staff and inventory and hiring security. Just on the first day, prices in someplaces rose to more than $500 an ounce,andsomeshopsannouncedmidafternoonthey would close early because of short supply. It's too soon to say whether the price spikesand long lines will persist.
Boehner issaid to backimmigration change
By Jason Straziuso and Elias Meaeret
POWERBALL
ISraeli SettlementS —TheIsraeli govern-
MinneapOliS fire —A bilowing fire engulfed a
REDMOND BUREAU
The Bulletin's primary concern is that all
tinian ambassador to theCzech Republic died Wednesday after suffering severe injuries caused by an explosive booby-trap security system in a safe at his Prague residence that heapparently had trigged by mistake, the police reported. They said there was noindication the explosion was sabotage or aterrorist attack. The diplomat, Jamal al-Jamal, 56, had been intheCzech capital only since Oct. 11. Apolice spokesman said an investigation at the residence indicated that the safe itself had exploded because ofcareless handling that detonated the security system.
gency management officials in NewEngland and parts of NewYork prepared on Wednesdayfor a winter storm predicted to help usher in 2014with snow and frigid temperatures across much of the region. Snowwas expected to begin falling overnight, promising a messycommute for the first business day of the newyear, but the full storm wasn't expected to hit until later today. Temperatures were expected to plummet, with someareas seeing highs just abovezero, the National Weather Service said.
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ICednund Ship —The latest attempt to rescue passengers on board aresearch ship that has been trapped inAntarctic ice for more than a week wasdelayed again early today after sea ice prevented abarge from reaching one of the rescue vessels. A helicopter wasexpected to airlift passengers to aChinese icebreaker, the Snow Dragon, and abarge would then ferry them to a nearby Australian vessel. But before the rescue operation could begin, seaice hadblocked the path of the barge.
JUBA, South Sudan — ¹
gotiators from South Sudan's two warring sides arrived Wednesday in Ethiopia for peace talks, and a U.N. official urged both forces to bring the world's newest country "back from the brink." Fighting continued in Bor, a gateway city to the capital of Juba, a government official said. Bor is just 75 miles from
Juba. Bor, the capital of Jonglei
state, is the center of ethnical-
was played down by Hilde
ly based violence stemming from the political rivalry be-
Johnson,the U.N. representative in South Sudan. "I think we need to take quotations with pinches of salt at this point of time," Johnson
t ween President Salva Ki ir
and ousted Vice President Riek Machar,the rebel leader
accused of mounting a failed sard. coup attempt. K iir declared a
s t ate o f
"On Jan. 1, the country is at a fork in the road, but it can
emergency Wednesday in
still be saved from further ma-
Jonglei and Unity, two states
jor escalation of violence," she
where rebel f orces have gained the upper hand in recent fighting. Machar said Tuesday he would send his forces from
sard. Johnson urged Kiir and
Bor to Juba, but that threat
The fighting has killed more literally picked up their kids and a few belongings and says. fled to the first safe place they Pro-Machar forces in Bor could get to, which is Aweriappear to be taking defensive al," said David Nash, head of positions, Johnson said. The mission for Doctors Without fighting in Bor has displaced Borders. "They are camped about 60,000 people, making it out under trees with no santhe latest humanitarian crisis itation and no safe drinking than 1,000 people, the U.N.
in South Sudan. The international Red Cross said the road
from Bor to the nearby Awerial area was lined with people Machar to use the new talks waiting for boats so they could to move toward peace, adding: cross the Nile River. "They can still pull the coun"There are tens of t h outry back from the brink." sands of people here who
water."
Two teams of five negotiators each arrived in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, and w ere
expected to begin talks later Wednesday, said Getachew Reda, a spokesman for Ethio-
pia's prime minister.
THURSDAY, JAN 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
A3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Thursday, Jan. 2, thesecond day of 2014. Thereare363 days left in the year.
HAPPENINGS Kerry —The U.S.secretary of state, already in the region, is scheduled to arrive in Jerusalem.A2
SCIENCE
Glow-in-the-darkpigs,part of radiantgreenmenagerie By Deborah Netburn
By the light of day these an- were put back in the mother. the most efficient production of Not every embryo picked glow-in-the-dark pigs yet. "In the past, scientists would R eady yourself for t h e off the lights and hit them with up the gene. With the pigs for r eal-life g l o wing gr e en a black light and parts of their example, 25 embryos were in- throw the DNA in the embryo menagerie. bodies glow fluorescent green. jected with the glowing-protein and hope that it would take, Ten little piggies that glow The glowing mammals were gene, but just 10 animals were but it was a very hit-or-miss in the dark have been created created when scientists insert- bornthat actually glow. deal, and just 2 percent of the by scientists at the South Chi- ed a foreign gene into the aniThis is not the first time that micro-manipulated eggs were na Agricultural University. mals' DNA. In a process called scientists have created glow- transgenic," Moisyadi told the A sheep that glows green un- active transgenesis, the scien- in-the-dark pigs, said Stefan Los Angeles Times. "But we der a black light will soon be tists removed embryos from Moisyadi of the University of came in with this active apannounced by researchers in pregnant females and injected Hawaii at Manoa, who worked proach, embedding the jellyfish 'Dirkey, and that same ltirkish each one with a jellyfish gene with Chinese scientists Zhen- gene in a plasmid that contains team has already created glow- that creates a glow-in-the-dark fang Wu and Zicong Li. But an insertion gene, and it is a in-the-darkbunnies. protein. Then th e e mbryos he said their efforts represent hugeimprovement." Los Angeles Times
PakiStan —Former military ruler Pervez Musharraf is ordered to appear in court as part of treason proceedings after Wednesday's hearing was canceled whenexplosives were found along his route.
HISTORY Highlight:In1974, President Richard Nixon signed legislation requiring states to limit highwayspeedsto55milesan hour as away of conserving gasoline in the face of anOPEC oil embargo. (The 55mphlimit was effectively phasedout in 1987; federal speedlimits were abolished in1995.) "Singing cowboy" star TexRitter died in Nashville at age68. In1492, MuhammadXII, the sultan of Granada,the last Arab stronghold in Spain, surrendered to Spanish forces. In1788,Georgia becamethe
imals all look normal. But turn
the term "robot," "R.U.R."
(Rossum's Universal Robots) by Karel Capek,wasfirst performed in Czechoslovakia. In1935, Bruno Hauptmann went on trial in Flemington, N.J., on charges of kidnapping and murdering the 20-monthold son of Charles andAnne Lindbergh. (Hauptmannwas found guilty, andexecuted.) In1942, the Philippine capital of Manila wascaptured byJapanese forces duringWorld WarII. In1959, the Soviet Union launched its spaceprobe Luna 1, the first manmadeobject to fly past the moon, its apparent intended target. In1960,Sen. John F.Kennedy of Massachusetts launched his successful bid for the presidency. In1971,66 people were killed in a pileup of spectators leaving a soccer match at Ibrox Stadium in Glasgow,Scotland. In1981, police in Sheffield, England, arrested PeterSutcliffe, who confessed to being the "Yorkshire Ripper," the serial killer of13 women. In2006,12 miners diedin a methane gasexplosion at the Sago Mine inWest Virginia, but one miner, RandalMcCloyJr., was eventually rescued. Ten yearsege: Insurgents shot down a U.S.helicopter west of Baghdad, killing onesoldier. British flights to Washington and Riyadh, SaudiArabia, were canceled as asecurity precaution. TheNASAspacecraft Stardust flew through the halo of the distant comet Wild 2.
Five years ege:President George W.Bushbranded Hamas rocket attacks on Israel an "act of terror" and outlined his own condition for a ceasefire in Gaza.President-elect Barack Obamaand his family arrived in Chicagoafter a holiday vacation in Hawaii. AirTran Airways apologized to nine Muslims kicked off a New Year's Dayflight to Florida. One yearege:The United Nations gave agrim newcount of the humancost of Syria's civil war, saying the deathtoll had exceeded 60,000 in 21months.
show that the active transgenic technique works and can be
done efficiently. The green glow is]ust a marker that the anunals
have pickedup thejellyfishgene. Eventually, Moisyadi believes genes could be inserted into the animals' DNA that
wouldcausethemto createproteins that would be useful for medicines, and that could be extracted through their milk.
SCIENCE Q&A
STUDY
Just how gOOd IS
working up
fourth state to ratify the U.S.
Constitution. In1893,the U.S.Postal Service issued its first commemorative stamp to honor theWorld's Columbian Expedition andthe quadricentennial of Christopher Columbus' voyage. In1900,Secretary of State John Hayannouncedthe "Open Door Policy" to facilitate trade with China. In1921, the play that coined
Theendgoalheieisnottocreate trippy animals that look cool under black lights, but rather to
a sweat? By Gretchen Reynolds New York Times News Service
The cues our bodies send our minds to tell them what comes next — whether a fight or an embrace — vary little across cultures according to new research that draws a map of emotions and the bodily
•Are there any health
•benefits a s sociated with sweating more during a workout? If so, is there a
sensations that accompany them.
difference if sweat is induced by heat versus aero-
By Melisse Healy
bic exercise'? "There's t h i s en• trenched idea that it's good to 'sweat things out,'"
Los Angeles Times
A •
The clenched-fist, hairon-fire feeling you get when grippedbyanger, the warm-allover sensation ofhappiness, the
said Oliver Jay, an associate professor ofexercise physiology and director of the Thermal Ergonomics Laboratory at the University of
bilious wave that gnaws at your
throat with disgust — these are the cues the body sends up to
•
'
ready the mind for what comes
Ottawa inCanada, and by extension, that s weating
next: fighting, hugging or withdrawal. And they appear to
heavily during exercise is
vary little across cultures, says
somehow healthier t h an
a new study, which draws a detailed map of emotions and the
misting daintily. But in fact, "sweating, per se, provides
distinct bodily sensations that
no health benefits," Jay
accompany them. The corporal topography
said, apart from preventing overheating. The benefits
of emotion is likely to have
derive from the exercise it-
evolvedovermillions of generations, and even if the mind isn't
self, and the more intense, generally, the greater the
listening, those somatosensory
health benefits.
cues makesense:With anger, picks up in readiness for flight or fi ght,and so our chestfeels
Core temperature rises during prolonged and vigorous physical activity, though, andyourbody must
tight. The muscles in our arms
shed that heat. It does so in
and legs feeldenched in anger, but in sadness, they feel limp. Happiness spreads its warmth even across the hips and genitals, but those areas typically go cold when we feel sad, angry or disgusted. Writing i n t h e j o urnal
large part by sweating. The more vigorously you exert
fear orsurprise,our heartbeat
yourself, the more i nter-
nal heat you produce, and the more you must sweat. Such strenuous exercise
improves health through many different physiological mechanisms. But perspiring, in and of itself, does not provide or amplify
PNAS, researchers in Finland
reportthat across five different experiments ranging in size from 32 to 305 subjects,
those effects, Jay said. That situation does not
participants linked seven dif-
change if you are sweating
ferent emotions with the same somatosensory e x p eriences
with such consistency, it could not be a matter of chance. The pairings they made were consistent whether they were asked to react to emotionally suggestive words or to read short stories and view films that conjured strong emotionalresponses. Even when viewing photographs of a person's face conveying a specific emotion, subjects drew maps of that person's likely feelings that were consistently similar. The pairings of emotion and accompanying sensation also transcended language: Participants were Northern Europeans who were either Finn-
The AssociatedPress file photos
Whether it's e Muslim fundamentalist shouting slogans during e protest in Tunisia, top, or e protester
in Spain shouting slogans against government austerity measures, the sensory cues are likely the same, e new study concludes.
because of a hot environment. "Sweat is sweat," he said.
You will perspire more if the air is humid, he said, because sweat does not evaporate efficiently in humidi-
ish or Swedish speakers and Taiwanese individuals whose native tongue is Hokkein, one of a family of Chinese languages. Even across the linguistic barriers, there was 70 percent agreement among participants on where in the body emotions
are felt. With more complex emo-
tions — pride, shame, envy, depression, contempt, anxiety and love — the study's partici-
pants did not draw somatosen-
sory maps with as much overlap. But they were still similar enough to beat chance.
Studies of emotional processingthat have used brain scans also suggest that we link distinct bodily sensations with certain emotions, and do so consistently — and perhaps that there is overlap between the neural circuits of emotion and the personal body map
each of us has in our sensory cortex. The authors of the study, led by Lauri Nummenmaa of Aalto
University's School of Science in Espoo, Finland, suggest that people with emotional processing difficulties stemming, say, from anxiety, depression or psychopathy, may also "feel" their emotions in places different from those in good mental health.
ty, and it is evaporation that actually cools your body. But you are not gaining extra health benefits from drenching your clothing with perspiration; you are only ensuring that you will need to sip from your water bottle more often to avoid
losing too much fluid. As a rule of thumb, drink
when you feel thirsty, so that sweating does not become actually unhealthy.
NASA devises'super ball bot' landing structure that canalso rove
BIRTHDAYS By Amina Khan TV host Jack Hanna is67. Retired MLBAll-Star pitcher David Cone is51. Actor Cuba Gooding Jr. is 46. ModelChristy Turlington is 45. Actor Taye Diggs is 43. Ballroom dancer Karina Smirnoff (TV: "Dancing with the Stars") is 36. Actress Kate Bosworth is 31.Jazzsinger-musician TromboneShorty is 28. — From wire reports
Los Angeles Times
Among all the challenges of sendingrobotic explorers to other planets and moons, nailing the landing has to be the most nail-biting part.
same structure to start rolling like a tumbleweed around the
CUTTING EDGE
terrain.
The super ball bot is unlike the thing as it bounced. The any landing gear ever sent to new-and-improved 2012 rover another planet. For example, Curiosity used a highly comthe 2004 Mars rovers Spirit plex landing system, including Now, a team at NASA's Ames and Opportunity essential- a supersonic parachute and R esearch Center i n M o u n - ly used a giant airbag ball to a hovering platform, to lower tain View, Calif., has devised cushionthe spacecraft as it the rover to the surface — a sea strange, flexible "super ball bounced across the surface. It ries of events that became part bot" concept that could take looks safe — until you consid- of the dramatic "seven mina rough landing on another er that one sharp rock at just utes of terror." world's surface and use the the right angle could puncture But this system would be
completely different, Vytas
s orption system: ou r
Sunspiral, a senior robotics
skeletons. "We have traditionally built robots in this very rigid-
researcher at NASA Ames, explained in a NASA video. It
own
sports a semi-rigid but flexible ly connected manner where structure, made of stiff poles you have elements that are and stretchy cables, that can hinged together with motors, distribute the force from an
but that's not how we work,"
impact at one point all over its Sunspiral said. "There's no pin system, protecting the payload that holds our bones together. of scientific instruments sus- There's no rigid hinge there. In pended at its center. fact there's a lot of fluidity and He added that it's a lot like a much more familiar shock-ab-
a lot of freedom of motion be-
tween the bones."
A4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JAN 2, 2014
Sharing
"I've invested so much into
Continued from A1 In this leaner, more efficient kind of consumption, just taking hold in major cities, New York
U n iversi-
ty Professor Arun Sundararajan sees the makings of a new wave of productivity gains. "It allows you to get more
it and it would feel like a loss if I had to sell it," said Palmer,
T he downside t o
P alm-
er and Queen's gains is the risk that these services lead to a society that needs fewer
handbags and automobiles. If that's the case, it's unclear lected in the sharing economy will be able to offset a decline
First, Sundararajan is try-
ing to get his arms around the size of the sharing econ-
gal standard for undue hardship," and that she declined an income-based payment plan. Her lawyer argued that the plan would heat any forgiven loans as taxable income at the
That organization is the Ed-
less input, less labor," said Sundararajan, who teaches in more expensive upfront at the Stern School of Busi- purchases. ness and is among the first to One car-sharing vehicle begin studying the so-called takes about nine to 13 cars sharing economy. off the road, and 2 percent of If he's right, the sharing bike-sharemembers reported trend might help reverse a the service was somewhat or slowdown in productivity that very important to their decihas prompted some econo- sion to sell an automobile or mists to worry that innova- postpone buying one, accordtion driving the U.S. econo- ing to the research of Susan my has stalled. A measure of S haheen, co-director of t h e productivity based on output Transportation S u stainabilgeneratedby a given amount ity Research Center at the of labor and capital slowed University of C a l ifornia at
How much sharing?
more in rent and rent out the other roomin their house. Asked for comment, Educational Credit said that Karen Schaffer "did not meet the le-
been attention to aggressive student debt collectors hired by the federal government, the organization pursuing Jorgensen does something else — it brings legal challenges to those few who are desperate enough to seek bankruptcy relief.
Some warn of risks
if the smaller rental fees col-
Development data.
Continued from A1 And although there has
out of the same capital — or
percent growth pace in 20052011, compared with an average since 1985 of 1 percent, according to Organization for Economic Cooperation and
should charge her son for using their car, require him to pay
29.
the same out of less capital,
in the U.S. to an annual 0.7
Student debt
end of therepayment periodso it was not a viable option.
ucational Credit Management Corp. which, since its founding in Minnesota nearly two decades ago, has been the main
Agencysupporters
private entity hired by the De-
Karen Sohaffer sits in her son's room at her home in Artesie, Ca-
tactics say they are necessary
pariment of Education fighting student debtors who file for bankruptcyon federalloans. Founded in 1994, just after the largest agency backstopping federal student loans collapsed, Educational Credit is
Iif. Scheffer took out e federal loan for her son to attend college before her husband fell iil and the family finances soured, but her
to holdborrowers accountable. "For every dollar that the aggressive debt-collection firm fails to recoup, that's a dollar that someone else is going to
now facing concerns that its tactics have grown ruthless.
Barbara Hann, who took a particularly drawn-out beat-
based on "complicatedissues
A review of hundreds of pag- ing from Educational Credit.
Another case, dating from 2012, involved Karen Lynn
easyto discharge studentloans in bankruptcy, lenders would
Schaffer ,54,who took out a
simply not lend money to stu-
attempts to file for bankruptcy were aggressively fought by the Education Credit Management Corp.
have to pay," said G. Marcus
the agency of abuse concerned due hardship and that it was
"This has all the hallmarks of a disruptive technology
advocates, experts and bank- it claimed that she owed more ruptcy lawyers suggest that than $50,000 in outstanding Educational Credit's pursuit of debt. In a hearing that Educastudent borrowers has veered tional Credit did not attend, more than occasionally into Hann provided ample evidence dubious terrain. A law profes- that she had, in fact, already resor and critic of Educational paid her student loans in full.
for a bunch of industries that have never had to think about
disruptive technologies," said Nicholas Colas, chief market strategist at ConvergEx Group, a trading services company in New York. He described the change as po-
agency oversteps in dozens of cases peryear. Others have also been highly critical.
e stimating the businesses reliant on an owncurrent and future share of ership society. " In th e n ear t er m G D P money spent through these s ervices, m os t o f wh i c h would take a hit," he said. are closely held companies Ian Hathaway, formerly an that don't release quarterly e conomic analyst w it h t h e earnings. Federal Reserve, said he is opHe's also studying how timistic innovations such as r apidly c o n sumers a r e sharing networks will boost switching to sharing from growth over time. "Doing more with less is more traditional forms of consumption and the pace how the economy grows susat which new marketplaces tainably over the long term," are creating jobs and encour- said Hathaway, now a San aging entrepreneurship. He Francisco-based research disays he hopes to release his rector at Engine, a nonprofit research in 2014. research and policy group More than 200 startups, focused on technology entrebacked by a total of $2 billion preneurship. "It's stuff t h at in funding, are now involved makes us do things better and in the renting, reselling, giv- new ideas that make us do ing or swapping of goods things better." and services, according to omy. He i s
Cole added that if it were
dents without dear assets or lege. Her husband, Ronney, prospects. "We need a standard like had a steady job at the time. But Ronney's hepatitis C that tobe ableto allowstudents began to flare up and he was who can't afford an education found to have diabetes and liv- to be able to borrow," he said. er cancer. He became bedridChris Greene, a spokesman But when her bankruptcy den and could no longer work. for the Department of Educacase ended in 2010, EducaKaren Schaffer said she did tion, said that the department tional Credit began hounding her best to cut expenses. She offers flexible repayment opHann anew, and, on behalf of began charging her adult son tions and believes that Educathegovernment,garnished her rent, got loan modifications for tional Credit complies with the Social Security — all to repay her mortgages, and cutbackon law and government policies. a loan that she had long since watering the yard and wash- He said that if there were evipaidoff. ing ciothes to save on utilihes. dence of wrongdoing, the deWhen Hann took the issue She woke up at 4 every morn- partment would investigate. to a New Hampshire court, the ingto take care ofher husband One of the places where judge sanctioned Education- beforeleaving fora fullday of Educational Credit has had al Credit, citing the lawyers' work at a security job. the biggest impact has been
Credit, Rafael Pardo of Emory University, estimates that the
t entially " c atastrophic" f o r
Cole, a law professor at Stanford University.
oflegalprocedure."
In 2004, when Hann filed for bankruptcy, Educational Cred-
es ofcourt documents as well as interviews with consumer
Berkeley.
Supporters of the agency's
Michal Czerwonka / New York Times News Service
Defining case A panel of bankruptcy appeal judges in 2012 reprimanded what it called Educational Credit's "waste of judicial
loan for her son to attend col-
resources," and said that the "violation of the Bankruptcy agency's collection activities Code's discharge injunction." "constituted an abuse of the Educational Credit went on bankruptcy process and defi- to appeal the sanctions twice, ance of the court's authority." earningareprimand thisyear Rep. Steve Cohen, D-Tenn., from Judge Norman Stahl of who has introduced a bill to the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of limit predatory tactics, said, Appeals, who agreed with the "The government should hold bankruptcy judges that the its agents to the highest stan- agency "had abused the bankdards, and I don't know that ruptcyprocess." we'vebeen doingthat." Asked for comment, EduThe case that caused the cational Credit responded that bankruptcy judges to accuse the case was not related to un-
But Educational Credit said
to shape the meaning of the
she was spending too much on foodbydiningout Accordingto Karen Scha%r,thatwasareference to the $12 shespent at Mc-
phrase "undue hardship," the standard required since the 1970s for relief from student
debt. In 2009, for example, the agency persuaded the 8th U.S.
Donald's. She and her husband
normally split a "value meal," a Circuit Court of Appeals to small sandwich and fries. adopt stricter standards. One "I was taking care of Ron
argument it made was that
and working a full-time job so if student borrowers seeking lots of times I didn't have time to bankruptcy could qualify for a fix dinner, or I was just too darn repayment plan tied to their intired," she said in an interview. comes they were, by definition, The lawyers also suggested she ineligible forrelief.
Altimeter Group, a research
and
a d visory c o m pany
in San M ateo, Calif. Twothirds of the services act as
third-party matchmakers facilitating exchanges between consumers.
Others such as Zipcar Inc. maintain their own fleets of
i
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items to offer to members.
As this model becomes more mainstream, consumer spending in the sharing economy will make up "at least a single-digit percentage" of gross domestic product in five years, Sundararajan estimates. Policymakers should start
thinking a b out c r e ating "metrics that capture the use of assets, not just the sale of
assets" to more comprehensively monitor the health of
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Among early adopters is
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only saving money but also earning a little extra. Ben Palmer in Boston rents out his Lexus to RelayRides Inc.
members on the occasional weekend, making about $100 to $200 a month for a vehicle that he himself rarely drives. He says the money that supp lements his salary a t t h e
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THURSDAY, JAN 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
Drones
plant, he said. In addition to the research,
Powerlifter
Continued fromA1 Simpkins envisions economic Oregon is part of a Pan-Pa- activity derived from commer-
Continued fromA1 Jake had been hoping to
cific team that includes Alaska and Hawaii, and the other winning sites were in Nevada, New York, North Dakota, Tex-
cial applications of the new ca-
compete in the 114-pound cat-
pabilities unlocked by UAVs. The FAA recently gave f armers permission to d o low-altitude flyovers of their
egory and spent the evening before at the gym, running on a treadmill, trying to drop water weight. In the morning,
crops with UAVs to examine
though, the scale in the bath-
as and Virginia. The aviation industry al-
ready has a significant pres- their crops, he said. Emerging ence in the Pacific Northwest companies will likely either and California, he said. But the nearest state with an un-
look to sell UAVs to farmers or
offer a service where they fly manned aerial vehicle test site the vehicles and provide the
room of his Pasadena home in Anne Arundel County (Maryland) was stuck at 118. He was hoping he'd somehow drop the rest on the drive
is Nevada, which could make
data.
with his mother and sisters to
"Our sense of it is that, yes, Central Oregon even more attractive to aviation companies there's some economic de-
York. Butwhenhe steps onto a big digital scale, the attendant
already in the Northwest.
announces, "One nineteen."
"We think we're pretty well positioned in that region to
velopment that comes from
producing th e p l atforms" used to produce the spectral capitalize on testing," he said. imaging, he said. "(But) much Monday's announcement, of the economic development part of an effort by the FAA to in Oregon will be providing integrate unmanned aircraft
the service to customers like
into U.S. airspace by the end of farmers who want to charac2015, opens the door for inno- terize what's happening on vation in the U.S. in the UAV their property." field, Lee said. Another application particAlthough the U.S. was an ularly useful in Oregon is fireearly leader in developing fighting, he said. "Unmanned aircraft can fly UAV technology, other countries' UAV industries have out- 24 hours a day; with infrared stripped the U.S. because reg- technology, they can look for ulations have hampered their hot spots through the smoke domestic use, he said. With the
FAA moving forward, a lot of those barriers will fall away as technologies are developed
and the haze," he said. Human pilots can't do that, he noted.
UAVs may also be used to manage wildlife and natural so that, like manned aircraft, resources more effecti vely, UAVs can detect and avoid Lee said. other aircraft in the sky. For example, wildlife offi"If you look at the aviation cials currently use manned industry, it's the fastest grow- airplanes to measure where ing segment of it," Lee said. sage grouse have established "It's definitely something that lecks. "It's fairly costly to do that we think has great potential and continued growth for the
and potentially disruptive to
next 10 or 15 years."
the wildlife they're trying to manage. You can fly a UAV at
In addition to aviation companies that could manufacture
a fraction of the cost and cov-
and fly the UAVs, other related er a lot more territory without fields may want to establish disturbing the wildlife," he offices near the test site, in-
sald.
cluding firms that design and
They can also provide a useful tool for ranchers trying
develop software, s ensors, cameras and optics, he said.
to fend off cattle rustlers, by
Initially, much of the work
hoveringand monitoring who is coming onto a specific propsaid Eric Simpkins, Oregon's erty, he said. chief operating officer for the Lee likened the develop-
will center around research,
Pan-Pacific team and a leading contributor to th e FAA
ment of UAVs to the historical development of airplanes. Ini-
application.
tially, starting in World War I, planes were used almost exmestic applications for UAVs clusively by the military, but will be for what Lee calls "pre- eventually their commercial cision agriculture," or using use far outpaced their military an airborne sensor todetect applications. Similarly, UAVs crops in hard-to-reach places such as predator drones have that may need extra water or been used extensively by the One of the anticipated do-
nutrients.
military in the Middle East.
While UAVs can take spec- But now the FAA has opened tral readings of entire fields the door for t heir domestic or individual plants, it will deployment. "We have an opportunity to take time to develop the ability to interpret those images so really capitalize on a technolfarmers can distinguish be- ogy that has been largely detween healthy and struggling veloped in the U.S.," Lee said. "If we don't develop that here, plants, Simpkins said. "You need to be able to char- other countries will. We don't acterize the spectral images want to see our industries take you are receiving," he said. flight to these places." UAVs can take crop-wide — Reporter: 202-662-7456, scans or zero in on a single aclevenger@bendbulletin.com
A5
LL
SER'rTCES, lVt".
Jake's eyes flash disappointment. "I was thinking if I would weigh in at 114, I could break records. Records are harder for the 123 class." His mother assures him: "That's OK, Jake." After the w eigh-in, Jake
straddles a bench to warm up on chest press. His trainer guides him as he lifts 155 pounds. Other powerlifters pass by and encourage him.
Photos by Marvin Joseph/The Washington Post
Jake Schellenschleger, 13 et the time, sets e bench-press record for his ege end weight et the 2013 IPA Strength Spectacular Powerlifting Bench Press Championships in June in York, Pe. During the event, he also set records in squat end deadiift. bleachers. His father nods in
encouragement. "My dad, because he is super strong," Jake says later, "when I see him it gives me
Powerlift ers share camaraderie, unlike bodybuilders, who
compete in a world that is more about vanity and beauty. Pow-
erlifters admire pure strength. Jake can deadlift 3 00 pounds. "Three h u n dred pounds is obviously double his body weight," says his trainer, Mike Sarni. His physical strength is matched by his mental toughness. "He doesn't
motivation." The announcer tells t he
crowd, "This kid weighs only 119."
M f HIIIJ' l
Jake straddles the bench. He arches his back. His trainer lowers the bar into Jake's hands. He controls the weight,
"a
bringing the bar slowly to his chest. The weight hesitates.
feel he can be defeated. It is that inner strength that tells
him, 'I can do this.' Usual- Jake Schellenschleger, smiling in the center, heads to class in ly, you only get that in older, April at Corkran Middle School in Glen Burnie, Md. more mature people." Jake is one of thousands of teens who compete across the Pediatrics. tially she worried about Jake "There is high risk to heavy competing, but eventually becountry, according to USA Powerlifting, an organization maximal lifts or explosive gan to feel that it was a good responsible for sanctioning lifts during their rapid growth activity for a teenage boy. "Lifting is a sport just like local and regional powerlift- phrase,"said Stricker, one of ing events. Christy Cardella, eight physicians who worked baseball," she said."That's how a state chairman for the or- with the U.S. Olympic team in we view it." ganization, said the youngest Sydney. "That is our biggest Jake started going to the competitive powerlifters are caution. We just don't recom- gym with his father when he 14, and there are several high mend they do maximal lifts was 12, after his parents split school powerlifting associa- or explosive lifts until they up. Then one day, he met Sarni tions across the country with have finished the majority of and began training in a more several thousand members. their growth spurt," especial- serious way. But there are also youth pro- ly if they aren't being properly His father encouraged Jake grams, where children start as supervlsed. to pursue powerlifting: "You Jake's father, Chris Schel- don't want your kid to be sityoung as 8 to lift for fun. lenschlager, said he under- ting on a couch and playing Medical caution stands the risks and makes video games." Although the A merican sure that Jake works out unAcademy of Pediatrics sup- der the supervision of Sarni, Ready to cempete ports strength training for owner of World Gym in Glen On a Saturday in Y ork, teenage athletes, it cautions Burnie, Md. Jake isscheduled to compete "Youwant to make surethey in three categories — squat, teens who powerlift while their bodies are still are doing proper form and not bench press and dead lift. He growlng. lifting too heavy," said Schel- squats 225, breaking his per"Powerlifting and Olympic lenschlager, 42,am aintenance sonal record. weightlifting sports are differ- tech. "I know it's bad on the There are 11 adults ahead of ent because they usually are joints with him still growing. Jake in the bench press cominvolving maximum liftsSome don't believe it is good to petition. Finally, it's his turn. the squat, bench press and the have kids weightlifting too ear- The bar is set at 205 pounds. dead lift," said Paul Stricker, ly. But Jake never complains Jake's trainer wraps and una youth sports medicine spe- about pain or hurting, and he wraps Jake's wrists and chalks cialist at the Scripps Health gets regular check-ups." his shoulders. Just before Jake's m o ther, B r a n dy walking onstage, Jake glancClinic in San Diego and fellow at the American Academy of Schellenschlager, 39, said ini- es at his father, sitting in the
•
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announcer exdaims.
Jake retreats to the gym and begins to warm up for the deadlift. He will go for 300 pounds, another personal record. He watches as a woman in
pink shoes takes the stage for her deadlift. "Go Patty," people scream.
Jake waits for his turn until he finally hears the announcer call, "Jake, you are the lifter."
The eighth-grader lifts the bar like a tooth pick. The weight climbs to 255, then 270. Each
powerlifter climbs onstage and goes through his or her ritual. The roll of the shoulders. The
backbends. The grunts. The audience cheers them
through each personal record attempt. The weight dimbs to 300. "Jake you are on deck," the announcer warns.
Jake's mother goes to the
front of the stage to record his
performance with her cellphone. "Come on, Jake," spectators yell.
Jake bends and lifts 300 pounds. The crowd explodes. The Wonder Kid fl ashes a grln.
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Jake pushes the bar up with
a final blast as three green lights flash on. "Good lift!" the
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Presenting our2014calendar at a glancewith all of our scheduledspecialty publications. I •
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2014: SPECIALPUBLICATIONSBYMONTH"
*PUBLI CATIONDATESARESUBJECTTOCHANGE.
January
April
June
August
October
• 18 P icture Your Home • 25 A geless • 31 T he Book of Love
• 12 U Magazine
44
e' 8
Bend Brewfest • 9 P i c ture Your Home • 11 H igh Desert Pulse El 13 School Directory • 22 S isters Magazine • 27 R edmond Magazine • 28 F ootball Preview
• • • • • • • • • • •
• 12 P icture Your Home
February • • • •
8 P i c ture Your Home 15 U Magazine 17 H igh Desert Pulse 24 M oney Matters
March • • • • •
• • • 26 H ome & Garden Show • • TBA 111 Ways to Discover C.O • • TBA Bid N Buy • • 16 R edmond Magazine
1 C e n tral Oregon Living 3 C O Sportsmen's Show 8 P i c ture Your Home 15 A geless 28 S isters Magazine
D e sch. County Fair & Rodeo Premium Book 7 U M agazine 14 P icture Your Home 18 R edmond Magazine 27 S isters Magazine 28 C entral Oregon Living
May
July
September
• 10 P icture Your Home
• 12 • 12 • 16 023
• I • •
• 11 G olf Preview • 12 H igh Desert Pulse • 17 A geless • 23 S isters Magazine
U Magazine P icture Your Home T our of Homes™ Desch. County Fair & Rodeo • 26 A geless
6 U M agazine 11 O regon Festival of Cars 13 P icture Your Home 17 R emodeling, Design & Outdoor Living Show • 20 A geless
December
4 C e n tral Oregon Living • 6 C e n tral Oregon Living 11 P icture Your Home • 13 P icture Your Home 18 U Magazine 0 25 Connections 24 T he Nature of Words TBA 111 Ways to Discover C.O. You'll also receive grocery TBA Bid N Buy inserts everyTuesday;ourarts
November 8 P i c ture Your Home 10 H igh Desert Pulse 12 R edmond Magazine 14 S isters Magazine 15 A geless
and entertainmentsection, GO! Magazine,every Friday; anda wide variety of shoppinginserts every otherday.You'll also enjoy thenationalmagazine, PARADE,which highlights the
world of entertainment, games and comicseverySunday.
JEFFERSON
WHO READS THE BULLETI¹? CROOK
• 67,500 adults read The Bulletin on an average day. • 66% of Deschutes County adults 18+ have read The Bulletin in the past 7 days • 53% of Central Oregon* adults 18+ have read The Bulletin in the past 7 days. Source: AORand Quantcast 2013
DESCHUTES
You will find what inte re sts you in The Bulletin.
AP . wn««aa
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In fact, no other publication delivers you more in-depth coverage of local news, sports, information and entertainment and more ... every day of the week in Central Oregon.
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The Bg.lletin
bendbL)lletin.com
Every day you'll find The Bulletin covers Central Oregon like no other news source. From community events to local education and politics, The Bulletin keeps you informed and engaged with your community.
W ANT M O R E ~ The Bulletin also delivers a wide variety of unique publications and weekly coupons. From event guides to locally written magazines and grocery inserts to specialty advertising, The Bulletin brings outstanding local value — every day.
To subscribe, call 541-885-58QQ
Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6
© www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 2, 2014
STATE NEWS
Eugene
Some nei h ors questionOSUsite selection of vocal opponents to the proposed expansion site on
By Hillary Bortud The Bulletin
A representative of south-
• lane County:Some county DAs choosing to end bad-check remedy program,BS • Eugene:Rodney Reece makesgood on his promise to fly a kite every day in 2013,BS • Snowpack:EugeneSpringfield area has its driest year on record,BS
Southwest Century Drive
west Bend neighborhoods says Oregon State University
have emailed him, attended open houses and written let-
administrators need to do a
ters to newspapers.
"In the broader community,
better job of explaining why they chose the area for the
there are a lot of people who are absolutely excited about
new four-year Oregon State
University-Cascades Campus. the opportunity of a four-year Bob Brell, co-chairman university coming into their of the Central West Neigh-
community," Brell said. "But
borhood Association and a the flip side is you've got a lot member of the OSU-Cascades of people who say, 'Hey, we don't want the fallout from Campus Expansion Advisory Committee, said a handful that.'"
"This issue of site selection continues to come up," Brell
think the people that are on
public is in the choice of the
that point are a handful, but
location," Coffin said. A realestatesearch com-
said. "Well, my opinion is the they're very vocal and I think university needs to do a better it's undermining the positive job of communicating what things that need to move happened.... I think some forward." people are trying to figure out, Christine Coffin, director of to change its mind and go somewhere else'?"
for OSU-Cascades, said the university signed agreements
city center to entice students
to keep confidential its nego-
niper Ridge, that's also a huge
tiations with property owners during the site-selection process. "The one aspect of our expansion where we're unfortunately unable to engage the
investment of infrastructure needed there, even prior to
If university officials want
to put an end to this speculation, they need to be more open about the details of why
they chose this location, Brell said. "And my concern is, I
Z4jt,
,
75t
By Hillary Bortud The Bulletin
A coalition of city officials, irrigation districts
and conservation groups hopes to study the future of
water supply and demand in the Deschutes Basin, with help from a new state
• Civic Calendarnotices:
Ieettui r ' Photos by Joe Kline I The Bulletin
Racers leave the starting line of the Great Harvest New Year's Day Relay on Wednesday at the Mt. Bachelor Nordic Ski Center.
and phone number. Contact: 541-383-0354
Details onthe Obituaries page inside. Contact: 541-617-7825, obitsuibendbulletin.com
• Community events: Email events tocommunitylife© bendbuiletin.comorclickon "Submitan Event"onlineat bendbuiletin.com.Details onthe calendarpageinside. Contact: 541-383-0351
• Births, engagements, marriages, partnerships, anniversaries:
Costumedskiers
Group is seeking $1.5 million in state and federal
race in fundraiser
grants, and Oregon Water Resources Department Director Phillip C. Ward
752
recently lent his support to
By Hillary Borrud • The Bulletin
the proposal. SeeBasin/B3
MOUNT BACHELOR — Lew Becker raced down the course at the Mt. Bachelor Nordic Ski Center on
Wednesday, outfitted with a logger's helmet, suspenders and an axstrapped to his back. Becker said it was not difficult to ski in the outfit, and he covered the sharp
COCC eyes Redmond
edges of the ax with duct tape. "But I did fall on the first corner, and I was afraid it
was going to be an ax murder," Becker said. Becker and approximately 50 other skiers hit the course to compete in the Great Harvest New Year's Day
Relay, which raises money for the Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation. See Ski/B2
Muffy Roy starts her leg of the Great Harvest New Year's Day Relay after being tagged by The Christmas Tree Hunters teammate Jacob Chapman, right, on Wednesday at the Mt. Bachelor Nordic Ski Center.
Decemder2013weather for Bend Reader photos
KRRRKRRRKIRRRRKIEBEHEHEEIEHEHKREHEBEBKBKRKHKHKRKRKIKHKBKBRHt KH
54- -%- -44 — -24 — ~ — 23- — 24— — 5- — -21-— st- — 38- — 42- -43 — -4z — es- — es- - 54- — ss — -41 — ae- — ee- — sa- — 52- -54- — ~ — ee- — 64- — 47— -47 — -53 — -45-
where and when you took them. We'll choose the best for publication. Submission requirements: Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must be high resolution (at least e inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.
veterinary program The Bulletin
Central Oregon Community College is close to finding a permanent home for its veterinary technician
program. The school is in talks
that will run in the
and tell us a bit about
site for
By Elon Glucklich
DAILY HIGHS AND LOWS Average temperature: 30.8'(1.8'below normal)
• We want to see your photos of snow for another special version of Well shot! Outdoors section. Submityour best work at bendbulletin.com /snow2014andwe'll pickthe best for publication. • Email other good photos of the great outdoors to readerpbotos© bentibulletin.com
water program. Members of the group say a new study could lead to major changes in water use in the basin. MaP For example, the study would Ol l B3 provide the basis for more efficiency projects, such as the piping of porous irrigation canals, which might result in more waterleft in streams to benefit plants and animals. The Basin Study Work
The Milestonespagepublishes Sunday inCommunity Life. Contact: 541-383-0358
Well shot!
SeeOSU/B2
study future of water use
Maii: My Nickel's Worth or In MyView P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR97708 Details onthe Editorials page inside. Contact: 541-383-0358, bulletin©bendbulletin.com
• Obituaries, DeathNotices:
digging the first hole to create a building," Coffin said.
Group hopesto
Submissions • Letters andopinions:
Email newsitemsand notices ofgeneralinterest to newsetbendbuiietin.com. Email announcementsof teens' academic achievements toyouth@bendbuiietin.com. Email collegenotes, military graduationsandreunion infoto bulletinetbendbulietin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358
to the area. "And then for Ju-
DESCHUTES BASIN
Call a reporter
• School newsandnotes:
Bend, but administrators believed it was too far from the
communications and outreach
The Bulletin
Email eventinformation to newsctbendbulletin.com,with "Civic Calendar" in thesubject, andincludeacontact name
owned Juniper Ridge mixeduse development in north
can they force the university
Have a story idea or submission? Contact us!
Bend .......................541-617-7829 Redmond..............541-548-2186 Sisters...................541-548-2186 La Pine..................541-383-0367 Sunriver ................541-383-0367 Deschutes.............541-617-7820 Crook....................541-383-0367 Jefferson..............541-383-0367 State projects...... 541-410-9207 Salem ....................541-554-1162 D.c....................... 202-662-7456 Business..............541-383-0360 Education.............541-633-2160 Health ...................541-383-0304 Public lands..........541-617-7812 Public safety.........541-383-0376
mittee considered the city-
with Deschutes County to buy a portion of the
FREEZING
BrightSide Animal Center
in Redmond, which sits on county-owned land. County commission-
38 18 1 8
5
4
1
- 7 -15 -15 9
1 e 1 1 2 5 3 2 3 e 2 6 2 9 3 5 2 4 1 6 2 4 3 8 2 4 2 6 a e 25 3 1
PRECIPITATION TOTAL: 0.53" Historical average precipitation for the month: 1.9" tN~H EEIH R H H H R H R R R R R R R R R
25 25 2e 37 T = Trace
R H R R R H R H R H R R H
SNOW TOTAL: 3" Historical average snow for the month: 7.8" tNt R
ALMANAC
Low e st temperature
Average high
Averagelsts
Highest recorded temperature
Lowest recorded temperature
forthe month:
for the month:
Monthly average high temperature through the years:
Monthly average low temperature through the years:
66' on Dec. 6,1937
-24' on Dec. 10, 1972
41.8'
23.4'
temperature
~
,.
* Monthly averages calculated from 1928 through 2005, Western Regional Climate Center Sources: NOAA, Western Regional Climate Center, Bend Public Works Department
county administrator Tom
Anderson. Under the proposed purchase, the county would
R R R R H R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R
Highest
ers were set to discuss a possible purchase on Monday, but pushed it back pending a legal review of the proposal, according to
Ciit
split the 4.39-acre lot, and the college would then buy a roughly one-acre parcel that houses BrightSide's event center.
The cost of the property purchase is expected to be $262,224, according to documents filed with the
county late last month. The purchase likely wouldn't have a negative impact on BrightSide, docGreg Cross/The Bulletin
uments say. SeeCOCC /B3
B2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JAN 2, 2014
E VENT
ENDA R
TODAY
SATURDAY
SCIENCEPARTY:ELECTRICITY!: Learn entertaining information about electricity; $3 for members,
VFW BREAKFAST: A breakfast of
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communityli fe@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at vpvpMi.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
pancakes,eggs,sausage orham;
$8.50; 8-10a.m.; VFWHall,1503 N.E $5 for nonmembers;11:30a.m.; Fourth St., Bend; 541-389-0775. HighDesertM useum, 59800 S.U.S. BEND INDOORSWAP MEET AND Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or SATURDAYMARKET:Featuring arts www.highdesertmuseum.org. and crafts, collectibles, antiques, SCIENCEPARTY:ELECTRICITY!: children's activities, music and more; Learn entertaining information about free admission;10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend electricity; $3 for members, $5 for Indoor Swap Meet,679S.E. Third nonmembers;1:30 p.m.; High Desert St.; 541-317-4847. r' Museum, 59800 S. U.S.Highway SCIENCEPARTY: ELECTRICITY!: 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www. Learn entertaining information highdesertmuseum.org. about electricity; $3 for members, i~+ FAMILY FUNDAY:Central Oregon $5 for nonmembers; 11:30 a.m.; Disability Support Networkand HighDesertMuseum, 59800 S.U.S. Oregon Family Support Network Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or Courtesy Brian Spady provide adayof fun; free admission www.highdesertmuseum.org. The California Honeydrops will kick off the Sisters Folk Festival's and dinner; 6:30-8:30 p.m.; Bouncing SCIENCEPARTY: ELECTRICITY!: 2014 Winter Concert Series on Jan. 9. Off The Wall,1134 S.E.Centennial Learn entertaining information about Court, Bend; 541-306-6587 or electricity; $3 for members, $5 for www.j.mp/dayoffun. backcountry-film-festival. nonmembers;1:30 p.m.; High Desert WEDNESDAY Museum, 59800 S. U.S.Highway "THE DESCENDANTS":A screening 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www. of the 2011 film starring George ANIMALADVENTURESWITH THE highdesertmuseum.org. Clooney (R); free, refreshments FRIDAY HIGH DESERTMUSEUM: Featuring LIVECOMEDY SHOW: LosAngeles a new animal, stories and crafts; free; available; 7:30 p.m.; Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County Library,134 SCIENCEPARTY: ELECTRICITY!: comediansSean McBride and Tess 10:30-11:15 a.m.; Rodriguez Annex, Learn entertaining information Barker perform; $10; 7 p.m.; Volcanic Jefferson County Library, 134 S.E. E S.E. E St., Madras; 541-475-3351 or about electricity; $3 for members, Theatre Pub, 70 S.W.Century Drive, St., Madras; 541-475-3351 or www. www.jcld.org. $5 for nonmembers; 11:30 a.m.; Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. jcld.org. HighDesertM useum, 59800 S.U.S. bendcomedy.com. BROTHERS ANDSISTER: The Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or STAND UPCOMEDY SHOWCASE: Allman Brothers tribute band SATURDAY www.highdesertmuseum.org. Featuring Brad Knowles andJake performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins SCIENCEPARTY: ELECTRICITY!: Woodmansee; $10; 8-10 p.m.; 2nd Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. jarL 11 Learn entertaining information Street Theater, 220 N.E.Lafayette Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or about electricity; $3 for members, Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626 or www.mcmenamins.com. POLARBEARFUNRUN& $5 for nonmembers; 1:30 p.m.; High www.j.mp/ComShow. WELLNESSEXPO:A family-friendly Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. 5K and10K run or walk through TOM VANDENAVOND: The alt-folk Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or singer-songwriter performs; $5; 8 Dry Canyon and aWellness Expo, THURSDAY www.highdesertmuseum.org. raffle; proceeds benefit St. Thomas p.m.; Pakit Liquidators, 903 S.E. Academy; free for Wellness Expo, HORN ANDTROMBONE DUO Armour Road, Bend; 541-389-7047 JarL 9 call for race information; 9 a.m.-1 RECITAL:Featuring a classical or www.riseupinternational.com. p.m. for Wellness Expo, 10:30 music recital; proceeds benefit THE CALIFORNIA HONEYDROPS: a.m. fun run start with day of race the Young Artists Scholarship of The Southern soul band plays the registration at 8:30 a.m.; St. Thomas the Sunriver Music Festival; free, Sisters Folk Festival's Winter Concert Academy, 1720 N.W.19th St., SUNDAY donations accepted;2-3 p.m .; Series; $20 plus fees in advance, Redmond; 541-548-3785 or www. Nativity Lutheran Church, 60850 $25 at the door; $10 plus fees for THEARCHIVIST:Paul Merchant redmondacademy.com. S.E. Brosterhous Road, Bend; 541reflects on working with poet William students in advance, $10 at the 389-2488 or www.facebook.com/ BEND INDOORSWAP MEETAND door; 7 p.m., doors open at 6:30 Stafford; free; 2 p.m.; Downtown events/465128676940933. SATURDAYMARKET:Featuring arts p.m.; Sisters High School, 1700 W. Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. and crafts, collectibles, antiques, FIRSTFRIDAY GALLERY WALK: McKinney B ut t e Roa d; 541549 4979 Wall St.; 541-617-7050 or www. children's activities, music and more; Event includes art exhibit openings, deschuteslibrary.org. or www.sistersfolkfestival.org. free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend artist talks, live music, wine and Indoor Swap Meet, 679 S.E Third food in downtown Bend and the St.; 541-317-4847. Old Mill District; free; 5-9 p.m.; throughout Bend. FRIDAY MONDAY SENSATIONALSATURDAY,NATIVE TOOLS:Learn how organic materials SHOKOTO ANDOKAIDJA: The ANIMALADVENTURESWITH THE jan. 10 are used in toolmaking; included in Portland band performs West HIGH DESERTMUSEUM: Ages3 the price of admission; $12 adults, African music as part of Mt. AUTHORPRESENTATION:Ellen $10 ages 65 and older, $7 ages 5-12, Bachelor Apres Ski Bash series; free; and older, featuring a newanimal, Waterston presents"Via Lactea: free ages4 andyounger;10 a.m.-1 6 p.m.; Crow's Feet Commons, 875 stories and crafts; free;10-10:45 a.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 A Woman of aCertain AgeWalks N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 541-728p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050, the Camino"; $5; 6:30 p.m.; Paulina S. U.S. Highway 97,Bend; 541-3820066 or www.crowsfeetcommons. julieb©deschuteslibrary.org or www. Springs Books, 252 W.HoodAve., 4754 or www.highdesertmuseum. com. deschuteslibrary.com. Sisters; 541-549-0866. or'g. THE MENTORS:The California BACKCOUNTRY FILMFESTIVAL: TRAP SHOOT: Trap shoot to notorious shock-metal band The Winter Wildlands Alliance benefit Paulina eighth-grade trip performs; $5; 8 p.m.; Big T's, 413 celebrates the human-powered to Washington, D.C.; bring your S.W. Glacier Ave., Redmond; 541TUESDAY winter experience through film; 504-3864 or www.reverbnation. own shells orpurchaseatvenue; proceeds benefit local organizations free, donations accepted; 10 a.m.com/show/11910604. GREEN TEAMMOVIE NIGHT:A working on advocacy, snow safety, 4 p.m.;Paulina Rodeo Grounds; screening of the 2008 Sundance ACOUSTIC MINDS: The Portland outdoor education and SnowSchool 541-477-3310. audience award-winning film "Fuel" pop-synth-rock band performs; programs; $10 plus fees in advance, OREGON READSKICK-OFF: free; 9 p.m.; Dojo, 852 N.W. Brooks about the past, present and future $12 at the door; 7 p.m.; Volcanic of fuel; free; 6:30-8 p.m.; First WILLIAMSTAFFORD CENTENNIAL St., Bend; 541-706-9091 or www. Theatre Pub, 70 S.W.Century Drive, Presbyterian Church, 230 N.E.Ninth CELEBRATION:Kit and Kim Stafford dojobend.com. Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. St., Bend; 541-815-6504. kick off the yearlong celebration of winterwildlands.org/what-we-do/
William Stafford with author Jarold Ramsey; Sisters' Americana Project students perform; free; 2 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7050 or www. deschuteslibrary.org. ABOVETHEINFLUENCENEWYEAR SHOWCASE: Students from Central Oregon Community College and local high schools perform from spoken word to music and dancing; visual arts showcase includes drawings, painting, sculptures and more; art proceeds benefit Above the Influence; free admission; 6 p.m., doors open at 5:30p.m.;VolcanicTheatre Pub,70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-3231881 or www.j.mp/ATIShowcase. WESTERN MOVIENIGHT:A screening of "Back to the Future III" and talk about guns in the "Frontier Firearms" exhibit; cash bar; $3 for
members, $5for nonmembers,
reservation requested; 6 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org. RED MOLLY:TheAmericana trio performs; $20-$25 plus fees; 7:30 p.m., doors open at 6:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700. POLECAT: The Bellingham,W ash., bluegrass band performs, with The Pitchfork Revolution; $10 plus fees; 8 p.m.; Domino Room, 51N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-4084329 or www.p44p.biz. HIGH END CLOTHSTOUR: Featuring Planet Asia, Z Man,The Bayliens, True Justice and more; $7 plus fees; 9 p.m.; TheAnnex, 51 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-4084329 or www.j.mp/HighECloths.
prep-profiles.com. ROB TOBIAS:The Eugene jazz and classic folk-pop musician performs; free; 7-9 p.m.; BrokenTop Bottle Shop & Ale Cafe, 1740N.W. Pence Lane, Suite1, Bend; 541-728-0703 or www.btbsbend.com.
MONDAY Jan. 13 BINGOAND COMMUNITYDINNER: Featuring dinner, bingo, silentauction and dessert grand prize; free, $2 bingo or11 games for $15; 5:30-8:30 p.m., 5:30 p.m.dinner,6:30 p.m . bingo; Sisters High School,1700W. McKinneyButteRoad;541-549-4050
or tim.roth©sisters.k12.or.us. "ROCKSHOW: PAULMCCARTNEY AND WINGS":A screening of a film of McCartney's concert in Seattle during the Wings OverAmerica tour; $12 general admission, $48 club pass,plusfees;7p.m .,doorsopenat 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. MEDIA SALON: The business of running a mountain; free; 7-9 p.m.; Broken Top Bottle Shop & AleCafe, 1740 N.W. PenceLane, Suite1, Bend; 541-728-0703 or www.btbsbend. com.
TUESDAY jan. 14
"EVERY WARHAS TWO LOSERS": A screening of the award-winning film based on poet William Stafford's journals; free; 6 p.m.; Tin Pan SUNDAY Theater, 869 N.W.Tin PanAlley, Bend; 541-241-2271 or www. deschuteslibrary.org. Jan. 12 "AMERICAN WINTER": A screening HOT CHOCOLATE RUN: A five-mile of the 2013 documentary film that or seven-mile run or walk followed by follows personal stories of families hot chocolate, coffee and treats; free; struggling in an economic crisis, 9 a.m.; Shevlin Park, 18920 Shevlin followed by a panel discussion; $8, Park Road, Bend; 389-7275 or www. $4 students and seniors, free for centraloregonrunningklub.org. those on a fixed income, registration MUSICINPUBLIC PLACES: requested; 7 p.m.; Mountain View Musicians from the Central Oregon High School, 2755 N.E.27th St., Symphony perform; free; 2 p.m.; Bend; 541-948-9633, gwenn© Central Oregon Community College, bethleheminn.org or www.ocpp.org/ Wille Hall, 2600 N.W.CollegeWay, AWBend. Bend; 541-317-3941 or www. cosymphony.com. SECONDSUNDAY:Jarold Ramsey WEDNESDAY and Kim Stafford discuss poet William Stafford's work and their own writing; free; 2 p.m.; Downtown Jan. 15 Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. MBRASCATU: The Portland musician Wall St.; 541-617-7050 or www. performs Italian folk; free; 7 p.m.; deschuteslibrary.org. McMenamins Old St. Francis School, HOUSE CONCERTSINTH EGLEN: 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382The Vancouver, Wash., Americana 5174 or www.mcmenamins.com. singer-songwriter DanWeber BUCKLERASH:TheAshland outlawperforms, with The Quons; bring country band performs; free; 9 p.m.; dish or beverage to share; $10-$15, reservation requested; 7 p.m., doors Dojo, 852 N.W.Brooks St., Bend; 541-706-9091 or www.facebook. open at 6 p.m. for potluck; The Glen at Newport Hills, 1019 N.W.Stannium com/whiskeydojo/events. Drive, Bend; 541-480-8830 or ja©
Get ATaste For Food, Home Sr Garden Every TUesday In AT HOME
OSU
respond to the public's con- their (covenants, codes and cerns, and they have posted restrictions) don't adequately Continued from B1 an outline of the site-selection address what they might be Coffin would not reveal process under the "frequently faced with down the road," the locations of the two oth- asked questions" section of Brell said. OSU-Cascades' er sites the university's real their website, Coffin said. plan calls for 5,000 students estate committee considered, Coffin said regardless of by 2025. Some residents are but she said a crucial consid- which site the university se- concerned that property owneration was that the universi- lected, some people would ers might rent homes to stuty needed40 to 60 acres to ac- oppose it. "There's no one dents, but the process to revise commodate its land needsby perfect location," Coffin said. covenants, codes and restric2025. "In some locations they
could cobblethat together, but in some locations it was sort of a messy cobbling," Coffin said. In September, the State Board of Higher Education approved the purchase of two properties in southwest Bend for $12.8 million. University officials have signed purchase and sale agreements with the
property owners, but OSU does not have to put down money until the due diligence process is complete, Coffin wrote in an email. Coffin expects due diligence on the 10-acre parcel to be complete soon, but it could take until March to finish the review of
the 46-acre parcel. "As long as the due diligence goes forward, that's w here th e
u n i versity w i l l
land," Coffin said. University administrators want to
"Each site has its detractors."
Brell said he personally supports the current campus site
tions is time-consuming and requires a vote of members
in the homeowners associa-
plan. "Century West Neighborhood Association has not
tion. There is also no guarantee that homeowners would
taken a position, pro or con,
approve restrictions on rental properti es, because some property owners might want
on the OSU-Cascades fouryear university site because at this time, we still have mem-
bers that range from against, all the way to totally in favor," Brell said. It would be difficult
for the association to take a stand on the issue, unless it
formally surveys its roughly 700 members, Brellsaid. Residents' concerns about
the university range from transportation and parking needs to housing and more general impacts on quality of life. "As the university grows, housing is going to be an issue, and I've heard from a number of neighborhoods on the west-side concerns that
to rent to students, Brell said.
The university's initial proposal to house 10percent of students on campus would
ra '•
have createdmore off-campus issues, and Brell said the uni-
versity responded to community feedback and has since changed its goal to housing 50 percent of students on the carllPUs. "So I think OSU from the
get-go has stepped up on that issue," Brell said. "But you've
still got 50 percent that are going to be seeking housing outside the campus perimeters." — Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrud@bendbulletirt.com
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Ski
called The Christmas Tree Hunters. Another member
a shaggy wig and a low-cut black and pink T-shirt. Continued from B1 of the team had a cardboard The three-person ski teams The nonprofit trains and model of a chainsaw attached completed one leg of classupports athletes who com- to his back, and a woman sic cross country skiing and pete in nordic and alpine on the team dressed as the two legs of skate skiing. The skiing, snowboarding and tree, using pieces of her own youngest competitors, kids up cycling. Christmas tree. to 9 years old, did one lap for Nordic Program D i rector Jason Adams said his team, each leg of the race. Kids from Dan Simoneau said Mt. Bach- which included friends Jason 10to 13completed two laps for elor Sports Education Founda- Tedroe and Marshall Greene, every leg of the race, and all tion has held the annual event dressed as rock stars and the remaining skiers did three for at least a decade. called themselves J Ski/G lapsforeach leg ofthe race. "It's just a fu n r a ce," Ski, after the band AC/DC. " That a l most m a ke s i t Simoneau said. "Almost ev- Adams, who dressed as Billy even," Simoneau said. erybody wears costumes." Idol, sported extra-large Mi— Reporter: 541-617-7829, Becker was part of a team ley Cyrus brand stretch pants, hborrud@bendbulletirt.com
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THURSDAY, JAN 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON
C an ein awpromptscounties to en a -checkreme pro ra The Associated Press
he too will end the check en-
EUGENE — A change in state law that took effect Jan.
forcement program that uses BounceBack. He said without
state Sen. Floyd Prozanski, D-Eugene, who worked with Gardner on passing the law. "I'm somewhat surprised
der criticism because the private debt collectors were send-
newspaper. Check enforcement proGardner tells The Regis- change to the law means that grams essentially are diverter-Guard th e le g islative payments would fall under sion programs, similar to change makes the check en- the federal Fair Debt Collec- those used for some drunken forcement program too ex- tion Act. And because of the driving and drug cases. They pensive to operate. The county requirements of th e f ederal allow people accused of delibprogram has helped business- debt-collection law, the cost erately writing a bad check to es recover more than $250,000 of collecting restitution would avoid prosecution by paying in restitution from bad checks rise, and could expose the the amount owed plus fees since 2004. county to a lawsuit, he said. and taking part in an educa"If there's even a 20 per- tion program. Several other counties offer similar check enforcement c ent chance we m i ght f a l l A number of district attorprograms run by the same afoul of the Fair Debt Col- neys across the country have company used by Lane Coun- lection Act, then we simply contracted with private firms can't risk it," Gardner told The to handle such bad-check ty, Ohio-based BounceBack. Bob Hermann, Washington Register-Guard. programs. County's district attorney, said Gardner's move dismayed But the programs came un-
prosecutor. So the 2013 Oregon Legislature passed a bill amending
1 has prompted Lane County a clear distinction between to end a program that helped restitution a n d co n s umer businesses recover their finan- debt, the program exposes the cial losses from people who county to the risk of expensive deliberately write bad checks. litigation. D istrict
A t t o r ney A l e x
ing out letters using the dis-
trict attorney letterhead and and dumbfounded to learn seal in their effort to get paynow that we've got a problem ment. Critics said that made it with this," Prozanski told the appearthe letters came from a
Gardner said he thinks the
the law to prohibit district at-
torneys from allowing private companies to send out letters
using the letterhead or seal of their offices. Prozanski, a sponsor of the
bill and chairman of the state senate's Judiciary Committee, said the changes weren't
meant to affect other parts of the program.
COCC
Prineville campus two years ago. Continued from 61 The school has also been COCC launched the vet- adding new departments erinary program last year, in recent years, including and offers classes out of the an aviation-professional pischool's Health Careers Cen- lot program and pharmacy teron itsBend campus. technician courses. COCC officials have told Deschutes County comThe Bulletin t h e B r i ght- missioners have to formally Side events center proper- approve the lot split before it ty would offer more space can sell the smaller portion for the growing veterinary of the BrightSide property to program, one of just two COCC. vet tech programs offered But the county generally by community colleges in supports the move, comOregon. missioner Alan Unger said The move would come as Tuesday. "We're ready to take acCOCC adds new buildings and programs, both in Bend tion on it," he said. and across Central Oregon. Anderson said the county School officials hope to fin- would take up the proposal ish an $8.3 million Technol- during a work session, possiogy and Education Center in bly next week. The schedule Redmond next fall. would likely allow commisThe s c hool op e ned sioners to vote on a proposal new buildings for health by Jan. 22. and science programs in — Reporter 541-617-7820 2012. COCC also opened a eglucklich@bendbulletin.com
Prozanski, who works as
a prosecutor, said he's concerned to hear now that pro-
grams are shutting down.
The DeschutesRiverBasin Local members of the Basin StudyWorking Group hope toobtain grants to study water supply anddemand in the Deschutes Basin, from the Upper Deschutes to LakeBilly Chinook.
Kyron Horman:Father,stepmomof missing boydivorced
Co/um The Dalle
The Associated Press
Horman on Ittesday, just days phen Houze, says the two have day to attend a science fair. PORTLAND — An Oregon before the two were set to go to settled financial issues. They The boy never made it to his judge has finalized the divorce trial. still need to work out legal regular class but wasn't reof the father and stepmother of Kaine Horman filed for di- custody issues and parenting ported missing until later that a Portland boy missing since vorce shortly after his 7-year- time for their daughter Kiara, afternoon when he didn't re2010. old son, Kyron, was last seen who is now 5. turn home by school bus. Multnomah County Circuit at Skyline Elementary School Kyron Horman vanished A massive search operation Judge Henry Kantor signed in rural northwest Portland. from his school on June 4, turned up no signs of the boy. off on the divorce of Kaine Horman and Terri M oulton
The Oregonian reports that
2010, after Terri Horman
Terri Horman's lawyer, Ste- brought him there early that
White River Warm Sp
Oesch River
A criminal investigation con-
tinues with no arrests made.
a as R er
PUBLIc OFFIGIALs CONGRESS U.S. SENATE • SEN. JEFF MERKLEY,D-ORE. 107 RUSSELLSENATEOFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON, D.C.20510 PHONE:202-224-3753 WEB:http:I/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.G.20510 PHONE:202-224-5244 WEB:http:I/wyden.senate.gov BENDOFFICE: 131 N.W. HAWTHORNE AVE., SUITE107 BEND, OR97701 PHONE: 541-330-9142
U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES •REP.GREG WALDEN, R-HOOD RIVER 2182 RAYBURN HOUSEOFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON, D.C.20515 PHONE: 202-225-6730 WEB:http:I/walden.house.gov BENDOFFICE: 1051 N.W. BOND ST., SUITE400 BEND, OR97701 PHONE: 541-389-4408 FAX:54 I-389-4452
STATE OF OREGON •GOV.JOHN KITZHABER, 0 160 STATECAPITOL, 900 COURT ST. SALEM, OR 97301 PHONE:503-378-4582 FAX:503-378-6872 WEB:http://governor.oregon.gov • SECRETARY OFSTATEKATE BROWN,0 136 STATECAPITOL SALEM, OR 97301 PHONE:503-986-1616 FAX:503-986-1616 EMAIL:oregon.sos©state.or.us • TREASURERTED WHEELER, D 159OREGON STATE CAPITOL 900 COURTST. N.E. SALEM, OR 97301 PHONE:503-378-4329 EMAIL:oregon.treasurer©state. OI;us
WEB:www.ost.state.or.us • ATTORNEY GENERALELLEN ROSENBLUM, 0 1162 COURT ST. N.E. SALEM, OR97301 PHONE: 503-378-4400 FAX:503-378-40 I7 WEB:www.doj.state.or.us •LABOR COMMISSIONER BRAD AVAKIAN 800N.E.OREGON ST.,SUITE1045 PORTLAND, OR 97232 PHONE:971-673-0761 FAX:97I-673-0762 EMAIL:boli.mail©state.or.us WEB:www.oregon.gov/boli
LEGISLATURE SENATE • SEN. TED FERRIOLI, R-DISTRICT 30 (JEFFERSON,PORTION OF DESCHUTES) 900 COURT ST. N.E., S-323 SALEM, OR 97301 PHONE:503-986-1950 EMAIL:sen.tedferrioli©state.or.us WEB:www.leg.state.or.us/ferrioli •SEN.TIM KNOPP,R-DISTRICT27 (PORTIONOF DESCHUTES) 900 COURT ST. N.E., S-423 SALEM, OR 97301
PHONE:503-986-1727 EMAIL:sen.timknopp©state.or.us WEB:www.leg.state.or.us/knopp •SEN.DOUG WHITSETT,R-DISTRICT28 (CROOK,PORTION OFDESCHUTES) 900 COURTST. N.E., S-303 SALEM, OR 97301 PHONE:503-986-1728 EMAIL:sen.dougwhitsett©state. ocus WEB:www.leg.state.or.us/whitsett HOUSE OFREPRESENTATIVES •REP.JASON CONGER, R-DISTRICT 54 (PORTIONOF DESCHUTES) 900 COURT ST. N.E., II-477 SALEM, OR 97301 PHONE:503-986-1454 EMAIL:rep.jasonconger©state. OI;us
WEB:www.leg.state.or.us/conger •REP.JOHN HUFFMAN, R-DISTRICT 59(PORTIONOF JEFFERSON) 900 COURT ST. N.E., H-476 SALEM, OR97301 PHONE:503-986-1459 EMAIL:rep.johnhuffman©state. OI;us
WEB:www.leg.state.or.us/huffman •REP.MIKEMCLANE, R-DISTRICT 55 (CROOK,PORTION OF DESCHUTES) 900 COURTST. N.E., H-385 SALEM, OR 97301 PHONE:503-986-1455 EMAIL:rep.mikemclane@state. or.us WEB:www.leg.state.or.us/mclane •REP.GENE WHISNANT, R-DISTRICT 53 (PORTIONOF DESCHUTES) 900 COURT ST. N.E., II-471 SALEM, OR 97301 PHONE:503-986-1453 EMAIL:rep.genewhisnant©state. ocus WEB:www.leg.state.or.us/whisnant
DESCHUTES COU5fPE 1300 N.W. WALLST., BEND, OR 97701 WEB:www.deschutes.org PHONE:541-388-6571 FAX:541-382-1692 COUNTY COMMISSION • TAMMYBANEY,R-BEND PHONE:541-388-6567 EMAILTammy Baney@co.deschules. OI:us • ALANUNGER,D-REDMOND PHONE:541-388-6569 EMAIL: Alan Unger@co.deschutes. ocus • TONYDEBONE, R-LAPINE PHONE: 541-388-6568 EMAIL: Tony DeBone@o.deschutes. ocus
CROOK COUNTY 300 N.E. THIRDST., PRINEVILLE, OR 97754 PHONE:541-447-6555 FAX:541-416-3891 EMAIL:administration©co.crook. ocus WEB:co.crook.or.us COUNTY COURT •MIKEMCCABE, CROOK COUNTY JUDGE PHONE:541-447-6555 EMAIL:mike.mccabe©co.crook. OI'.Us
• KENFAHLGREN PHONE:541-447-6555 EMAIL:ken.fahlgren©co.crook. or.us
JEFFERSON COUNTY 66 S.E. 0 ST., MADRAS,OR97741 PHONE:541-475-2449 FAX:541-475-4454 WEB:www.co.jefferson.or.us COUNTY COMMISSION
• MIKEAHERN • JOHNHATFIELD •WAYNE FORDING PHONE: 541-475-2449 EMAIL:commissioneroco.jefferson. or.us
CITY OF BEND 710 N.W. WALLST. BEND, OR97701 PHONE: 541-388-5505 WEB:www.ci.bend.or.us •CITYMANAGER ERICKING PHONE: 541-388-5505 EMAIL:citymanager©ci.bend.or.us CITY COUNCIL • JODIEBARRAM PHONE: 541-388-5505 EMAIL:jbarram@ci.bend.or.us • MARKCAPELL PHONE: 541-388-5505 EMAIL:mcapell©ci.bend.or.us • JIM CLINTON PHONE: 541-388-5505 EMAIL:jclinton©ci.bend.or.us •VICTORCHUDOWSKY PHONE: 541-749-0085 EMAIL: vchudowsky@ci.bend.or.us •DOUG KNIGHT PHONE: 541-388-5505 EMAIL:dknight@ci.bend.or.us • SCOTTRAMSAY PHONE: 54 I-388-5505 EMAIL:sramsay@ci.bend.or.us • SALLYRUSSELL PHONE: 541-480-8141 EMAIL:srussell©ci.bend.or.us
CITY OF REDMOND 716 S.W. EVERGREEN AVE. REDMOND, OR 97756 PHONE: 541-923-7710 FAX:541-548-0706 CITY COUNCIL •MAYOR GEORGE ENDICOTT PHONE: 541-948-3219 EMAIL:George.Ed nicott©ci.redmond. ocus • JAYPATRICK PHONE: 541-508-8408 EMAIL:Jay.patrick©ci.redmond. ocus • TORYALLMAN PHONE: 541-923-7710 •JOECENTANNI PHONE: 541-923-7710 JOE CENTANNI@ ICI REDMOND OR.US • CAMDENKING PHONE: 54 I-604-5402 EMAIL: Camden.King@ci.redmond. or:us •GINNY MCPHERSON PHONE: 541-923-7710 EMAILGinnyMcph ersor@ci.redmond. orus • EDONIMUS PHONE: 54 I-604-5403 EMAIL:Ed.0nimusoci.redmond. ocus
CITY OF SISTERS 520 E. CASCADE AVENUE, P.O. BOX 39 SISTERS, OR 97759 PHONE: 541-549-6022 FAX:541-549-0561 CITY COUNCIL • DAVIDASSON PHONE:503-913-7342 EMAIL:dasson@ci.sisters.or.us • WENDY HOLZMAN PHONE: 541-549-8558 EMAIL:wholzman©ci.sisters.or.us •BRADBOYD PHONE: 541-549-2471 EMAIL:bboyd@ci.sisters.or.us • CATHERINE CHILDRESS PHONE: 541-588-0058 EMAIL:cchildress©ci.sisters.or.us
rin
ers
Cro
• MCKIBBEN WOMACK PHONE:541-598-4345 EMAIL:mwomack©ci.sisters.or.us
• Be
CITY OF LA PINE P.O. BOX3055, 16345 SIXTH ST. LA PINE, OR97739 PHONE:541-536-1432 FAX:54 I-536- I462 CITY COUNCIL • KATHYAGAN EMAIL:kagan@ci.la-pine.or.us • GREG JONES GJONESOCI.LA-PINE.OR.US • KEN MULENEX EMAIL:kmulenex©ci.la-pine.or.us • STU MARTINEZ EMAIL:smartinez©ci.la-pine.or.us • KAREN WARD KWARDOCI.LA-PINE.OR.US
CITY OF PRINEVILLE 387 N.E. THIRDST., PRINEVILLE, OR 97754 PHONE:541-447-5627 FAX:54 I-447-5628 EMAIL:cityhall@cityofprineville.com WEB:www.cityofprineville.com CITY COUNCIL • BETTYROPPE EMAIL:broppe@cityofprineville. com • JACKSELEY EMAIL:iseley©cityofprineville.com • STEPHEN UFFELMAN EMAIL:suffelman©cityofprineville. com • DEANNOYES EMAIL:dnoyes@cityofprineville. com •GORDON GILLESPIE EMAIL:ggillespie©cityofprineville. com • JASON BEEBE EMAIL:jbeebe©cityofprineville. com • GAIL MERRITT EMAIL:gmerritt@cityofprineville. com • JASON CARR EMAIL:jcarr©cityofprineville.com
CITY OF MADRAS 71 S.E. 0 STREET,MADRAS,OR 97741 PHONE:541-475-2344 FAX:541-475-7061 CITY COUNCIL • MAYOR MELANIEWIDMER EMAIL:mwidmer©ci.madras.or.us • TOM BROWN EMAIL:thbrown@ci.madras.or.us • WALTCHAMBERLAIN EMAIL:wchamberlain©ci.madras. ocus • ROYCE EMBANKSJR. EMAIL:rembanks©ci.madras.or.us • JIMLEACH EMAIL:jleach@ci.madras.or.us • RICHARD LADEBY EMAIL:rladeby©ci.madras.or.us • CHARLES SCHMIDT EMAIL:cschmidt©ci.madras.or.us
CITY OF CULVER 200 W. FIRSTST., CULVER,OR 97734 PHONE:541-546-6494 FAX:541-546-3624 MAYOR • SHAWNA CLANTON CITY COUNCIL • NANCYDIAZ • LAURADUDLEY • AMY MCCULL Y • SHARON ORR • SHANNONPOOLE • HILARIODIAZ
O eschu e r aPlae
emut R G N
Greg Cross/The Bulletin
Basin
miles of the Deschutes River from Wickiup Reservoir
Continued from 61
to Bend, there is currently
"The basin stakeholders
have made great strides to collaboratively address irrigation, municipal, instream and other w ater n eeds
too little water in the winter to justify major investments in habitat restoration, Houston said. That could change
if a study leads to efficien-
c o nserva- cy projects that leave more tion and efficiency projects, water in the river. "Once the through w a ter
a groundwater mitigation program, and an active instream leasing and transfer program," Ward wrote in a letter to the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation last month.
"Despite these efforts, de-
water is instream, from our perspective, we're looking at it as a really important
opportunity to then engage in all types of habitat restoration projects," Houston
sard. Steve Johnson, manager schutes Basin still exceeds of the Central Oregon Irrigasupply and further work is tion District and a member necessary to meet instream of the work group, said the and out-of-stream needs." study would examine water The s t at e L e g i slature supply and demand at least mand for water in the De-
passed a bill in 2013 to cre-
20 years into the future. The
ate a new water supply de- study would cover the basin v elopment a ccount, w i t h from the Upper Deschutes a specific reference to the River to Lake Billy Chinook, Deschutes Basin study as a and it would consider the potential recipient of money impacts of climate change from this fund. The Basin on water supply. "The status quo will have Study Work Group hopes to leverage state support to ob- to change in order to meet tain a $750,000 federal grant the supply-and-demand scefrom the Bureau of Recla- narios of the future," Johnmation. Racquel R ancier, son said. Climate change senior policy coordinator will result in earlier snowfor the Oregon Water Re- melt — w i t h s i g n i ficant sources Department, wrote melting shifting from June in an email that "we expect to May — and that could to have funds to match the mean changes to the curBureau o f R e c l amation's rent water storage system, costs, which could be up Johnson said. "So as irrigato $750,000 over several tion district manager, that's years." something I think about," Ryan Houston, executive Johnson said. "The good directorof the Upper De- news for our basin is the schutes Watershed Council, overall precipitation is prosaid cities and irrigation jected to be neutral, or plus districts have an idea of how or minus 5 percent." much water they need in Kyle Gorman,south cenorder to serve drinking wa- tral region manager with ter and agricultural needs, the Oregon Water Resourcbut conservationists do not es Department, said a simknow exactly how much ilar study was done in the water various species need Yakima Basin in Washingin order to thrive in specific
areas of the basin. For ex-
ton, and one is underway now in the Klamath Basin.
a mple, Houston said "it i s
The local work group will
less clear how much water we need to have a redband
learn this year whether it will receive the Bureau of
trout fishery in
S unriver." Reclamation grant, and if it is successful, the study
Houston hopes the study could help answer those questions.
On approximately 60
would begin in 2015. — Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrud@bendbulletin.com
B4 T H E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JAN 2, 2014
EDj To
The Bulletin
s
emixe recor onen an ere s ecies roe ion he Endangered Species Act celebrated its 40th birthday Saturday, and 40 years in, its impact remains a
decidedly mixed blessing. The ESA has some real wins to its credit. The bald eagle surely is high on that list. The widespread use of the insecticide DDT had reduced the number of breeding pairs of the national bird to just over 400 by 1963; it was declared endangered five years later and was one of the first species to receive protection after the ESA became law. Just before the listing, DDT was banned, and the listing itself provided much-needed protection to the bird. It was removed from the ESA's protection list in 2007, according to the Associated Press. S o far, protections for t h e northernspotted owl have proven not terribly effective. Years after being listed, its numbers continue to decline, and now officials are shooting barred owls in the attempt to rehabilitate its threatened
cousin. Measuring the other side of the ESA is more difficult, unfortunately. Most of the act's negative impacts have been felt locally, in areas where threatened and endangered species are found, and they generally don't get the sort of attention the species themselves
receive. One such attempt came in 1998 in a paper by Gardner M. Brown Jr. and Jason E Shogren in the Journal of Economic Perspectives. Brown, from the University of Washington,and Shogren, from the University of Wyoming, said estimates of declining economic welfare in the region ranged from about $33 billion to $46 billion in 1990 dollars. In other terms, those estimates included more than 28,000jobs lost by the year 2000, and, over the long haul, the value of timber uncut because of the owl. The folks in Curry County, you can believe, will give you no argument over those bleak numbers. We've long suspected that the economic impactsof Endangered Species Act listings would get more attention if they were felt nationwide, but that has yet to happen. The folks in Washington, D.C., and New York can look with pride at the bald eagle in all its recovered glory. They're less likely to notice Curry County, Ore., a county near bankruptcy brought on in no small part by the same law that saved the eagle.
Uncertainty on tax breaks unfair ,damages economy
T
he federal government uses the tax code to encourage certain kinds of activities. It gives tax breaks to individuals, for example, for use of public transportation by commuters. Businesses get favored tax treatment for investing in research and for developing renewable energy. But these and many others tax breaks are often allowed to expire at the end of a year and are later renewed. For the 55 popular tax breaks that expired at the end of the day Tuesday, there's no certainty they'll be reinstated. A similar batch that expired at the end of 2011 wasn't renewed until New Year's Day 2013, according to an Associated Press report. That leaves individuals and businesses to o perate w ithout knowing the tax consequences of their actions. It defeats the purpose of tax breaks to encourage certain kinds of behavior, but it also prevents good financial planning. That's tough — and totally unfair — for i ndividuals. But the consequences for businesses have a much larger impact. Business-
es that don't have certainty about their tax bills are less likely to expand andcreatejobs, slowing economic recovery and hurting individuals seeking employment. Oregon recently saw a prime example of the importance businesses place on tax certainty when Nike convinced the Legislature to exempt it for 30 years from any changes in a specific piece of state tax law. In return, the company
promised a big expansion would stayin Oregon, not go elsewhere. Critics blame the federal tax law uncertainty on a dysfunctional Congress, but it's also tied up this time around in efforts to overhaul the entire federal tax code. As a result, there's even more uncertainty about the likelihood that any particular tax break will be renewed. We enthusiastically support the need to simplify the federal tax code by removing many tax exemptions and reducing overall tax rates. What's objectionable is forcing taxpayers to make decisions in the blind for 2014. Decisions need to be made now for 2014, with the larger overhaul coming later.
For c arities, a gi t is a gi t By Herb SmIth
ductive and healthy life. maybe even less,reall y help or But we and many other nonprofhis is the season of giving, accomplish much? The answer is its are struggling today to cope with when we give to the people we a very definite yes. Although non- the harsh reality of trying to meet love as well as to people we profit organizations are certain- more need with fewer dollars. The have never even met. And the gift ly grateful for gifts of millions of effect of this tough economy hits us you may think of as insignificant dollars, such donations are rare. If hard every day as more individuals and of little consequence to a char- charities were forced to rely solely and families come to us for help. ity is often the very thing that will on large gifts, those organizations This means we expend a lot of efmake all the difference to people in would soon go bankrupt. fort to get the most out of every dolneed. Research shows that the vast ma- lar donated. It turns out that nonprofit orga- jority of charitable gifts are comSmall gifts, of any amount, when nizations receive most of their an- paratively small — that donors of- multiplied by the millions of everynual contributions during the final ten give incremental amounts in re- day people who support our nation's quarter of the year. A cynic would sponse to specific appeals. Making charities, add up to something that attribute this surge to the impera- a small gift in the form of a steady, makes a huge difference in the lives tives of the tax code, and others to monthly donation gives charitable of people who have nowhere else to some amorphous, benevolent, sea- organizations the opportunity to es- turn. In fact, those small gifts made sonal spirit. Whatever the reason, tablish reliable operating budgets. $316 billion worth of difference to statistics from the Direct Marketing But even when small donations are charities in America last year. Association Nonprofit Federation made on a morerandom schedule, So whenever you read about a show that charitable giving peaks e fficient charities know ho w t o millionaire's gift, know that your in December. maximize each gift's effectiveness. donation, however humble, is vital These statistics are certainly Whatever amount you give is to a charity's ongoing life support. borne out by our experience at the put to good use. At the Los Ange- When you sit down to write a check Los Angeles Mission. Though we les Mission, for example, about 60 to your favorite charity, remember are more than delighted to receive percent of our annual operating the biblical story of the widow's large donations, it is the sum total budget is raised in the final three mite. She gave two small coins, of the smaller contributions that months of the year. But we have to while the wealthy gave much more. dependably undergird our oper- work hard year-round to soothe But it was everything she had. It ation. Even the smallest year-end the exhausted bodies and the be- made a difference and showed that contribution can touch those most leaguered spirits of the people who there is really no such thing as a in need. live on the ragged edges of our city small gift. That widow understood However, it i s t h e s t ories of streets. We take pride in preparing it is more blessed to give than to wealthy individuals who d onate and serving thousands of meals all receive. Consider that concept and millions of dollars to charitable year long, not just during the holi- know that whatever you give will be organizations that most often cap- days. We provide clothing, shoes, appreciated beyond measure. ture the public's imagination and showers, emergency shelter and — Herb Smith is president of the Los the media buzz. The willingness of medical help, as well as counseling, Angeles Mission and chairman of the Los the wealthy to share their financial education, job training and other Angeles Central Providers Collaborative, largesse with those less fortunate is practical services. Our long-term an organization representing the something everyone admires. residentialprogram prepares our homeless service providersin the skid Sometimes this admiration can graduates for a new beginning, ofrow area. He wrote thisfortheLos leave people feeling a little intim- ten their last chance to have a proAngeles Times. idated. Will that check for $10, or
For The Los Angeles Times
T
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.
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How to manage financial risk of investing in mllege By Alan Benson, KrIshna Esteva and Frank Levy
In our study of college costs and the college investment remains high, returns in California, we recognized the recession and higher tuitions For The Los Angeles Times that some students drop out while have increased the differences in outmack in the middle of the holi- others take more than four years to comes among college graduates. The day rush, college applications graduate. Nonetheless, we found that growing gaps between the highestare due — anxious weeks for entering freshmen at the University and lowest-earning students means high school seniors and their fam- of California and Cal State Univer- that college has become a more risky ilies. To heighten the anxiety, no sity systems will see an average rate investment for prospective freshmen month passes without a critic pro- of return on their investment of about and their families. claiming that college is a pedantic 12 percent. This is much higher than Anxious high school seniors can't waste of money, while opinion polls the 3.9 percent interest rate currently eliminate the financial risk from inshow a rising fraction of the public charged on Stafford student loans. In vesting in education, but they can doubts the value of a college educa- other words, college remains a good manage the risk by following a few tion. Yet many studies find that col- investment for the typical entering simple rules: lege still outperforms other invest- freshman. Consider what comes after gradments, at least for the typical student. But the 12 percent return is an av- uation. College is a time when stuAny student trying to make sense erage. It includes students who devel- dents can discover their passions. It's of this confusion should recognize op successful start-ups, students who also a time to become aware of the that investing in a college education drop out and students who graduate world and how those passions may differs from other investments in two but don't find work. It includes En- fit within it. What happens to a parimportant respects. First, you have glish and engineering majors, artists ticular major's graduates'? How do some control over the return on your and accountants. Some students will they find professional and personal investment (unlike the performance earn far greater than 12 percent on fulfillment'? There are plenty of data of a stock). Second, you have inside their educational investment, and oth- on earnings by major on the website information on how to invest because ers will end up in financial distress. for Georgetown University's Cenyou're investing in yourself. Although the average return on ter on Education and the Workforce
S
(cew.georgetown.edu), and earnings by occupation from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (bls.gov). Think about how these earnings will compare with a monthly student loan repayment, a figure you can estimate at FinAid.org (finaid.org/calculators/Ioan payments.phtml).
programs can be complicated to access, far fewer students who could benefit from these programs actually take advantage of them. Champions of higher education have long described college as a tick-
Graduate, and do it on time. When
benefits and prospects. That's too op-
considering a particular college, learn what fraction of entering students fail
timistic. College remains a good investment for the typical student, but it
to graduate in four years. If the fraction is more than 15 percent, find out
is an investment that carries increas-
where the obstacles are. Realize that spending a fifth year in college costs extra tuition and a year of forgone earnings. It also leaves you always one year behind in the labor market in
termsofexperience andpromotions. Be smart about student loans. The federal government offers a v ari-
ety of plans to repay federal student loans. Graduates with low incomes can qualify for lower loan repayments, and even have debts forgiven after a period of time. Because the
et to the middle class — an automatic
route to top jobs with good salaries,
ing risks. Fortunately, the risks can be wisely managed. College today shouldn'tbe considered a surefire
ticket to any outcome. It is a steppingstone to be navigated purposefully. — AlanBenson isan assistant professor in the Carlson School of Management at the University of Minnesota; Krishna Estevais a management consultant; Frank Levy is professor emeritus at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. They are members ofthe Scholars Strategy Network. They wrote this for the Los Angeles Times.
THURSDAY, JAN 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
OREGON NEWS EUGENE MAN DOCUMENTS A WHOLE YEAR OFFLYING KITES
BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES Alvin 'Gene' Eugene Baldwin, of Crooked River Ranch Aug. 19, 1932 - Dec. 28, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Redmond, 541-504-9485 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A Celebration of Life will be held at a later date. Contributions may bemade to:
Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701 www.partnersbend.org
Myrtle J. Ellison, of Redmond Sept. 23, 1920 - Dec. 27, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Redmond, 541-504-9485 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: No services are planned at this time.
Paul David Donlan, of Redmond May 8, 1979 - Dec. 29, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Redmond, 541-504-9485 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A Mass of Christian Burial will take place Friday, Jan. 3, 2014, at 1:00 p.m., at St. Thomas Catholic Church, 1720 NW 19th St., Redmond, OR.
B5
pb t 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. Theymay be 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 orabout the obituary policy, contact
A long string of kites
launched by Rodney Reece, of Eugene, fly above a field Tuesday.
Reece made good ona vow to fly a kite every
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 mustbereceived by5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on thesecond day after submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9a.m. Mondayfor Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details.
day of 2013 with a light air launch from a field in
Eugene on NewYear's Eve. Photos by Chris Pietsch The (Eugene) Register-Guard
i
/
Reece,below, documented his
daily launches and is hoping to set a Guinness World Record for the yearlong effort.
Phone: 541-617-7825
Email: obits@bendbullelin.com Fax: 541-322-7254
Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR 97708
FEATUREDOBITUARY
Ron Tom/ NBCviaThe Associated Press
James Avery as Philip Banks, left, starred with Will Smith in the TV series, "The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air." Avery, 65, died Tuesday. c•
Actor james Avery was Unde Phil on DI' COIl ItlOIlS et TV's'Fresh Prince' •
By Chris Lee
in 1980's "The Blues Brothers"
Los Angeles Times
and turned up as a regular on
LOS ANGELES — James
such TV series as "L.A. Law,"
Avery, who portrayed the com- "Beauty and the Beast" and manding yet cuddly father "Sparks." figure on the hit 1990s sitcom But Avery's role as Judge "The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air,"
Phillip Banks — "Uncle Phil"
— on "Fresh Prince" died at a Glendale, Calif., hospital Tuesday brought him his widnight due to complicaest audience. Ranked tions from open heart No. 34 on TV Guide's surgery, according to 50 Greatest TV Dads of his manager. He was All Time, the Navy veteran's stern, straight-ar65, according to public Avery records. row character providAvery was mourned by his ed a foil for series star Will "Fresh Mncee co-star Alfonso Smith. After rescuing Smith's str e et-wise Ribeiro on Twitter on Wednes- wise-cracking, day morning. Fresh Prince character from 'Tm deeply saddened to say the mean streets of west Philthat James Avery has passed adelphia, the bourgeois tranaway," Ribeiro tweeted. "He quility of Unde Phil's uptight was a second father to me. I'll Bel Air household set up the fish-out-of-water culture clash miss him greatly." Over the course of a jour- that powered "Fresh Prince's" neyman career in television situational comedy from 1990 and film that spanned more until Smith's departure (for than three decades, Avery lent global movie stardom) in 1996. his stentorian speaking voice Avery wrapped his final to several animated series, in- film, "Wish I Was Here" (dicluding 1987's "Teenage Mu- rected by Zach Braff) in Septant Ninja Turtles" and 1990's "Iron Man."
The Virginia-born, New Jersey-raisedactorfirstappeared onscreen in an uncredited role
The Associated Press
p~ WillametteValleyatmlt
EUGENE — Snowpack
Neuman in Portland said the entire West Coast is dry.
Through 'Ilresday, the National Weather Service recorded 21.19 inches of
rainfall in Eugene, breaking by more than 2 inches a nearly 70-year-old record for lowest rainfall, The Register-Guard reported. Most Oregon counties are
seeing snowpack levels of lessthan 50 percent of
average. Hoodoo Ski Area needs 36 inches of snow to open
for the season but has only about 7.5 inches so far. In Washington, The Summit
at Snoqualmie Pass remained closed for skiing and snowboarding, almost average. Neuman told The Regis-
t han
rebound from the abnormally dry conditions in the next few months. But if that
doesn't happen, he said that could create concerns
er of the Marshalls depart-
clothing retailer by buying irregular inventory from fashionable clothing stores and selling it at a discount. Died
ment store chain in the mid-
Saturday in Boca Raton, Fla.
years with low snowpack
for water supplies, plants and an early fire season. He noted f our
r e cent
— 1981, 1990, 1996 and
Find Your Dream Home In Real Estate •
• •
TheBulletin
in person, professional consultation
HOME LOAN DIVISION
541-382-4189
National Weather Ser-
vice meteorologist Colby
t hree weeks l ater
— From wire reports
2005. In 1981 and 2005, dry conditions persisted through the winter, while heavy snow-
levels across much of Oregon are below normal lev- fall fell in the second half the els, following a year that winter seasons in 1990 and also was the driest on re- 1996. cord in Eugene-Springfield.
Avery is survived by his wife of 26 years, Barbara Avery.
1950s who built a successful
Ca l l JerryGilmour...,..„..„,
across t e state
ter-Guard there is time to
Deaths of note from around theworld: Alfred Marshall, 94: A found-
Low Cost Reverse Mortgage 17 years reverse mortgage experience
tember. The movie is set to premiere at the Sundance Film Festival later this month.
DEATHS ELSEWHERE
•
Glen Wilham Evnse May 11, 1955 - December 28, 2013 Glen William Ernst passed away suddenly at home In Bend, Oregon, of natural causes Dec. 28, 2013 at the age of 58. He was born May 11, 1955 to Gilbert and Bonnie Ernst (Gillingham) in Prince Albert, Saskatchewan, Canada. Glen Is survlved by hls daughter, Shelby and son, Cody; hls father, Gilbert; his sister, Janet and her husband, Ernie Clark; a nephew, Chad (Nicole) Clark and two nieces, Nicole (Micah) Yeaman and Chantel (Brandon) Richert and their children; two aunts, Peggy Colbourneof Newfoundland, Canada and Dorothy Ernst ofSaskatchewan, Canada; and many, many cousins. Glen was preceded in death by his mother, Bonnie on April 1, 1979. Glen loved airplanes. He made hls living buying and selling airplanes and he was a gifted pilot. He would polish his airplanes until they shone because he "liked things nice" .He recently was invited by his dear friend, Jimmy Nelson to accompany him on a flight that took them to Asia, Singapore, India, France, The Unlted Kingdom, Spain, The United Arab Emlrates and back through Alaska andSeattle. Glen always enjoyed flying anywhere at the drop of a hat.
Glen loved everyone he met and never forgot a name. He had a great sense of humor and a joke for every occasion. Glen was fun and always the life of the party. Glen William Ernst was larger than life and he will be missed by everyone who knew him. He will primarily be remembered as one of Jehovah's Witnesses to those who knew and loved him. As a teenager in 1969, his family moved to Guatemala. Their desire was to have a greater share In the ministry. During thls tlme Glen contacted a young college student who began to learn the Blble's message and It resulted in 12 family members becoming lovers of Jehovah God. Until the day he died Glen never missed an opportunity Io talk about his God, Jehovah, to anyone. Glen based hls clear understanding of the Kingdom hope on the Bible. Under the Klngdom rule, Acts 24:15 states there will be a resurrection of the righteous and the unrighteous, please read this in your own Bible, "I have hope toward God, which hopethese men also look forward to, that there Is going to be a resurrection of both the righteous and the unrighteous." A memorial servlce will be held at 1:00 p.m. Saturday, January 4, 2014 at the Kingdom Hall of Jehovah's Witnesses, 63175 18th Street, Bend, OR. A reception will follow at the Nelson residence.
Please sign our guest book at www.niswonger-reynolds.com In lieu of flowers, Glen would have preferred a donation be made to Watchtower Relief, 25 Columbia Heights, Brooklyn, NY 11201.
B6
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JAN 2, 2014
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apid City 5/27
Las Vegas 62/41
78/50
oO
Denver 52/28
Tijuana 77/47
SOS
Chihuahua 55/33
-Os
LaPaz ~ 77/61
Anchorag 26/10
Houston
34/27
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44
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• Miami 83/66
57/37•
CONDITIONS
FRONTS
• h'h'h .
Cold W arm Stationary
II
"4
fI 44
Monterrey Ma z atlan ' • 84/70
h 3 0/13 3-rh
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St.Loui 22/4
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s
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H
ansas ity 15/5
rtland 10/0 ton 26/10 ew York
onto
• Dallasl 45/23$
S
HAWAI I
Os
-9/-1
reen 8 g/ 7 •
/11
oma City
S
Phoenix 76/4
Honolulu ~ 80/70
Quebec I
-TO
s
Des oine 7/.6 Omaha
San Fr asco 65/4
Palatka, Fla.
o"+',
vwwv
1/-2
a
• 88'
o~ o ~o
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• Calg
HIGH LOW
HIGH LOW
HIGH LOW
46 24
46 23
49 26
41 26
BEND ALMANAC
PLANET WATCH T E MPERATURE PRECIPITATION
SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE
Yesterday' sw eatherthrough 4 p.m .inBend Tomorrow Rise Mercur y....8:05a.m......4/46p.m. High /low... ...........50f25 24 ho ursending4p.m.*..0.00" Venus......809am......550pm. Remrdhigh........ 59in1964 Monthtodate.......... 000" M a r s......1212 am.....11:54a m. Remrdlow........ -16in1979 Averagemonthtodate... 006" Jupiter......440 p.m...... 8:00 a.m. Average high.............. 40 Year to date............ 0.00" Satum......328 a m...... 1:27 pm. Average low...............23 Averageyeartodate..... 006" Uranus....11:31 a.m.....12:01 a.m. BarometricPressureat4 P.m30.26 Remrd24hours ...0.79 in1948
Sunrise today...... 7:40 a.m. MOOn phaSeS Sunsettoday...... 4:39 Psm Fjrst Fug New Sunrisetomorrow .. 7;40a.m. Sunsettomorrow... 4AOp.m. Moonrisetoday.... 8:21 a.m. Moonsettoday.... 6/48 pm Jan. 7 Jan.15 Jan. 3 Jan 0
*Melted liquid equivalent
ULTRAVIOLET INDEX ~ SKI REPORT
OREGON CITIES
The higher the UV Index number, the greater Yesterday Thursday F riday Hi/Lo/Pcp H i /Lo/W H i /Lo/Wthe need for eyeandskin protection. Index is City Precipitationvaluesare 24-hourtotalsthrough4 pm for solar at noon. Astoria ........ 47/35/0.00....50/41/sh.....46/33/pc Baker City 3360/0.00.....35/23/c.....35/1 7/sn Brookings 6069/0.00.....57/43/<......57/40/c Burns.......... 46/1 6/0.00....4264/pc......39/1 4/c Eugene 39/30/0.00....43/40/sh.....43/28/sh Klamath Falls ...48/1 7/0.00....46/24/pc.....42/1 6/pc Lakeview....... 55/1 4/0.00....47/26/pc.....43/1 5/pc La Pine........ 51/1 9/0.00 ....47/23/sh .....42/1 7/sh Medford 47/22/0.00....48/35/pc.....43/28/pc Newport 54/41/0.00....53/43/sh.... A7/33/pc North Bend.....54/34/0.00....54/42/pc.....51/34/sh Ontario 28/11/0.00..... 32/24/f.....37/22/sn Pendleton 45/28/0.00.....47/35/c.... A6/26/pc Portland 44/39/0.00....45/41lsh.....44/32/pc Prineville 4064/0.00....51f33/pc.... A6/24/pc Redmond 51f22/0.00....53f32/pc.... A6/19/pc Roseburg 40f33/0.00.....51/39/c......45f33/c Salem 43/33/0.00....44/40/sh.....45/29/sh Sisters......... 47/23/0.00....51/28/sh.....45/20/sh The Dages 44/28/0.00.....46/37/c.....47/32/pc
1 L
MED IUM HIGH 4
6
8
1ii
Ski report from around the state, representing conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday: Snow accumulation in inches Ski area Last 24 hours Base Depth Anthony Lakes ....... . . . . . . . . 3 . . . . . . . . 42 Hoodoo....... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Mt. Ashland.................0.0...no report
Snow levelandroadconditions rePresenting condi tions at 5 P.m.yesterday. Key:T.T. = Traction Tires.
ijmbe~rirne 00 2g warner canyon........ . . . . . .0.0... no report Pass Conditions W igamette Pass ....... . . . . . . 0.0... no report 1-5 at Siskiyou Summit........ Carry chains or T. Tires 1.84 at CabbageHig.......... Carry chains or T.Tires Aspen, Colorado....... . . . . . . . 2 . . . . . .30-33 Hwy. 20 at cantiam pass ...... Carry chains or T. Tires Mammoth Mtn., California.....0.0... . ..18-30 Hwy. 26 at Government Camp.. Carry chains or T. Tires Hm; 26at Och~o Divide..... Care chains or TTires Squaw Valley, California.......0.0... . . .19-21 Hwy. 58 atWigameue pass.... (.arry chains ori.iires Sun ValleY, Idaho....... . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . .15-19 Hwy. 138 at DiamondLake .... Carry chains or T.Tires Hwy.242 atMcKenzie Pass........Q osed forseason For links to the latest ski conditions visit: For up-to-minute conditions turn to: www.tripcheck.com or call 511 www.skicentral.com/oregon.html Legend:W-weatherPcp-precipitation, s-sun,pc-pariial clouds,c-clouds, hhaze, shshowers, r rain,t thunderstorms,sf snowflurries,snsnow, i ice,rs rain snowmix,w wind,f fog, dr drizzle,tr trace
JRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL
wv w o a a w
Yesterday's eXtremeS
HIGH LOW
( $+ i
44 * * d4d 4 4 6 ' ,*** * ** * ** *
*
eh rih
rih rih hlh
Showers T-storms Rain Flurries S now
III
Ice
Yesterday Thursday Friday Yesterday Thumlay Friday Yesterday Thursday Friday Yesterday Thursday Friday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/tN HiRo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hri/Lo/JN City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W AbileneTX......70/40N.OO... 45/25/s.. 57/34/5 GrandRapids....13/1NO08...16Q/sn. 18/13/pc RapidCity........29/9/000...35/27/c. 49/20/pc Savannah.......54/47/0 18... 6065/r .. 49/37ls Akron ..........28/19N.03...23/3/sn... 15/6/c GreenBay....... 9/12NOO... 9/7/sn. 11/12/sn Reno...........5422/0.00..51/27/pc. 53/24/pc Seattle..........45/38N.OO .4N40/sh. 46/35/sh Albany..........24/1ON.00... 14N/50...6/-9/sn Greensboro......50/29/0.00... 49/2Nr.. 33/19/s Richmond.......49/26/0.00.. 51/27/sh.. 31/17/s SiouxFalls........1/5N 06...-2/6/pc. 26/17/pc Albuquerque.....55/26/000... 49/27/s.. 51/30/s Namsburg.......35/1$000 ..33/12/sn .. 16/Npc RochesterNY....22/16/001...13Nlsn...N3/sn Spokane........31/30N.OO ... 38/32/c.. 3962/c Anchorage......30/22N00... 26/10/c. 23/14/pc Hartbrd,CT.....32/19/000...22/7/sn..11/5/sn Saoamento......62/31/0.00 ..66/41Ipc. 67/38/pc Springfield MO ..5$3IN00...21/7/pc .. 33/24/s Atlanta .........47/35/0.00... 46/24/r .. 3N23/s Helena..........42/36/000..45/30/pc. 38/19/sn St Louis. 4 $ 27N 00 22/4/Pc 26/22/Pc Tampa..........63/58N.19... 75/49/t .. 62/47/s AtlanticCity.....43/16N.iN..47/19/sh.. 22/9/sn Nonolulu........80/6$0.00... 857Nr. 7$66/pc Salt Lake City....39QON.OO..3560/pc .. 3662/c Tucson..........71/40N00...73/41/s .. 72/43/s Austin..........64/33N.iN... 51Q7/s .. 54/3Ns Nouslon ........65/46$.0054/34/pc .. .. 56/42/s SanAntonio .....61/39N.OO... 56/2Ns.. 56/41/s Tulsa...........52/32/0.00 ..29/14/pc.. 43/32/s Baltimore...... A4/23/0.00 .. 40/20/rs. 24/10/pc Huntsville.......53/27N.OO...43/17/r .. 3362/s SanDiego.......68/47N.O O... 73/51/s.. 71/53/s Washingtan,Dc.A8/30/0.00.. 42/22/rs. 26/14/pc Billings .........33/25/0.33 ..4564/pc ..47/19/rs Indianapolis.....41/20N00... 23/6/sn. 20/13/pc SanFrancism....56/41N.O O..62/46/pc. 61/45/pc Wichita.........38/ISN.OO... 28/1 5/s.. 42/27/s Birmingham.....53/31/0.00... 47/20/r .. 34/25/s Jackson,MS.....62/35N00... 46/25/r .. 41/25/s SanJose........62/35/0.00..67/41/pc. 66/40/pc Yakima.........42/17N.OO.4N30/sh. 41/23/pc Bismarck.........2/6/il00.....43/c.. 36/Nsn Jacksonvile......59/50N.42... 65/33/1.. 5533/s SantaFe........50/23/0.00..43/23/pc.. 43/24/s Yuma...........74/41N.OO...76/49/s.. 74/4Ns Boise...........39/200.00 ..38/29/pc.. 39/24/c Juneau..........41/37N.54... 34/27/c .. 34/2Nc INTERNATIONAL Boston..........29/19N00.. 26/10/sn..14/3/sn Kansas City......36/11N.11 ...15/5/pc .. 34/26/5 Bridgeport,CT....33/23N00.. 31/15/sn.. 16/4/sn lansing..........13/9N.08.. 15/-2/sn.. I49/pc Amsterdam......489/0.31 ..4769/sh.4941Ish Mecca..........84/66N.OO ... 79/63/s.. 80/63/s Buffalo .........20/11N.04..11/-1/sn....N1/sf lasVegas.......66/40N00.62/41/pc. 63/41/pc Athens..........51/49/0.34..59/4Nsh.. 55/46/c Mexiko City......68/45/0.00... 64/37/r .. 64/41Is Burlinglon, VT....15/-1N.OO... 4/4sn ..0/-13/sn Lexington.......4N29/0.00.. 36/15/rs .. 24/20/s Auckland........75/54/0.00..72/62/pc. 73/57/sh Montreal.........1/ 9N 04 ..-8/11/sn .. e/9/pc Caribou, ME..... 4/-14N 00-12/22/pc. -5/18/pc Linmln...........12/7/0.10...13/3/pc.33/22/pc Baghdad. .. 22/2Nsf.. 25/22/c .......55/48N01..62/49/pc.63/5Npc Moscow........3465N.OO Charleston, SC...53/42N.10... 59/36/r .. 47/31/s Little Rock.......55/24000...39/19/s.. 36/24/s Bangkok........86/66N.OO...91/74/s.. 93/74/s Nairobi .........81/63N.OO . 77/55/pc .. 7N54/5 Chariotte........5529N.IN... 51/27/r .. 36/22/s losAngeles......64/4ENOO .78/50/pc. 73/51/pc Beijing..........52/28N.OO .46/23/pc .. 39/25/s Nassau .........82/75N.02.. 79/71Ipc...75/70/t Chattanooga.....51/28/0 00... 47/20/r .. 31/20/s louisville........49/29/0.00.. 34/16/sn .. 2663/s Beirut ..........6454N.OO .62/52/pc .. 63/53/c NewDelhi.......szy45N.IN... 66/44/s.. 67/47/s Cheyenne.......39/23/009... 4461ls. 50/21lpc Madison, Wl.......8/ON00 .. 9/13/pc. 14/13/pc Berlin...........37/30N.OO .4II39/sh. 3N36/pc Osaka..........55/41/0.00 ..4NJNpc. 49/37/pc Chicago.........22/10/0 23... 22/llsn. 18/15/pc Memphis........54/29NOO .35/19/pc .. 35/27/s Bogota.........70/46/0.00 ..71/48/pc...71/53/t Oslo............37/32N01 ..33/31/sn.. 3463/c Cincinnaii...... ABI2NO.O O. 31lt 2/sn. 22/13/pc Miami..........82/73N.OB .. 83/66/pc .. 72/63/c Budapest........3984/0.00...37/35/c.39/35/pc Ottawa ........ 4-11N.02..4i/-20/sn.... 1/3/s Cleveland.......25/19/015... 21/6/sn. 1$11/pc Milwaukee.......19/5/0.1 3 .. 15/-5/sn. 16/17/pc Buenos Aires.....91/680.00... 7$57/t .. 78I50/s Paris............52/43N.07 ..4N41lsh. 49/42/sh Colorado Springs.42/24/0.00...49RNs. 56/27/pc Minneapolis......1/8/000 .. 0/11/pc.19/13/pc CaboSanLucas.. 82/63/0.00..80/6Npc..79/54/5 Rio de Janeiro....99/82N.OO... 93/76/t...93/77/t ColumbiaMO , .. AO/20N.iN...16/Npc .. 3N2?/s Nashvile........52/21N00..36/20/sn.3$21/pc Cairo...........6450/0 00... 65/53/s.65/5$pc Rome...........55/37/0 00 .. 56/54/sh. 57/52/sh ColumbiaSC....50/35N.iN... , 55/31/r .. 41/2?/s NewOrleans.....62/45N.02.. 59/31/pc.. 45/36/s Calgary.........28/19/014..41/23/sn. 27/1Nsn Santiago........84/54/0 00... 85/SNs.. 91/59/s ColumbuS GA....45/3N0.14 .. 55/24/sh.. 40/26/5 NewYork.......33/24N00 ..30/13/sn.. 16/Nsn Cancun.........at/JSN.00... 82/71It...77/71/t SaoPaulo.......88/37/0.00... 85/71It...BN70/1 Columbus ON... AO/23N00... 29/9/sn. 19/10/pc Newark,NJ......33/21/000..29/15/sn .. 17/6/sn Dublin..........5N39/OA6 ..44/43/pc. 41/37/sh Sapporo........3767N.OO.. 25/22/sf. 29/19/pc Conmrd, NH......23/6/0 00.. 13/1/sn..9/12/sn Norlolk,VA......54/35/0.00..5428/sh. 3361/pc Edinhurgh.......4866N00..42/40/pc. 41/35/sh Seoul.......... A6QBN 00..3768/pc. 32/2Npc Corpus Christi....57/46/0.01... 57/36/s. 61/46/pc Oklahoma City...54/30/0.00... 37/22/s .. 47/34/s Geneva. ........5N32/004..42/32/sh.38/36/sh Shanghai........61/36/0.00 ..57/4i/pc. 55/3Npc DallasFtWorth...69/31N 00... 45/23/s.. SN41/s Omaha..........11/$009...10/1/pc.3521/pc Harare..........73/66N.O O... 67/59/t...65/6Nt Singapore.......84/77N.51 ..79/76/sh. 7$76/sh Daylon .........41/22/0.00... 28/9/sn .. 19/9/pc Orlando.........6659/002... 80/47/t.. 61/47/s HongKong......66/54N.00..67/57/pc.69/57/pc Stockholm.......39/340.00 .. 36/34/sf. 37/36/sh Denver..........41/25/018 ..52/28/pc. 5967/pc PalmSprings.....74/42/0.00... 77/SNs.. JN52/5 Istanbul.........48/45N.OO...47/42/c.. 49/44/c Sydney..........82/6NO.O O ..92/70/c102/6Npc DesMoines.......12/7/0.14... 7/4i/pc. 26QNpc Peoria..........24/1 7N 04.. 15/5/pc. 18/16/pc Jerusalem.......55/43N.01...59/44/s .. 59/45/c Taipei...........72/54/0.00...74/59ls.67752/pc Detroit..........1 7/11N25...17/2/sn. 14/1Npc Philadelphia.....41/23N.OO .. 40/14/rs .. 19/7/sn Johannesubrg....79/54N.OO..8457/pc. 82/5Npc Tel Aviv.........64/45N.OD...65/52/s.. 6$52/c Duluth......... A/19N 00 .. 1/11/pc. 15/lNsn Phoeniz.........7543N.OO...76/4Ns.. 74/47/s Uma ...........77/66/0.00..77/65/pc. 77/6Npc Tokyo. ..........5967N.OO..50/36/pc..456Nc El Paso..........63/25N.OO...53/30/s.. SN34/5 Pittsburgh.......34/24N.00...31/6/sn.. 14/Npc Ushon..........59/55/0.00..60/5Nsh. 5$55/sh Toronto..........14/SN.OO... 3/4ysn.21/21/pc Fairbanks.........19/2N00...-6/ 16/c.. -4/13/c Pordand,ME......22NNOO...10/0/sn.l?l-10/sn Landon.........52/43/0.51 ..46/41/pc. 45/40lsh Vancouver.......43/37/O.IN ..45/37lsh.. 43/36/s Fargz.......... -5/16/000...-6/4ypc.. 26/3/sn Providence......3N1 BN 00.. 3Nl2/sn ..15/1/sn Madrid.........5545/0.07... 50/SNI. 56/42/sh Vienna..........43/36/0.00..42/41/pc.38/35/pc Flagstaff........49/24000...52/17/s.5162/pc Raleigh.........51/29/000...51/29/r.. 3$20/s Manila..........BN73N.00..84/72/pc. 83/74/pc Warsaw.........3$34N.OO .33/31lpc .. 33/30/c
PECIRE
INRNCING ' VAIULSEE EEIVEIY IL N of Redmond 4 i
)
4
o
MATTRESS',."::.".. • Gallery-Be nd I
I si
IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 Sports in brief, C2 College football, C3 NHL, C3
Golf, C4 NBA, C4 College basketball, C5
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 2, 2014
O www.bendbulletin.com/sports
OLYMPIC HOCKEY
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
He ric 's irst
Players namedte Ij.S. men's squad ANN ARBOR, Mich.
— USA Hockeyusedto have it relatively easy picking players for the Olympics. Not anymore. Bobby Ryanhelped the United States earn a silver medal in 2010 in Vancouver and only10 NHL players — from all countries — havemore goals than hedoesthis season for the Ottawa Senators. "We did not pick the best 25 players," general managerDavid Poile saidWednesday after the roster was announced. "We picked the best 25 players that we thought gave usa chance to competeand win the gold medal." In Sochi, the U.S. forwards will be: David Backes, Dustin Brown, Ryan Callahan, Patrick Kane, RyanKesler, Phil Kessel, T.J.Oshie,Max Pacioretty, Zach Parise, Joe Pavelski, Paul Stastny, Derek Stepan, James van Riemsdyk andBlake Wheeler. JohnCarlson, Justin Faulk, CamFowler, Paul Martin, Ryan McDonagh, Brooks Orpik, Kevin Shattenkirk and Ryan Suter will be on defense for the Americans.
•
e
•
S
•
•
• After struggling in November,Oregon finisheswith an impressivebowl victory By Anne M. Peterson The Associated Press
Over the course of Mark Helfrich' sfirstyearashead football coach at the Uni-
versity of Oregon, he dealt with a troubled tight end, a snowball fight, and an injury
— The Associated Press
COLLEGE FOOTBALL Tuesday's games NorthT x UNLV
3
Ne ras a 22 Georgia
2 19
South Carolina 19 Wisconsin 16 LSU
lowa Michigan State 5 Stanford 15 Central Florida 6 Baylor • Roundup,C3
Today'sgame Sugar Bowl At New Orleans Alabama (11-1)vs. Oklahoma (10-2), 5:30 p.m. (ESPN)
14
2 20 42
under Kelly. Led by quarterback Mar-
first-year head coach in the Pac-12 Conference.
While preparing for the
is. You don't get to celebrate.
about the result."
After two Olympic-qualifying The stakes are now dramatical- events, Ferguson sits in eighth ly higher, but Ben Ferguson still p l ace in the World Cup halfpipe approaches elite halfpipe standings. More important, " contests as if he were back at he is the third-highest AmerMount Bachelor riding with ican in those standings. The ~ his buddies. U.S. halfpipe team takes ' The 18-year-old snowfour male riders to the Olymboarder from Bend used that pics, so if the selection were attitude to help him finish Ferguson to d ay, Ferguson quite likely third at a U.S. Snowboarding Grand Prix event last month at
would be headed to Sochi, R u s sia.
Copper Mountain, Colo. Three more Olympic-qualify"I was just having fun snow- i ng events remain, including a U.S. boarding," Ferguson says of his G r andPrixnextweekinBreckenpodium result. "I didn't watch any- ridge, Colo., and two Grand Prix body, so I didn't know what I had to e v ents at Mammoth Mountain, Cado. But I just did my run and I got a l i f ., laterthismonth.
good score, and I was super stoked
that sidelined the speedster
I'll take his advice and think about it for 24, 48 hours, then
get back to work." Helfrich, Oregon's offen-
rules. The next day, the ju-
nior from Hillsboro abruptly left the team, citing his desire to go to the NFL. Less than
three weeks later, Lyerla was arrested for cocaine possession. He has since pleaded guilty to a felony possession charge, but he plans to train for the NFL combine.
SeeOregon/C3
sive coordinator for the pre-
Another hopeful Bend snowboarder Kent Callister is vying to make the Australian Olympic team in the halfpipe. Callister is currently the third-highest ranked Australian in Olympic-qualifying points, 38th overall.
r
Enc Gay/The AssoaatedPress
Oregon players celebrate the team's win over Texas in the Vale-
ro Alamo Bowl onMonday in SanAntonio.Oregon won 30-7.
SeeFerguson/C5
GOLF:PGA TOUR
Age makesthis a big year for Woods
Lindsey Vonn speeds down the course
during a trainlng session for the women's downhill World Cup race in Val
son, despite an ankle injury
tight end Colt Lyerla was suspended for Oregon's game at Colorado for an unspecified violation of team
hearing how he talks, after a win, how your emotions go,
The Bulletin
The Ducks reeled off eight wins to start the sea-
in October, when talented
then how devastating a loss
By Mark Modcal
North and advance to the league championship. Oregon was ranked No. 3 in the preseason.
Longhorns. "There's not too much
Brown this week, it's funny
• Bend snowboarderBenFergusonmaking a bid for the Olympics
to finish atop the Pac-12
after 16 years with the
lax," Helfrich said. "Spending more time with Coach
Sarah Brunson/U.S. Snowboarding
back De'Anthony Thomas, the Ducks were expected
who coached his final game
time in this business to re-
Bend's Ben Ferguson competes in a U.S. Snowboarding Grand Prix at Copper Mountain, Colo., last month. The18-year-old finished third at the event.
cus Mariota and running
Thomas for nearly four games. Helfrich faced a challenge
bowl, Helfrich had a chance to chat with Mack Brown,
By Doug Ferguson
ajdys, ser
The Associated Press a
KAPALUA, HawaiiFour yearslater,the words of
D'Isere,
France, in
December. . '~
Jean-Christophe Bott/The AssociatedPress
W),t
24 1 14
to four straight BCS bowls
(2011) for most wins as a
r
Kelly went to the NFL's Phil-
one thought. But it all ended with an authoritative win. The No. 10 Ducks finished the season
Stanford's David Shaw
' >ir t f J
vious four seasons, took over as head coach when Chip
was much worse than any-
Helfrich matched USC's John Robinson (1976) and
f:II s Iftj
• Stanford falls to Michigan St. in100th Rose Bowl,C3
adelphia Eagles. Helfrich inherited a team that had gone
a 30-7 victory over Texas in the Alamo Bowl.
11 veterans lead women's roster
Inside
to his star quarterback that
11-2 and capped it off with
— The Associated Press
Eleven returning Olympiansare on the roster for the women's hockey teamthat will represent the United States at Sochi. The roster was announced Wednesday during the break between periods of the NHL's Winter Classic. Julie Chu is heading to her fourth Olympics. She will be looking for a gold medal to gowith the two silvers and a bronze shealready has. Canada haswonthe past three Olympic titles. Also making the team was AmandaKessel, whose brother Phil made the U.S.men's team. The U.S. women's team has sevendefensemen, 11forwards and three goaltenders: Jesse Vetter, Molly Schaus and Brianne McLaughlin-Bittle, all of whom haveOlympic experience. Theother players with Olympic experience include KaceyBellamy,Meghan Duggan, Hilary Knight, Jocelyne Lamoureux, Monique Lamoureux, Gigi Marvin and Kelli Stack.
season u o I s an ows
Jack Nicklaus resonate even louder. "If Tiger is going to pass my record, this is a big year for him in that regard," Nick-
way," Woods said recently.
laus said at the start of 2010.
at the Tournament of Cham-
Nicklaus was referring to hisrecord 18m ajorchampionships, and the major championship venues that favored Woods — Augusta
pions at Kapalua. And while Woods is among PGA Tour
Vonn mntinues to triumph asbrand with 0ympic future now inquestion
St. Andrews, all courses where Tiger had won before.
By Barry Svrluga
Under Armour.
remains at 14.
The Washington Post
left on the side of the course, crying, before skiing to the bottom of the hill, her Olympic future
Already, Vonn is the most successful American skier in history, and with that status comes the financial support only a few Olympians enjoy. Unlike so many of the other athletes destined for the Sochi Games, which begin Feb. 7, Vonn is
much in doubt. Yet last Sunday, as the National
a millionaire, sponsored by Under Armour, the
And that makes 2014 even bigger. Woods is facing another favorable menu of major championship sites. He already has won majors at Augusta, Royal Liverpool (British Open) and Valhalla (PGA Championship). The
When Lindsey Vonn's right knee gave out on Dec. 21 in a race in Val d'Isere, France, she was
Football League regular season came to a thrill- energydrink Red Bull,consumer productscoming conclusion, there was Vonn on the television, pany Procter 8t Gamble and a host of others. skiing confidently, in an ad for apparel company SeeVonn/C5
U.S. Open is at Pinehurst No. 2, wereWoods was third in 1999 and runner-up in 2005. "I'm trending in the right
National, Pebble Beach and Woods never had a serious
chance on the back nine of any major that year. His tally
"I've finished third, second
... you get the picture, right? OK."
A new year begins Friday
winners who chose to sit this
one out, his performance in the majors this year figures to be a primary topic of conversation over the next eight months. "I always thinkthat the
Masters signals a lot with Tiger," NBC analyst Johnny Miller said during a conference call. "If he doesn't win the Masters, I think it gives
agreatbig 'Uh-oh,'because that course is so perfect for his game. I'll leave it at that.
But ifhe wants to get off on the right foot, I think he needs to get off at the Masters." SeeWoods/C4
C2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JAN 2, 2014
ON THE AIR
CORKBOARD
TODAY TV/Radio
FOOTBALL
High School, Under Armour All-America Game College, Sugar Bowl, Alabama vs. Oklahoma
1 p.m.
ESPN
5:30 p.m.
ESPN
BASKETBALL
Men's college, Wisconsin at Northwestern 4 p.m. Men's college, Pennsylva niaatGeorgeMason 4:30 p.m. Men's college, Washington at Arizona State Men's college, Oregon atUtah
ESPN2 NBCSN ESPNU
Pac-12, 1110-AM, 100.1-FM
Women's college, Baylor at KansasState 5 p.m. Root Men's college,St.Mary'satGonzaga 6 p.m. ESPN2 Men's college, California at Stanford 6 p.m. Fox Sports1 Men's college, OregonState atColorado 7 p.m. ESPNU, 940-AM Men's college, Washington St. at Arizona 7 p.m. Pac-12 Men's College, Pacific at Portland 7 p.m. Root
FRIDAY SOCCER FA Cup, Blackburn vs Manchester City
4:30 a.m. Fox Sports1
GOLF
PGA Tour,Tournament of Champions
1:30 p.m.
Golf
BASKETBALL
High school, Bishop Gorman(Nev.) vs. Villa Angela-St. Joseph (Ohio) 4 p.m. Women's college, Oregon atStanford 6 p.m. Women's college, OregonSt. at California 8 p.m.
Pac-12 Pac-12
5 p.m.
Fox
5:30 p.m.
ESPN
OLYMPICS
U.S. Olympic Trials, speedskating, short track, women's & men's1,500 BOXING Boxing, Friday Night Fights, Argenis Mendezvs. RancesBarthelemy HOCKEY College, Brown at Denver
Today Boys basketball: Sistersvs. Scapp ooseat Sisters HolidayTournament, 7 p.m. Girls baskelbalhRedmondvs. Philomathat Sisters HolidayTournament,1 p.m.;Sistersvs. Creswell at SistersHolidayTournament, 5p.m.
5 p.m.
NBCSN
6 p.m.
ESPN2
6:30 p.m.
Root
Listingsarethemostaccurate available. TheBulletinis notresponsible forla techangesmadebyTV orradiostations.
BASKETBALL NO. 21 San DiegO St.bOatSCOIOradO St. — XavierThames scored 23 points to help No. 21SanDiego State fend off Colorado State 71-61 onWednesday night in Fort Collins, Colo., for its10th straight win. Winston Shepard scored17 points and JoshDavis had seven points and 15rebounds for the Aztecs (11-1, 1-0 Mountain West), which won its seventh straight conference opener in tying the second-best12-game start in school history. TheAztecs dominated Colorado State (9-5, 0-1) in the paint, outscoring the Rams40-16 from up close andout-shooting them from the field 48.2 percent to 38.5.
FOOTBALL Smith reaches deal to coach TampaBay —Aperson familiar with the negotiations says former ChicagoBearscoach LovieSmithhasreachedanagreement tocoachtheTampa Bay Buccaneers. SpeakingtoTheAssociated PressonW ednesdaynight on the condition of anonymity because anofficial announcement hasn't been made,the person also saysformer Minnesota Vikings coach Leslie Frazier will be the Buccaneers' defensive coordinator. The 55-year-old Smith will replace GregSchiano, fired Mondayafter going 4-12 this seasonand 11-21 in two years with the team. Frazier also was fired Monday.
APphotographer Martin collapses at game, dies — Dav e Martin, a longtime Associated Press photographer based inMontgomery, Ala., died after collapsing on theGeorgia Domefield after the Chick-fil-A Bowl onTuesday night. Martin, 59, ran onto the field immediately following TexasA&M's 52-48 win over Dukeandtook photos of Aggies coachKevin Sumlin being dousedwith a water bucket by his players. Martin continued to takecelebration shots before collapsing. Martin suffered anapparent heart attack andwas administered CPR on the field, according to astatement from the Georgia Dome. Hewas placed on astretcher and taken to Emory Hospital Midtown wherehe died early Wednesdaymorning, the statement said.
NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE
NFL Playoff Glance All Times PST Wild-card Playoffs Saturday, Jan. 4 KansasCityatIndianapolis,1:35 p.m.(NBC) NewOrleansatPhiladelphia, 5:10p.m. (NBC) Sunday,Jan. 5 SanDiegoatCincinnati,10:05 a.m.(CBS) SanFranciscoatGreenBay,1:40 p.m.(Fox) Divisional Playoffs Saturday, Jan. 11 GreenBay,SanFrancisco or NewOrleansat Seatle, 1:35p.m.(Fox) Cincinnati, Indianapolis orKansasCity at NewEngland,5:15p.m.(CBS) Sunday,Jan. 12 Philadelphia,GreenBayor SanFrancisco atCarolina, 10:05a.m.(Fox) Indianapolis,KansasCity orSanDiegoat Denver,1:40
p.m.(CBS) ConferenceChampionships
Sunday, Jan. 19 AFC,noon(CBS) NFC,3:30p.m. (Fox) Pro Bowl Sunday, Jan. 26 At Honolulu TBD,4:30p.m.(NBC) Super Bowl Sunday, Feb. 2 At East Rutherford, N.J. AFCchampionvs.NFCchampion,3:30p.m.(Fox)
W L 2 14 3 13 4 12 4 12 4 12 4 12 4 12 5 10 6 10 7 9 7 9 7 9 7 9 6 6 8 8 8 8 8 8 6 6 8 6 10 6 8 7
T 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
1. Houston Texans 2. Washington Redskins 3. Jacksonville Jaguars 4. Cleveland Browns 5. Oakland Raiders 6. AtlantaFalcons 7. Tampa BayBuccaneers B. Minnesota Vikings 9. Buffalo Bils 10. Detroit Lions 11. Tenne sseeTitans 12. New YorkGiants 13. St.LouisRams 14. ChicagoBears 15. Pittsburgh Steelers 16. x-BaltimoreRavens 16. x-DallasCowhoys 18. New YorkJets 19. MiamiDolphins 20. Arizona CardinaIs 21. y-Green BayPackers 22. y-SanDiegoChargers 9 7 0 23. y-PhiladelphiE aagles 10 6 0 24.y-Kansas City Chiefs 11 5 0 25.y-CincinnatiBengals 11 5 0 26. y-IndianapoliC solts 11 5 0 27. y-New OrleansSaints 11 5 0 28. y-NewEnglandPatriots 12 4 0 29.y-San Francisco 49ers 12 4 0 30.y-CarolinaPanthers 12 4 0 31.y-Denver Broncos 13 3 0 32.y-SeattleSeahawks 13 3 0 x-Subjecttocoinflip y-Subjecttoplayoffs The draftorderfor playoffteamsis determined hythe followingprocedures: A — Thewinnerof theSuperBowlwill select last and the other SuperBowl participant next-to-last, regardlessoftheirregular-seasonrecord. B— TheChampionship Gam e participants notadvancingtotheSuperBowlwil select29thand30th, accordingtothereverseorderoftheir standing. C— TheDivisional Playoff participantsnotadvancing to theChampionship Gameswil select25th through26th,according to thereverseorder of their standing. D— TheWild Cardparticipants not advancing tothe DivisionalPlayoffswil select 21st through24th, accordingtothereverseorderoftheir standing. NFL Injury Report NEWYOR K—TheNational Football Leagueinjury report, as providedbythe league(OUT- Definitely wil not play;DNP- Didnot practice; LIMITED- Limited participation inpractice; FULL- Full participationin practice):
17-year-old I.ehman earns another Olympic raceWith a powerful finishing kick, 17-year-old Emery Lehmanclaimed a second race at the Sochi Olympics by knocking off Jonathan Kuck in a thrilling 10,000 meters at the U.S.speedskating trials Wednesday in Kearns, Utah. Also, Maria Lambearned her third trip to the Olympics by winning the 5,000 meters at the U.S.Speedskating trials on Wednesday. Lambdominated the 11-skater field in the longest women's race with a winning time of 7 minutes, 13.31 seconds. She finished more than 7seconds ahead of runner-up Petra Acker.
MOTOR SPORTS Schumacher stadle but brain injury still critical — Formula Onegreat Michael Schumacher's condition was stable but still critical overnight as heremained unconscious following a brain injury suffered in a skiing accident, his managersaidWednesday. Sabine Kehm told reporters that his condition has not changedsince doctors said he showedsmall signs of improvement onTuesday, following his second operation.
EAGLES — SAINTS: DNP : SRafael Bush(ankle), RB PierreThomas(chest). EAG LES: DNP: CJulian Vandervelde (hack), SEarl Wolff (knee). FULL: SColt Anderson(knee), WRJason Avant (shoulder), CB BrandonBovkin (hip), LBMychal Kendricks(knee). KANSAS CITYCHIEFSat INDIANAPOLIS COLTS — CHIEFS:DNP: TEric Fisher(groin, shoulder),LB TamhaHali (knee). FULL:T Branden Albert (knee), WR Dwa yneBowe(concussion), LB Justin Houston (elhow), CEric Kush(ankle), CBRon Parker (finger, ankle).COL TS: DNP: DTAuhrayoFranklin (knee), DE Fili Moala(knee). LIMITED:WRDarrius Heyward-Bey (hamstring).FULL: SSergio Brown(groin), CBDarius Butler(quadriceps),CBVontaeDavis(groin), DTRicky JeanFrancois(foot), LBRobert Mathis (not injury related), GMikeMcGlynn (elhow), DECory Redding (shoulder), CB Greg Toler (groin), LBBjoern Werner (ankle). SAN DIEGOCHARGERS alCINCINNATIBENGALS — CHAR GERS: DNP: RBRyan Mathews (ankle), WREddie Royal (toe). LIMITED:DESean Lissemore (shoulder), DEKendal Reyes(ankle). BENGALS:DNP:TAnthonyCollins (ankle), CKyle Cook (foot), TE Tyler Eifert (neck), DEWallaceGilherry(concussion),WRA.J. Green(knee), CBTerence Newman knee), TAndreSmith (ankle), GAndrewWhitworth ankle).LIMITED : TEJermaine Gresham(hamstring), LB Vincent Rey(ankle). SANFRANCISCO 49ERS alGREEN BAY PACKERS —49ERS:NoData Reported PACKERS: OUT: LB ClayMatthews(thumh). DNP:LBMike Neal (ahdomen), LBNick Perry(foot). LIMITED : LBBradJones (ankle),RBEddieLacy(ankle), DTRyanPickett(knee).
College
GOLF Scott to skip Match Play Championship —Masters champion AdamScott is taking a six-week break after Hawaii, meaning he will skip the Match Play Championship. Scott has never missed the Match Play Championship since he first became eligible in 2002. But since the World Golf Championship moved to Arizona in 2007, he hasn't stuck around very long. Scott was beaten in the opening roundthepastthreeyears,and hehasnotadvancedbeyond the second round since 2005 when it was at LaCosta Resort north of San Diego. Scott is playing the Tournament of Champions at Kapalua and then the SonyOpenat Honolulu next week. — From wire reports
Bowl Glance All Times PST Wednesday,Jan. 1 Hearl of Dallas Bowl At Dallas NorthTexas36,UNLV14 Gator Bowl At Jacksonville, Fla. Nebraska 24, Georgia19 Capital OneBowl At Orlando, Fla. SouthCarolina34,Wisconsin 24 Outback Bowl At Tampa, Fla. LSU21,lowa14 Rose Bowl At Pasadena,Calif.
Winnipegat Ottawa,4:30 p.m. Los Angeleat s St.Louis, 5p.m. BuffaloatMinnesota, 5p.m. Montrealat Dalas, 5:30p.m. PhiladelphiaatColorado,6 p.m. Columbus atPhoenix,6p.m. Edmonto natSanJose,7:30p.m. Friday's Games ChicagoatNewJersey,4 p.m. N.Y.Rangersat Pitsburgh, 4 p.m. TampaBayatCalgary,6p.m. EdmontonatAnaheim,7 p.m.
Scoring Leaders ThroughWednesday GP G A PTS SidneyCrosbyPit 4 2 22 37 59 PatrickKane,Chi 42 23 30 53 Ryan Getzlaf,Anh 39 20 27 47 JohnTavares, NYI 4 0 16 26 44 Nicklas Backstrom,Was 40 10 34 44 Joe Thornton, SJ 4 0 5 39 44 CoreyPerry,Anh 42 22 21 43 Chris Kunitz,Pit 42 21 22 43 A lex Dvechkin,Was 38 3 0 11 41 PatrickSharp,Chi 4 2 22 19 41 EvgeniMalkin, Pit 32 9 32 41 KyleDkposo,NYI 4 1 15 25 40 J onathan Toews, Chi 42 1 5 25 40 2tiedwith39pts.
TENNIS Professional Brisbane International
"My inner child tells me to go out on the field and have fun. But my inner demon says go out and crush someone."
FOOTBALL
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS at PHILAOELPHIA
WINTER SPORTS
In the Bleachers tt 2014 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Uclick
Saturday Boys basketball: Sistersat SistersHolidayTournament,TBD;Central Christianat NorthClackamas Christian,2:30p.m. Girls basketball:Redm ond,SistersatSistersHoliday Tourname nt, TBD;CentralChristian atNorth ClackamasChristian,1 p.m. Wrestling: Redmond at Dallas Duals-Time,TBD; Madrasat RiddleTournament, 10a.m.; Culverat JosephHiTournament, 11a.m. Swimming:Bendat Lebanon Invite, TBD;Summit, MountainView,Ridgeview, Sisters, Madrasat Jay RowanInvitational at CascadeSwimCenter, 10 a.m. Nordic skiing: DHSN Oat Meissner SnoPark, Freestyle,TBD
Drag Order At New york May 8-15 First Round
SPORTS IN BRIEF
IN THE BLEACHERS
Friday Boys basketball: Sistersat SistersHolidayTournament,TBD;North Marion atLaPine,6p.m.; Culver at Western Mennonite, 6:30p.m.;Central Christian at NorthLake,TBD Girls basketball:Redm ond,Sisters atSisters Holiday Tourn ament,TBD;Ridgeview atCascade,7p.m.; Ontario atCrookCounty, 5 p.m.; North Marionat La Pine,4:30p.m.;CulveratWesternMennonite,5 p.m.; Gilchrist atTrinity Lutheran,2:30p.m.; Central Christian at North Lake,TBD Wrestling:CulveratJosephHiTournament,11 a.m.; Ridgeviewat West AlbanyDuals, TBD Swimming:Ridgeviewat Stayton Invite,12 a.m.
NFL ESPNU
FOOTBALL
College, AT&TCotton Bowl, Missouri vs. OklahomaState College, OrangeBowl, Clemson vs. OhioState
ON DECK
Wednesday At GueenslandTennis Centre Brisbane, Australia Purse: Men,5511,525(WT255); Women,51 milhon (Premier) Surlace: Hard-Outdoor Singles Men SecondRound MarinkoMatosevic,Australia, def. SamQuerrey, UnitedStates,5-7, 7-6(3), 6-4. RogerFederer(1), Switzerland, def.JarkkoNieminen, Finland,6-4,6-2.
MichiganState24, Stanford20 Fiesta Bowl At Glendale, Ariz. UCF52,Baylor 42 Today, Jan. 2 SugarBowl At NewOrleans Alabama(11-1) vs. Oklahoma(10-2), 5:30 p.m. (ESPN) Friday, Jan. 3
OrangeBowl At Miami OhioState(12-1) vs.Clemson(10-2), 5 p.m.(ESPN) Cotlon Bowl At Arlington, Texas Missouri(11-2)vs.OklahomaState(10-2), 4:30p.m. (Fox) Saturday, Jan. 4 BBVACompassBowl At Birmingham,Ala. Vanderbilt(8-4)vs.Houston (8-4),10 a.m.(ESPN)
Sunday,Jan. 5 GoDaddy.comBowl At Mobile, Ala. ArkansasState (7-5) vs. Ball State(10-2), 6 p.m. (ESPN) Monday, Jan. 5 BCSNational Championship At Pasadena,Calif. Florida State(13-0) vs. Auburn(12-1), 5:30 p.m. (ESPN) Monday's Summaries Rose Bowl
No. 4 Michigan St. 24, No. 5 Stanford 20 Stanford Michigan St.
10 7 0 3 — 25 5 14 3 7 — 24
First Guarler Stan —Gaffney16 run(Wiliamsonkick),11:16. Stan—FGWilliamson 34, 1:40. SecondGuarler MSU —Langford2run(Geigerkick),10:45. Stan—K.Anderson40interception return(Wiliamson kick),2:07. MSU —Pendleton2 passfromCook(Geigerkick), :28. Third Quarter MSU —FGGeiger 31,12:56. Fourth Guarter MSU —Lippett 25 passfrom Cook(Geiger kick), 13:22.
Stan—FGWilliamson39, 4:15. A—95,173. S tan M SU 11 21 36-162 35-65 1 43 332 10-16-1 22-36-1
Betting line NFL Wild CardPlayoffs
COLTS EAGLES BENGAL S 49ers
2.5 2.5 7 2.5
2.5 2.5 7 3
Alabama
College Today,Jan. 2 Sugar Bowl 14.5 17
Fiesta Bowl
Women
SecondRound Chiefs MariaSharapova(3), Russia, def. AshleighBarty, Saints Australia,walkover. Chargers StefanieVoegele, Swilzerland, def. SabineLisicki PACKE RS (7), Germ any,walkover.
AngeliqueKerber(5), Germ any, def. Anastasia
Pavlyuchenkova,Russia, 6-2,4-3retired. VictoriaAzarenka(2), Belarus,def. Casey Dellacqua,Australia,6-3, 6-1. Okla homa
Gatar Open Wednesday At TheKhalifa International Tennis 5Squash Missouri Oklahoma St Complex Doha, Qatar OhioSt Clemson Purse: $1.195million (WT255) Surlace: Hard-Outdoor Saturday, Jan. 4 Singles CompassBowl SecondRound Vanderbilt 3 2.5 Hous t on FlorianMayer,G ermany,def. AndyMurray(3), Britain, 3-6,6-4, 6-2. Sunday,Jan. 5 PeterGojowczyk,Germany, def. Philipp KohlschGo DaddyBowl (6),Germany,7-6(4), 7-6 (7). Ball St 8.5 7.5 Ark ansas Streiher VictorHane scu, Romania, def. FernandoVerdasco (8), Spain,4-6,7-6(0), 6-2. Monday, Jan. 5 RafaelNadal(1), Spain, def.Tobias Kamke,GermaBCS Championship 6-3,6-7(3), 6-3. F lorida St. 8. 5 8.5 Aubu r n ny,Ernests Gulhis(7), Latvia,def. LukaszKubot, PoFriday, Jan. 3 Cotton Bowl 1 PK OrangeBowl 5 3
BASKETBALL Men's College Wednesday'sGames
East Delaware 77, Liberty 64 Harvard73,BostonCollege56 Rutgers71, Temple 66 South Coll. ofCharleston76, Davidson64 FAU61,Warner47 FloridaGulfCoast75,Lipscomb62 Jacksonville86,KennesawSt. 66 N.Kentucky67,Stetson65,OT North Florida69,Mercer63 William &Mary74,Old Dominion 68 Midwest Cincinnati65,SMU57 Dayton81,Winthrop47 Drake94, Evansville 66 IndianaSt.70,Loyola of Chicago 56 N. Iowa 60,Bradley46 Far West Air Force 73, UtahSt.72 Nevada62,SanJoseSt.50 San Diego St. 71,ColoradoSt. 61 UNLV75, FresnoSt. 62
Women's College Wednesday'sGames
EAST BostonCollege81,Mount St.Mary's 67 Butler66,Providence65 Passing Creighton65,Georgetown63,DT Comp-Att-Int Duquesne 73,St. Bonaventure65 ReturnYards 44 21 Hofstra60,Albany(NY)56 Punts-Avg. 5-49.8 6-45.5 Louisville77,Temple 66 2-0 1-1 Fumbles-Lost BDUTH Penalties-Yards 8 -55 4 - 35 Georgia St.85 Troy77 Timeof Possession 28:49 31:11 Hampton70,Virginia Tech60 JacksonvilleSt.60, Samford54 INOIVIOUALSTATISTICS Penn67,Miami66 RUSHING —Stanford: Gaffney 24-91, HoSouth Alabama74,W.Kentucky65 gan 8-41,Rector 1-27, Seale1-4, Hewitt 1-0, Team Uconn77,UCF49 1-(minus1). Michigan St.: Langford23-84, Kings MIDWEST Jr. 2-7,Fowler1-(minus5), Team3-(minus6), Cook DePaul87,Xavier 60 6-(minus15). GreenBay 72, Maine49 PASSING—Stanford: Hogan 10-18-1-143. SMU54, Cincinnati43 Michigan St.: Cook22-36-1-332. FARWEST RECEIVING —Stanford: Montgomery 3-21, FresnoSt. 79,UNLV63 Rector2-44, Cajuste1-51, Hewitt1-11, Sanders1-11, Nevada101, SanJoseSt. 74 Wilkerson1-7,Gaffney1-(minus2). Michigan St.: UtahSt. 86,Air Force76 Lippett 5-94,Langford5-17, KingsJr. 4-52, Fowler 2-97, Pendleton2-21, Mump hery 1-20, Gleichert 1-17, Price1-9,Lyles1-5. HOCKEY
First downs Rushes-yards
Kei Nishikori(2),Japan,def. Mathew Ehden, Australia, 6-2,6-4. Marin Cilic, Croatiadef. , Grigor Dimitrov (5), Bulgaria, 7-5,7-5.
NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE
land, 6-2,4-6,6-3.
DustinBrown,Germany, def.Ivo Karlovic, Croatia, 3-6, 7-6(13),6-4. Daniel Brands,Germany, def. David Ferrer (2), Spain,6-4,7-5. Gael Monfils, France,def. RichardGasquet (5), France,6-2,7-5.
ChennaiOpen Wednesday At SDATTennis Stadium Chennai, India Purse: $459,140(WT255) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles SecondRound StanislasWawrinka(1), Swilzerland,def. Benjamin Becker,Germany,6-3, 6-1. DudiSela,Israel,def. MikhailYouzhny(2), Russia, 3-1, retired. EdouardRoger-Vasselin (7), France,def. Jiri Vesely, Czech Republic,6-4, 6-4. AljazBedene,Slovenia,def.AlexanderKudryavtsev, Russia,1-6,3-0,retired. Shenzhen LonggangGemdaleOpen Wednesday At Longgang Tennis Center Shenzhen,China Purse: $500,000(Intl.) Surlace: Hard-Outdoor Singles SecondRound Li Na (1),China,def.NadiyaKichenok, Ukraine,
6-1, 6-4.
VaniaKing,UnitedStates, def.SaraErrani(2),Italy, 2-6, 7-6(7),6-3. PatriciaMayr-Achleitner,Austria, def.KlaraZakopalova(3),CzechRepublic, 7-6(2), 6-4. BarhoraZahlavovaStrycova, CzechRepublic, def. Zheng Jie(7), China,6-0,7-6(6). AnnikaBeck(8), Germany, def. Viktorija Goluhic, Swilzerland,6-3, 5-7,6-3. JanaCepelova,Slovakia,def.Anna-LenaFriedsam, Germany,6-4,6-1. Monica Niculescu,Romania,def.Yung-JanChan, Taiwan,2-6,6-3,6-0. ASB Classic Wednesday
At ASBBankTennis Centre Auckland, New Zealand
Purse: $250,000(Intl.) Surlace: Hard-Outdoor Singles SecondRound KirstenFlipkens(3), Belgium,def.Karolina Pliskova, Czech Republic, 6-4,6-3. KurumiNara,Japan, def. AyumiMorita, Japan,
6-0, 6-1. Jamie Ham pton (5), UnitedStates,def. Kristyna
Plis kova,CzechRepublic,6-3,6-4. GarhineMuguruza,Spain, def. SharonFichman, Canada,1-6,6-3,6-3. UCF 14 14 7 17 — 52 EasternConference Ana Ivanovic(2), Serbia,def.JohannaLarsson, Baylor 713 8 14 — 42 Atlantic Division First Guarler GP W L OT PtsGF GA Sweden,6-1,6-1. SachieIshizu,Japan,def.Julia Goerges,Germany, UCF —S.Johnson11run (Moffitt kick),11;24. Boston 4 0 26 12 2 5 4 117 66 6-2, 3-6,7-5. UCF —S.Johnson2 run(Moffitt kick),7:46. Tampa Bay 4 0 24 12 4 5 2 114 95 LaurenDavis, UnitedStates, def.AnaKonjuh, CroBay—Petly1 run(A.Joneskick), 3:49. Montreal 4 1 23 14 4 50 103 94 2-6,6-2, 6-2 SecondGuarler Toronto 4 2 21 16 5 4 7 116 120 atia, VenusWiliams, UnitedStates, def.YvonneMeusBay—Norwood 30 passfrom Petty (passfailed), Detroit 42 18 14 10 46 109 120 burger, Austria,4-6,6-3, 6-2. 8:01. Ottawa 4 2 17 16 7 4 1 118 135 UCF —Hall 50passfrom Bortles (Moffitt kick), Florida 4 1 15 20 6 36 96 130 HopmanCup 5:05. Buffalo 4 0 11 25 4 2 6 71 113 Wednesday Bay—Petly13 run(A.Joneskick), 2:55. Metropolitan Oivision At Perth Arena UCF —Hall34passfromBortles(Moffitt kick),:44. GP W L OT PtsGF GA Perth, Australia Third Quarter P ittsburgh 42 29 12 1 5 9131 96 Purse: $1million (ITF Exhibition) Bay—Petly1run (Pettyrun),10:18. W ashington 40 20 15 5 4 5 122 119 Surface: Hard-Outdoor UCF —Perriman 10 pass from Bortles (Moffitt P hiladelphia 40 20 16 4 4 4 105 111 RoundRobin kick), 5:38. N ewJersey 41 17 16 8 4 2 97 103 Group 8 Fourlh Guarler N .Y. Rangers 41 20 19 2 42 96 109 France 2,unitedStates1 UCF —Bortles15run(Moffitt kick),13:37. C arolina 4 0 1 5 1 6 9 3 9 96 118 Sloane St e ph e ns, Uni tedStates,def. Alize Cornet, Bay—Martin 9 run(A.Joneskick),12:16. C olumbus 40 17 19 4 3 6 109 117 France,7-5l 6-0. UCF —S.Johnson40run (Moffitt kick),10:26. N.Y.lslanders 41 13 21 7 33 107 136 Jo-WilfriedTsonga,France, def. JohnIsner, United UCF —FGMoffitt 36,4:44. WesternConference States,7-6(7-1) 6-3. Bay—C.Fuller 9 passfrom Petty (A.Joneskick), Central Division CornetandTsonga, def.StephensandIsner, United 1:15. GP W L OT PtsGF GA A—65,172. Chicago 4 2 28 7 7 6 3158 115 States,6-1, 5-7,10-5. St. Louis 3 9 27 7 5 5 9 139 93 U CF B a y Colorado 3 9 24 11 4 52 114 100 DEALS First downs 29 27 Dallas 3 9 20 12 7 4 7 115 113 Rushes-yards 44-255 38-194 Minnesota 4 2 20 17 5 4 5 97 109 Transactions Passing 3 01 3 5 6 Winnipeg 4 2 19 18 5 43 114 121 Comp-Att-Int 20-31-2 30-47-1 Nashville 4 0 16 16 4 40 95 119 BASKETBALL ReturnYards (-3) Pacific Division National Basketball Association Punts-Avg. 4-41.0 7-43.6 GP W L OT PtsGF GA PORTLANDTRAILBLAZERS — Assigned G CJ Fumbles-Lost 2-1 1-0 Anaheim 4 2 2 9 6 5 63 137 106 MccollumtoIdaho(NBADL). Penalties-Yards 4-40 17-135 SanJose 4 0 HOCKEY 2 5 9 6 56 131 104 Time ofPossession 34;47 25:13 National HockeyLeague L os Angeles 41 25 12 4 54 110 83 BUFFALOSABRES — RecalledDBraydenMcNabh V ancouver 42 23 12 7 53 113 101 INOIVIOUALSTATISTICS Johan Larssonfrom Rochester (AHL). Placed P hoenix 3 9 2 0 1 0 9 4 9120 120 and LW RUSHING —UCF: S.Johnson 20-124, Bortles C algary 40 1 4 2 0 6 3 4 96 126 CCodyHodgsononinjuredreserve. 8-93, Stanhack13-33, Godfrey1-7, Team2-(minus E dmonton 42 1 3 24 5 3 1 109 143 TORONTOMAPLELEAFS— AcquiredDTim Glea2). Baylor: Seastrunk17-117, Goodley1-22, Lin- NOTE: Two points for a win, onepoint for overtime son the rights to DDennis RobertsonfromCarolinafor wood3-19, Martin6-19, Pety11-17. loss. DJohn-MichaelLiles. PASSING —UCF: Bortles 20-31-2-301. Baylor: Wednesday'sGames COLLEGE Petly 30-47-1-356. Toronto3, Detroit 2, SO LOUISVI LLE— AnnouncedQBTeddyBridgewater RECEIVING — UCF:Godfrey5-60,Wort on5-56, Tampa Bay4,Vancouver 2 will entertheNFLdraft. Today'sGames Hall 4-113,Perriman3-48, Stanhack2-25, S.Johnson OHIOSTATE— AnnouncedDENoah Spencewas 1-(minus1).Baylor: Coleman7-88, Lee5-80, Reese Nashville atBoston,4p.m. threegamesfor violating anundisclosed BigTenrule. 5-43, Norwood4-63,Goodley4-20,C.Fuller3-52, Chicagoat N.Y. Islanders, 4 p.m. SOUTHCAROLINA — AnnouncedDEJadeveon Najvar1-7,Linwood1-3. Carolinaat Washington, 4p.m. Clowney wil entertheNFLdraft.
NO.15 UCF52, No. 6Baylor 42
All Times PST
THURSDAY, JAN 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
Oregon
COLLEGEFOOTBALL
Continued from C1 Through it all, the Ducks
Central Floridaknocks
climbed to No. 2 in the AP
rankings and were seemingly on course for a national championship bid. Then came Stanford.
off Baylor in FiestaBowl
It turns out Mariota had
ROUNDUP
The Associated Press
C3
partially torn the medial collateral ligament in his
G LENDALE, A r i z . Central Florida wa s s up- history. posed to be a patsy for BayC entral Fl orida h a d a lor in its first BCS bowl. The slower rise under O'Leary. Knights wanted no part of it, The coach who was fired turning the Fiesta Bowl into by Notre Dame five days
left knee against UCLA the
week before. Ducks offensive coordinator Scott Frost said that just two days be-
fore the game against the
a big-play party.
after being hired for lying Blake Bortles threw for 301 on his resume has built his yards and accounted for four reputation back up in Orlantouchdowns, Storm Johnson do, taking a program that
Cardinal, the Heisman Tro-
ran for three more scores, and No. 15 Central F1orida
26-20.
phy hopeful could not even 1og Stanford beat the Ducks,
went winless in 2004 to the inaugural American Athlet-
Because Oregon's policy
pulled off one of the biggest ic Conference title and autoupsets of the bowl season by
is to not talk about injuries, it was unclear just how se-
matic BCS berth this year.
outlasting No. 6 Baylor 52-42 The matchup was projecton Wednesday night. ed to be like the 2011 Fiesta "There's not many outside Bowl, when mighty Oklahoof us who believe we had ma rolled over Connecticut a chance, but we did and I 48-20. think we showed what UCF
The
Kn i g ht s w e r e n't
football is all about," Bortles listening. sard. They opened with a 76A 1 7-point u n derdog, yard scoring drive capped Central Florida (12-1) didn't by Johnson's tackle-breakback down from the big, bad ing 11-yard touchdown run. Bears, racing past the na- Johnson scored again on tion's top offensive team with UCF's next possession, this an array of big plays. one on a 2-yard run. The Knights jumped out The early 14-0 lead was to an early 14-point and kept expected. The team leading rolling, piling up 556 total wasn't. yards in the highest-scoring Baylor finally revved up game in Fiesta Bowl history. its offense late in the first R annell Hal l h a d f o u r quarter, scoring on a 1-yard catches for 113 yards and TD sneak by Petty and Centwo touchdowns, and John- tral Florida looked as if it son ran for 124 yards to give was ready to fall apart with the Knights a rousing BCS turnovers on three consecubowl debut. tive plays. "Every week was a great Also on Wednesday: adventure," UC F c o ach Nebraska 24, No. 23 GeorGeorge O'Leary said. "It gia 19: JA C KSONVILLE, wasn't always pretty, but Fla. — Tommy Armstrong these guys found a way to Jr. connected with Quinwin and that's what it's all cy Enunwa for two touchabout." downs, including a 99-yardBaylor (11-2) had a hard er in the third quarter, and time keeping up with the Nebraska held on to beat Knights, gaining 550 total Georgia in the rain-soaked yards but losing 135 on 17 Gator Bowb penalties. No. 8 South Carolina 34, B ortles threw fo r t h r ee No. 19 Wisconsin 24: ORtouchdowns on 2 0 -of-31 LANDO, Fla. — Connor passing and ran for another Shaw was responsible for score. five touchdowns, including Bryce Petty ran for three three passing, and South touchdowns and threw for Carolina outlasted Wiscon356 yards and two more sin in the Capital One Bowl. scores for Baylor. Lache No. 14 LSU 21, Iowa 14: Seastrunk ran for 117 yards. The Fiesta Bowl was the
TAMPA, Fla. — Jeremy Hill
ran for 216 yards and two BCS coming-out party for touchdowns, helping LSU Baylor and Central Flori- and inexperienced quarterda before college football's back Anthony Jennings hold switch to a playoff system off Iowa in the Outback Bowl. next season.
The Bears had been building toward this since Art
North Texas 36, UNLV 14: DALLAS — Derek Thompson threw for 256 yards and
Brilesbecame coach in2009, two touchdowns, Brelan winding up his high-octane Chancellor scored twice and offense to lead the nation in North Texas dominated the scoring and churn out the second half to beat UNLV in second-most yards in FBS the Heart of Dallas Bowl.
g ~<'r''
rious Mariota's knee injury was.
The Ducks subsequently defeated Utah, but then fell Jae C. Hong /The Associated Press
Michigan State wide receiver Tony Lippett scores a touchdownagainst Stanford during the second half of the Rose Bowl on Wednesday in Pasadena, Calif. Michigan State won 24-20.
Rose Bow victo e ps Michi an St. ainrespect By Greg Beacham The Associated Press
during the second half of the Fiesta Bowl on Wednesday night in Glendale, Ariz.
Stanford went on to win the Pac-12 North and beat Arizona State inthe confer-
ence championship to earn a spot in the Rose Bowl.
The Ducks wrapped up the regular season with an exciting 36-35 victory against Oregon State in the Civil War. But Oregon's enough to get the team into a BCS bowl.
Michigan State's season, the storybook ending came with a moral.
The hiatus between the Civil War and the Alamo Bowl was not uneventful, either.
After so many years outside the spotlight, the Spartans are in nobody's shadow anymore. And for the first time in 26 years, they're Rose
Bowl champions. Connor Cook passed for a career-high 332 yards and hit Tony Lippett with a tiebreaking 25-yard touchdown pass early in the fourth quarter, leading No. 4 Michigan State to a 24-20
Junior cornerback Troy Hill was suspended indefinitely by Helfrich following
victory over No. 5 Stanford on Wednesday in the 100th Rose Bowl.
criminal mischief. His next
his arrest on misdemeanor
charges of menacing and court appearance is sched-
Michigan State's FBS-best defense capped a
uled for Jan. 21.
Sophomore tight end
dominant season with one more old-school per-
formance befitting the centennial celebration of the Granddaddy of Them All. The Spartans (131) yielded just 159 yards in the final three quarMark J. Terrill/The Associated Press ters, and they closed it out by stopping Stanford Stanford running back Ricky Seale jumps over
Pharaoh Brown was sus-
fullback Ryan Hewitt on fourth-and-1 near
that got out of hand when
Stanford fullback Ryan Hewitt and a Michi-
midfield with I:46 to play. gan State defender during the second half of Elsworth, the fill-in starter for suspended se- W ednesday's game in Pasadena,Calif. nior linebacker Max Bullough, hurdled the pile and flew into Michigan State lore with a spectacular head-on tackle. run was coming up the middle, and it was a test "When I saw their offensive linemen's stance,
of wills, and they got the better of us."
I knew the way to make a play was to go over Cook led in his own inimitable fashion, makthe top," said Elsworth, the game's defensive ing incredible plays and huge mistakes along MVP. "I was hoping they would run a play like the way. Along with his costly interception to they did on their fourth down. It's a one-in-a- Anderson, he also threw two passes that went lifetime play. We proved we could play on the through the hands of Cardinal defenders, and big stage on the national level." an interception in the third quarter was wiped Cook also threw a TD pass to Trevon Pendle- out by a defensive holding call. ton, and Jeremy Langford rushed for 84 yards But when the Spartans needed big plays in and a score as the Big Ten champion Spartans the second half, Cook repeatedly delivered, finovercame their first double-digit deficit of the ishing 22 for 36. "When we got down, guys were always helpentire season. Michigan State finished with 10 straight wins, holding off the Pac-12 champion ing each other," Cook said. "We're such a balCardinal (11-3) for the school's first Rose Bowl anced team." victory since 1988. A mere 112 years after the game considered "It's a special time for all Spartans, and we the first Rose Bowl was played in a park elsecame herein force,"coach Mark Dantonio said. where in Pasadena, Stanford and Michigan "I'm very happy for our football team, the resil- State engaged in an old-fashioned slugfest in iencewe showed allseason long." the venerable stadium that will host the BCS tiThe Spartans have longlaboredbehind Mich- tle game Monday night. igan, Ohio State and even Wisconsin among the Michigan State fans dominated the Rose Midwest's top programs, but Dantonio's sev- Bowl grounds and stands, with about 70 peren-year rebuilding project in East Lansing has cent wearing green in the crowd of 95,173 — the put them on top of the Midwest this season with game's largest turnout since 1998. aperfectrun through conference play. After Tournament of Roses Parade grand Tyler Gaffney ran for 91 yards and an early marshal Vin Scully flipped the coin, StanTD for Stanford, and linebacker Kevin Anderson returned an interception40 yards for
ford started with a 77-yard drive culminating
a score late in the first half. But the Cardinal
Stanford up 10-0 late in the first quarter, but the
the first quarter.
rushing touchdown asBayior safety Terreil Burt (13) defends
a n at i o nal
championship bid.
sixth straight season with at least 10 wins was not
PASADENA, Calif. — When Kyler Elsworth soared over the pile to deliver the final hit of
in Gaffney's 16-yard TD run. A field goal put
Spartans finally connected with a 13-play drive adena with back-to-back Rose Bowl wins, man- for Langford's TD. aging just three points from their offense after Cook handed seven points to the Cardinal Rick Scuteri/The Associated Press
dropped Oregon to No. 12 and skewered the Ducks' chances o f
couldn't follow up last season's success in Pas-
Central Florida quarterback Blake Bortles (5) dashes for a
42-16 at Arizona. The loss
shortly before halftime. With Usua Amanam
And Gaffney could only watch as Hewitt was bearingdown on him unblocked, Cook inexstopped on Stanford's final play. plicably threw a soft looping pass directly to "You have to give it to Michigan State for Anderson, who returned his first career interstuffing that," said Gaffney, who managed just ception untouched for a score — the first defen24 yards after the first quarter. "Everybody in sive touchdown allowed by Michigan State all the building knew exactly what was coming. A season.
pended for the Alamo Bowl because of his role in an on-campus snowball fight passing motorists were pelted. Brown and Helfrich
apologized for the snowball attack, which was posted on Youllrbe and went viral.
In the days leading up to the bowl game, defensive coordinator Nick
A l i o tti
announced he was retiring after spending 24 years with the Ducks, including 17 as defensive coordinator. His last game was the Alamo Bowl.
"I think the biggest thing was through adversity we were still able to kind of
pull through and get 11 wins. That's hard to do in
today's day and age," Mariota said following the victory over Texas. Mariota has already an-
nounced that he will stay at Oregon for his junior year. He averaged nearly 282 yards passing per game and threw for 3 1 touchdowns with only four in-
terceptions. He also rushed for 715 yards and nine scores. His 4,380 yards of total offense set a school record. "To us, 11 wins, I mean,
that doesn't happen very often. Just to come back out
here and to finish the bowl game strong really sets us up for the future, builds a
solid foundation for next year," Mariota said. "Like I say, we're looking forward to it."
Maple Leafstake Winter Classicvictory The Associated Press
NHL ROUNDUP
ANN ARBOR, Mich. — A lot of winter. Very little classic hockey. Light snow swirled down in the
mate Tomas Tatar was foiled on his team's third and final attempt be-
because of the conditions. cause he couldn't control the puck Detroit captain Henrik Zetterberg on the snow-covered surface and Big House, making it tough to push appeared to have a good chance in didn't even get a shot off. "The conditions made it so some the puck through piles of the white overtime with the puck in the Maple stuff on a sheet of ice where football Leafs' end and defenseman Cody of the skill in the game was elimiis usually played. Franson on his left side. The horn, nated," RedWings coach Mike BabTeeth-chattering te m p eratures however, sounded to stop play at the cock said. and a brisk wind were factors, too, 2:30 mark of the extra period so that Bernier, with a knit hat over his that made the NHL's Winter Classic much more of an event than a game.
both teams played into a 10-plus
helmet, made 41 saves — the most
mph wind for an equal amount of
Tyler Bozak scored the winning shootout goal and Jonathan Bernier
time. "I think I would have had a clear
in an outdoor regular- season game.
made two saves in the heart-pound-
who saw Michigan and Michigan
ing final moments, lifting Toron-
breakaway," Zetterberg said. The game also was halted mid-
to to a 3-2 victory over Detroit on Wednesday in front of 105,591 fans
way through the third period so that the teams could switch sides. In the
dium known as the Big House in
— the largest crowd to watch a hockey game.
shootout, skaters for both teams at-
Also on Wednesday: Lightning 4, Canucks 2: VAN-
"I was just lucky to get a stick on
facetoward the same net— or end zone.
it and keep it low enough," Bozak acknowledged.
tempted shots with the wind in their After a slew of skaters with shov-
The Red Wings were not as fortu- els cleared the ice following overnate in the closely contested specta- time, Pavel Datsyuk scored Detroit's cle that was altered in a lot of ways
only goal in the shootout and team-
The crowd surpassed the 104,173 State skate in the same football sta2010. COUVER, British Columbia — Valt-
teri Filppula had a goal and an assist as Tampa Bay beat Vancouver. The Carlos Osorio /The Associated Press Lightning, whose franchise is 21 A Detroit Red Wings fan, coated with snow, watches during the third period of the years old, posted only its second win Winter Classic outdoor NHL hockey game against the Toronto Maple Leafs at MichieverinVancouver. gan Stadium in Ann Arbor, Mich., Wednesday.
C4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JAN 2, 2014
Woods Continued from C1 There is a big difference with Woods the last time he
faced such a tantalizing rotation of majors.
Nicklaus spoke of a "big year" when Woods was more of a mystery than ever. No one
had seen Woods in more than a month going into 2010 and did not even know where he
was. His personal life at home, his mystique in golf and his appeal in the corporate world
were crumbling in spectacular fashion. N ow, he is No. 1 i n t h e
world. He won five times last year against some of the strongest fields. He won the Vardon
Trophy for the ninth time, the PGA Tour money title for the 10th time, and was voted PGA
Tour player of the year for the
"It's getting much harder for Tiger because guys are not wilting on him.So he's got a double whammy to close as well as he used to, and then the guys are more heroic against him like they never were before. ... Guys are saying, 'Yeah, you're Tiger Woods and you're the greatest ever, but now at your age, I can beat you.' He needs to do it in the majors." — NBC analyst Johnny Miller
won over Bob May in the PGA
Championship. It gave Woods his third straight major in that to close as well as he used to, amazingsummer of2000. and then the guys are more If that seems like a long heroic against him like they time ago, it was. Woods will never were before.... Guys not have seen Valhalla in 14 are saying, 'Yeah, you're Tiger years when he returns this Woods and you're the greatest summer. ever, but now atyour age, I can The best gauge of Woods beat you.' He needs to do it in and his pursuit of Nicklaus the majors." is more about him than the Will familiar venues help? course he is playing. More Not necessarily. than St. Andrews or Pebble Woods forever i s l i n k ed Beach, more than Hoylake or with Augusta National be- Valhalla, it is best to considcause of his record score (270) er Southern Hills. That is the and margin of victory (12 course that supposedly gave shots) in the 1997 Masters, Woods fits because of its tight, his back-to-back wins (2001- bending, tree-lined fairways. 02) and that magic moment Woods won the 2007 PGA with his chip on the 16th hole Championship that year, proof that led to his playoff win in that when he is on his game 2005. But he has not added to and in the right frame of mind, his wardrobe of green jack- he can win any major on any ets in eight years, his longest course. drought in any major. Who M ore s i gnificant t h a n saw that coming? where the majors are played in And while Woods is trend- 2014 is the fact Woods turned ing in the right direction at 38 on Monday. Pinehurst No. 2, the Donald By age alone, Woods has Ross design has gone through been ahead of Nicklaus' pace a restoration project that elim- in the majors since winning inated rough and replaced it his seventh major in 2002with sandy dunes, pine straw the Masters at age 26. They and wire grass. are tied now. Nicklaus also whammy in that he's not able
Woods won the 2006 British
By Doug Ferguson
get back here." He has not forgotten what
The Associated Press
KAPALUA, Hawaii — Ev-
he went through to get here.
ery day brought another reminder to Ken Duke of what
When he was voted PGA Tour player of the month after
it means to finally be a PGA
his win in Hartford, he donat-
Tour winner.
ed the $50,000 award to the Stephens Spine Institute in
When he w a s f i shing during the offseason, someone passing by in a boat would greet him with congratulations. A f e w d ays
Arkansas, that after writing a
personal check for $25,000 to the charities of the Travelers Championship after he won. He goes with his doctor, Richard McCarthy, a few
before Christmas, he was
sifting through a stack of mail whenhe came across a
times a year to meet with chil-
dren who are about to have back surgery, and Duke's manager arranges for four or five hospital visits a year so
cream-coloredenvelope with
impeccable writing and a postmark from Augusta, Ga. — his official invitation to the
certainty about Woods, main- the entire week. It might not ly because he has not won a be the same course if England major since 2008 and he has gets a wet summer — and yes, not broken 70 on the week- it does rain in England — and end of any major since the players see Hoylake green, 2011 Masters.That is a star- lush and longer. tling statistic for a guy who Valhalla is w here Woods has built a reputation as golf's made what he considers the greatest closer. biggest putt of his career, a "It's getting much harder 6-footer on the final hole for for Tiger because guys are birdie to force a playoff that he said. "So he's got a double
on roa o ara ise or u e
in that he's not able
11th time. Still, there remains an un-
not wilting on h i m," M i ller
GOLF: PGATOUR
had 14 majors when he turned
Open at Royal Liverpool when 38, and then he added his 15th it was firm and fiery, a links major that summer in the Britthat was more yellow than ish Open. green because of a dry sumThat is what makes this a mer. Woods hit only one driver big year for Woods.
Masters. Then he learned he was being inducted next year
Duke can meet with kids and help alleviate their concerns. "When I was 10 to 15, I would have loved to h ave someone to talk to," he said.
into the Arkansas Sports Hall
of Fame. All that before he boarded
a plane for paradise. "This is the way I pictured
"You're getting ready to go to major surgery, getting rods and pins. I was scared to death.Back then, Mom and
y-„
this place, just like this," Duke
said as he gazed at an emerald green fairway at Kapalua with the blazing blue Pacific
Dad said this is what you're
:4r+i- ~~~~
supposed to do, and you've got to do it."
Ocean on the horizon. "It's
breathtaking. Every shot, you
Trying to make it on tour
look at the water. You've just got to soak it in."
was daunting, too. There were times in the late 1990s
That he can manage. Gerald Herbert/The Associated Pressfile Duke is among 13 players Ken Duke chips onto the 15th green during a practice round at who are eligible for the first The Players Championship at TPCSawgrass in Ponte Vedra time to play in the Hyundai Beach, Fla., in May. Duke is among 13 players who are eligible for
when Duke had to borrow
Tournament of Champions, which starts Friday. It might
to getby. His big break came after
the first time to play in the Hyundai Tournament of Champions, which starts on Friday.
be hard to find anyone who appreciates being here more. Diagnosed with scoliosis jors at that age — and spent 10 when he was in the seventh years toiling on smaller tours grade, Duke had a 16-inch before he finally reached the rod inserted in his back to big leagues. correct the curvature in his It all was made worthwhile spine. His was a "C" shape, in June when the 44-yearand the top of his spine had old Duke won the Travelers gone from 40 degrees to 72 Championship in a playoff. "It took me 10 years to get degrees just before surgery. It was starting to put pressure to the tour," Duke said. "And it on his lungs. Even now, Duke took me 10 years to win." occasionally wakes up in the This will not be his first trip middle of the night gasping to Augusta National. Duke for a full breath. "If you would have told me
reached the Tour Champion-
back then I was going to be
into the Masters for the first time. He still has his first invi-
a professional athlete, I'd say
ship in 2008, which got him
you were crazy," Duke said. "My doctor says the same thing now."
tation on the wall in a frame.
He could not afford to take
winner, which to him makes
He goes back to the Masters this time as a PGA Tour
a partial scholarship out of
t he i nvitation even
state, so he went to Hender-
gratifying. Kapalua is not a bad place
son State in Arkansas, and then worked in a pro shop for a couple of years trying to hone his game and drum up financial support. He did not
more
to be, either. There is only one
way to get into the field, and that is by winning. "It feels really good here," turn pro until he was 25 — Ti- Duke said. "You watch this ger Woods had won six ma- tournament every year, and
money list in 2006 and he ran that's the on e
t ournament into swing coach Bob Toski. "I used to hook the ball," I never played in. My wife
said when I won, 'We can go Duke said. "I was open in my to Kapalua.' I said, 'We can
Kapalua for the sixth straight
ing four straight north of the border.
TORONTO — T h e Indiana Pacers have turned into one of the NBA's
Indiana committed 27 fouls to Toronto's 18 and the Raptors took advantage
premier teams by playing a physical, swarming brand of basketball. But the way Pacers guard George
of the discrepancy, converting 20 of 23 free throws.
Hill saw it, his team got beat at its own game by the red-hot Toronto Raptors on
our turnovers and too careless with our fouling," Pacers coach Frank Vogel
Wednesday night. DeMar DeRozan scored 26 points, Kyle Lowry had 13 points and a season-high 14 assists, and the Raptors extended their season-best winning
said. "Both of those areas were costly."
"Obviously we were too careless with
Hibbert picked up his fifth foul less than 90 seconds into the fourth quarter, and the Pacers couldn't hold a
one-point lead without their big man.
streak to four games, beating the Pac-
Greivis Vasquez hit a 3 on Toronto's
ers 95-82. "They played better than us tonight," have a tremendous third and fourth quarter but tonight, they hit first.
next possession, giving the Raptors a 69-67 lead. "Roy playing only 21 minutes was a big factor," a terse Vogel said. "He's a big part of what we do, the anchor of
first," Hill said. "We're a smash-mouth
our defense and a low-post threat." David West tied the score at 74-74
with a jump shot at 6:58, but Toronto
team. They came in and brought the pressure and turned us over more than
answered with six straight points, four from DeRozan, to open an 80-74 lead at
we're normally getting turned over. They initiated it."
Terrence Ross scored 18 points and Jonas Valanciunas had 13 points and nine rebounds as the Raptors (15-15) snapped Indiana's five-game winning streak and improved to .500 after 30
ChrisYoung/The Canadian Press
Toronto Raptors' DeMar DeRozan, left, shoots on Indiana Pacers' Paul George during the first half of Wednesday night's
game Toronto. DeRozan had 26 points.
front of us, we understand that they are "It's a great win," Lowry said. "We're going to throw a punch and we're going executing our game plan and we're to throw punches back." locked in." Roy Hibbert fouled out with 16 points The Raptors have won eight of 10 and George had 12 for the Pacers, who games since Dec. 13, when the majority recorded a season-worst 23 turnovers. "We beat ourselves," Hibbert said. of the players acquired from Sacramento in the Rudy Gay deal made their To- "We turned the ball over, we weren't ronto debuts. doing our defensive assignments. They "This is a team that's getting better," were the better team tonight, I can honIndiana's Paul George said of the At- estly say that." lantic Division-leading Raptors. "They George was at fault for six of Indihave a lot of confidence and they're ana's turnovers, hassled all night by agplaying like it." gressive Toronto defenders. "I thought their energy was amazDeRozan said the Raptors have been working to improve their toughness so ing," George said. "Defensively, they they can play the kind of physical style played the style that we play. They just that Indiana has perfected. helped one another." "We're going to go out there and batDanny Granger scored 11 points for tle with the best of them," DeRozan said. "We don't care who is out there in
5:23. West stopped the run by making one of two from the free-throw line, but Lowry hit two free throws at the other
end and,afterH ibbertchecked back in, DeRozan nailed a jumper to put Toronto up 84-75 with 4:22 left.
Also on Wednesday:
games for the first time since Jan. 6, 2010.
Indiana, which had won nine of its pre-
vious 12 meetings with Toronto, includ-
the right. That's just the way
year. Matt Kuchar is playing I learned to play. He just took for the fifth time. Jordan Spi- the way myback was, and the eth is here for the first time way I had to play, and he kind and, with his talent, figures of taught me from there." to be back plenty. Duke is not Toski had him swing more the kind of player who looks to the left to play a fade, and at this event as just another to Duke it seemed like every week on the schedule. shot was going straight. He is "We were trying to think not long off the tee, but he is the other night of all these accurate. He does not take the guys who win every year," club back very far because Duke said, shaking his head. his back will not let him. "It's like Augusta. You get a But he makes it work, and piece of it, you want to come it has worked quite nicely. back here. That's something Duke is a PGA Tour winner, I'm going to work hard on the and he is in good company next couple of years. I want to this week.
NBA SCOREBOARD
The Associated Press
t eam t hat h i t s
stance, but I would aim to the
go to Augusta.' That was the right and hook everything. discrepancy." He (Toski) said, 'Why are But he sees one parallel to you doing that?' I said, 'Notwo tournaments that could body told me any different.' not beany more differentThe reason I remain open once you are there, you want is because I have scoliosis. I can't aim square because it to go back. Dustin Johnson is back at gets me to push everything to
Standings
Raptors beat Pacersat ownphysical game
" We're normally a
some cash on some mini-tour he won the Nationwide Tour
NBA ROUNDUP
Hill said. "Normally we come out and
money just to pay the rent, but he always seemed to pick up
Mavericks 87, Wizards 78:WASHINGTON — Monta Ellis scored 23 points,
Vince Carter had 13 and Dallas held Washington scoreless for more than four minutes late in the fourth quarter.
Timberwoives 124, Peiicans 112: MINNEAPOLIS — N i k o l a P e kovic had 22 points and seven rebounds and
Minnesota led by as many as 30 points in cruising to the victory over New
Orleans. Clippers 112, Bobcats 85: LOS ANGELES — Blake Griffin scored 13 of his 31
points in the final 7:05 and Jared Dudley got 11 of his 20 points in the third quarter, leading the Los Angeles Clippers to a victory over Charlotte. 76ers 114, Nuggets 102: DENVEREvan Turner scored 23 points and Thad-
deus Young added 17, helping Philadelphia beat slumping Denver.
AllTimesPST d-Indiana d-Miami Atlanta d-Toronto Washington Charlotte Detroit Boston
EasternConference W L Pst GB
Chicago Cleveland Orlando Brooklyn Philadelphia NewYork Milwaukee
25 6 24 7 18 14 15 15 14 15 14 19 14 19 13 18 12 18 10 21 10 21 10 21 10 21 9 21 7 24
806 774 563 7'/z 5QO 9'/2 483 10 424 12 424 12 419 12 400 12'/z 323 15 323 15 323 15 323 15 300 15'A 226 18
25 7 22 12 19 11 21 13 20 13 19 13 16 16 14 16 14 17 13 17 13 19 10 20 10 24
781 iA 647 41/2
Western Conference W L Pst GB 25 6 806 25 1 781 '/z
d-Oklahoma City d-San Antonio Portland d-LA. Clippers Phoenix Houston Golden State Dallas Minnesota NewOrleans Denver Memphis LA. Lakers Sacramen to Utah d-divisionleader
633 5'/z 618 5id
8-11 22,Rubio4-65-614, Martin8-144-5 20,Cunningham5-6 0-010, Barea7-9 0-017, Shved2-4 4-410, Mbah aMoute1-1 1-13, Hummel 0-20-00, Diengt-10-00, Muhammad1-1 0-02, Price0-00-0 0. Totals 44-7928-35124. Neworleans 28 1 9 26 39 — 112 Minnesota 33 28 36 27 — 124
Raptors 95, Pacers 82 INDIANA (82) George5-142-2 12, West3-9 3-4 9, Hibbert 6-10 4-516, G.Hill 2-6 0-0 6,Stephenson4-9 0-1 8, Granger4-7 2-211, Scola3-101-2 7, Mahinmi 2-21-4 5, Watson3-70-0 8, O.Johnson0-0 0-00, Butler 0-0 0-0 0,Sloan0-0 0-0 0. Totals 32-74 13-20 82.
TORONTO (95) Ross 6-12 4-4 18, A.Johnson3-5 0-0 6, Valanciunas 5-10 3-4 13,Lowry4-9 4-4 13,DeRozan 9-248-926,Salmons2-60-05,Patterson1-40-0 3, Hansbrough 2-2 1-25, Vasquez2-6 0-06. Totals 34-78 20-2395. Indiana 18 26 19 19 — 82 Toronto 26 14 26 29 — 95
Mavericks 87, Wizards78
606 6 594 6'/z
DALLAS (87)
433 11'A 406 12'A
2-24, Larkin1-20-02,Blair1-I 2-24.Totals30-78 21-2387. WASHINGTO N(78) Ariza 3-141-1 8,Booker5-9 0-010, Gortat6-0 0-012, Wal8-185-522, l Beal4-130-1 10,Seraphin i -s 0-02, webster 3-91-1 8, Temple0-00-0 0, Nene 2-7 0-2 4,PorterJt 1-2 0-0 2. Totals 33-88 7-10
Marion4-71-2 9, Nowitzki3-143-3 9,Dalembert 5QO 9'/2 1-3 0-0 2,Calderon3-142-211, Ellis 7-I8 9-10 23, 467 10~A Carter 4-102-213, Wrights r 0-010, Crowder1-2 452 0 333 14'/z 294 16'/z
Wedsesday'sGames Dallas87,Washington78 Toronto95,Indiana82 Minnesota124,NewOrleans112 Philadelphia114,Denver102 LA. Clippers112,Charlotte85 Today'sGam es OrlandoatCleveland,4 pJs. Golden Stateat Miami,4:30 pJs Boston atChicago,5p.m BrooklynatOklahomaCity, 5pJs. NewYorkatSanAntonio,5:30p.m Memphis atPhoenix,6p.m Milwaukee atUtah,6p.m CharlotteatPortland, 7p.m Philadelphiaat Sacramento, 7 p.m. Friday's Games TorontoatWashington, 4p.m. NewOrleansatBoston, 4:30p.m. GoldenStateatAtlanta, 4:30p.m. NewYorkatHouston,5 p.m LA. ClippersatDallas, 5:30p.m Memphis atDenver,6p.m Utah atLA.Lakers,7:30p.m
Summaries Wednesday'sGames
Timberwolves124, Pelicans112 NEWORLEANS(112)
Aminu2-6 0-0 4, Anderson10-173-3 25, Davis 5-9 3-613, Holiday8-142-419, Gordon5-122-2 12, Evans 6-143-416, Stiemsma0-0 0-0 0, Roberts 1-3 0-0 3,Morrow3-40-0 7, Ajinca1-3 0-02, Rivers 2-3 0-04, Miller1-1 1-1 3, Withey1-1 2-24. Totals 45-8716-22112.
MINNESOT AI124) Brewer2-40-05, Love7-196-821,Pekovic7-12
78.
Dallas Washington
25 14 20 28 — 87 20 22 19 17 — 78
Cliqpers112, Bobcats85 CHARLOlrE(85) Tolliver4-110-011, McRoberts 4-80-010, Jefferson 7-150-014, walker4-105-514, Henderson3-0 6-612, Zeller0-6 6-66, Douglas-Roberts1-1 0-02, Sessions3-92-28,Biyombo3-52-38, Pargo0-00-0 0. Totals 29-7621-2285. LA. CLIPPERS (112) Dudley7-10 0-020, Griffin14-202-4 31,Jordan 3-4 0-0 6,Paul7-142-211, Crawford5-140-011, Collison3-32-28, Barnes2-100-04, Green2-30-0 4, Hollins2-31-2 5,Jamison0-2 0-00, Mullens2-2 0-06. Totals47-857-10112. Charlotte 27 29 13 16 — 85 LA. Clippers 25 3 1 25 31 — 112
76erS114, NIIggetS102 PHILADELPHIA I114) Turner8-176-8 23, Young7-17 2-3 17, Hawes 4-11 3-413,Carter-Wiliams5-156-816, Thompson 5-6 0-011, Anderson 4-7 2-212, Allen 6-90-013, Wroten 3-60-3 7,Wiliams0-20-00, Davies1-20-0 z Totals 43-9219-28114. DENVER (102) Chandler5-132-216, Faried6-90-312, Hickson 7-1t 5-919,Lawson4-136-715, Foye6-112-214, QMiller1-5 0-0 2,Robinson0-30-0 0, Mozgov1-2 2-2 4,Fournier3-61-2 7, Arthur2-64-48, Randolph 0-1 3-43, Hamilton1-20-02. Totals 36-9125-35 102. Philadelphia Denver
MEN'S COLLEGEBASKETBALL
Ferguson Continued from C1 Ferguson was also recently invited to compete in the
oora oamon teams towatc in ac- oo s
Winter X Games, set for Jan. 23-26 in Aspen, Colo. The 2014 Winter Olym-
pics are scheduled for Feb. 7-23.
Spencer Tamblyn, Ferguson's coach on the U.S.
Snowboarding rookie halfpipe team, says he is thrilled with Ferguson's progres-
By Chris Foster
sion and the level that he
al Pac-12 Conference suspects as well as those
has reached. But more so,
who may be suspect. Arizonaentersconference play ranked No. 1
Los Angeles Times
LOS ANGELES — Time to round up the usu-
the coach is impressed with
Ferguson's dedication to keeping snowboarding fun and not worrying too much about results. "We've just been so focused on the snowboard-
in the nation, taking its familiar role as Pac-12
men's basketball behemoth. UCLA has old-school tradition and was the 2013 regular-season champion, but the Bruins Sarah Brunson / U.S. Snowboarding
Ben Ferguson, of Bend, gets reedy to drop into the halfpipe
ing, and having a good time during a U.S. Snowboarding Grand Prix event et Copper Moundoing that, and supporting tain, Colo., lest month. each other as a group, that
I think it's just an example of the kind of result you can
Ferguson — who attended
who is also on the rookie
Bend's Mountain View High team. But what about tworonment," Tamblyn says. School and earned a GED time gold medalist Shaun "That's very much the foun- diploma — won the halfpipe White and other big-name dation of his riding, and I event at the 2012 Winter American boarders such think it can take him a real- Youth Olympic Games in as Louie Vito and Scotty ly long way." Austria. Lago, who are all currently Tamblyn recalls having much farther down in the In halfpipe snowboarding, riders are judged on the a "heart-to-heart talk" with stBIldmgs? Tamblyn says they must execution, amplitude and Ferguson on a chairlift one difficulty of the tricks they day as they prepared for qualify based on results, like perform as they fly in and that 18-and-under event, dis- everybody else, rather than out of the halfpipe, which cussing what it would take rely on coaches' discretion typically features 23-foot- to one day reach the actual to be selected for Sochi. The more subject ive sehigh walls. Olympics. "He has done nothing but lection by coaches is comThe five-trick ru n F e rguson landed cleanly at work hard and find different mon in some other events, Copper Mountain includes ways to progress — not just Tamblyn says. "But Olyma cab double 1080, which is in his tricks and his com- pic qualification is so strucbasically two back flips with petitions, but just the way tured," he adds, "that I don't three rotations. He says he he approaches it," Tamblyn think there's room for that is working on a more diffi- says. "Ben's sitting in third (subjectivity). It's p urely cult variation of that trick, a position right now and he's based on a point system. It's front double 1080. just got a ton of momentum very mathematic." "I do want to learn some behind him. It's more our Ferguson — who is curnew stuff so I can have a desire and our plan to focus rently in Breckenridge with more challenging run and on the technique and the rid- his younger brother Gabe, hopefully get a little higher ing, and really taking care also a member of the rookscore," Ferguson says. "But of himself to be ready to per- ie halfpipe team — first I'm just going to try my best form. But, yeah, it's realistic strapped on a snowboard and hopefully I end up plac- to think that he can make at Mount Bachelor when he ing high. There's a bunch of the (Olympic) team." was 6. He grew up dreamcontests, so it's not over unThe U.S. riders ranked ing of Olympic glory as he til it's over. But I'm in third a head of F e rguson i n carved the Central Oregon place as far as qualifying Olympic-qualifying points slopes. "It's crazy now," he says, points right now. I've got a are first-place Greg Bretz decent chance (to make the (Mammoth Lakes, Calif.) "to actually be in the mix." Olympics) as long as I keep and third-place Taylor Gold — Reporter: 541-383-0318, placing high." (Steamboat Springs, Colo.), mmorical@bendbulletin.com. get out of that kind of envi-
Vonn Continued from C1 She is a celebrity, comfortable in a designer gown on the runway, complete with a paparazzi-worthy boyfriend even more famous than she, Tiger Woods. Her injuries prior to what would be her fourth Winter Games show both the frail-
ty of the Olympic experience — perform at the scheduled time every fourth year
or miss the quadrennial window — and Vonn's established stardom. "That's always a c atchy situation, a
touchy situation, when you sign Olympic athletes well in advance of the actual Olympic Games," said Matt Delzell, man-
aging director of the Marketing Arm, a Dallas-based firm that handles sports marketing. "You're taking a risk, and you want to protect yourself in that situation. On theother hand, you want to be a good
tionship with a former ski team member, Thomas Vonn. Thomas Vonn laterbecame both her husband and coach, but
they divorced in 2012. That led to a reconciliation with her father, who traveled with Lindsey to Scotland last summer to watch Woods in the British Open.
The appeal, to both the public and potential advertisers, is there.
"First of all, she looks gorgeous," said Lesa Ukman, a founder of the consulting firm IEG and an expert in sponsorships. "That's Nos. 1, 2 and 3. Plus she is a gold medalist, the best-ever female ski racer. She hasa great storyline. She's very media savvy. She has all the pieces that you need." V onn, too, i s
c o n scious enough o f
her marketing position that she has not changed her name from that of her
tricky." Justfive weeks before opening ceremo-
ex-husband, even though she competed under her maiden name of Kildow at both the 2002 and 2006 Olympics. ("Once you've got that brand, you're not going to change it," Ukman said.)
nies, Vonn has suffered a pair of setbacks
Because of Vonn's established status,
partner to these Olympic athletes. So it's
in her recovery from a devastating crash she shouldnot be under pressure from during world championships last Febru- her sponsors tomerely appear in the ary. That accident left her with two torn Olympics, according to experts in sponligaments in her right knee — the medi- sorships and agents who represent Olymal collateral and anterior cruciate — as pic athletes. Take Vonn, compared with well as a lateral tibial plateau fracture, a someone lik e A m e r ican s n owboarder smallbroken bone in the same leg.Her Greg Bretz, who has established himself focus since has been returning to form in as a medal contender with strong results time for Sochi. The Olympic downhill, in in a series of qualifying competitions. "For a guy like that, if he doesn't comwhich ahealthy Vonn would be a heavy favorite, is Feb. 12. The super-G, in which pete, it means so much," said Peter Carshe could easily contend, is Feb. 15. lisle of the agency Octagon, where he But Vonn's planned return to compe- most prominently represents swimmer tition, which was set for Thanksgiving Michael Phelps. "If he does well in these weekend in Colorado, was delayed when Games, he may have some commercial she crashed duringtraining the week opportunity, and that means everything. "For someone like Lindsey, she's albefore, suffering another torn ligament. She raced in Lake Louise, Alberta, the ready established herself. People know first week of December, and professed who she is and what she stands for, so it to be encouraged after finishing 40th in means less. It's definitely a lost opportuher first downhill race, 11th the following nity for her and the companies that work day in another downhill and a more con- with her if she can't compete, but there fident fifth in a super-G to complete the
weekend. Yet the performance in Val d'Isere seemed to be disheartening. "Bummed
about today," she tweeted afterward. "Skiing with no ACL is hard!" Alex Hoedlmoser, the head coach of the U.S. wom-
are other ways to leverage the association with her."
Under Armour, which signed Vonn in 2006, said it made the decision to air commercials with Vonn over the final quarter
of 2013, even with her health up in the air, because "she deserved to be in it," said
en's ski team, told The Associated Press Matt Mirchin, the marketing executive earlier this week at the World Cup stop in vice president of brand and sports at UnLienz, Austria, "There is no decision yet if
der Armour. "She's an iconic athlete," Mirchin said.
or where she is going to race ahead of the "She's 29 years old, coming off a pretty Olympics." Healthy, Vonn would be one of the fo- severe injury. She takes so many risks cuses of the American public in the run- when she skis. I don't know whether she's up to the Games. She not only has the got another Olympics in her or not, but we allure of winning the downhill four years expect her to be an Under Armour athlete ago outside Vancouver, but she is one of the rest of her career." history's best skiers, a winner of 59 racWhether that career includes the Sochi es on the World Cup circuit, just three Olympics is, just more than a month out, a short of the women's record. She has an bit murky. There are three downhill races increasingly intriguing personal story: on the World Cup circuit in January. Her Moved from suburban Minneapolis to appearance in at least one of those would Vail, Colo., by her parents as a youngster, seem essential to Vonn the competitor. she then became estranged from her faVonn the brand, however, may be ther at least in part because of her rela- impervious.
have played a junior varsity nonconference schedule. Oregon won the Pac-12 tournament last sea-
son and is ranked 10th, getting as much out of Phil Knight's Nike money as the Ducks' football team.
Then there is Colorado. Once again the Buffaloes appear to be a player in the conference basketball race.
Pac-12 play begins tonight, though UCLA and the University of Southern California will wait until Sunday to open against each other at
Pauley Pavilion. It is hard to ignore Colorado, which comes in as one of the top-tier teams. The Buffaloes are 11-2 and ranked 20th. "We just want our program to get better," Col-
orado coach Tad Boyle said. It has. It's just that no one expected them to start near the top when they rolled into the Pac12 in 2011.
The working theory when the conference ex-
Ducks,Beaversreadytostart conferenceplaytonight The Pac-12men's basketball schedule tips off tonight for the OregonDucks andthe Oregon State Beavers. Both teamsare onthe roadto open conference play. Undefeated Oregontakes a12-0 record and a No. 10 ranking into its gametonight against Utah in Salt Lake City. Start time against the
Utes (11-1) is 5 o'clock (PST); the gamewill be televised on Pac-12Networks. The Ducks areoff to their best start since the 2006-07 season, whenthey started13-0 on their wayto the Elite Eight of the NCAATourna-
ment. They currently lead thenation in scoring with an average of 90.8 points per game. Oregon State has arecord of 8-4 in nonconference play andtonight takes on No. 20Colorado (11-2) in Boulder. Start time is 7 o'clock (PST), and the gamewill be televised on ESPNU. The Beavers are led byguard Roberto Nelson and forward DevonCollier. The high-scoring senior duo ranks amongthe most prolific tandems in the country with a combinedaverage of 39.4 points per game. Theteams exchange opponentsovertheweekend: Oregon State plays at Utah onSaturday afternoon, and Oregonplays at Colorado on Sunday afternoon.
panded two years ago was that the Buffaloes
— Bulletin staff report
football team would eventually become a power. Basketball was along for the ride. No one knew that things were beginning to which has opened up the Southern California Boyle in Boulder. recruiting market. Boyle has already lured to Colorado had been tothe NCAA tourna- Colorado guard Askia Booker from Los Angement twice from 1969 to 2011. Boyle, now in his les Price and Xavier Johnson from Santa Ana fourth season, took the Buffaloes to the tourna- Mater Dei. "If kids don't stay home for school, they want ment the past two seasons, winning the Pac-12 tournament in 2012 and getting an at-large bid to come back home to play," Boyle said. "We last season. can offerthat." This season, the Buffaloes walk into conSo far, he can also offer success. "We have been in the top half of the Pac-12 ference play with credibility and a record that includes a victory over No. 16 Kansas and a since I have been around," Boyle said. "Now the down-to-the-wire loss to No. 6 Oklahoma State. challenge is to stay there." That has been accomplished with a startThe conference appears stronger than in reing lineup that includes no seniors. Colorado cent seasons, with Arizona (14-0) perched at starts two juniors, two sophomores and one the top. The Wildcats have victories over Duke freshman. and Michigan on their resume. "I think we weren't on a lot of people's radar Last season, Arizona was 12-0 before Pac-12 when we joined the Pac-12," Boyle said. play, beating Florida and Miami, but finished in Those observers may need better radar. The a four-way tie for second place with a 12-6 conBuffaloes finished 24-14 and reached the Na- ferencerecord.These more-seasoned Wildcats t ional Invitation Tournament semifinals i n have size and depth. 2010-11. They finished fifth in their inaugural "We have a number of players who went Pac-12 season and rolled through the confer- through that experience last year, who are ence tournament. much more prepared and understand how dif"Winning four games in four nights opened ficult it is to win in the conference," Arizona some eyes, and you can include Colorado fans coach Sean Miller said. in that bunch," Boyle said. "It's not like our fans A conference, Miller added, that has "anyexpect us to go to Los Angeles and win. It was a where between five to seven teams who I'm defining moment." sure right now are talking about making the Boyle has created an upheaval as a local boy NCAA tournament." come home. He was the Colorado player of the Oregon reached the Sweet 16 last season, year at Greeley High in 1981, but he chose Kan- but lost key members from that team. Still, sas after Colorado changed coaches. the Ducks enter conference play with a 12-0 He played four seasons for the Jayhawks record. "I didn't know how we were going to blend but eventually found his way home. Boyle was hired at Northern Colorado. His teams went together with a lot of new guys," Oregon coach from 4-24 in 2006-07 to 25-8 in 2009-10. He took Dana Altman said. "We've blended together over in Boulder after that season, and he stress- well." es to recruits that he is staying. Arizona State and Utah enter conference "I would have never gone to Kansas if Colo- play with 11-2 records. The improved quality rado hadn't changed coaches," Boyle said. "It's of the conference forced Arizona State coach important that people know I'm a C olorado Herb Sendektobeefup the schedule. guy." "Playing good competition," Sendek said, "alStaying on is easier since joining the Pac-12, lows the truth to be revealed more readily."
ix mn erenceracesto watc By John Marshall The Associated Press
College basketball's n o nconference sea-
son cleared a few things up, identifying the front-runners for March while sprinkling a few surprises in along the way. Now it is time for the true contenders to dis-
tinguish themselves.
er.Conference newbies and former mid-majors Butler and Creighton were solid during the nonconference season, each going 10-2, and both Providenceand Xavier are above 10wins. This will likely be a race that goes down to the wire.
Pec-12:Top-ranked Arizona, as expected, is the clear favorite heading into conference play.
The majority of the conference seasons start
The Wildcats are undefeated, loaded, and have
thisweek, and there should be some great races, particularly among the bigger conferences. To get you ready, here is a rundown of six of the conferences: Big Ten:The nation's top RPI conference is
spent a month atop the poll. Arizona could have a tough time remaining undefeated in a conference that is as good as any in the country. No.
10 Oregonhas yetto lose a game, Utah has one loss, and six teams have at least 11 wins. It will
likely be hard for anyone to knock off Arizona the top five of The Associated Press poll: No. 3 for the conference title, but the Pac-12 could loaded with talented teams, including three in
Ohio State, No. 4 Wisconsin and No. 5 Michi-
have a stream of teams get into the NCAA Tour-
gan State. The Buckeyes and Badgers are both nament after getting shortchanged the past few 13-0 and the Spartans have just one loss in 12 years. games. But it does not stop at the top. Illinois, ACC: The conference appears to have two No. 22 Iowa and Minnesota are all 11-2, while clear top dogs: Syracuse and No. 7 Duke. The Indiana and Purdue are 10-3. Michigan is a bit Blue Devils have two losses and those were to of a surprise with four losses after opening the Kansas and Arizona. The wild card in the ACC preseason atNo. 7,but the conference does not
race will be No. 19 North Carolina. The Tar
have a team with a losing record. This confer- Heels' resume includes wins over Louisville, ence is brutally tough every year and could be Michigan State and Kentucky, but also losses to even more so this season. Big 12:The conference does not have the
Belmont in Chapel Hill and to UAB. North Car-
No. 13 Iowa State leads the way at 11-0, No. 6
Should be a lot of good teams with some talent
olina is undoubtedly a talented team, but how best RPI, but it too is jammed with good teams. far it goes will depend on which team shows up. Oklahoma State is 11-1, and the conference after those top three. is another without a losing record among its SEC:Kentucky, with another of John Calipa10 teams. Favorite Kansas has three losses al- ri's pros-in-waiting recruiting classes, opened ready, but the Jayhawks have the kind of talent as the preseason No. 1. Unlike when the Wildthat should have them contending for another cats' meshed right away on the way to the 2012 title at the end. The Big 12 also has some of the national championship, this group is still trying nation's most dynamic players, including Okla- to find its groove, with three losses already. No. homa State's Marcus Smart and Kansas fresh- 25 Missouri leads the conference at 11-1, but man Andrew Wiggins. Florida, at 10-2, is ranked 13 positions higher. Big East: Conference realignment could The bottom half of the SEC looks pretty weak, have hurt the Big East, but does not seem to so expect a few blowouts during the conference have lessened it at all. No. 11 Villanova won its
season. Kentucky is still loaded with talent, so
first 11 games before losing to No. 2 Syracuse the Wildcats could be in the mix for a nationon Saturdayand could be aFinalFourcontend- al-title run once they get their mojo going.
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 2, 2014
BRIEFING
BEND
via ionmm aniesin e a
French leader seeks jobgrowth PARIS — President Frangois Hollande, seeking to reduce France's high unemployment rate, has called for a "responsibility pact" with businesses that would reward companies that hire more people with lower taxes andgreater flexibility. "There is but one objective, one priority, one engagement, and that's employment," Hollande said in his New Year's Eveaddress to the nation. The idea of the pact "is founded on asimple principle," he said, "lower employment costs and fewer constraints on business activities." In return, businesses must step up with more hiring and greater willingness to work with employees to reduce layoffs, he said. Hollande did not offer any details of his proposal
By Joseph Ditzler The Bulletin
A lawsuit in Deschutes County Circuit Court pits two Bend aviation companies against one another over up-
for Sage, acquired a repossessed Bell Long Ranger for $450,000. Sage claims Leading Edge did not disclose that the aircraft had been damaged in an accident. Leading Edge, a helicopter charter service and flight school, oper-
keep of a Bell helicopter. Sage Aviation LLC sued Leading Edge Aviation Inc. ates from the Bend Municipal in October allegingbreach of Airport. contract and fraud and asking Two attempts to lease the for more than $2 million in helicopter to operators in New damages. York and Utah ended with the Sage's owner, Robert Smith, lessees returning the craft, alleges Leading Edge, which claiming it was "not airworacted as purchasing agent thy and had not been properly
maintained" by Leading Edge, the suit alleges. Although Sage Aviation purchased the helicopter, Leading Edge hangared, maintained and leased it on
behalf of Sage, according to the civil suit. In the first case, East End
Helicopters in New York, an air charter and cargo hauler, returned the craft shortly after taking possession, according to the suit filed by Sage attorney Martin Hansen
Sage's owner, Smith, alleged Leading Edge execcomplaint, a move that cost utives befriended him while Sage $1 million in lost revenue teaching his son to fly helicopand legal fees, the Sage suit ters. That friendship, Smith's alleges. suit alleges, resulted in LeadSage claims Leading Edge ing Edge forwarding an inagreed to pay a $40,000 share vestment opportunity — buyto settle a lawsuit brought by ing and leasing a helicopter. copters LLC of Utah returned
the helicopter with the same
Mustang but, so far, has not pald.
The suit claims two instanc-
es ofbreach of contract and one of fraud. A pretrial hearing in the case is scheduled April 8.
Leading Edge executives named in the lawsuit, Brad Fraley and Travis Warthen,
were not available to comment Tuesday.
of Bend. Next, Mustang Heli-
Vote on
Boeing contract
highlights
- •: H - ' • " - ' F •
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— From wire reports •
I • '• I• •• -I •l S SS • • I II 1 -• $. $ • • ..1 I I . S . I l 'I• t - S l
IS
•
rift in union
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BEST OFTHE
By Steven Greenhouse
BIZ CALENDAR TUESDAY • Introduction to Finding Funders:Free workshop for nonprofits seeking ways to find funding; 9-11 a.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541312-7089 or jennyp© deschuteslibrary.org • Three Things inThree Years: Whatare Bend's Priorities:BendChamber of CommerceTown Hall; registration required; $15 for members, $20 for nonmembers; 5 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W.Century Drive; 541-382-3221, bonnie© bendchamber.org or www. bendchamber.org. WEDNESDAY • OregonAlcohol Server Permit Training:Meets the Oregon Liquor Control Commission minimum requirements to obtain an alcohol server permit; registration required; $35; 9 a.m.-1 p.m.; RoundTable Pizza, 1552 N.E.Third St., Bend; 541-447-6384 or www.happyhourtraining. com. • Business Startup Class:Learn to reach your customers, where to find funding, how much you need to start and legalities involved; registration required; $29; 6-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7290. THURSDAY • Managing Day to
New York Times News Service
After Boeing's workers in Washington state voted
down an eight-year contract extension in Novem-
ber, Boeing wasted little time in soliciting offers from other states to build its new 777X aircraft. Within weeks, 22 states made proposals to Boe-
ing, with some offering billions of dollars in subsidies to lure a project that
would mean thousands of jobs and the prestige of having such a prominent manufacturer. All this so alarmed the leaders of the main union Automobn Lamborghini via The New YorkTimes
The LarnoorhhinAventador LP 700-4 Roadster can go from 0 to 60 mph in2.9 seconds. Larnoorhhii is among the luxury automakers
its president has brushed aside the objections of the
High rollers in a uying moo
local union and ordered a new vote — scheduled for Friday — on a slightly revised version of the con-
•Buoyedbyagrowing economy andsoaringstocks,wealthybuyerssnapuptrophycars
rift within the union, one
"I look at it as, I don't have
By Jaclyn Trop New York Times News Service
a boat," Hlavin said. "I feel confident about the economy
DETROIT-
M
and about my business."
att Hlavin, an
A legion of buyers like Hlavin, buoyed by a growing economy and a soaring stock market, are shedding
entrepreneur
in Cleveland
whatever reluctance, or self-imposed restraint, they
who owns seven businesses, mostly in
Identify ways to improve productivity in the workplace; registration
manufacturing, bought
noon; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W.CollegeWa y, Bend; 541-383-7270. • Project Management Certification: Course for experienced project managers looking to become certified and those seeking certification as associates in project management; sponsored by the Project Management Institute, Wiiiamette Valley Chapter; registration required by Dec.31; $885for chapter members, $985 for nonmembers; 8:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m.; Water Reclamation Facility, 22395 McGrath Road, Bend; busch@teieport. com or www.pmiwv.org. • BuildingYour Business for Success,TheSmart Approach:Part of the Bend Chamber of Commerce Master Series, which will be presented in threemodules through March. First topic: Business Development — Understanding You; registration required; call Bend Chamberfor pricing; 1 p.m.; Smart Sales Solutions Inc., 123S.W. Columbia St., Suite110; 541-382-3221, bonnieO bendchamber.org or www. bendchamber.org.
representing Boeing workers, the International Association of Machinists, that
that have seen sales gains at the highest end of the market, far outstripping those in the auto industry as a whole.
Day Performance:
required; $95; 8a.m.-
— Reporter: 541-617-7815, jditzler@bendbulletin.com
had during the recession by entering showrooms and leaving with trophy cars. "Luxury is not a dirty word anymore," said Robert Ross, an automotive consultant
three Mercedes last
with Robb Report, a lifestyle magazine for wealthy read-
year: a $237,000 SLS
ers. "In 2008, luxury was a
AMG and a $165,000 S63 AMG for him, and a $97,000 GL550 SUV fOr hiS Wife.
JAN. 10 • CCB LicenseTest Preparation Course:Two-day course approved by the Oregon Construction Contractors Board; fee includes required current edition of the OregonContractor's Reference Manual; registration required; $305; 8:30 a.m.-6 p.m.; Central OregonCommunity College, 2600N.W.CollegeW ay,Bend;541383-7290 or ccb©cocc.edu. JAN. 13 • IDSApp Development1 -FoundationSkills: Learn to create your first iOS app; first of three classes, MondaysandWednesdays through Jan. 27; registration required; $169; 6-8 p.m.; COCC - Crook County Open Campus,510S.E. Lynn Blvd., Prineviiie; 541-383-7270. • MTA ServerFundamentals: Preparation class for the MTAexam in servers; MondaysandWednesdays until Feb. 3; registration required;
dirty word." Maserati is opening deal-
are finding an eager market for their most expensive models, which push past $100,000. The sales gains at the highest end of the market are far
outstripping those in the auto industry as a whole, which, because of easier credit and
pent-up demand, have risen 8.4 percent from January through November. Maserati has led the way, with a 55 percent sales increase this year, followed
by double-digit gains from Rolls-Royce, Jaguar, Lamborghini, Porsche and Bentley, accordingto figuresfrom the Autodata Corp. Many of
amassing new wealth in industries like technology and energy, and executives in Fortune500 companies
"People were pulling back when they had to let people go," said Ken Gorin, chief executive and president of the
Collection in Coral Gables, Fla. "They'd come in and buy, but it would be the same color and the same model so no one knew they got a new car." "Now it doesn't matter," Gorin said. "Yellow cars,
States, Rolls-Royce just
than they did in 2007 before
better."
finished its most profitable
the recession.
Buyers at the top end of the market say the time feels right for a big-ticket purchase.
$299; 6-9 p.m.; COCC - Crook County Open Campus,510S.E. LynnBlvd., Prineviiie; 541-383-7270. JAN. 14 • ManagingBusinessSocial Media Presence:Learn to handle online marketing through social mediaand not lose a daydoing it; two sessions; registration required; $69; 9 a.m.noon; Central OregonCommunity College, 2600 N.W.College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270. • Serious SuccessMotivational Series for Women:Final of four parts; topic is Risk vs. Reward; noon1 p.m.; East BendPublic Library, 62080 DeanSwift Road; 541-6170340, diane©eioquentexpressions. com or www.facebook.coml events/183253898537357/?source=1 • ComputerEssentialsfor the Workplace: Learn to feel comfortable with the different technology and basic software packages; one oftwo
Among the hungriest consumers for luxury automobiles are entrepreneurs
sessions; registration required; $69; 6-9 p.m.; Central OregonCommunity College,2600 N.W.College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270. • Project ManagementInformation Meeting:Learn about project management skills, which are growing in demand,andbenefits of certification; registration recommended; free;6-7:30 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., Bend;541-383-7270. • Memhership101 - DrivingYour Membership: Hostedbythe Bend Chamber of Commerce: learn about benefits available through the chamber; registration required; free; 10 a.m.; Charles Schwab &Co.,777 N.W. Wall St., Suite 201, Bend;541382-3221, sheiiey©bendchamber.org or www.bendchamber.org. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visit hendhuiietin.com/hizral
ders. But the international
executives say.
erships around the United
that reflects the varying priorities of its leadership. Union officials in Washinggains hard won from a company that has surging profits and recordplane or-
ket, analysts and industry
blue cars, red cars, white cars, people are feeling
The dispute highlights a
ton state want to preserve
whose stocks have soared along with the broader mar-
these brands sold more cars in the first 11 months of 2013
year ever and even mainstream luxury automakers like Mercedes and Jaguar
tract extension.
leadershipseesa different threat — the possibility of losing a large manufacturing center and more than 10,000 union jobs to a right-to-work state where it would be difficult to win
representation. And that could mean a big loss in dues — Boeing workers in the Puget Sound area paid $25.5 million in dues to the international union in 2012.
Boeing has promised to put final assembly of the 777X in the Seattle area, as well as fabrication of
the aircraft's wings, if the 31,000 Boeing machinists vote to approve the revised
deal.
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$237,802 • Hayden HomesLLC,61143 S.E.Cone Flower St., $236,442 •W estBend PropertyCompanyLLC 1753 N.W.Hartford Ave., $208,779 • Jerryand Robin Knighten 2002 Trust, 1970 N.W.Baiitch Court, $335,713 • Kyle Roseborrough, 220 N.W. Skyiiner Summit Loop, $425,646 • Jeffrey L. Payne, 61756Bridgeciiff Drive, $200,503 • Brookswood BendLLC,61140 Princeton Loop, $350,749 • PacWest ii LLC, 63416N.E. Lamoine Lane, $190,441 • Bridges at ShadowGlen LLC,61113 S.E. ManhaeLoop, $237,686 • Rick A. Hayes, 19160N.W.Mt. Shasta Drive, $395,767
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Money, D2 Nutrition, D3 Fitness, D4 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 2, 2014
O www.bendbulletin.com/health
MEDICINE
ALMONDS. JOY? ~
I
Thinkstock
~~ "osa
Do nuts assist in
• Untangling the misconceptionsconcerning headlice
wei t
By Christina ianzito •Special To The Washington Post
ead lice: The idea alone is enough to make
oss7
your scalp itch. Each year, there are 6 million to 12 million lice cases in U.S. h
children ages 3 to 11, according to the Centers for
By Michael Moss New York Times News Service
Disease Control and Prevention. It's a year-
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. — "Here are the nuts,"
round scourge, though the number of cases
said Drew Sayer, a graduate student in nutrition
seems to peak when kids go back to
science, before shoving me into the MRI machine, flat
school in the fall and again in January,
on my back. "Chew them.
possibly due to familial mingling
Swallow them. And don't move
' •
1
NUTRITION
during the holidays.
head." I
There are
moved my head, which blurred the resulting images. But if all goes well in the coming weeks, researchers
almost as many misconceptions
at Purdue University will have stacks of brain scans
about the parasites
with crystal-clear views inside the minds of their test
as thereare critters.
insect's eggs that
subjects — while they were eating nuts. These images could help answer a timely question: Do nuts really merit the hype they've been getting as a guilt-free indulgence? The reports about their
the mother cements to hair shafts.
many benefits have come thick and fast: Studies
M.J. Eckert, a former school nurse and cofounder of Lice Happens, an Annapolis, Md.-based
ABOVE: Nits are the
in-home lice treatment and removal service, says she once met a father who'd used a high-powered shop
finding that people who
vacuum on his son's infested head, hoping to suck the
LEFT: Lice need
eat nuts (tree nuts like
blood and a warm
cashews, almonds and pistachios, along with their legume pal, the peanut) live longer and healthier lives, with less risk of chronic
environment to survive, which is why they like to root themselves itself in the nape of the
problem away. Another family threw out a sleeper sofa in the middle of the night, convinced that it was the source of an intractable lice
neck. lllustrations by Patterson Clark The Washington Post
infestation. Neither approach worked. First, some facts: The head
louse is a six-legged wingless insect known as an ectoparasite,
ailments like heart disease,
respiratory problems and Type 2 diabetes. But perhaps the most startling news is that nuts
may help in maintaining a healthy weight. Research has found that people can snack on modest amounts of them without gaining pounds, and that nuts can even help in slimming
IWN oCCH<
meaning that it makes its home on a
down.
host's surface. It's related to the body louse, which, unlike
This dieting power is particularly hard to fathom when you consider that
the headlouse,can carry disease.The animal needs blood
nuts pack 160 to 200 calo-
and a warm environment to survive. That's why it finds
ries in each tiny ounce, not even a handful. And most
such comfort in the human scalp; it also likes to root itself
ofthose caloriescome from fat. Ounce for ounce,
in the nape of the neck and behind the ears.
cashews and pecans and walnuts are loaded with more calories than many
See Lice/D5
of the processed foods being blamed for the surge
Lessons inthe Courting the 'younginvincibles' va ue of intensity By Gretchen Reynolds New York Times News Service
In 2013, exercise science expanded and finetuned our understanding of how
physical activity affects our brains, FITN ESS joints, hearts andevengenes,beginning before bhth and continuing throughout our life spans — whichcanbelengthened, itseems, by exercise, especiallyif we pickup thepace. The year's fitness news, as a look back through Phys Ed columns show, was variously enlightening, validating (if, like me, you never bothered cooling down after a workout anyway) and practical (do-it-yourself concussion testing, anyone?). It was also occasionally deflating, say if you had hoped barefoot running would invariably reduce the risk of injury, gentle exercise would quash your appetite, or train-
ing for a marathon would automatically exempt you frombeing acouch potato. SeeIntensity/D4
By Kelli Kennedy
Salt Lake City, said he still hasn't
to sign up, with the rest split fairly
The Associated Press
seen any of the social media cam-
evenly between those likely to en-
MIAMI — The so-called "young paigns — one of which targets Utah invincibles" are so important to the residents with images of people success of the Affordable Care Act snowboarding and rock climbing. that sup p orters He tried to sign up online when and detractors are M O N P ( the federal marketplace first spending millions launched but couldn't because of racy ads, social me- Related dia campaigns and • Insurance costs cut endorse ments. The presi- by ltmtttng dent is even (gasp) hosPital asking their moth- access, ers to help convince them to sign up for insurance. The federal government and states runningtheir own exchanges have launched marketing efforts for this crucial demographic of healthy young adults, but it's unclear if the messages are getting through. EricFisher,a 28-year-old from
the long wait times and other web-
roll and those who probably won't. The survey of 2,000 young adults was conductedfrom Oct.30 to Nov.
11, after the first month of enrollment on the health care exchanges and when sign-up problems were at their peak. Consisting of healthy college
site glitches. He said he'll try again at some students and twenty-somethings, point. He added that the historic the so-called "young invincible" health care overhaul isn't a topic he demographic is the holy grail of and his friends spend much time
the Affordable Care Act. Insurers
talking about. need their participation to offset "It's not like a coffee table conver- the costs of covering older, sicker sation," Fisher said.
According to a recent Harvard survey, many of Fischer's peers are undecided. A poll by Harvard's Institute of Politics shows about 40 percent of people between the ages of 18 and 29 areon the fence about whether
Americans.
If enough young people decide
in obesity. In the conventional wisdom, a dieter's
best friends are watery foods like celery and carrot sticks.
One of the country's leading nutrition scientists, Richard Mattes of Purdue,
has been exploring this seeming paradox and has some intriguing, if still uncertain, findings. Nuts have several big things going for them, Mattes said. For starters, even a small amount can
make you feel full. Scientists call this feeling satiety; it is a busy field in food research and marketing these days, given the way that snacking has become
a sort of fourth meal, adding an estimated 580 calo-
or federal marketplaces, it could throw off the market's equilibrium
ries to the average person's daily consumption. Why do nuts appease
and cause insurance rates to rise
the appetite so well? Mattes
dramatically the following year. SeeInvincibles/D2
pointed to several studies.
not to buy insurance through state
See Nuts/D3
D2 THE BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JAN 2, 2014
MoNEY DATA POINTS
Impact of Obamacare:Lossof hospital access By Sandhya Somashekhar and Ariana EunjungCha
Zoe Newton, 5, seen with her mother, Kellie
benefits. President Barack
Newton, at apark
choose to extend these poli-
cies past Dec. 31, but Wash-
exchanges, they are discover-
in Seattle, is legally blind and has
ing that insurers are restrict-
been diagnosed
ing their choice of doctors and hospitals in order to keep
with a rare bone
missioner has said he will not permit the extension.
costs low, and that many of
ily wants her to continue getting care from Seattle Children's Hospital, but it isoutof network for many
The Washington Post
A s A m ericans shop f o r health plans on the insurance
disease. Herfam-
the plans exclude top-rated hospitals. The Obama administration
made it apriorityto keep down the cost of insurance on the
of the insurance plans offered
exchanges, the online market-
places that are central to the Affordable Care Act. But one
through Wash-
ington state's online insurance
way that insurers have been
able to offer lower rates is by creating networks that are far
exchange under the Affordable Care Act.
smaller than what most Amer-
icansare accustomed to. The decisions have prov oked a
Karen Ducey The Washington Post
b a cklash. I n o n e
closely watched case, Seattle Children's Hospital has filed suit against Washington's insurance commissioner after a
The result ,some argue,isa two-tier system of health care: Many ofthe people who buy health plans on the exchanges have fewer hospitals and doc-
agnosed with a rare bone disorder, face difficult decisions. Under some of the new law's health plans, the family would no longer be able to take Zoe to Children's for her routine checkups, or if they do, it could count as an "out-of-network" visit, saddling Blank's family with huge bills. "Itjust stresses me," said Blank, 53, a self-employed
tors to choose from than those
massage therapist who is sort-
with coverage through their employers.
ing through his options but readily admits that his fam-
A number of the nation's
ily has benefited from other
number of insurers kept it out of their provider networks. "It
is unprecedentedin our market to have major insurance plans exclude Seattle Chil-
dren's," said Sandy Melzer, senior vice president.
top hospitals — including the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota, Cedars-Sinai in Los Angeles and children's hospitals in Seattle, Houston and St. Louis — are cut out of most plans
sold on the exchange.
Money talks
parts of the health law. "I hope things continue wonderfully for my daughter and that she doesn't need the levelofcare she got after her diagnosis, but there's this unknown."
In New Hampshire, Frisbie Memorial Hospital took legal action against an insurer that
In most cases, the decision excluded it from its marketwas about the cost of care. place plans, and in Missouri, In Seattle, the region's pre- consumer advocates successdominant i nsurer, Premera fully lobbied an insurer to Blue Cross, decided not to in- add a children's hospital after clude the children's hospital as it unveiled a plan that lacked an in-network provider except one. in cases where the service Experts say that routine care sought cannot be obtained offered atcheaper, commuanywhere else. "Children's nity-based hospitals is often non-unique services were too comparable to that of pricey expensive given the goal of academic medical centers. "Academic medical centers providing affordable coverage for consumers," spokesman are valuable because they are Eric Earling said in an email. the only place to get certain For example, a p e diatric specific treatments, but they appendectomy at Children's provide a lot of care that is costs about $23,000, he said. routinely provided in commuAt another community hospi- nity hospitals that do it very tal, the cost is closer to $14,100. well at a cheaper cost," said Melzer said his hospital often Paul Ginsburg, president of bills more than community the Center for Studying Health hospitals for comparable pro- System Change. cedures because the children Some advocates argue that it treats are often gravely ill, so these narrow networks are even a routine tonsillectomy a fine way to cut costs. They may bemore complicated. note the majority of people exBut as a result, families like pected to buy coverage on the Jeffrey Blank's, who has relied exchanges are uninsured, and on Seattle Children's since his that even a narrow network is daughter, Zoe Newton, was di- better than nothing.
Invincibles
small sound studio, hasn't
seen any ads or perused the state's health exchange.
Continued from 01 " There's this e l itist a t t i Federal officials haven't released detailed demographic tude that (politicians) think i nformation o n w h o ' s e n - they know what's better for rolled so far, so it's not clear us than ourselves and that's how many young people have part of why I take issue with signed up. this. I'm being forced to do
Courting the undecided Ad campaigns in many states are courting undecided young adults. In Colorado, a nonprofit group created a series of provocative "got in-
something that's not neces-
sarily in my best interest," said Johnson, a 31-year-old who's never had insurance.
"I don't need insurance, man. I'm healthy." He'll wait until M arch to
enroll and says he'll select a blonde standing next to a the cheapest, lowest-level of life-sized cutout of celebri- coverage available simply to ty heartthrob Ryan Gosling avoid the fine. with the caption, "Hey girl, E xperts e x pect m a n y you're excited about easy ac- young adults, like Johnson, to surance?" ads. One features
cess to birth control and I'm
excited about getting to know you. She got insurance." Another touting " B rosurance"
encourages men doing a keg stand not to ta p i nto t heir beer money to cover medical
bills. When t h e exc h ange launched, models wearing nothing but underwear and "Get Covered" signs passed
wait until March. In 2012, 18 million 19- to
34-year-olds lacked insurance — or 27 percent of all people in that age group, according to U.S. census data. The Obama administration is making the rounds on college campuses to encourage people to sign up and has enlisted celebrities including Lady Gaga and Kerry Washington in its Get Covered social media campaign. Jenni-
o ut f l i er s i n dow n t o w n Denver. Arizona and Utah ads tarfer Hudson and Olivia Wilde
Insurers "looked at the people expected to go on the exchanges and thought, 'These are people coming out of the ranks of the uninsured. They don't care about the Mayo Clinic or the Cleveland Clinic.
They will go to community providers,'" explained Robert Laszewski, a consultant to the
health care industry. lnstuers will typically cover
The Affordable Care Act
requiresinsurers to provide enough doctors and hospitals to ensure quality care. But there is no detailed guidance
Obama has said that states and health plans may
Toughdecisions Blank's insurer, Prem-
era, has suggested that he enroll in the new Premera
plan on the marketplace. But Children's is not in the new network.
So, Blank must make a choice. Should he take his insurer's suggestion and lose access to Children's'? Should he go with one of the plans on the exchange that includes Children's, even if that means picking an insurance company he has never heard of? He is leaning toward a third option: buying a private plan with Premera outside the exchange with a b roader network,
doctors affiliated with Monadnock Community Hospital in
health law. Blank faults the insurer and not the health law,
but that would force him to give up the $400-permonth subsidy he would be eligible for under the
his town for 15 years, and his wife for 30 years. But starting which has already benefitin 2014, that medical center ed his family, he said. Prior will no longer be in network to its enactment, insurance for the Anthem plans sold in companies routinely put a
tion and another bad option,"
dollar cap on the amount
of benefits a person could receive in a lifetime. Without the law, Zoe, 5, who
was diagnosed with a sometimes-fatal condition called osteopetrosis, likely would have reached that cap before adulthood, her father said.
She was diagnosed at 8 months, not early enough to prevent he r
i m p rop-
erly growing skull from crushing her optic nerves,
said Justice. Anthem spokesman Chris
rendering her blind. At a
Dugan said that consumers
successful stem-cell transplant. But she is still suffer-
under the plan are seeing prices that are 25 percent lower than they would have been with a broader network, and
year old, she underwent a ing some side effects of the transplant, and gets check-
on what this means. "It's been mostly up to the
that the company found in
ups at Children's every two or three months.
surveys of more than 50,000
Premera has said it will
plans to attest to it, and for
consumers across the coun- consider as in-network sertry that most people would vice "unique" treatments chose cost savings over being available only a t C h ilable to see a particular doc- dren's. But the decisions tor. He said that the network about what is considered "unique" will b e m a de still covers 74 percent of all primary-care providers and on a case-by-case basis, 78 percent of specialists. Blank learned, and he has
from the federal government
now everyone's taking their word for it," said Karen Pollitz, a senior fellow at the Kaiser
Family Foundation who focuses on health reform and insurance.
What is the chance thatyou will rack up big health care bills this year? For the typical American adultyounger than 65 who does not have health insurance, the total of all health care bills would be $2,700. That's according to calculations by Milliman, an actuarial firm. The obvious problem is thatyou can't know in advance if your costs for the year will betypical. If you areunfortunate enough to haveacostly medical problem,you could end upwith far higher bills. Milliman calculated that 5percentof the population will incur bills, absent insurance, exceeding $47,300. Milliman estimated what patients will be billed without insurance, not what is paid to providers. According to Milliman, uninsured patients, who don't have the benefit of insurance negotiators, are billed about 30 percent more than insured patients. The Affordable CareAct requires individuals to purchaseinsurance, but at what coverage level? If half of Americans without insurance will be billed less than $2,700, as Milhman projects, a healthy person, might do better under a plan with lower premiums but with high deductibles. (They can generally run as high as $5,000 for an individual and $10,000 for a couple.) Of course, Milliman doesn't know whether you are likely to become sickand to beamong the top 5 percent or even the top 20 percent (who are billed more than $13,300). When choosing insurance, consumers needto consider their personal situations — andtheir stomach for risk.
ington's insurance com-
as Michael Justice, 63, a Web developer from Peterborough, N.H., to leave doctors theylike. Justice has been treated by primary-care doctors, cardiologists, orthopedists and eye
out-of-network costs in an emergency. And most hospi- his state, whether he buys the tals are included in at least one insurance through the health plan. exchange or on his own. "I can't find you a plan with Justice said he and his wife all the major facilities, but if could go with another insurer, you give me a hospital I can which costs $1,600 a month find a plan participating in it," for the couple outside the marsaid Elisabeth Benjamin, vice ketplace, and continue to see president of health initiatives their providers. Or they could for the Community Service save around $400 with subSociety of New York, one of sidies if they purchase on the the agencies helping consum- exchange. "We're being forced to ers navigate their new health insurance options. choose between one bad op-
Taking 'their word for it'
Placingodds on yourhealth (and itscost)
— Anna Bemasek, New York Times News Service
In New Hampshire, con"This w a sn't s o mething decided to reject that opsumers who purchase insurance through the exchange built overnight," he said. "We tion, which is fraught with have only one choice of carrier took a very thoughtful ap- uncertainty. — Anthem BlueCross BlueShield — because no other
proach to this."
insurer applied to join the exchange. The company's network includes access to only 16 of the state's 26 acute-care hospitals. That's forcing people such
policies are being canceled at
ages young adults to tell their friends to get covered in an online rap. The president himself recently told a group of mothers visiting the Oval Office that: "Moms can tell young people who think t hey're
the end of the year because they do not comply with the
health law's mandated basic
Health Events: Email event information to healthevents© bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bend bulletin.com. Allow at least10 days before the desired date of publication. Ongoing class listings must be updated monthly and will appear atbendbulletin. com/healthclasses. Contact: 541-3830358. People:Email information about local people involved in health issues to healthevents©bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358.
be prepared. As wonderful as the Affordable Care Act has been for us, it's like,
how did this happen?"
personal health decisions. The group's recent tailthat, Benson, who had his gate party at the Univerpancreas removed and needs sity of Miami had all the daily insulin for his 7ype 1 markings of the South diabetes, struggled to find Beach club scene: hired coverage. He was either de- g lossy-haired mod e l s nied orquoted $2,000 month- handing out swag, free ali nvincible that t h ey're n ot ly premiums, said the South cohol and a sea of sweaty and prod them to at least get Florida resident, who works twenty-somethings bumpinformation." part-time as a grocery store ing and grinding to a live California state exchange cashier. DJ. officials even tried to perHe recently enrolled in a Mette Jensen, a 22-yearsuade women to pay the first platinum plan with no de- old student, says she supmonth's premium as a Christ- ductible that costs him $170 ports "Obamacare" even mas gift to their adult chil- a month and even covers his though she signed a petidren and grandchildren. endocrinologist. The federal tion against it. "Well, why not. I love government kicks in another Cost iskey $200 a month. free stuff." Experts sa y e n gaging B enson says h e wa s young invincibles requires a amused by the Funnyordnuanced touch. They prefer ie.com skits, but said many Weekly Arts ijr to talk with their peers about other ads "are focusing more Entertainment pragmatic things they can do on getting our attention than Inside MfNamfa to impact the world, but aren't actually giving us any valid interested in ideological de- information." eBulletin bates, said Morley Winograd, author of 3 books on mille- Generation Opportunity nials, including "Millenial On the other side of the Momentum." aisle, groups that oppose But the cost of coverage the health overhaul such as will play the biggest role, ex- Generation Opportunity are EVERGREEN perts say. spreading their message at In-Home care servlces Care for loved ones. Comfort for all. More than 3 million young college tailgate parties. 541-ss9-0006 adults have h e alth i n s urThe organization gained www.evergreeninhome.com ance thanks to the Afford- a following after disturbable Care Act because they ing-by-design social media remained on t heir p arents' videos featuring a creepy health insurance, according UncleSam popping up atgyA TTLE to the feds. The law extended necological and proctology ASSOCIA TES
geting weekend warriors and were featured in skits pushother athletes note the risks ing the Affordable Care Act of getting hurt without health on the humor website Funnyinsurance. orDie.com. the age that children can stay S hmuel Johnson, w h o I n th e l a t est p u sh, a n on their parents' plan to 26. works in Los A ngeles at a Obama impersonator encourJoshua Benson stayed on
How to submit
"What if Zoe has to be Jeffrey Blank is among hospitalized'? What then?" the hundreds of thousands of Blank said. "I should have Americans whose insurance a plan that is in network, to
his parents' insurance until he turned 26 last year. After
exams went viral. The tagline
urged young adults to keep big government out of their
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THURSDAY, JAN 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
D3
TION HEALTHY KIDS
Millet: It'seasiertosaythanpuinoa, andtastes good, too Whole grains havebeen ahot nutritional topic in the past few years. Much airtime hasbeendevoted to white or refined grains versus the more nutritionally sound whole variety. TheWhole Grain Council stamp of approval identifies food items up and down the grocery aisles. Andmoreand morepeoplehaveevenlearnedhow topronounce quinoa (KEEN-wah). Although quinoa hasasserted its position as the golden girl of whole grains, there is another grain that deserves a chance in the spotlight: millet. It seems like most Americans either haven't heard of millet or associate it with birdseed, (Technically, it is a seed, though it is usually categorized as agrain because it is cooked and eaten like one). Yet according to the "The New Food Lover's Companion," millet feeds a third of the world's population. Comeon, America: Catch on.
Millet is gluten-free, nonacid-forming and nonallergenic, so it's a fantastic option for people following a gluten-free diet or wrestling with digestive issues. It also contains the following nutrients: • Protein (tissue-building); • Iron (blood-building); • B vitamins (energy-providing); • Magnesium (heart-healthy); • Phosphorus (bone- and teeth-strengthening); and, • Insoluble fiber (aiding in digestion and the absorption of nutrients). But even more important, millet tastes good, with a mildly sweet flavor very similar to that of corn or grits. It is also an incredibly versatile food. • Make morning millet porridge with almond milk, cinnamon and peaches. • Add the cooked whole grain to soup in lieu of
rice or barley. • If your kids like macaroni and cheese, replace the less healthful pasta with millet. Just add butter and grated Parmesan. • Pop it in a skillet (like corn kernels) to make a healthful snack. • Use millet flour in bread andmuffin recipes (start by replacing a quarter of the flour and increase the proportion if you like the flavor and consistency). • Toss with olive oil and salt, or add your favorite vegetables, nuts and dried fruit to make amillet salad. • Replace couscous with this wheat-free alternative. • Instead of grits, whip up creamymillet. — CaseySeidenbergis co-founder of Nourish Schools,a Washington,O.C;based nutri tion education company
osmoos easis o earn • Messy kids who play with their food may befaster learners, studysays
AC
p
y
Deb Lindsey/The Washington Post
Millet mufflns are a modern take on the corn muffin, but with a blt more depth, crunch
and flavor.
Nuts Continued from D1 "They're high in protein, and protein is satiating," he said. "They're high in fiber, and fiber is satiating. They're rich in unsaturated fats, and there is some literature that suggests that
has satiety value. They're crunchy, and that would
suggest just the mechanical aspect of chewing gen-
By Perri Klass, M.D. Everybody loves a messy eater. In a study published this
r
~~
month in Developmental Sci-
erates a satiety signal."
c
r
New York Times News Service
ence, 16-month-old children were taught new names for foods like jelly and syrup, then tested to see if they could connect those names with the foods when they were presented in different colors and shapes.
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Purdue University via
New York Times News Service
An undatedhandout image,
Snacking on nuts makes produced by the technique it likely that you will eat known as functional magnetic less later in the same day, resonanceimaging, shows the according to some r e- braln's reward centers being search. That decrease in activated by the eating of nuts. consumption can make up A doctor in Indiana is working for many of the nuts' calo- on a study to try to determine
ries — as much as three- whether nuts have staying
fourths of t h em, studies power as a substitute for other
have shown. Nuts are also resistant
snacks.
to digestion, thanks to the
tough walls of their cells. other snacks. Will they remain As much as one-fifth of the appealing if people eat them fat in nuts never gets ab- every day, orbe tossed aside in sorbed by the body, Mattes favor of chips or cookies'? estimated in a 2008 paper The 20 volunteers will be published by The Journal asked to eat a handful of alof Nutrition. He noted some monds every day for 12 weeks. weaker evidence that nuts Their brains will be scanned may cause people to burn at the start, midway through a little more energy as they and at the end of the trial, to simply sit around. see if their pleasurable reE ven the fat t hat t h e sponse changes over time. body absorbs from nuts The morepleasure they get,
The conclusion'? The tod-
dlers learned better if they had, shall we say, interacted vigorously with the original samples — in other words, had played with their foods. The study wa s w i dely picked up by media outlets, and headlines trumpeted that a toddler's propensity toward
mealtime mess might actually be a sign of intelligence (a media trope not unlike the periodic celebration of the messy
tends to be virtuous. It's m ostly u n saturated f a t ,
desk and the creative adult
mind). On some level, it would seem, we are all very ready
Illustration by Joyce Hesselberth/New York Times News Service
Parents were also asked to accumulate all kinds of data, face well covered in chocolate describe their toddlers' usu- which helps them put together pudding. al behavior at meals at home, a picture and a vocabulary for But the experiment brings and each child was scored for the world around them. " They literally t a ste t h e up a number of interesting messiness. "It was the ones questions about how children w ho were messy at h o m e world by putting things in learn, about the role of play who, when we put them in the their mouths, by making them and exploration. And maybe highchair in the lab, showed make their sounds, shaking even about table manners. the best learning," said Lar- them," said Roberta Michnick The psychologists who did issa Samuelson, an associate Golinkoff, a professor of edthis research were interested professor of psychology at the ucation at the University of in the question of how babies University of Iowa, who super- Delaware and co-author of "A learn about "nonsolid" objects. vised the research. Mandate for Playful Learning "We had noticed in our lab in Preschool." "Didactic information just work before that children are Tasting the world much better at learning names So the messy-eater exper- falls flat," she said. "They have for new solid objects that they iment is really about the de- to figure out for themselves, didn't know before," said Lynn veloping brain and the cues and the only way they can do Perry, now a postdoctoral re- and contexts that small chil- this is by messing around." search associate at the Univer- dren need to create lexical Some experts worry that in sity of Wisconsin, Madison, categories — everything cov- a world of sophisticated, digand lead author of the study. ered by a particular wordital entertainments, children Since solid objects have a challenge especially when may find fewer opportunities fixed characteristics, it's rel- the category is not defined to create their own exploraatively easy for a toddler to by a shape. The children who tions. And we might wonder figure out what makes a cup, squidged around in the cream whether real-life investigaball or chair. "It's harder for of wheat, tasted it, smeared tionsseem more obtrusive or them to learn the names of it, did various unmentionable chaotic to parents accustomed nonsolids," Perry said. "You things with it — t hey were to their children's virtual can't just look and know what the children who understood messing around. it is. You have to use your sens- what cream of w heat was. But mealtime will always es and explore a little more." They could identify it even if offer opportunities to explore. The researchers reasoned it came in a different shape "These simple, everyday activthat children's most regular and was doctored with green ities — like eating — that we context for exploring non- food coloring. The messy- might take for granted, for the solid substances comes at eater experiment is also about child really are rich sources of mealtime, and t hat p utting play and the way that children information," Perry said. children in highchairs might explore their worlds and learn I once worked in a clinic for help them learn the names of as they go. Toddlers play with young children who weren't such substances. In fact, chil- their food because toddlers gaining weight — in pediatdren sitting in highchairs did play with their worlds. And by rics, the syndrome is called learn better in the study. playing and exploring, they failure to thrive. Some of the to cheer for the child with a
parents had come through refugee camps and times of great hardship, and the sight of a small child "wasting" food by playing with it was very disturbing. We took those con-
cerns seriously, with strategies to allow the children to handle their own food and feed
themselves without it looking like too much food was being wasted, and that helped with nutritional intake.
We can celebratethe sophisticated science that tod-
dlers learn in their highchairs, matching new substances to
those they have already encountered. "Babies are learning through their play and their exploration, and they can build on that for subsequent learning," Samuelson said.
One last thought Still, I can't leave this subject without a word about table
manners. Sixteen-month-olds are too young for those lessons, but, at a certain developmental point, you come out of the highchair and join those around the table in exchange for giving up some of the messier mealtime pleasures.
the more neurological activity
with lesser amounts of the
will appear in the insular cortex, amygdala, dorsal striatum
saturated type whose ex-
and other parts of the brain
cessiveconsumption has been associated with heart disease. But even the best foods come with c aveats, and nuts have several to con-
known as the reward centers because they send signals of pleasure when we do things that keep us, or our species, going, like eating and having sex. (The scans, known as
sider. Their high fat content generates the powerful
functional MRIs, don't measure neural activity, but rather
changes in blood flow, which is a good indicator.) To quote the old candy-bar a lot of them. Two cups of slogan, sometimes you feel mixed nuts can pack 1,600 like a nut; sometimes you don't. calories. "It's been our experience "When I travel, I t ake nuts," said Barbara Rolls, that some people like them director of the Laboratory less and l es s o ver t i m e," for the Study of H uman Mattes said. "And some learn Ingestive Behavior at Penn to like them more and more, State and the author of so that they get unhappy when allure that food scientists
call mouth feel, making it tempting to wolf down
"The Ultimate Volumetrics Diet." "They're compact
the trial is over and their free
supply gets cut off." My own trip through the w hen you're stuck on a scanner was just a trial run to runway for hours. But I do get a taste of the experiment, find them easy to overeat." and I got only three almonds and energy-dense, great
Also, diets c ommonly
to eat. But an hour later, in
fail (and quickly) when people become bored, or
choosing a place for dinner,
back t o
I zeroed in on some pad Thai
and went straight for the le ss-nutritious chopped peanuts.
f eel deprived, and
turn
foods. Can nuts even come
close to holding their own against the Oreo'? This is w h ere M attes'
current study comes in. He is trying to determine
Maybe we should consider manners and polite behavior
whether nuts have staying
the ultimate nonsolids for chil-
power as a substitute for
dren to identify and master, new real-life learning oppor-
mplements Heeuc '3vi fcv'i ew J 70 SW Century Dr., Ste. 145 Bend, OR 97702• 541-322-7337 complementshomeinteriors.com
tunities that arise when fami-
lies gather at the table. Central oregon
•
Simple nutritional lessons taught by an 18-month-old By Barbara Quinn The Monterey County Herald
It's good to experience the
joy of my 18 month-old granddaughter this Christmas. Life is pretty simple when you're 18 months old. And the holiday with this little one has reinforced for me some sim-
ple and yet profound nutrition truths.
of her busy little body.
tle hands and fingers.
fast. And lunch. And dinner. I notice how adept Frances' little
Berries are good for break-
"Beenz?" Frances echoes back to me when I offer her
Milk and water are excellent fluids for kiddos. "Melk? e
fingers have become at picking up blueberries and raspberries and popping them into her mouth. Thesebaby-sized whole fruits nourish her better than
my homemade pintobeans
Frances says as I fill her sippy cup for dinner with whole can provide every nutrient a milk. "Waatew?" she says as growing child needs, beans she slugs down plain water come pretty darn close. Rich after pushing her new wooden juice and are loaded with nutri- in protein, calcium, iron, mag- toy duck around the room. ents and other substances that nesium and folate, this simple No wonder this kid is so agfortify the rapidly-dividing cells food comes well-suited for lit- ile and strong. for lunch. While no one food
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JAN 2, 2014
FITNESS ROAD TO FITNESS
The 12monthsof fitness: Strengthexercises Photos and video of theseexercises arewidely available on the Internet through YouTube orsuch sources asthe American Council on Exercise's Exercise Library at www.acefitness.org.
FIRST QUARTER:
SECOND QUARTER:
THIRD QUARTER: FOURTH QUARTER: Three rounds of: Heavy lifts. To stay safe, consider 1. Walking lunges with weights having a trainer checkyour form. (8-10 reps per leg) Three rounds of: 2. Sitting military press with dumb1. Back squat with barbell (6-8 reps) bells (8-10 reps per side) 2. Bench press (6-8 reps) 3. Seated row with a resistance band 3. Deadlift (6-8 reps) (8-10 reps) 4. Standing barbell press (6-8 reps) 4. Lying dumbbell chest press (8-10 — Special to TheWashington Post
Three rounds of: Try increasing the challenge when 1. Squats (12-15 reps) possible by using small dumbbells or a 2. Plank hold (30 seconds; can be me dicine ball (5-15 pounds). done on hands or forearms, knees or Thr ee rounds of: 1. Alternating lunges (12-15 repsfor feet) 3. Bosu ball squats (12-15 reps; the each leg) Bosu adds abalance component to the 2 .Pushups or floor press (12-15 squats, which encourages good form r eps) and posture) 3. Mountain climbers (15 reps for 4. Hip bridges (12-15 reps; hold eac h leg) three seconds at the top) 4. Bent-over row (12-15 reps) Rest one minute betweeneachset.
reps)
Squats are a key strength exercise. Thinkstcck
' e-e ucain ' our o • Alexander Technique teacheshow to undo badhabits, develop proper bodyalignment The Washington Post
from a chair in her home of-
to determine why the intensity of the exercise mattered. And in September, I wrote
Continued from D1 B ut t h e l e s son t h a t seemed to emerge most persistently from the f i t-
ness-related studies published was that intensity
matters, especially if you wish to complete your workout quickly. The most popular col-
By Lenny Bernstein Marian Goldberg grasps my head gently but firmly, her hands along my jawbones. Ever so slowly, almost imperceptibly, she helps me rise
Intensity
about two studies showing that strenuous exercise blunt-
ed volunteers' appetites after workouts more effectively than longer sessions of easy exercise did. The studies were small, though, and involved only younger, overweight men. D etermining
w h e th-
er the results are applicable margin, detailed "The Sci- to other people, including entific 7-Minute Workout," women, requires additional a concept that was appeal- experiments. umn that I wrote, by a wide
4g' p»
8~~$
ing, no doubt, because the time commitment was so
fice until I'm standing. That one simple movement, which I probably do a dozen times ormore every day,feels slightly different this time. It's
Other studies that I wrote
about emphasized how pervasive the effects of any
slight. But the vigor required was considerable; amount and type of exercise to gain health benefits can be. One of my favorite from those seven minutes, experiments of 2013 detailed
difficult to p i npoint exactly
you needed to m aintain
why, but it does. The reason, Goldberg ex-
a thumping heart rate wheels for several weeks reand spray sweat droplets sponded far better to stressful
plains, is that this time I more
around the room.
situations than sedentary an-
closely approximated the way nature intended for me to get up. I didn't shove off with my hands after hours of slumping
A lmost h alving t h e time spent exercising was also effective, a later and likewise popular column
imals, in large part, it seems,
showed. In that study, out-
iety. At a molecular level, the runners' brains were calmer
ran on a treadmill for a mere four minutes three times a week for 10 weeks
than those of their sedentary
R.
over a computer. I didn't lean forward with my t orso and
of-shape volunteers who
drag my lower half out of the chair. With my head and neck leading the way, I gathered myself a little better and stood up a little more naturally, one
body part following another, working together, a bit more in balance. It's impossible to reduce the
Alexander Technique, a philosophy of movement more
Michael S. Williamson IThe Washington Post
Marian Goldberg works with "student" Lisa Branic at the Alexander Technique Center of Washington
raised their maximal oxygen uptake, or endurance capacity, by about 10 percent and significantly improved their blood sugar control and blood pressure profiles.
h ow rodents that
ran on
b ecause their b r a ins c o n -
tained specialized cells that dampened unnecessary anx-
lab mates.
Perhaps the year's most remarkable studies examined the effectof exercise on our
DNA. In several experiments, which I wrote about in July, scientists found that exercise
reshaped genes in human cells, changing how atoms
The results undercut a
attached to the outside of in-
in McLean, Va. "This isn't treatment in anyconventional sense of the word," Goldberg said. "We are ple rise from a chair, but at its re-educating." core is a strikingly simple, easily understood concept: What "It's about non-doing. ails us is the result of bad hab-
common excuse for skipping workouts. "One of the main reasons people give" for not exercising is that they don't have time, said
dividual portions of our DNA.
its we've learned, from early in
Arnt Erik Tjonna, a post-
months of moderateexercise
doctoral fellow at Norwegian University of Science and Technology, who led the study. But they emphasized
profoundly remodeled genes related to the risk for diabe-
the potency of hard effort.
er study found that a single session of bike riding altered
than a century old, to one sim-
childhood, about how we use our bodies. And the best way
'I I
to rid ourselves of pains in our
back, neck and elsewhere is to consciously unlearn those habits. " This i sn't
g
t r eatment i n
— Marian Goldberg, of the
any conventional sense of the word," said Goldberg, whose Alexander Technique Center of Washington is actually in McLean, Va. "We are re-educating." In that case, I'd probably qualify for remedial education. I am round-shouldered,
Alexander Technique Center
he began to lose his voice during performances. Doctors couldn't help him, so Alexan-
I find myself in all manner of and the Alexander Technique, which leave practitioners feeling slouches in my desk chair, un- aligned. consciously seeking a position have the strongest of core muscles. None of that really matters to practitioners of the Alexan-
der began touse mirrors to observe himself delivering his lines. He noticed that he held his head and neck in a way that
inhibited his delivery and set out to change it, ultimately developing his core theories about proper body alignment and shedding bad habits as he made a successful return
Mom tilts her head to the side to the stage. Alexander's work or Dad dips his shoulders as has been particularly useful
better after the first session, as
I did, though I definitely had some stiffness and discomfort the next morning. My first
he walks, and we tend to imcrammed into small desks for
United States, in places such
f or a t hletic e ff ort. M a y be the only one of its kind. The there'sa car accident or other Feldenkrais method preach-
Pilates. trauma in our past. or posture problems, and all Repeated practice each day can improve. Some will take a is critical, Goldberg tells me, Birth of the technique handful of "lessons" and find so my neuromuscular system Goldberg herself f ound what they're looking for; oth- can learn new habits. the Alexander Technique in "It's about non-doing," she ers may stay on for 20 or 30 1978 after she sought relief sessions or more as they seek said. "It's about not doing your from back pain caused by an additional guidance in reno- habits, learning to do less. accident, not unlike the techvating the way they move. Most things are about learn- nique's founder, Frederick A 2008 study published in ing to do more." Matthias Alexander. Born in It's not just work that impos- Australia in 1869, Alexander the British Medical Journal was a successful actor and
nique to "have long-term ben- bodies. As children, we notice, "elocutionist" — a kind of orefits for patients with chronic perhaps unconsciously, that atorical entertainer — when
es a similar philosophy, and as Goldberg d emonstrated and explained the Alexander
Technique, I was reminded of the little I know about yoga.
All this bodily re-education takes time, patience and persistence, but it seems well
worth it if you are suffering and have the inclination. The
next time you get up from your chair, take a look at the way you move and see whether it's time to go back to school.
back pain," and noted that six
lessons followed by regular exercises were nearly as effective as 24 lessons. Goldberg charges $65 for a half-hour lesson.
About'non-doing' She says most people feel
percent of their maximum aerobic capacity for those
Where Buyers And Sellers Meet i ii
•
is frankly unpleasant. But in four minutes they were
done. There were other hints throughout the year that
'•
-
• • Classrfreds wwwlendbulletin.com
ior of the gene changes. In one of the studies, res earchers found that s i x
tes and heart d isease. But
for those of us too impatient to wait six months, the othgenes in volunteers' muscle
cells. The effects showed up whether the pedaling was easy or strenuous, but, in line
with so much of the year's exercise science, were more pronounced when cyclists rode vigorously. Still, for everyone, as one
exerting yourself vigorously might have unique of the scientists told me, the payoffs, compared with studies are an important and less strenuous exercise. In inspirational reminder of "the a study that I wrote about
robust effect exercise can
a few weeks ago, for in- have on the human body, even stance, people who walked at the level of our DNA." briskly, at a pace of 17 minutes per mile or faster, generally lived longer than those men and women who
strolled during their walks, at apace of20 m inutes per mile or slower, although the study was not designed
hours at a time. Sports coach- as Great Britain. es teach us to gather ourselves Alexander's technique isn't
the time with severe back pain
es unnatural positions on our
to actors and musicians, and
itate them. In school we are is more popular outside the
lesson also included Goldberg der Technique, Goldberg says. stretching me on a massage Students — in the Alexander table and "lengthening" my vernacular, we are not clients neck and torso muscles, which or patients — come to her all reminded me of the goals of
found the A l exander Tech-
The volunteers ran at 90 four minutes, a level that
a combination of g e netics, Robert Presutti / New York Times News Service tension and more than three Lisa Avellino, the owner of the Susan Marlowe Fitness Club For decades hunched over com- Women in Scarsdale, N.Y., left, works with a client. The popularputers, often under the pres- ity of yoga and Pilates have raised somepeople's awareness of sure of newspaper deadlines. posture, as have lesser-known disciplines like Feldenkrais, Rolfing
that will allow a little more time at the keyboard. I don't
It's about not doing your habits, learning to do less. Most things are about learning to do more."
As a result, I wrote, the behav-
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MENTAL HEALTH
THURSDAY, JAN 2, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN D 5
MEDICINE INNOVATION
Magnetic medicaldevicehelps acid-reflux diseasesufferers ORLANDO, Fla.— For two years, Milagros Camacho struggled with what shethought was heartburn after every meal. At night, stomach acid would sometimes comeout of her mouth and nose. Evendrinking water would set off her symptoms. "I was afraid to eat," said Camacho, 55.Eventually she was diagnosedwith gastroesophageal reflux disease, or GERD.It's a chronic condition that can eventually lead to cancer of the esophagus. But after undergoing an innovative surgical procedure at Florida Hospital Celebration Health, Camacho is symptom-free and finally able to eat normally. Camachohadwhat'sknown asaLINX device implanted around heresophagus. A ring of titanium magnets similar to a bracelet, it stretches to allow the patient to swallow food and liquid but contracts to keepstomach acid out of the esophagus. Side effects are minor and rare but can include difficulty swallowing. Occasionally patients will complain that they canfeel the device, but Cama-
cho so far has nocomplaints. Her procedure wasperformed by Dr. James "Butch" Rosser, ageneral surgeon for whom the issue is personal. As ayoung medical student working at aVeterans Affairs hospital in Mississippi, he treated his uncle, whowas suffering from esophageal cancer. That uncle, KoreanWarveteran Ludie Mitchell Jr., later died of the disease. "There needs to beillumination on this issue becauseit'ssoneedless,"Rosser,59,said.According to the National Cancer Institute, there are slightly fewer than18,000 newcases of esophageal cancer eachyear and morethan15,000 deaths. It's the fastest-growing type of cancer in the U.S., Rosser said, up 600percent since1972. "This problem is increasing as our diet gets more fatty and asour BMI gets higher," he said. And Americans' increasing reliance onpills to treat heartburn, he said, canactually makethe problem worse. "People are self-medicating, or their doctors are putting them onpills," he said. "The symp-
Lice
sure clients that "Lice are very
good at holding on to hair. And they are not microscopic. You're going to see them if they're on a pillow."
Continued from 01 Once
it
has
set up s hop, th e insect lays pinhead-sized tan or whitish-colored eggs,
She also says there's no
need to wash everything in a home where lice
k nown as n i ts. T h e
mother louse exc retes a k i n d
glue to
have been spotted;
she'll tell people to wash their bedding
of
c ement
t he nits t o t h e hair shaft, close
not because there are
bugs in the bed (there probably aren't — and if there are, they're dying) but because lice leave droppings, which look like tiny dark specks. "You
to the scalp so its warmth can i n cubate them. They hatch about
a week later into baby lice, called nymphs. In a typical
don't want to be sleeping on lice excrement," she said.
infestation, there are more
nits than bugs since an adult louse will lay an average of five to 10 eggs a day and a newborn female needs only
• Youneed special shampoos. Shampoos such as Nix and Rid kill live lice
10 days to become
every day. "Seeing lice in their kid's hair," Eckert said, "makes a normally sane person insane." The American Associ-
I
5
month or more by the time it
is discovered and poses little risk to others from the infestation," its guidelines say, "he or she should remain in class but be discouraged from close direct head contact with others."
gHOF'=9
~gghAV~
It doesn't help that there's
For thosewith A-fib, the beat goesoff New York Times News Service
When a lean, healthy, physically active person has a stroke, seemingly out of the blue, the cause may well be a
New
called an ambulance,and
within minutes she was at New Y or k M e thodist HospitaL There she was
in her brain. The t reat-
most common active ingre-
ment spared her lasting disability. "I had high blood pressure which was completely controlled with medica-
The condition is also becoming moreprevalent atany age, experts say, because of a rise in three leading risk factorshighblood pressure,diabetes and obesity. These conditions can dam-
necessary to repeatedly check a patient's clotting ability to
age the heart's electrical sys-
half of A-fib patients are either
tem, Ruff wrote last year in the journal Circulation. 0th-
not on an anti-coagulant or on
tion, but I didn't know I had atrial fibrillation until I had
some insecticides. Already this year, at least
a stroke," Bolen said in an
one U.S. school district
slows blood flow from the heart and was the likely
"Evolutionary resistance
has gotten much worse in the past 10 or 20 years," Clayton said. When he grew up in the 1960s, he says,"I never heard of anybody who had lice. Now they're very, very common." But Eckert says that, pesticide resistance or no, the key
is "meticulous combing"
that cause the heart's uptheir usual c oordination.
This sends an erratic signal
pling and sometimes fatal consequence. "As many as 1 in 5 or 6 strokes is due to atrial
each daughter's hair, inch byinch.
son was exposed to someone with head lice." Bon-
Eckert and Lice Hap-
pens' 12 other "lice specialists" can do a full comb-out
wit says a louse, which is
"about the length of George Washington's nose on a quar-
ter," doesn't have discriminating tastes: It wants warmth for
its eggs and a regular "blood meal." It doesn't matter if the
dish is dirty or clean.
• Your pet can carry lice. Lice feed only on humans. Fleas and ticks are another story.
• Lice can jump and fly. No. They just crawl. That's
why kids are so much more likely than adults to have lice:
in an average of 90 minutes lllustrations by Patterson Clark The Washington Post
There are almost as many misconceptions about the parasites that can lead to misguided treatments like covering a child's head with mayonnaise in an attempt to smother the lice, or using a Shop-Vac to get rid of the lice. The key to getting rid of lice is "meticulous combing" with a fine-toothed metal comb that removes the eggs from the hair shaft.
for girls and as little as 15 or 20 minutes for boys (the price is $100 an hour plus a service-call fee), and they will teach parents how to do the
necessary follow-up combing for the next 14 days.
•You can suf focate lice. Eckert says she'll show up for house calls and parents will come to the door with their child's hair covered in petro-
interacting, whether playing or talking or sleeping together at slumber parties (which are top-notch settings for lice transmission). A few lice can
leum jelly, wrapped in cellophane and topped with a shower cap."Theyread online some•Your house can where that you can suff ocate get infested with lice. lice with Vaseline, olive oil or While scientists agree that mayonnaise," she said. "They lice almost always spread by get dubious results at best, and crawling from head to head, it's not going to kill the nits."
quickly scuttle over hair to
they're less sure how often
a new head while, say, kids press close to take photos, snuggle up to watch a movie or share a pillow. While adults can get lice from their chil-
they travel from head to pillow to head. The bugs "probably don't voluntarily leave a scalp," said Dale Clayton, a lice expert and biology profes-
• lf youhave lice, your head will be itchy.
dren, they rarely are the fam-
sor at the University of Utah in
few weeks into the infestation.
They often touch heads when
Many people with lice don't
fibrillation, and in a lot of
these people the rhythm disorder was undetected before the stroke," said Dr. Christian Ruff, c ar-
diologist at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston, who studies new treat-
m entsforthe disorder. People with symptomat-
ic A-fib, as it is commonly called, may experience periodic palpitations (a sense that the heart is pounding or f luttering), chest discomfort, shortness of
Researchers at the Univer-
sald. This concern has spurred
the development of several other anti-coagulants that are considerablysafer and easiof premature atrial contrac- er to take, but also far more tions, which can be detected expensive than the generic by a Holter monitor worn for warfarin. The Food and Drug 24 hours, face a significantly Administration has already increasedrisk of developing approved three such medicaA-fib. Dr. Gregory Marcus, tions — apixaban (Eliquis), the senior author and director dabigatran etexilate mesylate of clinical research at UCSF's (Pradaxa) and rivaroxaban cardiology division, theorized (Xarelto) — and others are bethat eradicating these prema- ing studied. cisco, reported this month in
ture contractions with drugs
Patients with A-fib are also
or a procedure that destroys oftenprescri bed drugs, like the malfunctioning area of the amiodarone hydrochloride heart may reduce the risk of (Cordarone) and verapamthe rhythm disorder. il (Calan and other brand Step I in treating A-fib is to names), to normalize the rate identifyand correct revers- and rhythm o f t h e h e art's ible risk factors. Step 2 — and contractions. Sometimes an most i mportant, a ccording electrical shock to the heart, to Ruff — is to prevent blood called cardioversion, is used clots from forming by treating to restore a normal rhythm. patients with anti-coagulants. When neither medication The most commonly pre- n or c ardioversion i s a b l e scribed and least costly treat- to maintain n o rmal h e art ment is warfarin, also known rhythm, an invasive proceby the brand name Couma- dure called ablation can be din, in use for more than half used to knock out the area a century. But while highly or areas of the heart sending effective at reducing the risk out errant signals. A catheter of stroke, warfarin is a very is inserted into a vein, usualtricky drug. It interacts with ly through a small cut in the a number of foods, especially groin, and snaked up to the those like spinach and kale heart. Small electrodes placed
breath, unusual fatigue or dizziness. A -fib can s how u p during an electrocardio- that are rich in vitamin K, and in the heart identify malfuncgram, or EKG, but because other drugs that a patient may tioning areas, which are then the abnormal rhythm may have to take. destroyed. not occur all the time, people suspected of having the condition usually must
wear a Holter monitor for
Juniper Ridge Clinic
days or weeks to obtain
a certain diagnosis. This small portable d evice, connected to electrodes on the chest, continuously re-
cords the heart's rhythm and sends the data to a
itch. For those who do, the
doctor or company for
itchiness may not begin until a
evaluation. A-fib is more common
ily members to bring the bugs Salt Lake City. "Because if you Since head scratching isn't home. (As Bonwit points out, think about it, that's danger- always present as a warning "In the typical office, there's ous for them. But they may get sign, many experts suggest probably not a whole lot of brushed off from time to time." that parents do periodic lice hugging going on.") Eckert says shetriestoreas- checks on their children.
er risk factors include a prior
per chambers, the atria, to Annals of Internal Medicine contract rapidly, without that people with a high rate
times each over the past seven years. Sessoms, who lives in
do with whether the per-
level. Ruff said that more than
sity of California, San Fran-
require treatment to prevent this potentially crip-
combing out the nits from
bleeding while maintaining an effective anti-coagulant
characterized by multiple irregular electrical signals
ed in her stroke. About 3 million Ameri-
ters, ll and 13, have had "the four-letter L-word" at least four
she has spent the length of "two Disney movies"
reduce the risk of excessive
cans have atrial fibrillation,
cause of the clot that result-
back-breaking work," said Kay Sessoms, whose two daugh-
Bethesda, Md., adds that
People metabolize warfarin
an ineffective dose. Fearful of a hemorrhage in the brain, or heart attack, overactive thy- uncontrolled bleeding in an roid, sleep apnea, excessive al- accident or emergency surcohol consumption, abnormal gery, doctors may prescribe heart valves, lung disease and an amount of warfarin insufcongenital heart defects. ficient to prevent a stroke, he
interview. The c ondition
er chambers that supply blood to the lungs and rest of the body. People with the disorder face a much higher risk of stroke, and most
sity Health System outside Chicago. "It has to
Illustration by Scott Bakal/ New YorkTimes News Service
given the drug tissue plas-
from the hair shaft. "It's time-consuming,
expert at Loyola Univer-
':; Il>~::r:i)
home. Luckily, her husband, Jack, heard her fall,
little beasts operate. Here are a few common myths:
atric infectious-disease
ati@~
York, then 67, who said she collapsed last year at
to the ventricles, the low-
~/
„e.
S uch was the f ate of
P amela Bolen of
comb that removes the eggs
Andrew Bonwit, a pedi-
rf(3~~a ~"
,' ~c „(tf'Pgfte~
.'~P„p )f
h e art r h ythm
abnormality called atrial fibrillation.
such confusion about how the
"Head lice has nothing to do with hygiene," said
..~;./+~ fffftr,t' ~~PP (geP
riil~)Nf
By Jane E. Brody
with a fine-toothed metal
• You're more likely to get lice if you're dirty.
reflux.
at different rates, making it
has reported an uptick in cases of super lice.
lice infestation likely has had the infestation for one
— David Breen,Orlando Sentinel
annually, a number expected
are developing a resistance to
child with an active head-
The main constraint of the LINXprocedure is that it forces patients to eat more slowly and chew more carefully, which is healthier anyway. Camacho hopesother people will heed the The Associated Press file photo warning to get their symptoms checkedout. The LINX device — a small, flexible band of "Don't let it happen like me," shesaid, "waiting magnetic beads — is designed to help the two years and suffering." esophageal sphincter stay closed to stop the
to double in the next 25 years.
Infact,useoftheseproducts has led to super lice, bugs that
stay in school: "Because a
to vomit.
was blocking circulation
of the nits.
ation of Pediatrics suggests that kids with lice
L "'
In addition, it makes it very difficult for patients to burp, Rosser said, andphysically impossible
not all of them. Many lice have developed resistance to the dients, permethrin and pyrethrins. And they don't kill all
tears andpanic from parents
than LINX.
minogen activator, or tPA, to dissolve the clot that
— but not always and
a mom. So the family tree grows quickly. Head lice are undeniably gross. Eckert says she faces
toms may goaway, but the problem is still there." The LINX procedure has sofar been performed on 2,000 people worldwide. Rosser is the only Central Florida surgeon trained to do the procedure. The band is implanted using four to six small incisions in a surgery much less invasive thanearlier techniques. Theprevious method, known as Nissen fundoplication, involves disconnecting the stomach from the spleenandthen manipulating the stomach. It has amuch longer recovery time
in men, tall people and the elderly. As the popula-
Tom Coehlo, FNP-C • Family health care 7 yrs and above • Treatment of adolescents and adults with ADD
Office 541.385.5515
tion ages, the incidence is rising; more than 460,000
new cases are diagnosed
• School Age Vaccines available • U.S.DOT/National Registry of Certified Medical Examiners
•
•
' •
Please call office for questions.
•
I
Currently accepting private insurance
D6
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JAN 2, 2014
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT TV TODAY
ewreai s ow oo TV SPOTLIGHT "Sex Sent Me to the ER" 10 p.m. Saturdays, TLC
By Neil Genzlinger New York Times News Service
The phrase "saved the worst for last" comes to mind. On Saturday night, the wits
or a s inence
10a.m. on GOLF,"PGATuur Gulf" —The PGATour returns for 2014 with the HyundaiTournament of Champions, featuring golfers who wonTour events in 2013. Thoseeligible to participate at the Plantation Course atKapalua in Maui, Hawaii, areAdam Scott, BrandtSnedeker, Dustin Johnson, Jason Dufnerand Matt Kuchar.
E ntertainment, t hat b r i n gs volve more than mere overexus "Untold Stories of the ER," ertion. An ironing board plays which r e c ently p r o m oted a pivotal part in one of the
an episode with the tagline three cases in the premiere. "Stuck in a Toilet." So, off the What really m akes "Sex bat, you're expecting a certain Sent Me to the ER" distinctivelevel of quality. But "Sex Sent ly unpleasant, though, are the Me to the ER" aims much lower than whatever lowest com-
re-enactments of the incidents
being described by the actual participants. It's not that they
mon denominator you were anticipating. are X- or even R-rated. It's out "Sex Sent Me to the ER," a It shouldn't be surprising that they are given a leering, four-part series about real-life that sex occasionally requires heavy-breathing quality that emergencyroom visits,w hose medical a ttention b ecause, might be intended to be funtitle has been deemed so irre- done with conviction, it can be ny but that makes you want to sistible that the show will also physically rigorous. And be- send your brain out for a steam be seen on a sister channel, cause humans are an innova- deaning. If the medical emerDiscovery Fit & Health via New York Times News Service Discovery Fit & Health. tive species, it is also to be ex- gencies themselves don't cause A re-enactment of a bedroommishap in TLC's newreality series The series is from the same pected that the cases in a show you to swear off sex, these "Sex Sent Me to the ER." Misadventures in the bedroom, and perproduction company, GRB of this type will sometimes in- wretched recreations will. haps elsewhere, are fodder for the show. at TLC sent off 2013 by rolling
5:30 p.m. onESPN, "2014 Allstate Sugar Bowl" — Don't be surprised to see a chip on the collective shoulder of the Alabama Crimson Tide asthey take the field tonight in NewOrleansagainst Oklahoma in theSugar Bowl. AJ
McCarron and the third-ranked two-time national champswere knocked out ofthis year's title game by alate-seasonupset loss to Auburn. Sp.m. ong, "The BigBang Theory" — Leonard (Johnny Galecki) tries to help Penny(Kaley
Cuoco)getoveradisappointing
'Mary3ane' — the seriesandthe woman —want it all By David Wiegand
Gabrielle Union plays the
San Francisco Chronicle
title role of a TV news anchor
Viewers had a preview of BET's very solid new series "Being Mary Jane" in the form of the network's first original film in June. The story of a single woman trying to balance a busy career, a needy family and a complicated personal life was strong enough to make viewers want to see how things
who also has demanding family responsibilities. Her mom (Margaret Avery) is battling cancer. Her brother Patrick (Richard Brooks) has a teenage daughter named Niecy (Raven Goodwin) who keeps getting pregnant. Her dad (Richard Roundtree) and younger brother, Paul Jr. (B.J. Britt), all need
turned out for Mary Jane Paul, and now we get our chance
attention as well. Her job is safe, but the net-
when the series premieres at 10 p.m. Tuesday.
on edge, and the competition for ratings is greater than ever. Her best friend, Mark (Aaron Spears), is thinking about coming out, because, after
credible contemporary woman. What makes her credible'? That she isn't just beautiful, accomplished and well meaning: She also makes mistakes. She's what Mary Richards
all, it was OK for CNN's Don
might be in the 21st century.
their jobs. That puts everyone
many times at work. OK, so her
family needs her. But does her family really need her as much as she thinks they do or has she determined that they can't deal with their own issues? All these things not only
Lemon, while her producer, Mary Jane's problem isn't Kara (Lisa Vidal), is feeling the that she tries to do too much pressure to boost ratings at all
costs, even if the cost is spend- much. She has idealistic iming less time with her kids. ages of what her life should The series, created by Mara
Brock Akil, works for a num- make it that way despite how work is going through a major ber of r e asons, including unrealistic it is. She is petty upheaval and people are losing Union's performance as a very when her mom calls one too
ami uarres oversister's a
ible, they make her more en-
dearing. More i m portant, Mary Jane's flaws have noth-
employee(OdetteAnnable)on a new project.Alan(JonCryer)
ing to do with whether a wom-
advises Jenny(Amber Tamblyn) to be more openwith her girlfriend, Brooke (Aly Michalka), or risk the relationship ending, in the
an can "have it all." Of course she can, but that doesn't mean she's immune from screwing up in the process.
be and is determined to try to
MOVIE TIMESTOQAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-D and IMAXmovies. • Movie times aie subject to change after press time. t
Dear Abby: My sister "Nicole" faked severalpregnancies to keep her boyfriends around until they wised up. She is now really pregnant by a married man. Nicole has a long criminal history and has been in and out of jail for various offenses. She's now facing drug charges that DFP,R
onmy own since I was 18. I own my home, my carand have no credit concerned with this innocent baby card debt, but my mother refuses to than her drugged-out daughter. Am acknowledgeme asan adult. I wrong to feel hurt and think my When I do simple chores or cook mother is choosing her over me? meals, she acts surprised. She conthat the needs of this baby HAVE
to comefirst? She should be more
— Heartbroken in Alabama
stantly pleads with me to move
Deer Heartbroken: back home because she insists I Stop personalizing can't take care of myself and rethis as a choice your
fuses to discuss it any further than
years. If she's found guilty, my m other will get custody of the baby so it
mother is making be- belittling me. My friends say what tween you and your she's doing constitutes abuse. How sister. Try instead to can I deal with her condescending make her understand attitude when I'm with her? — At My Wit's End how traumatic it will be to a child
won't have to stay in foster care.
who could be as old as 10 or 15 to
for the next 10 or 15
ABBY
My parents are in their late 50s be handed over to a virtual stranger and financially capable, but they're who has no job, no money and a long not in the best of health. Mom uphill dimb to try and build a future. plans to raise the child until Nicole Your sister may have always gets out of prison because my sister dreamed of motherhood, but the
Dear Wit's End: Most parents strive to make their children inde-
pendent. Your mother may want you home not because you can't
takecareofyourselfbutbecause she doesn't want to live alone. I wouldn't call that abuse but I do consider it to
"always wanted to be a mom."
most important part of being a par-
My husband and I have been discussing adopting a child and would love to adopt Nicole's baby. If we did, we'd get a child and could
ent — aside from loving a childbe selfish and self-serving. is being PRESENT. If your sister You should not sacrifice your lifeis found guilty, she will be absent style to live with someone as maniplong after her child's primary at- ulative asyourmother. When she attachments will have formed. tacks, laugh and deflect her with hu-
provide the love, safety and security my sister cannot. And the child
If this doesn't convince your
would get a stable home. Mom feels mother to change her mind, you Nicole"deserves" to be a mom, de-
will have no choice but to accept
mor. Assure her that as incompetent
as she thinks you are, you're "muddling through." And if she persists,
spite the fact that she's going to jail her decision and consider adopting point out that if she doesn't ease up, she'llbe seeing less of you. and flits from man to man search- another child. ing for someone to love her. Dear AbbyI'm in my late 20s, sin— Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com How can I get my mother to see gle andhave no children. I have lived or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORTHURSDAY,JAN.2,2014:Thisyearyou jump into the limelight. You also have
goodmoney sense.Trynottobecome too adventuresome and cause yourself a problem. Someone of the opposite sex finds you very charismatic. If you are single, you could develop an intriguing tie with this person. Others are unusually clearabouttheir inStars shuwthe kind terest in you. if you uf dsyyou'llhave are attached, the ** * * * D ynamic two of you could p t choose to indulge a little more than in pastyears. Be * Difficult careful with a higher-up, especially if he or she is an AQUARIUS.Youmight assume that you are on cruise control when you really aren't.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21)
YOURHOROSCOPE be more appreciated than you know. Continue being a good listener. Tonight: Surf the Web.
* ** You coul d betenseovera domestic matter or a misunderstanding with a roommate or family member. Express your concern about what is happening without expectations of a response. Be patient. Tonight: At home with a good book.
CANCER (June21-July 22)
SAGITTARIUS (Nuv.22-Oec. 21)
By Jacqueline Bigar
** * * You might be more in touch with whatyou need than you realize. Sometimes you feel as if you give too much away, but your need to give feels good in ing stronger boundaries. Tonight: Share with a favorite person.
** * * A friend easily could lose his or her cool. Your ability to communicate can and will make a difference here. Don't allow this person to intimidate you. A close friend or loved one could pointyou toward a new venture or interest. Tonight: Hang out with a family member.
LEO (July23-Aug.22)
GAPRICORN (Oec.22-Jan. 19)
many ways.Perhapsconsider establish-
** * * A gentle, kind attitude will be
appreciated. Newscould surprise many
people, including you. Your ability to adapt will emerge. You'll see the total ARIES (March21-April 19) perspective, whereas many people won't. *** * You or a keyperson inyour life could become hot-tempered when dealing Someone's words sound harsher than he with an interpersonal issue.Thepresence or she anticipated. Tonight: Speakyour mind. of your friends might clear up who is doing whatto whom. Remember, it takes VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) two to tango. Tonight: A dream's realiza** * * Be careful with your funds and tion could be on the horizon. countyour change. Make sure your wallet is nicely tucked away. You might want to TAURUS (April 20-May20) indulge a child or loved one. Recognize ** * Tension builds. As much as you might like to diffuse a situation, anyaction that there are other ways that do not cost much or are free. Tonight: Get into the you take could prove to be problematic. pace of a normal week. Tune in to your higher self, and attempt to see the big picture. Good will could LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) come through. Tonight: A possibility will *** You seem to bereleasing pent-up become a reality. feelings. You easily could snap at a family member over a domestic issue. A close GEMINI (May 21-June 20) ** * * Keep reaching out for new ideas. associate might be unpredictable, which Consider planning a vacation for you and is one of the reasons you are disgruntled. a friend or loved one. Your ability to touch Recognizewherethe problem comes someone and calm him or her down will from. Tonight: Let off some steam.
** * Be aware of the costs of proceedingasyouhave.You m ightnotbe comfortable with everything that is going down. Your finances demand attention and precision. A family member once more could make demands that you might feel you can't meet. Tonight: Pay bills first.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) ** * * Many thoughts might be going through your mind. You would be wise not to discuss all of them, as you tend to go backand forth betweenideas.Someone from a distance could be irritable. Use caution with this person. Tonight: Someone wants to court you.
PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * Defer to someone else, and know full well how this person will approach what you deem a difficult situation. Once this individual walks in your shoes, he or she will have great respect for you, your decisi ons and how you handlechallenges. Tonight: Get some extra R and R. © King Features Syndicate
I
I I
Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX, 680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • 47 RONIN(PG-13) 4:20 • 47 RONIN3-0 (PG-13) I, 7:20, 10:20 • AMERICANHUSTLE(R) 12: l0, 3:30, 635 940 • ANCHORMAN 2: THE LEGEND CONTINUES (PG-13) 11:25 a.m., 12:25, 2:15, 3:20, 5:05, 6:45, 8:05, 9:35 • THE BOOKTHIEF (PG-13) 12:I5,3:25, 6:30 • FROZEN(PG)12:35, 3:40, 6:20, 9:05 • GRUDGEMATCH(PG-13) 11:15a.m., 2:05, 4:50, 7:40, 10:25 • THE HOBBIT:THEDESOLATIONOFSMAUG(PG-13) 11 a.m., 2:30, 6:15, 9:50 • THE HOBBIT:THEDESOLATION OF SMAUG IMAX 3-0 (PG-13) 11:05 a.m., 2:40, 6:30, 10 • THE HUNGER GAMES: CATCHINGFIRE (PG-13) 11:20 a.m., 3:30, 6:45, 9:55 • JUSTIN BIEBER'SBELIEVE(PG) 11:50 a.m., 2:10, 4:30, 6:55, 9:15 • NEBRASKA (R) 11a.m., 5:35 • PHILOMENA(PG-13) 9:30 • SAVING MR.BANKS(PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 2:50, 6:05, 9 • THE SECRET LIFE OFWALTER MITTY (PG) 11:10 a.m., 2, 4:45, 7:30, 10:15 • TYLERPERRY'S A MAOEA CHRISTMAS (PG-13)9:25 • WALKINGWITH DINOSAURS(PG) 1:55, 7:15 • WALKINGWITH DINOSAURS3-0 (PG)11:35 a.m., 5 • THEWOLF OF WALL STREET (R)Noon,1:45,4:10,8,9 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies. •
the newepisode"The Hesitation Ramification." SimonHelberg also stars. 9:31 p.m. on 6, "Twuanda Half Men" —Walden (Ashton Kutcher) teams upwith a former
make Mary Jane more cred-
— it's that she tries to be too
acting gig, which leads her to pose a bold question. Sheldon andRaj (Jim Parsons, KunalNayyar) work on their respective social challenges — the former's deficient sense of humor andthe latter's awkwardness with women — in
r
I
McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 541-330-8562 • CLOUDYWITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 2 (PG)11:30 a.m., 2:30 • ENOER'SGAME(PG-13) 6 • JACKASSPRESENTS:BA0GRANDPA(R) 9 • After 7p.m.,showsaie21andolderonly.Youngerthan 21 mayattend scieenings befoie 7 p.m. ifaccompanied by a legal guadian. Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • THEARMSTRONGLIE(R)6 • BLUEIS THEWARMEST COLOR (NC-17)8:30 • THE SECRET OFKELLS(no MPAArating) 4 I
I
10p.m. un 29, "TheAssets"Set in1985 and based onatrue story, this new eight-part series tells the story of CIAcounterintelligence officers SandyGrimes and JeanneVertefeuille (Jodie Whittaker, Harriet Walter) and their quest to unmask notorious mole Aldrich Ames (PaulRhys).
Stuart Milligan, JulianOvenden and Christina Colealsostar. 10 p.m. on 58, "Parenthood" — Joel (SamJaeger) intervenes in a confrontation between Ed and Julia (David Denman,Erika Christensen). While Camille (Bon-
nie Bedelia) isaway,Zeek(Craig
Nelson) makes anewfriend. Drew (Miles Heizer) is reminded of some old feelings. Sarah (Lauren Graham) learns moreabout Carl (Josh Stamberg) whenthey attend a fundraiser together. © Zap2it
' NQRTHWEsT CROSSING Aauard-aeinning neighborhood on Bend's teestside. www.northwestcrossing.com
s~a C1ASsIC COVERINGS Also see usfor
I
Redmond Cinemas,1535S.W.OdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • 47 RONIN(PG-13) 11:15 a.m.,1:45, 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 • ANCHORMAN 2: THE LEGEND CONTINUES (PG-13)11 a.m., 1:30, 4, 6:30, 9 • THEHOBBIT:THEDESOLATION OF SMAUG (PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 3, 6:15, 9:30 • WALKINGWITH DINOSAURS(PG)11:15 a.m.,1:15, 3:15, 5:15, 7:15, 9:15 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • ANCHORMAN 2: THE LEGEND CONTINUES (PG-13)2, 4:45, 7:30 • FROZEN(PG) 1:30 • THEHOBBIT:THEDESOLATION OF SMAUG (PG-13) 3:45, 7 • SAVING MR.BANKS(PG-13) 1:45, 4:30, 7:15 • THEWOLF OF WALL STREET (R)2:45,6:30 r$• r
Madras Cinema5,1101 S.W.U.S.Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • 47 RONIN(PG-13) 4:40, 7:20 • ANCHORMAN 2: THE LEGEND CONTINUES (PG-13) 4:30, 7:10 • GRUDGEMATCH (PG-13)4:25,7 • THEHOBBIT:THEDESOLATION OF SMAUG (PG-13) 6:30 • THEHOBBIT:THEDESOLATION OF SMAUG 3-0(PG-13) 3:10 • WALKINGWITH DINOSAURS (PG)4:45,6:50 •
new episode"Tazedin the Lady Nuts."
Awnings, Solar Screens 8 Custom Draperies
(541) 388-441 8
WILSONSsf Redmond 541-548-2066
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•
Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • ANCHORMAN 2: THE LEGEND CONTINUES (UpstairsPG-13) 6:30 • THEHOBBIT:THE DESOLATION OF SMAUG (PG-13)6:15 • The upstaiis screening room (UP) haslimited accessibility.
775SW BonnetWay,Suite120•Bend 541-728-0321 swww.elevationcapitakbiz
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Guns, Hunting & Fishing
Adopt a rescued kitten Donate deposit bottles/ or cat! Fixed, shots, cans to local all vol., ID chip, tested, more! non-profit rescue, for Rescue at 65480 78th feral cat spay/ neuter. St., Bend, Thurs/Sat/ Cans for Cats trailer Sun, 1-5, 389-8420. at Bend Petco; or dowww.craftcats.org nate M-F a t S m ith HANCOCK & MOORE SOFA Sign, 1515 NE 2nd; or at CRAFT, Tumalo. Salmon/Coral cheWant to impress the Call for Ig. quantity nille fabric with diarelatives? Remodel pickup, 541-389-8420. mond pattern. Tradiyour home with the tional styling with www.craftcats.org help of a professional loose pillow back, Labradors AKCdown-wrapped seat from The Bulletin's 2 chocolate males left! cushions, roll arms, "Call A Service Shots, wormed, health/ skirt, two matching Professional" Directory hip guar. 541-536-5385 illows and a r m www.welcomelabs.com p covers. L i k e new Aussie/Heeler mix, MALTESE WANTED condition. $1 000. shots 8 dewormed, Small female, preferably 541-526-1332 $150. 541-977-4686 a puppy. 541-382-2157 Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the Need to get an ad classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! in ASAP? 541-385-5809 Cavalier Puppies, PIT BULL Darling 3-yr- Fax it to 541-322-7253 old female bluenose, Ready 1/16/14. Taking deposits. Only very docile, well be- The Bulletin Classifieds haved, free to right three left. $900/ea. home. 541-610-7210. 541-408-5909 or 541-548-4574. POODLE pups AKC toy, TheBulletin tiny teacup, cuddly people recommends extra ' dogs. 541-475-3889
The Bulletin recommends extra caution when purc hasing products or services from out of the area. Sending cash, QueenslandHeelers checks, or credit inStandard & Mini, $150 f ormation may b e 8 up. 541-280-1537 subjected to fraud. Chihuahua puppies, tiny, www.rightwayranch.wor For more informadpress.com 1st shots/dewormed, tion about an adver$250. 541-977-0035 tiser, you may call Want to impress the the O regon State relatives? Remodel Attorney General's your home with the Office C o nsumer help of a professional Protection hotline at 1-877-877-9392. from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Dachshund mini pieThe Bulletin Professional" Directory servfngcentral oreyons/ncefarr bald male, $400. Call 541-508-0386 for info. Rodent issues? Free adult barn/ shop cats, fixed, shots, s o me friendly, some not. Will deliver. 389-8420 Wolf-Husky pups, beautiful, gentle, $400 ea. 541-977-7019
r
l caution when pur-l
products or, I chasing services from out of I the area. Sending fI cash, checks, or l l credit i n f ormationl may be subjected to l FRAUD. For morel about an s I information advertiser, you mayl
HOH'T IISSTHI S Life Fit R91 Recumbent Bike-
Absolutely like new with new batteryoperates perfectly! Clean, always housed inside home. $2100 new; selling for $975. Great Christmas gift! 541447-2227
Want to impress the relatives? Remodel your home with the help of a professional from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
Nordic Trac A2350. Presents beautifully. Hardly used. A perfect holiday gift. $350.00 Cash and carry. 541-390-1713.
Need to get an ad in ASAP?
State
KIT INCLUDES:
• 4 Garage Sale Signs • $2.00 Off Coupon To Use Toward Your Next Ad
Employment Marketplace Call
RB fttl'4 it Conctgrl cprl cript Dairurc
5 41- 3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9
The Bulletin
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Ad must
include price of si ~ le re o f 85DD or less, or multiple items whose total does not exceed $500. Call Classifieds at 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com
NIKON Buckmaster rifle
scope, $180. Please call 541-815-2560.
Ruger SP-101 .357 Mag with 3 speed loaders. Front night sight, Hogue monogrip. $400 541 -350-0642 Art, Jewelry 8 Furs
l General's O f f i ce l Consumer Protec- • h o t line at I i 1-877-877-9392.
I tion
I TheBulletin I serwny renvaf oregons nce $03
245
Golf Equipment CHECK yOURAD
212
Antiques & Collectibles
14-kt white gold ladies wedding band with a bright polish finish, 1.66 carat diamond Hearts and arrows, round cut, Sl -1 Clarity, F color. Appraised at $15,000. Very unique piece. Asking $9500. 541-281-7815
Oil paintingby noted NY artist Julie Heffernan, 22"x18" framed, $500. 541-548-0675
n d • O r e g o n
97 $ 0 2
264- Snow Removal Equipment 265 - BuildingMaterials 266- Heating and Stoves 267- Fuel and Wood 268- Trees, Plants 8 Flowers 269 - Gardening Supplies 8 Equipment 270- Lost and Found GARAGE SALES 275 - Auction Sales 280 - Estate Sales 281 - Fundraiser Sales 282- Sales Northwest Bend 284- Sales Southwest Bend 286- Sales Northeast Bend 288- Sales Southeast Bend 290- Sales RedmondArea 292- Sales Other Areas FARM MARKET 308 - Farm Equipment and Machinery 316 - Irrigation Equipment 325- Hay, Grain and Feed 333- Poultry, RabbitsandSupplies 341 -Horses and Equipment 345-LivestockandEquipment 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers 358 - Farmer's Column 375- Meat and Animal Processing 383- Produce andFood
ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202 - Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar 8 Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free Items 208- Pets and Supplies 210- Furniture 8 Appliances 211 - Children's Items 212-Antiques& Collectibles 215- Coins 8 Stamps 240 - Crafts and Hobbies 241 -Bicycles and Accessories 242 - Exercise Equipment 243 - Ski Equipment 244 - Snowboards 245 - Golf Equipment 246-Guns,Huntingend Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- Health and Beauty Items 249 - Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253 - TV, Stereo andVideo 255 - Computers 256 - Photography 257 - Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259 - Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - Medical Equipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 263 - Tools 255
260
260
Computers
Misc. Items
Misc. Items
T HE B ULLETIN r e quires computer advertisers with multiple ad schedules or those selling multiple systems/ software, to disclose the name of the business or the term "dealer" in their ads. Private party advertisers are defined as those who sell one computer.
Buying Diamonds How to avoidscam /Gold for Cash and fraud attempts Saxon'9 Fine Jewelers YBe aware of interna541-389-6655 tional fraud. Deal locally whenever posBUYING sible. Lionel/American Flyer trains, accessories. Y Watch for buyers 541-408-2191. who offer more than your asking price and BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS who ask to have Search the area's most money wired or comprehensive listing of handed back to them. classified advertising... Fake cashier checks real estate to automotive, and money orders merchandise to sporting are common. 257 goods. Bulletin Classifieds YNever give out perIillusical Instruments appear every day in the sonal financial inforprint or on line. mation. YTrust your instincts Call 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com and be wary of someone using an The Bulletin escrow service or servingcentral oreronsince ee agent to pick up your BUYING & SE LLING merchandise. Ililason & Hamlin All gold jewelry, silver The Bulletin Baby Grand Piano. and gold coins, bars, servtng cenrral oregon rfnre 1903 Beautiful black lacrounds, wedding sets, quer finish Still unclass rings, sterling sil- WHEN YOU SEE THIS der warranty. ver, coin collect, vinA great Christmas tage watches, dental Gift! $25,000 gold. Bill Fl e ming, MorePixatBendbjjlletin.com (orig. $47,000) 541-382-9419. swingroll61Ogmail. On a classified ad People Look for Information com go to About Products and 541-312-2425 www.bendbulletin.com Services EveryDaythrough to view additional photos of the item. The Bulletin Clnssieeds
•
•
Repair & Supplies J
Visit our HUGE home decor consignment store. New items arrive daily! 930 SE Textron, Bend 541-318-1501
Want to impress the relatives? Remodel your home with the help of a professional to advertise. www.redeuxbend.com from The Bulletin'9 PICK UP YOUR GARAGE SALE KIT at www.bendbugetin.com "Call A Service 1777 SW Chandler G ENERATE SOM E Professional" Directory Ave., Bend, OR 97702 EXCITEMENT in your neighborhood! Plan a The Bulletin garage sale and don't Serving Central Oregon sincelae 241 sertiny cenrrar oregonsince r903 forget to advertise in Bicycles & classified! 541-385-5809. Accessories ESTATE SALE Microfiber sofa, round oak dining set, 2 curio cabinets, king 8 queen beds, dresser, small furniture pieces, newer Panasonic 50" flat screen TV, antique loveseat & desk & art deco sideboard, 3 oak files & computer desk, recliners, Henry Miller spinet piano, lamps, artwork, rugs, bedding & linens, 5 dish sets, 3 flatware sets, Maytag Bravos 2005 Maverick ML7 kitchenware, lots of contemporary pottery, books, Washer & Gas Dryer Mountain Bike, 15" tools, room of craft & floral items/1009 of floral Owner moving. 4 years frame (small). Full pics, 2 bistro sets, lots of outdoor decor, antique old, but only used suspension, Maverick farm primitives, costume jewelry & jewelry suponce per week. s hock, SRAM X O plies, collectibles & more! Top-of-the-line quality. drivetrain & shifters, 9 Fri. & Sat., 9-4, numbers Fri., 8 a.m. Always in home, speed rear cassette, 15th past Reed Market, right at 1st never in garage. 34-11, Avid Juicy disc Nottingham entrance, then 1st right again to Paid $1500 new; brakes. Well t aken 61539 Friar Tuck Ln. selling pair for $475. c are o f. $950 . Attic Estates & Appraisals, 541-350-6822 541-647-2227 541-788-6227. • 10 Tips For "Garage Sale Success!"
advertisers may place an ad with our "QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week3lines 12
249
Fax it to 541-322-7253
Oregoni Attor ney ' The Bulletin Classifieds
I c all t h e
DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL FOR $500 OR LESS? Non-commercial
~2 e e k s
on the first day it runs to make sure it is corAntiques wanted: tools, rect. "Spellcheck" and 210 furniture, marbles,early human errors do ocB/W photography, old Furniture & Appliances 282 292 cur. If this happens to sports gear, cowboy your ad, please conSales Northwest Bend S a les Other Areas items. 541-389-1578 tact us ASAP so that A1 Washerea Dryers corrections and any Garage Sale at 637 NW $150 ea. Full warNOTICE The Bulletin reserves adjustments can be Compass Lanethis Sat., Remember to remove ranty. Free Del. Also the right to publish all made to your ad. 9-3. Outdoor clothing, your Garage Sale signs wanted, used W/D's ads from The Bulletin 541-385-5809 kitchen ac c essories, (nails, staples, etc.) 541-280-7355 newspaper onto The The Bulletin Classified sport equipment & more. after your Sale event Bulletin Internet webis over! THANKS! site. 246 286 Want to impress the From The Bulletin Guns, Hunting Sales Northeast Bend relatives? Remodel The Bulletin and your local utility companies. your home with the & Fishing help of a professional 240 ** FREE ** The Bulletin CASHI! from The Bulletin's servfngcentral oreyons/ncefaa For Guns, Ammo & Crafts & Hobbies Garage Sale Klt "Call A Service Reloading Supplies. www.bendbulletin.com Place an ad in The Professional" Directory 541-408-6900. Bulletin for your gaAGATE HUNTERS rage sale and rePeushers • Saws ceive a Garage Sale The Bulletin is your i • • J • Kit FREE!
A v e . , • Be
S HeW y e u H Stu ff . Add a photo to your Bulletin classified ad for just $15 perweek. Visit ww w . bendbulletin.com, click on "PLACE AN AD" and follow the easy ste ps. All adsappeariil both print andonline. Pleaseallow 24 hoursfor photoprocessingbeforeyour ad appears iII print afid online.
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E2 THURSDAY, JANUARY 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 Employment Opportunities
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Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • I chasing products or I services from out of • area. Sending Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. I the c ash, checks, o r I I credit i n f ormationI Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. • may be subjected to I FRAUD. I more informaThursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. I For tion about an adver- I
you may call Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. I tiser, the Oregon State I I Attorney General'sI C o n s umer x Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri. xl Office Protection hotline atl 1-877-877-9392. I Saturday • • • • . 3:00pm Fri. ILThe Sunday. • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri •
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Can be found on these pages:
528
Loans & Mortgages WARNING The Bulletin recommends you use caution when you provide personal information to companies offering loans or credit, especially those asking for advance loan fees or companies from out of state. If you have
EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools andTraining 454- Looking Ior Employment 470- Domestic & In-HomePositions 476 - EmploymentOpportunities 486 - IndependentPositions
FINANCEANDBUSINESS 507- Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 528- Loans andMortgages 543- Stocks andBonds 558- Business Investments 573 - BusinessOpportunities
648
Houses for Rent General
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PUBLISHER'S NOTICE All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the F air H o using A c t concerns or queswhich makes it illegal tions, we suggest you to a d vertise "any Multiplexes for Sale Need to get an ad consultyour attorney • R ooms for Rent preference, limitation or call CONSUMER Place aphotoin yourprivate party ad disc r imination 2 bdrm, 2 bath duplex PRIVATE PARTY RATES in ASAP? Room fo r r e n t in or HOTLINE, foronly$15.00par week. Starting at 3 lines top-notch, b e a utiful based on race, color, 1000 sq. ft. each side. 1-877-877-9392. area $500/mo. + part religion, sex, handi- landscaped & fenced *UNDER '500in total merchandise Fax it to 541-322-7253 OVER '500 in total merchandise yard, $179,900. cap, familial status, utilities. 541-279-9538. TURN THE PAGE 541-280-1746 marital status or na7 days.................................................. $10.00 4 days.................................................. $18.50 The Bulletin Classifieds tional origin, or an inFor More Ads Good classified ads tell DUPLEX 14 days................................................ $16.00 7 days.................................................. $24.00 tention to make any • NE Bend, single level the essential facts in an The Bulletin eilliust state prices in ad 14 days .................................................$33.50 such pre f erence, interesting Manner.Write • 3 bedrooms, 2 baths & Trucking: Owner Op28 days .................................................$61.50 limitation or discrimiGarage Sale Special erators4-Axle Chip BANK TURNED YOU from the readers view - not nation." Familial sta- 2 bdrms, 2 baths 4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00 icall for commercial line ad rates) • Fenced yards & 2-car Trucks. Currently hiring DOWN? Private party the seller's. Convert the tus includes children tandem garages two owner operatorswill loan on real esfacts into benefits. Show under the age of 18 local and regional line tate equity. Credit, no the reader how the item will living with parents or • $309,900 www.johnlscott.com haul. Based out of Ma- problem, good equity help them insomeway. A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: legal cus t odians, /4402 dras, OR. We hope you is all you need. Call This pregnant women, and Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. Kellie Cook, Broker will consider joining the Oregon Land Mortadvertising tip * people securing cus541-408-0463 Chambers Madras team gage 541-388-4200. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN ( ) brought toyouby tody of children under John L. Scott - celebrating our 50th 18. This newspaper REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well Real Estate, Bend Year in 2014! The Bulletin will not knowingly acCall a Pro Serving Ceneel Oregonsince fgte www.johnlscott.com 541-546-6489 or as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin cept any advertising 541-419-1125. Whether you need a bendbulletimcom reserves the right to reject any ad at for real estate which is 632 fencefixed,hedges in violation of the law. Tick, Tock any time. is located at: What are you Apt JMultiplex General O ur r e aders a r e trimmed or a house 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Tick, Tock... hereby informed that looking for? built, you'll find CHECKYOUR AD all dwellings adverBend, Oregon 97702 ...don't let time get You'll find it in professional help in tised in this newspaaway. Hire a per are available on The Bulletin Classifieds The Bulletin's "Call a an equal opportunity PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction professional out Service Professional" basis. To complain of is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right of The Bulletin's Directory d iscrimination ca l l tc accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these 541-385-5809 "Call A Service 541 e385-5809 on the first day it runs HUD t o l l-free at newspapers. The publisher shall nct be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party to make sure it is cor- 1-800-877-0246. The Classified ads running 7 cr moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. Professional" Looking for your next LOCAL NONEYrWebuy toll f ree t e lephone rect. nSpellcheck" and employee? Directory today! number for the hearhuman errors do ocsecured trust deeds & 263 266 267 Place a Bulletin help im p aired is note,some hard money cur. If this happens to ing wanted ad today and Tools Heating & Stoves Fuel & Wood loans. Call Pat Kelley your ad, please con- 1-800-927-9275. • reach over 60,000 541-382-3099 ext.13. tact us ASAP so that Homes for Sale readers each week. NOTICE TO 1 cord dry, split Juniper, corrections and any New in box, ADVERTISER $200/cord. Multi-cord Your classified ad USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS adjustments can be 63080 STENKAMP or near/ynew will also appear on Since September 29, discounts, & tia cords made to your ad. DRIVE Search the area's most Craftsman Tools: Door-to-door selling with 1991, advertising for available. Immediate bendbulletin.com 541-385-5809 Affordable horse propcomprehensive listing of • 10 n Stationary which currently used woodstoves has delivery! 541-408-6193 classified advertising... The Bulletin Classified fast results! It's the easiest erty - 1,700 sq.ft., 3 radial arm saw, been limited to mod- All Year Dependable receives over 1.5 way in the world to sell. Bdrm, 2 bath home real estate to automotive, Model ¹31 5.220100, million page views els which have been Firewood: Seasoned; Look at: needs some TLC & merchandise to sporting $375. certified by the Orevery month at 476 The Bulletin Classified updating, 2 stalls, tack Bendhomes.com goods. Bulletin Classifieds Cedar, Spl i t, D el. • 10 n Stationary table no extra cost. egon Department of room 8 hay storage. Employment appear every day in the for Complete Listings of 541-385-5809 saw w/guide rails, Environmental Qual- Bend: 1 for $175 or 2 Bulletin Classifieds 2.4 acres with underprint or on line. for $325. Lodgepole model ¹31 5.228590, Opportunities Area Real Estate for Sale Get Results! ity (DEQ) and the fed- 1 for $195 or 2 for ground irrigation near Call 541-385-5809 $325. eral E n v ironmental $365. 541-420-3484. Call 385-5809 thousands of acres of www.bendbulletin.com • 6-1/8 n Jointer or place Pressroom Protection A g e ncy BLM land for riding. CAUTION: planer "Professional" your ad on-line at (EPA) as having met Pine & Juniper Split Night Supervisor $219,000 Ads published in The Bulletin model ¹351.227240, bendbulletin.com smoke emission stanServing Central Oregon since igie The Bulletin, located in beautiful Bend, Orwww.DavidFoster.Biz/ "Employment Op$250 obo. dards. A cer t ified egon, is seeking a night time press superviStenkamp portunifies" include Call 541-504-6413 PROMPT DELIVERY w oodstove may b e sor. We are part of Western Communications, David Foster, Broker employee and indePressman daytime hours. 542-389-9663 identified by its certifiInc. which is a small, family owned group con541-322-0034 pendent positions. Experienced press operator cation label, which is sisting of seven newspapers: five in Oregon 541-213-9950 Ads for p o sitions permanently attached 269 and two in California. Our ideal candidate will John L. Scott that require a fee or Find exactly what Our Smith River, CA. production plant is seekto the stove. The Bulmanage a small crew of three and must be Real Estate, Bend upfront investment you are looking for in the letin will not know- Gardening Supplie ing an experienced Goss community press able to l e arn o u r e q uipment/processes www johnlscott com must be stated. With & E q uipment operator. We have 8 units that have been well ingly accept advertis- • CLASSIFIEDS quickly. A hands-on style is a requirement for any independentjob maintained and added to during the past seving for the sale of our st/~ tower KBA press. Prior management/ Have an item to opportunity, please eral years including rebuilt quarter folder. We uncertified leadership experience preferred. In addition to 265 BarkTurfSoil.com i nvestigate tho r sell quick? have CTP operation with Kodak equipment as woodstoves. our 7-day-a-week newspaper, we have nuoughly. Use extra Building Materials well. If it's under merous commercial print clients as well. We caution when apPROMPT DELIVERY offer a competitive wage and opportunity for plying for jobs onREDMOND Habitat '500 you can place it in 542-389-9663 We are Western Communications, inc. a fam267 advancement. line and never proRESTORE ily owned company that has 7 newspapers in If you provide dependability combined with a The Bulletin Fuel & Wood vide personal inforBuilding Supply Resale California and Oregon. Our company provides positive attitude, are able to manage people For newspaper mation to any source Classifieds for: Quality at a great culture and work environment. This and schedules and are a team player, we you may not have LOW PRICES delivery, call the plant prints 2 of our publications plus a limited WHEN BUYING would like to hear from you. If you seek a Circulation Dept. at researched and 1242 S. Hwy 97 '10 -3 lines, 7 days amount of commercial printing, which we hope stable work environment that provides a great FIREWOOD... 541-385-5800 deemed to be repu541-548-1406 to grow. This is a 4-day, 32-hour shift that re'16 - 3 lines, 14 days place to live and raise a family, let us hear To place an ad, call table. Use extreme Open to the public. To avoid fraud, quires hands on community press experience from you. 541-385-5809 c aution when r e (Private Party ads only) The Bulletin and ideal candidate will be willing to assist in Contact Al Nelson, Pressroom Manager at or email s ponding to A N Y other areas outside the pressroom such as recommends payanelson@wescom a ers.com wit h your claeeiiiedaibendbulletimcom online employment ment for Firewood prepress and mailroom as needed. NOTICE complete resume, references and salary hisad from out-of-state. only upon delivery All real estate adverThe Bulletin tory/requirements. No phone calls please. We suggest you call gerving Central Oregon since Sie Western Washington and inspection. Smith River is centrally located between Crestised here in is subDrug test is required prior to employment. the State of Oregon Guy seeks gal 48-65, • A cord is 128 cu. ft. cent City, CA, one of our papers that prints evject to th e F ederal EOE. Consumer Hotline 4' x 4' x 8' slim/average build, to 270 ery Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday a.m. with Fair Housing A c t, at 1-503-378-4320 share quiet times; • Receipts should approximately 5,000 circulation, and Brookwhich makes it illegal • Lo s t & Found For Equal Opportutrips, walks, nature, include name, ings, OR. Our Brookings publication is also to advertise any prefnity Laws contact moon-light, cuddling! phone, price and approximately 5,000 circulation that prints on erence, limitation or Found: Necklace on The Bulletin Oregon Bureau of Greg, PO Box 3013 kind of wood SewingCentral Oregon since iggg Wednesday andSaturday a.m. Both Crescent discrimination based Butler Mkt Rd., Call Labor & I n dustry, Arlington, WA 98223. purchased. City and Brookings provide excellent quality of on race, color, reli541-617-8598 to Civil Rights Division, • Firewood ads life to raise a family. gion, sex, handicap, identify. Prepress Systems Analyst 971-6730764. MUST include familial status or naNeed to get an ad species & cost per If this sounds like you, we would like to hear tional origin, or intenThe Bulletin The Bulletin is seeking a Prepress Systems cord to better serve from you. Please send resume with refertion to make any such in ASAP? Analyst. This person works with staff memour customers. 541-385-5809 ences and salary requirements to: David Depreferences, l i mitaREMEMBER:If you bers in day-to-day production of The Bulletin's longe, Qu a l it y Con t ro l Sup e rvisor products, and with Commercial Print customtions or discrimination. have lost an animal, Fax it to 541-322-7253 don't forget to check Add your web address ( ddelonge@triplicate.com), PO B o x 2 7 7 , ers, to ensure efficient prepress processing We will not knowingly The Bulletm Serving Central Oregon since Sal Crescent City, CA 95531. accept any advertisThe Humane Society and successful runs on press. This position to your ad and readThe Bulletin Classifieds ing for r eal e state Bend requires knowledge of computer hardware, ers on The Bulfetin's 541-382-3537 which is in violation of software and operating systems, as well as web site, www.bendthis law. All persons Redmond MECHANIC FOR FORKLIFTSHOP in-depth experience with litho plate production bulletin.com, will be 541-923-0882 are hereby informed and offset printing. The right candidate will able to click through that all dwellings adPrine iiie Bright Wood Corporation in Madras is seeking have an understanding and background in automatically to your osi-ser-ti 78; vertised are available an EXPERIENCED mechanic to work in our graphic arts workflow, and a thorough knowlwebsite. on an equal opportuo Ceicoece forklift shop. The most qualified candidates edge of prepress layout software. 541-389-8420. nity basis. The Bullewill possess a minimum of 2 years experience Chi p Truck Drivers • • C al l 5 4 I -385-5809 tin Classified working with hydraulic plumbing, automotive Hiring 3 drivers - local This is a hands-on position, involving work with electrical wiring, possess strong diagnostic/ Commercial Print customers during job planand regional line haulto ro m o te o u r s ervice ning, production, and with troubleshooting as Garage Sales for our growing Madras troubleshooting skills and be familiar with diagnostic equipment or have the ability to required. The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace division. CDL with learn. A valid Oregon driver's license and Garage Sales and an equal opportunity employer. doubles endorsement Building/Contracting Handyman good driving record is required. Applicant and a good driving must be able to lift 50 pounds, have your own Garage Sales Send a resume with qualifications, skills, record req. We hope NOTICE: Oregon state ERIC REEVE HANDY tools, possess good people skills, be selfexperience and past emp/oyment history to: you will consider joinlaw requires anyone SERVICES. Home 8 Find them motivated and be able to work independently ing the Chambers MaThe Bulletin who con t racts for Commercial Repairs, and as a team player. A high school diploma dras team - celebrating 1777 SW Chandler Ave. in construction work to Carpentry-Painting, or GED equivalent is required. our 50th Year in 2014! PO Box 6020 be licensed with the Pressure-washing, 325 The Bulletin Call 541-546-6489 or Construction ContracBend, OR 97708-6020 Honey Do's. On-time • Hay, Grain & Feed Position is full-time 40 hours or more a week 541-419-1125. Classifieds tors Board (CCB). An Attention: James Baisinger promise. Senior with flexible hours to meet the demands of active license by Friday, January 9,2014. Discount. Work guar- First quality Orchard/Timproduction. We offer a c ompetitive hourly NIGHT ATTENDANT 541-385-5809 means the contractor anteed. 541-389-3361 othy/Blue Grass mixed Whispering W i n ds wage and benefits package (after your introis bonded & insured. or 541-771-4463 hay, no rain, barn stored, ductory period) that includes medical, life Retirement is seekVerify the contractor's Bonded & Insured $250/ton. Patterson Ranch ing a person to work insurance, vision, vacation, holiday and profit CCB l i c ense at CCB¹t 81595 Sisters, 541-549-3831 www.hirealicensedthe night shift (10 p.m. sharing. We are a drug free workplace and roua AD WILLRECEIVECLOSETo 2,0D0,000 Home Repairs, Remod contractor.com to 7 a.m.) Part-time equal opportunity employer. EXPOSURES FORONLY 52SO! Looking for your or call 503-378-4621. els, Tile, Carpentry position av a ilable. The Bulletin recom- Finish work, Mainte next employee? Duties include light A clean pre-employment drug screen is OngonClnnrrniggvrrrising Nernork is eserviceof rlrr OregonNersrsgrer reirliriees gsrecgrlion mends checking with nance. CCB¹t 6891 0 Place a Bulletin laundry, misc. office mandatory. Qualified candidates should apply Peek of December 30, 2013 the CCB prior to con- Phil, 541-279-0846. w ork. A b l e t o r e - in person at: help wanted ad tracting with anyone. spond t o r e s ident Advertise Your car! today and Bright Wood Corporation, Some other t rades emergencies if Add A Picture! reach over PersonnelDept., also req u ire addi-Reach thousands of readers! needed. Former car60,000 readers Serving Central Oregon since 1903 335 NW Hess St., tional licenses and Call 541 n385-5809 egiving e x perience each week. certifications. The Bulletin Classigeds Nfadras OR 97741. 541-385-5809 helpful b u t not Your classified ad r equired. A p ply i n will also Landscaping/Yard Care person to Whispering Debris Removal appear on Winds, 2920 NE ConAuto Renew Coordinator NOTICE: Oregon Land- bendbulletin.com ners Ave., B e nd. JUNK BE GONE DIVORCE $155. Complete preparation. Includes children, scape Contractors Law which currently Pre-employment drug Immediate opening in The Bulletin Circulation I Haul Away FREE (ORS 671) requires all receives over testing required. department for a full time Auto Renew Coordicustody, support, property and bills division. No court For Salvage. Also businesses that ad1.5 million page nator. Job duties primarily encompass the proCleanups & Cleanouts vertise t o pe r form appearances.Divorced in 1-5 weeks possible.503-772-5295. views every SALES PERSON cessing of all subscriber Auto Renew payLandscape ConstrucMel, 541-389-8107 month at no Local floor covering store ments through accounting software, data entry www.paralegalalternatives.com legalalt©msn.com tion which includes: has immediate need of new credit card or bank draft information, extra cost. l anting, deck s , for F-T salesperson. Bulletin Domestic Services and resolution with customers of declined Auto ences, arbors, • Must possess com- Renew payments. Other tasks include mainClassifieds water-features, and inputer knowledge; have taining accurate spreadsheets for account balA ssisting Seniors a t Get Results! stallation, repair of irsales & design experi- ancing purposes, transferring funds from subHome. Light house- rigation systems to be Call 541-385-5809 DRIVERS: It's a great time to change! Haney Truck Lines seeks topkeeping & other ser- l icensed w it h th e or place your ad • ence accounts for single copy purchases, Knowledge of carpet, scriber quality, professional truck drivers for regional work! Earn up to vices. Licensed & dispatching of all promotional items associLandscape Contracon-line at vinyl, tile, hardwood & ated with new subscriptions and upgrades, as Bonded. BBB Certi- tors Board. This 4-digit bendbulletin.com $.375/mile. CDL-A required. 1-888-414-4467 www.GOHANEY.com natural stone. fied. 503-756-3544 number is to be in• Responsible for show- well as tracking/ordering Circulation office supplies. cluded in all adverroom coverage, manGordon Trucking, Inc. CDL-A Solos & Team Truck Drivers. Up to 341 A ssisting Seniors a t tisements which indiagement of individual Home. Light house- cate the business has ~Horses & Equipment $5,000 Sign-On-Bonus & $.54 CPM. Consistent Miles, Benefits, accounts for c lients Responsibilities also include month-end billing keeping 8 other ser- a bond, insurance and working on remodel for severalI/YESCOMpapers and back up to 401k,EOE. Call7 days/week 866-435-8590 v ices. L icensed 8 workers compensaand/or new construc- the CSR and billing staff. Ability to perform all Bonded. BBB Certi- tion for their employtion. Material selec- these tasks accurately and with attention to NEED CLASS A CDLTRAINING? Start a CAREER in trucking today! ees. For your protecfied. 503-756-3544 tions, estimates, sales deadlines is a must. Work shift hours are tion call 503-378-5909 2008 Thuro-Bilt 3H agreements, ordering Monday throughFriday 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Swift Academies offer PTDI certified courses and offer "Best-Inor use our website: slant Shilo, great product, i n stallation Handyman www.lcb.state.or.us to c ondition. $ 5 9 00 work orders and inPlease send resume to: Class"training.New Academy ClassesWeekly;No Money Down or check license status obo. 541-317-0988. voicing. Actively purahusted Ibendbulletin.com Credit Check; Certified Mentors Ready and Available; Paid (While I DO THAT! before contracting with sue new accounts and Home/Rental repairs the business. Persons Call The Bulletin At prospects. Training With Mentor); Regional and Dedicated Opportunities; Small jobs to remodels doing lan d scape 541-385-5809 Wages based on experiSewing Central Oregon since 1903 Honest, guaranteed Great Career Path; Excellent Benefits Package. Please Call: maintenance do not ence. Email resume work. CCB¹151 573 r equire an LC B l i - Place Your Ad Or E-Mail and cover letter to: EOE/Drug free workplace 866-315-9763 Dennis 541-317-9768 cense. At: www.bendbulletin.com wall 970@hotmail.com
The Bulletin
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JAN 2, 2014
DAILY B R I D G E
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD wiii'sbortz
C L U B T hursday, January2,2014
Sleepers awake!
ACROSS 1Not for the Parti Quebecois? 4 Comcast and CenturyLink, in brief 8Terminalinfo 12Words of praise 130rg. that fought Napster 14Hook's place 15Joe Louis, to fans 18Kind of bean 190ut, in a way 20 For instance 21Flowerfeature 23Anti-apartheid activist Steve 25 Base of a certain pole, figuratively 27Grate 31Someradios 34Oneinterested
39Stowedstuff 40 Isn't content with the status qUO,say 42 Gang Green member 45SomeTV drama settings, for short 46 in p rogress (iPhone phrase) 47 Cottonwoods 49Tennis's Mandlikova 51 Classic toothpaste name 54"Gross!" 57 Recipe instruction 59 Door fixture 61 Cult classic whose title is depicted four times in this puzzle in current 64 Beaker material affairs? 65 Mrs. James 36 Host of the 1972 Joyce Winter Olympics 66Toon'splace 38 ita l l 67 Positive principle
By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency
A pastor friend of mine has an unforgettable picture on his office wall. It shows a preacher in the p ulpit, holding forth for all he i s worth. And sitting in the front pew is Jesus — sound asleep. Most bridge errors result not from a lack of technical knowledge but from a loss of focus: being asleep when you must bewide awake. In today's deal, West led the jack of diamonds against f ou r s p ades. D ummy played l ow , a n d E a st signaled with the seven.
one heart. What is your response? ANSWER: I t' s a n e i ementary p roblem: The correct call is t w o hearts, confirming a fit and defining the strength promptly — desirable with a weak hand. A one-spade responsewould do neither. Ifpartner next bid two of a minor suit, a return to two hearts would not show the three-card support and would make it hardforpartner to evaluate. South dealer Neither side vulnerable NORTH 4K643 Q652
CLUB WINNERS
0864 4KQ6
S outh ducked, wo n t h e n e x t diamond, drew trumps, led a club to the king and ruffed dummy's last diamond. He took the A-Q of clubs and led a heait from dummy: three, nine, jack. West was end-played: W hether he took the ace of hearts or led a minor suit, conceding a ruffsluff, South was home. East was snoozing at Trick One. He must overtake with the queen of diamonds, seizing a chance to be in the lead, and shift to a heart. South can play low, but West wins with the jack, exits safely and scores two more hearts.
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Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO
A N Y T R U U S I T K S
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68Mother of Nike, in Greek myth 69 Historic leader? DOWN 1 They may be cast-iron 2 For a specific purpose 3"I'm outta here!" 4 Like some verbs: Abbr. 5 Little Bighorn conflict 6 Future queen, maybe 7 Balloon ballast 8 Street shader 9 K eep o n 10 Lost 11Nimble 14 Blarney Castle's county 16Cinderella's soiree 17 Human 22Chantfrom a 32-Down, maybe 24 Small antelope 266 letters 28 Hold dear 29 Cut 30Voicemail imperative 310rgs. 32 See 22-Down 33Offspring 350bjectof scrutiny at airport security 370utwit, in a way, with "out" 40 Horror film director Alexandre 41Schoolat which students are collared?
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PUZZLE BYLOREN MUSE SMITH ANO JEFF CHEN
43 Some queens
60One-named sports star who was once the highest-paid athlete in the world 62 Party congregation site, maybe
54Spot 44 "Ah-00-gah!" horns 55"A Day Without 48 Canadian-born Rain" singer comedian once featured on the 56Tipoff cover of Time 50 Kind of card 52Antidiscrimination 58 Playing longer grp than expected, 53Ed of "IJp" for short
63 Bellum's opposite
Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT&T users: Text NYTX to 388 to download puzzles, or visit nyiimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscriplions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nyiimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nylimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nylimes.com/learning/xwords.
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By Jeffrey Wechsler (c)2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
01/02/14
THE BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 2 2014 E5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
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i e
880
881
882
908
932
932
Motorhomes
Travel Trailers
Fifth Wheels
Aircraft, Parts & Service
Antique & Classic Autos
Antique & Classic Autos
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RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605- RoommateWanted 616- Want ToRent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent 632 - Apt./MultiplexGeneral 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NW Bend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SE Bend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648- Houses for RentGeneral 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for RentSunriver 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663- Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RVParking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space
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682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REALESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 -Real Estate Trades 726- Timeshares for Sale 730 - NewListings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - MultiplexesforSale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744- Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746-Northwest Bend Homes 747 - Southwest BendHomes 748-Northeast Bend Homes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson County Homes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land 865
748
Northeast Bend Homes
: I.
3 bdrm 2 bath, 1258 sf,
upgrades, vaulted, culdesac. 2574 NE Cordata Pl. $192,000. 541-815-3279 or 541-815-3241
®
ATVs
fj 0
750
850
Redmond Homes
KOUNTRY AIRE 1994 37.5' motorhome, with awning, and one slide-out, Only47k miles and good condition.
$25,000.
541-548-0318 (photo above is oi a
similar model & not the actual vehicle)
Want to impress the relatives? Remodel your home with the help of a professional from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
875
Sunriver/La Pine Homes
Reai Estate Auction Jan. 18th O 1pm Open House/Preview Sun., Jan. 12, 1-4 8 Elk Lane, Sunriver Home w/ master bdrm on main level, 1 bath, 800 sq. ft., wood-burning stove, Storage for wood, skis and toys. www.StuartRealty Grouplnc.com
Harley Davidson 2011 Classic Lim-
Watercraft
ited, LOADED, 9500 miles, custom paint "Broken Glass" by Nicholas Del Drago, new condition, heated handgrips, auto cruise control. $32,000 in bike, only$20,000 obo. 541-318-6049
Ads published in "Wa ercraft" include: Kay ks, rafts and motor zed personal atercrafts. Fo 'boats" please se lass 870. 541-385-5809
HDFatBo 1996
The Bulletin ng
vai o r egon
880
Motorhomes
503-263-7253
Completely 4 Bdrm, 5 bath, 3500 Rebuilt/Customized sq.ft., 2 shops, barn, Award 3-car garage w/guest 2012/2013 Winner quarters, located on 5 Showroom Condition acres in middle of Many Extras Smith Rock. Low Miles. $440,000. MLS¹ $17,000 201304982 Pam 541-548-4807 Lester, Prin c ipal B roker Century 2 1 Gold Country Realty, Inc. 541-504-1338 771
COACHMAN Freelander 2008 32' Class C, M-3150 Pristine - just 23,390 miles! Efficient coach has Ford V10 w/Banks pwr pkg, 14' slide, ducted furn/ AC, flat screen TV, 16' awning. No pets/ smkg. 1 ownera must see! $52,500. 541-548-4969
Lots SHEVLIN RIDGE 17,000 Sq.ft. Iot, ap-
proved plans. More details and photos on craigslist. $149,900. 541-389-8614 775
Manufactured/ Nlobile Homes 1994 Marlette 2 bdrm, 1 bath, excellent shape, new furnace & air conditioning, no n -smoker. $14,000. 541-526-5920
541-548-5511
LOT MODEL LIQUIDATION Prices Slashed Huge Savings! 10 Year conditional warranty. Finished on your site. ONLY 2 LEFT! Redmond, Oregon 541-548-5511
JandMHomes.com Rent /Own 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes $2500 down, $750 mo. OAC.J and M Homes 541-548-5511
Jeep CJ5 1979, Original owner, 87k miles, only 3k on new 258 long block. Clutch 15 factory options includ- package, Warn hubs. 'Sloan docuing A/C. Excellent runner, very mentation." Quality re- dependable. Northpaint. COMPLETELY ori- man 67s' plow, Warn inal interior & trunk area PRISTINE). Engine com- 6000¹ winch. $7900 partment is VERY MUCH or best reasonable Save money. Learn original. No r ust, n o offer. 541-549-6970 or to fly or build hours leaks, evervthinq works! 541-815-8105. with your own air$19,900. 541-323-1898 c raft. 1968 A e r o T Touring 1923 Commander, 4 seat, Chevy 1955 PROJECT Model car. 2 door wgn, 350 Good cond. $ 10,500 150 HP, low time, obo. 503-559-6618 or small block w/Weiand full panel. $23,000 dual quad tunnel ram madsenm1Ocomcast.net obo. Contact Paul at with 450 Holleys. T-10 541-447-5184. 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, Weld Prostar wheels, extra rolling chassis + extras. $6500 for all.
Transporter
541-419-8583
Low miles, EFI 460, 4-spd auto, 10-ply tires, low miles, almost new condition, $3500. Ask for Theo,
541-260-4293
If• 2004 CH34TLB04 34'
Orbit 21' 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
Tango 29.6' 2007, Rear living, walkaround queen bed, central air, awning, 1 large slide, $12,000. 541-280-2547 or 541-815-4121
fully S/C, w/d hookups, new 18' Dometic awning, 4 new tires, new Kubota 7000w marine diesel generator, 3 slides, exc. cond. inside & out. 27" TV dvd/cd/am/fm entertain center. Call for more details. Only used 4
541-389-7669.
SuparhatNkOnly 1 Share Available
Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Re-
Plymouth B a r racuda Chevy pick-up truck 1954, all there, started 1966, original car! 300 hp 360 V8 c e nter restore you finishi lines, 541-593-2597 $6800.541-480 3646
933 BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS Economical flying years.. No pets, no Pickups Search the area's most in your own smoking. Hiqh retail comprehensive listing of IFR equipped $27,700. Will sell for Cessna classified advertising... 172/180 HP for $24,000 includinq slidestate to automotive, only $13,5001 New real ing hitch that fits in merchandise to sporting Garmin Touchscreen your truck. Call 8 a.m. avionics goods. Bulletin Classifieds 1966 Ford F250 center stacki to 10 p.m. for appt to appear every day in the 3/4 ton, 352 V8, 2WD, Exceptionally clean! see. 541-330-5527. print or on line. P/S, straight body, Hangared at BDN. runs good. $2000. Call 541-385-5809 Call 541-728-0773 541-410-8749 www.bendbulletin.com Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the The Bulletin Seving Central Oregonsince 5N classifieds! Ask about our Chevy 1986, long bed, Super Seller rates! four spd., 350 V8 re541-385-5809 MONTANA 3585 2008, built, custom paint, great t i r e s and exc. cond., 3 slides, 916 king bed, Irg LR, wheels, new t a gs, Trucks & $5000 obo. Arctic insulation, all 541-389-3026 options $35,000 obo. Heavy Equipment 541-420-3250 Ford Model A 1930 Coupe, good condition, $14,000. 541 588 6084
times total in last 5i/~
CLASSIC
OPEN ROAD 36' 2005 - $25,500 King bed, hide-a-bed sofa, 3 slides, glass shower, 10 gal. water heater, 10 cu.ft. fridge, central vac, s atellite dish, 2 7 " TV/stereo syst., front front power leveling jacks and s cissor stabilizer jacks, 16' awning. Like new! 541-419-0566
Peterbilt 359 p o table water t ruck, 1 9 90, Price Reduced! 3200 gal. tank, 5hp T-Bird, 1966, 390 pump, 4-3" h oses, Ford power everycamlocks, $ 2 5,000. engine, thing, new paint, 54K 541-820-3724 orig. miles, runs great,
81 WEEKEND WARRIOR Toy hauler/travel trailer. 24' with 21' interior. Sleeps 6. Self-contained. Systems/ appearancein good condition. Smoke-free. Tow with i/z-ton. Strong suspension; can haul ATVs snowmobiles, even a small car! Great price - $8900. Call 541-593-6266
Buick Skylark 1972 Matchless! 17K original miles! Sunburst yeilow/ white vinyl/Sandalwood.
932
Antique & Classic Autos
1921 Model T Delivery Truck Restored & Runs $9000. 541-BB9-B963
exc. cond.in/out.$7500 obo. 541-480-3179
Ford Supercab 1992, brown/tan color with m atching full s i z e canopy, 2WD, 460 over drive, 135K mi., full bench rear seat, slide rear w i ndow, bucket seats, power seats w/lumbar, pw, HD receiver & trailer brakes, good t ires. Good cond i tion. $4900. 541-389-5341
GMC Yi ton 1971, Only
$10,500! Original low mile, exceptional, 3rd owner. 760-985-4016
FORD XLT 1992
3/4 ton 4x4 The Bulletin's matching canopy, Recreation by Design "Call A Service 30k original miles, 2013 Monte Carlo, 38-ft. possible trade for Top living room, 2 bdrm, Professional" Directory GMC Sierra 1977 short classic car, pickup, has 3 slideouts, 2 A/Cs, is all about meeting bed, exlnt o r iginal entertainment center, motorcycle, RV your needs. cond., runs 8 drives fireplace, W/D, $13,500. great. V8, new paint garden tub/shower, in Call on one of the In La Pine, call and tires. $4750 obo. great condition.$36,000 928-581-9190 professionals today! 541-504-1050 or best offer. Call Peter, 307-221-2422, AILL DELIV/R
Time to declutter? Need someextra cash?
0
OI'
Qoo 908
Aircraft, Parts
& Service
sults! Call 385-5809
or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com 882
Fifth Wheels
Arctic Fox 2003 Cold Weather Model 34 5B, licensed thru 2/15, exlnt cond. 3 elec slides, solar panel, 10 gal water htr, 14' awning, (2) 10-gal propane tanks, 2 batts, htr in addition to Winnebago Aspect catalytic central heating/AC, gen2009- 32', 3 slide- tly used, MANY features! outs, Leather inte- Must see to appreciate! rior, Power s eat, $19,000. By owner (no locks, win d ows, dealer calls, please). Call Aluminum wheels. or text 541-325-1956. 17" Flat Screen, Surround s o u nd, camera, Queen bed, Need to get an ad Foam mattress, Awin ASAP? ning, Generator, Inverter, Auto Jacks, Air leveling, Moon Fax it to 541-322-7253 roof, no smoking or p ets. L ik e n e w , The Bulletin Classifieds $74,900 541-480-6900 CHECK yOUR AD
And sell it locally. 1/3 interest in Columbia 400, $150,000 (located O Bend.) Also: Sunriver hangar available for sale at $155K, or lease, @ $400/mo. 541-948-2963
', (i
I' s
a•
762
Homes with Acreage
FACTORY SPECIAL New Home, 3 bdrm, $46,500 finished on your site. J and M Homes
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
For the avid flyer, Madras Airport Hanger for sale, $8000. Call for info.
For Sale 1990 5th Wheel
Keystone Challenger
Front & rear entry doors, bath, shower, queen bed, slide-out, N ayion R V 20 0 8 , oven, microwave, air Sprinter chassis 25'. conditioning, patio Mercedes Benz diesel, awning, twin pro24,000 miles, pristine pane tanks, very cond., quality through- nice, great floor plan, out, rear shde-out w/ $8895. queen bed, d e luxe 541-316-1388 captain swivel f ront seats, diesel generator, awning, no pets/ smoking. $78,500 o b o . Ready to deal! Financing avail.
The Bulletin Honda TRX 350 FE To Subscribe call 2006, 4 wheel drive, 541-385-5800 or go to electric start, electric www.bendbulletin.com s hift, n ew tire s , $2500, 541-980-8006.
he Bulleti
755
20 06 w i th 1 2 ' slide-out. Sleeps 6, queen walk-around bed w/storage underneath. Tub & 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 Li f t . $29,000 new; Asking$18,600 541-447-4805
541-382-2430
ervm Cenfrai Ore on since 190
541-385-5809
Rt/
Layton 27-ft, 2001
Snowmobiles - Small acreage with i rri1994 Arctic Cat 580 gated pasture overEXT, in good 870 l ooking pond 8 condition, $1000. Boats & Accessories fenced pas t u re Located in La Pine. ready for horses or Call 541-408-6149. other critters. DeProvidence2005 tached garage shop 860 Fully loaded, 35,000 w/storage. IIotorcycles & Accessories miles, 350 Cat, Very MLS¹201307823. clean, non-smoker, Call Don Chapin, 3 slides, side-by-side P rincipal Bro k e r Sunchaser Pontoon refrigerator with ice 541-923-0855 boat - $19,895 maker, Washer/Dryer, Redmond RE/MAX 20' 2006 Smokercraft Flat screen TV's, In L and & Ho m es cruise, S-8521. 2006 motion satellite. Real Estate 75hp. Mercury. Full $95,000 541-771-7786 2013 Harley camping e n closure. 541-480-2019 Davidson Dyna Pop u p ch a nging Where can you find a Wide Glide, black, room/porta-potty, BBQ, only 200 miles, helping hand? swim ladder, all gear. brand new, all stock, Trailer, 2006 E a syFrom contractors to plus after-market loader gal v anized. yard care, it's all here exhaust. Has winter P urchased new, a l l cover, helmet. in The Bulletin's records. 541-706-9977, Selling for what I cell 503-807-1973. "Call A Service Rexair 28-ft owe on it: $15,500. motorhome, 1991Professional" Directory Call anytime, Ideal for camping or 541-554-0384 hunting, it has 45K miles, a 460 gas enLooking for your next emp/oyee? gine, new tires, auTake care of tomatic levelers, Place a Bulletin help your investments 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, wanted ad today and Onan generator, inboard motor, g reat king-size bed, awreach over 60,000 with the help from cond, well maintained, readers each week. ning. Nice condition The Bulletin's $8995 obo. 541-350-7755 Sell or trade? $8700. Your classified ad will also appear on 541-815-9939 "Call A Service bendbulletin.com Professional" Directory which currently receives over 1.5 million page Harley Davidson 2009 views every month Super Glide Custom, 21' Sun Tracker Sig. seat no extra cost. Stage 1 Screaming Fishin' Barge, Tracker Bulletin Classifieds Eagle performance, ries live well, fish fndr, TIFFINPHAETON QSH Get Results! too many options to 50hp, new int, extras, exc cond, 2007 with 4 slides, CAT Call 385-5809 or list, $8900. $7900. 541-508-0679 350hp diesel engine, place your ad on-line 541-388-8939 $125,900. 30,900 miles, at Ads published in the bendbulletin.com "Boats" classification new Michelin tires, great Need help fixing stuff? cond! Dishwasher, w/d, Speed, fish- central Call A Service Professional include: vac, roof satellite, ing, drift, canoe, find the help you need. Need to get an aluminum wheels, 2 full house and sail boats. www.bendbulletin.com basement trays ad in ASAP? For all other types of slide-thru 3 TV's. Falcon-2 towwatercraft, please go & You can place it bar and Even-Brake into Class 875. online at: cluded. 541-385-5809 Call 541-977-4150 www.bendbulletin.com
$349,500
KeystoneLaredo 31'
•
Triumph Daytona 2004, 15K m i l e s, perfect bike, needs nothing. Vin Fleetwood D i scovery ¹201536. 40' 2003, diesel mo$4995 torhome w/all DreamCar options-3 slide outs, Auto Sales Suncruiser34' satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, Winnebago 1801Division, Bend 35K, loaded, too etc. 3 2 ,000 m i les.2004, DreamCarsBend.com much to list, ext'd warr. Wintered in h eated thru 2014, $49,900 541-678-0240 shop. $84,900 O.B.O. nis, 541-589-3243 DenDlr 3665 541-447-8664
Say "goodbuy" to that unused item by placing it in The Bulletin Classifieds
Victory TC 2002, runs great, many accessories, new tires, under 40K miles, well kept. $5000. 541-771-0665 Just too many collectibles? Sell them in The Bulletin Classifieds
541-385-5809
541 -385-5809
Gulfstream S u nsport 30' Class A 1988 new f r idge, TV, solar panel, new refrigerator, wheelchair l i ft . 4 0 0 0W g enerator, G ood condition! $12,500 obo 541-447-5504
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 con881 tact us ASAP so that Travel Trailers corrections and any adjustments can be Fleetwood Wilderness made to your ad. N.W. Edition 26' 2002, 541-385-5809 1 slide, sleeps 6, The Bulletin Classified queen bed, couch, stove/oven, tub/ shower, front e lec. jack, waste tank heaters, s tabilizers, 2 prop. t a nks, no smoking/pets, winteri zed, g oo d c o n d. Fleetwood Prowler $8500 OBO 32' - 2001 541-447-3425 2 slides, ducted heat & air, great What are you condition, snowbird ready, Many uplooking for? grade options, fiYou'll find it in nancing available! $14,500 obo. The Bulletin Classifieds Call Dick, 541-480-1687. 541-385-5809
1/3 interest i n w e l lequipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. $65,000. 541-419-9510
1/5th interest in 1973
Cessna 150 LLC 150hp conversion, low time on air frame and engine, hangared in Bend.Excellent performance & affordable flying! $6,000. 541-410-6007
1974 Bellanca 1730A 2180 TT, 440 SMO, 180 mph, excellent
condition, always hangared, 1 owner for 35 years. $60K.
iv i c
List one Item* in The Bulletin's Classifieds for three days for FREE. PLUS, your ad appears in P RINT and ON -LIN E
at bendbulletin.com
In Madras, call 541-475-6302 Dramatic Price Reduction Executive Hangar at Bend Airport (KBDN) 60' wide x 50' deep, w/55' wide x 17' high bifold dr. Natural gas heat, offc, bathroom. Adjacent to Frontage Rd; great visibility for aviation business. 541-948-2126 or email tjetjockoq.com FIND IT! SUY IT! SELL IT! The Bulletin Classifieds
BSSl I'
S
To reCeiVyO e ur FREECLASSIFIEDAD, Cal 385-5809 OrViSit
The Bulletinofficeat:1777SWChandler Ave. (OnBend's west side) *Offer allowsfor 3 linesof text only. Excludesall service, hay,wood, pets/animals, plants, tickets,weapons, rentals andemploymentadvertising, andaiicommercial accounts. Must beanindividual itemunder $20a00 and price of individual itemmust beincludedin thead. Askyour Bulletin Sales Representativeabout special pricing, longer runschedulesandadditional features. Limit i ad per itemper30 daysio besold.
E6 THURSDAY JANUARY 2 2014 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
• •
•
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975
975
975
975
975
975
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Porsche 911 Turbo
Toyota Celica Convertible 1993
•
BOATS 8 RVs 805- Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 869 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 879 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies and Campers 899- RVs for Rent
AUTOS8ETRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916 - Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles
933
935
935
Pickups
Sport Utility Vehicles
Sport Utility Vehicles
g&Z~X Chevy Tahoe 2001 GMC SLE 20051/2 ton BMW X3 2 0 07, 99K miles, premium pack4x4 Xtra Cab
5.3L V6, leather, air, heated seats, fully loaded, 120K mi. $7500 obo 541-460-0494
fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell. The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809
CorvetteCoupe 1996, 350 auto, 135k, non-ethanol fuel/synthetic oil, garaged/covered. Bose Premium Gold system. Orig. owner manual. Stock! $10,500 OBO. Retired. Must sell! 541-923-1761
Buick LaCrosse CXS 2005 loaded, new battery/tires, perfect $7995 firm! 541-475-6794
Need to get an ad in ASAP? You can place it online at: www.bendbulletin.com
541-385-5809
940
Garage Sales Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds!
541-385-5809
6 1,752
mi., exc. cond., V6, 3.1 L, fuel injected, 4 dr., FWD, exc. all season tires, new battery and alternator, very clean, exc. a/c and heater, pb, pw and s t eering. $4000. 541-419-5575
www.aaaoregonautosource.com
$16,500. 541-260-1746.
L82- 4speed. 65,000 miles Garaged since new. I've owned it 25 years. Never dam-
aged or abused. $12,900.
Ford Thunderbird 2004 Convertible 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)
R Lincoln LS 2001 4door sport sedan, plus set of snow tires. $6000. 541-317-0324.
Mazda Miata 1997 Mwdition Mica Green, 5-spd, original interior 8 exterior. All power options, leather, convertible boot, Tonneau Cover 114K miles, synthetic oils, new timing belt O 61K, & more! $5995. 541-548-5648
2003 6 speed, X50 added power pkg., 530 HP! Under 10k miles, Arctic silver, gray leather interior, new quality tires, and battery, Bose premium sound stereo, moon/sunroof, car and seat covers. Many extras. Garaged, perfect condition $5 9,700. 541-322-9647 Porsche Carrera 911 2003 convertible with hardtop. 50K miles, new factory Porsche motor 6 mos ago with 16 mo factory warranty remaininq. $37,500. 541-322-6926
Chevy Suburban 1500 LT 2009 5.3L V6 Flex fuel. 4wd Heavy Duty tow pkg., Cargo Racks, running boards, leather interior, power locks, XM satellite, OnStar multi-disc MP3, Bluetooth. Summer and new studded tires. 61,000 highway miles. $25,000 OBO. 541-460-6231
Dodge Grand Caravan SXT 2012, quad seats, 33k mi. Trades - financing. ¹304760 $ 1 5 ,995 BMW M-Roadster, 2000, w/hardtop. $19,500 57,200 miles, Titanium silver. Not 541-596-3750 many M-Roadsters aaaoregonautosource.com available. (See Craigslist posting id People Look for Information ¹4155624940 for About Products and additional details.) Services Every Daythrough Serious inquiries only. 541-480-5348 The Bulletin Classifieds
503-356-1164.
Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 365-5609 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
Just too many collectibles?
Volkswagen Touareg 2004
Meticulously maintained. Very clean inside and out. V6. Recently serviced60 point inspection sheet. $7200 Call 541-460-0097
Sell them in The Bulletin Classifieds
541-385-5809
~ E P U R LI C MCÃFICEI I M P CSRT~ ~
Porsche 911 Carrera 993 cou e
An important premise upon which the principle of democracy is based is thatinformation about government activities must be accessible in order for the electorate to make well-informed decisions. Public notices provide this sort of accessibility to citizens who want to know more about government activities.
1996, 73k miles,
Grand Sport-4LT loaded, clear bra hood & fenders. New Michelin Super Sports, G.S. floor mats, 17,000 miles, Crystal red. $42,000.
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Subaru STi 2010, 16.5K, rack, mats, cust snowwhls stored oneowner, $29,000, 541.410.6904
Dave, 541-350-4077
CORVETTE COUPE Glasstop 2010
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GT 2200 4 cyl, 5 speed, a/c, pw, pdl, nicest c o nvertible around in this price range, new t ires, wheels, clutch, timing belt, plugs, etc. 111K mi., remarkable cond. inside and out. Fun car to drive, Must S E E! $5995. R e dmond. 541-504-1993
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tom 1994,
4WD, leather, 22K mi. ¹A34703. $23,995
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age, heated lumbar 71,000 original miles, 5.3L V6, towing pack- supported seats, panmo o nroof, age, canopy, leather oramic Bluetooth, ski bag, Xeinterior, 2-tone paint, non headlights, tan & running boards, Acura Legend, 1992, black leather interior, AM/FM CD & tape n ew front & re a r black on black, chrome player, newer tires, brakes O 76K miles, wheels, new tires, new disc brakes. one owner, all records, beautiful cond! $2250. See to appreciate! very clean, $16,900. Ford Bronco II 4x4, 1969, 541-549-6569 $16,995. auto, high miles, runs 541-388-4360 541-390-4549 good. $1700. Acura TL SH 2013 541-633-6662 AWD 4dr, tech. pkg, USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! 15k mi. ¹001713 $35,995 Door-to-door selling with Ford Escape SEL 2013, I nternational Fl a t Bed Pickup 1963, 1 ton dually, 4 spd. trans., great MPG, could be exc. wood hauler, runs great, new brakes, $1950.
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Tiptronic auto. transmission. Silver, blue leather interior, moon/sunroof, new quality tires and battery, car and seat covers, many extras. Recently fully ser-
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viced, garaged,
looks and runs like new. Excellent condition $29,700 541-322-9647
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7. RC O L E GAL, following d e scribed LEGAL NOTICE P.C., Michael BotEstate o f Mi c hele real property situated thof, OSB ¹113337, Nicholson Campbell. against you in the in the a b ove-menmbotthof@rcolegal. NOTICE TO INTER- above-entitled Court t ioned county a n d ESTED P ERSONS. and cause on or com, Attorneys for state, to wit: Lot Three P laintiff, 511 S W Case Number: before the expira( 3) o f FAL C O N 10th Ave., Ste. 400, 13PB00995. Notice: tion of 30 days from RIDGE SUB D IVIPortland, OR 97205, The Circuit Court of the date of the first SION, according to the State of Oregon, publication of t his P: (503) 977-7640 t he o ff i cial pla t F: (503) 977-7963. for the County of Jef- summons. The date thereof, recorded July ferson, has appointed of first publication in 10, 2006 in Microfilm LEGAL NOTICE Jeffrey Kiernan as this matter is DeNo. 2006-212636, on NOTICE OF Personal Representa- cember 26, 2013. If file and of record in FORECLOSURE tive of the Estate of you fail timely to apthe office o f the S ALE O F PE R Michele N i c holson pear and answer, C ounty C l erk f o r S ONAL PRO P Campbell, deceased. plaintiff will apply to Crook County, OrERTY. High Desert All persons having the a bove-entitled egon. Property tax Self-Storage, 52650 claims against said court for the relief account No.: 16522. Hwy 97, La Pine, estate are required to p rayed for i n i t s Real property or its OR, shall sell the present the s a me, complaint. This is a address is commonly personal property of with proper vouchers judicial foreclosure known as Lot 3 FalPrudence Ducich E6 to the Personal Rep- of a deed of trust in con Ridge Subdiviand Timothy Robresentative, c/o John which the p laintiff sion, Prineville, OR erts F2 and Mary D. Sorlie, Bryant, Lov- r equests that t h e 9 7754, t h e "Real Manning D6 for faillien 8 Jarvis, PC, 591 plaintiff be allowed Property". The underure to pay rental SW Mill View Way, to foreclose your signed hereby disand default fees. A Bend, Oregon 97702 interest in the folclaims any liability for private sale will be within four m o nths lowing d e s cribed at H i g h De s ert any incorrectness of from the date of first real property: LOT the above-described Self-Storage on publication of this no- 31, B L O C K 2, s treet a ddress o r 1/20/2014 at Sam. tice as stated below, N EWBERRY E S other common desigor t he y m a y be T ATES PHASE I , LEGAL NOTICE nation. The u n derbarred. All persons DESCHUTES TRUSTEE'S NOTICE signed as successor whose rights may be COUNTY, OROF SALE trustee hereby certiaffected by this pro- EGON. Commonly *An Exemption Affi- fies that no assignceeding may obtain known as: 5 2450 davit was recorded on ments of the T rust additional information Ammon Road, La behalf of C olumbia Deed by the Trustee from the records of P ine, Orego n State Bank on August or by the Beneficiary the court, the Per97739. NOTICE TO 26, 2013 as Instru- and no appointments sonal Representative, DEFENDANTS: ment No. of a successor trustee or the Attorney for the READ THESE PA2 013-259704 in t h e have been made exPersonal Representa- PERS CAREreal property records cept as recorded in tive. Dated and first FULLY! A l a wsuit of Crook County, Or- the mortgage records published December has been s tarted egon. On information of the county or coun19, 2013. Personal against you in the and belief, the Real t ies i n w h ic h t h e Representative: Jefabove-entitled court Property d e scribed above-described Real frey Keirnan, 6611 NE by PennyMac Loan herein is bare land Property is situated 1 21st A v e , Apt . Services, LLC, that is commercial in t ogether w it h ap Q-139, V a ncouver, plaintiff. P l aintiff's nature. Because the pointing Erich M. PaWA 96662. Attorney claims are stated in Real Property is not etsch as the current for Personal Repre- the written c o mr esidential and t h e successor t r u stee; s entative: John D . p laint, a c opy o f Deed of T rust d e- further, that no action Sorlie, OSB ¹95045, which was filed with scribed herein is not a has been instituted to B ryant, L ovlien 8 the a b ove-entitled residential trust deed recover the debt, or Jarvis, P.C., 591 S.W. C ourt. You m u s t a s defined i n O R any part thereof, now Mill View Way, Bend, "appear" in this case Laws, 2012, Ch 112, remaining secured by Oregon 97702, Tele- or the other side will 6 5(5) and OR House the Trust Deed, or, if phone: (541) win a u tomatically. Bill 3369 (2013), this such action has been 362-4331, Fax: (541) To "appear" you Notice of Default is instituted, such action 369-3366, Email: sor- must file with the n ot subject t o t h e has been dismissed lie@bljlawyers.com court a legal documandatory mediation except as permitted ment called a "morequirements a ppli- by ORS 66.735(4). LEGAL NOTICE tion" or "answer." cable to r esidential The Real Property will The "motion" or "anIN THE C I RCUIT trust d eeds b e i ng be sold to satisfy the swer" (or "reply") COURT FOR THE foreclosed in Oregon Promissory Note deS TATE O F OR must be given to the after July 11, 2012. scribed below and seEGON IN AND FOR court clerk or adSee OR Laws 2012 cured by the Trust THE COUNTY OF ministrator within 30 Ch 112 6 2 and OR Deed and a Notice of DESCHUTES. days of the date of H ouse B i l l 336 9 Default has been rePENNYMAC LOAN first publ i cation (2013). Reference is corded pursuant to SERVICES, LLC, its s pecified her e in made to that certain Oregon Revised Statsuccessors in interalong with the retrust deed made by utes 66.735(3); the est and/or assigns, quired filing fee. It The S & H G roup, default(s) for which Plaintiff, v. UNmust be in proper Inc., a W a shington t he f o reclosure i s KNOWN HEIRS OF form and have proof Corporation, as t he made is/are the folDANIEL EVERETT of service on the r antor, an d W e s t l owing: Loa n N o . CONARTY; CATHplaintiff's a t torney o ast Trust is t h e 60000160. Failure to LEEN PA T R ICIA or, if t h e p l aintiff t rustee; an d W e s t pay the outstanding CONARTY; STATE does not have an Coast Bank, was the principal, interest and OF OREGON; OCattorney, proof of original b e neficiary other fees in full on CUPANTS OF THE service on the plainunder that c e rtain the maturity date of P REMISES; A N D tiff.lf you have any trust deed ("Trust December 15, 2011. THE REAL PROPDeed") dated March Failure to pay when questions, you ERTY L O CATED should see an attor5 , 2010, a n d r e - due property taxes on AT 52450 AMMON ney immediately. If corded on April 13, the Real P r operty R OAD, L A P I N E, you need help in 2010, as Instrument from 2010 to present. OREGON 9 7 739, finding an attorney, No. 2010-240191 of By reason of these Defendants. Case you may contact the the Mortgage Records defaults, the benefiNo. 13CV1499FC. Oregon State Bar's of Crook County, Or- ciary has and does SUMMONS BY Lawyer Re f e rral egon. The beneficial h ereby declare a l l PUBLICATION. TO Service online at interest in the Deed of sums owing on the T HE DEFEN www.oregonstateT rust was last a sobligation secured by DANTS: UNbar.org or by calling signed to Columbia the trust deed immeKNOWN HEIRS OF State Bank, succesdiately due and pay(503) 664-3763 (in DANIEL EVERETT the Portland metrosor by merger to West able, those sums beCONARTY: In t he p olitan area) o r Coast Bank, on Octo- ing the following, to toll-free elsewhere name of the State of b er 10 , 2 0 1 3 a s wit: Principle Balance: O regon, you a r e in Oregon at (600) Document No. $236,960.44. Achereby required to 452-7636. This 2013-260310, who is crued Interest: appear and answer summons isissued the current benefi- $32,044.01. Late the complaint filed pursuant to ORCP ciary and covers the Charges:$25,160.14.
follows: Erich M. Pa- was the original benetsch, P.O. Box 470, eficiary under t h at Salem, OR c ertain t rust d e e d 97306-0470, Trustee ("Trust Deed") dated crued interest at the telephone n u mber: June 19, 2009, and (503) 399 1070. If you recorded on July 9, rate of $ 39.49 per diem after September believe you need le- 2009, as Instrument 12, 2013, additional gal assistance with No. 2009-235462 of late charges, expen- this matter, you may the Mortgage Records contact the Oregon ditures, o r tr u stee of Crook County, Orfees, and a t torney State Bar and ask for egon. The beneficial the lawyer r eferral fees and costs. A tointerest in the Deed of tal payoff amount as service. You may call Trust was last asthe O regon S t ate signed to C olumbia of a specific date is a vailable upon r e - Bar's Lawyer Referral State Bank, succes(503) sor by merger to West quest. WHEREFORE, S ervice a t notice hereby is given 664-3763 or toll-free Coast Bank, on Octoin Ore go n at ber 10 , 2 0 1 3 a s that the undersigned trustee will on Friday, 1 -600-452-7636 o r Document No. February 21, 2014, at you may visit its web- 2013-260312, who is at: the current benefithe hour of 2:20 P.M., site www.osbar.org. You ciary and covers the i n accord with t he standard of time es- may also contact the following d e scribed t ablished b y OR S statewide consumer real property situated 167.110, at the Front query assistance line in th e a b ove-men1 - 6 55-460-1950. t ioned county a n d Entrance of the Crook at County Courthouse, For more information state, to wit: Lots 5, 6 300 NE 3rd Street, in and a directory of le- and 6 o f F A LCON the City of Prineville, gal aid programs for RIDGE SUB D IVICounty o f Cr o o k, free or low cost legal SION, according to go to t he off i cia l pla t State of Oregon, sell help, http://www.oregonat public auction to thereof, recorded July lawhelp.org for more the highest bidder for 10, 2006 in Microfilm information. D a ted: cash the interest in No. 2006-212636, on October 17, 2013. /s/ the said d escribed file and of record in Erich M. Paetsch. Real Property which the office o f the the grantor had or had Erich M . P a etsch, C ounty C l erk f o r power to convey at Successor T rustee, Crook County, O rt e l ephone egon. Property Tax the time of the execu- Trustee tion by grantor of the number: (503) 399 Account Nos.: 16517, 1 070. State o f O r - 16519 8 16520. Real said Trust Deed, together with any inter- e gon, C o unty o f p roperty or it s a d est which the grantor Marion) ss. I, the un- dress is c ommonly or grantor's succes- dersigned, certify that known a s 12 9 5 1, sors in interest ac- I am the attorney or 13126 & 13191 SE one of the attorneys Falcon Ridge Road, quired after the execution of said Trust for the above named Prineville, OR 97754, Deed, to satisfy the trustee and that the the "Real Property". foregoing obligations foregoing is a com- The a bove l i s ted thereby secured and piete and exact copy properties are a porthe orig i nal tion of the properties t he costs and e x - of penses of sale, in- t rustee's notice o f given to secure the cluding a reasonable sale. /s/ Erich M. Pa- Deed of T rust decharge by the trustee. etsch, Attorney for scribed herein. Lot 2 Notice is further given said Trustee. of FALCON RIDGE that a n y per s on SUBDIVISION listed LEGAL NOTICE in said Trust Deed named in ORS 66.753 has the right, at any TRUSTEE'S NOTICE has been r eleased time not later than five OF SALE and is no longer sub*An Exemption Affidays before the date ject t o s a i d T r ust last set for the sale, to davit was recorded on Deed. The u n derhave this foreclosure behalf of C o lumbia signed hereby disproceeding dismissed State Bank on August claims any liability for and the trust deed 26, 2013 as I nstru- any incorrectness of reinstated by paying ment No. the above-described the e ntire a m ount 2 013-259704 in t h e s treet a d dress o r then due (other than real property records other common desigsuch portion of t he of Crook County, Or- nation. The u n derprincipal as would not egon. On information signed as successor then be due had no and belief, the Real trustee hereby certidefault occurred), to- Property d e scribed fies that no assigngether wit h c o sts, herein is bare land ments of the T rust trustee's fees and at- that is commercial in Deed by the Trustee torney fees, and by nature. Because the or by the Beneficiary curing any other de- Real Property is not and no appointments fault complained of in r esidential and t h e of a successor trustee the notice of default, Deed of Trust dehave been made exthat is capable of be- scribed herein is not a cept as recorded in ing cured by tender- residential trust deed the mortgage records ing the performance a s defined i n O R of the county or counrequired under t he Laws, 2012, Ch 112, t ies i n w h ic h t h e obligation or T r u st 6 5(5) and OR House above-described Real Deed. In construing Bill 3369 (2013), this Property is situated this notice, the singu- Notice of Default is together lar includes the plural, n ot subject to t h e ith appointing Erich M. the word "grantor" in- mandatory mediation Paetsch as the cludes any successor requirements appli- current su c cessor i n interest t o t h e cable to r e sidential trustee; further, that grantor as well as any trust deeds b e ing no action has been other person owing an foreclosed in Oregon instituted to recover obligation, the perfor- after July 11, 2012. the debt, or any part mance of which is se- See OR Laws 2012 thereof, now cured by th e t rust Ch 112 6 2 and OR remaining secured by deed, and the words H ouse B i l l 336 9 the Trust Deed, or, if "trustee" and "benefi- (2013). Falcon Ridge such action has been ciary" include their re- L.L.C., an O r egon instituted, such action spective successors Limited Liability Com- has been dismissed in interest, if any. The pany, as the grantor, except as permitted mailing address for and West Coast Trust by Oregon Law. The trustee, a s re f e r- is the t rustee; and Real Property will be enced herein, is as West Coast B ank, sold to s atisfy the
A ppraisal
Fees :
$ 1,409.70. Tota l : $295,574.29*. *Total does not include ac-
P romissory Not e described below and secured by the Trust Deed and a Notice of D efault ha s b e e n recorded pursuant to Oregon Rev i s ed Statutes 6 6 .735(3); t he d efault(s) f o r which the foreclosure is made is/are the following: Loan No. 60000160. Failure to pay the outstanding principal, interest and other fees in full on the maturity date of December 15, 2011.
Failure to pay when due property taxes on the Real P r operty from 2010 to present. By reason of these defaults the , beneficiary has and does hereby declare all sums owing on the obligation secured by t he Tr u s t Dee d immediately due and payable, those sums being the following, to wit: Prinaple Balance: $236,960.44. Accrued Interest: $32,044.01. Late Charges: $25,160.14. Appraisal Fees:$1,409.70. Total: $295,574.29*.
*Total
does no t in c lude accrued interest at the rate of $39.49 per diem after September 12, 2013, additional late charges, expenditures, or t rustee f e es , a n d a ttorney fees a n d costs. A total payoff amount a s of a specific date is available upon request. WHEREFORE, notice
proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by paying the e ntire a m ount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occ u rred), together with costs, t rustee's fees a n d attorney fees, and by c uring a n y ot h e r default complained of i n the n o t ice o f default, th a t is c apable o f be i n g cured by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust dee d . In construing this notice, the singular includes the plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by the trust deed, and the words "trustee" "beneficiary" and include their respective successors in interest, if any. The mailing address for trustee, as referenced herein, is as follows: Erich M . P a etsch, P.O. Box 470, Salem, OR 9730 6 -0470, Trustee te l e phone number: (503) 399 1070. If you believe y ou n e e d leg a l assistance with this matter, you may contact the Oregon State Bar and ask for the lawyer referral service. You may call the O regon S t ate Bar's Lawyer Referral S ervice a t (503) 664-3763 or toll-free in Ore g o n at 1-600-452-7636 or you may visit its website at: www.osbar.org. You may also contact the statewide consumer query assistance line
hereby is given that the undersigned trustee will on Friday, February 21, 2014, at the hour of 2:00 P.M., i n accord with t he s tandard o f tim e established by ORS 167.110, at the Front Entrance of the Crook County Courthouse, 1 - 6 55-460-1950. 300 NE 3rd Street, in at the City of Prineville, For more information County o f Cr o o k, and a d i rectory of State of Oregon, sell legal aid programs for free or low cost legal at public auction to go to the highest bidder for help, cash the interest in http://www.oregonlaw h elp.org fo r m o re the said d escribed real property which information. D a ted: the grantor had or had October 17, 2013. /s/ Erich M . P a e tsch. power to convey at Erich M . P a etsch, the t i m e of the execution by grantor Successor T rustee, t e l ephone of the said trust deed, Trustee t ogether w it h a n y number: (503) 399 1070. St a t e of i nterest which t h e grantor or g rantor's Oregon, County of successors in interest M arion) ss. I , t h e a cquired after t h e undersigned, c ertify execution of said trust that I am the attorney the deed, to satisfy the or o n e of the foregoing obligations attorneys fo r thereby secured and above named trustee and that the foregoing the co s t s and e xpenses of s a l e , is a c omplete and including a reason- e xact copy of t h e trus t ee's able charge by the original t rustee. Notice i s n otice of s a le. / s / further given that any Erich M. Paetsch, sa i d person named in ORS A ttorney fo r 66.753 has the right, Trustee. at any time not later FIND IT! than five days before SUY IT! the date last set for SELL IT! the sale, to have this The Bulletin Classifieds foreclosure